University of South Carolina Libraries
F* THE KITCHEN nnnrr ' • . . * "" *jV* . * .5: r BARNWELL SENTINEL, BARNWELL, S. 0 PAGE 2 --T - ,‘yThe anxiety of some people to make / new ^jjjends Ta no/Intense that they* *’W§Ver have time to have old ones." HOT SOUPS FOR COOL EVENINGS CHAPTER XI*. . . —14— ; . The Balt That Lured. I went-a brag the tunnel In the direc tion of K» Vi el I Ange, picking: niy way 'very carefully, peering into the numer ous small caves antL.fissures In the wall on either htrfitL And I was about half way through when I saw a shadow running in front of me and making no sound. It was Duchalne. There could be no mistaking that tall, gaunt figure, Just risible against the distant day. I raced along the tunnel after him. But he seemed to be endowed with JJie’ speed of a' deer, for he kept his dis tance easily, and I Would never have caught him had he not Stopped for an instant at the approach of the ledge. There, Just as he was poising him self to leap, I seized him by the arm. He did not attempt violence hut gazed at me with hesitation und pa thetic doubt. "M. Duchalne,” I pleaded, ‘‘won’t you come back with me and let us talk it over? Jacqueline Is with me—” “No, ho,” he cried, laughing. ‘‘You can’t catch me with such, a trick *tfs that. My little daughter has gone to New York to make our fortunes at M. Daly’s gaming house. She will be back soon, loaded down with gold.’* "She has come back,” I answered. “She Is not fifty yards away.” “With gold?” he inquired, looking at me doubtfully. “With gold.” I answered, trying to allure his Imagination as Leroux had done. “She'has rich gold, red gold, such as you wlll love. You can take up the coins In your fingers and let the gold stream slip through^ them. Come with, monsieur.” I grasped h!in by the arm and tried to lead him with me. My argument had moved him. I thought I hud’Wyn: But Just as I started hack Into the tunnel, holding the arm of the old man, who lingered reluctantly and yet began to yield, a pebble leaped from the rocky platform ami rebounded from the cliff. I fast a backward glance, and there upon the opposite aids I saw Leroux, st» nding. “Bonjour, M. Hewlett ! ,f he called across the chasm. “Don’t he afraid of me any more than I am afraid of you. Just wait a moment. I want to talk business.” “I have no business to tulk with, you,” I answered. “But I did not say It was with you. monsieur.” he answered lie sheering tones. "It Is with our friend Duchalne. Hola,. Duchalne!” At the sound ,Qf Leroux’s voice, the old man straightened himself and be gan muttering and looking from the one to the other of us undecidedly. Suddenly I saw hjm turn Ills head and fix his eyes upou Leroux. - He craned -Ids neck forward; nnd then, very slowly, he began to wnlk toward his persecutor. I craned my neck. Leroux was holding out—the rou lette wheel! . * “Come along, Charles, mv friend,” he cried. “Come, let rs try our for tunes! Don’t you want to stake some money upon your system against me?” The, old figure had leaped forward over the ledge, amj In a moment Le roux hud grasped him und pulled him Into the tunnel. 1 I hastened buck to Jacqueline nnd -encountered her in the passage Just where the light apd darkness blond'otC standing- with " arms stretched . out against the wall to steady herself; and In her eyes was that look which -tells a man more surely than anything, I think, can, that a woman loves him. “Oh, I thought you were dead !” she sobbed, and fell Into my arms. I held her tightly t > support her, and I led her back to the gold cave. In a few words I explained what had occurred. ^ ♦‘Now Jacqueline, yon must let me guide you,” I said. “Don’t ybu see that there is no chance for us unless we leave your father for the present where,he ,s and make o‘ar owm escape? We can reach Pere Antoine’s cabin soon after midday, and we can tell him your father Is a prisoner here. He would not come with us, Jacqueline, even If he were here.” She did not respond. It was the safety of us two and her father’s life assured, against a miserable* fate for her, and I knew not iyhat for me, though I thought Lercux would give ine little shrift once I was In his power again. - w She was so silent that I thought I had convinced her. I urged her to her feet But suddenly I heard a stealthy footfall close at hand, between the »ve nnd the cataract. I thought it was Charles Duchalne. I hoped it was Leroux. I placed my (Lager on Jacqueline’s Ups and crept •tealthlly to tha passage, revolver in hand. Then, In the gloom,, 1 saw the villain ous face of Jean Petifjean looking into mine, twelve pares away, and In his hand was a revolver too. We fired together. But the surprise •polled his aim, for his bullet whis tled past me. I think my shot struck him somewhere, for he uttered s yell •«*4 b'tgan running back along the as hard as be coaid. . Copyright. W I followed him,-firing gs fast as I could reload. Fori upe helped the ruf fian. for When I reached the ifght he was scrambling ncrowr fhe Tedge, and before I could cover him he had suc ceeded In disappearing behind the pro jecting rock on the other *ide. So ■Derotix had already' sealed one exit—that hy,7the Old Angel, where the road led into" the main passage. God grant that he had not-,IIme_ to reach the exit by the mine! If I made haste! If I made, haste! But I would not argue the matter any further. I ran bqck nt full speed. I reached The Cave. “Jacqueline! ■ Come, come!” I. called. , She did not answer. ~ T ran forwards peering round mo In the obscurity*. I saw her near the earth-sacks, lying upon her side. Her eyes were closed, her face as white as a dead woman’s. .The expert soup-maker will obtain ^delicious flavors by usin^_ leftover meats and vege tables. After ccok- The bullet from Jean Petltjean’s re volver that mlsse<^me must have pen etrated her body. -—.. She lived, for her breast stirred, though so faintly that It' sceffiPd as though all that remained of life were concentrated In the fulnt-throbbing heartbeats. \ 1 I raised her in my arms nnd placed a wk beneath her head, making a began laboriously to draff*'the bags o! eurth Into this last refuge—UjdjTre If had grown quite dark,I hud barricaded Jacqueline and myself Within a, ,phu"< the size or" a bedrdhin inclosed • upon three sides AViih rock. And there I waited for the end., ~ I sat beside Jacqueline, holding her hand with <>ne of mine, and my re volver in the other. There was a faint flutter at her Wrist. T fancied Umt.lt hud grown stronger during the past Half hour. *r»- r--. But I was unprepared to hear her -whisper to me, Arid when she spoke 1 was' alert In a moment, v-“Paql!” she said faintly. “JafTTfraJiue!” “Paul! Bend down. I want to speak to Vod. ' Do you know I have been conscious for a long time, my dear? I have-been thinking. Are you distressed became of me?” “My dear!” Lsuid; und that was-ail lag the soup should be • strained and thickened as usual with, a binding of butter' and flour cooked together. Corn Chowder.-- Take about four teaspoonfuis of' ’f *11 Salt pork cubes and try them out ; add one sliced onion and cook five min utes, stirring often to keep the onion -from burning. Parboil four- cupfuls of potato slices In' water to- cover, drain and add the potatoes to'the fat and onion, with twq,jcupfulsr nf boiling' water; cook until the potatoes jare^ soft, add a can of corn, a q-uart of milk, salt, pepper and buffered crack ers, Serve with the buttered crackers on top. This recipe will serve six. Cream Soup.—Put thin slices of bread as thin as.shavings with a small amount of Ffutte^-_Jn a saucepan and brown; pour over enough boiling, wn- that I could say. 1 clasped her cold tor to rnake the.soup needed, add salt little hand tightty in mine. t0 tnstp and let "the' mixture boil up; “You must leave me, Paul, because— i tf,on rem °ve the saucepan and stir because of what hs -between us. Yoy in a ,ar L ,p cupful of croton, the thick- must, go to Leroux und tell him so ! er t,le totter. Be sure to have It well YouTbve me, Paul?”* ' salted or the soup will taste flat. “Always, Jacqueline The production pt-^fvrs appears’ to I made up with this fur fabric, and ag a long way behind the demand-for -thfcmJlf one can Judge by prices they. habTrr nmtrh; Invite rmrsTderntton a a shown In the picture above. The coate* ^-1 . , i bring today as compared to those of , does away with sleeves and substitutes — w spared j ream^o can ul_ So up.—Put a three or four rears ago. In the pn*-t for them pointed .piece* that give It *me put her arms alumt my neck. ! ful of peanut butter into a quart of * - ”*•“1 love you, Paul,” she said. “It j milk, add salt, cayenne, a tablespoon- seems so easy to say it In the dark, j ful of grated onion, a bay leaf, celery and 4 used to he so hard. Do you I salt, and cook ten minute’s In a double know 1 what I soared up and away uutil they have passed beyond the horizon for the- to the figure. - woman of modest Income. It was in forge admired and loved you holler. Moisten, a tnblespoonful of for, even when you thought my mind cofnstarch .with cold milk and stir unstable and empty? How true you until smooth, add to the soup and were! It was that, dear. It was your cook ten minutes. Strain nnd serve honor, Paul. with cubes of toasted bread. “That was why, when I remembered Quick Egg Soup.—Stir n teaspoon everythin* that ■ava.m.l Httl.t In thy j ful „f laa-f eyntft Into a quart of bolfc. j nlc , h » ran l„ h fi'- rr j" 1 *;- 1 I ln ; Wi '<‘ r 11 C ra *<''l <»"■»■• "lory ! at tlio satm> tint.- hut' In" them ran away in horror. I could not believe , salt, salt nnd pepper to taste. Pour tlial it wus true and .yet I knejv It J boiling hot Into a tureen with four was true. . j tahlespoonfulaLof boiled rice nnd two “And Leroux was waiting then* ana well beaten eggs. ^fouml me. I t\U\ not ward to leave J Split Pea SoujriUPiek over, wash >ou, but he told me there was Pere an ,j pU f to^oak In plenty of eold wn- Antoine’s cabin clt.se by, and that you t er ohe^cupful of split peas. In the would come to no harm. And he made , morning cook in two quarts.of water, me believe >ou had stolen-my mone> ] n two-inch cube of salt pork and year price and real value appear toj-fhe effect of a cape. There Is a full have little relation in fur garments; j shawl' collar nnd a Dolt that slips the most plentiful of pelts, undyed through slashes at the back and front nnd undisguised-in any way, are made where It fastens with a-'buckle. This up into garments that are as expen- ' model has the *easv lines of a rape, Is sive ns good and Substantial furs graceful and may be \\t>rn slipping off ought to be. Really good furs, have the TStionhlers. When its warmth Is needed and it is belted In If sets close This season has witnessed the return 'of iQ'J'g. wide senrfs to favor along uifil a great vnrfety ot oiner ucek- real value-and price go hun<L_jn hand , plpceST*' s jFw fabric nnd duvetyn are as they should. Plushes have been’^combined-to make the ample scarf pio* as well. Lilt I never believed that,, f , ne sliced ontrm.-Cook and stir often and I only taunted you with It to drive -i untll lhe p(>as nrp soft< nlh through >ou away for your own sake. n sfpve. thicken with two tablespoon- She drew me weakly toward her and j ft,is of flotir nnd butter, add milk to went on; , — “Now that we are to part forever, nnd perhaps I am to die, I can speak to .you from my heart and tell you, dear, lviss in* 1 —as though I were ybuf wife. iUlri. thin the .puree_to the desired consist* f ency. Season well and serve very hot. f made to imitate furs very closely in n group known as fur fabrics and they are used for all garments thut are made of fur. A good plush is much to he preferred to a poor fur from al most any {mint of view. It is just as warm. It looks better and wears better. Furs have been very closely imitated In these substantial fabrics, A short cape-llko coatee of moleskin plush, also a wfde scarf- of duvetyn tured above long enough to protect the chest, encircle the Ttrrbuf and fall over the shoulder. The scarf Is the meet easily, adjusted of neckpieces imd^nd- mits of several Ingenious ...arrange ment*. Tin* clever hat to match Sug gests the popular Napoleon shape nnd is trimmed with an ornament made of ostrich fines that looks like a flat tassel. It hns^the approved tlroopluff pose at the Fide. The Villainous Face of Jean Petitjean. resting place for her with my fur coat. Then with my knife I cut away her 4ress over the wound. There was a bullet hole beneath her breast, stained with dark blood. I rah down to the rivulet, risking an ambils- eude, brought back cold water, and washed It, and stanched the flow' as best I could, .making a bandage and placing-lt above the wound. . ,1 have a dim remembrance of losing my self-control when ibis was done? nnd clasping her in my arms and press ing my lips to her cold cheek and beg ging her to live and praying wildly that she shpuld not die. Then I raised her in my arms ami was stag gering across t.hn cave-tow urfl ITieTiTn-" n-ol which’ led to the rocking stone. And then, just as I approached the barricade of earth-filled 'bags Leroux and the man Raoul emerged from the tunnel’s mouth, and ran toward me. I stopped behind the barricade.- Presently I saw something white fluttering from the tunnel. It was a white handkerchief upon a stick of wood. Then Leroux’s voice hailed me from the tunmet; "V “Hewlett!’’ he called, and tl}ere was no traee af mockery in his tones now, “will you come out and talk with me? Will you meet me In the open, If you prefer?” I fired one shot In futile rage. It struck the cliff and sent a stone flying into the streanu Then silence followed. And I took Jacqueline and carried her back Into the little hollow’ space. I put my hand upon her breast. 1 It stirred. She breathed faintly, though she .showed no sign of con sciousness.,; Heaven knows what was In my mind. I stood beneath that awful cat aract firing at tjie blind rock. jtnd now I was back behind the „earth-bags shooting i^o the tunnel. So the afternoon wxTre away. The sun had sunk behind the cliffs. I,had fired away all but six of my cartridges 3 folly before came home to me. I grew more calm.' . ; ' I felt ray way around the cave with the faint -hope that there might be some other egress there. - There was none, hut I made out a recess which I had not perceived, about' one-haIf as large as the cave Itself, and opening Tnto It hy a small passage Just large enough to give ad mittance to a single person. ■ Here I should have only tlfie front to defend. So f carried Jacqueline inside and “So you will go to Leroux,” she added presently. “Is that your will, Jacqtfeline?” “Yes, dear,” she said. "Because we have fought, and now we are beaten, Paul A* ___ - I bowed my head. I knew’ that she spoke the truth. I knew,at last that I was vanquished. For, now c that Jncqueljne lay there so weak, so help less, nnd thinking all our past was but a dreajn, there was nothing but to yield. I could not tight any more. So I left her and climbed cross the bags nnd went down toward ths stream. Bujt before I had readied it A drrk figure slipped® from among the shad ows of the rocks* and came toward me; and hy the faint starlight I the face of Pierre Caribou! , v Ho stopped me and held me by both' shoulders, and he drew me into the recesses of the~rocks and bent his wigeftod oM.fttei»4Qrward~tt>wafd roipe*, "Ah, monsieur, so you did not obey old Pierre Caribou and stay in the cave,” he said.— v “Pierre, I did not^ know that you would return.” I answered. "Never mind^’ the Indian answered looking at me"strangely: “All finish now. Din hi C frrke Leroux. Ills time come. Dlahle show me!” “IIow?” I answered, startled. “All finish,” said Pierre inexorably and,.gs Dwatched him a superstitious fear crept over me. He, who had cringed, even when he gave the com mand,-- now cringed no lopger, and there was a look In his old face that I had only seen on one man’s before— on my father’s the night he died. “Pierre, where is Leroux?” J whis pered. “Shall I surrender to him or shall I fight?” “No matter,” he said once again. "M’sletir, suppose yon -go hack to ma’m’selle, and soon Simon come. His diable lead him to you. His diabfe tel) you what to say. All finish now!” He walked past me noiselessly, a tenuous shadow, and his hearing was as proud as that of his race had been In the long ago, when they were ’ords where now their white masters ruled.’ (TO BE CONTINUED.) Time’s Changes. - Caesar used to wail days to hour from the outposts oi his Empire, but Then the memory ufroy similar act off today the descendants of his legion? who plow the sunny fields near fifth) mond, La., get daily market news or their strawberries from places tbou sand.v of miles away. This n£w»- comes over Wires^and is Issued in Itm lan, as well as in English, by the locaf office of the bureau of markets of th» United States department of agrteni ture. ' - ' Government figures show that York has over 1,000,000 persona * do not speak English. Ordinarily we find- - in 'peojde the qualities we are njostly looking'for or the qualities that our prevailing char acteristics call_forth, - The larger the nature the less critical and cynical it is. the more it Is given to looking for the best in others.—Trine. SOFT AND STURDY SWEATERS CHEESE DISHES, a Cheese naturally suggests itself as a robstltute for meat, since it is rich In the same kind of nutrients which meat supplies; IMs also a food which is staple and may he used in a varie- of ways.*-- Stuffed Potatoes With C h e e re.— Split hot baked potatoes lengthwise. ! remove contents without injuring the ■ skin of the potato. Mush the.potato, add seasoning and enough hot milk and butter to season well; beat until 1 light, then refill. theTskin, piling it up lightly; do not smooth the top. Sprin kle, w ith grated» cheese and- reheat irrj- oven until cheese is melted and a | delicate brown. Rice Baked With Cheese. :ook "a cupful of rice in a large hmtuiftt of boiling water, at least three-quarts, adding t teaspoonful of salL- -When tender drain and cover the, bottom, ef a buttered baking dish with a layer of the rice; sprinkle .with grated chpe.se, a dash of -cayenne pepper and add mllk^to half fill the dish; cover with crumbs and bake until the^milk is ab sorbed and crumbs brown.’ Pittsburgh Potatoes. — Cook t one quart of diced potato cubes with a small minced onion until the potatoes are pearTy tender; add a temspoonful of salt and half a can of minced red peppers and cook until the potatoes are 1 done. Drain and put into a baking dish. Make a sauce of two table spoon f pis of butter and flour, one ten- spoonful of salt and a pint of milk, then add one-half pound of grated cheese. Pour this over the potatoes and bake until a golden brown. Baked Fish with Piquant Stuffing.— Bass or any firm-fleshed fish of moder ate size, may, be-4}&ed for baking. If the fish lacks fat insert strips of pork in gashes along each side of the fish. Baked Eggs With Cheese.—Break fouc^eggs Into a buttered baking dish and cook in a hot oven until thejf be- -gfn to turn white around the edge. Cover the eggs wjjli a white sauce and over this a cupful of cheese nnd bread crumbs well mixed. Season and brown the crumbs in a hot oven,, . Fgg shells should be carefully scrap ed out with a teaspoon; someone who ht4 tried It says that the bulk of on« five cents apiece, It is Worth while. Soft and. sturdy yards, closely and firmly knitted into sweaters nnd sweat ct coats with JRtle ornamentation amL-to match to accompany the sweater, muehvwarmth—these are tip? outstand- when skating, tobogganing or other ing style features in this year’s prod ucts. There is a.reaction away from strong contrasts in color, but varia tions In the weave or knitting serves for decoration. Above all the new sweaters and sweater coats look warm; ftrelr collars take their cue from those tff coats; tha;T“tfre ample and cozy. There is .nothing frivolous or inconsequential about \ these ne\v mod els; they are Uustness-llke, snug-fit ting, and neat. A great many sweaters nnd sweater coats ar^" knit with caps to match. There are occasional collarless models provided with a scarf in a lighter cqI- or nnd finished with a fringe of yarn. Very long sleeves that are rolled hack at..the hand,-pockets finished with a band In the color of the scarf having a narrow yarn fringe ha*ow it, and but tons set close together add dignity to a handsome sweater of this kind. There is a cap to match with a huge but flat pompon made of loops of yarn on the top of It. This Is a sweater de egg Is saved in the scraidng a doaeq | Uuj(i _^ Decial | y when j t i S kn i t by shells, and with eggs Worth four or bn qd. — V The two n°dels pictured are meant Tor good service and entice their wear- *rs Inin the open air. They are ina- •fajie lilF'attd made In several cot- ,ra. bine and gray being the favorites. Very heavy yarns are used for them nnd most of them are knit with caps winter sports engage tbeir wearers. The sweater coat, pictured buttons up the front with hone buttons and is provided ..with patch pockets and a belt of the knitted material. It has a rolled.^— collar and depends for ornamentation and snug fit upon variations In Its knitting. „ A border nt the bottom,, bands on the pockets, and cuffs are all put ifi by running the stitches in a horizontal direction. Worn with a heavy wdblen skirt and a hat this sweater will,serve for practical wear T on the street in the morning'and for * school. The gray sweater of very heavy yarn with sailor collar and cap to match. Is meant for sports wearl Every athletic girl will see its advan tages. The new sweaters may be had in a variety of colors. 4j/Us Flattens the Hem. Before hemming napkins by hand run the edges of napkins through the sewing machine hemmer. It will crease the hem straight for the hand