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" AN ABSORBING SERIAL |
“Amos Chapin Is Killed, Appar
. ently by John Butler, After
Noisy Quarrel Over Elizabeth
Wade. '
By Virginia Terhune Van De
‘ Water.
= f{Copyright, 1918, Star Company.)
5 CHAPTER LI
PBTAIRS Elzabeth Wade
U washed her hands and face
, quickly, and, removing her
sofled dress, slipped hurriedly into a
fresh one,
She was atill fearfully nervous and
wanted to get back downstairs,
_ i Bhe did not even pau e to comb her
halr, but, smoothing the rough p
tions with her brush, she pinned us
the loosened atrands.
. As she did so she heard more plnin
1y than before the men's volces rajs-d
~“in altercation. The sound frightened
“ber, and she hastened to put the g
ishing touches to her toilet,
“ In the kitchen Mrs. Chapin trotted
_back and forth from table to range,
. making coffee and heating the muiling
«that were to form a part of the eve
‘ning meal.
She in her turn was worried and
nervous. She had not had a pleas
“ant afterncon with her husband, and
“her thoughts were busy with what he
had eaid to her.
In the first place, he had told her of
his bhaving discharged Sulov Talak
This bit of information was hardly
necessary, for she had heard some of
his orders and Imprecations before
she saw Talak crossing the meadow
back of the barn, his head bent in
depression or sullenness. |
£he had thought that he was go
ing away then. But later she had '
seen him creep back anl dlsrnpy!&*ul‘l
in the direction of the stable. At that |
‘time Amos was resting in the living |
lflfl‘& and she did not tell] him that
‘the discharged farm hand had re- |
turned. |
" Instead she had waited until her
‘husband was aslecp. Then she had |
oremt out on a tour of ir\vo.fltmutmn.l
She was not afraid of the Pole She |
had always been kind to him, and he |
had mever been uncivil to her, More- |
‘over, she feit quite able to protect |
herself. i
~ Going ilnto the dusky recesses of |
the barn, she called the man softly |
but distinctly. |
- *“Talak!” she sald. “Talak, where |
are you?" i
No answer eame. He had probably |
left at last. |
Paasing out through the rear door, |
£he glimbed a little knoll at the aldel
of the barnyard. From this eleva
tion she could look across the m'Msl
’irlw between her and the pine woods |
to the south. i
. ross the most distant of these
fel she spled a figure walklng'
slowly. It carried something long |
over its shoulder—it looked Tke a|
m&utlck-»«—nnd from this hung an |
‘objact which she thought she recog- |
nized as the bundle containing all |
!‘lsl;k’l earthly possessions.
¢ breathed a little more freely
now that she knew that the I"ole had
Mfi started on his journey.
. and he have had so muny[
4 lately that it's made me awful- |
1y mfortable” she muttered. I
don't feel somehow as If pa had done |
! . by him, and yet he says the
1 ‘fool hasn't done a decent day's
3 since the death of his dog.
% with a sigh of pity, “I suppose
: “was his only friend, Anyway,
3!” he's going, I'm glad he's gone.
1 hope pa will be less upset now, |
‘don't understand him these days. He's
rvna‘ than ever!"
. "hich admisison would have
to an unprejudiced listengr
: Martha Chapin's matrimonial
. . wWas not a path of roses. ‘
. Returning to the house, she set
; preparing supper. As she was
o this her husband came into
P. tehen,
" s Retting late” he remarked.’
.
On Special Sale
010
Military Boots
$ 95 )
@ AN
e
Real $9.00 EANL
Values. All Sizes - )
and Widths. AN
L™
Grey Kid, Brown and Fie'd Mouse, “Girl
Military" boots, with cloth tops. Also, Cherry
Calf, all-leather boots, and with Field Mouse
buckskin tops.
French Heel Boots, in Grey
Kid, Field Mouse and Tobacco
Kid, with cloth tops, on sale for
$6.95.
Mail Orders Given Special Attention.
G s,
r, )
Y SRR D
52.54-56 Whitchall Street.
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e ———————————————
“Where's Butler gone with that girl?”
“For a walk, I guess,” his wife re
plied.
“It's time they were back” he
grumbled,
“What do you care? his wife rea
soned, gently. “Doun’t bother so much
about things, pa. It's not good for
you." 4 )h ;
“It's easy enough for you to say,
‘Don’t bother,’” he retored. “You
don’t need to bother, You don't have
to work the way I do 6n another
man's place and get no credit,. Well,
it's coming to an end now.”
His wife looked up eagerly. “You
mean,” she sald, “that you're going
to give up the farm, or”-—as he shook
his head.-"“what do you mean?"
“l mean I'm going to buy the place
myself if it's possible,” he said. ‘“T've
told you all along that I meant to,
Now I've ashout got it sottled.,”
She could not answer immediately,
When she did she gave no sign of the
disappointment that was tugging at
her heart-strings,
She was thinking of this now as
;he got supper for Butler and Eliza
eth,
She had always hoped against hope
that Amos would change his mind
and move to town--preferably Chi
cago, where she could be near Clif
ford as long as she lived, Now that
was out of the guestion. Her hus
band had, in some way that was mys
terions to her, secured the money
with which to buy the farm. He and
she would probably end their days
here,
Well, she must try to bear her lot
cheerfully, and not to think alout it
now, The duty of this minute was to
call the younge people to supper. If
pa would only let that young man go
and “wash up!”
She started across the hall to sum
mon Elizabeth., As she Aid so her
husband's excited voice reached her
cars. At the same moment Eliza
beth's door opened, and the girl hur
ried down the stalrs.
“Oh, Mrs. Cnapin;” she gasped.
“What is the matter In there? What
can they be saying?' 'Then, as the
matron caught her hand nervously
“Mr, Chapin must be very angry—he
must——-s"
She got no further, for the sound
of a shot rang through the house.
Pushing past the terrified woman
who tried to detain her, Klizabeth
rushed to the small room bhack of the
parior. Opéning the door, she stopped
short on the threshold,
In the center of the room stood
John Butler, as whita as death, At
his feet lay the body of Amos Chapin,
blood oozing from a bullet wound in
his temple.
(To Be Continued.)
Recipes so §
Warti |
Rttt oo
| Mulligatawny Soup.
Two quarts of stock, one teaspoon«
ful of curry powder, two onions, stalk
of celery, one tomatoe, one carrot, one
tablegpoonful of flour, halt a cupful
of milk, with one tablespoonful of
butter, and salt to season, Put the
stock Into a soup pot and add to it
the curry powder, onfons cut up, the
carrot chopped, the celery cut fine,
and the tomato, also cut in small
pleces. T.et all boll for two hours,
then siraln and return to the clean
soup pot. Mix together the flour, but
ter and milk, add one teaspoonful of
ealt, put all In the soup; stir til it
boils, Boil for elght minutes, and it
will be ready,
Baked Halibut.
Two sMees of halibut cut from the
middle of the fish, two cupfuls of
oysfer stuffing, salt, pepper, lemon
Juice and melted butter, Wash and
wipe the fish. Place one slice In a
buttered dlsh, brush with melted but
ter, sprinkle with salt and pepper and
cover with oyster stufMing. Place the
seeond slice on the top of the oysters,
season and brush \m}\ butter. Bake
for 40 minutes, ba¥ting frequently
with melted butter, turning the dish
ofter. in order that the fish may be
uniforml!y browned. Remove to a hot
plate, garnish with potato Ddalls,
parsiey, lemon and sauce,
Denbigh Pudding,
Put one pint and half of milk into
o eaucepan, When it bolis put iln
three heaping tnblosgoonl’uts of fine
breaderumbs, one tablespoonful of
butter, and half a teaspoonful of
lemon rind Let it boil for ten min
utes, then leave It to cool a little,
Stir in two well-beaten eges and twe
tablespoonfuls of sugns Well butter
a mold or basig, half fill it with the
mixture, then put in a layer of glace:
cherries cut in halves, Fill up with
the rest of the mixture, then sprinkle |
more cherries on top. Cover with n‘
plece of buttered paper and steam it
for two hours,
OU'VE counted upon the fingers of your hand, and the other one,
Y and back into the first one again (there are so many of them),
the Allied armies, with a grand, fine swelling of thé heart, be
cause they are so many. White and Black, and Yellow, and Red, and
Brown, welded together, to wipe out the direct descendant of Attila and
his barbarians! The Black, the Yellow, the Red, the Brown, have lined
themselves on the side of civilization and fair play. The shock-headed
liji Islanders have written themselves down civilized enemies to the
wild-man Hun.
But there are subtler armies in the field. The man with his hand
in his pocket at home, the sweating riveter, the girl who winds bandages
and mends endless clothes for soldier and foreign baby—in this, my
little town of New Rochelle girl-and-women hands turned out twenty
thousand garments for French and Belgian children; some cleaned and
mended from used ones and the rest brand-new, in a little over a week!—
the man and the woman on the farm; the minister; the artist; the m‘n
with the gift of words on a golden pen; from the greatest high one in
the land to the littlest low one; we're all in one army or another, back-
Ing our boys up with every bit of the good and endurance in us.
And here's another army-—it goes into the fleld in a folding leather
cage under the tan blouse over a million soldier-hearts. And it helps
him thrash the Hun. It's a feminine armiy—of old faces and young—
they face one another mostly from the two sides of the case when a
fellow opens it to look.
They are warm rivals—his mother and his sweetheart—rivals in
loving him—helping him to stand in sunshine and remember that there
Is laughter and love waiting for him—rivals in willing him to victory—
rivals in gifts and letters and the “cheer” call across the sea—{riendly
rivals! They say rivalry in an army makes for efficiency!
' -—NELL BRINKLBEY. .
Pass Your Ideas
HELP OTHERS WITH THEIR CHILDREN
By Dr. Wm. A, McKeever,
One of the Nation's Best Known So
ciological Writers,
HERE are thousands of parents
T among the readers of my arti
cles who possess in the aggre
gate as many perfectly good and
helpful ideas about child culture. Why
not pass these on to me in order that
I might place them before many oth
er thousands?
Tha best life 1s a game of give
and-take, The successful teacher is
helped by her pupfls, the able speaker
Is inspired by his audience, the wide
awake parent learns as much from
his children as they do from him, So
the helpful writer on the problems of
young humanity must depend for his
materials upon those who struggele
with these problems and so discover
ways of solving them,
And now, dear parent, why shoudl
you take It all and give back none?
Do you not count one? Wisdom re
garding the child comes not neces
sarily from the genius and the schol
ar, the wise mq‘ the prudent, the per
son of any supposedly high or special
caste, but is born only of experience.
If you are dealing constantly with a
child, you are quite as likely to stum
ble upon a valuable idea or method as
any other person. Ideas are not sime
ply thought out: they are found out.
ldeas in your own field of endeavor
are almost, if not quite, your great
est asset. fhey freshen you, renew
you, stimulate you to go on with your
work, i
So with myself. 1 am hungry for
Ideas about child rearing. Not In a
thousand years to come will the whole
truth about the human young be re-’
vealed to the living. Doubts, mys
teries and misgivings will continue to“
baffle the minds of th ast of men
and woemen as they co : to try to
fathom the depths of manifold
nature of the ordinary child.
Wherefore, considering in its en
tirety this never-ending problem of
rhrinmn‘ up the next generation,
' where shall wigdom be found and
where is the place of understand
ing? Wisdom is to be found in the
patient trial and error of ten thou
sand devoted caretakers of the young,
and the place of understanding is lo
cated in as many good parental
hearts, warm with affection for the
little ones. But how may we bring
"all this mass of scattered wisdom to
sether, and how summon all this se
cret understanding into one great
united body of truth? Tndeed, it is
precisely that question which I am
here trying partly to answer,
And, moreover, when you learn to
regard your child-rearing as a call
ing, when you learn to think of your
self as one chosen of God to bring
your offspring Into the world and to
care for it through many anxious yvears
then you will have proper respect
for the divine calling of parenthood
and you will desire to shout your new
ldeas to others from the hilltops and
desire theirs to come echoing back to
s ol
Again, 1 say, pass your ideas along.
Often a most helpful idea comnes from
a writer who appenls for help in deal
ing with a difficult problem. Yours
will be most welcome in that form.
Or If you have a naw or unusual way
of teaching a child to spin a top, to
comb his hair, 10 play with a dog, to
put on his clothes, to say his prayers,
to save his pennies, to be thoughtful
of his mother, to respect the truth, to
take care of a doll, to love his work,
to look after his own health, to—but
is not that enough?
The editor of this paper will be glad
to have you write him giving a word
of criticism of these articles, offering
a 4 suggestion for their improvement
and eontributing your bit in the form
of an ldea. Or, address me in his
care. By some such means 1 shall
finally receive your idea, shall work
it In with many others of its class,
and fnally, withholding your name
an fdentity in the strictest confldence,
shall send your contrthution on its
tappy way among the thousands of
my readers. |
Can you possibly think of a bfiur‘
aer\'l’oo to render your fellow pax
ents?
Do You Know That
In China and Japan railway sign
boards bear the names of places in both
Engilsh and the native language.
On an average the Scoteh inm the
tallest men in Great Britain, Irish come
next, the English third and the Welsh
last.
An emerald of filve graine weight is
worth 6 pounds; but one flve times as
big will fetch, not 25 pounds, but 100
pounds.
No Jew may purchase land in Russta.
The ashes of burnt corks make fine
black paint.
Brass is the best reflector of heat of
any metal.
Upton, near Peterborough, one of the
smallest parishes In England, number
ing only fourteen houses, possesses a
tombstone of black marble which ba
comes damp In patches whenever rain
°
Davison-Paxon-Stokes Co.
_—_—m
« b - T s e 5
R B VR, 7 L\
; A =4\
é Our Great Semi-Annual
Trimmed Hat Sale
4 7 i Comes tomorrow morning only, from
‘ ’g 8:30 a. m. till 1 p. m.
( 275 Gorgeous Creations
= A ¢ Large Hats Small Hats -
NP Medium-Size Hats
o 57 96 Tailored Hats Dress Hats
'9 Young Ladies and Matrons’ Hats
Folks who attended this sale last sea
-9 son will recall the extraordinary values £
°’ they secured. For this event we have, 48
through co-operation with several New U(HASu
5 York’s best milliners, obtained even su- v
. perior values. Yl
/ Hats Worth Double Sale Price ~,"
All fashioned of silk vel- To be had in black and
vet or in combinations. The the season’s newest colors,
greatest sale ever held in e Come early for choice g
Atlanta, lection, i Y e
By NELL BRINKLEY
Capyright, wwfiée:s’mnfi::nmu Peature
is about to fall. It is regarded in the
village as an infallible barometer.
| : o A
} Savings banks were invented by a
clergyman,
} It Is said that in Smith’s “Wealth of
Nations” the word ‘‘nation™ appears
only on the title page.
~ Gray horses are the longest lved.
Creams are usually delicate and are
seriously affected by very warm weath
er.
; ———
~Amber s found in varlous colors be
sides yellow—black, white, brown and
Inoen.
Out of every hundred of the popula
tion in England and Wales 78 live in
towns,
?snm' 18 HATT hrd emf bm gfmfwy
The only maritime country in Europe
without a bpavy is Belgium.
Fenoars || 1185 ot 2 I
; oEFICE i lé’ {'.:,{,’t ;8
i /,23:::-::-_-';’ ) 3 o
e N |
LA AR IO BD IR Ot ont Y
Nights With
A A PP
By JOEL CHANDLER HARRIS
The Baby's Fortune—(Continued.)
15, Shacklett had often boasted
h/I that she wus a Sandedge, and
she made no concealment of her
belief that the Sandedge were higher in
the social scale than the Shackletts, Mr,
Shacklett could remember this even if
he had forgotten where the money had
been hid. Indeed, his mind dwelt upon
it.
“You ought to know where we put
the money, You were there; you helped
to do it If the Sandedges ls so mighty
much bester than the Shackletts, why
n't you mind where we put the money ?
Hey? Tell me that. You're a Sandedge,
and I ain’t nothing but a plain Shack
lett. "T ain’t no trouble for me to forget,
but how can a Bandedge ferget. Heay?
Tell me that, When it comes down to
hard sense 1 reckon the Shackletts is
just as good as the Sandedges.”
But all this did no good. The oM peo-.
ple failed to find thelf precious store
They sat and tried to trace their move.
ments on the day they had carrled the
money to its new place of concealment,
but they never could agree. The death
of the negro was the only event they
could clearly remember, Pach exclaimed,
many times a day: “Oh, I know!” as ilf
a flash of memory had revealed to them
the place, but it always ended in nothing.
Cassy soon became accustomed to the
constant talking and hunting for hid
den money, and finally came to the eon
clusion that the old people were the
victims of a strange delusion. She com
pared it in her mind to the game of
hilde-the-switch which the children play.
At the las:, she paid no attention to the
matter than if the old couple had been
a pair of tcddling infants fretting over
some imaginary trouble. °
B &
Now it happened that while Private
Chadwick was enjoying his soup under
the gentle auspices of the ladies who
had invited him to be their guest, his
comrades in the trenches and round
about had received some news that
scemed to them to be very bad indeed,
It was In the shape of a rumor merely
the forermnner of facts. The news was
to the effect that General Johpston was
about to b% removed and General Hood
put in his Place. The news had not yet
appeared in the newspapers, and it had
reached the soldiers before it came to
the ears of their officers, How, nobody
knows. The commander of a brigade in
Virginia made the rounds of his camp
one night. He saw considerable bustle
among the troops—fires burning and
and rations eooking. Inquiring the ecause,
he was told that the brigade would re
celve order to march before sunrise the
next morning, The brigadier laughed at
this, thinking it was a joke on the men,
but when he returned to his headquart
~rs he found a courier awaiting him with
orders for his brigade to move at dawn.
In the same way. General Johnston's
removal was well known to the private
soldiers before the newspapers had
printed the information. The news was
not very well received, for, in spite of
the fact that they had been retreating
from Dalton to Atlanta, the men were
weil enough acquainted with the tace
tics of war to know that these retreats
were masterly, and they felt that their
general was gathering all his resources
well in hand for a decisive battle at
the proper moment,
(Copyright, 1881, 1883 and 1911 by the
Centlry Company; 1883 by Joel Chandler
Harris; 1911 by Esther Laßose Harris
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Printed by
permission of and by special arrangements
with Heughton, Mifflin Company.)
{To Be Continued Tomorrow)
[EUsscaise ¥or UipEafy sowpg