6 Two or Three Small Fish Lay Faintly Wriggling on the Surface. SYNOPSIS. The story opens with the shipwreck of tlm steamer on which Miss Genevieve I.< sll*», an American heiress, Lord Win thrope, an Knglishinan, ami Tom Blake, a brusque American, were passengers. The three wire tossed upon an unin habited island and were the only ones not drowned. Blake recovered from a drunken stupor. Blake, shunned on the boat, because of his roughness, became h hero as preserver of the helpless pair. The Englishman was suing for the hand Of Miss Leslie. CHAPTER ll.—Continued. "Oh, but Mr. Blake, I am sure It must be a mistake; I am sure that if It is explained to papa—" "Yes; we'll cable papa to-night. Meantime, we've something else to do. Suppose you two get a hustle on your selves, and scrape up somethingx, to eat, I'm going out to see what's left »112 that blamed old tub." "Surely you'll not venture to swim out so fan!" protested Winthrope. "I saw the steamer sink as we cast off." "Looks like a mast sticking up out there. Maybe some of the rigging Is loose." "But the sharks! These waters Bwarm with the vile creatures. You must not risk your life!" "'Cause why? If I do, the babes In the woods will be left without even the robins to cover them, poor things! But cheer up!—maybe the mud-hens Will do it with lovely water-lilies." "Please, Mr. Blake, do not be so cruel!" sobbed Miss Leslie, her tears starting afresh. "The sun makes my head ache dreadfully, and I have no hat or shade, and I'm becoming so thirsty!" "And you think you've only to wait, and half a dozen stewards will come running with parasols and ice water. Neither you nor Winthrope seem to 've got your eyes open. Just suppose you get busy and do something. Win thrope, chase yourself over the mud, and get together a mess of fish that are not too dead. Must be dozens, aft the blow. As for you, Miss Jenny, I guess you can pick up some reeds and rig a headgear out of this handker chief— Wait a moment. Put on my coat, if you don't want to be broiled alive through the holes of that peek-a --boo." "But I say, Blake —" began Win thrope. "Don't say—do!" rejoined Blake; and he started down the muddy shore. Though the tide was at flood, there was now no cyclone to drive the sea above the beach, and Blake walked a quarter of a mile before he reached the water's edge. There was little surf, and he paused only a few mo ments to peer out across the low swells before he commenced to strip. Winthrope and Miss Leslie had been •watching his movements; now the girl rose in a little flurry of haste, and set to gathering reeds. Winthrope would have spoken, but, seeing her embarrassment, smiled to himself, and began strolling about in search of fish. It was no difficult search. The marshy ground was strewn with dead sea-creatures, many of which were al ready shriveling and drying in the «un. Some of the fish had a familiar look, and Winthrope turned them over with the tip of his shoe. He even went so far as to stoop to pick up a large mullet; but shrank back, re pulsed by its stiffness and the unnat ural shape into which the sun was warping it. He found himself near the beach, and stood for half an hour or more watching the black dot far out in the water—all that was to be seen of Blake. The American, after wading off-shore another quarter of a mile, had reached swimming depth, and was heading out among the reefs with steady, vigorous strokes. Half a mile or so beyond him Winthrope could now make out the goal for which he was aiming—the one remaining top- 1 mast of the steamer. "By Jove, these waters are full of sharks!" murmured Winthrope, star ing at the steadily receding dot until it disappeared behind the wall of surf which spumed up over one of the outer reefs. A call from Miso Leslie interrupted his watch, and he hastened to rejoin her. After several failures, she had contrived to knot Blake's handkerchief to three or four reeds in the form of a little sunshade. Her shoulders were protected by Blake's coat. It made a hcavj- wrap, but it shut out the blis tering sun rays, which, as Blake had foreseen, had quickly begun to burn the girl's delicate skin through her open-work bodice. Thus protected, she was fairly safe from the sun. But the sun was by no means the worst feature of the situa tion. While Winthrope was yet several yards distant, the girl began to com plain to him. "I'm so thirsty, Mr. Winthrope! Where is there any wa ter? Please get me a drink at once, Mr. Winthrope!" "But, my dear Miss Leslie, there is no water. These pools are all sea water. I must say, I'm deuced dry myself. I can't see why that cad should go off and leave us like this, "Indeed, it is a shame —Oh, I'm so thirsty! Do you think it would help if we ate something?" "Make it all the worse. Besides, how could we cook anything? All these reeds are greeu. "But Mr. Blake said to gather some' fish. Had you not best —" "He can pick up all he wants. I shall not touch the beastly things." "Then I suppose there is nothing to do but wait for him." "Yes, if the sharks do not get him." Miss Leslie uttered a little moan, and Winthrope, seeing that she was on the verge of tears, hastened to re assure her. "Don't worry about him, Miss Genevieve! He'll soon return, with nothing worse than a blistered back. Fellows of that sort are born to hang, you know." "But if he should be —if anything should happen to him!" Winthrope shrugged his shoulders, and drew out his silver cigarette case. It was more than half-full, and he was highly gratified to find that neither the cigarettes nor the vesta matches in the cover had been reached by the wet. "By Jove, here's luck!" he ex claimed, and he bowed to Miss Leslie. "Pardon me, but if you have no ob jections—" The girl nodded aa a matter of form, and Winthrope hastened to light the cigarette already in his fingers. The smoke by no means tended to lessen the dryness of his mouth; yet it put him in a reflective mood, and in think ing over what he had read of ship wrecked parties, he remembered that a pebble held in the mouth Is supposed to ease one's thirst. To be sure, there was not a sign of a pebble within miles of where they sat; but after some reflection, it oc curred to him that one of his steel keys might do as well. At first Miss Leslie was reluctant to try the ex periment, and only the increasing dry ness of her mouth forced her to seek the promised relief. Though it failed to quench her thirst, she was agree ably surprised to find that the little flat bar of metal eased her craving to a marked degree. Winthrope now thought to rig a shade as Miss Leslie had done, out of reeds and his handkerchief, for the sun was scorching his unprotected head. Thus sheltered, the two crouched as comfortably as they could upon the half-dried crest of the hum mock and waited impatiently for the return of Blake. CHAPTER 111. The Worth of Fire. -'II /Though the sea within the V reefs " was fast stnoothing JB» to a glassy plain in the dead calm, they did not see Blake on his return until he struck shallow wa ter and stood up to wade ashore. The tide had begun to ebb before he started landward, and though he was a powerful swimmer, the long pull against the current had so tired him that when he took to wading he moved at a tortoise-lilce gait. "The bloomin' loafer!" commented I Winthrope. He glanced quickly about, and at sight of Miss Leslie's arching brows, hastened to add: "Beg par don! He —ah —reminds me so much of a. navvy, you know/' CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1909. Miss Leslie made no reply. At last Blake was out of the water and toiling up the muddy beach to the spot where he had left his clothes. While dressing he seemed to recover from his exertions in the water, for the moment he had finished he sprang to his feet and came forward at a brisk pace. As he approached, Winthrope waved his fifth cigarette at him with languid enthusiasm, and called out as heartily as his dry lips would per mit: "I say, Blake, deuced glad the sharks didn't get you!" "Sharks?—bah! All you have to do is to splash a little, ana they haul off." "How about the steamer, Mr. Blake?" asked Miss Leslie, turning to face him. . "All under but the maintopmast— curse it!—wire rigging at that! Couldn't even get a bolt." "A bolt?" "Not a bolt; and here toe are as good as naked on this infernal —Hey, you! what you doing with that match? Light your cigarette—light it!— Dam nation!" Heedless of Blake's warning cry, Winthrope had struck his last vesta, and now, angry and bewildered, he stood staring while the little taper burned itself out. With an oath, Blake sprang to catch it as it dropped from between Winthrope's fingers. But he was too far away. It fell among the damp rushes, spluttered, and flared out. For a moment Blake knelt, staring at the rushes as though stupefied; then he sprang up before Winthrope, his bronzed face purple with anger. "Where's your matchbox? Got any more ?" he demanded. "Last one, I fancy—yes; last one, and there are still two cigarettes. But look here, Blake, I can't tolerate your talking so deucedly—" "You idiot! you—you— Hell! and every one for cigarettes!" From a growl Blake's voice burst into a roar of fury, and sprang upon Winthrope like a wild beast. His hands closed upon the Englishman's throat, and he began to shake him about, paying no heed to the blows his victim showered upon his face and body, -blows which soon began to les sen in force. Terror-stricken, Miss Leslie put her hand 3 over her eye 3, and began to scream—the piercing shriek that will unnerve the strongest man. Blake paused as though transfixed, and as the half-suffocated Englishman struggled in his grasp, he flung him on the ground and turned to the screaming girl. "Stop that squawking!" he said. The girl cowed down. "So; that's better. Next timo keep your mouth shut." "You —you brute!" "Good! You've got a little spun*, eh?" "You coward —to attack a man not half your strength!" "Steady, steady, young lady! I'm warm enough yet; I've still half a mind to wring his fool neck." "But why should you be so angry? What has he done, that you—" "Why—why? Lord! what hasn't he done? This coast fairly swarms with beasts. We've not the smell of a gun; and now this Idiot—this dough-head— has gone and thrown away our only chance—fire—and on his measly ciga rettes!" Blake choked with returning ra^e. Winthrope, still panting for breath, began to creep away, at the same time unclasping a small penknife. He was white with fear; but his gray eyes— which on shipboard Blake had never seen other than offensively supercili ous—now glinted in a manner that served to alter the American's mood. "That'll do," he Baid. "Come here and show me that knife." "I'll show it you where It will do the most good," muttered Winthrope, ris ing hastily to repel the expected at tack. "So you've got a little sand, too," said Blake, almost good-naturedly. "Say, that's not so bad. We'll call It quits on the matches. Though how you could go and throw them away—" "Deuce take it, man! How should I know? I've never before boon In a wreck." "Neither have I—this kind. But I tell you, we've got to keep our think tanks going. It's a guess if we see to morrow, and that's no joke. Now do you wonder I got hot?" "Indeed, no! I've been an ass, and here's my hand to it —if you really mean It's quits." "It's quits all right, long as you don't run out of sand," responded Blake, and he gripped the other's soft hand until the Englishman winced. "So; that's settled. I've got a hot temper, but I don't hold grudges. Now, where're your fish?" "I —well, they were all spoiled" "Spoiled?" "The sun had shriveled them." "And you call that spoiled! We're like to eat them rotten before we're through with this picnic. How about the pools?" "Pools? Do you know, Blake, I never thought of the pools. I stopped to watch you, and then we wero so anx ious about you—" Blake grunted and turned on his heel to wade into the half-drained pool in whose midst he had been deposited by the hurricane. Two or three small fish lay faintly wriggling on the surface. As Blake splashed through the water to seize them his foot struck against a living body which floundered violently and flashed a brilliant forked tail above the muddy water. Blake sprang over the fl3h, which was entangled in the reeds, and with a kick flung it clear out upon the ground. "A coryphene!" cried Winthrope, and he ran forward to stare at the gorgeously colored prize. "Coryphene?" repeated Blake, fol lowing his example. "Good to eat?" "Fine as salmon. This Is only a small one, but—" "Fifteen pounds If an ounce!" cried Blake, and he thrust his hand In hie pocket. There was a moment's si lence, and Winthrope, glancing up, saw the other staring in blank dismay. "What's up?" he asked. "Lost my knife." "When? —in the pool? If we felt about—" "No; aboard ship, or in the surf—" "Here is my knife." "Yes; almost big enough to whittle a match! Mine would have done us some good." "It is the best steel." "All right; let's see you cut up the fish." "But you know, Blake, I shouldn't know how togo about it I never did such a thing." "And you, Mis 3 Jenny? Girls are supposed to know about cooking." "I never cooked anything in all my life, Mr. Blake, and it's alive—and— and I am very thirsty, Mr. Blake!" "Lord!" commented Blake. "Glvo me that knife." Though the blade was so small, the American's hand was strong. After some little haggling, the coryphene was killed and dressed. Blake washed both it and his hands In tlio pool, and began to cut slices of flesh from the fish's tail. "We have no fire," Winthrope re minded him, flushing at the word. "That's true," assented Blake, In a cheerful tone, and he offered Win thrope two of the pieces of raw flesh. "Here's your breakfast. The trimmed piece is for Miss Leslie." "But it's raw! Really, I could not think of eating raw fish. Could you, Miss Leslie?" Miss Leslie shuddered. "Oh, no! and I'm so thirsty I could not eat any thing." "You bet you can!" replied Blake. "Both of you take that fish and goto chewing. It's tho stuff to case your thirst while we look for water. Good Lord! —in a week you'll be glad to eat raw snake. Finnicky over clean fish, when you swallow canvas-back all but raw, and beef running blood, and raw oysters with their stomachs full of dis integrated animal matter, to put it politely. You couldn't tell rattlesnake broth from chicken, and dog makes first-rate veal —when you've got to eat it. I've had it straight from them that knows that over iu France they snails and fish-worms. It's all a mat ter of custom or the style." (TO Bli2 CONTIHUCOJI S The Place U Buy Cheap S J J. F. PARSONS' { CUfiESI RHEUMATISMI LUMBAGO, SCIATICAS NEURALGIA and! KIDNEY TROUBLE! "f-MOPS" takoo Internally, rids the blood W of the poisonous matter and acids which 8.1 •re the dlreot oauscs of those diseases. H Applied externally It affords almost In- ■ •toot relief from pala, while a permanent n cure 1* being eßooted by purifying the BH blood, dissolving the poisonous sob- H ■taooe tod removing it from the system. Eg DR. 8. D. BLAND E Of Brewton, Ot., writes i «I had bHo a sufferer for a number of j«n B j with Lumbago uil Rheumatism Inn; arms and leg". iuad tried all the remedies that I oou Id Kj gather from medical worka, and also consulted M with a number or tha best phralolani, but found K nothing that gars the relief obtained from ■ "•.DROPS." I ah all presorlbe It In my praotloa V to# rheumatlara and kindred dlieaim " FREE I If yon are guttering with Rheumatism, H Neuralgia, Kidney Trouble or any kin- B dred disease, write to us for a trial bottle B] of "§-DROPS. •' and test U yourself. H "•-DROPS" ean be used any length of E] time without aoqulrinf a "drug habit." E as It Is entirely tree or opium, cocaine. E aloohol. laudanum, ami other similar ft; Ingredients. R Uw St.e Bottle, "H-DROPS" (§OO Dad) KJ •1.00. Fee Bat* bf Sn«gltta fcjj BWARBOI BHIDIIATIfi OORE GOMPMY, E Sept. SO. MO Lake Street, B ffffn ■■■ r» Ommam Gives yon tha reading matter la # Lr3oßn& which you have the greate* in . —■ - ■ terest—the home news. Its overy issue will prove a welcome visitor to every member of the family- It should baad your list of newspaper and periodical subscriptions. G.SCHMIDT'S,^ HEADQUARTERS POR FRESH BREAD, II popular CONFECTIONERY Dally Delivery. Allordern given prompt and * * skillful attention. Enlarging Your Business If you are In annually, and then carefully business and you note the effect it has in in« want to make creasing your volume of bust- i Vn more money you ness; whether a 10, ao or so will read every P* r cent increase. If yott wor d we have to watch this gain from year t» say. Are you you will become intensely in* M» spending your terested in your advertising, | m Wfl money for ad- and how you can make it ea- Ml |1 vertising in hap- Your business. El ta hazard fashion If you try this method we £s< as if intended believe you will not want to tor charity, or do you advor» let a single issue of this paper tise for direct results? goto press without something Did you ever stop to think from your store, how your advertising can be Phased to have made a source of profit tf» 7 ou on u *» ftnd we you, and how its value can be * R^e pleasure in explaining measured in dollars and our R nnual contract for so cents. If you have not, you many inches, and how it can be i' are throwing money away. «* ed in whatever amount that i Advertising is a modern teems necessary to you. I business necessity, but must If you can sell goods over be conducted on business the counter we can also show I principles. If you are not you why this paper will best I satisfied with your advertising serve your interests when you you should set aside a certain want to reach tho people of amount of money to be spent this community. JOB PRINTING * 1 can do that class just a little cheaper than the other fellow. Wedding invitations, letter heads, bill heads, sale bills, statements, dodgers, cards, etc., all receive Uie same careful treatment —just a little better than seems necessary. Prompt delivery always. If you are a business man, did you ever think of the field of opportunity that advert is- Irg opens to you? There is almost no limit to the possi bilities of your business if you Study how to turn trade into four store. If you are not get ting your share of the business of your community there's m reason. People go where they are attracted where they knozv what they can get and how much it is sold for. If you make direct statements ia your advertising see to it that you are able to fulfill every promise you make. You will add to your business reputa tion nnd hold your customers. It will not cost as much to run your ad m this paper as you think. It is the persistent ad vertiser who gets there. Have something in the paper every Issue, no matter how small. We will be pleased to quote you our advertising rates, par ticularly on the year's busi ness. If I «—■■ MAKE YOUR APPEAL fto the public through the columns of this paper* With every issue it carries its message into the homes and lives of the people. Your competitor has bis store news in this issue. Why don't you have yours? Don't blame the people for flocking to bis store. They know what he has.