The Cedartown standard. (Cedartown, Ga.) 1889-1946, January 04, 1900, Image 4

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' - ' : . -••' ••• ; • ' •■ ONLY ONE CURE FOR SCROFULA. c S S, Is iiie Only Scro^fla* 1 ""—” 26 ' reme d>ea recommended for U* nflFnrH !}■ Ui Ul ,v ' a flr or ri lo’-f^ 6 t * lem no doubt being able to _ , r„ I10 | fn thic theonte™,^ reIief - but S - s - s - i8 absolutely Dompdv FOUOi lO InlS Rcrofiit/;/ em which completely cures it. nclllsUj 4 blood dia<f° ne the roost obstinate, deep-seated r . .1. flicoacp manv an< ^ is beyond the reach of the Obstinate LIISeaSB. J purifiei "3 and tonics because some- U-tomore than a mere tonic is required. S. S. H. is equal t he ’dfselsp tf fails to cure Scrofula, because it goes down to the seat ot the disease, thus permanently eliminating every trace of the taint. , The serious consequences to which Scrofula surely leads should impress upon those afflicted with it the vital im portance of wasting no time upon treatment which can ,,ot possibly effect a cure. In many eases where the wrong treatment has been relied upon, complicated glandular swellings have resulted, for which the doctors insist that a dangerous surgical operation is necessary. Mr.'ll.E-Thompson,of Milledgeviile, Ga writes- “A bad case of Scrofula broke out on the glands of mv neck which had to be lanced and caused me much suffering T was treated for a long while, but the physicians were un able to cure me, and my condition was as bad as when I began their treatment. Many-Wood remedies were used but without effect. Some one recommended S. S. S. and I began to improve as soon as I had taken a few bottles Continuing the remedy, I was soon cured permanentlv and have never had a sign of the disease to return.” Swift’s Specific— S. S. S. FOR THE BLOOD —3s the only remedy which can promptly reach and cure obstinate, deep-seated blood diseases. By re ymg upon it, and not experimenting with the various so-called Ionics, etc., all sufferers from blood troubles can be promptly cured, instead of enduring years of suffering which gradually but surely undermines the constitution, fa. fa. fa. is guaranteed purely vegetable, and never fails to enre Scrofula, Eczema, Cancer, Bheumatism, Contagious Blood Poison; Boils, Tetter, Pimples, Sores, Ulcers, etc. Insist upon 8. S S.; nothing can takeits place. Books on blood and skin diseases will be mailed free to any address by the Swift Specific Company, Atlanta, Georgia. For honest treatment and a speedy cure ivrite or go to Dr. J. Newton Hathaway whose great reputation is a sufficient guarantee of satisfactory results. Consultation Free. Blood Poison Conti acted or Uereid- tary Syphilis in all its terrible stages, producing copper-colored spots on face or body, little ulcers on the tongue, in the mouth or throat, falling out cf the hair or eyebrows, docay of the flesh or bones, completely and forever eradicated ■without the use of injurious drugs, leaving the system in a pure, strong and liealth- . ful state. or enlarged veins, which lead to a complete loss of sexual power; also Hydrocele, Gonorrhoea, Gleet, Stricture and all Private and Venereal Diseases and Weaknesses of men quickly cured. Varicocele Kidney and Urinary SasHt cult. Too Frequent, Bloody or Milky Urine; all functional diseases of the Heart, Lungs, Liver and Stomach; also Catarrh, Rupture, llheumatism, Piles, Fistula and all Blood and Sirin Diseases and all Female Diseases treated according to. the latest and best methods known to medical science. Home Treatment dance alwayssne- cessful. Write for free book Just published and Symptom blank if you cannot calL J. NEWTON HATHAWAY, M. D. Dr. Hathaway & Co., South Broad Street* Atlanta, Ga. MENTION THIS PAPES WHEN WRITING. COPYRIGHT. r89$. 0Y THE AUTHOR. ^SOUTHERN RAILWAY Condens d Schedule In Effect Novemb-r 19.1899. NoT20~ 7.15pm 5.02pm 3.00pm STATIONS. lv... Akron... ar ..Greensboro... Marion..... ...Marion Jet., ar...Selma...lv STATIONS. lv.New OTs.a r lv..Merldian.a r York....... ...Demopolis.. Selma ..Monte 1 Cal era ..Columbiana.. ..ChUdersburg. :..Talladega... .. .Oxford ...Anniston... ..Jacksonville.. ..Piedmont... Cave Springs.. ar.. Atlanta., lv STATIONS No. 7.10pm 6.22pm 5.28pm 4.26pm 4.10pm 8.30am No. J25 No.. *15 8.20am 7.50pm 7.00pm 6.03pm 5.20pm 4.51pm 4.25pm 4.15pm 2.25pm 2.12pm 1.48pm 12.57pm 12 15pm ll,39um 11.25am 1 l.iMani 43am JO.OOam 0.25am 5.3 Jam 11.15am 9.30am 8.0 am 7.10am George Simmerville has returned to Cedartown, after spending a few days with home folks. George is now hold ing the position of flagman on the C. B. & S. Baiiway.—Bookmart Slate. gjjjggSgjg|8?;...- MOO. Dr. JR. lletchon’H Ami Diuretic May be worth to yon more than $100 if you have a child who soils bedding from incontinence of water during sleep. Cures old and young alike. It arrests the" trouble at once. $1. Sold by E. Bradford, druggist, Cedartown, Ga. When a woman gives her reason, man might as well cease to argne. lv...Blnn’liam.. ar Pell City..... Anniston..... .... —Oxford^..;;;. ....Heflin ... Edwards vUle... .... Fruithurst.... .Tallapoosa.... Bremen/:.... .. .Douglasville. .> .Lithia Springs.. ar... .Atlanta. ...lv stations. Lv Birmingham Lv Anniston.. Lv Atlanta ’.‘.'.*.’.1* “V**** Ar Macon ••••». Ar Jesup Ar Jacksonville’*** *’■*~~ Lv Jesup 4.40pm 6.57pm 10.45pm Ai Brunswick.***!?.*.*****-*.***■ *.**-* 12.55am ,5.20am 8.30am No. 38 6.00am a 10am 12.05pm 2.25pm 6.50pm 10.00pm J l8 oi" rri ? s ele £ant Pullman Drawing Room In 1 ! 0 " 38 Eullman Sleeping car Birm ingbam a; Atlanta and Atlanta J QUESTION ANSWERED. Yes, Augnst Flower still has the larg est-sale of any medicine in the civilized world. Yonr mothers and grandmoth ers never thought of using ant thing else for Indigestion or Biliousness Doctors were scarce, and they seldom heard cf Appendicitis, Nervous Prostra tion or Heart failure, eto. They used August Flower to clean ont the system and stop fermentation of undigested food, regulate the action of the liver, stimulate the nervous and organic ac tion of the system, and that is all they took when feeling dull and had with headaches and other aches. Yon only need a few doses of Green’s Angnst Flower, in liquid form, to make you satisfied there is nothing serions the matter with yon. Sample bottles at Knight Drug Company’s. The picture dealer should always be in an excellent frame of mind. Men can be cared privately and posi tively at home of all weakness and dis ease. Write for new free book. Dr. J. N. Hathaway, 221 South Broad Street, Atlanta, Ga. When a person is lost in thought, it is Atlanta ^.'Jacksonville 'probably owing tp his pandering mind. Ar Goldsboro.*_ at Washington.;./]. ' / Ar New York... Chn.tinilSleeping-car Rome to ^nattanooga. Chattannnon. to Fa STATIONS. Ly Atlanta.....;/./; Ar Charlotte. Ar Danville......;...... Ar Lynchburg.../. Ar Charlottesville. Ar Washington . Ar Baltimore,.. No. 38|No. 12.00n nil 1.50pm Ar Philadelphia.. Ar New Yorl [phia............ /.-j rk. 8.13pm 11.56pm 1.22pm 2.00am I 3.25pm 3.35araj 5.28pm 6.42am' 9.l‘5pm S. 00am 11.35pm 10.15am i 2.56am 12.43pm! 0.13am No. 38 “Washington and Southwestern Lim- ' ited” Solid Pullman Vestibule train Atlanta to New-'York, carryinir Pullican Sleeping car Atlanta to New York. Dining car Atlanta to Greensboro and Washington to New York., Pullman Library Observation car Atlanta to New York. _ • . No. 36 carries Pullman Drawing room Sleep ing car Atlanta to-New York, and Dining car Charlotte 10 Washington. ♦Daily. tDaily Except Sunday. §Sunday only. F. S. GANNON. 3d v.p. & G.M. Washington.D.C. J. M. Cl LI*. Traf Mi-r. Washington. D. C. Cleuuea and beautifies the flair. s to Bestarff-'u«j Hair to its Youthful Color. - s scalp diseases & hair lalT gQc.aBdyi.qyat Pru^gutij li MONEY SEND NO CUT THIS AD. OUT oil!. s, state your id height also inches around at boat and neck. ASTOXIXA. "Bears the /O l]* Kind You Have Always Bought Signatnro It’s difficult to convince a schoolboy that the days of Angnst are longer than those in Decembfr. < li 3® RELIEF IN SIX HOURS. Distressing Kidney and Bladder Dis ease relieved in six hours by “New Great South American Kidney Cure.” It is a great surprise on acconnt of its exceeding promptness in relieving pain in bladder, kidneys and back, -in male or female. Relieves retention of water almost immediately. If yon want qnick relief and care this is the remedy. Sold by E. Bradford, druggist, Cedartown. The spoon is an insignificant little utensil, yet it creates a stir in every household. DO YOU GET UP WITH A LAME BACK ? Kidney Trouble Makes You Miserable. Almost everybody who reads the news papers'is sure to know of the wonderful H M cures made by Dr Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and bladder remedy. It is the great medi cal triumph of the nine teenth century; dis covered after years ot scientific' research by Dr. Kilmer, the emi nent kidney and blad der specialist, and is wonderfully successful in -promptly curing lame back, kidney, bladder, uric acid trou bles and Bright's Disease, which is the worst form of kidney trouble. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root is not rec ommended for everything but If you have kid ney, liver or bladder trouble it will be found just the remedy you need. 11 has been tested in so many ways, in hospital work. In private practice, among the helpless too poor to pur chase relief and has proved so successful in every case that a special arrangement has been made by which all readers of this paper who have not already tried it, may have sample bottle sent free by mail, also a book telling more about Sw«T>p-Root and how to find out if y ou have kidney or bladder trouble. When -writingmention reading thi?generous offer in this paper and send your address to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bing. hMirton, N. Y. The rAklar fifty cent and Bcnu ot siunp^Boot lionar sizes are sold by all good druggists. ■'rue glass is tio linf," Earn Captain Trollope to Davenire and pne or two others Who stnc.-i near, while he looked up at the canvas soaring in sheets of light sallow into theyejlow sky. “We’ii ease her of her smell fails and that big main course before it comat on dark. What d’yon say?” ■ They answered by going to work. Tfrey clewed op the royals and fore top gallant safi. and took in some staysails, the gaff topsail and (heflying jib. Wil liam and Harry ferJetl the canvas of the foro. Weston t.nd Haukey made a very good .figure ut the main. Seven men then, got .upon tbo main yard and rolled up tho big saiJ, coaxing with a pleasant chorus the central cloths itilo a frigate- like hunt which Davrnirr, l.cgfl in the slings, slapped with <u’.uijration. This unusual labor of going aloft, of tossing upon footropes and lifting the dead weight of canvas had extinguished in the gentlemen onq and all the last lingering inspiration of champagne. They were now perfectly sober, tjuite sensible, disposed to be thoughtfnL “Is Masters dead, Trollope?” said Caldwell, speaking in a low, thick voice and looking unusually sullen and gloomy, while the motion of his dark eyes showed inward disquiet, “Shannon,” called Trollope, “go be low and see if Masters is dead. Cald' well’s in doubt and anxious about him.” "You killed him. Why don’t you go yourself ?” exclaimed Shannon, the faint smile with which he bod approached vanishing. - _ “Don’t say I killed him," snarled Caldwell. “I shot himinself defense,” “So you did,” said Trollope. He went with a face of aversion. The expression in his damp, pale, bine, pro truding eyes made him look sick. While be was absent the sun set. His going this evening had something of a strange, weird hurry about it. There was no solemn and majestic withdrawal of the trailing skirts of rod splendor. A thin, moist, yellow effulgence, like colored steam, filled the western sky and went quickly. A calm seemed to roll out of tho west over the brows of tho swell, polishing them. Tho topsails aloft gasped and beat, as though, being alive, they suffocated in the sadden stagna tion. “It was more like an eclipse than a sunset, ” said Davenire. “It will bo a black night,”exclaimed Trollope. “Look how the bend of the sky’s approached! And d’yon see those scalelike clonds up there?” he added, pointing np where a little before it was all faint bine. “He is stone dead,” said Shannon, coldly, stepping out of the companion- way. “It may comfort yon, Caldwell,” he exclaimed to thatgentlemar, who was leaning over the rail, “to know that be something n.ftrr. 9, Weston came Below for a draft. “Mark,” says-Weston, “I’ve been thinking over that key at the bottom of the sea. Suppose a fire—any sudden trouble—should we be able to force the door as quickly as Trollope fancies?” “Jjet.’s try an experiment,” said Davenire. - He locked the door of tho cabin in which Mrs, Heacocb liafi slept and then, putting bis foot pod shoulder pgainst it, strained. “Shall I help?” said Weston, “I can manage it,” answered Dave nire in a voice of snffocatiou, and at the insfant of his speech the door, driven by his irresistible muscle and weight of “beef,”.ps sapors soy, flew open. This satisfied the .two met)- They returned td thfl ipbjp, pnd while they drank a tum bler of sold gpog apiece they talked cheerfully of their prospects. On deck the sijepcp of tho fog black ened sea was soul subduing. It forced the men to speak in low voices, A Pongh Startled, a laugh would make an echo jq the invisible heights. Old splicers, old sponters, fica/S whose backs had been curved to tho shape cf phells by years of leaning over yards and kneejipg upon decks, would havo made nothing of such a pigbt as this. ThfiJ would have found nothing t,o .awe them in ft, They would harp pepn nothing terrifying in tbp soft green sbpets of fire which ran in folds from the ship’s sfijp eyery time she leaned, lighting r.p the fog .as fir.e lights up its smoke. But onr sinefriepds wgrp not .Tacks in a professional 6ensp, Tbey were educated ruen; they were gentle men bprit ppd bred. Two or three of them who claimed to bo did afterward, prove to bo “highly connected. ’’ They were m nt of sensibilities, of taste, cul tivation, Sojnp were yery well read. They were just tho Sfjrf.pf people to be moved by this yisioij of wPBtlsrfnl hashed blackness, in tba midst of wh.ieb they hnug floating on fire. “Where’s William?” said Trollope, who spt SPPB the foremost skylight smoking n pipe.. : Shannon roared ont the uafije. The man answered and came aft. “WhntdoyPB tbjnkof this weather?” said Trollope. “Why,” answered the map plowiy, "I can’t say that I’ye beep a-thinkipg of it at all. ” “Is there wind in it?” The man standing in the cuddy sheen turned bis bead about with n leisurely motion, as thpngb seeking for tho wind. “There’s no look pf wjnd,” "said he, “but I don’t say this mnpk ain’t going to draw cp presently and fall ,dpwn again in water. ” “Would yon advise that the ship should be left to lie under snob cnnvns as she now has?” "See yonr tawps’I halyards clear, and tbore'Jl be nothing to hurt, ” answered William. They pulled the b anket from his face. sleeps in beauty. AH the sins of his life have gone out of his face, and he’s the innocent son of a good mother. V “We must bury him, ” said Caldwell, who had turned quickly , on hearing Shannon. “At dark,” exclaimed Trollope, with determination. They had not long to wait for that, however. By 8 o’clock it was a dead calm'ami black as thunder with fog. The ocean was full of fire, and close alongside the mystio lights rose and swayed, dissolved, fluctuated, sheeting ont again in flashes brilliant ss distant lightning. These fires played in n hun dred shapes. You saw them through the steam of the fog, and the silence in that brooding blackness made them wonder ful and awful. The sheen of the skylights htmg in the thickness in a faint silver, tho bin nacle was a crown of light, and down upon the quarter deck the light stream ed in lines through the windows in 1 the cuddy front. The deep gloom, the occa sional long drawn yearning sob of water alongside, the sometimes strange cry falling from the invisible heights where the fanning canvas strained the sheaves or jarred a parrel, the sense of isolation, of infinite remoteness, of the.ship’s lit tleness as a speck in that black void, boundless as the imagination chose to make, filled the gentlemen with sensa tions of superstition. They were all agreed that Masters’ body ought to be sank at once, so Cavendish, Hankey and Weston went to work to bury it Softly entering the berth he lay in, they pnlled the blanket from his face. Ho looked like some fancy of manly beanty in marble. It was true’that death had smoothed tho sin out of his face. Tho light of the next world was on it, and he looked to be smiling at some finer sight than tongue could utter. The three stitched the poor fellow up hastily and did not omit to attach a heavy weight of iron to his feet. This done, they bore tbs dismal burden on deck : Caldwell stood near the main hatch, never imagining they would be so quick. When he saw them coming info the square of light in the cabin doer, he uttered a low_yeII of surprise and has tily walked away on to the poop, mut tering curses as he glanced behind him. "Overboard with itl” said Trollope, who was standing in the gangway. “But decently, boys. He was one of us.” They put him over feet first and let him go. Tho body dropped, with a soft splash, and vanished in a vivid flash of sea fire, whose track those who watch ed thought themselves able to follow to depth of fathoms. “It’s shuddering work,” said Han key. “It's gone beastly cold, liain’t it?” jEIe entered the cuddy and mixed a ass of brandy and water, which he drank Tit® time passed slowly. Some of the men sat down to cards, but they could not play. They lighted pipes and tigars and went Ob deck and mooned about the poop conversing in tones sub dued by the black silence that was all about them. They could not efimebow on this first night of piratic possession settle themselves down into true sea routine. From time to time the figure of one pr another might have been seen in a posture of drinking at the cuddy tpfile. PayegjjmgggjHtepf these, when, CHAPTER XXI. THE NAME OP THE ISLAND. The surveying brig Wellesley on a certain afternoon at 7 o’clock was on the port- tack, moving boldly to leeward on a tnnt bowline. The air was very light; the sea ran in wrinkles. The brig made no wake, but if yPB looked over the side you saw the water there polish ed by her corpulent bilge. Commander Boldock stepped out of the companion hatch and looked round him. Mr. Hardy and Mr. Matthews paced side by side tho very short soopo (' quarter deck, A number of seamen filled the round bows about the wind lass ends. Any one glaneipg through the flat skylight would have observed Miss Manscl at the little table reading. “There is no farther fall in the mer cury, ” said the commander, touching bis cop in response to that quarter deck civility or duty in the others. “What d’yon think it’s going to be, Mr. Mat thews?” said he in a voice whose deep complaining notes were now familiar to the mate of the Qneen. “The sky grows a bit shrouded, sir,” answered Mr. _ Matthews, looking straight aloft as a boy balances a pole on bis nese. . • •'' ' “And I observe that the horizon don’t look so far off,” said Mr. Hardy, leer ing at the ocean. “Tho barometer is like a woman’s temper,” said Boldock, beginning to ■mile and broadening his "smile as be continued, “whether it rises or whether it falls—though you can't gness what’s going to happen, you’re bound to know that something's coming along.” “Trne, sir,” said Mr. Hardy, with cheerful alacrity. ‘‘You were speaking of that gold, Mr. Matthews,” said the commander. “How was it stowed?” Mr. Matthews explained. “Will the scoundrels be able to find it?” “They’d come at it, sir, if they had to pick out the wool fleece by fleece. ” “A little abaft the main hatch! A strange place. I should have built a safe in tho Jazarette,” said Boldock. “It-was done by orders of tbo con signers of the gold and dust,” said Mr. Matthews. “I bejievo they are 13 in number. I heard so in Sydney.” “A good number, ” said Mr. Hardy dryly. “One’s a middle aged man who has been a sea captain. He was up at the diggiugs and coaxed ore enough out of tho soil to set up 40 merchant masters for life with a coisch and pair apiece and a footman behind their chair* at dinner, ge designed the compartment for the gold, panned file place—insisted upon tbatpiaoe^had pnregsppajtje nrgpijieptg with old Captain Benson, wfrq WPS fop stowing the gold in bis own private cabin.” “What!” cried the commander. “That some sailor should bo tempted aft with a jackknife to cut his throat! Think of trying to sleep with nigh £300,000 in gold finder your bed! I had thought better of Benson's jndgmppt, ” “That searaptain, whose name I rec- plleet is Bnmniell, is pretty nearly a crank as It js,” said Mr. Matthews. “Tho find so elevated his wit 3 that they passed ont cf his head. ” “Lifting his hair as they went, no fiopbt,” said Mr. Hardy, with a laugh and a lew. “At tho present moment,” continued Mr. Matthews, “he thinks himself a prodigiously rich man. The news’ll take long in fetching him. And mark me, gentlemen, Bnmmell on the mere mer its of flip first report will go raving S?d.” “I suppose, sir,” said Mr, Hardy, ad dressing Mr. Matthews, '‘that nothing was known among the passengers of those ten gentlemen who havo mu away with your ship?” -‘•‘IJothing that ever I got to hear,” answerefi tbo rnafe of tho Qneen. “The fact is .they composed nearly all the passengers. The rest were ladies and one or two geptlemen—one Dent, a colonial merchant, a bit pf p fool; one Storr, an auctioneer, going beme pfter a brief ca reer of bad bargains, so be told me.” While tbey thus conversed it darken- pd around, and a scale like a layer of clouds shaded the dimness that had gathered pver the njpsfheads. The brig was heading oil to tlie southward antj westward—that is, Bhe would have been beading off had sho teen making any way but leeway .through the water. But when it darkened and tbipkened, the wind sank oat ip p ' gasp pf air jn the topsails, the water flowed in oil and bet gan ‘to shine richly and wonderfully with fire.* The brig now lay sleeping in a maryelons silence that was fall of mystio light Commander" Boldock pnd Mr. Mat thews bad left tbedeek before the water brightened and (be sky blackened and were sitting at snpper'witb Miss Man- sel, when Mr. Hardy cajno half way down the steps to report that a Sense log had settled upon the sea “Well, sir,” says the commander, tpming )iis immense, red, kindly face round upon his mate, “suppose yon case her pf fier rpyals and flying jib and roll np yonr maipsail. if you don’t like the look of this fog, yog might ease her of the foro topgallant sail. ” “Aye, aye, sir,” answered the mate. “It’s a grease calm, and the water is like a bowl of snapdragon.” The commander smiled at Miss Man- sel, who inquired wbat Mr. Hardy meant? is a gooo sign,' ■ said Mr, Mattaews. “Who’s the navigator among them, do yon suppose?” “I should say, certainly. Captain Trollope, ” answered Mis3 Mansel in a voice of fatigue and weakness. “I might believe him that big villain with the silver chain,” said Mr; Mat thews. “But in any case,” says he, ad dressing the commander, “it may ask a trick of seamanship above their parts to carry, the bark to tho island Miss Man sel forgets the name of.” “I cannot see how they are going to dispose of ai) that weight of nuggets nud dust, "said Boldcck, whose crimson was deepening its dye, as though the in- fluence of the rum was net within, but shoue upon him in color through his tumbler without, "Taka a piece of gold worth 100 sovereigns—it’s a consider- able weight. Here, sir, we have ten men who are going to step asboro with plunder in precious oro io the valuo of £2S,000 apiece How will they do it?” Hr. Matthews shook his head grave ly. “They’ll not laud wbero there are customs, anyhow,” said ho. “Pity this part of their project didn’t reach yonr ecrs!”iie said to Miss Mansel. ' “I begin to think I see the fire in the water,” eait] flommijll'ler Boldock. Ho rose, niade fhc yqiiug |ady g bow and w'eul pn tWejr, Mr. Matthews fob lowed him: It wps pitch black with fog, a calm heavy and profound, as though the-son pud -moon were dead and tho earth" beginning to rot, and this image indeed was suggested by the fires in the sea, ! ‘By George, Hardy,” said the com mander, going to tho rail and I Peking ever, ”wp seem to be afloat oq (jig fo, flections of a blazing volcano." Mr. Hardy was hungry, was sick of the fog and tho sea flames, and being relieved went hastily into the cabin to eat and drink, Tho commander, after glancing at tho phantom glows alongr side, looked aloft and then around; then pulling ont a big meerschaum pipe, which he loaded with tobacco ont of a great fujr .parse, be struck a match,' which burned as steadily ip that ocean calm as a candle in a bedroom. Neither Ji( nor Mr. Matthews gave any further filed fo the wppflrong ghow of roaming and swimmiug lights and glows van, fishing in tho impenetrable blackness wi thin a biscuit toss. They were Beacon ed hands, pickled from toe to topmost bflir=nsed fg wonder at nothing unless it were some monstrous and amazing piracy such as this on board the Qneen, ha opening, so to speak, under their nose, pr the recovery from tho dead of a y< ung woman, floating to Boldoek’s Very cutwater, a sllent”but an ayeug.- in ▼ ucvirrfipless. • [ro Bv: CONTINUED.] rttT The Kind Yon Have Always Bought, and which has "been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of , anil has been made under his per sonal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and Substitutes arc but Ex- peiiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infonts and Children—Experience against Experiment. What is CASTOR IA Castoria Is a substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Harmless and Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic; substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys 'Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind. Colic. Jt relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep, The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend, genuine CASTORIA ALWAYS 'Bears the Signature cf The Kind You Hare Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years, THF CKwrauff compamk, murbav street, ncwyork city. L. T. Travis, Agent Sontbeyn B. B., Seliua, Ga., writes, “I can not say too much' in praise of One Minute Cou Cure. In my ease it worktd like' „ obarm,” The only harmless remedy that gives immofjiate resiflt. Cures coughs, colds, oropp. bronphitis, and all throat and lung troubles. IJ- Bradford. “He means that thero'g plenty pf phosphoric light in tho sea,” answered the commander, with a glance at the cabin windows as if he thought to catch there a sight of the brightness. “There is nothing more beautiful, said Miss MacseJ, “than tho fires of the OfH? You may have heard about SCOH’S EMULSION and have a vague notion that it. is cod-liver oil With its bad taste and smell and all its other repulsive fea tures. It is cod-liver oil, the purest and the best in the world, but made so palata ble that almost everybody can take it, Nearly ail children like it and ask for more- SCOTT’S EMULSION looks like cream; it nour ishes the wasted body of the baby, child or adult better than cream or any other food in existence. It bears about the same rela tion to other emulsions that cream does to milk. If you have had any experience with other so-called “just as good” preparations, you will find that thb is a fact The hypophosphites that are combined with the cod-liver oil jtive additional value to it became they tone up the nervous system and impart strength to theVhole body. 5oc.-and $1.00, all draggisfr. SCOTT & BOWNfc, Chemists, New York. Sho spoke with listlcssuess and was by no means yet recovered. She was still very pale, and when thonghtfnl an expression of fear—faint indeed, yet de terminable—haunted the lines of her month and the light of her eyes. Yet, on the whole, she looked amazingly well for one who not many hours before had been throttled, gagged and left to float upon the sea in n swoon. Her white throat bore certain dark marks, which were probably the impression of Mr. Caldwell’s fingers. Sho looked a very comfortable figure of a fine young wom an in her dressing gown. The white cap was off her head, her fiair was now thoroughly dried and rose thick upon her pretty bead under the" light pf the little ewaying lamp. The eyes in Com mander. Boldoek’s toasted face often roUed upon her, and Mr. Matthews, sit ting opposite, viewed her with the" kind ness of an old friend. The table, though furnished with tho homeliest of sea suppers, presented, nev ertheless, a hospitable appearance. There was room for g fourth, and then the cabin would have beeg comfortably full. The coarse white tablecloth shone with the salt it had been washed Jn as the sand of the beach shines with the froth that dries in it. It was furnished -with wine and rum in decanters, a ham and piece of pold salt beef. The .commander’s glass always seemed abonf half full. Mr. Matthews drank water barely col ored with rum, Miss ManseJ a glass of Boldoek’s Madeira. “Do yon think the boats will have outlived the weather this day, Captain Boldock?” said Miss Mansel. “Sailors were' distributed among them, I believe, ” answered the com mander, looking at Matthews. “I shall expect to hear they have been picked PP-” ■‘■‘It (nnfi.t be frightful to be ont in an open boat in the wide ocean in a dense bfiaok fog throughout a Jong night,” said Miss Mansel, shivering as she look ed np at the "skylight. “ Ypoug meii have stepped ashore off er snetj experiences,’•’ ‘said Air. Mat- thews, “and have "been .’nistakei] by their mothers for their own' grand.- fathers. ” •'it agrs so!” cried Miss Alansel. ,. “There’s a wrinklp in eyery hour, ” ■aid the male, “And Bpecters flyover (he boat iq the wind and dye your bate gray!” ex claimed the commander, langhing. ’’Poor Mrs, Peacock, who was going home for her health I" said Aliss Mansel. “Aye, ayel” esolaimed Alatthews, rolling his cye« Hp into pure whites. “But the Storrs will feel It most, He was a selfish little cuckoo was Mr. Storr. He’ll miss his warm bed, the lights of the cuddy, the poop to stretch his legs on." “Things are not np to tho hammer with him,” said tbo commander, “and I shouldn't be surprised if ho finds the party in the boat a slow lot. ” Ho emptied his glass and filled it again and immediately it was half fall. “I wish I could recollect the naans of the island;*'laid Mias Mansel. “Some--; at my tongue's end.*’ J u the alphabet of egotism there is brifi one letter. A CLEAR HEAD; gcod digestion; sound sleep; a fir e appetite and a ripe old age, are some of the results of th§ pse of Twit’s Ljyer Pills. A single dose will convince von of their wonderful effects and virtue. A Known Fact Afl absolute cure for sick head ache, dyspepsia, malaria, sour stomach, dizziness, constipation bilious fever, piles, torpid liver arid all kindred diseases. Twit’s Liver Pills The Coming of Baby brings joy or pain. It’s for the mother to decide. With good health and a strong womanly organism, motherhood but adds td a woman’s attractiveness.; McELREETS Wine of Gardui uukcaanay outcuuia uy auciiguiciuiig the vital organs. It fits a mother for baby’s coming. By revitalizing the nerve centres it has brought chubby^ prowing youngsters to thousands of (eak women who feared they were garreg, fit' pnrifigs,' Tjieals, regulates and strengthens,'and is goddfoyall women at all times, ‘ No druggist would be without it, Ji oo “ Fpradyicein cases requiring special directions, address, giving symptoms, * The Ladies’ Ad visory Department,' ’ Tfie Chattanooga Mediping gp., ghatr tenooga, Term,"". r . ww »1-U uv.ii nun iau VJ not have any children* I had a fine girl baby.” Dr. Fenner’s and Backache Cure. Siip§riqr to all others. For all Kidney, Bladder and Urinary Diseases. Compounded from the most efficient known remedial' agents, selected with great care from the markets of the World, and long and successfully used in private practice, i Especially adapted to the relief of Lame Back, fre-j quent, difficult and painful urination, (clearing it when red, cloudy or turbid sediment,) dropsy, rheu matism, heart disease, diabetes, bed-wetting, female^ weaknesses, (a veritable mother’s cordial.) Dr. Fenner’s Kidney and Backache Cure is offered as an unfailing Remedy in these diseases. Hp has devoted a lifetime to the treatment of Inveterate clironio i flisun*®* and has acquired a world-wide reputation for his success, oxtend ing his practice into overy State In the Union, indeed it is confidently believ- Pd Ws practice in tbesc diseases exceeds in a singlo year that of the ordi nary practitioner in a lifetime. His writings on medical questions have obtained universal approval. These facts are a guaranty to tb" afflicted In tho selection of this Remedy which makes so directly and speedily for cure. * Get of your dealer a circular with full description and certificates of some of the most remarkable cures ever, achieved by.medicine. FOR SALE BY J. C. KNIGHT SENB«US QjftiE DOLLAR examine it at jour ncurc'-t freight depot, and If ctly as represented, toe greatest raise jon ever saw anil far hi tler thin organs advertised by others at wore money, pay the freight Kent OUR PRICE S35.50, less H e #1.00deposit; or *34.50 and xy E PARLOR CEM leone of tho most DlJlUDLi: IjSD StTE£TEST TOSU> Instruments eurmade. From the illtisfrnUon iho n, which It engraved direct from a photofirraph you can form jlffiPWfienpaqiuUflU appearance. Haile from,olid quarter ' r 11 stops, as follows: Diapason, Principal, *“ Coupler, Treble Coupler, minds. Contains 5 o iklana, Heladla, Colette, Cremona; Bss - Sly Heeds, 1 8clof 37 Pare Sweet Mclcdia Beedx, isi k!y Krdllant Celeste Ileeds, 1 bet or24 Kleh Bellow Smooth i ilceds. 1 Set «t Pleasing Soft Melodious Principal ' i HE PARLOR GEM actioncbbslstsof tho tUd Sewell iteedsj vlilch are only used In the hlgh- tde Instruments: fitted p ith Hammond Cobplrrg and be best rubber cloth, 8-friy bottom Block and finest e iherin valves. THE PARLOR CEM -is furnished h 0-19x14 beveled plate French mirror,'nickel plated &Q.75 BQXRAm COAT AKEGUIAU $5.00 WATEIi- '♦O 7C PROOF MACKINTOSH Tor / 3 SEND NO MONEY. »>;d i r height nod welpL*, 1 ■ud. to 1 fo-fry cl cvrill serdy ou thi»"coat by exp’re nit c and ti v it on at your nearest exj-re.-s office, end If found exactly a» represm « d and the oo»t wonderful Kprfil firccy coat yon e«n buy for #3.0f«,*ftay the express airent OUR SPKm/> OITfclt PKII E, $2.75, and ' xnrnSflufjiTnni 1,late.-tidoo. 1 color Mb; f- 11 length, double breasted, per Velvet collar, faocy plaid lining, iterj'roof cev ed: earns. Suitable for ch It-In or O.rreost, ar.d guaranteed U.lTKbT VAI.rU ever offered by US or > Kor Vrrt C!utl * 8«»ple. ;f Srr.brMnj;Wtoup to 15 00, md Mado-tb^Sltivul'e Suit* and Over- •oaftiefrr -m in (0 tollft.co. write for Address, K & Co. 'Inc.) CH 11 (Sem tv Roeb ’.ch k Cc. trais and conditions of which If any pari (fit _ . sj^xlr It free of ebarge. Try It one month and we wl refund-your money it you are not perfectly sntls./cd.- -5i * tbeve orrra.ns.wJU tie sold at .$35,50. OKl>EI£ .roxcK. uojvirr delay* - OUR RELIABILITY IS ESTABLISHED express company lu Chicago. * We *' *700,000.00, occupy entire one of the largest burinets blocks In Chicago, and employ nearly 5.000 people in our own *'KLL OBGAXS AT *22. building; _ WK 81 PIA509, Cll&.OO 1 organ, piano and „ - - - .:;r-- - SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO. (Inc.), Fulton, Desplainesand Wayman Sis., CHICAGO, ILL aiaanuiui or, year freight agaat and freight charges. Machine weighs 120 average 75 cents for each BOO miles. QIVE I. , yonr off* home, and we will return your 415.50 any 'day yon satisfied. _We sell diWerftarites and grades of Sewing laehlaes °Tuocc a 2il. t u h * e will M0HTHS_TRIAL In *8.50, *10.00, *11.00, *12.00 and np. all fully described In our Free s-Wfoi Hachlae Catalogue, but $15.50 for this DROP DESK CABINET DL'RDiCK U the greatest value ever offered by any house. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS by nnknowo concerns ■w.m/v.jyooradver- ith varionaln variousnames, wit ilsementa,offering unkaown machine* unfit d see meats. Wri^ some fries* In Chic ago ar-1 lexrn who arc rHiabl. m THE BURDICK iS* !“S!ffS{R««T SOUP QUARTER SAWED DAK DF.ap ” * isoo bostcil and decorated cabinet finish fint casters, adjujjtaLIe treadle, geniiine'* head, positive four motion feed. Self DGN”J OEI/A.Y. (Soars, Roebuck A Co.are thopoimhiv reiiabl’e.—loiter V Address. SEARS. ROEBUCK & CO >atU!ied. ORDKIi TO-DAT. One.) Chicago. 111. COME T0 THE=f^ •oachlv reliable.—&dlto*b> TKUSSES, t5& _ 650. are celling tbs nrjOmtMt Tm**e* md at FACTORY flUCUv leas than ono-thj lii'fflSffWI Tni**T|f|u»Hwted ghovs. cut thl. :it and send to ns with Ot'R HVm F*«CI your Height, Weight, As#, how long you bars hew state your 8 rsmalli siso fftafo iptuiwd. whether mpiorg tstonre _ - - numbsrtnches seound the body onjB^Une rapture, say whether 1 times it j . tr whe . . and we will send either standing. If It Is Ml • pnfiwt .-stale at three tbweeowr prkejoti will return your money, g FQH giEETgyttCWi iptorels on right , trow to yoo with the vndn ft aa* sgoal U tf 11 Ws VANDIVER WHISKEY JOHN M. VANDIVER, Ho. 18 Broad St. (BjjgjsoTT FINE WHISKIES WINES PROMPT injorn bjafl, which