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UNDER TWO
FLAGS By ** OUIDA ”
lory ns you have always done, if you
will. What my friend was matters
nothing. I know well what he is and
how true a friend. As for mlladi. she
will be best out of your path. Victor.
Women! God, they are so fatal! Do
you know what brought me here? No?
As little as 1 know what brought you.
though we have been close comrades
all those years. Well, It was she! 1
was an artist. 1 had no money, 1 had
few friends, but I had youth. I had
ambition. 1 had. 1 think, genius till site
killed it. 1 loved my art with a great
love, and I was happy. Happy—until
she looked at me.” he pursued, while
his voice grew in feverish haste over
the words. "Why would she not let
me le? She had them all in her gold
yn nets—nobles and prim-os and poets
and soldiers: she swept them in
far and wide. She had her empire.
Why must she seek out a man who had
but his art and his youth and steal
these? It was the first year I touched
triumph that I saw her. They began
for the first time to speak of me. It
wad tiie little painting of Cigarette
as a child of the army that did it. Ah,
God. I thought myself already so fa
mous! Well, she sent for me to take
her picture, and I went. I went, and I
painted Dor as Cleoputra—l>y her wish.
Ah, it was a face for Cleopatra, the
eyes that burn your youth dead, the
lips that kiss your honor blind!
Through month on month my picture
grew, and my passion grew with it,
fanned by her hand. She knew that
never would a man paint her beauty
like one who gave his soul for the
price of success. Then came my re
ward. When the picture was done, her
fancy had changed. A light scorn, a
careless laugh, a touch of her fan on
iny check. Could I not understand?
Was I still such a child? Must I be
broken more harshly in to learn to
give place? That was aU, and at last
her lackey pushed me back with his
wand from her gates! She had killed
rue. She had struck my genius dead.
What of that? She had her beauty
eternal in the picture she needed, and
the whole city rang with her lovelinees
as they looked on my work. I have
never painted again. I came here.
What of that? An artist the lees,
then, the^ world dl<| not care. A life
the less soon, she’will noTcarJTeitner!”
Then as the words ended a great
wave of blood beat back his breath and
burst from the pent up torture of his
striving lungs and stained red the dark
and silken masses of his beard. His
comrade held him upward in his arms
and shouted loud for help. The great
luminous eyes of the French soldier
looked up at him through their mist
with tlie deep, fond gratitude that
beams In the eyes of a dog as it drops
down to die, knowing one touch and
one voice to thejast.
YioT forsake,” he murmured
brokenly, while his voice ebbed faint
ly away as the stream of his life flowed
! faster aud faster out. “It is over now
—so best! !f enly J could have seen
France once more—France”— Then a
deep sigh quivered through his lips,
his hand strove to close ou the hand of
his comrade, and his head fell, resting
on the flushed blossoms of the rose
buds of Provence. , <rt ,
i He was dead. v *
* * * *• • • •
Au hour later Cecil left the hospital,
seeing and hearing nothing of the gay
riot of the town about him, though the
folds of many colored silk and bunting
fluttered across the narrow Moorish
streets, and the whole of the populace
was swarming through them with the
.vivacious enjoyment of Paris mingling
with the stately picturesque life of
Arab habit and custom. In I-eon Ra
mon be bad found a man whom be had
loved and who bad loved him. And
now that the one lay dead a heavy,
weary sense of loneliness rested on the
ether. Passing one of the cafes, a fa
vorite resort of the officers of his own
regiment, he saw Cigarette, ller tunic
skirt was full of bonbons and crackers
that she was flinging down among the
crowd while she sang, stopping every
now and then to exchange some pas
sage of wit with them that made her
hearers scream with laughter, while
'behind her was a. throng of young of
ficers drinking champagne, eating ices
and smoking, echoing her songs and
her satires with enthusiastic voices
and stamps of their spurred
As he glanced upward she Ipoked liter
ally in a blaze of ‘luminance, arid the
wild, mellow tones of her voice ringing
out sounded like a mockery of that dy
ing bed beside which they had both so
late stood together. c -v^
“She has the playfulness of the
young leopard, and the cruelty,” he
thought, with a sense of disgust, for
getting that she did not know what
he knew and that if cigarette had
waited to laugh until and ?ath had passed
by she would have never laughed all
her life through in the battalions of
Africa.
She saw him as he went beneath
JKT balcony, and she sang all the
louder, she flung her sweetmeat mis
siles with the reckless force of a
Roman carnivalist, she launched bolts
of tenfold more audacious raillery at
the delighted mob below. Cigarette
was a good soldier when she was
wounded', she wound her scarf round
the nerve that ached and only laughed
the gayer. , , 4
Aud he did her that Injustice which
the best among os are apt to do {a
f those whom \Vo do not feel interest
| enough in to study with that closeness
i which can alone give comprehension
of the intricate and complex rebus, so
i faintly sketched, so marvelously in
volved, of human nature.
S He thought her a little leopard In
her vivacious play and her inborn
i bloodthirstiness. Well, the little leop
! aid of France played recklessly
i enough that evening. Algiers was en
fete, and Cigarette was sparkling over
the whole of the town like a humming
bird or a firefly— here, there and every
where. She played through more than
half the night the agile, bounding,
graceful play of the young leopard to
which he had likened her and with a
quick punishment from her velvet
sheathed talons if any durst offend
her. Then when the dawn was nigh,
ieopardllke, the little one sought her
den.
"The chateau of Cigarette” was a
; standing jest of the army, for none
! was ever allowed to follow her thither
I or to behold the interior of her fortress,
and one overventur-ous spahis, scaling
| the ramparts, bad been rewarded with
, so hot a deluge of lentil soup from a
| boiling casserole poured on his head
I from above that he had beaten a hasty
and ignominious retreat. “The chateau
of Cigarette” was neither more nor less
than a couple of garrets high in the
air in an old Moorish house in an old
Moorish court, decayed, silent, poverty
struck. Up a long and winding rick
ety stair Cigarette approached her cas
tle and opened her door. There was a
dim oil wick burning. The garret was
large and as clean as a palace could
be. Its occupants were various and
all sound asleep except one, who,
rough and hard and small and three
legged, limped up to her and rubbed a
little bullet bead against her lovingly.
“Bouffarick, little Bouffarick,” re
turned Cigarette caressingly in a whis
per, and Bouffarick, content, limped
back to a nest of hay, being a little
wiry dog that had lost a log in one of
the famous battles of Oran and lain in
Its dead master’s breast through three
days and nights on the field. Cigarette,
shading the lamp with one hand, glanc
ed round on her family. They had all
histories— hlstoriesTn the French army,
y hlch was the only history she consid
ered or Wy" Import to the universe.
There was a raven perched high, by
name Yole-qul-Veut. He was a noted
character among the zouaves and had
made many a campaign riding on his
owner's bayonet. He loved a combat
and was specially famed for screaming
‘‘Tue, tue, tue!” all over a battlefield.
- .
Cigarette glanced round on her family.
He was very gray now, and the
touave’s bones had long bleached on
the edge of the desert.
There was a big white cat curled in
a ball that had been the darling of a
Triuglo and had traveled all over north
Africa on the top of his mule's back
seven seasons thfough. In the eighth
the Triuglo was picked off by a flying
shot.
There were little Bouffarick and three
other brother dogs of equal celebrity,
one in especial-, that had been brought
from Chalons, In defiance of the regular
tions. Inside the drum of his regiment
and had been wounded a dozen times,
ulways seeking the hottest heat of the
skirmish. And there was, besides these,
1 sleeping serene|£jOft # .strawjmlljgsse,
) a "very old man with a snowy beard
and a head fit for Gerome to give to an
Abraham.
Avery old man—one who had been
a conscript in the hand# of young
France atjd marched frepi Jiis Pyre
nean village to the battle tramp of the
aud charged with the
children of Paris across the plains' of
Gemappos, who had known the pas
sage of the Alps and lifted the long
| curls from the dead brow of Desaix
| at Marengo and seen in the sultry noon
day dust of a glorious summer the
1 guard march into Paris, while the peo
ple lagghed and. wept with joy, surg
-1 ing like the mighty sea around one
! pale, frail form, so young by years, 60
absolute by genius.
Avery old man, long broken with
; poverty, with pain, with bereavement,
With extreme old age, alone save for
the little Friend of the Flag, who for
four years had kept him on the pro
| cceds of her wine trade in this Moorish
1 attic, tending him herself when in
■ (own, taking heed that he should want
I for nothing when she was campaign
! Ing. In her Sight the survivor of the
army of Italy was sacred: sacred the
I eyes which, when full of light, had
seen the sun glitter on the breastplates
of the hussars of Murat, the dragoons
of Ivellermau, the cuirassiers of Mil
haud; sacred the hand which, when
| nervous with youth, had borne the
j standard of the republic victorious
| against the patlvored Teuton in the
| Thermopylae of Champagne; sacred the
ears which, when quick to hear, had
heard the thunder of Areola, of Lodi,
j of Rlwil and, übove even the tempest
I of war. the clear voice of Napoleon.
Cigarette had a religion of her own
I and followed it more closely than most
\ disci tiles follow other creeds.
CHAPTER X.
E" ’ IaRLY that morning when the
snowy 'cloud of pigeons was
S' circling down to take its daily
; alms from Cigarette where
her bright brown face looked out
from the lattice hole Cecil, with so die
of the rough riders of his regiment,
was sent far into the interior to
bring In a string of colts, bought of a
friendly desert tribe and destined to be
shipped to France, for the Imperial
Haras. The mission took two days.
Early ou the third day they returned
with the string of wild young horses,
that It had taken not a little exertion
aud address to conduct successfully
through the country into Algiers. Chn
teaiyoy was himself present when the
colts were taken into the stable yard,
and himself Inquired, without the me
dium of any third person, the whole
details of the sale and of the transit.
It was Impossible, with all his Inclina
tion, to find any fault cither with the
execution of the errand or with the
brief, respectful answers by which the
corporal replied to his rapid and im
perious cross questionings; hence th 6
inspection passed off peaceably. As
the marquis turned on his heel, how
ever, he paused a moment.
“Victor!”
“My commander?”
“I have not forgotten your insolence
with those Ivory toys, but the prin
cess herself has deigned to solicit that
it shall be passed over unpunished.
She cannot, of course, yield to your im
pertinent request to remain also un
paid for them. I charged myself with
the fulfillment of her wishes. You de
serve the lasb, but since miladi herself
Is lenient enough to pardon you you
are to take this instead. Hold your
hand, sir!”
Cecil put I|Mut his hand. He expected
to receive a heavy blow from his com
mander's saber that possibly might
break the wrist. These little trifles
were common in Africa.
Instead a handful of napoleons was
laid ou his open palm. Chateauroy
knew the gold would sting more than
the blow.
For the moment Cecil had but one Im
pulse—to dash the pieces In the giver’s
face. In time to restrain the impulse
he caught sight of the wild, eager ha
tred gleaming in the eyes of Rake, of
Petit Picpon, or a score of others who
loved him and cursed their colonel and
would at one signal from him have
sheathed their swords in the mighty
frame of the marquis, though they
should have been shot down the next
moment themselves for the murder.
The warning of Cigarette came to his
memory. His hand clasped the gold.
He gave the salute calmly as Chateau
roy swung himself away, and, his hour
of liberty being come, be went slowly
out of the great court, with the hand
ful of napoleons thrust in the folds of
his sash.
Rather unconsciously than by pre
meditation his steps turned through
the streets that led to his old familiar
haunt, the As du Pique, and, dropping
down on a bench under the awning,
he asked for a draft of water. It was
brought him at once, the hostess, a
quick, brown, little woman from Paris,
whom the lovers of Eugene Sue called
Rigolette, adding of her own accord a
lump of ice and a slice or two of lemon,
for which she vivaciously refused pay
ment, though generosity was by no
means her cardinal virtue. He did not
look at the newspapers she offered
him, but sat gazing out from the tawny
awning, like the sail of a Neapolitan
felucca, down the checkered shadows
and the many colored masses of the
little, crooked, rambling, semibarbaric
alley. He was thinking of the napo
leons in his sash and of the promise
he had pledged to Cigarette. That he
would keep it he was resolved. Yet a
weariness, a bitterness, he had never
known in the excitement of active
service came on him. brought by this
sting of insult from the fair hand of an
aristocrat.
There was absolutely no hope pos
sible in his future. The uttermost that
could ever come to him would be a
grade something higher In the army
that now enrolled him—tie gift of the
cross or a post In the bureau. Al
gerine warfare was not like the cam
paign of the armies of Italy or the
Rhine, and there was no Napoleon
her 9 to toggery with unerring omnis
cience a leader’s genius under the uni
form of a common trooper. The heavy
folds of a Bedouin’s baik, brushing the
papers off the bench, broke the thread
of his musings. As he stooped for
them, he saw that one was an English
journal some weeks old. His own
name caught his eye—the name buried
so utterly, whose utterance in the
thelk’s tent had struck him like a dag
ger’s thrust:
THE ROYALLIEU SUCCESSION. k
We regret to learn that the Right Hon. Viscount
Royallieu, who so lately succeeded to the family
title as his fathers death, has expired at.Men
tone, whither his health had induced him to go
some months previous. The late lord was unmar
ried. His next brother was, it will be remem
bered, many years ago killed on a southern rail-'
way. The title, therefore, now falls to the third
and only remaining son, the Hon. Berkeley Cecil,
who, having lately inherited considerable prop
erties from a distant relative, will, we believe,
revive all the old glories of this peerage, which
have, from a variety of causes, lost somewiiat of
tbeir anriant brilliance.
1. ITO XX CONTINUES. 1
LYNCH Li
PREVAILED.
Mother. Daughter and Son, Colored,
Strung Up-
MURDERED MISSISSIPPI COUPLE
The Mob Would Not Listen to Law
and Order Appeals by Citizens.
Carrollton, Miss., the Scene.
Carrollton, Miss , Aug. i. —The
murder of Mr. and Mrs. Taliaferro
culminated this evening at 5 o’clock
in the lynching of Betsie McCray,
her son, Belfield McCray, and
daughter, Ida McCray, ail coljred.
The mob was composed of 500
white citizens of Carroll county,
who marched to the jail in order,
demanded the keys from Jailer
Duke, proceeded to the cells of the
unfortunate negroes, bound them
by the neck and hands and carried
them to the corporate limits of
town, where they hung them to a
tree by the public roadside and
riddled their bodies with bullets.
The mob resisted the earnest ap
peals of Judge W. F. Stephens and
Hon. W. S. Hill, who stood on the
steps of the jail and appealed to
the mob in the name of law and
order. They even followed the
mob to the cell doors with their
arms around the necks of the lead
ers, pleading to let the law take
its course, but with no effect.
Ida McCray confessed to the
knowledge of the murder and sta
ted that her mother, Betsie, aud
brother, Belfield, helped commit
the murder. She furthei implica
ted others who will probably meet
a like fate. Betsie McCray refused
to make any statement.
Gov. A. H. Longino arrived on
the scene by special train from
Jackson just a few minutes after
the hanging. He addressed a
large and attentive audience*at the
court house, impressing upon them
the duty of their citizenship and
obedience to law and order.
The best citizens of the county,
among whom were W. F. Stephens,
Hon. W. S. Hill, district attorney;
Senator A. H. George, L. M.
Southworth and others, labored un
tiringly with the excited mob all
during the day to allow the law to
take its course, but without avail.
FOOD CHANGED TO POISON.
Putrefying food in the intestines
produces effects like those of arse
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expel the poisons from clogged
bowels, gently, easily but surely,
curing Constipation, Biliousness,
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Under the Starlight-
Washington Star.
‘’Ethel,” he said, in that soft,
cooing tone which sounds so fool
ish to the disinterested by-stander,
“I think that there is no treasure
to equal a true woman’s affec
tion.”
“And I,” she answered, “believe
that no riches can compare to the
love of an honest man.”
With all his sentiment, he was a
man of business and without hesi
tation he rejoined:
“Miss Smithers, does it not oc
cur to you that we have enough
capital at our disposal to organize
a trust?”
The laws of health require that
the bowels move once each day
one of the penalties of this
law is piles. Keep your bowels
regular by taking a dose of Cham
berlain’s Stomach and Liver Tab;
lets when necessary and you will
never have that severe punishment
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For sale by Hall and Grdene.
Genuine stamped C. C. C. Never sold In bulk.
Beware of the dealer who tries to sell
“something just as good.” g
' Slops the Cough and Works off
the Cold.
Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tablets
cure a cold in one day. No Cure, No
■ pay. Price 25 cents.
A Sustaining Diet.
i These are the enervating davs, when,
ass >tnebodv has said, nun drop by L he
sunstroke as If the Day of Fire had
dawned. They are fraught with dan
ger to people whose systems are poorly
sustained; and this leads us to say, in
the interest of tiie less robust of our
readers, that the hill effect of Hood’s
Sarsaparilla is such as to suggest the
propriety of calling this medicine some
thing besides a blood purifier and tonic,
—say, a sustaining diet. It makes it
much easier to bear the heat, assures
refreshing sleep, and will, without any
doubt, avert much sickness at this time
of year
A lame shoulder is usually
caused by rheumatism of the mus
cles, and may be cured by a few
applications of Chamberlain’s Pain
Balm. For sale by Hall and
Greene.
Hood's Sarsaparilla builds up a brok
en down system. It be gins its work
right, that, is, on the blood.
Dr. Cady’s Condition Powder
are just what a horse needs when
in bad condition. Tonic, blood pur
ifier and vermifuge. They are not
food but medicine and the best in
use to put a horse in pri*je eondl.
tion. Price 2 cents per package
For sale by alldruggists.
Ladies Can Wear Shoes.
One size smaller after usjng Allen’s
Foot-Ease, a powder to be slaken into
tiie shoes. Jt makes tight or new shoes
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I discovery of the age. Cures and pre
vents swollen feet, blisters, callous and
sore spots. Allen’s Foot-Ease is a cer
tain cure for s veating, hot. aching feet.
At all druggists and shoe stores, 25c
Trial package Free bv mail. Address,
Allen S, Olmsted, Le Roy. N. Y.
‘‘Cleanliness is next to godli
ness.” Dirt and depravity go hand
in hand. This is just as true of
the inside of the boefy as the out
side. Constipation clogs the body
and clouds the mind, Constipa
tion means that corruption is breed
ing in the body, poisoning the
blood with its foul emanations, be
fogging the brain with its tainted
exhalations. Constipation is the
beginning of more diseases than,
perhaps, any other single disorder.
The consequences of constipation
are legion. Headache, pain in the
side, shortness of breath, undue
fullness after eating, coldness of
the extremities, nervousness, inde
cision, lassitude, dizziness, sallovv
ness, flatulence, and a score of oth
er ailments are directly caused by
constipation. Cure constipation
and you cure its consequences.
The quickest cure of this evil is
obtained by the use of Dr. Pierce’s
Pleasant Pellets. They are small
in size but wonderful in result.
They cure permanently. They
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The use of them does not beget the
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Send 21 one-cent stamps, the ex
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Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Med
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work contains 1008 pages and 700
illustrations. For 31 stamps it can
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Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo,
N. Y.
Entertaining Fiction.
One advantage of reading a se
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grants to settle in territory contiguous
to its lines, and to engage the attention
of capitalists seeking Manufacturing
Sites or Mining Property. It therefore
solicits the support, the ro-operation
and the assistance of the people ot every
county through which its lines pass.
The management earnestly requests
that all persons who have farms for sale
or lease, those who have timbered
lands, water powers or mirieral lands
tor sale, will send a brief description ot
the same to the railroad agent nearest
them, giving the prices and terms of
sale. The prices must correspond with
the prices asked ot local buyers. The
management does not propose to aid in
selling lands to immigrants at exorbi
tant or speculative prices.
Large tracts suitable forcoloniza
at low prices, are espe daily wanteAgt.
J. B. Killibrew,
Industrial and Commercial
H. F. Smith,
Traffic Manager,
Nashville, Tenn.
Evßry Woman
■SJtW is interested and should know
rn'S\ Sg> iWtUUll\\ about the wonderful
1 MARVEL Whirling Spray
w9S*4S The new Vigin.l Syrtasv. Jnjec/
vs- St. tion and /Suction. Beit—saf
est—Most Convenient.
It Ueuue. Innuatl*
Ask your druggist for It. star. ML
i£be'-anpot eupi'ly the \iWF' , SS,
MABI EL, accept no Nr To ■ -Arm,—*
other, but *end stamp for II- NN,
lustrated book-.rslrd.lt give* m /
full particulars and directions In- dd/’ f rn
valuable to ladles. MARVEL CO., &/*&.;, M
Room Times Udg.,.\ew York. Xj*L:.!bW
A Wonderful Discovery.
The last quarter of a centurv -coords
many wonderful discoveries in meuieine,
but none that have accomplished more for
humanity than that sterling old household
remedy, Browns’ Iron Bitters. It seems to
contain the very elements of good health,
and neither man, woman or child can take
it without deriving the greatest benent.
i Browns’Jeon Bitters is sold by all dealer*.