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QUARANTINE ISLAND.
* BV WALTER BESANT.
(Copyright, lE9I, by the Authors’ Alliance.]
CHAPTER L
4><l "V he cried, pas-
I sionately, “you
drew me on;
I you led me to
f believe that you
>1 cared for me;
you encouraged
V A me - What, can
- a - irl £° on as
* Vl , Jx.' you have done
w’ithout mean
in <? anything?
MM* Uoes a ffirl al *
v \ Vhv Val ' *°' v a man
T '*’ press her hand
—to keep her
hand—without meaning anything? Un
less these things mean nothing you are
the most heartless girl in the whole
world —yes —! say, the coldest, the most
treacherous, the most heartless!”
It was evening and moonlight, a soft
and delicious night in September. The
waves lapped gently at their feet; the
warm breezes played upon their faces;
the moon shone upon them; an evening
wholly unfit for such a royal rage as
this young gentleman—two-and-twenty
is still young—to exhibit. He walked
about on the parade which was deserted
except for this solitary pair, gesticulat
ing, waving his arms, mad with the
madness of wounded love.
She sat on one of the seaside benches,
her hands clasped, her head bent. He
went on. He recalled the day when
first they met; he reminded her of the
many ways in which she led him
on to believe that she cared for him.
He accused her of making him love her
in order to laugh at him. When he
could find nothing more to say he flung
himself upon the bench, but on the
oTtier end of it, and crossed his arms
and dropped his head upon them. S®
that there were two on the bench, one
at either end, and both with their heads
dropped—a pretty picture, in the moon
light, of a lover's quarrel. Hut this
was worse than a lover’s quarrel. It
was the end of everything, for the girl
was engaged to another man.
She rose. If he had been looking up
he would have seen that there were
tears in her eyes and on her cheek.
“Mr. Fernie,” she stammered, timid
ly, “I suppose there is nothing more to
say. I am, no doubt, all that you have
called me. lam heartless. I have led
you on. Well —but I did not know—
how could I tell—that you were taking
things so seriously? How can you be so
angry just because I can’t marry
you? One girl is no better than an
other, There'are*plenty of girls in the
world. I thought you liked me and I—
but what is the use of talking? I am
heartless and cold—l am treacherous
and vain and cruel—and —and —won’t
you shake hands with me once more—
Claude —before we part?”
“No, I will never shake hands with you
again—never—never, by heavens! Noth
ing that could happen now would ever
make me shake hands with you again.
I hate you—l loathe you—l shudder at
the sight of you—l could never forgive
you—never. You have ruined my life.
Shake hands with you? Who but a
heartless and Worthless woman could
propose such a thing?”
“Good-by then, Claude,” she said.
“Perhaps when we meet again you will
be more ready to forgive me. Oh!” she
HE RECALLED THE DAY WHEN FIRST
THEY MET.
laughed. “It is so silly that a man like
you, a great, strong, clever, handsome
man, should be so foolish over a girll
Besides, you ought to know that a girl
can’t have things her own way always.
Good-by, Claude. Won’t you shake
hands?”
She laid her hand on his shoulder
just touched it—turned —and fled.
CHAPTER IL
She had not far to go. The villa
where she lived was within five min
utes’ walk. She ran in and found her
mother alone in the drawing-room.
"My dear,” the mother said, irrita
bly, “I wish to goodness you wouldn’t
run out after dinner. TWre’s Sir Wil
liam in the dining-room still.”
“Let him stay there, mother dear,
ne’ll drink up all the wine and go to
sleep, perhaps, and then we shall be rid
of him.”
"Go in, Florence, and bring him out.
It isn’t good for him, at his age, to
drink so much.”
“Let the servants go,” the girl re
plied, rebellious.
“My dear —your own accepted lover.
Dave you nd right feelings? Ohl Flor
ence, and when I am so ill, and you
know —1 told you—”
“A woman should not marry her
grandfather. I’ve had more than
enough of him to-day already. Yon
made me promise to marry him. Until
l do marry him he may amuse himself.
As soon as we are married I shall fill
up all the decanters and keep him full
and encourage him to drink as ipuch aa
he possibly can.”
“My dear, are you mad?”
“Oh! no, 1 believe I have only just
come to my senses. Mad? No. I have
Deen mad —now—when it is too late —I
gsr*. wrljotj If lei fAQ late——hen I
have lust understood what I have done.”
“Nonsense, child, you are doing what
every girl does. You have accepted the
hand of an old men who can give you a
fine position and a great income and
every kind of luxury. What more can
a girl desire? When I die—you know
already—there will be nothing—noth
ing at all for you. Marriage is your
only chance.”
At this moment the door opened and
Sir William himself appeared. He was
not, although a man so rich and there
fore so desirable, quite a nice old man
to look at; not quite such an old man
as a girl would fall in love with at first
sight; perhaps under the surface were
unsuspected virtues by the dozen. He
was short and fat; his hair was white;
his face was red; he had great white
eyebrows; he had thick lips; his eyes
rolled unstcßjlily and his shoulders
lurched; he had taken more wine than
is good for a man of seventy.
He held out both hands and lurched
forward. “Florenshe,” he said thiakly,
“WHATSH MATTER WITH THE GIRL?”
“let us sit down together somewhere,
letsh talk, my dear.”
The girl slipped from the proffered
hands and fled from the room.
“Whatsh matter with the girl?” said
Sir William.
CHAPTER 111.
Out at sea —all by itself—somewhere
about thirty miles from a certain good
sized island in a certaih ocean there lies
another little island —an eyot —a mile
long and half a mile broad. It is a
coral islet; the coral reef stretches out
all round it except in one or two places
where the rocks shelve, suddenly mak
ing it possible for a ship to anchor
there. The islet is Cat, but all round it
runs a kind of natural sea wall about
two feet high and as many broad; be
hind it, on the side which the wall pro
tects from the wind, is a little grove of
low-stunted trees, the name of which
the successive tenants of the island
were never curious to ascertain. The
area protected by the sea- wall, as lotV
as the sea level, was covered all over
with low, rank grass. At the north end
of theislct a curious round rock exactly
like a martello tower, but rather higher,
rose out of the water, separated from
the sea wall by twenty or thirty feet of
deep water, dark blue, transparent,
sometimes rolling and rushing and
tearing at the sides of the rock, some
times gently lifting the seaweed that
clung to the sides. Rouad the top of
the rock flew, screaming, all the year
round, the sea birds. Far away in the
horizon like a little cloud, one could
see land; it was the larger island to
which this place belonged. At the
south end was a lighthouse, built just
like ail lighthouses with low, white
buildings at its foot and a flagstaff and
an inclosure which was a feeble at
tempt at a flower garden. Half a mile
from the lighthouse where the sea wall
broadened into a wide level space there
was a wooden house of four rooms —
dining-room, salon and two bedrooms.
It was a low house provided with a
veranda on either side; the windows
had no glass in them but thick shutters
in case of hurricanes. There were doors
to the rooms, but they were never shut.
Nothing was shut or locked up or pro
tected. On the land side there was a
garden in which roses—a small red rose
—grew in quantities and a few English
flowers; the elephant creeper with its
immense leaves clambered up the veran
da poles and over the roof; there
was a small plot of ground planted
with pineapples, and a solitary banana
tree stood under the protection of the
house, its leaves blown to shreds, its
head bowed down.
Beyond the garden was a collection
of three or four huts where lived the
Indian servants and their families.
The residents of this retreat —this se
cluded earthly paradise—were their serv
ants withtheir wives and children; the
three lighthouse men, who messed to
gether, and the captain, governor or
commander in chief, who lived in the
house all by himself because he had no
wife or family.
Now, the remarkable thing about this
island is that, although it is so far
away from any other inhabited
place, and although it is so small,
the human occupants number many
thousands. With the exception of the
people above named, these thousands
want nothing, neither food nor drink.
They lie side by side under the rank
grass, without headstones or even
graves to mark their place; without a
register or record of their departure;
without coffins. There they lie, sailors,
soldiers, coolies, negroes, forgotten and
lost, as much as if they had never been
bom. And if their work lives after
them nobody knows what that work is.
They belong to the vast army of the
anonymous. Poor anonymous! They
no an me woi *c; they grow our corn
and breed our sheep; they make and
mend for us; they build up our lives for
us; we never know them, nor thank
them, nor think of them; ell over the
world they work for their far-off
brethren, and when one dies we know
not because another takes his place.
And at the last a mound of green grass
or even nothing but an undistinguished
slip of ground.
Here lay side by side, the Anonymous
—thousands of them. Did I say they
were forgotten? Not quite. They are
reraeraliered by some. At sunset the
Indian women and the children retreat
to their huts and stay there till sunrise
next morning. They dare not so much
as look outside the door, because the
place is crowded with white, shivering,
sheeted ghosts. Speak to one of these
women; she will point out to you, trem
bling, one, two, half a dozen ghosts. It
is true that the dull eye of the English
man can see nothing. She sees them—
distinguishes them —one from the other
—she can see them every night—yet she
can never overcome her terror. The
governor or captain or commander in
chief for his part sees nothing. He
sleeps in his house quite aloue, with his
cat and his dog, windows and doors
wide open and has no fears of any
ghost. If he felt any fear he would be
surrounded and pestered to death every
night with multitudes of ghosts. Hut he
fears nothing. He is a doctor, you see,
and the doctor never yet was afraid of
ghosts.
How did they come here, this regi
ment of dead men? In several ways;
cholera accounts for most; yellow fever
for some; other fevers for some, but for
most cholera was the destroyer. Be
cause, you see,*this is Quarantine island.
If a ship has cholera or any other infec
tious disease on board it cannot touch
at the island, close by which is a great
place for trade and has every year a
quantity of ships calling. The infected
ship has to betake herself to Quarantine
island, where her people are landed and
where they stay until she has a clean
bill, and that sometimes is not until the
greater part of her people have ex
changed their berths on board for per
manent lodgings ashore. Now you un
derstand. The place is a great cemete
ry; it lies under the hot sun of the trop
ics; the sky is always blue; the sun is
always hot; it is girdled by the sea; it
is always silent, for the Indian chil
dren do not laugh or shout and the In
dian women are too much awed
by the presence of the dead to wrangle
—always silent, save for the crying of
the sea birds on the rock. There are no
letters, no newspapers, no friends, no
duties —none, save when a ship puts in,
and then for the doctor —farewell rest,
farewell sleep, until the bill of health
is clean. Once a fortnight or so, if the
weather permits, and if the communi
cations are open—that is, if there is no
ship there —a boat arrives from the big
island with rations and letters and
supplies. Sometimes a visitor comes, but
not often, because, should an infected
ship put in, he would have to stay
as long as the ship. A quiet,
peaceful, monotonous life for one who
is weary of the world or for a hermit,
and as good as the top of a pillar for
silence and for meditation.
1 CONTINUED.]
THE GERMAN FARMER-
Immigrants of the Kind Georgia Wishes to
Come South.
[Detroit Free Press.]
“A person who has studied agri
cultural matters abroad is impress
ed with many things about our
farmers,” remarked a citizen of
Saginaw. “We have a few frugal
German farmers in a little com
munity near Saginaw and no mat
ter how hard the times or what
great depression there may he in
agricultural interests they always
seem to have plenty and to spare.
What is Hie reasdn ? This kind of
a farmer does not cover his entire
crop with one commodity, but
plants and sows all kinds of grain
and vegetables. When the time
comes you will see him driving to
town with his little load of miscel
laneous truck, which he can easily
sell. Then all the time he is rais
ing what he needs for daily con
sumption. He is never hard up.
This is the type of a German far
mer. Many of our farmers are too
ambitious. They want to raise a
great quantity of wheat and corn.
There is plenty of wheat and corn
on the market, for times haV'e
changed since we ceased to supply
the foreign market, and the result
is that he does not get his price for
his large crop, and complains that
there is nothing in farming. Any
one who has traveled through Ger
many and France realizes how
much can be gotten out of a small
piece of ground. The farmer man
ages to live where the conditions
are ten-fold less tavorable than
they are in this country. The time
is coming when different methods
will have to be employed by many
farmers here, if they expect to keep
clear of debt.”
When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria.
When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria.
When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria.
When she had Children, she gave them Castoria.
Headache,
Indigestion, Billiousness,
Dyspepsia,
And all Stomach Troubles are cured by
P. P. P.
[Prickly Ash, Poke Root and Potas
sium],
Rheumatism is cured by P. P. P.
Pains and aches in the back, shoulders,
knees, ankles and wrists are all attacked
and conqured by P. P. P. This great
medicine, by its blood-cleansing proper
ties, builds up and strengthens the
whole body.
Nothing is so efficacious as P. P. P., at
this season, and for toning up, invigora
ting, and as a strengthener and appiti
zer take P. P. P. It throws oft the mal
aria and puts you in good condition.
Thu ’n Siimmor Vlon
tiv >u*uuiiiivi :j:tin,
Record.]
Writing from a Wisconsin resort,
a Chicago girl chats thus: You
ought to see the ’94 summer man;
he’s a sight! At least, the Lake I)e
--lavan summer man is, and I pre
sume they’re all more or less alike.
If I can purchase a nice specimen
I’ll bring him back with me —that
is, if you’d preter him instead of a
silver belt buckle I promised you.
He wears white duck trousers, a
funny little coal, a hat big enough
to house all the children of the
celebrated lady who lived in a shoe.
But his garments are not so remark
able as the creature himself. He is
so small that you look over his
head when you dance with him,
and his waist is as trim as that of a
dressmaker’s dummy. I think that
a pair of him would make a lovely
set of candelabra for the mantel,
and one of him would look simply
stunning perched on the side of
your new Spanish turban. Some
of them really aren’t worth express
ing home, my dear. Some are
freckled and use perfumery and say
“Y-aa-s,” but, as I said before. If I
can find a good sample summer
man I’ll buy him. His hair is usu
ally nice, and he could be used for
a chimney-cleaner if you don’t want
him for a table ornament or a watch
charm.
But, really, I don’t wonder that
he’s thin. The poor dear is simply
hunted to death, The girls just
mob him, and the way that they
ock at his heels reminds one of a
drove of street waifs tagging after
a piano-organ. I hate the design
ing creatures —the girls, I mean—
and hope that I’ll haye sense enough
to constitute a flock of one that does
n’t live for man’s smiles and cater
to the whims of the white-trousered
infant.
There was a dreadful hour of ex
citement here to-day. About 5
o’clock one of the steamboats landed
two young men, pne mustache and
a valise. The gills in the ham
mocks scattered like a huge family
of jnice and scampered to their
rooms to powder and fuss and curl
for dinner. Just after the meal I
went off for a tramp in the woods,
and when I returned both victims
were in the hands of the enemy.
The girls swooped down upon
them like merciless wolves after
unprotected lambs. The young
sters seemed to enjoy their sudden
flight into popularity’s frivolous
clouds, and every word they said
was “ohed” and “ahed” or shouted
at or giggled over as the brilliant
remark warranted.
I wish I were a man, I’d hurry
up and earn piles of money, and
then I’d be a professional summer
man. I’d year yc 1 w s ojs and
speckled calicoish vests and cream
colored yachting caps, and I’d give
myself a nickel every time that a
summer girl proposed to me. I’ve
always thought that I’d like to be
president, but even the president
doesn’t have girls by the dozen, all
willing to be used as door-mats.
Submitted to Tbe People.
The three proposed amendments
to the consittution to be voted on
at the next election were put betore
the people in a proclamation by
Governor Northern
The first amendment proposses to
increase the number of judges of
the supreme court from three to
fiye, to consist of a chief justice and
four Associate justices. If this
amend mend passes Governor At
kinson will have two important aj>-
pointments to make. One of the
judges will hold for five years;
the other for six, from January 1,
1H95.
The second proposed amendment
is to be attached to section 1, article
7 of the constitution and is to supply
the soldiers who lost a limb or limbs
in the military service of the con
federate states with substantial ar
tificial limbs during life, and to
make suitable provisions for such
confederate soldiers as may have
been otherwise disabled or perma
nently injured in such service, or
who, by reason of age and poverty, or
infirmity and poverty, or blindlless
and poverty, are unrfble to provide
a living for themselves, and for the
widows of such confederate soldiers
as may have died in the service of
the confederate states or since from
wounds received therein or diseases
contracted therein.”
The third amendment is to change
the time of holding the session of
thejlegislature from October to July.
- m
To Cleanse The System
Ettectually yet gently, when costive or
bilious, or when the blood is impure or
sluggish, to perniantly cure habtual con
stipation, to awaken the kidneys and
liver to a healthy activity without irri
gating or weakening them, to dispel
headaches, colds or fever use Syrup of
Figs. __
Pimples, boils and other humors of
the blood are liable to break out in the
warm weather. Prevent it by taking
Hood’s Sarsaparilla.
Abbotts East Indian Corn Paint cures
Corns, Warts and Bunions.
For [ sL\CasTiv£fi£S9
dyspepsia / m 1 Sick or
Indigestion Jjpdf
Rn / “"ADAuntt
aILIOUSNESS \ JjA UNDICE
Sourness oss of
Stomach Appetite
None Genuine Without The Likeness Anb
Signature or M. A.Theoford on FrontOf
Each Wrapper. M.A.Theoford Med.<S
IT POPS.
Effervescent, too.
Exhilarating, appetizing.
Just the thing to build up the
constitution.
HireS 9 Rootbeer
Wholesome and strengthening,
pure blood, five from boils or
carbuncles. General good health
—results from drinking HIRES*
Rootbeer the year round.
Package maker, fve gallons, 25c.
Ask your druggist or rroccr for it.
Take no other.
Send 2-cent ftamp Charles E. Hires
Cos., 117 Area S< . for beauts,
ful picture. . - ‘
E. & W. R. R. OF ALAI
No 1 Passenger—VV No 2 Passenger—East
DAILY. DAILY.
Lv Cartersville 10.10 am. Lv Pell City 8.30 am
“ Stilesboro..lo.3tj ’’ “ Coal City 9.18 “
" TayPrsv’le. 10.48 “ “ Ragland 10.45 “
“ Roekmart .11.11 “ “ Duke’s 12.20 pm
“ Grady 11.32 “ “ Piedmont.... 1.36 •*
“ Cedartown.. 12,00 m “ Warner’s 2.12 “
•‘Warner’s ..12.29 p m " Cedartown... 2.50.“
“ Piedmont,.. 1.05 “ “ Grady 3.00 “
“ Duke’s . ... 2,27 •’ “ Roekmart... 3.26 "
“ Ragland.... 3.38 •’ •• Tayl’rsv’le.. 3.47
“ Coal City.... 4,20 “ “ Stilesboro... 4.00 ••
Ar Pell City — 4.45 “ Ar.Cartersville.. 4.25“
No 3 Passenger—West No 4 Passenger—East -
DAILY EX. SUNDAY. DAILY EX. SUNDAY.
Lv Cartersville...s.3s pm Lv Cedartown...6.ss am
“ Stilesboro 5.52 •’ “ Grady 7.10 •*
“ Taylorsville..6.o9 “ ” Roekmart 7.30 “
“ Roekmart 6,30 “ “ Taylorsvllle..7.s7 “
“ Grady 6.50 “ “ Stilesboro 8.02 “
“ Cedartown....7.os “ lAr atCartersville 8.25 “
N0.5 Passenger—West No. 6 Passenger—Easi
SUNDAY ONLY. | SUNDAY ONLY.
Lv Cartersville..4.lo p ra Lv Cedartown...B.oo a
“ Stilesboro 5.03 “ ' “ Grady 8.15 “
“ Taylorsville 5.14 “ I “ R0ekmart....8.35 “
“ R0ekmart....6.30 “ “ Taylorsville 8.56
“ Grady 6.30 “ ’• 5ti1e5b0r0....9.07 '•
Ar Cedartown...7.os “I Ar Cartersville..9.3o “
Moi] Female College,
DALTON, CA.
Having taken this coljego for another
three years term I propose to
build it up to a
HIGHER DEGREE OF EXCELLENCE
than it has ever before known. If you
you wish your daughter
Well and Cheaply Educated
send her to Dalton. We enroll
Two Hundred Pupils,
of whom fifty are boarders. To Insure
a plaeo write at one. Desirable rooms
are taken first.
Address REV. G- J. ORR, I’res’t.
Western&fltlantic
AND
N.,C.&St.L Railways.
TO
Chicago,
Louisville,
Cincinnati,
St. Louis,
Kansas City,
Memphis
and
The West,
Quick time and Vestibuled trains car
rying Pullman Sleeping Cars. For any
information, call on o£ write to
J. W. HICKS,
T. P. A., Atlanta, Gal,
C. E. HARMAN,
G. P. A., Atlanta, Ga.
Or JOS. M. BROWN,% *
Traffic Manager, *
Atlanta, Ga.*,
S ELECTRIC TELEPHONE
Sold outright, no rent, no royalty. Adapted
to City, Village or Country. Needed in every
home, shop, store and office. Greatest conven
ience and best seller on earth.
Agents make from *5 to*so per
One in s residence means a sale to all ;he
neighbors. Fine instruments, no toys, works
anywhere, any distance. Complete, ready for
l si t uiMj wliwu shipped. Can bo put up by any one.
Vi ji j never out of order, no repairing, lasts a .lie
h u time. Warranted. A money maker. V rite
* —i-® W. P. Harrison & Cos., Cl*rk 10, Columbus, 0.
ft saclrjs Agents. S7B
- J a week- Exclusive terriio-y Tk
y 7<T > TkCy Rapid OUk W Washes aii Um
_ f.\> -Ja&kfcVS dishes for a family in one miaata.
Wauthes, rinses and dries then
# without welting the hands. You
f 4l- J push t*> button, the machine daea
I 'faftAPiQ WjS. the ret. Bright, polished di*he,
| sis* s a smi a cheerful wires No sc aided
8 clothing.
X broken dishes.nomuss. Cheap,
durable,warranted. Ctrcularsflreik
W. P. HARRISON a CO., Cterk No. 12, Colambu*. Ok