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SuM' J NervousProetra
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ATT HT> A Iff tty r TCI \vn
yVimirlil i iiiL iJLtlili).
BY WALTER BESANT.
(Copyright 1891, by the Authors’ Alliance.]
CHAPTER IV.
The islet lay all night long in much
the same silence which lapped and
wrapped it all the day. The water
washed musically upon the shore; the
light in the lighthouse flashed at inter
vals; there was no other sign of life.
Towards six o’‘clock in the morning the
dark east grew gray; then long white
rays shot out across the sky and then
the light began to spread. Before the
gyay turned to pinlr or the pink' to crim
son, before there was any corresponding
glow in the western sky, the man who
occupied the bungalow turned out of
bed and came forth into the veranda
jli oL——l
WHEN HE HAD BATHED THE DOCTOR WENT
BACK TO HIS HOUSE.
clad in his silk pajamas and silk jacket,
which formed the evening or dress suit
in which he slept. The increasing light
showed that he was a young man still,
perhaps about thirty, ayoung man with
a strong and resolute face and a square
forehead. lie stood under the veranda
watching as he had done every day for
two years and more, the break of day
and the sunrise; he drank in the de
licious breeze cooled by a thousand
miles and more of ocean; no one knows
the freshness and sweetness of the air
until he has so stood in the open and
watched the dawn of a day in the trop
ics. lie went back to the house and
came back again clad in a rough suit of
tweed and a helmet. His servant was
waiting for him, with his morning tew;
he drank it and sallied forth. By this
time the short-lived splendor of the east
was fast broadening to right and left,
until it stretched from pole to pole.
Suddenly the sun leaped up and the col
ors fled and the splendor vanished. The
sky became, all over, a deep clear blue,
and round and about the sun was a
brightness which no eye but that of the
seabird can face and live. The man in
the helmet turned to the seashore and
walked briskly along the sea wall. Now
and then he stepped down upon the
white coral sand, picked up a shell and
looked at it and threw it away When
he came to the seabirtl’s rock he sat
down and watched it. In the deep
water below sea snakes red and purple
and green were playing about; great
blue fish rolled lazily round and round
the rock; in the recesses lurked unseen
the great conger eel, which dreads noth
ing but the thing of long and horny ten
tacles —the ounte or squid—the humor
ous tajar which bites the bathers in
shallow water all for fun and mischief
and with no desire *o eat their flesh,
and a thousand curious creatures which
tpis man who had ruined his eyes by
days and days of watching came here
every day to look at. While he stood
there the seabirds Look no manner of
notice of him, flying qjose about him,
lighting on the shore close at his feet.
They were intelligent enofrgh to know
that he was only dangerous with a gun
in his hand. Presently he got up and
continued his walk. All round the sea
wall of the island measures three miles.
He took this walk every morning, and
every evening in the early cool and the
late. The rest of the time he spent in
doors.
When he got back it was past seven
and the day was growing hot. He took
his towels, went down to the shore to a
place where the coral reef receded, leav
ing a channel out to the open. The
channel swarmed with sharks, but he
bathed there every morning, keeping in
the shallow water, while the creatures
watched him with longing eyes. He
wore a pair of slippers on account of
the lap, which is a very pretty little
fish indeed to look at, but he lurks in
dark places near the shore, if he is too
lazy to get out of the way, and if you
put your foot near him he sticks out
his dorsal fin, which is prickly and
poisoned, and when a man gets that
into the sole of his foot he goes home
and cuts his leg off, and has to pretend
that he lost it in action.
When he had bathed the doctor went
back to his house and performed some
simple additions to his toilet, that is to
say, he washed the salt water out of his
hair and beard—not much else. As for
collars, neckties, braces, waistcoats,
black coats, rings or any such gewgaws,
they were not wanted on this island.
Nor are watches and clocks, The resi
dents go by the sun. The doctor got
up at daybreak and took his walk, as
yon have seen, and his bath. He was
then ready for his breakfast and for a
solid meal, in which fresh fish, newly
caught that morning, and curried
chicken with claret and water formed
the principal part. A cup of coffee
came after with a cigar and a book in
the veranda. By this time the sun
was high and the glare of forenoon had
succeeded the coolness of the dawn.
After the cigar the doctor went indoors.
The room was furnished with a few
pictures, a large bookcase full of books,
chiefly medical, a table covered with
papers and two or three chairs. No
curtains, carpets or blinds; the doors
and windows wide open to the veranda
on both sides.
He sat down and began writing—per
haps he%was writing a novel —I think
no one could think of a more secluded
place for writing a novel. Perhaps he
was doing something scientific. lie
continued writing till past midday.
When he felt hungry he went into the
dining-room, took a biscuit or two, and
a glass of Vermouth. Then, because it
was now the hour for repose and be
cause the air outside was hot and the
sea breeze had dropped to a dead calm
and the sun was like a red-hot flaring
furnace overhead, the doctor kicked off
his boots and threw off his coat, lay
down on a grass mat under the mos
quito curtains and instantly fell fast
asleep. About live o’clock he awoke
and got up; the heat of the day was
over; he took a long draught of cold tea,
which is the most refreshing and the
coolest drink in the world. The sun
was now getting loav and the air was
growing cool. He put on his helmet
and set off again to walk round his do
main. This done, he bathed again.
Then he went home as the sun sank
and night fell instantly without the in
tervention of twilight. They served
him dinner, which was like his break
fast, but for the addition of some cut
lets. lie took his coffee; he took a pipe
—two pipes slowly, with a book —lie
took a whisky and soda; he went to bed.
I have said that he had no watch—it
hung idly on a nail. Therefore he
knew not the time, but it would very
likely be about half past nine. How
ever that might be, he was the last per
son up in this ghostly island of the
anonymous dead.
This doctor, captain, general and
commandant of Quarantine island was
none other than the young man who
began this history with a row royal and
a kingly rage. You think, perhaps, that
he had turned hermit in the bitterness
“Uf his wrath and for the fault of one
simple girl had resolved on the life of a
solitary. Nothing of the kind. He was
an army doctor and he lef], the service
in order to take this very eligible ap
pointment where one lived free and
could spend nothing except a little for
claret. He proposed to stay there for a
few’ years in order to make a little
money, by means of which he might be
come a specialist. This was his ambi
tion. As for that love business, seven
years past, he had clean forgotten it,
girl and all. Perhaps there had been
other tender passages. Shall a man
wasting in despair die because a girl
throws him over? Never! Let him
straightway forget her. Let him tackle
his work; let him put off the business
of love—which can always wait—until
he can approach it once more in the
proper spirit of illusion and once more
fall to worshiping an angel.
CHAPTER V.
Neither nature nor civilization have
designed a man's life to bo spent in mo
notony, most of us have to work for the
daily bread which is always an episode
and sometimes a pretty dismal episode
to break and mark the day. One day
there came such a break in the monot
onous round of the doctor’s life. It
came in the shape of a ship. She was a
large steamer and she steamed slowly.
It was early in the morning, before
breakfast. The doctor and one of the
lighthouse men stood on the landing
place watching her.
“She’s in quarantine, doctor, sure as
sure,” said the man. “I wonder what
she’s got. Fever for choice. Cholera,
most likely. Well, we take our chances.”
“She’s been in bad weather,” said the
doctor. “Look, she’s lost her mizzen,
her bows are stove in. I wonder what's
the meaning of it She’s a transport—”
She drew nearer. “Troops! Well, I’d
rather have soldiers than coolies.”
She was a transport, she was full of
soldiers, time expired, men and invalids
going home. She was bound from Cal
cutta to Portsmouth. Sly; had met
with a cyclone. Driven out of her course
and battered, she made for the nearest
port, when cholera broke out on board.
Before nightfall the island was dotted
with white tents, a hospital was rigged
up with the help of the ship’s spars and
canvas, the men were all ashore and the
quarantine doctor and the ship's doctor
were hard at work among the cases,
and the men were dropping in every di
rection."
Among the passengers were a dozen
ladies and-some children. The doctor
gave up his house to them and re
tired to a tent or to the lighthouse or
anywhere to sleep. Much sleep could
not be expected for some time to come.
He saw the boat land with the ladies
on board. He took off his hat as they
walked past. There were old ladies,
middle-aged ladies, young ladies. Well,
there always is this combination. Then
he went on with his work. Then he
had a curious sensation as if something
of the past had been revived in his
mind. It was a very common feeling.
And one of the ladies changed color
when she saw him.
Then begkn the struggle for life. No
more monotony in Quarantine island.
Right and left, all day long, the men
fell one after the other, day after day
more men fell, more men died. The
“X DON’T THINK IT IS VERY MUCH."
two doctors quickly organized their
staff, the ship's officers for clinical
clerks, some of the ladies for nurses.
And the men, the simple soldiers, sat
about in their tents with pale faces, ex
pecting.
Of those who worked there was one —
a\nurse —who never seemed weary,
never wanted rest, never asked for re
lief. She would work day and night in
the hospital; if she went out it was to
cheer up the men outside. The doctor
was conscious of her work and of her
presence, but he never spoke to her.
Vv’hen he came to the hospital another
nurse received him; if he passed her she
seemed always to turn away. At a less
troubled time he would have observed
this At times he felt again that odd
sensation of a recovered past, but ho
regarded it not—he had other things to
consider.
There is no time more terrible for the
courage of the stoutest man than a time
of cholera on board ship or in a little
place whence there is no escape; no time
worse for a physician than one when
his science is mocked and his skill
avails nothing. Day after day the doc
tof fought from morning till night and
far on to the morning again; day after
day the new graves wore dug; day after
day the chaplain read over the new
graves the services of the dead for the
gallant lads who thus died, inglorious,
for their country.
Then came a time, at la&fc, when the
conqueror seemed tired of conquest,
lie ceased to strike. The fury of the
disease spent itself: the cases happened
singly, one or two a day, instead of ten or
twenty; the sick began to recover; they
began to look about them. The single
cases ceased; the pestilence was stayed;
and they sat down to count the cost.
There had been on board the transport
three hundred and seventy-five men,
thritv-two officers, half a dozen ladies,
a few children and the ship’s crew.
Twelve officers, two of the ladies and
a hundred men had perished, when the
plague abated.
“One of your nurses is ill, doctor.”
“Not cholera, I do hope.”
“No. I believe a kind of collapse.
She is at the bungalow. I told them I
would send you over. ”
“I will go at once.” He left a few di
rections and walked over to the house.
It was. He found the nurse who had
been of all the most useful and the
most active. She was now lying hot
and feverish, her mind wandering, in
clined to ramble in her talk. He laid
his hand upon her temples. He felt her
pulse. He looked upon her face. The
odd feeling of something familiar
struck him again. “I don’t think it is
very much,” he said. “A little fever.
She may have been in the sun. She
has been working too hard. Her
strengtl has given way.” lie still held
her wrist.
“Claude,” murmured the sick girl,
“you are very cruel. I didn't know,
and a girl cannot always have her own
way.”
Then he recognized her, “Good
heavens!” he cried. “It is Florence."
“Not always have her own way,”
she repeated. “If 1 Could have my own
way do you think I would—”
“Florence,” he said again. “And I
did not even recognize her. Strange!”
Another of the ladies, the colonul’s
wife, was standing beside him.
“You know her, doctor?”
“I knew her a long time ago—some
years ago—before she married.”
“Married? Florence isn't married.
You must be thinking of some one else.”
“No. This is Florence Vernon, is it
not? Yes —then she was engaged to
marry a certain Sir William Duport.”
“Oh! 1 believe there was some talk
about an old man who wanted to marry
her, but she wouldn’t have him. It was
just before her mother died. Did you
know her mother?”
“I knew her mother when they were
living *at Eastbourne. So she refused
the old man, did she? and has remained
unmarried? Curious! I had almost for
gotten her. The sight of her brings back
the old days. Well, after she has pulled
so gallantly through the cholera we
cannot have her beaten by tl little fever.
Refused the old man, did she?”
Iu the dead of night he sat watching
by the bedside, the colonel’s wife with
him.
“I had almost forgotten,” wljjspered
the lady, “that story of the old baronet.
She told me about it once. Her mother
was ill and anxious about her daughter
.because she had next to nothing except
her annuity. The old man offered; he
was an unpleasant old man; But there
was a fine house and everything; it was
all arranged. The girl was quite a
child and understood nothing; she was
to be sold in fact to this old person
who ought to have been thinking of his
latter end instead of a pretty girL Then
the mother died suddenly and the girl
broke it off. She was a clever girl and
she has been teaching. For the last
three years she has been in India; now
she is going home under my charge.
She is a brave girl, doctor, and a good
girl. She has received half a dozen
offers, but she has refused them all, so
I think there must be somebody at
home.”
| CONTINUED.]
DIVIDING THE WORK.
\ —■ —r— — - c
b c
“Jim, I’ll tell you how you’ll have to
fix it. Tackle de ole woman fust, see?
’cause she’s got de plunks in dat bag
wot she’s carryin’. Don’t mind de dog
at all; he’s a bulldog, an’ he’ll just take
a hold in one place an’ den hang on;
he won’t chew you like an or’nauy dog.*
“Well, where do you come in?”
“Oh, I’ll git de plunks while you’se
%moosin’ de dog.”—Life.
Wanted.— Every lady in Oartersville
jo call on .Mrs. O. B. Jenkins and receive
a free trial of the most renowned com
plevion beautifies ot eartii.
* * -
THE DAY IS DAWNING
When Tariff Reform Will be a
Blessed Reality. m
AN AGREEMENT IS REACHED
That Will be Accepted by Both Houses and
the Great Democratic Party of the Coun
try—Money in Alabama.
I From Our Regular Correspondent.]
Washington, 1) C., Aug. 10,1894.
“It is the hour before day that is
always the darkest.” Just when
democrats almost despaired of any
agreement ever being reached on
the tariff and the outlook was at
its darkest, the day of tariff reform
began to dawn, and now the sun is
brightly shining upon an agree
ment which, if it does meet with
the enthusiastic approval of every
democrat, can be honestly and con
scientiously supported by every
democrat without loss of dignity or
smirching ot party principles. The
agreement is not a victory for either
house or senate; it is victory lor the
great democratic party of the coun
try, which made its wishes known
iu Washington, and there should
not be any doubt of its prompt ac
ceptance by both house and senate.
There isn’t as far as the house is
concerned, bul, unfortunately, ev
erything does not look so promising
in the senate, where threats have
been made which may be carried
out and the will of the party be de
feated by the votes of members of
the party. However, let 'us not
borrow trouble when we should be
rejoicing over the end of the dead
lock. It may be that the threats
referred to, which were made be
fore the agreement was reached by
the conferences, were merely made
for bluffing purposes, and that the
only danger the agreement will
have to meet in the senate will be
the attempt of the republicans to
postpone a vote by dilatory tactics.
Next week will probably tell the
story.
The house judiciary committee
ims unfavorably reported Repre
sentative Everett’s bill to enable
persons of Japanese descent to be
come citizens of the United States.
The committee couldn’t see any
good reason for granting to the
Japs what has been denied to the
Chinese.
In response to several petitions
asking that Judge Ricks, of the
northern district of Ohio, be im
peached for misdenuanors in office,
the house judiciary committee has,
through Representative Bailey, of
Texas, reported a resolution author
izing that committee to investigate
the charges and the house has
adopted it.
Senator Butler, of South Caroli
na, lias returned to Washington
from his senatorial joint stumping
tour with Governor Tillman. The
senator expresses the greatest con
fidence in his re-election to the
senate.
President Cleveland’s yeto of the
private bill for the relief of Eugene
Welle, late captain in the Twelfth
Infantry, is approved by army
officers, and it is moreover based
upon principles of the highest jus
tice. This man retired from the
army in 1870 to avoid a court mar
tial that would have resulted in his
dismissal, was appointed a second
lieutenant in 1885 and court tnar
tialed and dismissed the service in
1887, for drunkenness and other
causes. The vetoed bill provided
that he should be appointed a
second lieutenant of artillery and
placed on the retired list without
the usual examination. In plain
words, that a man who had been
officially found unfit to be an offi
cer should be paid a salary for the
rest of his life as a retired officer.
The fact that Wells has influential
friends merely adds to the credit
to which the president is entitled
for vetoing the bill, ana brings out
the strongest trait in Grover Cleve
land’s character —his absolute de
termination to do what he believes
to be right regardless of whom it
may please or displease.
The repbulicans in congress who
were deluded into contributing
money to the Kolb campaign in
Alabama —there are a number of
them —in the hope that the move
ment might be made the entering
wedge to break up the solid de
mocracy of the south, were a deep
ly chagrinned lot of individuals
when the returns were received.
Needless to say that the democrat
ic colleagues of Governbr-elect
Oates were delighted at his success,
and doubly so because he has al
ways stoutly opposed anything like
concessions to the populists. Pres
ident Cleveland also has good rea
son to feel gratified, as Col. Oates
from the beginning of his campaign
for the nomination had been class
ed as the Cleveland candidate.
This election has thrown a wet
blanket over the loud-mouthed,
but poorly-informed, individuals
who have been prophesying tre
mendous gains to the populists iu
the south at the expense of the
democratic party. It has also con
vinced many that the democrats
will retain control of the house at
the coming congressional elections.
Senator Jones, of Arkansas, was
not speaking at random when he
said: “It is absurd to talk about
the sugar trust owning the senate.
I believe that the trust would wil
lingly vea million dollars to be
assured that there would he no
tariff legislation, as under the ex
sting McKinlew law its profits
iwould be vastly greater than under
Tiny democratic tariff law.
Fa ft f fL \CoSTIVENCSa
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Biliousness \ fj A undice
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Exhilarating, appetizing.
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Packages makes f.vo gallons, 25c.
Ask your druggist or grocer for it.
Take no other.
Send a-cent ftarim ?’ic Oharle*i H. Hires
Cos., 117 Arc i i , ’i. .• ‘.mia, lor beauti
ful pic<-
E. & W. B. R. OF ATjA.
NO 1 PAHBENOEB—W NO 2 PAHBENGEB—EAST
DAILY. DAILY.
Lv Cartersv!!!e 10 10am T,v Pell City 8.30 am
“ Stilesboro., 10.38 “ “ Coal City 9.18 “
" Tayl’rsv’le. 10.48 “ “ Ragland 10.15 “
“ It or k mart .11.1 l “ “ Duke’s 12.20 pm
“ Urady 11.32 “ “ Piedmont.... i.36 “
“ Cedartown.. 12,00 m “ Warner’s 2.12"
“ Warner’s ..12.20 p m •• Cedartown... 2.50 “
“ Piedmont,.. 1.05 “ “ Grady . . 3.00 “
" Duke s .. 2,27 “ “ Hock mart... 8.28 "
“ Kayla nil. .. 3.38 •• “ Tayl’rsv’le.. 3.17 “
“ Coal City.... 4,20 “ " Stilesboro... 4.00 "
ir Pell Cltv 4.45 " Ar.Cartersville.. 4.25 “
No 3 PAssesses —West No 4 passenger—East
DAILY EX. SUNDAY. EX. SUNDAY,
Uy Cartersville...s.3s pm Lv Cedartown...o.ss am
" Stilesboro 5.52 " " Grady 7.10 “
“ Taylorsville..o.o9 " “ Rook mart 7.30“
“ ltorkmart tt.3o “ " Taylorsville..7.s7 “
“ Grady 6.50 “ “ Stilesboro 8.02 “
" Cedartown....7.os “ lAr atGartersyille 8.25 "
No. 5 Passenger— west No. 8 Passenger— Eabi
SUNDAY ONLY. ! SUNDAY ONLY.
Lv Cartersyille..4.lo p mlMr Cedartown...B.oo a m
“ Stileshoro....s 03 “ “ Grady 8.15 "
•• Taylorsville 5.14 “ “ Bock mart. ..5.35 “
“ Kockmart....B.3o “ “ Taylorsville s.r6
“ Grady 6.30 “ " 5ti1eab0r0....9.07 •*
Ar Cedartown...7.os “lAr Cartersville..M.3o “
Dalton Female College,
DALTON, CA.
0
Having taken this coljege for another
three years term l propose to
build it up to a
HIGHER DEGREE OF EXCELLENCE
tlian 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 hoarders. To insure
a place write at one. Desirable rooms
are taken first.
Address ItEV. G- J. OUR, Pres’t.
Western# Atlantic
N.,C.&Si,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 or wriie to
J. W. HICKS,
T. P. A., Atlanta, Ga.
' O. E. HARMAN,
G. P. A., Atlanta, Ga..
Or JOS. M. BROWN,
Traffic Manager,
Atlanta, Ga.,