‘ cence icone THE TAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTE eens TOWN, NOVEMBER 20, 1900, The Fount of Like IS THE PURE ED BLOOD THAT COURSES THE BODY. Impure an is Blood Stagnant, Holds Sv ay. If the lisease Paine’s Celery Compouri: PURIFIES, ENRICHES AND VITALIZES EVERY DROP OF BLOOD. The majo it yent peop : ; — te ru iN) Mor gyiy know tha 1, pure and h ght) vitalized od alone can give health Lal snd build up the tissnes that have anus . x - heen W rey and sate x i - 4 >» b sod C Ui nateriais fo restorine : dou #9 ry ada 5 ) orn as ma Pail 5 itl 1aciea — od : 3s } } and } appro very fa t he sys th { , ; 454 ) SLIOTIL, ives i mus eu LS } sed sti 10 lf y ure, ifthes Lac and tions, i! you h in unhealth yellow a ynearanc 1* sare Silo ino ve whites, you should u Paine’s Celery Compound w delay to cleanse the bloodand regu - . — , , - late the liver and kidmeys o7 tne strain that is brought upon them whenever imptr lood pour through their substance. Mr. M. D. Arthar. Chelmsford. Cmnt., writes LOWS “T was laid up with scars all over my face anl n2:k, th2 result ot lood-poisoni Wh 12 in that con- oh a : x dition [could not sleep at nigat, had no appetite, andculd not at tend to my work Tae doctors in my district and their medicine did not benefit m2. My «aunt advised me to use Paine’s Celery Compound. la two weeks | was so much better thatI could wo out, ::nd in three weeks | was able to work again. =! bless the day I commenced with Paine’s Celery Compound. ’ ECONOMY — ee IF a} r } nak Sinai g ach day, it :nen I le a year. We sell a large tin, 3 |b, Baked Beans fcr 10 cents a RE. b ne 6 Ue YOU can make qu a sivins (ea } and every day by dealing v 14 us. SANDERSON & CO., Vicrorta Row GROcERsr tne Faij-.. Footwear Gur |Lines ar All Right. y F : Why pay high prices fora name When we give you Qui:l'tv at low Prices ? Gents B m Gol. Goodyeer welt--- ; lace 4 :$2.80 % . in CGents Dongola Chocolate. lace— &2.25. Gents’ Dongola Black year welt, F--- $2.75. r ¥ . Gents Box Calf. SOdyear welt-— lace.Good- Black and Tan, $2.75. oe Sox Calf, Black, double oodyear welt, rubber heel, Value in the city--- $4.00. J.H. BELL \ The PopulargShoe ma a THROUGH | f medicine which was first on ms ay’s AUTHOR OF 7] reat one 5 LL A LT ALT LTTE dene, [copyriautr, 1898. p ‘ ree (Continued.) ~ Did be say Merriweather could go?’’ asked the major, glancing up at Ray’s eunshiny face. “I wouldo’t, if I were fu his place.’ | ‘‘He wasn't overwilling at first,’’ was | the answer. ‘‘ However, my fellows will all be wishing themselves back in the field before they’ve been home a fortnight—small blame to them.’’ ‘What's the reason you’re so down on garrison life, Ray?’’ ‘‘J’m uot down on it exactly, major, but if it weren’t for the wife and boys I'd be glad if we were forever in the ficld,”’ anewered Ray. “den get kitied in this Indian business, but they— keep eut of trouble. Thers’s Merriweather, now. He was a tiptop sergeant in the Sicux campaign. Ho was one of the bi st all round troopers and noncommis- ficned officers in the regiment all through the campaigns that followed in t, hoe hy yy SON PTe « ’ the n ‘xt three years, ang he’s been run- blng down steadily ever since he fell ig love with that flibbertigibbet of Free- ; mans. Garrison life and girls spoil many a good cavalryman,”’ be conclud- ed oracularly, ‘ 7 ‘Dou t dare me to tell that to Mrs. Ray as your sentiments,’’ grinned the major. ‘‘Ob, everything depends on the girls, of course,’’ said Ray, growing instantly grave. ‘‘Blakey and I—well, I, at least, owe everything to my wife,’’ he finished almost reverently. Then pres- ently ke spokeagain. ‘‘But what chance bas the average trooper? What manner of woman bas he to mate with, if he mate a& all? Next batch of recruits I get should Le anchorites, 60 far as women Gre ccpocerned.’’ ‘*Sailors are just es bad as soldiers,’’ eé2id Mainwrring serely, whereat Blake ucked bis bead under his blanket in éunva!lsions of delight. “I know, sir,’’ said Ray, glancing vergefully at the ccontcrtions of the fcrn gray slumber robe and biting his own lip bard to repfcss the bubbling fun. ‘*‘What I mean is that I'd like to get the troop fuil cf fellows tbat cotldn’t be twisted arcund a woman's finger.’’ **You nevcr will, Ray,’’ said Main- Waring, thereby proving that he knew buman natnre, if rot books. ‘‘ You can take your pick cf this gang that Raw- son’s bringing out with him or of any of the men that offer themselves at Ran- /mext man you enlist will be woman driven from the word go,”’ CHAPTER II. The night express was 50 minutes late already, and engino 763, waiting at the Juncticn with her spowpiow set, was | hissing and rumbling impatiently. The | big brown building, embracing hotel |and waiting rooms, ticket and station master’s office, loonied up against the star dotted sky. The switch lights gicamed in crimson, green and dazzling | white bere, there and everywhere along | the glinting rails. Bleary lamps were | burning in frcst covered windows, ard tiny sparks fiuttered from the pipe of the solitary biped on the platform, a burly man in the toil stained garb of a locomotive engineer, a sturdy fellow who limped as he stamped up and down | the creaking planks of the platform, his hands in his pockets, his eyes every- where. To him came forth his fireman, splitting his mouth with a wedge of bilious looking pound cake. He strove to speak, but, finding articulation im- possible, jerked backward bis head and pantomimed the process of serving bim- self with a cup ef coroforting drink— coffee, presumably —for be was fresh from the lunch counter. ET HEART | DISEASE is a symptom of Kidney Disease. A_ well-known doctor has said, ‘‘ I never yet madea post-mortem ex- aminationinacase of death from Heart Disease with- out finding the kidneys wereat fault.” The Kidney the market, most success- ful for Heart Disease and all Kidney Troubles, and most widely imitated is Dodd’s Kidney Pills 7 es Y teseve | Long’s answer. som, and I’m willing to bet that the | they’ve done nothing ee etna ee, a ecruit eee . CAPTAIN CHARLES KING, U.S. A. ! Kf COLONEL’S DAUGHTER,” “FROM THE RANKS,” ETC, J. B, LIPPINCOTT co. ] “Come, swallow the rest oz tans Gg: =*. now, and be lively with your oil can. We can’t wait two minutes after she once getsin. No,’’ be continued as the younger repeated his persuasive panto- mime, ‘I had my tea at home, and that’s enough. Yon’ll die of overeating, first thing youknow. Do your best now. We've got an extra Pullman and a car- ‘ i load of greeuhorns to haul up to Buite | this night of all others, and I’m betting | it's snowing in the mountains now.”’ 0 Saying, the engineer turned and | gazed anxiously westward, where even the stars seemed blotted from sight, then quickly whirled about and bent O1S Car. ““Comipg at last,’? he muttered. sil 2) at’s old ¢ oyote’s yelp for the Cross- road D ‘1 little wind for whis- ; has she left cither. No wonder No. 3's late, with nothivg ketter than that limping carcass t drag it. She ougk+ to be in he boneyard—oughbt to ’a’ bec. th iycarago. Dut bere’s the beau- ty, Said be to himself, as he turned acd laid a leving band on tk: ; oe rod cf tho huge Scut,’’ ho added. ) massive Criving machine. **Lively, coming.’ mcct was descending from the cab ag a cat comes dov pa tree backward. ‘“What'n ‘ell they takin recruits to Ransom for now?’ ho asked. ‘‘The War's over.’”’ “*It’s to fill the gaps made when the War warnt over, young mun, and mighty hard they’!l! find it to fill some ef ’em too. Jim Strang, that was killed at Cave Springs, was corpors! with me in Bate’s trcop eight years ago, and thers wasn't a bettcr sergeant in a!l the cavalry. Lo icy.s a shining wark, or I’d never got bit twice in one day.”’ **Would you go beck to ecldierin if you could, Mr. Lc» :?’ asked tho fire- man, tilting up his long be thru:e the nezzie dcep in between the spokes of a massive driver. “1? Give me back the legs I had be- fore the Sioux maco a sieve of my ekin, and it isn’t the rail I'd bo riding, but tho best sorrel in Billy Rey’s truop, and with tho best office in it, and that’s first sergeant.’’ “*Tt’s*ttakin chances to be in the caval- ry these days,’’ said be of the cil can, listening to the low, farawey rumble of the coming train. ‘‘Do you seo her headlight yet?’ ? ‘She isn'é through the cut,’’ was “fAsto taking chances? but take chances in that regiment cver since the war, | yet there isu.'t a cay cf cur livres we @on’t teke chences, ard tigger chances, right hezé cn this b:cubiau ai ision,’”? A tall young icllew in traveling cap and ulster bad coms out from tka lunch- foom and was sirc!'irs crer toward the hissing engine. Ke sto; red and listened as Long spoke, then seemed to be pon- Cering over the words ard locking te the exgine man fcr crplanaticn. ‘“‘How do you mean?’’ asked Scut, pausing in his werk and looking up. **We haven’t had a ‘kold up’ on the road for over a year.’’ *‘Neither bave we had a head on col- lision, nor spreading rails, nor a plunge from a trestle, but they are only thr of the things likely to occur any min- ute, especially when trains are r-nring behind as we are tonight-—ail cn se- count of that one eyed coyote that's peeping at you down yonder.”’ It was the headlight of No. 3, just dawning on the view at Mile End Cross- ing, to which the engineer referred. ‘*Watch how slowly she comes,’’ he added. ‘‘ihe old maid is about worn out. Here’s the girl that can shake that train up grade as though ’twas made of bandboxes. I’ll bet you.we make Butte by 7 o’clock.”’ **I’ll bet you don’t, if you’ll let me in,’? was the cocl interjection of the young man ulster clad; ‘‘for Butte’s my objective point.”’ ‘*‘What do you know about it, or cout railroading?’’ asked Long suspi- tiously. ‘*As much as you did when you quit soldiering, and no more, wherein we have much in common, Mr. Leng, but here’s where the difference comes in. You quit soldiering to take to the rail- road; I quit the road to take to soldier- ing.’ “Oh, I see. Then, you're an officer?’’ queried Long, his accustomed lips fram- ing te little word ‘‘sir’’ and almost resenting his enforced omission of the once familiar monosyllable. Long said ‘‘sir’’ to no one under the division su- perintendent now, ‘‘I? Devil a bit,’’ was the laughing answer. ‘‘I’m not even a lance—unot even a recruit. Man, I haven’t signed my papers yet,’’ ‘‘Then take a fool’s advice and don’t sign them,’’ interposed Long. ‘‘ You’ve got no call to go soldiering. Such as. you come im enly when it’s whisky or women or cards.’’ ‘*Say it’s all three if you like,’’ was the half laughing answer. ‘‘I heard cf you as une of the old cavelrymen at the necked can ag | _ tone of gay guod humor, not unmixed berTEc: and the stri:. ced care his shoulder ix the directio; pact ont, «s*aLlished Jo tardies tha "10d Waa Doing | MES is O mis. ** Ve t 1 eoyr lets: K * It's the cu sl sie rehctes = D M The eny,, nee rng a } . # from childhood : , . Ag d . | *,.O ripe Old age since 1810. - QHINST score LINIMENT =VRas been used by generation cr scoked the speaker over in Surprise. Away down the track the headiight of the ing train was ao bigger eve ry nicinent and the Fumble of the bulky approach cop Shihaie haces bulky approach could be “You don’t look like a man who had to take to foldiering,’’ be said. “Ob, I’m not!" was the prompt, good natured reply. ‘“‘I do it simply because I’vea hankering that way—and no otk er,’’ he added under his breath. ‘‘Per- haps you can tell me something of the regiment at Ransom?’ ‘‘Enough about it to talk from here to Frisco, but there’s no time now. We've got to pull out with that train the moment their engine gets out of our way. But you're the first man I ever met out here who would openly say he | Was going to enlist. They all come up shamefaced like, as though it was the last thing they wanted people to know.”? | “*Ob, I never found 3 paid to sail un. | der false colors,’? was the answer ina oming @ oe, —_—_ ~~ alter generation Relieves Every Form of Inflammation 8" for INTERNAL and M / old couples relate tha’ ever since they were be d girl toge .er, J OHNSON’S ANODYNE Linmwrnt has tina ik as an in favor with them for many family ills from infancy to old age. I have used Johnson’s Anodyne L T have been a standard bearer more than more than fifty years in m colds, coughs, Gere throat, eee : £0 years for Jelinson’s Spoerne tcuemens. ent For | With a dash of reckless disdai “Tp toothache, etc., havg found italways Olle, | I have found it superiorto any other. My s z ain. I : oh ve MBF Tos. CisLato, out Rovbinston, G2 | GrADdehildren continue touge{s to this day | nothing to lose. But I would like to ask | YOU something about the troop com- | Sive me a liftin the cab? I’ve ‘*Three’g | “I’ve got tickets all rigbt,’’ said the ae | Icnely man cn the platform, ‘‘ict I'd id “ay | rather sit up ina cab than sleep ina 3K E Y } Pullman. It’s all right, though. Lavo sé + W. TA 5 LO R | @ smoke anyhow.”’ And with lavish | engine. | his band, be turned aside to the lench- | score of hungry passengers from the ar- | out the conductor. ‘‘ We've got to inake | can’t do it there.’’ Send for our Book cn INFLAMM Put up in Two Sizes, Price 28 and cam 1's. JONSON a coy, co ia. manders there at Ransom. Can’t you 7 a pocket- ful of better weeds than you get out) this way if that’s any inducement.”’ And, so saying, he reached down into the deep pocket of his ulster and brought out a bandful of cigars. Mr. Long's manner changed in an us instant. ‘* ’Gainst said he Po: > briefly, gazing suspiciously into the § h "ee Sys ” stranger's face as he spoke. ‘‘ Better get a e A i bak e as your ticket if you’re going to Butte.’ at 4nd, swinging himself up to his perch, TO BR NG Ti he grasped the reversing lever with one hand and the throttle with the other. ~ SZ “A> crders,’’ 7 Vw ; nih ; LE OR Vr. y + % Thats Sout laid hold of the cord and set the Oi. fc i} Ge bE FD {y iP q' E | WED ; : =e : . , ° i Lhe f,EeD ; _ ‘ vet big bell to swinging warning cf their Ly UE, as e 5 ei ha y <4 ci escsse coming. The huge machine began slow- iy to move rearward as the much ma- . i. ; ligned and belated coyote came hissing | “Artic €s that have ceased t» be of use Wi by on the fireman’s side, and that be- wil ‘ow full value i “ch ‘oO: ] : - , vil ‘OW Tu Value th exchange for vo G5 ind grimed young man availed himself of youm:y. b: 1) S Cas es ee the chance to chaff bis fellow workers ee > ab-€ to | urchase something—either in the flitting cab. He tcck no beed, Me atch, Jc wery, Srectac.e OF 2S therefore, of the stranzer’s parting hail, i, vould be f si: ek tua us Long waseying him closely and lis- | : oe teuing for any word. cock —~nat 2ud be tossed half a dozen cigars into tha cab as he walked besids the moving Then, with a cordial wave of CAMERON BLOCK room, into the doorway cf which a balf riving train were eagerly pushing. “Only three minutes, geuts,’’ sung up time before we reach the Rockies— And he Garted into City | ardware Store | the train cispatchcr’s office to register } First door to the right up ) DR. AYERS and receive his orders. Meantime Sect, etill clinging to tbe belicord with one bend, was scocpizg up cigars with the right. ‘That fel- low’s a prince,’’ said hea. ‘‘ Just lock at BUILDERS’, MERS’ "ECHARICS’ FARDWARE.. that for a seegar.”’ And ho held it ad- miringly up to Leng te see and vas amazed at theglcom in hiz cowpauicu’s | Iaini Ss, Oils, Giass, Ca rpenters’ Too's fave. ‘‘Wky, what's up?’ he asked. ‘‘What's up?’ repeated.the engixeer, as be clowed down Cu “caring the for- ward end of the mailcar. ‘‘A hold up, unless I’m mistaken, and tho fewer of them cigars you stick in your mouth the more Lrains yoa'!! have Icft in the morning.’’ With a sharp click the FAR ‘ ALL CHEAP FOR GASH Th: Celebrated Norton | beavy coupling pin was driven home, and Long sent the reversing lever over to the front, then poked his head out of the side of *he cab and tehcrted to a train hand he saw hurrying by, ‘‘ Where 919 you got them recrrits Bills? (To be Continued.) Torpid Liver Headache And Biiousness Made Life Miserable for Three Years— Healih Restorad by Dr Chase’s Kidney-Liver Piiis. Having a direct actior. on the liver, | Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills are in- variably euccessful ix curing liver com- | plaint, torpid liver, and the headaches | and stomach troubles resulting there- | from. Mre. Faulkner, 8 Gildersleeve place, | Turonto, says:—‘‘ After doctoring with. | @ut success for biliousness, liver com- plaint, and sick headache for over three years, I am glad to testify to my ap- | reciation of Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver | ills. At first they seemed a little | strong, but being both searching and > thorough in their action, amply repay any inconvenience by after results. I | am feeling better in every way, and my headaches have entirely disappear- | ed. Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills are eertainly the best I have ever used, | and I freely recommend them.” The liver is responsible for very | many ille of the human body. It is al- | COME DOWN WITH BOTH FEET and you will be fitted with the latest and most fash ionable boot or shoe to be found in the city, for the least money, and guaranteed the best of satisfaction. licQUAID’S LOWER OUEEN STR ~ rr + | ' ; 4 isa -—“” HASZARD’S BRAHMIN TEA. DENTISTRY 60,000 Psunds now Landing and to arrive, Ask your grocer for ‘“‘Haszard’s Brahrrin’’ an! ways made healthy, active, and vigor« ous by using Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills. One pill a dose, 25 cents a —_ at all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates : Go., Toronta | SUNNi-= SIDE Office in New Prowse Block stairs..; Telephone cernec- take no other. Nev. 14.—2|wksid&w, ¢ ott Pee a Fag oe i ;, sees pS ot, . a or pnt ese LEE tet ere y ee ates a7 F in retainer were oar ain nse Be