THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTT p{GWN, APRIL 18, 1898 The man whose home menaced by midnight marauders isn’t slow to grasp a weapon to de- fend it. The same man when threaten i a> 18 _ edbyan enemy <a ten thousand times more dangerous, will /calmly go his way and make no effort at de- fence. The K most danger- fee ous of all man- a kind’s enemies is consumption. There is but one effective weapon with which to com bat this grim destroyer, It jerce's Golden Medical Discovery, 98 per cent. of all cases of con- bronchitis, asthma, laryngitis, {ungs, spitting of blood and throat ome lll \ oO al uubles. Thousands have testi- fed to th very under this remedy Mm after they were given up by the doctors, and all hope was gone. Many of these have, permitted their experiences, names, addresses and photographs to be printed in m™ wr. Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Ad- ser. Any sufferer may write to them Golden Medical Discovery” is the great blood-maker and flesh-builder. it - appetite hearty, the digestion assimilatien perfect, the liver active, he blood pure and rich with the life giving of the food and the nerves strong Acting directly on the lungs, it drives o@t all impurities and disease germs, Its also a wonderful medicine for all nervous troubles. Sold by all dealers in medicmme Ino. M. Hite, of Audubon, Audubon Co., Iowa, savs I took a sever« cold which settled on my ' ral of our best physicians gave up all hopes of my recovery. I would cough and spit blood for hours. I teek Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and recovered.” imi chest. Sev mos ng Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser is a book of 1,008 pages and over three hundred illustrations. This book is free. You may have it in all its usefulness, and iu strong paper covers, for 31 one-cent stamps, which pays the cost of customs and mailing on/y, or in cloth binding fer s0 stamps Address, World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y. ”-_ - ~ ee The D & A CORSET. For Evening Dress Women find the ID) & A Corset as well suited for evening wear as it is for ordinary purposes. It gives “chic’’ to the figure, without stiff- ness or discomfort. It is sold at popular prices. Wear the D & A Corset. (7) EPPS'S COCOA ) ENGLISH EREAKFAST COCOA Possesses the following Distinctive Merits: DELICACY OF FLAVOR. SUPERIORITY in QUALITY. GRATEFUL and COMFORTING to the NERVOUS or DYSPEPTIC. NUTPITIVE QUALITIES UNRIVALLED In Quarter-Pound Tins only. Prepared by JAMES EPPS & CO., L-d.. Homm@opathic Chemists, London, Englan Colum bias. I have resumed the aLency of the Columbia Bicy- j . ae tes, The gord qualities of those famous wheels require NO puffing. They are easily ‘The Standard of the World.” Prices to suit all pock- ot, ranging from $44 to ‘*} dollars, A thoroughly rons, Serviceable wheel fur Hdo'lars. Samples and ées- Miptve catelozues on hand Wa few days. 5 ORLM. YOUNG, Agent fr P. BL. ~ TO CONTRACTORS, Tenders will be received by the under- : ip to April 19th, at noon for finish- Bg the keg . At the office of C. B. Chappel, Archi * The lowest cr any tender not ly accepted. JOHN; McMILLAN, Secretary Bu'lding Committee. —_, y Building Com . mide of Afton Hall, West River, ding to plans ard specifications to be —=— a. wre (Continaedl.) SYNOPSIS, cousivs, sindents at Edeburg University betwren whom ia a %etter fued. The former is the son of & rich city lawyer and his cousin is ihe heir of an estate in the Highlands that has almost pasved into the hands of creditors. After a ‘bitter fight with his cousin, Kilgour on ‘his way home when he falls in with company at the “Hound and Stag” inn at Perth. Arrived home his companion on the journey turns out to be bis uncle, Peter Clephane’s father. To retrite his familie’s fortune Andrew is senttol dia. 2 & suaden aarkness the snock o1 a tremendous broadside hurled me back With a bellyful of salt water. I serain- ble’ up, sputtering, to be hit and kn@®cked down apaia. The second lime I rose with greater difficulty. and clutching dizzly at the porthole, look- ed over the weltering flame-iit is ss sii waste. There were no boats. Either the cea had swallowed them, or they were hida- den in the scudding mist of spray. In either case they were Jost to me. A sudden sickness seized me, my head Bot strangely light, the din fell to a far off murmur, and slipping my feble hold I sank splashing inte the water on the floor. A period of uncon- sciousness must remernber no have followed, for I more until, half crawling, half swimming, and in utter darkness, I somehow got back to my berth. Then, with my mind settled in the conviction of 2 doom that was not to be averted, no words could tell awful sense of desolation that fell On me. I thought it would really have been an act of humanity on the part of my late companions to have thrown me into the sea or drawn a sharp blade across my throat. Either would have endec my tortures quickly, whereas I up- oe ‘he Sal UTR eee ~ SN \, Ss Franticelly straining to hold on and to hail the quickly vanishing boats. into the face upon me by thus is to die many times. But the brig could not long hold out, and when she should go down, all would be instantly over. be looking advancing be tortured had nov to of death ir.ches. 2 a 'To i closed my burning eyes, feeling that ro light would ever more fall on them till that light rose that shall not fad away. Ere the morrow morning should be ‘deeper than aid ever plummet sound,” coffined in the black hulk of the engulfed brig, and no moertal should ever Jook on my slimy grave among the green and things that strew the Indian ocean. There was 2 pang in the thought that no one could murk the place where J slept. gut that pang, too, must pass in the great lull, the lasting quiet that Was at herd. I lay very still, for there was no longer ai motive to move. The tempest \ evidently much abated, though the waves were still leaping madiy against the ship's sides, and sometimes rnaking clean breaches over her. I wondered why she held so long afloat. But doubtiess she was goirg steadily, if slowly, down. She would sink gradually for awhile, then in the crucial moment, when the flood sheutd have gained a proper hold, she would descend headlong with a dizzy gurete and swirl as if sucked by the lips of the maelstrom. I could anticipate the motion, and my own sensations in the embrace death. There would be a momertary, involuntary effort to held back, gasping for breath, a brief pain as of one choking, a sudden giddiness fading swiftly into uncon- sciousness, and then absolute peace. I wished that the ordeal were not so long delayed I wished that the hur- ricane might blow anew, and that the billows would rise and overwhelm us at once, so faithless is man in ex- tiemity. But no fresh hurricane came, only after a great while there was a loud sudden splash by my berth side, fol- lowed by a sharp cry that made me use the liver, cure bilious- “te. Price 25 eents. Sold by all druggists 1638, neadache, dizziness, ‘be only Pills to take with Hood's Sarsaparilla of au ‘timulate the stomach, [> iff “ur stomach, constipation, i § W.P. Colwill has opened up & nice Crockery and China store in ths building ormerly occupied by Miller Bros. 2w d we [Copyr aK, TR, by John Alex Peter Clepbane and Andiet Kilgour wre the | (een peerage panne taste ena ander Steuart.} ‘start in alarm, though why I should ne Alarmed who had nothing worse te fear nor better to hope than of death, a question I cannot arswer. Start, hewever, I did, with a frightened look I the blackness of darkness about canny thing this disturbing my part- could of course see noth- to see what li might be that was ing hour. ] ing, but presently I understood from the splashing and squealing that the rats were prowling around, and reatly disgusted at finding the cabin were heor under water. As for me, I was gied of their company. “If the creatures could only speak to me,” I said to myself. “ar we cculd only exchange sympathies and converse togetner on our fate, thers wculd be some satisfaction evem yet.’’ And as I lay listening to their in- terchange of seitiments, which to my ear seemed to express disappointment, I thought of the marvellous amounting almost to intuition, is insiinct, which ing ships. An old story cecurred to me. A vessel had feundered in mid- ocean, the crew took to the boats, even like the crew of the Bird of Paradise, and as the last man was stepping off a company of rats appeared, and with- out ceremony or hesitation leaped into the boats with the men. The ship was going down, and they knew it. My companions were doubt- less endowed with this instinct also. What if the brig were not sinking after eh It secems an absurd thing to take aay comfort from the actions of rats, and yet a wild hope that I might still be saved thrilled through my heart. One hope begets another. I went on to think that, since the brig was settling down so very slowly she might keep afloat till we should b« discovered. A drowning man clutches at straws, and hope, as the poet says, springs eternal in the human breast. Well for us that it is so. The thought that I might be rescued kept with me through the long hours of darkness, and when the morning light returned and found me in no worse plight than I had been in at sunset on the previous evening my hope strength- ened. My physical strength increased with my mental, and when the sun was fully up, the sun I had not ex- pected to see again, I leaped from my bed to welcome it, almost forgetting my fever. Had I Shakespeare’s gift of expression ten times over I am sure I could not half tell how sweet, how transcendently glorious it was after that night in the tomb to feel the warmth and mystie potency the re- turning light. In the first great burst of joy I won- dered why I should ever have been de- pressed, so inexplicable do despair and dismal thoughts become to us in mo- ments of supreme exaltation. My heart welled into my eyes in thankful- ness as [ drank in the. full deep draught of happiness, and yet I was so full of wonder that more than once I doubted whether the whole thing were not vision, a trick of the im- agination. It was as if Plato’s fan- tastic dream were realized, and after ages of immurement in a subterranean be- of a cell a man. were brought forth to hold the rising sun for the first time. Yet the illustration is incomplete, for while Plato’s supposititious character would have been overwhelmed with awe I was filled with gladness. The creature of Plato’s dream would have veiled his face in terror before the sun's majesty. I thrust mine forward in eager and rapturous welcome. I had risen from the dead. Here was the joyous exuberance of life again. I lived, and that was enough. Il saw the east kindling with a divine illumination that was as the light of a resurrection morn. Higher and high- er the blaze of glory rose, till the flood cf life had mounted to the zenith and held undisputed sway. Death hadj{ vanished. The world was born anew, fresh, lusty, jubilant as on that pri- mal morning when the Omnipotent said, ‘“‘ Let there be light.” When the great orb showed the edge of its flam- ing disc, a golden shaft shot straight across the ocean to the derelict brig. It came like a kiss of salutation. a benediction, a promise of life. Then, as the sun rose slowly, monarch of the world, and the waves of light, inex- pressibly beautiful ard holy, came rolling toward me, I was ready to cry out in worship. O Gec, how sweet is life after death—paradise after pit! philoso- wisdom "—¥ ec lare say they silly ques- miserable nient ving There are those- phers—who ask with s2 whether life is worth them into danger, and I will find an answer tion. With my new-found strength I tried the screws which had baffled me in the night. Jov succeeded joy—they vield- ed. and the port opened. Then I thrust out my head well to the shoulders end drew a long, deep breath, which was aS meat to _ the starving and drink to the parched. Again and again I sucked in the licious cordial, feeling its grateful ef- fects in the uttermost fibres of frame. When I had inhaled till I was dizzy, I leaned forward as far as I could and feasted my eyes on the glit- tering water now rolling lazily in big smooth billows thac rocked the brig almost as gently as a mother rocks the craé@le of her firstborn. I know not whether it was the pecu- arity of my disease or whether the newborn hope gave such fresh vitality to my system as enabled it to throw the fever off, or whether it was owing to an extra dose of quinine I had taken from a box of pills which Mr. Watson had left me. but from that time I be- gan to improve rapidly. True, after the first delirium of joy had passed, there came a short period of depression and relapse, but I strove to keep up my courage, and the feeling of conva- lescence soon returned. (To be Continned.) to their up de- attributed to rats in regard to sink- | mv | Caps. and remember We trade, unequalled prices. — have all that A Reduction Sale If you want, to’ see a display of tke finest and newest Hats and When we make a specialty of any artice you may be sure that that is a sufficient guarantee of the said article’s speciality,— .... 48 Now On In these goods at the Bargain Corner. Another of Our Specialties is ine, Fit-the-form Clothing Nhe Miho te Me ote ME SNE MZ DN I II THE GUAR which accompanies the pur- chase of A Massey Harris valve for movey expended,is what we give inall goods in our line, to which we attribute our steady increase io business. We are showing @ nice assortment of Ladies and Gentlemens WATCHES this season, which are all thoroughly tested before leaving oar store. W~ guaravciee every waich sold by us to give satisfaction, by buying now you can procure a good time piece VERY LOW as out goods ate bonght low for spo each. Call and see for yourself, at— W. N. TANTON Opposite Crabbe’s Hardwre Store, - The Best value See our new stock of White and Fancy Shirts. See our new stock of Ties. See our new stock of Collers. See our new stock cf Underelothing. Everything m Gents’ Furnishings going cheap. The people that make most of their money buy at oa “The Bert Plaee to Buy Your (lothing and Hats Tnat Money Can Buy | That describes our aew stock of Gents’ Furnishings. J. B. Macdonald i& Co eal is nobby and neat in Men’s Suits, The collection is really handsome. and the way we have lowered prices on these goods seems absurd, but we must lead the clothing Also a large stock of clothing for children and boys at W. D. 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