j The rang ‘lion that rav- ages the earth, seeking that which it may devour is a fearsome an- tagonist te fight. I11- health is ¢@ stealthier but much more dangerous ep emy. It is e- ways easier wed better to aeoid ae than to fight =~ it. It comes in ~ 4,4 Yatious guises. “1 ‘At first it is vr 4 Usually es a tri- <— Sling indiges- tion ora ore as "attack of bil- iousness. Then gilow loss of « appetite, or headache, or nerv- oases and slee pl ssne $8, or stupor These we the advatice heralds of consumption, ig. nervous exhaust eid prostra- gon, ane a multitude let Wis There 15 an easy way te avowd ind a stire Ii-henlth. Dr. Pierce’s grtoescape from, 11! aie Mavigorate wety g mviworates lhe i wes edge to the “Tr, makes the jon perfect ar od pure. Itis — appetit pemer, blood-maker gekdailder and uerve-tomic. It cures 9 gent. of all cases of consumption. It joes not make fla! by fle: h like cod - liver ‘ ea, but firm healthy tissee, without corpu- en-v Honest dealers don’t urge sv sti- mes for a little extra profit Teast sot praise Dr. Pierce's Golden Medica! wovery too high! ° ; Mrs. Marv A. Seay, q andersonvil lie. Buckingham Co., Va My fiends gave me Ip as dvit yf misuitn pt ic n I aeeervthing. | jut gt worse, ttntil | becam: weak 1 gave Up ah my helereeck. 3 trie gr bottles ot the ° 1 1 Medical Discovery’ gd have now no m need to take medicine of oo kind. I recommen: t your mericines the Golden Medical Discovery’ an Pleasant Pel- w'—to my friends with a full belief in their Aciencyv When any member of the family is sick ¢ hurt, look in Dr. Pierce’s Medical Ad- eer and there vou will find the remedvy. sed to cost $1 ; now it’s FREI 1008 ae is Over 700 illust: yrs Send 31 one ent stamps, to cover cost of customs and mailing ly, to Worl Dispensary Med- ial Association, Bufialo, N. Y., for paper- gvered copy. Cloth binding, 50 stamps, Corsets are made in great variety of styles. Whether tall, slim, stout or short you can sta D&A that win fit you comfortably, and at the ame time add little to fe natural grace of the igure. 0&4 Corsets Wear aswellasthey fit. (;) bed by most dry goetis houses. — eee —_-— Pure Spiccs are Profitable But bad This is a truism that no competec housk should for get. Half the trouble o ing is paet if you epice is socominable. Perper oo ‘t brand of Spice, get tne ri and while there sre wany that are fairly good, it »4 alwavga safest te take one which «s invariably uni- form. That one is MOTT'S THE DAILY EXAMINER , CHARLOTTETOWN, MAY 26 1898. TT he cried, ere the words were well out of his mouth. he cometh—Satan com- eth. We are undone. Who can with- stand him ? He rideth like a whirl- Wind and destroyeth ‘as a fire. My brother, we are undone.” Abou Kuram made turned his eyes to the dread warrior on the black horse, who was canter- ing down the slope with a band of 50 men mounted on the pick of Arabian studs. As the company advanced it was joined ‘iy others, till the total must have been equal to half a Brit- ish regiment. A contingent promptly went out from ‘? see, of rejoicing “He cometh, no reply, but our front to meet them, Koor Ali lead- i ing There was to be no play this time, no circling and wheeling, no re- tiring and advancing for picturesque display ‘Lance to lance, body to body, the issue would be decided, and the fittest would survive. Abou Ku- ram bit his lip with anger at being forced ‘to remain in charge of a cow- ard in the rear, and watched the mo- mentous events in which he could met participate. The enemy’s cavalry came on ata / round gallop, their pennons streaming, | their ‘faces well forward on their | horses’ necks. The leader, however, sat his great black horse erect, and held his sword at what I believe Brit- ish dragocns call the slope. There was something in his appearance that marked him out from his fellows, and I am free to confess that, with Amood Sinn’s whining in my ears, a thrill of superstiticus awe passed through me at the thought that, he might not be mortal. As soon as the level plain vas gain- ed he waved his sword quickly in the air, and the great biack warhorse broke from the gallop to the charge. We could see his fierce leap and the responsive bound of those that follow- ed hard behind. Before half a dozen horse lengths were covered there came to our ears a resounding double peal of “ Techbir, techbir!’’ for our men, too, were riding at the charge, and even from our distance we saw how every rider, setting himself a little for- ward, hugged his lance close under his right arm. I watched the mutual swoop with straining eyes and a thun.p- ing heart, with cold tremors at the pit of the stomach, and a hot whirt of the brain that was as the madness of much wine. There were fear and headlong audacity in the feeling—a fear that could easily have made me turn and fly, an audacity that al- most compelled me to rush forward ard MONTREAL & QUEBEC {O— SOU RIS. —— —— = The Steamship Campana will call at ris regularly on a cone dur.ng present season. ” Sail iz from Mon- felon or about 25¢! Apes Merchants - Mering goods wi vale > well to have #M Come b y this line For rates of right Or other particulars enquire of Vv { eLEAN Acvente atSouris. —_————— + awe! D @ comm need burn and cin supply any quan at b: st quality or Lime, arming and building pur- Doses, (. LYONS & co pes, fiar.,1 mo share the delirious ecstacy of that on- set. Nearer and nearer swept the oppos- 1 ing column like two flights of 0s- tri iches, darken! ng the sky with dust, the horses skimming the ground as if fury lent them wings, the riders alert h a tigerish intentness of pur- | pose. No man could have said which side sped the more furiously or shout- ed the louder: none whether Koor Ali or the man on the black horse led with the more determin yur. There is no resisting the magnetism of a desperate exploit enacted under your eves, and the main bodies paused fascinated by the fearful spectacie On both sides the men drew in } ) to knee in order to have the greater driving and resisting power, and crouched lower apon their straining horses The last hundred yards wer covered as it were at a bound, and then with a c1 ‘rom a thousand throats, a daz flash of steel, a shock as of ishing thunder- bolts, came the collision There vas a vibrating sensat 1 as of an earth- quake, and a rumble of groanings and crushings reached us the fighters rolled together in a dark seething heap as when two swift i irrents meet My vision 1S Sugid urred, and l involuntarily my eyes When I ope! ! =} vere through each otner, l for another cha Up f ierce war-cry again, and as 1 tre- | ly dous shock and t ring” | t! I ! la | ing t odigious quickness they , dashed a ach her again and yet | again, with an ever-increasing heap of ' slain and wounded weltering 1 the ground By n father’s sword, is to be t r annihilation!’ said Abou Ku- ram. breathing thick and fast. “ They mean to kill each other out.” But almost <: he spoke the enemy, but } : uch our lines, . LET ng space and i hea ru body, the man n the black horse slashing and hew- ing in froni 1 way that fairly justi- fied the ta! of his Satanic character. At the san time Yume Yusel’s cam- elmen, rending the air th yells, rush- ed, lurched, and sorenyinas to the aid of the eavalry From that n rent, so f is I could . all ore r vanished. There is a theory that in properly planned bat- tles things: go by method and prear- rangement. The idea is a preity one¢ for drawing-room warriors, but if there were the least truth in it no battle should ever be lost or won. There would be no Marathon, no Therm: Py lae, no Waterloo, no Alma, no Luck- now, to shed lustre and glory on the human ra and give an interest to desperate hazards. Take my word f it, that a fight between two armies de- termined to win or die is a thing of heart-shaking surprises and riotous contempt of regulations. The moment the ‘common soldier, panting for revenge or frantic to save his skin, takes matters into his own hards, provhecies and prearrangements go to the winds. The general may plan, wut the soldier does the work, and generally his own way and in flat detionee *) orders In that wal- Coat and Vest alba at D. A. BRUCES } a, [Copyright, 1893, by John Alexander Steuare.} billowv were not dozen knew their hea their heels. Al- most every mother’s son in that gory chaos cut and thrust and stabbed and charged and recoiled and reared at his lcewing, there host, I dare half a ds from assert, men who OWn sweet will, and in obedience to what might seem to his whirling mind the exigencies of the occasion. For myself, what with incessant knocks and collisions, the hubbub of rage and agony, the sharp scream and envenomed oath, and most of all the sickening sight of living men being Sliced and laid open, my wits were so confounded I might have been in the throes of a nighimare. I had a Sword and a brace of pistols, though What I did with them heaven alone knows. They may have accounted for some of the enemy, but I have no Knowledge of shedding any man’s blood, which is perhaps a solace to the conscience in locking back from the vale of vears. In the dartings hither and thither of my mare I got glimpses of Abou Kuram making flashes of crimson light with his sword, of the man on the black horse hewing savagely where there lay the best chance of doing havoc, of Ismael Numar and Koor Ali laying about them as if they were us- ing pruning hooks in a forest of sap- lings, and of Amood Sinn scurrying to and fro in abject terror, fighting the air, and ever getting into the places he would have given his king- dom to be able to avoid. I laughed at him with the hilarity of hysteria, and I have an idea cried jeering words as well. But how the tide of war was running I knew not, and probably you would not have known had you been in my place Once in a wild swirl I got knocked out of the saddle, but with wildcat clutch I caught something—probably the pomme! or mane before me—and was up again in an instant, wondering in my own mind whether I was mor- tally wounded or whether I was wound- ed at all, and as I was trying to de- cide I came upon a sight that drove all thought of self away and made me rein up with a jerk. In the midst of their partisans, who had formed a circle, as if to fee fair play to the champions, were Koor Ali and the man on the black horse in a hand-to-hand fight. I do not know how long they had been at it before I chanced to see them, but the con- test did not iast long after my coming up. Koor Ali was a good soldier and an expert swordsman, but his fate was upon him. The man on the black horse first tipped off an ostrich plume from the other’s turban, then some ribbons, then he shore a piece of each side, as if showing the easy and dainty precision with which he handled his weapon. Two or three swift passes followed, then, rising quickly in his stirrups, with a lightning-like stroke, he clove his antagonist from crown to breast- bone, so that half fell either way. (As will be seen later on, this stroke was never learned in Arabia.) From the raised sword-hand of the divided man dropped the sword, but the arm itself remained rigid in the air, as if with a final threat of vengean« and there rose from the split throat a shriek which haunts me to thi ay. Then, the horse wheeling, andes a sudden, ; ¢onvulsive pull of the bridle-hand, the body tumbled from the saddle to be mangled by a thousand hoofs. (To be Continned.) 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