00D HEALTH FOR WOMEN Dr. A. W. Chase’s Nerve Food Re. stores Weak, Sickiy Women to Robust Health, ~_— Sera ties in h nant ; Any ties in the monthly uterine action is s : e for r women to be ! : Whether painful, ise menstruation, the cause to some derangement of the At boxes of Dr. A. W. Chase’s Nerve Food I y I { up the exhausted nerves t the regular monthly action w! I the body the cl gged mat- tet otherwise Cause pain and serious u . . . > Pius » "a! 2 i It > restorative for f ule, weak women A. W. s Nerve Food has been : It counteracts the debi- hit S peculiar to women by feeding t! \ " reatinge ne » / ; s and creating new nerve fluid, the vital force of the human body. . 9 te ce ee ee Dr. A. W ise’s Nerve Food has restored scores of hi recs Of weak, sickly women to ' t he soc. a box at all dealers, or ] Bates & Co., Toronto. = + 7 ew illucer Dr. Chase's new illustrated book “‘ The Ils ot i > al il} yw to Cure Them,” sent free to your ad dress. tT ADVICE AECUT SS a Dice. When ordering a packrge Pepper, Ginger, Alispice, Cin namon or Cream of Tartar from your grocer you can al- ways feel sure of securing the best quality by asking for : : : Niott’s ete i a ee oo ee ws a le ie -BO008 4-4 = @ 2424 948638 - "“See%4.%7 24007 42344233 42888 OPERA HUUSE CHARLOTTETOWN tNIGHTS ONLY-4 tHE DAILY EXAMINER The hair must have been cut off when hope of recovery was gone, ) IFRG ihdiaiviine 4 Wee Rie me, al ) 3 ; u wih is > az ine i 9 ms ai PPy viata Vue icud a vat ; i} naa min ted her hu hand of ; prom- across the road.” wig se. He seemed to have forgotten what | “How good—how very good is goat!” said a had sed between them, and ieclared the jackal. + seuies, you Khow, & man always that he must have heen speaking in deli- Hairy, too hairy, and when found in the retrieves himself hy some brilliar bit } jum. If was the duty, he said, of people | Water more than likely to hide a cross * lare-c viltrg rancther I don’t alates | who nursed the sick not to pay atten- shaped hook. But that goat ] accepted . . ‘ K ‘ dient i “oe” : 7 ' ’ | if it really does generally happen tion to ravings which only showed thas | and went down tothe ghaut in great honor } . ' : ‘ } : is if ‘“e . : “ ‘ i tks |} any rate in this casa it didn’t The the brain was off its balance. He had Later, my.Fate sent me the boatman who . os 4 ‘ } jan har e . 2 > : oe fellow was ser home sick aln forbidden her to refer to the subject | had desired to cut off n tai it ; , 1¢ home sick alm ; . j t olf my tail with an ax te. titi ; 4 again. ‘*My ow > is cle ” is boat gr led ut a 'y; sae ed,I believe he was too ill to have oie endian one duty is clear to me, Hi boat grounded upon an old shoal, which much voice in the matter of the inquiry, | testin sw i. ou have my letter; re Rn ae tek emeann an od e : S ) 7 ‘ 7 in . ont ¢ ; ’ OTT 2 oro + wt? 2 1 ; ° and I don’t believe he was under fire | as a ‘i nenay when — call sor 1% we a jackals here,” said the igain to the day of his death a oo _ the paper which held the hair j adjutant. ‘“‘Wasit the shoal made where inzen years later the two n : : 48 traced feebly a c With stars at the stone boats sank in the year of the | the most unlucky way. Itwasin Madras points. like that on the wall. Per- great drouth—a long shoal that stood three ittinh eacdiinll an . ; ; Dap hey hi s a > ck 9? — whe re, and this time there was a |! sa 7 ; a Mens Sagatiee ea dock ane Hoods | ludy in the business, She had come out | po” the southern cross. rhere were two,” said the mugger, “an in the same ship with him and there had service ] bel | {ror he had to with he Was too d lraw 1 bai no mr Nneagement } ag | l - at f ane agemen And OF Rete Ban om hie Ps : bee Satan himself would have it, the other | 22° Deen Do thought of how that thiek i Man turned ip, fell in love with ies Silken strand would ba missed. He had | lady, used ie - . refused to strike his enemy , aay, Use the old story unmercfully, | , or aera ak = a - oe "a married her and nearly succeeded } eo u6 on carrying his burden oO lrivir i wniucksy Fi ; sham ; x » it and thanke Griving his unlucky rival ont of the | hin . Pes she Enew Wand thaskes , im, | The colonel and I talked the thing er and sealed up the letters. While we | Were waiting the resuls of the inquiries we had made about my poor friend’s relatives, came my own illness. After- } Ward we arranged that I should take | them home and explain the matter to bis brother; who, it seems, isin rather an influential position, and he can do as he pleuses about it. But the other man has left the service,his name is no longer in the army list. So I don’t sea what can be done ty him, if the thing were capable of proof, which it isn’t. 1 the club but . gezed to Llineh, at the sama e ‘ tw, “if > . tation with the couple when the lady | and | Gied, not two years atver her marriage. i | he was certainly That is what I Jearned. Now for Own sh ire my in the Cholera, sometimes strikes a man down e blow of a tiger’s paw. He may sbout and well atsunrise and dead by My poor business, tr? inidday. iriend and I had our tea together at daybreak; when I came in from the batts he was past speech. J his papers, I knew vothing of his affairs or his family, but sa. : te asael to look over . “ORT aw la : : had been more with him than any one _ Nay nay ! notingratitude!” the mugger elas. said. ‘‘They do not think for others, that I had never been in his rooms till I is all. But I have noticed, lying at my Was culled in to see him die. They were | Sttion below the ford, that the stairs of as bare as they well could I noticed | tBe new bridge are cruelly hard to climb, one thing. On the white wali, jnst close | both for old people and young children. to where his face must have turned as he | |e old, indeed, are not so worthy of con- slept on the little pallet-bed, a cross was sideration, but I am grieved—I am truly traved incharcoal. It was not accident Matt - ghenbaae _ acoguns ofthe children. Still, the lines were doubled, and cross lines | Ithink, in a little while, when the new- serawled to mark the ends, so that thera | @&55 of the bridge has worn away, we shall Was a star at each point. A damp sponge | © ™Y people’s bare brown legs bravely be, would have made an end of it in a mo- ! splashing through the ford as_ before. ment, {t was ao faint. But [remembered | 7 hen the old mugger will be honored again.”’ the shape. There were next to no papers —nothing to tell ms who onght to be “But surely I saw marigold wreaths written to. Hardly a letter—bills dock- | 10@ting off the edge of the ghaut only this eted and notes about regimental matters, | 20", said the adjutant. Marigold But in the only box his servant sald he | WTeaths are a sign of reverence all India oyer,”’ kept locked there was an envelope with i @ couple of leiters ‘n a lady’s handwrit- ing, and there wus a ‘ong tress of chest- , nut hair, I didn't like to read ther | *isht year by year, and cannot tell a log and took it all to the edglenel, But he from me—the mugger ofthe ghaut. Isaw caid they might give us the information ) the mistake when sue threw the garland, we wanted, Sol tock them out of the | for I was lying at the very foot of the envelopes in his presence and first just ghant, and had she taken another step I glanced at the “~- hues, could have shown her some little differ- ihe name eas Shed of the man who j ence. Yet she meant well, and we must hac brought such rnin into my friend’s wie oe ~ _ ene wc ue life. They were fro.n his wife. het DEES oan SENDS Wreeine Waee . one ison the rubbish heap?’”’ said the jack: She was a good woman, Mra, Marston; 1 a . or a gacken, hunting for fleas, but keeping one wary | “An error—an error. It was the wife of the sweetmeatseller. She loses her eye- and SATURDAY MATINEE Special Encoagement of MR. NOR. NAM PARR u. P. Flocton’s Comedy & Vaudeville Co. MAGNIFICENT ENTERTAINMENT Com prieinz Dramatic Sketches,2 Scream ng farces— Songs — Instrumental Solos, etc, etc.— making io all a strictly bigh- class Vaudeville attraction. EIOGRAPH—The latest sen- sation of the day. cents, Popular srices— aod at Dodd’s and Reservod seats on sale Rankine. W hite’s Caramels and Snowflake Chacolates == Can be had at any of the foilowing first class stores: T. J. Morris D. L. Hooper W. Pickard & Co. W. A. Hutcheson W. F. Carter Stewart & Gates Sanderson & Co. Beer & Gefl ‘Dividend Notice } mentees t Mircuaxts Banx or P. E. I. i Charlottetown, June Ist, 1899 Notice is hereby given, that a half ‘yearly diy dend at the rate of 8 yer cent lper annuro, on the capitel stock of the {bank has been declared payable at ite barking louse on and after July 3rd next The Transfer books will be closed from the 19h June, to the 3rd of July next, both days inclusiye. By order of the Board. J. M, DAVISON. Casbier what the letters told was horrible j Se ae af ; enougti,but her part was as clear as God's | 675 Ca ee Protector of the Poor, sunlight. ‘ rue, but they have not yet begtin to J suppose her husband had met with ; make the rubbish heap chat shall carry | wome dangerous accident. Sho wrote in! me. Five times have I seen the river | a kind of passion of supplication, en- { draw back from the village and make new | treating my friend to write one line of } !stdat the footof the street. Five times | forgiveness to his poor dying enemy. He j "Ve I seen the village rebuilt on the had confessed to ner, sho aid; all he | %&eks and I shall see it built yet five | Tam no hate Kasi to-day and Prayag the true d constant watcher of the ford. Ib res more, faithless, fi wanted was to make his confeaalov pub- ott PAVLAL. 2, Hé lie, but there was no time. The doctot had told her he would not live to see the sun rise. As she wrote he was lying to morruw, as the saying is, bu as white and as still as he would lie in tf nothing, child, thn i} lage a few hours in his coffin. and then it | be would be too late, then he would be s the saving is, ‘suall at last have his re beyond the reach of forgiveness. He wara.’”’ eould ‘trhderstand her still; perhaps he “T have watched long—verr lonz—neat'y woulda still be able to hear her read the | all my life, and my reward has been biévs message shé knew the answer would lt contain. She knew it, because she had | “Lic! | Ilo!” roa: at. injured him too—it was the memory ™" ist was the j uo bora fe ™ 2@ ii dat of that wrong that made her sure. It was like acry for mercy, written all in a breath, as it were, at her hus band’s bedside, I dare say. I can fancy his eyes foliowing heras she wrote—efes with the terror of death looking out of them, The other letter was different. The handwriting was labered,as though every letter had cost her a struggle, and the expression was quite culd and simple. She wrote, she said, with a feel ling of the deepest humiliation. At ia tearit s he, ‘I ca There i me very unpleasant peculias ! ' i } | ; . 4 : : ity about the adjutant. At unc. rtain | n Ters froma Lit ect <6 ' t ' ite oe fidvets or cratnp in] | and tc! : Gc & behold than any of th cranes, who are allimmensely respectavie, is more virtuous to ild, . se opening his Wings crippie stilt war he flies off into w dances, half and bo! tne : sae : : t known to himself he is ver his worst attacks remarks. At the iast he came toattention b iore reasons kx careful to time with his nastiest word of song again, ten times adjutanter than The jackal winced, though he was full three seasons old, but you cannot resent his rine sicht ; tk ' spiring igint in 1¢ \Q : we rid than the picture | a2 or tare Staiwart yong Nag farmer and his rosy- } | | There is no more in } | J : i. an tnantt foam « il aah » iN a i tt Axh cheeked wife start- | #2 insult from a person with al ak a yard ISN Se ing out to fight long. and the power of driving it like at JA} Pw the battie of life | javelin. The adjutant was a most notori no } reason i coup Nive lV ous coward, but the jackal was worse. ‘We must live before we can learn,” said the mugger, “and there is this to say. Little jackals are very common, child, but There is why all su <7 , 7 salA neo* les should 1 han, happy, Much dé long, lives. pends | A upon the wife herself | such amugger as I am is not common. To some extent, she must | For all that I am not proud, since pride is be a jack of all trad: destruction: but take notice, itis Fate,and Ugg tier husband must be a | against his fate no one who swims or J little of a blacksmith and | walks or runs should say anything at all. , a little of a harness ma<- | 7 .m well content with fate. With good er and a little of a veterinary surgeot a° | 1.01 4 keen eye and the custom of consid- well as a farmer. It is the same with { wife. It is a long ways to town, and ef ae must have a handy hand at many things. | an outlet It is possibly many miles to the first physi- ; be done. ing whether a creek or a backwater has to it ere you ascend, much may cian, and the farmer’s wife should be able | “Once lI heard that even the Protector ais, © ™ ‘ Faenialey 7 . a ’ ; } to see that every member of the family 18 | of the Poor made a mistake,” said the kept in good health. | jackal. If the young farmer’s wife is wise, when | her husband shows that he is out of sorts, when he is suffering from biliousness or torpidity of the liver or indigestion, she wil! not permit him to neglect these disor- ders. but will have at hand Dr. Pierce's . Golden Medical Discovery. _ This wonder- | fil medicine is not a cure-all, but as meat diseases have their inception in 4 torpi | ‘rune: but there my Fate helped me. It was before I had come to my full growth— | before the last famine but three (by the | Rightand Left of Gunga, how full the streams used to be in those days!) Yes, I flood came, who so pleased as I? A little : aid made me very happy then. The village liver or a disordered Cgeeton, - ; ae was deep in flood, a I swam above the for a great many = ed ind eaelcaiie, | ghaut and went far inland, up to the rice appetite “oy Siiver active the blood pure | fields, and they were deep in good mud, I tion geri ae It cures all smalar- | remember alsoa pair of bracelets (glass 2 es steady. al _ Pod and rheumatism. Medicine | they were, and troubled me not a little) dealers sell it, and keep nothing else “just | that I found that evening. Yes, glass od.’” | bracelets; and, if my memory serves me “the farmer's wife may frequently fer | Well, a shoe. I should have shaken off the life of her husband = paged Ae Pierce’s | both shoes, but Iwas hungry. I learned children * OWT ai T Rdviser. It tells | better later. Yes. And so I fed and rest- an oe all the ordinary ills of life and | ed me; and when I was ready to go to the aoe oe for serious accident cases while | river again the flood had fallen, and I awaiting the arrival of a physician. Itcon- walked through the mud of the main tains I pages. It used to cost $1.50 $ street. Who butI? Came outall my peo- copy; now it is free. Fora paper-covere@ | Je, priests and women and children, and I looked upon them with benevolence. The - t stamps /o cover copy send 31 one -cen torld’s customs and mailing only, to Ne mie. mud is not a good place to fightin. Saida Medical Association, Buffalo, Jure lst, 1899 Dispensaty indi s. boatman, ‘Get axes and kill him, for he is = ye ae ceaaet Pellets eure consti- the mugger of the ford.’ ‘Not so,’ said the tio and biliousness, They regulate and Brahmin priest. ‘Look, he is driving the nvigorate stomach, liver and bowels.. good before him! He is the godling of the a druggists do not recommend some- vi » Then they threw flo’ as thing else as ‘just as good. llage. many Lowers ‘re could | ' rt . smy name, and ‘he who watches long | ' | bing his bald head up and down; while for | was young and unthinking, and when the } CHAKLOTTETOWN, JUNE 29, 1899 ‘ LL a Le a eee See Ae SY eT ee Re CCP SPN upper and a lower shoal.” “Aye, I forgot. © el and lat A channel divided them rdried up again,” said the adjut- ant, who prided hinfself on his memory. “On the lower shoal wisher’s craft grounded. He was sleeping in the bows, and, half awake, leaped over his my well — —no, it was no more than to his cnees = fF Blin seni hees—to push off, His empty boat went on and touched again below the next reach, asthe river ran then. J followed because I knew men would run out todrag it ashore.”’ “And did they doso?” said the jackal, a little awe stricken. This was hunting on a scale that impressed him. 2 “There and lower down they did. I went no further, but that gave me three in one day—well-fed manjis (boatmen) all, and, except in the case of the last, never a cry to warn those on the bank.” _ ' “Ah, noble sport! But what cleverness and great judgment it requires!” said the jackal. “Not cleverness, child, but thought. A little thought in life is like salt unon rice, as the boatmen say, and I have ‘thought deeply always. The gavial, my cousin, the fish eater, has told me how hard it is for ; him to follow the fish, and how one fish differs from the other, and how he must know them all, both together and apart. I say that is wisdom; but, on the other hand, my cousin the gavial lives among his pew ple. My people do not swim in companies with their mouths out of the water, as the tewa does; nor do they constantly rise to the surface of the water, and turn over on their sides, like Mohoo and little Chapta; nor do they gather in shoals after flood, Like Eatchus and Chilwa.” (To be Cuntinued. ) SOppressive eat. How weak and weary one feels after the slightest exertion these hot days. All the strength stems to. | Ss difference, though, after a refreshing glass of POPPPPPP HNN PN PHD N NTT ONT? FEPPEPPPPORT ERY PPT YDPIPPERDT IITA Y eP AD a : ” ae. hy 3% sé ) . ae aS ae MME Me Nb ME NEN Mey Me ME ME NE NE NEMS SIRS RR RUE DRESSES Tisn’t--= Irdinary Yalues that we wish you to see when we as! you to look at our Ready-to-Wear Clothing. Ordinary values you can see anywhere, but it’s a saving ofat least 35 per cent. on your purchase, How can we do this? Because we bought the goods that .nuch less, at che Doull and Gibson great retiring sale, and we give our customers the benefit of the low price paid for the goods. We always make it a rule when we bought at a bargain to sell at a bargain. MCDONALD & CO LEADERS IN LOW PRICES. ctyrvetnNOnHeSNEONENeNDanatnDenypenenopnennenagnonve enon nner praca = Men’ ; | wing «=. 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