= ees si the NeT & fond belief that , @m angel is kiss. a : ) Sng it. No woman \@Rains the <v preme joy of wo FEE” fingers, Ne wo- ean meee man kvews the fr i supreme ‘*srrow S ~s of womarhood Ph | until she sees her { , baby in ‘the cold embrace df de; Thousands of *remen daily achieve roe manhood's supremest joy, only to meet, a few days or weeks or month: tater, its supremest sorrow. This is because so many babies are orn into the werid with the seeds of degth alre: adv sowy in their little bedies. f a woman wacld have healthy, robust «children. strong and able to withstand the usnal little ilmesses of childhood, she must eaps. If a womanwrill take the Pramer care of her health in # woma: ily way, during the period of Prospective matemity, she may protect herself against much “pein and suf. fering and possible death. and insure the health of het child Dr. Pierer’s Favorite Prescription ts the greatest of d/l medicines for prospectrve mothers. It:xcts directly on the delicate and importarté organs that | bear the beedens of maternity and makes them strong, healt! 1¥, v\igorems and elastic. It allays inflammation, heads ulceration. soothes pain and tones the tortured nerves It banishes the sual discomforts of the expectant od und makes baby’s advent to this oar easy and almost I Links ss It insures an ample supply of pouaetuneet It is the greatest known nerve tom and ini ¢ ater tor women All good de al rs eell it Sas No ind stick to it when ‘urged to accept a substitute said to bs “just as good as Dr. Pierce's Sileiae Pr ‘ had 1 twi nd was so week I cor aut afas ‘ + fees writes Mrs. Minrnie« Smith, P. M Lowell, Lane Co., Oregon I took tw ttles of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre ' ' now ive a healthy bat nd am Ww we Y T i 1 Lioctar Pi gripe AC t ils 4 1s Corset is Unbrea- kable. “cCREST’’ | | Stand everystrain. Always | comfortable and absolutely | unbreakable, every active woman needs one { Unrivalled for golfers and | | bicyclists Cost only 25c. more than | re jar D & «A styles, and atdniadis es ’ a iain ee them e j French P ® Corsets own (109 P.D.«. 769 ol 50 Only P LD. Co resets i reputation, and are unanestionsely th® wuniversn- best fitting coraetae in exiatence. Thev are made in many different shapes and styles,and can be bought in all deading dry goods Stores at popular price a. Pure Spicss are Profitable But bad + pice is scominable. This is @ truism that no c ym petet houskeeeper should forget. Half the trouble of cook ing is pas’ if you get the ripat brand of Spice, and while there sre maay that are fairiy good, it 1 always safest to take one which « invariably uni- form. That one is ; j ; Manhood wisi | “- ~she knows he re PR SK ) Caressing to'teh a fp a of @ first-bom’s en “look ‘before she | eae a, ate Deceit eee “=ee8 2 EP TEES g | ry eo) ey SEES CHAPTER If Her tpreparations were still incoxpicte | when Eben put his shining face through | ‘the apen window nearest to the roller ‘towel, which was just then im active | service. “Short ‘lowance of time for grub, Becky. How come you to forget us? Never knowed yon do it before.’’ **I’ve been flustered all mornin, Eben ~At least ever since Dan fetched the rozil home.’”’ ‘‘Mail? Anything wrong’ with Strong?’’ ‘‘Strong’s all right, for anything J know to the contrary. It's about Liza, @ld man.”’ “Well?” There was a sharp note of anxiety in tthe lond, fresh voice. Strong and Eliza were the objects about which all the \ifamily pride and homage revolved. ‘*She’s sent her picture home, Eben ‘Here it is. What do von think of it?’ With gingerly deference the overseey | took the imperial photograph into his ' freshly scoured hands, first making sure _ ' Strong! She’s been runnin the big “You rung tat bell like you woe ine | hurry.” by passing the backs of them carefully down his trousers legs, that no moisture could possibly cling to them. His wife stood silently at his elbow, gazing wist- fully at the white throated, delicately featured face of the disconcerting pic- ture. The overseer’s long and silent in- spection culminated in a prolonged | whistle of amazement. ‘*That our girl! That our little Eliza | I used to take afield on the pommel of | my saddle? You're foolin me, Becky! Wy, this here’s the picture of a queen. She looks like a young empress.’ ‘‘She does, indeed. That's -what’s } pesterin me.”’ ‘*Pesterin you?”’ ‘‘Yes. What-are we goin todo with | a queen in this hdle, Martin? Look at that slim white neck of hers and that round bit of a waist. She’salady, Eben, from them purty waves falling over her | forehead down to the tips of her toes, which we can’t see in the picture.”’ | Eben was still studying the fair, un- | familiar face of his cnly daughter. The sweet, serious eyes looked at him un- smilingly. They did not know each other—that burly man and dainty girl. ‘‘T hope she won’t be too fine for the home that’s been good enough for her mother all these years,’’ Eben :said gently. ‘‘Her and me are cut out by different natterns, Eben. She ain’t goin to fit in here aon be a shock to her, old man, : positive shock. We've done wrong more ‘tha n oncet by our own daughter, Martin, and I’m jast in atremble all over since I’ve seen what she’s growed up to me, 7 ‘‘Done wrong? How do you make that | out?’’ He placed the photograph conspicu ously on the dining room mantelpiece lodging it on. top th: WOO den turrets iv SAVE THE MOTHERS Dodd’s Kidney Pills Their Only | | would get through school and hafter | come home. And now, Eben, she'll find Safety in Female Diseases. You have seen a flower nipped by frost, fade and die in the flush of its beauty. ‘That is how women die when attacked by any of the discases peculiar to their sex. Woman’s burdens are woefully heavy. Her sufferings are agonizing. Her patience is grand. Disease preys upon her. The light dies out of her eyes, her steps become slow and dragging; she loses flesh ; grows sallow, listless, droops like a flower. Then she dies. Her family is left to the cold mercy of the world. “ Mother’s dead!” What a piteous phrase. What sufferings have been endured before it was used. Why should mothers, wives, sisters suffer so? They need not. Dodd's Kidney Pills will quickly and thoroughly cure all cases of Female Weakness. They never fail. They give health, strength, courage: a new lease of life. 2 Nostine, a me ee CHARLOTTETOWN SPOR OF By ANTE BELLUAA DAYS, et * TEANCESER Mot TALNTORGH COPYRIGHT, (897 BY THE AUTKOR. Which the eight day clock culminatec. ‘Thar. Leave it thar till the bors come in and make ’em guess who it is. l'un bound to cat grd cut.’’ “*\vhere are the boys, father?"’ “Down in the new cut. Seth said he’d rather finish that bit o’ fencin while he was down thar than t’ bafter go back t’morrer, and Charlie’s turned in t? help him. It ain’t likely they’ get through before sundow -t He dragged a chair tothe table. It erate d harshly across the bare floor. Mrs. Martin disappeared with the coffee pot. She went to put it on the kitchen n stove. The boys liked their strong black fiuid hot. Eben was cutting a liberal wedge out of the circular pone of egg bread when she got back. He accosted her with a full mouth. ‘*You ain’t never explained yet what you meant by us doin Liza a wrong. I theught we was givin her the bes’ chance in ‘he world. Mrs. Strong said we didn’t heve no right to deny her the blessin's of a good education.”’ ‘‘Mrs. Strong! That’s just it. Mrs. Sumedie house and the governor and the boys and the yard hands so long that she can’t keep her finger out of anybody’s pie.’’ ‘*‘¥Yon sound sorter snappish, Becky. You know they set a heap of store by book learnin up at the gov’nor’s, and our girl was uncommon bright and purty. It was a sorter freak of nature our havin such a child given to us, with her yellow curls and her great big eyes and little hands and feet.”’ ‘Strong is just as good lookin im his way.’’ ‘*And I don’t think it’s for us to com- plain when the governor’s kep’ Strong at Shingleton college these years at hi: own cost.’’ ‘‘That is because Strong is named fox him, and he wants the respectability of the name kep’ up. But Strong and Elivs is two different people, Eben, and Pm not sayin college is goin to harm om boy. He’s got his way to make in the world, and all three of the boys can’t oversee for Adrien when the governor's gone. Strong don’t expect tocome home and spend the rest of his days starin out “ them niggers’ cabit 1s, , listenin to tha verlastin sian g ‘i wi and at a lot of mules switchin the flies off close to our very bedroom win dows. Sometimes it sorter grates even on me, old man, specially if I’ve just come back from the big house, where it’s all , but I’ve got used to it so different e she’s been out of it now for eight b! years. And there, Eben, I done wrong | +} in lettin Mrs. Strong send her all p Gabriella’s fine clothes and things.’ ‘*Gabriella was dead. She didn’t want the frippery no longer.”’ ‘*Yeos, I reckon I knowed that as well as youco. But it has helped to spcil | lta our Liza. She’s got on a silk dressri there in that picture now, Eben. fhe | used to say when she was a little girl | ! that she loved tohear Mrs. Strong’s silk | dresses go swish swish along the hall | the big house. I remember that very dress. It’s a little blue and wh Re check silk with lace—real lace, old man—#in | the threat and sleeves. I don’t ‘this k she’ll care to hear it go swish swish over these rough plank floors, Martin, ! } - or? do you! She tanght her breath and went on more anxiously: ‘‘And then, Eben, the worst wrong of all I’ve done her was lettin Mrs. Strong do all the letter writ- | in. and when she comes home her moth- | er-—hber own mother’ll be the worse shock of all to her, old man.’’ The rds culminated in a hard, dry sob. ‘*Put somehow when her first letter came home, lookin so sweet and clean | and prim, I just couldn’t bear fo send ‘ ; her back one of my awful scrawls, end when Mrs. Strong said it sorter comfort- ed her by makin her feel as if she wis writin to her own Gabriella, I just lot things goon, never lookin far enough ahead to see the time when the child out what a cheat I am. I almost wish she did not hafter come back at all.”’ ‘‘Don’t sa¥ that, Becky. She oughter be « real comfort to you when me and the boys has to leave you by yourself so much. She'll gut used to things little by little.’’ ‘Duke's fitter company for me than that slim, dainty thing, Eben. I’m goin to be afraid of her. She won't fit in here, Eben. Never, never, never! And if she don’t reproach us in words she will in her heart. She’ll pine away here, Martin.”” ‘ (To be Continued.) —_——__—— “Fleetwood,” 2354, stands at Andrew Doyie’s stables, Grafton Street, every Fri- day. Balance of time at Albert Craswell’s, Rustico. In breeding and in iudividuality this grand herse is not surpassed on the Island and Mr. Craswell expects to give him a mark of 2 26 or betier this fall lke he gave his brother Shaver last fall. hould see “Fleetwood” va encanto 15! 2i d 2iw. Gingham, from dc to lode, grand value. Flannetiete, 5c, 7c, 8c, Ie; 10c¢ and Ile. Towel: ing from 4c to 8c per “Bath Towels 20c to $ 1.00 Side Reard Covers, regular price 40 50, 60, at 20c, 25¢e, Dress Le neihs, { $16.00 to $24,0u, now $12.00, | at 10¢ worth 20c. 10.00, 8.00, 5.00 and 3.00. Colored Dress Goods trom 18¢ to 38¢ per yd Biack Dress Guods at 25c to 85c per yd. All wool > JULY 5 1898 aan MACK A Y o LADIES—See the Bargains we offer in STAPLE DRY GOOD at prices so low that you cannot help purchasing when you see the qnality and finish of ti} ollowing every day wan’s, Print Cotton at 9 to 16c] '152 and 20c per yd, Braid, former price 6: now 3; 5 and 10c, Black and Coloree price 2¢c and 25c. new selling former price at 20c, former price 40c snap at 5c per pair. The above prices bold good euery day of the week. eo Be avsnnensnanecnonenreneneenennene ane nn ynny rt? “a - aa y ; aaa 7799 +?Ff 997 - . : SUTTPERT ENTE eit an AA HRAAKAAAAASH I Wi made of different makers parts, THE, ....- Massey Harris is made in the Cumpany’s own plant. Massey-Harris Co. LIMITED. MARK WRIGHT & CO Agents Ch’town, ROGERS & ROCERS Agents for 8’side. fc EEREERERE GREE REVS ‘i ‘VE HAD ENCOURAGING niche dyer TRADE SSE, we EVER did in the same time, that, and we think it is this: beet, grades, and have asked only poor grade prices. We have ul! grades, from 60c up. piiluws, ee We are leaders in the Green business We sell the best We have sold more jin the past six years than any bouse in P. E. Island. Plain China Silk at 10c. suitasle for trim- ‘mings, selling at half price, (rens’ at 10c to 20¢, 10 and 206, | Ya- | teens—10c and 12c, former UP, worth double the moner® | Ladies’ Undervests, alls Ladies Handkerchiefs plain and hemstitch going at 4c each Ladies Emb. Hkfs going Ladies Linen HKfs selling Ladies Cotton Gloves a Vik kee aaa AAAAARAZ BTCC ETC CLLEG LEC AAAAPAAALLaAhAAAL tak AALlkk aad dbdAdd Aad TAA Addad in nattresses, In fact we have sold more this spring than There must be @ reason We have handled only When comparing ours with others, note PARTICULARLY the difference in quality of ticking and the general appearance and juet here we would lik, to call your attention to our | John Newson Ki CELE SEES SF SESS IFES PARIS GREEN. FENNEL. & CHANDLER. black silk, 25c and 5c per yd, dlack velvet from 80c u DOMINION OF CANADA, ] | In Cuancery | . Gas Light Company and the Dis a > Ba A - nears Se eneieimeeiiiimen seal vine Ladies Gloves waite Hose Supporters, chil Colored Velvot 25c p Ladies Parasols trom 4! from 10c to 30¢, : Ladies’ Hose from 12c\% 35¢ per pair. ‘| & a ; a » Children s Hose —10c, 15 15c and 18c per pair. Dress Waslin—7e, 10c, 12 worth double the money. PROVINCE UF PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, Th _ the matter of the Charlottetow cae "ot its Assets among th Shareholders. To Reverend Ralpb Brecken, of Sackvil New Brunswick, Executor of tbe! talph Brecken; Edgar Hubert Beer, « Charlottetown, Executor of George RJ Beer; Frauk D, Beer, of Charlottetowa Medical Doctor; Edward Bayfield, Charlottetown Executor and Trustee off Henry W. Bayfield; Andrew A, McDoo ald, ot Charlottetown, Executor of Ow Connolly; Francis L. daszard, of Char lottetown, Representative of the Estas cf the late Charles Hensley; Henry &. Lordly, of Charlottetown; Hugh Monagh en, of Charlottetown; ‘Thomas Handra-] han, of Charlottetown, Trustee for Fanny Leigh; and William A. Weeks, ¢ younger, of Charlottetown, Executor ¢ the late Williara Weeks, AND OTHER Shareholders in the eaid Companry An 1D TO ALL REPRESENTATI VES, AGENTS of and TRUSTEES for deceased or absent Shareholders » These are to require you and each of yo and sll and every other persen or per~| sons interested, or claiming tobe inter este! in the said Company, as Share holder or Representative, Agent, Trustee or Agent or Shareholders, to appem before me, Rowen Robert Fitzgeraidf Vice Chancellor, in Chariottetown, a the Court of the Vice ‘Chancellor, or i Thursday, the Twenty-eight day of Jul next, atthe hour of eleven o’clock in th forenoon, io show cause why an acccunt) should not be taken of the affairs afub-e & Compasy, and of its debte, property and assets, and why ® sum of monary now ia) the ame is of the directure » the proceede.of § the sale of property of the said Company, and eliotnerthe assets of the seid ‘Cum - pany hereafter to be realize d, should not be divided among the ehareholders and ij for the others interested therein, or baving claime } thereto, ax soon 88 can be, and whys , decree sheuld not be made declaring the rights of -hereholders between themeclel | and their ree pective rights, and directing F 1 the mode of divi ding and paying out such assets among sbareboldere and creditora of the company, aod the payment of coste incident to the said proceedings. All per- eons interested are hereby notified thata decree to be made in the premises shail be final, and that all persons not Tr alk Og claim at the time and place aforesaia shald be barred from any right or claim not al« lowed by such decree. You are further no! ified that # petition has been filed by the direcors df the said Company with the Registrar of the Courtof Chancery in Charlottetowo setting forth the names of thareholders and their respective shares ae far as known, and other facts in connection with the affairs ofthe Company pursuant to the Act of the Legislature, iatitiuled “ An Act to Facilitate the Liquidation of the Affairs of the Charlottetown Gas Light Company.” You and each of you are further notified that in default of your ap~ pearance atthe time and place aforesaid the hearing of the matter of said petition will proceed, and a decision wii) be made by which you wiil be as effectually boand as if you hed appeared. Dated at Charlottetown this Eighteenth day of June, A D. 1398. ; (Sg’d) R. R. FITZGERALD, Vice Charceillor, H. JAMES PALMER, Charlottetown, P. E. Island, Solicitor for said Company, d & w. TO LET.—The brick store on U r Street lately o.cupied by + ijler 7 session on the 2ith Aucust, appl t 7 Mary Ann Offer, Kent sirect, rae f 4 et ee _— ae