Intelligent - this — in v and age al set without ¢x jon, protect . mse lves ins small a a yvaccina Consump tion. tion kills in a ~ year more peo IT ple than sm all-/ < ¢ holera, gellow fever and all kn ow n es kill in fifty. Tens of thousands of intelligent people recognize that they are threatened by this deadly disease, but take go precautions against it te Consumption approaches its victim step by step. First there is a little “out of gots’ feeling, the digestion isn t just right, the appetite falls off, the liver is inactive, the assimilation of the life-giving elements of the food is imperfect, the blood gets im- ce and the body is improperly nourished. Frese conditions get worse and worse. The heart through the arterial system is pump- ing thin, poisonous blood into every organ githe body. The organs that are inherently geakest break down first. Ordinarily the jungs. As the last straw that breaks the camel's back comes a cold, however slight. This, with the accompanying cough, com. tes the work and an invasion of the germs efconsumption follows. Dr. Pierce’s Gold- en Medical Discovery cures 98 per cent. of agiicases of consumption. It corrects the conditions that lead up toit. It isthe great- est blood-maker and flesh-builder known. KC. McLin, Esq.. of Kempsville, Princess anne Co., Va.. writes When I commenced taking yout ‘ Discovery’ I was very low with a eugh. and at times spit up much bloed. I was got able to do the least work, but most of the time wasin bed. I was all run-down. very weak, gy bead was dizzy. and I was extremely des- poudent. The first bottle I took did not seem to dome much good. but I had faith in it and con- fiaued using it until I had taken fifteen bottles and sow I do not look nor fee! like the same man Iwasone year ago. People are astonished. and ay, ‘well, last vear this time I would not have thought that vou would be living now.’ I can thankfully say I am entirely cured of a disease which. but for vour wonderful * Discovery,’ would wave resulted in my death,” Indestructible (a) AT THE SIDE. The D & A “CREST” Corset is just what thousands od women are | king for. The disposition of the lower #eels and the hip lacing are whet make this corset posi- tively unbreakable. It is a‘so perfect as to fit and made in al! styles Ask your dealer to show you the D & A *‘Crest.’’ Nature makes the cures ater all. Now and then she gets into a tight place and needs delpine out. Things get started ‘in the Wong direction. Something is needed to theck disease and start the Wstem in the right direction ward health. Scott’s Emulsicn of Cod- iver Oil with hy pophos- phites can do just this. It strengthens the nerves, keds famished tissues, and Makes rich blood. §0c. and $1.00; all druggists. SCOTT & BOWN E, Chemists, Toronto. .. ad iti al all ot ———_ PPSS GOGOA ENGLISH BREAKFAST COCOA Possesses the following Distinctive Merits: DELICACY OF FLAVOR, RIORITY in QUALITY. SRATEFUL and COMFORTING 10 the NERVOUS or DYSPEPTiC. WTPITIVE QUALITIES UNRIVALLED Tn Quartor-Pound Tins only. Een’ °Y JAMES EPPS & CO., Lid ‘SBcpathic Chemists, London, — Enzland. MMER Por COTTAGE FJR SALE. MR ef land, beauritally Sale, a comfortable cottage with t situated at Kep- ae a delightful view of the straits bathi Devas Noing, convenient to town, and @ i tholidav resort. Apply to JUDGE McLEOD, 8. Side, a THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, MAY 6, 1898, SYNOPSIS. Peter Clephane and Andrew Kilgour are consins, etndente at Edinburg University, betwren whom is a better fend. The former is the eon of a rich city lawyer and hia consin is the heir of an estate in the Highlands that has almost pasied in'o the hands of creditors. Afier a bitter fight with his cousin, Kilgour is on hie 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 his uncle, Peter Clephane’s father. To retrive his fam:ly’* fortune Andrew is cent tol dia, All ( - CHAPTER anne me, TS avab. graciously. ‘] who and what thou art, and how thou camest hither, where, I doubt, if any man of thy nation ever set foot fore. belly. When thou hast rested, peradventure thou wilt tell thy story.” Continued.) wren son,” said be- eaten We through answer questions. long distance wound for a circling streets, clustering palms into a small but lux- uriant garden, fraught with flowers water, he took off my shoes and wash- ed my feet, a piece of attention that was. strange, but exceedingly refresh- ing. After awhile came the food. This consisted of a large piece of boiled mutton, a kind of batter made of ground wheat and melted butter, boil- ed rice. fresh dates, figs, sour camel’s milk and coffee—real Mocha, that never by any chance comes to Western lands. The stuff that deluded Eng- lishmen gulp down es coffee an Arab menial would not put to his lips. The truth is that the untravelled Briton never sees Mocha. What passes with him as such is only the refuse of all the plantations of Arabia, and often of plantations outside of Arabia, gathered in the interest of shippers, and greatly to the prejudice of occidental palates and stomachs. The pale, flavourless berries sent to Western America are to the rich, matic berries valued by Eastern peoples what the sour crab apple is to the luscious nectarine, yet the swells of London and Paris drink the muddy mixture served to them as coffee with symptoms of delight. Truly, ignorance has its enjoyments and consolations As for myself. my nose never comes over a cup of the English preparation without causing me an of disgust. The meal was all brought in togeth- er, heaped on one huge wooden trench- er, and what had been on the fire was eaten scalding hot with the fingers, for the Arabs scorn the frivolity of Knives and forks. I found no diffi- bers ’’ in the west. Put mind and ing fever of thirst let water plash and sparkle and stream. In- stead of noxious blasts, let— : fountni in TOUNTAIN torrid, JOy and deep content. Everything Wis in unison with my mood, from the m*stic splendours of the encircling rn tains to the soft beanty and in- cense of the radiant, mellowy groves close at hand. We spoke not a word. In delicious silence we saw the gold waning, and the rose flushing, and mountain, plain, and tree shining with a Shifting glory that was like an ef- fluent flood of light and colour from the open doors of heaven. Then down dropped the sun, darkness rushed upon the land, and we went inside. Said Archmet lost no time in reminding me of the promise to tell my story. He listened to it with the immovable ecuntenance of the sphinx, sucking quietly at his pipe, his eyes fast on the ground. When the recital was over, he raised his face to mine. “Thou hast been in great peril, my son,”’ he said, ‘“‘and such as thou never couldst have escaped except the hand of God were with thee. Of a surety thou art reserved for some great work.”’ I asked him if he had any idea who and what the men were who had plundered and fired the brig, and al- most truculently he answered :— , ard, if it be possible. warse. “Dogs and thieves and murderers, Il know the | would fain learn | But long tates fit not a hungry | and | his | He led the way, I walking by side in silence, for it is comtrary to | Arabian etiquette to n > a tired man then turned aside under the shadow of | and musical with babbling water. From | the garden to the house was but a step. A black slave met us as we enter- ed, and at a word from his master brought a pile of cushions to the khawah, or reception room, for me, placing them near the stove, which is the place of honour. Then, bringing | Europe and | brown, aro- | inward shiver | culty whatever in reverting to the me- thods of Adam. The batter I could make nothing of, since it was like putty in my hands, and the mutton seemed none too cleanly dressed, but on the rice and fruit |! fell with the furicus Zeal of a famishing man, being indeed az empty as a dry well Tne 1 | fini ! terally finished, for Aral: ! pitality enjoins that a guest shali eat t morsel remains -ve washed our bands, an operation that was highly necessary, and went into the garden tc smoke the pipe of peace under the u'mn}trageous cover of date palms, i cannot express the luxury of re- Clinine in that verdurous sce watch- ing the sun descendinz to “his cham- | body at rest after racking both; let fruits and blossoms and green masses of foliage take the place of a baked and biasted wilderness. After a rag- | Gentle gales, Fanning their cdoriferous wings. dispense | Native perfumes and whisper whence } thes st« Phese balmy spoils. and, above all, let a sense of human cordiality and sympathy replace the distress of the outcast. and you may aindy conceive my feelings of quiet a (Copyright, 1893, by John Alexander Stenart.? tic#i, the evii offspi.ng of Cain. have had their polluting hands on me; they have made me suffer. Th tir deeds reek with iniquitv. They are met lcok you, whose heads should not on their shoulders. anmat is ¢{. But let us not talk of such vile dogs. It is not good. It polluteth the mouth to rame them.” finding him so Strangely moved, I was at a loss how to proceed, but at a venture I inquired the name of thx town. “ The city is called Marabel,” he re- joined. “Thou shalt know it all. It is not so mighty a city as 3ombay; neither is it so rich. Yet it is a fam- cus place, and we have a great gover- ~_ ner. {ft will please me to present thee to him. 3ut perchance I may inquire | what thou meanrest to do ?” | “Hew can the iriftwood cast on | the beach know what the next wave ; Will do with it ?” I answered. } He smoked a little more thouzht- |} fully at this, as if he were ponder- ing something. “We are a people by ourselves,” he remarked, slowly, after the space of a minute. ‘‘ For ages too many to be numbered we have been what thou } seest us. I have fravelled—I know | What changes are in other parts of the earth, but we change not. save to g£o from youth to age, from our mother’s care to the darkness of the grave. As the son is, so was the father, and so | the father’s father, even to the gen- afar off, when the patriarch Abraham built the only house of Mec- ca, and Job, after manifold sufferings, | was enriched for keeping his soul’s | integrity, and numbered the increase of Kis flocks and herds and gathered the | overflow—gold from that which was for wheat, and silver from that which | was for barley. (The Arabs believe | that Abraham built the Caaba, and that after proving the righteousness of Job God sent two clouds which rain- e@ gold and silver on his thrashing flcors till they ran over). The child- ren of Ishmael have been the same since the beginning, like the sun, and the moon, and the stars. (To be Continned.) uP g a somecn POU Stomach trouble is the common ume applied to a derangement of the system which is keenly felt but lt may mean | erations SS See PS aE “el ‘ ‘ vaguely understood. inability te retain food or to digest it. It may mean nausea, pain after | eating, fullness, inordinate craving for food, or entire lack of appetite. \\ hatever it means, there’s trouble, and it’s with the stomach, If you have stemach trouble, you will be interested in this letter from a inan who had it and was cured by Sarsaparilia “Tor nine years I suffered from stomach trouble. I tried the aid of the best doctors f Philadelphia and Pittsburg, and spent irge sums of money, all in vain. One day | while waiting a train in Bellaire, O., I kod up a paper with a notice of Ayer’s narilla. I got one bottle to try it. It cid me so much good that I purchased five more bottles. I took four of them and gained in flesh, my appetite improved, and {| now I can eatanything. My stomach is all right, thanks to the use of Ayer’s Sarsapa- rilla.””—CaLVIN M. STEVENs, Uniontown, Pa. il aan COOD—.- valree for money expended, is what we give inal] goods in our line, to which we attribute our steady increase in business. We are showing a nice assortment of Ladies and Gentlemens WATCHES this season, which are all thoroughly tested before leaving ocr siore. W-~ guarantee every watch sold by us to give satisfaction, by buying now ypu can procure @ good time piece VERY LOW as our goods are bonght low for spo each. Call and see for yourse!lt, at— om ew W..N. TARTON Opp>site Crabbe’s Hardwre Store. TALI ST IY YATE ES ard, to the Front IS the Battle Gry We need not the order, we are always found in the very front rank of value givers. In the front rank for value in clotking ln the front rank for values in Hats & Caps In the frent rank for values in Dress Goods In the front rank for values in Staple Dry Goods, in the front rank for value all along the Dry Goods line, ur Bie Window VVe call the attention of passers by to the assortment and vaiues we stow in Men’s Trousers. what you see elsewhere—we judge’s decision, TW Pla Lit ar3 willing to TOA) Orie Compare these values with stand by a good VW. D. McRAY, Successor to McKay Woolen Co. “LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT ~ you have wearied looking at the blemishes and weakness ofa low grade wheel, come and see the Massey Harris and compare the difference MASSHY HARRIS CO. LIMIMED. Mark Wright & C,-5 gents for Ch’town. Ladics Hats. FLOWERS FETHERS. RIBBONS We are now showing our new stock. Miss Wede will be found on our first floor ready for her customers, T. J HARRIS, London House i Rogers & Rogers, Agents for S’side, Neuralsia in the head is almost invariably cansed by decayed and abscessed teeth. Don’t suffer needlessly when you can be relieved in a few hours and cured in a few days by the careful treatment we will give you. DR. J. H. AYERS DENTIST. Painless Extraction of Teeth. TEETH WITHOUT PLATES Crown and Pridge Work. DR. J. FP. MURRAY 155 Queen Street. = ea