The men who do dar. ing deeds in battle, are men whose arteries pul- sate with the rich, red, vital blood of health. The same is true of the men who win success in the battles of work and business. When a wean’s liver is slug- gish, his digestion im- “ paired, and his stom. ach weak, his blood soot gets thin and im- The blood is the stream of life. If itis impure every vita) organ in the body is improperly nourished and becomes weak and diseased and fails to perform its proper functions in the ecenomy of life. tim suffers from tess of appetite and sleep, -”~ ure The vic ; wind, pain, fulmess and swelling of the | ‘stomach after meals, bad taste in the mouth, foul breath, imaginary lump of food in the throat, headaches, giddiness, crowsiness, heavy head and costiveness. All of these conditions and their causes are promptly cured bw the use of Doctor Pierce’s Golden M-dical Discovery. It brings back the keen edge of appetite, makes the digestion perfect and the liver active It makes ric, red, pure blood, filled with the life-giving elements of the food that build healthy tissues. firm flesh, strong wnuscles and vibrant nerve fibers invigorates and vitalizes the whole body, and imparts mental power and elasticity. It cures 98 per cent. of all cases of con- , sumption, strengthens weak lungs, stops bleeding from lungs, spitting of blood, obstinate lingering coughs and kindred ailments. Costiveness, of the liver are surely manently cured by Dr constipation and torpidity epeedily and per- Pleasant Prerce’s Pellets. They are tinv. sugar-coated gran- tiles. One little ‘‘ Peilet’’ is a gentle laxa. | tive, and two a mild cathartic. They never | gripe. Thev stimulate and strengthen the jaded organs until a regular habit is formed and may then be discontinued without a return of the trouble. They stimulate invigorate and regulate the stomach, live and Medicine stores sell them, and have no other pills that “are just as good.”’ bowels ———— Corsets are made in great variety of styles. Whether tall, s\im, stout or short you can get a D & A that will fit you comfortably, and at the same time add a little to the natural grace of the figure. D&A Corsets Wear as wellasthey fit. (,) Bold by most dry goods houses. { French P D Corsets SHWOa @100 01 P.D....769 $1.50 +. Bh s ‘ } Ui Corsets bave a universal repu at Db, and are nrg emt Oona v the hest fitting COTFets ir exietence. Thev aremade in many different shapes and styles, and can be bought ip al] leading See j arvy WOoOOGs Swore _ . ie pular prices, “” cr rt os! “ILY SECU RED) GET Mich aU ICKL. Write tu+ia, free cony of our vig Hook. on Fatent. extensite eeperrenee, in the intrivare patent lawsof 50 forcign countmes® Bendskeich model crpheto for free atvise. MARION ¢ Ma. RION, Experts, Temple Building, Montrea! luca FOR SALE O8 TO L&T. —— Theat well known bueinese Hotel on Richmond Street, near the market. This Borel conta ns atout twenty good rooms and shop, all in good repair. Good Stabling for thirty Lorces, with large yard in Coguection, i piy to TBOMAS CAMPBELL — It j . we a» eee CC, CCC CT LCC TT tl tl | thee ? ,and THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, JUNE 21 1598. a SRO *Y Timea puirasa vorugn Tee aone many things that ke ought to have left un- dione” we said, with a quiver in his voice “But there is one thing he has never done—he has never broken his word. That has always been bet- ter than his bond. I and my wife will go with you to Scotland as soon as some necessary business is trans- acted here. I never intended to set foot in the Old Country again. But Heaven has its own way of upsetting the designs of man, 1 am happy enough to do anything.” “I wish I could fly to The Elms,” I paid, “and let them krnow.”’ “ We'll sail, Kilgour; we'll sail,” he laughed. “That'll be quick enough. And now for the preparations.” He turned away abruptly, and I knew there was a lump in the threat of the warrior who had been thought a devil, and indeed my own was strangely tight, while for —P2n belng a woman In spite of her country and colour, she was fairly with downright gladness. ourselves in heart I took the liberty, greatly to the astonishment of Don- ald's chief butler, of serving with my own hand some of the best sherbet all as round. A little later I breke the news to Tabal. “I am going away, Tabal,’”’ I said ; “far away to my own country, and the desert and the black tent will know me no more forever.” “Cannot Tabal go with thee ?” he pleaded, quickly. “That can scarcely be, good Tabal,” I answered. “It will be better for thee to return to Marabel with the caravan.” “J will not return unless thou drive me away,” he_ replied, stubbornly. “Hast thou not saved my life, and where thou goest will 1 not go to serve Thou wilt take thy little Fa- tima. Let me go, I pray thee, to care Ser her.’ “Take the honest fellow with you, Kilgour,” called out Gordon, who hap- pened to hear us. “I will be at the cost of him, and he will look after my rogue Mahomet Besides, Hassan” (the great black warhorse) “is going to keep your little mare company.” “Be it as thou sayest, then, Tabal,”’ I said, and the poor fellow leaped for joy. Three weeks later we embarked at Yedda with all our belongings, Yumen Yusel, the shereef of Mecca, and a brilliant company of sheiks and great tien doing us final honour. CHAPTER XXVI. HOME AND VICTORY. So we are among loved the torrid sands we are back to once more familiar scenes, left behind, and are What they saw, a’ [Copyright, 1893, by Joho Alexander Steuart.) weeping | So to keep } , ever happened. | walk without misery, are to be seen the scented heather and the fellowship of friends. That home-coming was such as had never been known in the sedate val- ley that includes Kilgour and the hms. Old people talk of it yet by | the chimney cheek on winter nights, and the young listen with open mouths and wide eyes to the wondreus tale of the sudaen appearance one quiet / evening of a company of outlandish folk with the jargon and garb of heathendom. I wish some of these people were now at hand to descrip ‘| Pure Spiccs d thus save me mucn | trouble, for I have come to a point that seems to touch me more Closely | in my tenderest part, and to make it more difficult to write than anything | | that went befor But I will brietiy | relate what re iins of this extraor- | dinary history and endeavour to be | lucid. In his wanderings in the Bast Don- 'ald had imbibed high notions of pa- geantry and the picturesque, and so he insisted we should go home in the best style at our tommand—that is to say, in full Oriental, costume and @ cjal carriage. ; that sp “It will be a free sight far the na- tives,”” he eaid. ven isn’t very day Arabs of our standing arrive in i” lingly Ecotian A on reaching Perth we invoked the aid my old friend of the *“‘Hound and Stag,’ who procured for us at a cost that, in his own ; words, was feckly awfae,” the | "“ehave { %.4 ’ pe best barouche and the fastest pair in the city. make th@ more imposing show, To Tabal and Mahomet were to ride behind Fatima and Ha utred in ab fashion, with a spear and half a dozen daggers apiece. Very glad they were to get into the saddle again, both to stretch theor muscies eaccord- ing to wont and to display their horse- manship. The horses also whinnied With delight at the touch of the fa- miliar girths, and when mounted canced jig unknown to the sober steeds of these isles. The town gathercd to witness the tacle of our departure, and it rward leaked out that the provost council were at the moment ex- ‘ly considering the question of ertaining the Indian nabobs whe a so unexpectedly honoured their city But we were off before the zood n could decide, with half the popu- fon at our heeis, as if we exercised € charm of the Pied Piper of Haumeélin. And the mighty sensation of the starting was continued along cur route. Peorle rushed gaping from houses and fields to get a glimpse of us at close quarters, and those whom we met generally turned and followed us as long as they had breath. Scme saluted us as if we were foreign potentates, others stared as if they had been turned into stone, and yet others, by- their looks, seemed to apprehend an invasion. When we swept through our little village, there was the commetion that an earthquake or the descent of an armed band of robbers might have caused. Fain would I have stopped te Immake myself known to the villagers and see their astonishment...byt at endless pain and suffering. Every i ie = ee eS that Stage we could not néar to tarry. Two miles ahead was Kilgour, and a little beyond was The Eims. So we sped on without drawing rein, our hearts beating short and fast, with the expectation which the returning exile alone knows. The carriage herses were lathered and blowing after their forty miles, though Fatima and Hassan, with more trying work, did not show a wet hair. But no consid- eration for blown horses could have induced us to delay. The coachman, rather against his will, whipped up, and instead of slackening the pace in- creased, As we rolled, bumping and shaking, over the mountain road in the midst of many whirling thoughts, suddenly cld Duncan’s parting words flashed uD- on me. “Ged bless ye, take it. the siller pipes It will be Ilearned ve to blaw on. Ayont the seas ye'll can gie a skirl at times to mind ye of old friends, and when ve come back yvye'll can march to your own quick step.” Why shouldn’t I? In less time than it takes me to write this sentence the Silver pipes were out of the green beg. “You shall be played home like a hero, Gordon !" I cried, leaping upon the dickey to the great discomfort of the coachman, who was evidently un- able to make up his mind whether we Were great folks or simply maniacs. The scream of the pipes made the horses almost as wild as I was my- self. (To be Continned.) TWIN TORTURERS! Lumbago and Rheumatism made Harmless by Dodd's Kidney Pilis. Lumbago and Rheumatism cause man and woman who runs chances of getting wet, or catching cold, is liable to suffer from one or both. Our hospitals are full of sufferers from these diseases; none are more pain- ful. Every nerve is on fire; every joint is a centre of agony ; every mus- cle an area of torture. ‘To move hand or foot makes the victim shriek with agony. Rheumatism makes more cripples than all the railroad accidents that Twisted, mis-shapen caricatures of humanity, who cannot every day. The kidneys areto blame. Ifthey are healthy you needn’t fear Rheumatism or Lumbago. Dodd's Kidney Pills keep the kidneys healthy and cure Rheumatism and Lumbago. Dodd’s Kidney Pills aways CURR. are Profitable Bat bad : pice is aoominable. This is a truism that no com petet houskeeeper should forget. Half the trouble of cook ing in past { if you get the rignt brand of Spice, and while there sre many tbat are fairy good, it 73 always sale-t to take one which is invariably uni- That one is form. MARK FISHER,SO NS & CO Victoria Square, MONTREAL Importers of Fine Woollens and Tailors Trimmings Merchant tailors and Woollex buyers wapting fo assurt tueir stocks will fiad our stock of Wuollens the largest ip Canada. Sample Room, 72, Prince Wm. sl... st. John, N. B. H. H. HARVEY. Agent. Aching and Ulcerating Teeth Treated and filled. Necayed teeth crowned with gold. Mederate prices. oe om following every day wants. Print Cotiou at 9 to Ibe per yard. Gingham, from 5¢ to 15e, erand Value. Flannetiete, 5c, Te, 8c, Ie; 10¢ and Ile. Towel ing from 4c to 8¢ per vard, "Bath Towels 2c to $ 1.00 per pair. Side Board Covers, regular price 40 50, 60, now selling at 20c, 25c, 30¢c. Press Lengifts, former price $16.00 to $24.0u, now $12.00, 10.00, 8.00, 5.00 and 3.00. All weel Colored Dress Goods {rom 18c to 38¢ per yd Black Dress Goods at 25c to 85e per yd. om = = als thid more, Best liien collars 2 for caps Sc each. Sen't Forget to Come R. J. P. MURRAY ee —_ — Piain Chisa Silk at 102, 15¢c and 20c per yd, Braid. suita le fir tcim- mings, selling «t half price, former vrice 6. 10 and 26¢, now 3; 5 and 10c, Blick and Coloree *a- teen«—10c and 12c, former jadies Handkerchiefs plain and hemstitch going at 4c each Eades Fmb. Hkfs going at 10e worth 20c. Ladies Linen Hkfs selling at 20c, former price 40 Ladies Cotton Gloves a price 2c and 25c. : LADIBS—See the Bargains we offer in STAPLE DRY GOODS at prices so lyw that you cannot help purchasing when you see the qnality and finish of the RTT a CCR LL snap at 5c per pair. . The above prices bold good euery day of the week. “YY OU Are Sate irom any accident through breakages if you ure mounted on a Massey Harris It is very strong. ° Me NE Me Me MEN MM ES Qo Ue Us AE AS TS AS BS AS EAE Massey-Harris Co. LIMITED. MARK WRIGHT & CO Acents Ch’town, ROCESS & REGERS Agents for S’side. é 0-(ay Men’s flanlette shirts 18c, men’s fancy dress shirts, 50¢ worth 74¢c, 50 men s pants 90c, $1.00, 1.25, worth one 25e, Gents’ ties 5 for 29c, Boys’ to J. B. Macdonald & Co The Best Place to Buy Your Slothing and Boots BSOAAAAddLddddd ddddd/ dds ddd envvvo nant even nrernnsonggTTUN IRL Wadd dd Ad GdE Ad AML Akl AdL dd ddtUAdAAdMds Uk AULA \ddbdddAddond f Ladies Gloves white and black silk, 25cand 50e per pr, Hose Supporters, chilc- lrens’ at 10c to 20c, Colored Velvot 25c per yd, dlack velvet from 80c¢ up Ladies Paraso’s trom 50c up, worth double the money Ladies’ Undervests, all sizes from 10c to 30c, Ladies’ Hose from 12c to 35¢ per pair. Children s Hose —-102, 1c, ide and 18e per pair. Dress Unslin -7c, 10c, 12 worth double the money. — cc ae Aa en catnneatiinaldle ————— Oueber Steamship Co’y, Ltt “STR. CAMPANA.” —-_—-oO Sailing Sailing from Montreal from Charlottetown at 2 p.m. t about 6 p. ni. ‘Mouday 30th May Mouday 13th June Monday 27th June Monday 1lith July Monday 25th July Morday 8th Aug. Monday 220d Aug Monday Sth Sep: Monday 19th Sept Monday 2fd Oct Monday 17th Oct Monday Sist Oct Monday 6th June Monday 20th June Monday 4th July Monday 18th July Monday Ist August Monday 15th August Monday 29th August Monday 12th Sept, Monday 26th Sept. Monaday 10th Oct Mondry 24th Oct Monday 7th Nov Calling at Summerside, “al Bay aod Father Point. <ummer trip for tourists. accommodation unsurpassed, carried at competition rates. Eggs band- led with great care. CARVELL BROS, Delighétul Passenger Removed i — . we ee oe oe Victoria ae F J HORNSBY Bookstore. OW THE LAW SOCIETY. The annual meeting of the Law Society of Prince Edward Jsland, for the election of officers and tranration of ei! other busi~ nese, willbe held,at the Law Librarg, in Charlottetown, on Monday, the 27th daw of June inst, atthe hourof 12 o’clock, nNvOeb, By order F. L. HASZARD, Sec’y dy lw iMPORTBNT TO DAIRYMEN 250 ——m, made of 15 to 20 gallon milk _ cans the very best material obtaicab'e. Prices right. Tie J- D. Bell Manufacturing Co Stove ani Hurd ware Merchants, lune 7—lm Mon ag , Perce Gaspe Freight . Agents