THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, APRIL 16, 1898 eer ce ee ae eamaeeanee aaa ee eae — samen It is undoubtedly a fact that our grand mothers, bere pio- neer w- ~ tn en of Pithe courn- Footry ed = |more la , borious lives than the house- Wives of to-day. In spite of this = |fact, they bore ‘itheir hus bands healthy, iughters, and did not £ robust sons and d become weak, complaining invalids as a consequence There are probably several reasons for One is, that they lived more in the and another, and probably the ential of all, is that they were this. © open aif, most 1 jess prudish than the women of to-day. They were n tamed to know something of their own physical make-up. They were got too nice to take care of their health in gwomaniy way. Women now-a-days snf- fer untold tortures in silence, because of weakness and disease of the distinctly feminine organism, rather than consult ¢ physician, or even talk upon the subject tc their own husbands. They imagine that troubles of this description can only be cured by undergoing the disgusting exam- inations and local treatment insisted upon by the average modern physician. Doctor Pierce’s Favorite Prescription cures all dis- eases peculiar to women in the privacy of their own homes. It does away with the necessity for examinations and local treat- ment. It acts directly on the important organs concerned, making them strong, healthy and vigorous. It fits for wifehood and the burdens of household duties. It allays inflammation, heals ulceration and soothes pain. It tomes and builds up the nerves. It banishes the discomforts of the time of expectancy and makes baby’s ad- vent easy and almost painless, Thousands have testified to its merits. Over 1 pages of medical advice free. Send g one-cent stamps, fo cover customs'and mailing miy, \of paper-covered copy of Dr. Pierce’s Com- mon Sense Medical Adviser, Cloth bound 50 Mamps. Address Dr. K. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. ¥. — ee ee YOUNG WOMEN LOVE The D & A Corset, it fits so comfortably, supporting the figure, while yielding easily to every movement. It lasts wel!, and sells at popular prices.—MORAL : YOUNG WOMEN WEAR tHe D & A CORSET. 6) rss a EREAKFAST COCOA Possesses the following Distinctive Merits: DELICACY OF FLAVOR. SUPERIGRITY io QUALITY. GRATEFUL and COMFORTING to the NERVOUS or DYSPEPTiC. NUTPITIVE QUALITIES UNRIVALLED In Quarter-Pound Tins only. Prepared by JAMES EPPS & CO., I.:<. Homeopathic Chemists, London, Encilan WARE - HOUSE: | TO LET PEAKE’ WHARF (WO 1) Wharfage storage and yard- ag? at reasonable rates. Arthur @. Peake. Nov, 4 en NOTICH! Application will be mide at the presen 8100 of the Partiameat of Ca nada, fo #1 act to incorpora’e the enheiciary big COnrt of toe Ancient Order of Foresters, im the Dominion of Canada; a friendly #n Devolent Society, with all other neces- ) power, inc'dental thereto, fo carry MH the said society’s objects, ant for * purpose. Dated 28:h March, 1898. mn. PF. MACWATT, Dicitor for applicants. M4 law9 wks ( SSS ( Joatinned.) SYNOPSIS. Peter Clephane and Andrew Kilgour are cousins, students at Edinburg University, between whom is a better fued. The former is the son of a rich city lawrer and his cousin is the heir of an estate ia the Highlands that has almost, paseed into the ‘ands of creditors. Afier a bitter fizht with his cousin, Kilgour is on his wavy bome when he falls in with company at the “Hound and Stag” inn at Perth. Arrived home his companion on tie journey turns ont to be his uncle, Peter Clephane’s father. To retrive his familie’ fortune Andrew is | sent te | d a. Inkfititaneolis!l¥ fhere was a creat crash, as if a sudden blow had rent our timbers, and the brig flew up at the bows like a fisherman’s punt when a heavy weight is swung on behind. I had my sconce dented in the bunk, and Mr. Watson swept the floor with his back like a kind of incontinent besom. When in the rebound the stern went up in turn, I fell back to my place breathless and helpless, and the supercargo, scrambling to his feet With the cat-like agility of a _ sailor made desperately for the companion- Way. Then for an instant the vessel seem- ed to lie still, but the next she was reeling and dancing like an eggshell in a boiling caldron. Now she would rear from the bows, now from the stern, then tumble on her beam ends, careening till mast and keel must have been level, then rebound, then spring, shaking herself like a thing demented with pain, and all the while she cried and groaned in every timber with a terrorizing, human-like sense of the Ypangs of dissolution. I clung to my unk with all my feeble might, unable ta discern anything clearly, yet con- scious in spite of darkness and terror of the swish of water rushing through the open door, After awhile Mr. Watson came back. Tiflis face was very white and his man- ner excited. I looked at him beseech- ingly for news, for in the tumult I could not hope to make myself heard. He did not keep me long in suspense. “Smashed by the stern !” he shout- ei, at the vitch of his voice, bending over me as he held on by the side of niy berth. ‘“ The spout hit us, carry- ing with it masts and rigging, and now we're reeling in the grip of a tor- nado, The fury of the pit’s let loose or us. Wind and fire and water, all contending against us. And, worse than that, we're waterlogged and the in- ternal crew threatening to take to the boats. Captain’s keeping them at it With the pistol. Keep you still; I'll come back again.”’ { could say nothing, I could do noth- ing, only lie and iisten to the raging ef pandemonium and sveculate what would come of it all. Presently Mr. Watson returned, his face whiter than ever. The hbrig’s done for,” he shouted. The first blow killed her. It’s ter- rific, I have been through simoon and tornado and never saw. anything like this. They’re going te batten down, though aven knows why. I must run, But don’t vou be frighten- ed: T'll not desert yeou.”’ Fie bolted up the companionway, and the hatches closed with a bang. I passed am eternity hearkening in the darkness, which the lightning made Jurid, expecting every moment to feel the sction and hear the xzur- zle of death as the ship went down. But we were dying hard by and by J n to think the fury of the temnest wus abating and that the movements of the brig were stead- fer Then I wondered why they w Keeping m losed down there like a yat in its hole. Another eternitv vass- ed cre there was anv evide: that I Las rerrembered. At !ast the hatchs were thrown open, and [ looked with joy fil nd frantic eagefness for Mrz Watson. To tv horror, he did t come Sicker with fear than disease. } get te my elbow to listen. In a moinenta lull of th ast I heard the rattle of ropes on the ship’s sid anéd then a Splash, as if some fiat - temed object had struck the wated A terrible fear. a terrible suspicion struck into my vitals, and weak as I was I rose, and groping my way threugh the darkness to a porthole thrust my face against the glass. Ther were boats alongside, and the off and wrew, who looked li} demons in the livid light, were struggling und fighting to get into them. With the frenzy of death, twisting and tuggins and tearing, I tried to open the port but the screws were stiff and ! fneers nerveless, and [ fi iled. Then mv face aguinst class, I shrieked as on'y a lost mar can. The next in- stant the glass was in shivers, an I was imploring these without not to ahbanclon ime But the tempest drown- ed my voice. No une he arel t I . ne one heeded me. One by one in he Hellich contiagration of sea and sky the heats rowed away. leaving me alone on the sinking brig. —— ee CHAPTER VI. ALONE, ALL, ALL ALONE ON A WIDE, A.” *“ ALONE, ALONE ; WIDE 8! By the glare of streaming fires I could wateh the boats drivirg deliri- ously before the wind, which still blew with hurricane force. To any eve but the of de- that sharpened bv terror spair the flying, leaping specks would not have been distinguishable from momentary rifts in the careering bil- lows, for in that terrific scene nothing was distinct, nothinz individual. There was 30 ocean wpa no. sky, bus high Ti at step ladder you so much need for house cleaning is at M. Wright & Co’s. [Copyright, 1893, by John Alexander Stenart.} ana :ow &@ WNirting cnaos of roam ana spray, with gleams of ghastly green in the breeking mountains and of hel- lish lividness in the swirling chasme eri shettering crests. The din was as the crack of dovum. Sea and thunder crashed together as if the universe were splitting ind rending, the wicked treble of the tempest breaking in at times like the etiteful screams o2 congregated de- mons exulting in the work of destruc- tion. The waves, in certain aspects bleod and red, and dripping a crim- son froth, reared and curled ‘the wonstrous snakes as they rushed, 1g, upon the helpless and stag- tram pli1 eering brig. They seemed alive and mad with a passion to destroy. Leap- ing upon their victim like the furies broken loose, they would pound her as with steam hammers, then catch her and throw her aloft as if to see her go tc pieces in the fall: then, disap- pointed at her toughness, hurl her headlong into a boiling gulf, and as she floundered heavily fling themselves afresh unon her in a frenzied effort to put her forever cut of sight. Then there would be a swift recoil and a momentary pause, but only hbe- cause the infuriated waters were ath- ering for a fiercer and deadlier at- tack. Rallying in piled up, seething masses, on they would come again in \V'reathed and yeasty avalanches, bury- ing her deep and crushing and tearing her timbers till she groaned and cried l:ke a thing in the last agony. How she lived was a marvel. A right good sailer she must have been in spite of her ugly looks and evil name, tighter sailer than many a>-craft a prouder head and a tion. Smothered and pelted ‘and tossed, only the tenseness of grip which the fear of death gives to nerve and mus- cle could have held me in my place. As often as { had vent I shrieked in competition with the storm—shrieked till my voice failed me, and my cry Sank to the hoarse, gasping rattle that {cre chest and throat as barbed cylinders revolved inside. My situation was the more cruel that I had strength enough to feel, and none to act. Had I been myself, I should have been on deck in an in- Stant, and headlong into the surging Wilderness in pursuit of the desert- ers. My fate would have been soon decided, for the swimmer did not ex- ist who could that night have escaped the devouring maw of the sea. But there would have been an instant’s di- version in battling and a speedy end a with better reputa- lo suffering. As it was, even the solace of making an effort was denied me, So I stood there with my head crushed into the porthole dg cf the broken like in my flesh, battered, buffeted, choked by the pitching ship and the breaching seas, yet frantically straining to hold on and to hail the quickly vanishing 1 and the jagzsed « Ss ole sa . - S1a8SS saws CATS. Every fibre in my body shook with & mortal weakness and terror. My finrers were getting cramped and pal- Sied; my breath was gone to a gasp, yet ever as my strength waned the Cesire to shout for succour became the mo? desj rete Have You ever eeen a& spent animal panting with open mcuth for a little aid in its extremity ? tiven.so I panted then with distended but voiceless lips. I would have given a million worlds, had I owned them, for rm < 1 i just for an instant to make ane last appeal for help that would rise above the voice cf the storm. But my weakness ccomed 1: to silence. (To be Continned. ) Easy to say, but how shall I do it? In the only com- , mon sense way—keep your head cool, and pure by taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla, f Then all vour nerves, and organs will be nourished, builds up the system, creates an ap- petite, tones the stomach and gives Medicine, has a larger sale and ef- fects more cures than all others. . Is arsaparill: Sarsaparilla 5..." nc C. 1. Hoop & Co., Lowell, Sass. your feet warm and your blood rich muscles, tissues cs S pring vroverly : Hood’s Sarsaparilla strength. It is the people’s Spring the One Purifier. a oe ee eee Hood’s Pills =... fo vorite family gathartic.” Price 25c. TO CONTRACTORS, Tenders will be received by the under- signed up to Apri! 19th, at noon for finish- ing the inside of Afton Hall. West River, according to plane ard specifications to be eeen at the office of C. B. Chappel, Archi tect, The lowest cr any tender not necessarily accept’ i. JOHN McMILLAN, Secretary Bu‘idirg Committee. Pt apr8 ~ w2i raw as if } VISIT OUR STORE If you want,to see a display of tre finest and newest Hats and Caps. When we make a specialty of any artice you may be sure that that is a sufficient guarantee of the said article’s speciality,— and remember 4 Reduct'on Sale : .-..- Is Now On In these goods at the Bargain Corner, Another of Our Specialties is ‘ Fine, Fit-the-form Clothing We have all that is nobby and neat in Men’s Suits, © [he collection is really handsome. and the way we have lowered | prices on these goods seems absurd, but we must lead the clothing — trade. Alsoa large stock of clothing for children and boys as © unequalled prices. : VW. D. McRAY, Successor to McKay Woolen Co. oo pee ne een erm Ll S SEITEN TRAE 7 | THEGUARANT i - me ~— 9 kywhich accompanies the pur- i Cebus chase of A assey Harris is from a reliable firm, and therefvure worth ‘ ry r hav ing. sey-Harris Ce., Limited \\ Mas KAAS, be Za | \\ MARK WRIGHT & CO. i" \ =i | \s Agents, Ch’town. \ ¢ \> = or ROGERS A ROGERS & ROGERS, ( if —, ss le . . i ; Ee me Agents, Summersite, "!t AVE rSer «rus * Ne Me eM Me Ne Nee eae | LOV AY FiRST. SIGH ASUS IS ASUS UE %, i —— -- er ; j GOOD yale for money expended, is what we give inal) goods in our line, to which we attribute our steady increase The Best value ion business. We are showing a nice T i} at Mi Oo nN cy C a Nn B uy ui assortment Of Ladies and Gentlemens | WATCHES That describes our aew stock of Gents’ Furnishings, 7 new stock of White and Fancy Shirts. ti See our new stock of Braces, Hdk{fs, Socks, Sweaters. Everything mn Gen's’ Furnishings going cheap. The people that make most of their money buy at this season, which are all thorough|y See our ; tested before leaving = ee 7 See our new stock of Ties. | guarantee every watch sold by us to i ae i a is give satisfaction, by buying now you See our new stock of Collars. i y buying : og - f can procure @ good time piece. See our new stock cf Underclothing. "i : VERY LOW as our goods are bought low for po cash. Cali and see for yourself, at— eee J. B. Macdonald & Co The Best Place to Buy Your Siothing ani Hats a ed W. N. TANTON Opposite Crabbe’s Hardwre Store.