wee FACTS ABOUT BABIES. ; What woman doesn’t fa want a baby—a dimpl- ing, laughing darling, dainty enough to be cradled in ai snow- hite lily ? We W U wha Every wo- ~\ manly woman wants eS one, but she doesn’t want too dainty a baby. A baby’s cheeks may be too waxen-white and its body too puny, and when that’s the case, baby’s cheeks won't dimple or its lips jaugh, and death is in its eyes. Above all things a woman wants a healthy baby, and she may have one if she will but gse the right remedy for weakness and dis- ease of the delicate an“ j:nportant organs that make baby a possibility. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription 1s the best of all med- dcines for prospecti onld-be mothers. jt makes a woman « distinctive organism atrong, healthy and vigerous. It allays in- fammation, soot. n and heals ulcera- tian. It banishes wie discomforts of the qaiting time and ikes the little new- comer’s entree to the world easy and almost ainless. It insures baby’s health. In writing for advice to Dr. R. V. Pierce, for thirty years chief consulting physician to the Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute, at Buffalo, N. Y., a mother, wife or maid grites to one of the most eminent and skill- fal specialists in the world, at the head of a staff of physicians that has treated over 50,000 women. “When I was taking your treatment. I sent in the names of three ladies who were sterile,” writes Mrs. M. A. Scott, of Park Rapids. Hubbard €o.. Minn. “One had been married seven years and had nochildren, and after taking Dr Pierce's Favorite Prescription she gave birth toa big girl ynside of a year. The other one was confined within a year and a half, after going six vears without having any children. I do not know how the third one came out, for we moved away." Torpid liver and constipation are surely and speedily cured by Dr Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. They never gripe. They regulate, tone up and invigorate the liver. stomach and bowels. No substitute urged by mer- cenary dealers is as good. CORSETS Give Grace, Style and Comfort Made throughout of best materials, they give good wear, and while not expen- sive at first, compare sti! better with other makes, when their lasting qualities are considered. Sold by most dry goods doalers, oe y SMOKING J.Rattraya Co!” t=] MONTREAL.Cax. lle — — ee a EPPS'S COCOA A ENGLISH EREAKFAST COCOA Possesses the following Distinctive Merits: DELICACY OF FLAVOR. PP ce Dae aaa THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, MAY 9, 1898, SYNOPSIS. Peter Clephane and Andrew Kilgour are cousins, stndents at Edinburg University, between whom is a better fend. The former is the son of a rich city lawyer and his consin is the heir of an estate io the Highlands that has almost passed into the hands of creditors. After a bitter fight with his cousin, Kilgour is on his way home when he falls in with company at the “Hound and Stag” inn at Perth. Arrived nume bie companion on the journey turns out to be his uncle, Peter Clephane’s father. To retrive his family’s fortune An‘trew is eent tol dia. _—_— CHAPTER XV (Continued.) “ne people. pressing about us, specu- lated aloud on the doom that was in store for me, and their auguries wer: anything but cheering. What was more disquieting, they once or twice showed a disposition to take matters into their own hands. If they had done that, I have a notion this history would never have been written. As I listened to the shoutings and mutter- ings about me I had a very vivid re- membrance of Said Achmet’s tale of the Egyptian and Persian. ‘Here may be the very place where they were killed,”’ I theught to myself. as we went along. “ Here their blood may have been poured out. These walls may have echoed their dying groans.” And sometimes in sudden flares and sweeps of the torches the crimsoned ground had gruesome sug- gestions of violent deeds. On reaching the castie walls. which thick, we entered gateway, flanked of esplanade, Then we enter- were suprisingly through a narrow with towers, to a sort crowded with soldiers. ed an outer court, passing through another narrow gate to an inner. This also we traversed; then we passed through several crooked corri- dors, till ew came to a gap — 2 dead wall. Into this I was thrust, a door was banged and bolted behind me, and I was alone, in utter darkness. A moment’s groping proved I was in a windowless dungeon —probably a condemned cell. CHAPTER XV. O TRIAL FOR MY LIFE—A SIN- GULAR DIVERSION. of this fresh entanglement. One thing fast under boits for the night. In the morning, if a pestilential air did not finish me in the meantime, I should and convicted by dence of uncommitted crimes, for I knew the ingenuity of the Asiatic mind in devising charges. low—the judgment and form of exe- cution—were matters that could be foretold with disquieting accuracy. The prospect gave me less concern than might be imagined. Assuredly Lut her persecutions were beginning to lose something of their poignancy. Like a vain woman, fortune loves to show her power, and like a meddlesome one, she must have a finger in every man’s pie, making ing to her whim and humour. sut when one has, as the poet puts it, look- ed on his own funeral procession, he may smile at her efforts to inflict pain. He is then petting beyond her range. To that stage of apathy 1 was fast ap- proaching. The ignominy of the thing troubled ine most. To die once is the fate of all, and desth, as wise men have ever taught, mav be wade giorious. sut to be shut up in a hole like a rat and then proled out to be worried by bloodthirsty hounds is not to close the fifth act of one's play with any dignity or glory. If they would only put a proper sword in my hand, then I might leave my memory” green and furnish a tale worth telling to their grandchildren In spite of what has been said, I must not hoast of confidence, for when at leneth outwearied nature claimed her hoen af sleep 1 was constantly starting vp, with a throbbing heart and SUPERIORITY in QUALITY. - GRATEFUL and COMFORTING to the NERVOUS or DYSPEPTIC. NUTP ITIVE QUALITIESUNRIVALLED In Quarter-Pound Tins only. Prepared by JAMES EPPS & CO., Ltd, Hoznwcpathic Chemists, London, rsland, WANTED. Coat and Vas ukhenh at D. A. BRUCES a clammy obro-v. To be rid of the Dilaguing dreams I decided at last to keep awake. Az the best means of doing that I crent about the cell, en- tertainine myself first by guessing its dimensions and then by feeling its walls inch by inch with my hands. mhis diversion lasted but a little while, and then I fell back on my own thoughts, They, refusing to be con- fined, tiew to other days—to old scenes and familiar faces. Time reversed his movement, the past became the present, dead things started into life, and the absent and the distant were brought near. Every brae and bush about Kilgour, every bend of the road, every burn, almost every tuft of heather, every dear tigure, my father, my mother, old Duncan, and the rest rose before me with the vividness of reality. Sir Thomas Gordon with his brown face was there, too, and so was Isabel, look- ing as I had se often seen her, with her melting eyes and her abundance of glossy hair. [ trembled with a feeling —half of joy, half of superstitious dread ~as I locked from one to another of the visionary company. It was pleasant to see them all as of old. Should I ever see them again ? The meeting was gladsome, but would it be the last ? In some agitation of spirit I rose, and my foot struck against the green bag. It Was an electric link connect- ing me in very reality with those of whom I was thinking. I picked it up. drmy forth the yanoes. hurriedly | Huddled in a foul hole, which ad-; mitted neither light nor air, I tried to- imagine what might be the outcome, seemed certain; that I was to be kept probably be led forth to a mock trial , overwhelming evi- | What would fol- |! | fortune was using her teeth and claws | | upon me with implacahle malevolence. | it sweet and sour accord- | (Copyright, 1898, by John Alexander Stenart.} turneg them ana the next instant wae playing Highland airs with might and main. Very weird and strange and thrilling sounded the music of mv na- tive hills in that close subterranean cel) grasp of a friend adversity, strange as the Grelie speech amid Arabian sands. 1! Played till | knew no fear and foreot al] danger, till there rose within me a spirit of revolt and resistance that would have defied the united power of all the calipks from Aboo-Bekr to Mus- hh wd > ° > -thrilline as the e in the day of tassitn, (The first and last of the real caliphs. Under the Mamelukes there were, properly speaking, no caliphs, and the claim of the Sultan to rank as caliph is absurd.) My gaolers beat upon the door with the butis of their muskets to demand Silence, but they might as well have Whistled to the charging lion. Heed- less of their pounding, indeed scarcely hearing it, 1 played on, the wild slogan of the clans almost bursting the walls asunder. Faster and faster danced the fingers of the piper; ever more and more furious rose the strains that nev- er yet failed to give the streneth of ecstasy to a Highlander. It was the pipes that won Waterloo, that saved Lucknew, that broke the Russian swoo at Balaklava. On reeking fields of gore their scream has made men for- get death and banish the thought of yielding. What they had done in the stress and havoc of battle they were now doing in solitariness and dark- ness. With their music in my ears, I could dare anything. All at once the door opened, and a reficction of far away sunshine dribbled teebly in. 4. band of grisly warriors Stood without, grasping tneir weapons and hearing countenances of distrust 49d apprehension. “Come forth,” said one, stepping a little in advance of his fellows. “The great Abou Kuram waiteth to hear the charges against thee.”’ (To be Continned.) <Fop Colds and Threat Treubles our regular standard medicine is hyer’s € nevpa Pectoral” J. Mathebcs A.M, Professor of Mathematics, Otterbein Unie versity, Wasterville, O. Medical Advice Free. Atidress, J. C. AYERCO., Lowell, Mass., U. 8. Trace MarRKs DESIGNS CopyricHtTs &c. Anyone sending a sketch and description may enickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably patentable. Communica tions strictly confidential. Handbook on Patents soni free. Oldest agency for securing patents, Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the Scientific Americatt. A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cir culation of any scient tic journal. Terms, $3 a year; four months, $1 So:d by all aie HAN & C N A ‘ way, MUN & Cp,s6:5r0a0ua. New Tor Kranch Office. 63 F St.. Washington, A—- Se, ou If You Need a Watch Article of Jewelr or Si-verware There is achance of a bargain if you buy this week, as we take stock May Ist., and wish to reduce stock before them, and close out some lines. EWTAYLOR, Victoria Jewelry Store. 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English Manures are the BEST, CHEAPEST, and Wuly Reliable Fertilize: on the Have been largely used here foc 10 years, with most gratifying results—.nd w.thout a single failure. AULD BROS! W. D. McKRAY, Successor to McKay Woolen Co. you have wearied looking at the blemishes and weakness ofa low grade wheel, come and see the Massey Harris and compare the difference Rogers & Rgers, Agents for S’sde. Neuralgva in the head is almost invariably caused by decayed and abscessed teeth. Don't suffer needlessly when you can be relieved in @ 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 Bridge Work. DR. J.P. MURRAY 155 Queen Street. sseaenenieeneinaeeemitaasieeemanamion nee tn te Least Caanit TT a eee ee a pcan aa ~ s a ee eo