' ; THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, APRIL 19, 1897 Boils ten difficult to convince peo- plood is impure, until dread- 1 carbuneles, abscesses, boils, scrof- “ fe salt rheum, are painful proof of ’. Itis wisdom now, or when- ny indication of It is of ple their ula 0 the fact. + . ever there 18 4 impure plod, to take Hood's Sarsaparilla, and event such eruptions and suffering. «{ had a dreadful carbuncle abscess, red, fiery, fierce and sore. The doctor at- tended me over seven weeks. When the gbscess broke, the pains were terrible, and {thought I should not live through it. I peard and read 80 much about Hood’s Sersaparilla, that I decided to take it, and my husband, who was suffering with poils, took it also. It soon purified our Blood built me up and restored my health se that, although the doctor said I would not be able to work hard, I have since done the work for 20 people. Hood’s Sar- saparilla cured my husband of the boils, and we regard it a wonderful medicine.”’ Mas. ANNA PETERSON, Latimer, Kansas. d4oods Sarsaparilla Ie the One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. $1. cure liver ills, easy to take, rlood’s Pills easy to operate. “25 cents’ MANY DAINTY “= DISHES CAN BE PREPARED WITH Benson’s CANADA ‘Prepared Corn. MANUFACTURED FROM CHOICE SELECTED PURE CORN. NO ADULTERATION THE BEST FOR CHILDREN, WD FT = RECIPE for Infants’ Food. To one desertspoonful of Benson's Canada Prepared Corn, mixed with half a cup of cold water, add half a pint of Gboiling water; stir over the fire for five minutes; sweeten slightly; for older babies mix with milk instead of water, SEE OTHER RECIPES ON PACKAGE. 7 THE EDWARDSBURG STARCH CO. Works: Cardinal, Ont. Offices: Montrea!, P.Q. fa NOT WORRY YOURSELF es about you with anything in that line— HEED Lumber. We can sapply prices and quality suitable prices to the hard times, and quality—you’ve heard of. It no use to get 4s Thin as a Lath. (Our laths are a good thickness.) Running _ from one place to another when you can get every- thing you want at Barrett’s. We will be glad to sell you any- thing from one board to a house. JAMES BARRETT. CONNOLLY’S WHARF $$ —_— “1S | CHRONIC | fjiseaseS Treated by the SALISBURY Method cf Persistent SEKL¥-HELP in overcoming Past errors and removing the causes of! disease, The result justifies the means. . not an eary quack cure- Neither should it be jnoeed by enan pad iM tations already +mopng the people nor} by the helf-bad efforts of invalids oO go it alone orhalidoit Thesalva 1on of health This is Gecessita'es sincere repentance, constant?? self-denial and whole-hearted faith iu th: g00d works of physician and patient Not Sven M b’s certificates by the ream will Ave one trom the evil conse quences Oj Wimulants, fluid or solid, DR. CLIFT “veduate ofrN Y University and the V Y4 Dietal. 2) years’ practice in N Y City.3 rloma registered in LU $ and Canada Adress: - Charlottetown, P. E. L. Diee :—Vietoria Row. A weer Se A Qe poe Telephone Call,: HOME "REATMENT, perseverin Towne to, month ACCOMMOD AS vv reserved for natients. REFER- ENCES on application. L ‘ ee zh ¥ins> | Vy, Wr 14> [2 ON AILS Os OVA AacY O ; tay OO NOP) ZOLWN) RGGI |W QV GO |KO NAYS E]D LEW EDL ? ~ © 4OWn OO AOY 4O% 0 JOY = S 9068) A ) . nN — ~ “1 A DNA POUL] PViB rl FO ER ORS LOO. KON i BAI CD YANTIO! WW OO Tillyloss Scandal *: . ty VEN GOV 0B ANS LO 63 OW? Tp c is AY By J. Wi. BARRIE Ar “4 ) sk sh Auth “ ‘ te 3 hs ‘ 1.99 64 GASB — uthor of “The Little Minister, Auld Licht Hylis” “A 299% a Re> soH3> 1 S249) Window in Thrums,” Etc., Ete. Sent AS AS if slay . SX NAO) (QO D PL Wr DB VL WV YQ W\y DTN HEX’ LOW (DA EO Vb QP) i Qs > WeDo We wes Py Mo ; Ow Gi - c ye X So We G Ww Way We ew Soe NOOK . »f< SSO-RE 90 AO) 226 NX AIA D902) Sf Af OP rN OO x , ,ory O ov \ , Aj ow 4 Ro \/ WNP / oy CoC wp Ac * ZO RIV. DIV Go \ GOL CHAPTER IT. In the future Haggart’s mind was to become a book in which he could turn up any page wanted, but its early stage was a ravel not worth harking back to uniess for purposes of comparison. He could never, therefore, when questioned, say for certain that between the session house and Tillyloss he had met a soul except the Auld Licht minister, to see whom was naturally to feel him. At the foot of Tilly, however, he was taken aback to find a carriage and two horses standing. The sight knocked all the news he hed heard about the funeral sermon out of his head, and left him with just suffici- ent semse to put his back to the wall and assume the appearance o: a man who would begin to think directly. gazed at the horses, and said, ss Then he coachman. ‘*Yes,’* he said. Lastly, he gave both eyes riage, and corroborated his marks with, **Umpha.’ In themselves these statements sug- gest little, though they realiy left Hag- gart master of the situation. The first was his own answer to the question, ‘*Will these be Balribbie’s beasts?’’ and the second was merely a stepping-stone to the third, which was a short way of saying that the ladies had called on Chirsty at last. Tammas’s wife, Chirsty, servant at Balribbie, the First he looked less carefully at the to the car- previous , re- ; had been a mistress of which had promised, as most of Thrums | Was aware, to call on her some day. ‘*Ye'll be none the better though she does call,’’ Haggart used to say, to which Chirsty’s inhuman answer was, ‘*Maybe no; but it’ll make every other woman in Tillyloss miserable.”’ Every day for a year Chirsty awaited the coming of the ladies, after which it was the neighbors who spoke of the promised visit rather than herself. But evidently the ladies had come after all, and the question for Tammas was whether to face them or step about Tilly until they had driven away. It is difli- cult, no doubt, to believe that there ever was a time when Haggart would rather have hidden behind a dyke than converse with the gentry, but I have this from himself. He, whose gngatest topic in the future was to be, Women, and Why we should Put up. with Them, ‘however Unreasonable, could not think of the proper thing to say to the ladies of Bal- ribbie. **Losh, losh,’’ he has said, when cast- ing his mind back to this period, ‘‘it’s hard to me to believe that the unhumor- ous man swithering at the foot of Tilly that nicht was really Tammas Haggart, and no just somebody dressed up in Tam- mas Haggart’s image.”’ If it was hard to Tammas, harder to the like of us. Without actually deciding to show fail, Tammas continued to lean _ heavily against the wall, where he was not con- spicuous to two women little later with baskets on their arms. ‘*T assure ye Chirsty’s landed,’’ one of them said, ‘‘for she has her grand folk after all.’’ ‘*Ay,”’ said the other, ‘‘and Tammas is no in, so she’ll no need to explain how her man’s so lang and thin by what he was when she exhibited him at Balrib- how much bie.’’ ‘‘What do ye mean, ye limmers?’’ cried ~. , 5 =% ae > Haggart, stepping into sight. E was , never at Balribbie.’ They slipped past him the parting shots— ‘‘Chirsty can tell ye what we mean,” and ‘*And so can Jeames Pitbladdo.’’ Haggart probably sent his under lip over the upper one, for that was his way when troubled. He was aware that Chirsty had very nearly married Pitblad+ do, but these women mean something else. Without knowing that he was do ing so, he marched straight for his house, and was halt-way up the outside stair when the door opened, and two ladies, accompanied by Chirsty, came out. Hag- gart did not even know what they were like, though he was to become such an authority on the female face and figure. He stopped, wanting the courage to go on and the discourtesy to turn back. So he merely stood politely in their way. Chirsty gave her curls an angry shake as she saw him, but he had to _ be ack- nowledged. “This is himsel’,’’ contempt a@ woman her husband, Thus cornered, Tammas opened his mouth wide, to have his photograph taken, as it were, by the two ladies. The elder smiled and said, ‘‘T am glad to make your acquaintance, James,’’ Tammas thinks she said more, but sould never swear to it. To keep up with her quick way of speaking was a race for him, and at the word ‘‘.James’’ he stumbled, as against a stone. When he came to himself. ‘‘Thank ye, mem,’’ he said, name—’’ Here Chirsty gave him a look that made him lose his words. ‘*Let the leddies pass, can ye no?’’ exclaimed. For a moment giggling, with she said, with the naturally feels for ‘*but my she Tammas did not see HE ONLY True Biood Purifier prominently in the public eye to- day is Hood’s Sarsaparilla. ‘Therefore get Hood’s and ONLY HOOD’S. who passed a , : fe Chirsty screamed, ‘‘and that’s it ye hear think you < oe Os LD rN JAAD » YY ODNOID, AQ OO OD, FQOY OV, DLND DOESINE® So GD So IV So | HOON) hew they uniess py retvurn- ing to the house, when he .could follow them and so get rid of himself. Then he had the idea of descending. ‘*At the same time,’’ he said, up the lost words, ‘‘my naime—-’ **Dinna argy bargy with the leddies,”’ said Chirsty, tripping down the stair like a lady herself, but not hoisting the color COUIG Piss, picking ’ that would at that moment have. best become her. ‘*You must come out to Balribbie again and see us, James,’’ the elder lady remarked by way of good-night. Tammas turned a face of appeal to his other visitor, who had been regarding him curiously. ‘*Do you Know, James,’’ she said, ‘‘I would mot have recognized you again?’ ‘Very like,’’ answered Tammas, ‘‘for ye never saw me.”’ ‘*Be ashamed of yourself, James,’’ cried Chirsty, shocked to hear husband of hers contradict a lady. The young lady, however, only smiled. ‘Oh, James,’ she said, playfully, ‘‘to have forgotten me, and I poured out your tea that day at Balrib- bie With my own hand.”’ In his after years ‘lammas, tempted to this extent, would have answered in some gallant werds such as the young lady could have taken away with her in the carriage. But that night he was only an ordinary man. ‘*T never set foot in Bal—’’ he was replying, when Chirsty interfered. ‘*Well he minds of it,’’ she said, auda- ciously, ‘‘and no farther back than Mon- day he says to me, ‘That ‘was a cup of tea,’ he says, ‘as I never tasted the mar- rows of.’ ”’ ‘*‘Wuman!’’ cried Tammas. **See to the house, James,’ said Chir- | sty, ‘‘and I’ll go as far as the catriage with the ladies.’’ . When Chirsty returned, five. minutes afterwards, her husband was standing where she had left him. ‘*My name, mem,’’ he was saying to the stair, ‘‘is not James, but Tammas, and it’s gospel I tell ye when I say I was never at Balribbie in my born days.’’ Chirsty passed him without a word, and went into the house, slamming the door. Tammas and his tantrums did not seriously disturb her, but she had been badly used om her way back from the carriage. While helping the ladies to their seats she had been happily conscious of ‘Kitty Crabb peeping at the proud sight from the back of the doctor’s dyke, and as Kittty was the most celebrated gossip in Tillyloss, Chirsty thought. to herself, “It'll be through Tilly before bedtime.”’ ‘*Ay, Kitty,’’ she said, on her way back. looking over the dyke, ‘‘that was the Balribbie family calling on me.’’ Kitty, however, could never stand Chirsty’s airs, and saw an opportunity of humbling her. ‘*I saw nobody,’ ‘*They’ve been in my house , she answered. since haif nine,’’ cried Chirsty, amxiously, ‘‘and that was their carriage.’’ “T saw ne carriage,"’ said Kitty, cruelly. “I saw ye gaping at it over the dyke,”’ driving east the road.’’ ‘‘T hear nothing,’’ said Kitty. ‘*Katrine Crabb,’’ cried Chirsty, ‘‘think shame of yourself.’’ ‘‘Na, Chirsty,’’ needna blame me ignore ye.”’ So Chirsty entered her house with the dread fear that no one would give her the satisfaction of allowing that the Bal- ribbie family had crossed its threshold. She was wringing a duster, as if it were Kitty Crabb, when Tammas stamped up the stair in no mood to offer sympathy. He kept his bonnet on, more likea visitor than a man in his own house, but as he plumped upon a stool by the fire he flung his feet agaimst the tongs in a way that showed he required immediate at- tention. rejoined Kitty, ‘‘ye if your grand folk CTo be Cont. ane) ARE 10U A Jfso you will appreciate the fra- grance and flavor which our Extracts impart to your cooking. Why lose time and patience experi- menting with worthless and unreliable goods, when you can get the best from your grocer by asking for the “Sovereign” Braud. SOVEREIGN FLAVORING EXTRACTS Have stood the test of years, anu their increasing sale proves their superiority. Ask your Grover for them. Simson Bros. & Co. Manufacturers WANTED. Amachine operator at once. Aleo, pant and vest makers wanted. None but first -class workers need apply. J. T. McKENZIE, — ook Out the Starch, William E. Curtis, the newspaper correspondent, tells ihe following story of « Washington colcrved woman: “The wife of a naval cficer in this city, whose huske..7 !:s just returned from a long cruise, is i... - up her home |.->- and sent her lace curtains to a colored woman to be ‘done up.’ The ‘washlady’ returned them on the day agreed upon, but apologized because they were so ‘limpsey’ and offered to do them over again if she were allowed a few days’ time. ‘I had ’em jus’ as stiff as you like, honey,’ she remarked to the naval officer’s wife, ‘but my husband’s niece by his fust wife died jus’ at the time I got ’em ironed, and nuthin’ll take the starch out of things so much as a corpse ‘. a house.’’ Another trial was given er. A Wonderful Mathematician. Zerah Colburn, born in 1804, was the most remarkable natural mathematician every known. He was able to raise 8 to the sixteeuth power, this comprising 15 figures, and was right in every par- ticular. Once he was requested to name the factors which produced the number 247,483 and immediately gave the cor- rect answer. He was asked the square root of 106,929, and before the figures could be written down he gave the an- swer. Chew for a few moments a cracker containing no sugar and notice how sweet it beco:ses. This is the sugar into which your saliva has converted the starch of the cracker. When a dentist in China is pulling a ‘ooth for a patron, an assistant hammers magong to drown the cries of ‘the rictim. — It is just as well to know that ophelia, 2 new color, is a pale mauve. “Scratch Your Liver!” **Scratch your liver!'’ was the ery which arose from the corner of the busiest and noisiest down town restaurant about 1 o'clock one afternoon. The patrons of the place dropped thelr knives and forks and looked up in amazement. The waiters did not act in the least surprised and reached for the bills of fare, drawing a pencil through the line, ‘‘Liver and bacon, 85 eents.’’ The order came from the superin- tendent, who had received word from the chef that the dish had run out, and he was so busy at the time that he did not think how the shouted command would sound. —New York Mail and Express. Ay O1p AND WELL TRIED ReMEDY.— Mis. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup bas been used for over fifty years by millions of mothers for their children while teething with perfect success. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain,cures wind colic, and is the best remedy for Diarrbcea. Is pleasant to the taste. Sold by Druggists in every part of the world. Twenty-five ents a bottle. Its value is incalculable. sure and ask for Mrs. Winslow’s Scoth iug Syrup, and ta\e no other kind 1 3 5w — If we told you that your baby was starving, that it actually didn’t get enough to eat, you might resent it. And yet there are thousands of babies who never get the fat they should in their food or who are not able to digest the fat that they do get. Fat is a necessity to your baby. It is baby life and baby beauty. A few drops of Scott’s Emulsion for all little ones one, two and _ three years of age is better than cream fcr them. They thrive and grow on it. SCOTT & BOWNE, Bellevilie, Ont, P. E. Island Railway WEST PRINCE. NOMINATION. Tn connection with the nomination in West Prince, a special pascenger tram will leave Ch’iown at 5.30 a. m., Sumer- side at 7.45 a. m., arrive at Aiber on at 1430 a.m and leave there for return at 6.00 p. m.. standard, on Suesrday 20th inst. Keturn tickets wiil be issued by this train at undermentioned rates: From Charlottetown, Royalty Junction, North Wiitshire, Hunter River, $1.25. From Bradalbane, Emerald, Freetown, Kens'ngton $1.15. From Summerside, Miscouche, Welling- ton $1,00. From Richmond to Ellerslie, inclusive, 75 cts, From MecNeill’s to Coleman, inclusive, 50 cts. O’Leary and Iatermediate Stations, one first class fare. Return tickets will aiso be issued at one first-class fare from Tignish and inter- mediate stations by morning train on 20tb good for return by evening train ou same date. A. McDONALD, D. POTTINGER, Superintendent. Gen. Man. Gov’t Railway Office, Ry’s, Moncton, Charlottetown. April 15, ‘97—89, 3in. a choice lot of spring Sell youa Spring Suit. We have goods in Worsteds, Serses, Cheviets, Tweeds, Hte. Our Cutters and workmen are A 1—alwaysgiving satisfaction. : | D. A. BRUCE, FINE TAILORING EVERYBODY. SPEAKS, HIGHLY, OF . ew Goss. -— weenie ‘ We have just opened five lines of the following:—Eng- ish and American Hats & Caps, @VERCOATINGS | SUITINGS TROUSERINGS The latest styles, popular makes and shades, ‘The correc hings for the coming season. We give the best values. See ur prices. JOHN MACLEOD &CO MERCHANT TATLORS. _—_—_ li Papers ! Wall Papers! A fine,assortment of American and Canadian Wall Papers now inestock. For Prices and quality we will not be beaten. Have-a look at our stock before purchasing elsewhere. ~ McMILLAN & HORNSBY QUEEN STREET \\»- {|p Il» «ill «t{| «fff aff al «| I} USK ——aai- Sherwin-Williams Half a cent buys enough Liquid Paint Suerwin~- WILLIAMS PAINT THE BEST for fwo coats on one square foot of surface. . « MADE Vee *Sesssess SIMON W CRABEBE Walker's Corner 133 STOVES HARDWARE an MTC pI + a ea ee ae I ie Oe ee ep ee om om RRS gfe wma! a ORI APR Cie MEG gt Seta mb RR ERR oe Ren Ei LAR gel ely A fr rr 9 actin wn nem prnges peers snc em Se es A AOOO EEE A: IS: OE BS SSS lly At LETS NN AE Ny OS (RED 2 BM MSE EMR ne «5 eens ee _