itt - mae OO Bue a henteeiemeenaielannimmmmammmanentl THE DaiLY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, SEPTEMBER 19 1598 ~ haa No STHRCH! STITCH! STITCH! The womar, who bends hei baék over.a sew- ing machine for tuany hours each siay needs to be trong and healthy in every way, or she is courting death. When ‘rer work comes hard, and makes her mer. ous, fretful and <lespondent, and she has ‘stitches in the side,’’ pains in the back«sr abdomen, and headaches, she may be «certain that some- thing is radically wrong A local doctor, with a ti servation and experience, that the fault is in thx heart. Generally he ts"wrong. The fault is probably in the delveate and important organs that really constitute’: womanhood. They are weak or disease case, only a doctor of bnown reputation and wide experience showld be consulted. A letter to Dr. R. V. Pierce, for thirty years chief consulting physiciar to the Jnvalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute, at Buffalo, N. Y., will secure the’ free advice of prob- ably the most eminent specialist in these diseases in the workd. Dr. Pierce’s Favor- ite Prescription has been used with success 1ited fietd of ob- vill probably say tomach, liver or by tens of thonusamis of invalid women. Over 90,000 have acknowledged its merits over their signatures. It promptly cures all weakness and dtsease of the organs dis- tinctly feminine. All medicine dealers. “I have been a greatesufferer from female dis- eases,’’ writes Mrs. C.iC. Clark, of New Rome, Floyd Co., Ga. ‘I was confined to my bed three years, and not able to-sit in my chair but very little. I got one of yeur pamphlets and read it and sent and got threébottles of Dr. Pierce's Fa- vorite Prescription. - Fitook the medicine and re eeived so much benefit from those three bottles that I was induced to take more. I therefore sent and got nine botttes. I took them and they completely cured me.” : Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets cure and comstipation. They never gripe- bil- One a dose wusness ae es 648 A &'3330008 ADVICE ABOUT Spice. When ordering a puckage of Pepper, Ginger, A!) pice, Cin pamon or Cream of Tartar from your grocer you can al- ways feel sere of securing the best quality &y asking for: : : Mott's BOO 1447 J OG 224 208 60 YEARS EXPERIENCE Ve “Trave Marks DESIGNS CorvricHTs &c. Anyone sending a sketeh.an« description may mickly ascertain ocr oputen, free w mee on fMvention is probably pater e Com tions strictly confidential. Bian book on Patents sent free. Oldest agency fors uring patents. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receitg speciat notice, without charge, ‘1 the Scientific American, A handsomely illustrated weekly. La cir. culation of any scient fic jours al. Terms, Sa ear: four months, $1 Soid &) all newsdealers. NK & (0,36»8roads. New Yor Braneh Office. 25 F St.. Wer ington, D. ©, oO de 62066 28 O24 @OG 4444 SBS O48 é e066 8 2%? £4004 @ @ 060646446 86464 a pice assortment of BLOUSE SETS the newest designs in sterling silver and _ rolled plate, and selling very low, >o@ W. N. TANTO Opposite Crabbe’s Ha rdwere Store —___ cts Soap! soap ! Use Kionprke Bar the great Laundry and scouring soap. marvel of cheapness unsurpassed n excellence. Use Roya Oak in the Laundry. Happy homes, easy quick work, snow white clothes. Use Jupmee fer the toilet and light Laundry. Makes child’s play of washday, J.D LAPTHORN & CO.’ } Charlottetown Soap Works. If such is the | THE DOCTOR, ‘We took to ‘him from ‘the ‘first. He waix- | ed quietly inte the Angel's Bower, at New Paradise, one might. when a half dozen of us miners seat smoking, drinking and ex- orene reminiscences of the civil way, in which everyone of us had taken part on | one side or the other, emerging therefrom | with a tegasury of wounds, hair breadth escapes and desperate experiences:enough to raise the ‘hair on the heads -of the tender- feet preserit and to draw comments from the toughened veterans themselves. He oamein as softly as ‘though he sus- pected wewere all asleep-and he was afraid of waking'us. He was. the handsomest fel- low that‘had ever shownup'm the Golconda diggimgs. Six feet tall, straight, a natural and graeéful athlete, even ‘the full yellow beard ‘that covered his face could not hide its symmetry and wonderful winsomeness. The mose was slightly aquiline, the brown | eves bright and the head, with its scant covering, was as matchless as any that Ru- bens ever immortalized on-canvas. He greeted us familiarly and captured all by a general invitation to the bar—an in- Vitation promptly and enthusiastically ac- cepted. There was some -surprise when he named lemonade, but only one of the com- pany objected. He wes Red Mike, the most vicious desperadothat ever had a price set-on his head, and tolerated at New Para- dise only because we were afraid of him. If half the rumors about Red Mike were true, he-ought to have been:hanged a dozen times over. He was quick to draw, forever hunt- | imgea quarrel and played the king bully | over all. He was a frowzy, snarling wretch, siouchy of gait, husky ef voice, with beady eyes, tangled red .beard—a tramp in dress, a giant in strength and a devil in dis- | position. “I obsarved, stranger,” said he, after |} gulping down his share, ‘‘that you insulted’ ata, *“How is that ?” asked the new comer, in his gentle voice, the twitching of the beard at the sides of his mouth and a twinkle of his womanly mouth showing that he was amiling. ‘*You drunk some pizen, while the rest of as took ours straight.” ‘You drank what yeu preferred and I did the same.” Every one of us sympathized with the stranger, but, like cowards, kept our mouths closed, We knew what was coming. “What did yer swaller ?” continued Red Mike, stepping in front of the man, leaning one elbow on the bar and glaring into the face of the smiling stranger. ‘‘Lemonade; 1 never drink anything gLroncer. “Wal, by , when you’re with this crowd you ve got to drink the same as the rest of us.” ‘‘[ shall exercise the same right as you— that of choosing my own drink.” I plucked up enough manhood at this point to interpose, seeing that Mike was determined to force a quarrel. ' “You forget yourself, Mike. This gen- tleman is a stranger. He comes among us, and we have all drank with him. He took, as he says, what he preferred and we did the same. You have no cause to object.” “Tl tend to you when I’m through with him,” he growled, flashing his flaming vis- age on me and turning back the same in- stant. ‘‘Stranger, you have the ch’ice of drinking a tumbler of mountain dew or you die.” spake, but the other was quicker than he, so auick that none of us ever rightlv under- Dr. A. W..CHase EXPERIMENTING OW His KEMEDIES. HALE ROUND THE WORLD Distance no Barrier in Getting the Glad News of His De- light to His Friends. UNIVERSAL REMEDY. Gentlemen :—Please find enclosed $1, for which send four boxes of Dr. Chase’s Catarrh Cure. We have used it, and find it an excellent re- medy, so we recommend it to others. Mr. J. M. Poorman, of Woodhum, Marion Co., Ore., got seme and is de- lighted with its effects. Please send three boxes to Mrs. F. J. Edmunds, No. 401 West Part street, Portland, Ore., and one box to Rev. ©. F. Edmunds, Sedro, Skagit Co, Wash. Be sure and send the blowers; they are so handy. Send at once. F. J. EDMUNDS. sar Dr. Chase’s Catarrh Cure Contains no Coeaine, DR. CHASE’S CATARRH CURE NEVCR FAILS TO CURE Cold in the head, Hay Fever, Rose Cold, Catarrhal Deafness, Foul Breath, loss of taste and emell, and Catarrh in all its forms. Contains neo oocaine. Price 25 cents, complete with blower. He slid his hand down te his hip as he | DR. CHASE’S CATARRH CURE A. “Sood baw it was done, “ : lwo Pistui stuivt reports rang through the little barroom of the Angel’s Bower, but one was a second ahead of the other. With a frightful oath Red Mike lurched against the r, sagged sideways and then collapsed, going down on the floor, his hat tumbling off, his wea- pon dropping from his nerveiess hand and both arms flapping out above his head as he thumped over on his back at full length. His bullet had nipped the ear of the stranger and embedded itself in the timbers behind him ; the other had passed through his neck, and it looked as if the time had come for Red Mike todie with his boots on. None of us moved, The stranger shoved his pistol into his pocket, stepped forward and knelt on one knee beside the head of the senseless miscreaat. He ran his fingers along the wound, bending his head lower and examining the hurt in a way that made us suspect on the instant that he was a doctor. “I hit him where I intended,” he remark- ed, looking around and up in ourfaces. ‘“‘He won't die, but when he gets well he'll know more than he did. A swallow of brandy will help him, and, gentlemen, you will oblige me once more.” He drew the bulky form one. side, as though it was that of a child, set it upright, with the back against the wall, with the ugly head flopping limply to the right and left. The brandy was held to the whisker- ed lips, and after Mike kad swallowed the stuff and showed signs of reviving the at- tendant bandaged the wound with some rags substracted from the superabundance around Mike’s person. ‘‘Now you will come all right,” remarked the visitor, walking back to the bar, where glasses in hand, we awaited him. He lift- ed his lemonade again and said, ‘‘Your health, gentlemen.” While the bottom of my glass was tilted upward I shot a look alongside of it at Mike. His shaggy head dropped forward, but it was done purposely and the lower whites of his eyes showed. He was glaring from under the beetling ridge of his brows at the stranger, who, having drank again, was fishing out with his forefinger a piece of the dried lemon in the bottom of the dirty glass. Mlke’s head was bent so far over that it was hard to see what he was doing, but he was studying his master and that master knew it. ‘“‘How do vou feel?” he asked, m the sympathetic tone of a physician. ‘None of your bus’ness,” grwmted the desperado. ‘A good sign when a paiient talks like that,” remarked the stranger, champing the bit of withered lemon; “‘if you'll place him on the couch where he can be quiet fer several days, he will soon come round again. I willdrop in to-morrow and look at him.” Landlord McGuigan helped the snorting Mike to wobble to the back room, where he was dumped on McGuigan’s only spare couch and once more and finally he collaps- ed. “J judge you are a physician?” I said to the visito?. “Yes, | was a surgeon for the Oonfed- eracy from Manassas to the sunset at Ap- pomattox—Dr. Edward Creighton, at your service. He lifted his army hat with a “Good night, gentlemen,” and passed out into the darkness, carrying our hearts with him, for he was a born knight, with the daring of a lion. The next morning Red Mike was wilder than aloon. McGuigan was scared out of his wits and begged the Doctor to give him a dose right off that would kill or sooth him, preferably the former. Ten minutes later Mike was sleeping as sweetly as when #u .iuocent infant, though it is hard to im- aime him, even at that early stage. guilt- lene cf any of the crimes attainable by fallen human nature. A week later he was sub- stamtialivy well, thengh the wound troubled kine ior a coasiderable while. ar. That was how Dr. Ned Creighton aad Red Mike became partners. That burly, tonsled knet of concentrated deviltry was now the meck bulldeg, never se content as when allowed to hick the hand that had smitten him. He was as ready as ever to strike, bite, elaw, geuge and shoot with any oue except the Doctor. One glance of these soft brewn eyes electrocu*ed him. He was happy only in the Doctor’s com- pany. Shrinking in one corner, doubled up and introverted like a turtle, he fixed his beady eyes on his master, who talked and laughed and captivated all by his wonderful magnetism, unconscious apparently of those unwavering orbs that seemed not to wink for an hour at a time. Crack! sounded Mike’s revolver, amd Bos- ton Hank lea from his seat with @ questioning glare at the fellow, who from his place on a smashed barrel held his smok- ing revolver still levelled. ‘*What did you do that for?” ** ‘Cause you ’nterrupted the Doctor when he was talkin’.” “T didn’t say a word.” ‘But you opened your mouth and war goin’ to lip in; I shet you off.” ‘“‘T was gaping—that’s all.” “T jedged from your looks that you ‘meant to speak, when you got them jaws of yyourn back ag’in to place. The Doctor asn’t to be ‘nterrupted; you hear me, rds.” The Doctor had his secret and we all saw it. Naturally genial, talkative and the soul of the company, spells came upon him now and Sthen when his melancholy was too profound to be shaken off. At such times he would wander into the mountains. not allowing even Mike, the bulldog, to slouch,at his heels. Sometimes he was gone for a short while only and again for half a day or more. He and Mike had their cabin in Devil’s Gulch, a few hundred yards from the settle- ment modestly called New Paradise. I was the only one with whom Mike would ever talk about his master. ‘He gets ‘em bad sometime,” he said ina low voice, glancing round for cowens. “When he thinks I’m asleep, ‘cause my eyes ar’ shet, be sneaks off his cot, lights the candle and sits for hours without speak- ing.” “Doing what?” ‘Blamed if I know, ’cept he has a picter that he takes out from his inside westcoat pocket—over his heart I ’spose—and holds it abind the light and never takes his eyes offen it, onless to read a letter that he carries in the same place.” ‘Are you sure he never says anything?” “T’ve heerd him mutter once or twice, heaving a big sigh, but the only word I’ve ever been able to catch was ‘‘Maggie” and I’m not sure of that. He kisses the picter +ver so many times, and when he is through outs ’em back together. He is the most MACKAY Mid Summer Sale. No exaggeration, we both talk and give dargains; with this special list of go is and prices we have no occasion to exaggerate, as a call will convince the most fastidious. 1 dikread gloves Better glove Sunshades, former price Silk cord for fancy work worth 10c, now 2c Fancy black braid for dress trimming le, 3c, dc per yard, worth from Ladies undervests, Hooks and eyes Silk dress laces worth Table doyles worth Colored Trimming silk from 10c to 25c yard worth double what we ask for them, Black sewing silk Colored twist worth from 4c to 6 per yard, now 2c. H2mstitsheld hdkts Lace trimmed 10, 18, 22, good valu: Prnts perv: Black and colored sateens, former price ow 12 to 15c per yard Colord and black vsilk elvet } pric 12c, for 5¢ 25c, for 12¢ %0c, now 25c 50c for 25¢ yard 75¢ for 25c yard 1.00 for 50¢ yard 1.65 for 80c yard 10 to 25c le card Vin iad Mie Aberdeen skirt closer . a “| Dress Goods—see our prices oa a few |in +s 10c, now 5c 33c for 15¢ yard 36c fer 19c¢ yard 55¢ for 29¢ for S0cyade for 32c yard 63c for 40c yard 1.45¢ tor 75¢c yard le skein 4, worth 10c 10c, worth 20¢ | DP, MACKA -onsiderate man lever knowed. He never } forgits me, and moves about like a cat, fearing of waking me, not ‘specting’ cause my eyes appear to be shet I’m peeping atween the lids.” **And then does he lie down ?” “He slips out of doors, coming back jest afore daylight to prevent my waking up and finding him gone. I think thar’s some woman inthe business, and, if a woman,” added the philosopher, ‘‘then a man, and,” resumed the bull dog, showing his fangs, ‘‘I want to find that. man !” “‘And has the Doctor never explained anything of this ?” “TI can’t ‘zactly say no. He was so infarnal biue three nights ago that I up and asks him whether I couldn’t do nuthing for him. He looked at me steady-like for a minute and then says, says he, ‘Mike, what do you think [ come out to the mines fur? **To dig gold,’ I says, insocent like. wee he; ‘I’m looking fur a man.’ ‘It took me ail aback when he said that and | continners after a proper pause : ***And what are you going to de with the man when you find him? ‘I say, did you ever see blood red thun- der and lightning mixed up with the fire from the eyes of a rattler when he snaps back his head to strike? Wal, that was the Doctor’s face when I drops down on him with that question, and when he says: ‘Wait till I find him ; he’s somewher ea top of the ‘arth and I come out to the Golconder to look for Kim.’ says (To he Continued.) THE ONLY HOPE! For Victims of Brigizt's Disease is Dodd’s Kidney Pills. Not a day passes on which the newspapers do not record the death of one or more persons from Bright’s Disease. Already its victims num- ber hundreds of thousands. Day by day the awful total grows larger. No class is safe from this destroyer. War and intemperance, with all their miseries and fatalities, are not responsible for as many deaths 2s have been caused by Bright’s Dis- ease. Yet, there is a way of resisting it ; of drawing its poisoned fangs, and making it as harmless as a summer breeze. That great medicine, Dodd’s Kidney Pills, has cured thousands of ‘he worst cases. It never fails to cure, hopeless as the case may seem. Would you safely shield your loved ones from the fatal grip of this curse of mankind—Bright’s Disease? Then use. -Dodd’s Kidney Pills, the only cure ou earth for this disease. Purnell’s Malt Vinegar 7 PLAIN AND SPICED We have recei ved adircet imycrta tion from the old ccuntryy of PURNELL Mar Vivecar. This vinegar cannot be excelled for purity— The best vinegar for pickling— guaranteed to keep the pickles. The spiceD kind is particulary good. Try it. For Pickling—we sell all the difter- ent kinds of spices—also, currie powder in bulk, Tumeric, and celery seed. SANDERSON & CO Wholesale & Retail. HEAVY Ran ge... ee RRM a eo a) Ser aR For ..s STEEL PLATE | Coal or Wood. More than 100 styles and sizes for FAMILY, HOTEL and Restaurant use, Are constructed in the most substan- tial manner and after the most approved patterns, 2° & < 3 2 é e ¢ © 2 : ARE STRICTLY UP TO DATE IN EVERY PARTICULAR. ' YOU A heavy steel range ,6 holes CAN with reservoir and hot warm- 2 ing ovens top and bottom in : BUY any part of Canada for. . . Equal in Weight, Durability and Efficiency to any in Canada or U. S. The McClary Mfg. Co., ioex72, , MONTREAL,. . . TORONTO, WINNIPEG end If your local dealer cannot supply, write our nearest house, F'all Goods now Coming to Hand Ladies Jackets. Ladies Waterproof Cloaks. Ladies Hats. Feather Boas. Golf Jerseys, J. T. HARRIS, LONDON HOUSE, DIRECT FROM NEW CLOTH FOR FALL AND WINTER We have opened a fine line of Nobby Cloths in suit- ings, Overcoating and Trousering, Call now and get first choice—a full line of gents fur- nishings always on hand. John McLeod & Co., Sartorial Artists. — =LONDON