When a man who has neglected his hes lth fins ally realizes that he is being attacked by serious il} health it is no f seed , time for half Sin way measures, . 4 Death is an enemy that & must be Ms knocked out ae in the first round, or he is pretty sure to conquer in the end A weak Pstomach, an impaired di gestion end a disordered liver mean that a man is fighting the first round with, leath. Unless he m: inages to strike th nock out blow, it means that death will oon up in the second round in the guise Of some serious malady. When a man's stomach is weak and his digestion is im paire d, the life-giving elements of the food he takes are not assimilated into the blood Che blood gets thin and weak. and the body slowly starves. In the meantime the disordered liver and the sluggish bow- els have forcec ‘ into the blood all manner of impurities The body vis hungry and ageriy consumes anything that the blood. tream «carries to it. In place of healthy nutriment, it receives for food foul poisons that shoukl have been excreted by the bowels. Continued, this system of starva- tion cot ombined with poisoning, will wreck every Organ in the body Naturally, the weakest organ will give way first. If a man is naturally nervous, he will break down with nervous exhaustion or prostra tion. If he inherits weak lungs, the con- sequence will be consumption, bronchitis st 1m: r some d lise ase of the air-passages If he 1a8 a naturally sluggish liver, he will suffer from a se rious bilious or malarial at tack. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discov- ery cures all disorders of the stomach. di gestion and liver. It purifies the blood and fills it with the life-giving elements of the food that build i new and healthy tissue. It is the great bicod mak er and flesh-builder ad neces % we 1 nery t It es oS pet cent of ull cases of consumption. Thousands have testified to their recovery from this dread 3; see } thie disease under this great medicine ts eure constipation. a EG iQ) ! PICKFORD & BLACK, LINE CORSETS Stand every strain. Always comfortable and absolutely un- breakable, every active woman needs one. Unrivalled for golfers and bicyclists. Cost only 25c. more than regular D & Astyles, and made in all sizes. Ask to see them. (,) HALIFAX ‘ CHERLOTTETOWN. SEASON OF 18598. 8.8. CITY OF GHENT will sail from THE a CHAPTER VIL. Sie reached over to possess herself of | the papery litter, asking herself when |} memory | | she had destroyed a letter and cast its fragments to the winds. To assist her she smoothed the crumpled fragment across her knee. Two unbro- ken lines revealed themselves startling- ly at a glance: ‘‘Adrien, you would not be eshamed of your wife if you could see her with’’— That was all. Liza crumpled the pa- per up once more and flung it from her asif it had been some loathsome rep- tile. With scorn bright eyes she looked across the broad flat fields to where Adrien, his gun resting across his shoul- der blades, was just disappearing be- hind a knot of pecan trees. **So that is the sort of coward he is!’’ The glittering clasp of a Russian leather wallet caught hereye. It was ly- ing on the ground beside the brick steps. She stooped to pick it up. Its contents were scattered loosely about, flung out by the violence with which he had jerked his shooting jacket from the tree. These Liza gathered up promiscuously and shoved into the wallet. Once only did she pause in her task. It was when her fingers came in contact with the stiff leather case of a small ambrotyne. It was impossible not to look. Impos- sible not to wonder. A small, plain face, with sad, large eyes and a sensitive mouth. That was all. ‘*Scarcely the sort of face to make a ' man forget to be a gentleman,’’ said | Liza, clasping the wallet over the pic- i | green of the | tured face and consigning it to her own deep dress pocket. CHAPTER VIII Presently there was no one left in sight and the battlefield was all her own. It was high noon, as she knew by the northward slanting shadows of the elder bushes that were tracing a delicate pat- tern of lace against the crumbling brick wall behind her. On the knoll that had just swallowed up Adrien’s fast moving figure the torch of a crimsoning sweet gum flared brightly among the rusty pecans and the vivid ver- dure of the magnolias; a soft rustling in the oak trees which disputed territory with the pines and the laurea mundis in the graveyard was all the sound she MR. MONTAGUE, DENVILLE, ONT., Chase's Gintment, HIS SUFFERING FROM ULCERATING PILES CURED. Charlottetown every Friday at 10 a. m., He says :—I was troubled with itch- luring the the season of }*98, for Halifax,| ing piles for five years, and was badly ealling at Summerside, Port Hastings, , ulcerated. They were very painful, so Port Hawkesbury, Arichat, Caneo, Isaac much so that I could ‘net sieer. I tried Harbor, Salmon tiver. Sheet Harbor; ne, Come many Frnt mage trae returning will leave Halitaxevery Tues~| pent 1 purchased a box, and from the m., makiog sane calls. The excellent passenger accom - amidships. Special given this season. informaticn apply to W. W. CLARKE, Agent dav at 6 p. steamer has modat freight For further yn. Saloon a will be Ch’town, Mav 14, 1898. Fich-crade Art Rocemese S. F. TarBush, for the High Grade Art Co., has opened an office 4 doors up from J. T. McKenzie’s store on west side of Queen street, and is of- fering to enlarge photos, tin-typ«s or group. pictures very cheap for three months, that everybody may have a sample of their work. He has in the past 10 months delivered the hizhest grade wurk ever delivered on P. E. 1 unauthorized agents. A and no de pos 1538 Beware of work guaranteed, required, a —— WANTED. At Acadia Hotei # woman or girl who 18 capable and efficient to assist io the kitehen Apply at Hotel or of Mr. Crockett, at Fieh Market Charlottetown. 158 21 DAILY ae STORY OF bE : 18 WEESUA BAYS, Ne aes SEANMBRTE, HWILORGE COPYRIGHT, 1897 BY THE AUTHOR. — ee ee first application got such relief that I was satisfied a cure would be made. I | used in all two boxes, and am now completely cured. Ievery remedy given by Dr. Chase cost years of study and research, and with an eye single to its adaptation for the ailments for which it was intended. Dr. Chase detested cure-alls, and it has been proven ten thousand times that not one of his formulas leave a bad after-effect. Dr. Chase’s Ointment is based on lanoline, and the ‘est phy- sicians prescribe it. Mr. M.T. Wigle, of Kingsville Essex Co. Cured of Itching Piles of 23 Years’ Standing, Physicians Fall to Make a Cure When Dr. ( hase’s Vintment Gave Immedal- ate Reiief, M. T. Wigle, better known te every cne in the vicinity as ‘Uncle Mike,” was troubled for over 23 years with itching piles. At times he was so bad he would have to quit work. ‘The irri- tation became so intense with constant rubbing that they became ulcerated and would bleed. He had been treated by mary physicians, but found nothings that gave him relief. Reading in the paper the cure of a friend who had suf- fered in a like manner, and being cured by Dr. Chase’s Ointment, he procured a box. After the third application he got such relief that he had the first comfortable nightgs sleep he enjoyed) in years. The one box made a compleic cure, and he says he would not be with- out it for $50 a box if it could not be re- placed. Mr. Wigle is a wealthy farmer, well known in the community in which he resides. It is over two years since he was a'Hicted, and he has never been troubled since. heard. “In the cool sustaining currents of the upper air some pigeons were cir- cling ambitiously. The sumach was kindling its autumn fires in the fence corners. A blue jay dressed his elegant plumage with dandified fastidiousness as he swayed easily among the russet tassels of the dead corn. A serene still world above, below, all around about her! After alittle Sarah Jane lifted her brown head and pointed alert ears, while a look of animated interest came into her soft eyes. The tnusical note of a hound in pursuit broke in upon nature’snoteless madrigal, floated near- er and died away, quenched in the soundless distance. Liza put ont a hand and laid it caress- ingly on the silken head at her feet. ‘*Poor beastie! It has been a day of scourging tous both—stripes for thee, @ haircloth shirt for me.’’ Things had been especially exasperat- ing that morning. The flies had been more than ever populous about the open mouth of the molasses jug which form- ed the central ornament of the red ta- ble cover three times a day. Charlie had appeared at the breakfast table with an unkempt look, laughing nervously over the admission that he ‘‘couldn’t find his comb and brush nowheres.’’ He reckoned ‘*Duke’d done made way with ’em.”’ Her father, fresh from the humane but un- pleasant task of drenching a sick mule, had composedly taken position behind the dish of fried chicken without any intermediate ablutions. Her mother had ‘‘clean disremembered’’ that ‘‘sissy didn’t like her to come to the table without somethin white about her throat.’ Only Seth had vigorously adhered to the new order of things and taken his place at table, red in the face from re- cent conflict with the coarse roller towel, his waveless, sandy hair irre- proachably smooth and his _ stalwart arms painfully compressed into the coat which, before Liza’s advent, had been conscientiously reserved for state occa- sions. As for Strong, h¢ was only an occa- sional visitor now, who came more and more rarely to the overseer’s house. He had ‘‘cut loose,’’ Charlie called it. Liza’s fastidious taste was sorely out- raged at home scores of times each day. “What was Strong thinking of?” Self rebuke always followed closely on the heels of her silent condemnation of the shortcomings of those who loved her so well. ‘‘Tt does not matter. It must not mat- ter. It shall not matter. They are my people. Iam theirs. If they made a mistake in sending me away, it was the blunder of loving, ignorant ambition, and it shall not be visited on them. But it galls, O my dear Lord, it galls! Give me strength to bear it and to hid. it from every eye but thine!’ This, her prayer, she had poured out afresh that morning, kneeling among the fallen leaves that carpeted the earth about Gabriella’s tomb. ‘‘You loved me, sweet, when we were two ignorant lit- tle girls, knowing nothing of the social bars that herd all humanity into differ- ent pens for different service. If only you could have staid and I gone, Bella mine !’’ Having thus quieted herself ‘‘like a weaned child,’’ her sketching had pro- ceeded very satisfactorily until the iliad of Sarah Jane’s woes had pierced her ears and broken up her working mood, not to be recovered that day, (To be Continued.) ee tte, cc eee Ax Op Ayp Wet Triep Remapy.— Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup has been used for over fifty years mothers for their children while teething with perfect succes. It soothes the chi:d softens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind, colic,and is the best remedy for Diarrhoea. Is pleasant to the taste. Sold by druggists in every part of the world. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Its value is incalculable. Be sure and ask for Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrap,and take no other kind by millions of EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, JULY 25 1898 £{MACKAY’S POO EES ¥ meady-to-wear Clothing At the Following Prices 24 all wool suits in grey and brown checks, single breasted well trimmgd, men’s size: at $5.00 to 6.00 20 all wool, mixed checks, 4 button sack, single breasted atg$7.00 to 8 00. ° 50 suits made from our own make of tweed, all patterns, single and double breested good fits and guaranteed to wear, selling at $7.00 to 11.50. 50 children’s 2 piece suits in dark grey patterns, at $1.50, all wool, grey, check ard brown, mixed, selling at $2.00 40 children’s suits, 100 boys’ Men’s working pants in nice stripes—all sizes, good fits, at 75c, $1.00, 1.25, 1.50 up. 3 piece suits, all sizes, Boys’ odd pants at 25c up. 2 piece, brown check, well trummed, selling at $3.75 Bicycle suits at $4.50, former price 6.00 CALL AND INSPECT OUR STOCK Pianos Built on the patch- ¥ ork plan, cases made at one place works at another,thon thrown together by a selt styled man ufacturer, are offered daily, at prices so ridiculous as to con- vince any intelligent person of their utter wothlesness. MIL. ¢ ; * ; MDE * Sut One of the causes of side-slipping is ‘weakness in the joints of the frame THE. ..0-. Massey- -Harris is reinforced and very strong. Mark Wright & Co Agents Charlottetown. Rogers & Rogers Agents Summerside, ott CON-N OU hits t Low- : Priced Heintzman & Co Which are remarkable for tone, touch, finish, and durability, rs well as price. Coms and hear them and in- vestigate not only the instru- ments, but also our plan of easy payments. We are not here for a month or two, but permanently, and just and sat- isfactory treatmentcan be re: lied upon, The P. KE, /. Music House | Connolly Building, Rueen St. nice checks and well made, selling at $3,50 up to 7.00 Extensive Au Auction Sale. | ee 50 children’s 2 piece suits; a Rar | Photographs Photographs We are making all the latest styles of Photos fivished in a superior manner, either on Glossy or Flat paper. At the old stand Grafton St. We have also a new and splendid stock of China, Glass and Earthenware, fine goods at reasonable prices. C- LEWIs.. Grafton St. Ly sexe side of Market House. a a . - Piano, Furniture, Carriages, &¢;. | I am instructed by J 8 Morris, Exq., to» | sell by auction at his residence, Davdas. if Esplanade, on Monday, the 25th day o% | July inst,, commencing ut 10 o’clock. 1 Superior Newcomb Piano, (nearly } new) cost $500,00, Drawing room, Dining room, Hall, Bedroom and Kitchen Fur- niture, Carriages, Sleighs, Harness, Robes: etc., etc. 8. BEARISTO; | Auctioneer 165-—d td “S O°} OQ OS DW OGVIOVD® earth — - - ail a Rees US “as >t @ eS 2 2 2% 2 = OD OD OS OS OS 0 VOD OBS OV OVIOHDOBDOVWH We have rendered you, your acecunt,. Please attend to it at once, R. KJOST. Stampers Corner. SS Wr DADODPDOQDODO +00 BOD a WDPF38DOO86O £4052 68>F' rruit Jar Eiliciency —- The jar that will keep the fruit cosssy ng more than the jr of doubt. Use the “Canada” Jar When you putup fruit, and you'd) lose no preserve by fermentation. _ Special low prices this season on fruit jars. SANDERSON & C0