THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, APRIL 2, 1898 ee go! ¢‘oR-— 6%. vie That 1s wmtry, are prepared by :) / ‘ N © BOVRIL umreo Farringdon St., jodon, England, They put up their goods in the smallest possibile bulk, ie lightest possible werght, and the most convenient style Thetr prepuations include ip transportation. and 27 St. Peter St Montreal, Canada. BOVRIL, in tins or bottles, JONSTON’S FLUID BEEF, DESSICCATED and DRIED POTATOES and other VEGE- TABLES, SOUP NODULES. LIME JUICE ; NODULES, pd numerous other condensed food freparatioas, all indis- visible to Explerers. Miring Prospectors and Surveyors INE country of geld; but it isalso a gyere food 18 scarce and expensive, and it requires a journey shere ordinary rations are too burdensome to takerwith you hhe fod preparations suitei better tbam all ethers for such a country — lian Ware House Beal's Corner frafton and Ct, Geo. Sis lth side Queen Squarre lules Robin Waicinal Brandy | ee ee WY & DAVIES. Wine Merokants. Prisoncr of Pirates, On the Rocky Shores of the Persian Gulf. Sonly ene of the many parove AMents in which Andrew He Oy as ; ’ A on » hing self, as describce in the WSOINATING SERIAL 4K RR KK mak Al ° x ia Nw 4 \NMPIA MRK me LOVE'S sax 4 COM MAN KF x ~ a OS MMR ARK KK Sime romance whic lor Boog fletion cs ; af nea enaiae . “GHTED AND ILLUSTRATED — — — First Chapter Ap- '$ in to-day’s Examiner The D & A CORSET. For Evening Dress Women fia! the D-& A Corset as well suited for evening wear as it is for ordinary purposes. It gives “«chic’’ to che figure, without stiff- ness or dismomfort. It is sold at popular prices. Wear the D&A Corset. (7) % Sid Nady TE ipa A a a” Hoan ANAAAP AAR SABSARAAAAAL NARAR BAA ABABAAMAABAAEO SYS A RECORD OF MANY YEARS IT NEVER FAILS HAVE You A dose will A COUGH HAVE YOU A few doses A COLD TRY 'T ALSO FOR (Whooping Cough, Asthma, Bronchitis DR. HARVEY’S SOUTHERN RED PINE relieve it will remove it i CURES } aver 28 CENTS PER BOTTLE = As gout for children as for adults "THE ESSENCE OF THE VIRGINIA PINE” THE HARVEY MEDICINE CO., MONTREAL. (4) 3 ne Hidde deed due edd PAAR? SRAAAMPPOR ASE AP AP AAAAAARAAN i a8 BOARRPAPRAASE SED GBR Y EPPSS GOG0z. ENGLISH EREAKFAST COCOA Possesses the following Distinctive Merits: DELICACY OF FLAVOR. SUPERIORITY in QUALITY. GRATEFUL and COMFORTING to the NERVOUS or DYSPEPTIC. NUTRITIVE QUALITIES UNRIVALLED In Quarter-Pound Tins only. Prepared by JAMES Z£PPS & CO., Lid, Homeopathic Chemists, London, a EnglaoiL CHAPTER i. A KINSMAN AND AN ENEMY. After five and forty years, they tell me, turbulent students of the versity of Edinburgh listen Clephane and Andrew side of the meridian, and who ought rather to be engaged with his evening prayer than his morning folly, the memory of early misdeeds can be no matter for satisfaction, vet, I own, it causes me no surprise to hear that our ungracious reputation . still lives, for if fervency of hate could rive immortality to strife ours might be forever memorable. Jonathan and David made a covet ant of love, their souls being Fnit to gether in the bonds of a mutual affe tion, but we swore vows of vengean our hearts being aflame with reciprocal ill-will. must cess as quick as it was natural we got into the very blackest the authorities. and intractable spirit would assuredly bring us te a speedy and an evil end. I being the greater sinner (from c2uses which may presently be ap- preciated), was encouraged with the direr predictions. But the censors might have saved their breath. If these warnings had any effect at all, it was to stimulate ; There are | and embitter our enmity. certain moods in which admonition but fans into the flame the spark of | rebellion that lies in every unregenei ate human bosom. i fear that mood | impenitent, was ours. Defiant and we were a grievous affliction to our professors, and the cause of many fits | { of choler, resulting in red faces and ehaken nerves. I regret to add that } what rendered us no better than pest to our teachers mace us a source |} of endless delight. to our fellow-stu- dents, particulerly to such as studying civinity. i hope studer.ts of a later gener- ation are youchsafed more grace, though I am bound to aid that sev- eral cf those who used to cheer lcudest in the thick of the fray are now worthily thumping pulvits, and With evident success pointing their hearers to the straight gate and nar- row way. Who knows but they serve heaven all the better for having some special knowledge of the ways of sin ? If the devil were converted, he would probably make a first-rate preacher. Peter and I were kinsmen, and the !} deadlier enemies on that account. Ve! had come up in the same month of pursue our studies, as college pastimes are ironically styled, he from Dundee, I from a re- mote part of the Highlands, and as we had never previously met nor even heard of each other, save by vague and casual reports, our introduction was that of strangers. For cousins the mecting was not cordial. A town bred exquisite and the sole heir cf a lawyer with a big bank account and a trunkful of mortgages, Peter enter- tained a sovereign contempt for all such as were not of the gilded court of Mammon. The wretch who could not fee a fashionable tailor and live like a prince, if he happened to be of tne Same year to princely tastes, would inspire neither affection nor respect in my worthy cousin. Himself possessed of the longest purse and the finest clothes in the university, he was fawned up- on by a body of the most devoted ? tcadics that ever worshippel a golden eel, To the charmed inner circle of his | worshippers I was never for a mo- ment admitted, yet none of his chosen ! 7 i friends touched him so closely as I did mor yielded him so much pleasure They flattered, but I served as ta) for his Wit, an unenviable capacit: that was extremely gratifying to him and extremely galling to me. Neve! an opportunity of vexing m did miss. Not onmee during the two jy rs We were together did he forego the Slightest chance of taunting and ridi- uuling me. Though naturally averse to toil, he would cheerfully have lab- eured for half a Gay to coin a sen- tence that would sting or contrive an insult that would humiliate me At our first meeting, though I spoke } a purer English than his own, he beg- ged for an interpreter, as unhappily he ! had not the delightful Celtic Gislect at his command, expressed surprise that ome born to the heritage of a kilt should @emean his tine legs with trous- ers, and then with a sarcasm that was alternately like ice and fire in the blood he commented on the instructive and interesting antiquarian cut of breeches made in the Highlands. “As for your coat,” said he, “it is | the finest specimen of the antique I have seen, and I more than half sus- pect you of being the lucky finder of a garment dropped from thé ark dur- ing its cruise among the northern peat bogs. As an antediluvian relic ther: would be a fertune in the thing. Why don't vou exhibit yourself ?’ Where- upon his satellites laughed, unprozrious- ly, calling out that it wasn’t fair to purloin the clothes of Noah and say mever a word about it. I. left him with a crimson face and my heart already a furnace of hate. Thenceforward we were as powder end flame to each other—we had but to come into contact to go off. Psychi- cal experimenters hoid that an idea is a force of which the natural tendency is to translate itself into action. When we were together, the tendency of our ideas was generally violently that Way. In the tongue I was no match for Peter, nor tndeed in the entire univer- sity was there his equal in the use of that diabolical weapon of offense. In three minutes he could have blackened the character of a saint bevand. hane ~ | with passion. |} sentence, sometimes a single sneering Cni- |} with ' envy to stories of the battles of Peter | Kilgour. To} one whose sun is far on the wrong | As a consequence, hostilities } were frequent and kot, and by a pro- | books of ! Almost as regularly | day succeeded day we heard it} angrily prophesied that our rebellious | were | he hissed. to-morrow. See, I'll crush you like | | unhealthy life. Unitke ; would maintain his physical and mental i health, he must take reasonable precau- (Copyright, 1893, by John Alexander Steuart.} or réc&gtiition and put a° much more patient mau than Job beside himself As for me, a single little laugh or curl of the lip was en- ough to bring my blood to the boil- ing point and create an irresistible itching in my fingers to close on his throat. To do him justice, he took no pains to evade a contest. When we laid aside our coats to set- tle differences, I generally managed to pay off scores. satisfactorily, for, though he was my master with the tongue, and three years my senior to boot, I, being bred a hunter and climb- er of hills, had the firmer muscle. Per- haps, too, I had the greater ardour in crucial moments, and if that had its | | effect. mine was not the first instance in Which the spark of naphtha fire in the Celtic bload told in the fight. But the fortunes of war are variable. It chanced that one day my enemy caught me with a crippled arm. He railed upon me, as was his wont, I re- taliated, we fought, and the victory was with him. If he had whipped the whole British nation, instead of a maimed and insignificant unit of it, he could not have exulted more, nor if he had been of the race of rebel | angels could he have paid his debt of vengeance with a keener or malignancy of delight. “There, you Highland blusterer,” he cried, when the issue was opener more ? How does it feel to get a drubbing ?” ‘You ought to know who have had it so often,’’ I retorted. this day’s work, we will reckon for it yet, To-morrow we'll see who crows loudest.” “We will,” he laughed, with a more sinister expressicn than I had ever seen in his face before. “You and I agree for once. And when the reck- oning comes there are muir cocks I know whose crow will not be so cruse as it is to-day.” He came up to me with a devilish gleam in his eyes and snapped his fingers in my face. ‘* To-morrow !” “I'll show you what'll be that!” and he stamped and ground his heel in the dust. ‘*A poor, crawling thing like you setting yourself up be- fore me!” Then he stood off a step and broke into a laugh of derision, but, checking himself, he bent forward again, saying, in a tone of simulated compassion :—‘ After all, Christian, I ought to pity you. There is a shilling for you. Take it. Be- fore seven days are over l dare say you will find it useful.” Such was my amazement at this speech and the sudden change of his manner, that I mechanically held out my hand and took the shilling. Sut its touch, which was as a sting in the quick, restored my senses, and I flung the coir back in his face. ‘You may insult but you cannot de- grade me,” I cried, a hot, moist, prick- ly sensation springing to my eyes. ‘What your meaning is I cannot tell. I only know that, being yours, it must be spiteful and malicious. But be- fore the seven days of which you talk are over I will repay your affront with interest. And in the meantime I will say in the spirit of Timon, it is a pity you are not good enough to spit on.” My outburst awed the throng that had gathered about us, and I strode away in the midst of a dead silence, the picture, as an evewitness after- ward told me, of fury incarnate. Pe- ter’s tongue, however, was not long still. (To be Continued. ) sciihaboeiaek iia Pe eg 1 ; LO In J. Fenimore Cooper's Leather Stocking Tales, we read stories of the wonderful agility, physical endurance and the utnerring ac- curacy of the eye of the American Indian whev he reigned su- preme over this conti- nent. Before he was debauched by modern civilization, he was a magnificent specimen of physical manhood. He lived entirely in the. open air, and knew no medicine, save the simple herbs gathered by his squaws. Civilized man leads an unnatural and an the Indian if he tions to combat disease. Nearly all dis- eases have their inception in disorders of the digestion, torpidity of the liver and impurity of the blood. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery is made of simple herbs. It restores the lost appetite, makes diges- tion and assimilation perfect, invigorates the liver, purifies the blood and promotes the natural processes of excretion and se- cretion. It sends the rich, red, life-giving blood bounding through the arteries and corrects all circulatory disturbances. It dispels headaches, nervousness, drowsi- ness, lassitude, and drives out all impuri- ties and disease germs. It cures o8 per cent. of all cases of constuumption, bron- chitis, asthma and diseases of the air-pas- sages. It gives sound and refreshing sleep, drives away all bodily and mental fatigue and imparts vigor and health to every or- gan of the body. Medicine dealers sell it, and have nothing else, ‘‘just as good.”’ “A few of my symptoms,” writes Charlies Book, of Climax, Kalamazoo Co., Mich., “ were heart-burn, fullness after eating, pain in my boweis, bad taste iu my mouth, and occasional fever and hot fiushes. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery cured all these and I am perfectly well.” Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets are sure, speedy and permanent cure for constipa- fion. One little “Pellet” is a gentle laxa- tive and two a mild cathartic. ey never gripe. 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Hear what Madame Albani’s special accompanist has to say about the BELL PIANOS THE QUEEN’S, Toronto, Feby. 22nd, 1897 ro Wuom 17 MAY CONCERN: In connection with my visit to Canadaas Pianist to Madame Albani, I have had occasion to observe various m»kes of pianos, and have been much impressed with the advances which are being made in the art of piano construc- tion in this young and flourishing country, recent instruments to anest my attention--and I might say ene of the best —is the well known “Bell” Piano. is admirable throughout, and the touch firm and 1esponsive— ust what we musicians like—in fact, an excellent piano in every respect. understand can be obtained op ‘Bell’ pianos only) is also an excellent feature, and one which will doubtless excite inter- est with all classes. ihe “Bell” piano a good, honest instrument, and so recom- mend it to any intending purchaser. One of the most Its tone The new Orchastral Attachment (which I I do not hesitate to say that I consider (Sgd.) ARMANDO SEPPILLI. (Conductor, koyal Italian Opera, Covent Garden.) Pianist to Madame Albani, Canadian tour, 1896-7, For sale only at FLETCHER’ Piano Warerooms, Opera House Building, T. C. P. Yeo. Agent at Summer-ide. For winter shoes of all kinds. Lay them aside, and greet the approach of spring with a pair of new Oxford Tie Shoes. We have just opened 25 cases of new shoes in Chocolate, Black and Russets. STEWART & CO W. iH. enna Reet Pa. eae oe ints sn aa ya rice aaa wingers © . a eo aA AT. eR apne Sapa Bett ig = nn oP I EBA "SR lt: an te nize 5 Say ae eee ee RRR BS SE ES - pictgaghe te Me Pn a ae ial ee ae a ee ae ee aa sg tc Mle et ee ts afi