EE a EE ee? a ee? a ee? aa ¢¢¢ femme a ee ee ee eee ee i a THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN. MAY 12, 1898 Bright-faced, happy, rollicking, playful babies, thousands of them all over the broad land, have in their bodies the seeds of serious diseases, and while they laugh and play are facing death. The mother, in the majority of cases, is unconsciously re- sponsible for this sad stete of affairs. Where the mother, during the anxious period, suf- fers from weakness ana disease of the dis- ‘inctly feminine organ’<'n. it is useless te expect 4 sound an thy baby. Every woman may be strong i. « womanly way, and have robust happre children. A wonderful ' ie for women is Dr. pierce’s Favorite i rescription. It is the discovery of an erm'~*nt and skillful spe- cialist, Dr. R. V. Fierce, for thirty years chief consulting physician to the Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute, at Buffalo, Nw. Y. It is a m dicine that acts directly and only on those delicate and important organs that bear the burdens of maternity. It makes them stronz, healthy ard ¢!nstie ft allays inflammacu. heats ulceration, ! stops debilitating drains and soothes pats. te giss rest and tone to the tired nerves. It Rte for wifehood and motherhood. It does away with the 7°-cc=fozts of the expectant period and 1 ‘ baby’s coming easy and comparatively painless, Honest druggists will not offer an inferior substitute for the sake of a litt): extra profit, —_— I” «tT guffered for vears from displacement, detili- tating drains, inflammation and weak back,” writes Mrs. Bessie McPherson, of 38 So. Main St., Providence, R. I. “I traveled with my husband. and first noticed my weaknesses coming on when the jolt of the cars became unbearable. I stop- d traveling but the trouble steadily grew worse. i suffered so that I became despondent and wish- ed for death. I took only a few bottles of Dr Pierce's Favorite Prescription and was perma- gently cured.” D & A CORSETS. D&A “crest” CORSET Unequalled fer grace and com- fort. It is modelled to living orms, made o: first class mate- rials, and its patsnted construction ou the hip makes it POSITIVELY UNBREAKABLE. If you have hac trouble with your corsets breakiag, try the D&A “oa, Seld by most dealers. (4 PPOS GOGOA ENGLISH EREAKFAST COCOA Possesses the following Distinctive Merits: DELICACY OF FLAVOR. SUPERIORITY in QUALITY. GRATEFUL and COMFIRTING to the NERVOUS or DYSPEPTIiC. NUT? ITIVE QUALITIES UNRIVALLED In Quarter-Pound Tins only. Prepared by JAMES EPPS & CO., Lc. Homeopathic Chemists, London, Enzland, 50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE TRADE Marks DESIGNS CopyricHTs &c. Anvone sending a eketch and description may qnickly ascertain our opinion free w ether an invention is probably patentable. ¢ ommunice- tions strict!y confidential. Handbook on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American. »A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cir culation of any scient fle journal. Terms, $3 a year; four months, @1 Scid by all newsdealers. MUNN & Uo.2¢:8roadway, New York _ braneh Office. 6% F St.. Washington, D.C LEGAL CARD. MATHIESON & BENTLEY Barristers, Solicitors, ac. OFFICES— Cameron Block, Charicttetow~ Main Street, Georgetown. MONEY TO LOAN. W. E. BentTir’ Ch town. 1. A. Matiigeson, Geo'wwn. a — Rat aes a i an | ~ SYNOPSIS. [Copyright, 18935, by John Alexander Stenart.} Peter Clepbane and Andrew Kilgour are | cousins, students at Edinburg University, betw-en whom is a better feud. The former is the son of a rich citv lawser aud his consin is the teir of an estate in the Higilands that has almost passed into the hands of creditors. Afier a bitter fizht with his cousir, Kilgour is on hia way home when he falls in with company at the “Hound and Stag” inn at Perth. Arrived home his companion on the journey turns out to be hie uncle, Peter Clephane’s father. To retrive his fam:ly’s fortune Andrew is sent tol dia. CHAPTER XVI (Continued.) With palpitating haste I answered It Was named a bagpipe in my country, that it put the spirit of victory int« Werricrs aid the fleetness of fear into the heels of their enemies, “T safd it wan the scréam of de- mons,” he remarked, with o chuckle, Then suddenly his exvression betame one of deep thought; he seemed to be trying to recollect something. “f have it; I have it,”’ he cried, sitting up with a beam of intelligence. “Tn thy country are the men naked about the legs ?"' "*Partiy, my toeg,” I astonishment, “They have been to Egyrt, they not ?” he said, eagerly. Cairo, Alexandria—they| have looked on the desert and sniffed its sands. They have likewise been to India. They have pulled down princes, established empires, uprooted ancient laws, and made new ones, said prayers ina Strange tongue that no man could un- derstand, and gone to battle with great answered, in have cries. Have they not done all this ?” “My lord speaketh the truth,” I said, more and more amazed. “They are called’’—He pressed his brow as a man will to aid his mem- orv. “ Highlanders,” I shouted, beside my- self with excitement. * Nay, nay, not that. That is not it. I will remember; yea, 1 have it. Dest thou not recall the tale of that Egyptian ?” turning to his minister. “*Neked Scottish devils’—that was it. They lear like lions, and roar tike bulls of Bashan; vea, they have the voice of the wild ass, and their tread is like an army of horsemen that maketh the earth to tremble.” “My lord is right again.”’ I cried. “Wert thou naked when Said Ach- met took thee in ?” he asked. “No, mv iord.” He seemed disappointed at this, but his face lighted up again as hé said: “At any rate thou hast the screech- ing demons with thee. We have leisure this morning. Thou shalt give us some of the war music of thy land.” “If my lord will cause room to be made for me,’ I said, joyously. “Cause room to be made for thee! Oe Why, dost thou swell with playing ” “‘Nay, my lord, but the piper must walk to and fro to play well.” “Thou callest thyself a piper. T have heard the coinpany of pro- phets with pipe and_ tabret. Per- chance we shall have thee prophesy- ing.” Saying this, he waved his hand, with a laugh, as a signal to the soil- diers to clear a space. ‘**Make room,” he called. ‘‘ Hearken to the music that putteth courage in the hearts of the naked Scottish dev- a The next ple were being pipes were squea tuning up. You may be sure that if ever piper played with all the zeal and skill that were in him it was then. The con- sciousness of the great at stake was diffused like an electric current through and lungs and fingers, threugh head and feet and all that lay of instant the wondering peo- hustled back, and the ling in the process of prize lips o * SICK HEADS Positively cured by these Littio Pilis. They also reliove Distress from Dyspepsia, Indi-csti n and Too Hearty Eating. fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowst- ress, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue + TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels. Perely Vegetable. Sra Pit. Small Dose. Small Price. Substitution tho fraud of the day. - See you get Carter's, 4. per- Pain in the Side '_ Ask for Carter’s, j Insist and demand Carter's Little Liver Pills. ee OOO ee ee CHE | cogency | security could ignore. However friend- betwéen, giving dour to both the s nerformer. Yet. in ite of nery energy and ar- ul and hody of the this earnestness and the acute sense of momentous issue hanging in the balance, I could not heip beirg tickled by the ludicrouscness of the situation. Very absurd it was to me b, a Highlander er an Arab ip. carb, in feeling, to go sailing about in flow- ing skirts, bursting my cheeks for the favouranle verdict of judges who had never seen or heard a begpire in their lives, who did not know one tune cr note from another, and who would be quite likely to decide with overwhelm- ing unanimity that all my merits were faults and all my faults merits, and who were prejudiced and incensed against me. It was like putting Harlequin on a | trial of skill before a man who had never seen a play, who detested the theatre and its traditions, and above all fervently hated the performer. Yet I gave them the music of my native I gave them the music of my native hills awith all my might. hills with all my might—all the | marches, strathspeys, reels, pibrochs, coronachs, all the solemn tunes and ranting airs, all the rousing battle pieces, and the melting funeral wails I had ever learned or heard, with many more that were improvised on the spot, I thought my playing would have charmed the sou} of a Macrimmon, In fine, to my own mind [I Was sur- passing myself in all kinds of music, both grave and gay, and playing nob- ly eneugh to win the plaudits of the best judges in all Scotland. But Arabs are not Scotsmen in the matter of pipe playing. The glances 1 managed to cast with the tail of my eye showed me a listless and apathetic audience. If there was any particular expression in their faces, it was one of disgust. Rollicking airs and solemn psalm tunes, * Tullochgorum ” and “ Old Hundred,” *Jenny’s Ba‘vkee’”’ and “ Martyrdom,” “The Laird 0’ Cockpen” and “ The Land o’ the Leal,” * Macgregor’s Gath- ering ” and “ Roy’s Wife” had precise- ly the effect—a uniformly de- pressing one, I plaved charges that Same would have made the “Black Watch” er the “Cam- eronians” how! for blood, and pibrochs that would have made a Highland bail- iff sit Gown afid cry, and llts that would have sent the young men and minaidens of a whole i » skipping over the green—I strode, I doubled, I caanced without moving a single sign of enthusiasm. Yet I blew on-—blew livelier or fliercer as the case might be, for the incentive to keep going was strong. 1 waiked with my drones in the faces of the ranks that lined my path, a thing that was unwise; I press- ed as néar as possible to Abou Kuram and his ministers, a thing that was givers. Forward, to the Front IS the Battle Gry We need not the order, we are always found in the very front ‘rank of value In the front rank for value iv clothing In the front rank for values in Hats & Caps In the frent rank for values in Dress Goods In the front rank for values in Staple Dry Goods, In the front rank for value all along the Dry Goods line, Our Big Window — We call the attention of passers by to the assortment and values we slow in Men’s Trousers. ‘what you see elsewhere—we ar willing to stand by a good judge’s decision, Place Like The Bargal WW. D. McRAY, Successor to McKay Woolen Co. unwiser still, for the close quartere are can bear T x when, in advancins toward Abou Kur- oe noticed the leather-faced coun- sellor at his right wriggling as if in Gire pain. Paying no heed I came up, wheeled and marched back. but before I reached the other erd there was 42 pipes at with equanimity. midst of the parade, v« as in-the suda . ry, anda th g ~ypoch the peovle closed in, almost knoching the pipes Wiese vk iy XVI. OF FRONT CHAPTER A SURPRISING CHANGE So all my rosy hopes were blown to the winds again. Fate had cut off the last chance of escape, and I could look fer nothing but immediate death. For 1 had heard something of the por- tentous mysteries of statecraft that make such havoc of the conscience of rulers and understood that behind the perscna] will and inclination of Abou were reasons of such fearful Kuram as u as no prince who valued his ; ly the Governor might be at heart, he was not a free agent, but merely | the instrument of a tyrannous system | which sentenced and siew with ruthless disregard of the sanctity of private thoughts. ; This was driven in upon me with stavgering emphasis when the leather- faced inerate I had relieved of his pains, humbly venturing to commend the wisdom of his master’s speech, en- larged on the © absolute necessity of preserving the State from foreign in- trigue at all hazards and at whatever cost of blood, and ending up with the proposition, “ Let my lord decree death forthwith, and while he despatcheth weightier matters I will see this rogue executed.” (To be Continned.) ag re cee ae ene BE SURE you get what you war. when you ask for Hood’s Sarsape- rilla. Unequalled in Merit, Sales, Cure . | There’s no substitute fr HOGD’S. more than any mse ek . : OF — a 10 cents. e eee in cash or stammps, we will } F sotsas - 1 ’ nN? cena ot I2C'2Cc3 lon . a v/t ' > - : yA 2 c , nn tenet in + wivye se 4 es r . ps Lchgaes Danan = ate miur2 than the money. mail you, 2 tho box alone is worth the money—the Tea i! contains 15 worul ll charges prepaid, a kandsome 21% inches wide cord I inch deep, tied ax InxpDoO-CEYLON TrA, £9 cents per Ib, hay & yO? b oe os ‘ ° + - Soest en newt eet 4 a « ‘ I.’s offered as an inducement fo : ' “oa? Pe dant ere eee ra Cciicious Ciephant Brand Teas, end 31cice » § r ee ot ok 1 beet rerzd—ard co Kind: y mention ins j Tereer’s Drerrass T2ara I-act.0F Teas are coid only iu esti 1 tat Tiikind of, sever i: tuik and cos be bid from nit EPHAMT CRAND. caters in good grocesies in Cana At the price printed on each packet (25 eetts to fz. jer th.) they ore cocsicercd fo Le tie Best of Tea Values. JOSEPH TETLEY & CO. _4 Lemoine STREET. MONTREAL Compare these values with . | l ST CAT Be _—— “ee ee LUNG A ANE Rm ch dis ge ater see ae ~ i = ran ce eeaer sat ll eA Se ome a -PERFECTION28+ the balance and adjust- ment of THE — i> Massey pe He Hye ; ¢ > e ye z F Harris accounts forits eaxy run- ning qualities. Massey-Harris C€o., LIMITED. MARK WRIGHT & CO. Agents Ch’town. ROCERS & ROGERS Agents for S’side. ee Neuralova in the head is almost invariably cansed te decayed and abscessed teeth. Don’t suffes needlessly when you can be relieved in a few hours and cured in a few days by the careful treatinent we will give you. DR. J. H. AYERS DENTIST. Painless Extraction of Teeth. TEETH WITHOUT PLATES Crown and Fridge Work. DR. J.P. MURRAY 155 Queen Street, a eT SACRO ate Furness Line of Steamers. S. S Halifax Vity sailsfrom Halifax 21st April, for Great Britain. This steamer has beex fitted up with Cold Storage. Shippers of perish- able produce should apply : arly. W. W. CLARKE, Agent &4