| ITCHING PILES... . Positively and permanently ; ' ’ cured by Dr. A. W. Chase’s Ointment. p A WwW ¢ 2 » CVintment is an al lute al wa . : er nownt : i “ sdisease which has wr r S. l rather str to . the nt of tment, but it # 4 | by the ‘ menand w th w! I aiter years of s r- is zy many preparaiions and cons tors, uM. HI :, Ont., says: ‘'I take pl re in that after thirty years of suffe: ing wit! g Piles, Dr. Chase's Oint- m has t I me, I tried every r i, with little or no be but as I ? told difierent persons afi 1 as J was, Dr. Chase's Ointment made : ape ect cure.” Dr | s Oingment has a record of cures ann alicled in t tory of medicine. It is guar 1 to cure any case of piles. For | sale |y all dealers, or Edmansog, Bates & Co., : Tor ito. j ‘ j oe Ni GRATEFUL COMFORTING Distinguished everywhere fo: Delicacy of Flavour, Supe- rior Quality, and Nutritive P-operties. Specially grate- ful and comforting to the nervous and dyspeptic. Sold oniy in }-lb. tins, labelled JAMES EPPS & Co., Lid., Homeopathic Chemists, London, England. BREAKFAST SUPPER fPss corti Are Sure | of getting the best kitchen utensils if | |CRESCENT + STEEL AGATE WARE is om every piece you buy! We guarantee them to be absolutely pure, and very durable. Chey won't barn or chip and fruit acids have no affect on them, Your dealer has them or will get them for you, ; ne MADE BY i The Thos. Dayidson [ifg. Co. j MONTREAL.. THE’SS 56Q, ‘ 2° Ompouds Wed AKE THE BICYCLES Par Excellence. om FOR" STRENGTH BEAUTY DURABILITY It t.kes less energy to propel the iMPERIAL than any 1 Bic, cle made. Its ccnstruc- tiol: renders it alimost inde- siructab'e. Is THE BEST 100 Gucb FUR YOU ? Ci ll and see our wheels and get rice s——liey will interest you. y Hii) PL. NEWSON, AGENT D5 y.u SIDE" DENTISTRY Sas ae ( fice in New Prowse Block, firs: duor to the right up Btai:s. | THE DALLY EXAMINER, CHARLUTTETOWN, MAY 5, | 9: ee eee A eR + ~ , NB DABDDE wei FU . 4s¥ Pere rTerrT TTT Ty * AC i ‘ G9° a4 . Ao \s May no ill dreams disturb my rest Nor powers of darkness 1 olest! —Ev Hymn One of the few advantages that India bas over England is a great knowabili- ty. After five years’ service a man is directly or indirectly acquainted with 200 or 800 civilians in his province, all the me 10 or 12 regiments and batteries and some 1,500 other people of the nonofficial caste. In ten years his knowledge sbould be doubled, and at the end of 20 he knows, or knows something about, every Englishman in the empire and may travel anywhere and everywhere without paying hotel bills. Glohe trotters who expect entertain ment asa right have, even within my memory, blunted this open heartedness, but none the less today, if you belong to the inner circle and are neithera bear nor a black all houses are open to you, and our smal! world is very. very kind and helpful Rickett of Kamartha Polder of Kumaon some 15 He meant to stay two nights, but was knocked down by rheumatic fever, and for six weeks disorganized Polder'’s es- tablishment, stopped Polder’s work and nearly diced in Polder’s bedroom. Polder behaves as though he had been placed under eternal obligation by Rickett and-yearly sends the little Ricketts a box of presents and toys. It is the same everywhere. The men who do not take the trouble to conceal from yon their opinion that you are an incompetent ening sses of : Sie ep, staid with years ago ass and the women who blacken your character and misunderstand your wife’s amusements will work them- selves to the bone in your behalf if you fall sick or into serious trouble Heatherlegh. the doctor, kept in ad- dition to his regular practice a hospital on his private acconnt—an arrangement of loose boxes for incurables, his friend called it—but it was really a sort of fit- ting up shed for craft that had been damaged by stress of weather The weather in India is often sultry, and since the tale of bricks is always a fixed quantity and the only liberty allowed is permission to work overtime and get no thanks men occasionally break down and become as mixed as the metaphors in this sentence Heatherlegh is the dearest doctor that ever was, and bis invariable pre- scription to all his patients is, ‘Lie low. go slow and keep cool.”” He says that more men are killed by overwork than the importanee of this world jus- tifies He maintains that overwork slew Pansay. who died under his hands about three years ago He has, of course, the right to speak authorita- tively. and he laughs at my theory that there was a crack in Pansay’s head and a little bit of the dark world came throngh and pressed him to death ‘‘Pansay went off the handle,"’ says Heatherlech, ‘‘after the stimulus of long leave at home. He may or he may not have behaved like a blackeuard to wotman’s %y “A rank lies in the wees” fuliness of her wo- Y to : ° Be tia ca. A sick ae 3 woman, a nervous by wotuan, a fretful fe = womnian, a woman Meawho suffers from ” weakness and dis ay ease of the delicate vi and important or- gans that consti- tute womanhood, a woman doomed BR LOD AS ADE DED OD OQOOQ OD BOO BADE PQS BQO OED tome THE me: PHANTOM RICKSHAW. > oom + BY + ame + RUDYARD KIPLING. . 9 LOSI IOS MID 8 WG 0 | developed cession that | ered. I suggested that he should write , end. knowing that ink might assist bim to euse i have learned a new bad word, they are _ call him a fool, but he = to childlessness, is not a real woman. | The most glorious duty and privilege of womanhood is motherhood. The childless woman woman. A woman who never knows the caressing touch of a first - born’s fingers, cannot know the full measure of happiness possible to a woman. There are thousands of unhappy women who go through life without knowing the supreme happiness of motherhood, who go each day through a faithful but weary round of work, and live almost loveless and usu- ally pain-racked lives, because they neg- fect to take care of themselves in a wo- tnanly way. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescrip- tion is the most wonderful of all medicines for ailing women. It acts directly on the delicate and important organs that make maternity possible. It makes them well and strong. It fits for wifehood and moth- erhood. It banishes the dangers of mater- nity. It does away with the discomforts of the period of anticipation and makes baby’s coming easy and almost painless. It in- sures the new comer’s health and an ample supply of nourishment. Thousands of homes that orly lacked a baby as a final binding tie, now bless this marvelous rem- edy for the ring of childish laughter. It soothes pain, tones the nerves and makes a woman’s work easy. All medicine dealers sell it. “] miscatried four times,” writes Mrs. Flor- ence Hunter, of Corley, Logan Co., Ark. ‘‘ Then, after taking four bottles of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription I made my husband a present of a fine, healthy girl.’’ Tiny, sugar-coated granules that always cure biliousness and constipation—Doctor Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. They regulate and invigorate the stomach, liver and bowels. All good medicine dealers have them. Nothing else *‘just as good.” cannot bea happy | WY WW CI WWI WW Mrs. Keith-Wessington. My notion is that the work of the’Katabundi settle- ment ran him off his legs. and that he took to breoding and making much of an ordinary P and O flirtation He certainly was engaged to Miss Manner- | ing. and she certainly broke off the | engagement Then he took a feverish | chill, and al] that nonsense about ghosts Overwork started his illness, kept it alight and killed him. poor devil! Write him off to the system— one man to take the work of two and a half men. ’ Ido not believe this. | used to sit ap with Pansay sometimes when Heath- erlegh was called out to patients. and |! happened to be within claim. The man would make me most unhappy by de scribing ina low, even voice the [70 vas always passing at the bottom of his bed He had asick mans command of language When he recov out the whole affair from beginning to mind When little his boys never happy till! they have chalked upon a door And this also is liter ature He was in a high fever while he was writing and the blood and thunde magazine diction he adopted did m cala bim Two months afterward be was reported fit for duty, but in spite of the fact that he was urgently needed to help an undermanned commission stugger through a deficit be preferred to die, vowing at the last that he was bhagridden [ got his manuscript | efore he died, and this is bis version of the affair. dated 1855 My doctor tells me that I need rest nd change of air It is fut improbable that | shall get both ere long—rest that neither the redcoated messenger nor the midday gun can break, and change of air far beyond that which any home ward bound steamer can give me In the meantime | am resolved 10 sta} where | am and, in flat defiance of my doctor's erders. to take all the world into my confidence You shall learm fer yourselves the precise nature ef my malady and shall. tco. judge for you selves Whether any man born of wom: on this weary earth wus ever so tol mented as | Speaking now as a condemned crim inal might speak ere the drop bolts are drawn, my story. wild and hideotsiy improbable as it may appear, demands at least attention That it will ever re ecive credence i utterly disbelieve mouths ago l should have mad or drunk the man who hid dared tell me the like. Two months ago I wa: the happiest man in India Today. frou: Peshawur to the sea, there is no on more wretched My doctor and I[ ai the only two who know this planation is that my brain. digestion and eyesight are all slightly affected ceiving rise to my frequent and persist ent ‘‘delusions.”"” Delusions, indeed! | attends me still with the same unwearied smile. the same bland professional manner. the same neatly trimmed red whisiters. till I begin tosuspect that I am an ungrate- ful. evil tempered invelid But you shall judge for yourselves Three years ago it was my fortune— my great misfortune—to from Gravesend to Bombay. on return frei long with one i ? : , as re awe scoateu His ex sail leave, Agnes Keith Wessington, wife of an officer on the Bombay side It does not in the least eoncern vou to know what manner of woman she was Be content with the knowledge that. ere the voyage had ended. both she and I were desperately and unreasoningly in love with one an- other. Heaven knows that I can make the admission now withont one particle of vanity In matters of this sort there is always one who gives and another who accepts. From the first day of our ill omened attachment I was conscious that Agnes’ passion was a stronger, a more dominant and—if I may use the expression — a purer sentiment than mine. Whether she recognized the fact then, I do not know. Afterward it was { bitterly plain to both of us. Arrived at Bombay in the spring of the year, we went our respective ways, to meet no more for the next three or four months, when my leave and her love took us both to Simla. There we spent the season together. and there my fire of straw burned itself ont to a piti- ful end with the closing year I at- tempted no excuse. I make noapology Mrs. Wessington had given up much for my sake and was prepared to give up all From my own lips, in August. 1882, she learned that I was sick of her presence, tired of her company and weary of the sound of her voice. Nine- ~~ ty-nine women out of a hundred would have wearied of me as 1 wearied of | them; 75 of that number would have | promptly avenged themselves bv actire and cbtrusive fiirtation with other men Mrs. Wessington was the hundredth On her neither my openly expressed aversion nor the cutting brutalities with.which I garnished our interviews had the least effect. ‘Jack, darling,’’ was her one eternal cuckoo cry, ‘‘I’m sure it’s all a mis- take, a hideous mistake, and we'll be good friends again some day. Please forgive me, Jac!:, dear!’’ I was the offender, and I knew it That knowledge transformed my pity : into passive endurance, and, eventual- ly. into blind hate—the same instinct. I suppose, which prompts a man to sav- agely stamp on the spider he has but half killed. And with this hate in my bcsom the season of 1882 came to ab end Next year we met again at Simla— she with her monotonons face and timid attempts at reconciliation and I with loathing cf her in every fiber of my frame. Several times I could not avoid meeting her alone, and on each occasion her words were identically the sume—still the unreasoning wail that it was all a ‘*mistake’’ and still the hope of eventually *‘making friends.’ { might have seen, had I cared to look. that that hope only was keeping het alive. She grew more wen and thin month by month Yon will agree with me at least that such conduct would have driven any one to despair It was uncalled for, childish, nnwomanly — I maintain that she was much to blame. And again, sometimes in the black, fe- ver stricken night watches. I have be- gun to think that | might hve been a little kinder to her Prt tha? really is a ‘‘delusion.”’ I could not have contin: | ued pretending to love her when I didn't. vonld 1% It would have been un fair to us both (Cor tinned Or triage * 2 DR. GAUTHIER —— ‘ ? = ———_ SISK SOR ah A Mea Gh Re Ra ae ae McA a ¢ ft FROM! INDIA & CEYLON = 4 ue vo Seeexssee its a Treat: Ss ae To Drink ETLEY’S”? ‘FROM ANCIENT INDIA AND sW LE . CHhY LON AS 66 ei oS % Sold in lead packets only’ ae s% $1.0 per th, * ry x ss Always Best of Tea Values : Se BTS ee STS CR RS ES S DEY Office for Maritime Provinces 7 & 9 Bedford Row, Halifax, N 8 —=S Seiccaeiocanes emeeoae ae ae = —— See ——— Clothin Stk ae” | te Clothing for Everyone at 25 to 35 ocr cent. less than reg- ular prices ENDORSES The statement that i hir. Major owes : BR, CHASE'S idney Liver Pills } Dr. J. T. A. Gauthier, of Vallevfield, Que., | writes: ‘I, the undersigned, certify that the contents of this letter, in regard to the cure of Mr. Isadore Major, by the use of Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills, is correct.” ' Here is Mr. Major's Icttcr: ‘‘ After 20 years of suffering from backache and k.cney disease I owe niy life to Dr. A. W. Chase. I had trieri an endless variety of remedies to no avail, and on the recommendation of a friend began the use of Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills. Two pills that night and two next morning gave great relief, and I continued their use until now [am completely cured. My friends are surprised and pleased to see me well again, for I spent hundreds of dollars in vain trying to get cured. Before using Dr. Chase’s Kid- ney-Liver Pills my back ached so I could not put on my shoes and couldn't lift 20 Ibs. My shoulders were sore, I had headaches anda bad taste in the mouth, ‘These troubles are now entirely gone and what I say I am ready to rove. L have told my friends of my wonder- ful cure, and many have been greatly benefited by using these pills.” Dr, Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills are the great- est kidney cure the world has ever known. One pill a dose, 25c. a box at all dealers, of Edmanson, Bates & Co., ‘Toronto. mT LINE —TO— Commencing Way b°th The Favorite ‘‘S. §. HALIFAX” will leave Charlottetown for BOSTON every Tuesday at noon (Standard Tim €) caliing at Hawkesbury and Hal fax. Returning leave BOSTON every Satur. dav a noon, Passengers leaving CHAR.WOTTEs~ TOWN Wednesday merning, via Picton, ean make close connection st Halifax vitn 8,8. “HALIFAX” sailing Wednes dap eveving at 11 p. m. Tickets forsale at staticnson P. BK, I Railway. For tickets,, rates ard all in- formation apply to W. W. CLARKE, Agen‘, Char lotietow orto H, L. CAJPMAN, Canadian Agent, Halifax, N. S. May 3— Spring. general cleaning. watch may need insure their keeping ‘lhe time for Your clock or cleaning, tw geod time. Let us have them and we will put them in good running order. Per- sona attenti n given to watchwork Our big purchase ot Men’s and Boys Clothing at the Doull & Gibson sale has ar- rived. Wecan now supply you with Cloth- ing atthe manufacturers’ cost rices, Men's Tweed Pants from 50c, 7de 1.60, 1.25, 1,50, 200, worth 50 per cent more=Men’s Tweed Suits from $3.75 and upwar !s, &t wi!l mean money in your pock et to buy your clothing from us. aAPJrwrv7rwrr J. B. Macdonald & Co ‘ * : 3 . ree @0eccoa: ©80808 69 000600000000 0009 . ° v i HAICGHAIC |} $ Oldest Whisky Distillers on Earth. Est. Since 1679. § THREESTAR & FIVE STAR SCOTS WHISKY. We Simply ask the Corsumer to Comp s'~ ° ¢ Can be obtained at all first class Llotels.... 5 soee, @eeee 200086 OO *@bGvua aoe ‘ e2ef : : 3 s Rade ae Of all Wine Merchants. fibbry ™ Wholesale from the distiller, A. G. Tuomson & Uo, Glasgow =a AMBERST BOOT & SHOE MFG. CO WHoLEsaLe Boor « SHOE MANUFACTURERS, AMHERST, NCWA SCOTIA.... enor # Cur travellers reach ali parts of the provinces several times yearly well as points in Newfoundland, Magdelen Islands, St. Pierre, Miquelon Quebec shores. sy We are also the leading distributors in the provinces of the Canadiae Rubber Os foorwear. Agents will be on the roaiin a few days with sam- ples for the fall and winter trade, also for sorting orders. Repfesentative for P. E. Idand, Mr. C. Stanley Sutherland. Address all commpnicatioas to the Company. G.H. 7: VLORS! SUNS YSIDE AMHERS! BOOT & SHOE MEG. CO'Y April 15 2aw tl May 31 Ashen oes. aes, Seat 6 eee “reac 1 iat nisl i OS!