One of a healthy woman’s princi- pal charms is her Vivacity of car- riage—the dainty, springy steps with which she walks i The woman who suffers from weak- ness and of the distinctly feminine dise ise organ- ist, who is tronb- led with back- aches, stitches in the sides, drag- ging down or burning sensa- ions, sick head- aches and the multitude of other that accom- pany these diswr- ders, cannot have the dainty, bound- ing Catriage of a healthy woman. She will show in every movement ills i li is as fferer 1 wonderful s description, that has stood the that she - o 4 | her medicine for troub- est for thirty years, and has been used suc- esfully by many thousands of women, It is Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. It gis directly on the delicate and important ogans concerned and makes them strong, peaithy and vigorous. It allays inflamma- gon, heals ulceration and scothes pain. It wnes and buiids wp the nerves. Itis the discovery of Dr. R. V. Pierce, an eminent god skillful specialist, for thirty years chief eusulting physician to the Invalids’ Hotel gd Surgical Institute, at Buffalo, N. Y. This is one of the greatest medical institu- tons in the whole world. During the thirty gars that Dr. Pierce has been at its head be has gained the unbounded respect of tis fellow citizens at Buffalo, and they dowed it by making him their representa- tive in the National Congress, from which position he resigned to give the remainder d his life to the practice of his chosen profession. He will cheerfully answer, free d charge, any letters written to him ty affering women. Address, as above. ‘A few years ago."’ writes Mrs. W. R. Bates @ Dilworth, Trumbull Co Ohio, “I took Doctor Perce’s Favorite Prescription, which has been a peat benefit to me. Iam in excellent heaith a. I hope Suns every woman, who is troubled women's ills,’ will try p * Pre ion’ gad be benefited as I Sete heen.” ees i PPS'S COCOA ENGLISH BREAKFAST COCOA Possesses the following Distinctive Merits: DELICACY OF FLAVOR. WPERIORITY in QUALITY. GRATEFUL and COMFORTING fe the NERVOUS or DYSPEPTIC. WUTRITIVE QUALITIES UNRIVALLED In Quarter-Pound Tins only. Prepared by JAMES EPPS & CO., Ltd, Homcopathic Chemists, London, England. OOD. vale for money expended, is what we give in all goode in our line, to a which we attribute our steady increase | i ! in business. We are showing a nice asortment of Ladies and Gentlemens WATCHES this season, which are all thoroughly tested before leaving ozr store. guarantee every watch sold by us to give satisfaction, by buying now you can procure @ good time piece VERY LOW as our goods are bought low for epo cash , Call and aee for vourselt, at— a W. N. TANTON Opposite Crabbe’s Hardwre Store. ~ WARE - HOUSES TO LET | PEAKE’ WHARF (WO 1) Wharfage storage and yard- 123 at reasonable rates. H,,,, Arthur 6. Peake. Fertilizer Dried Blood and Tankage Bich in Ammovia and Paosphoric ; Write us for prices and avalyeis. | The broadside B. & M. PATTENBURY You immeciase'= va! | THE VAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN APRIL 14, 1898, Live | aaa TR TES YT EE PA SAE wns eee sas i f a e ij 47 7 A: gs H u ; i ' :' o i. Se Pi If you want to see a display of tke finest and newest Hats and ae ' - ] a : sold 5 i Caps. When we make a specialty of any. artice you may be sure ; LUOPYTIENt, 1800, DB ohn Alexander Steuart. . ~ . - ’ . . } (Continued.) ““'|that that is a sufficient guarantee of the said article’s speciality,— ‘i oe : The mate could not be described as | it SYNOPSIS. being of a milder natural disposition, and remember , Peter Clenl - - } but only as being less fearfully de- i eter Clephane anc Andrew h ilgour are | veloped. His name for cruelty was coutins, students at Edinburg University, | less eminent than his chief’s, but he oe aiiy between whom ia a better fued. The | WS training excellently and gave high es former is the son of a rich city lawyer and | PTO Se Of brutality. Meanwhile he rat ri hie consin is the heir of an estate in the| .4..2 took his grog, and practised se- ee ichleidin Unet pan alms ii , | Siduously on the crew. The first day rma > saatagee passed into the | out he knocked a sailor down with a iM hands of creditors. Afier a bitter fizbt | marlin spike under the very eyes of it | with his cousin, Kilgour is on his way | the captain, who was too indifferent rid heme whens he fal] ! even to curse approvingly. A little +; * in with company at the “Hound and Stag” inn at Perth. Arrived home his companion on the journey turns out to be his nncle, Peter Clephane’s father. CHAPTER’ VI. DISENCHANTMENT AND DESPAIR While the Bird of Paradise—such Was the alluring name of our gallant brig--was being loaded with a cargo of cashmere shawls, cocoanuts, drugs, glass beads, and other articles of mer- chandise likely to suit the cuftured Mohammedan taste, I was so closely engayed with my own concerns and the urgent hospitality of Sir Thomas’ friend’ that I paid but scant heed to the men with whom I was to sail. I had a vague notion of a picturesque medley of dusky children of the sun who would be likely in the course of the voyage to discourse of many mar- vellous things and discover traits at once new and interesting. But at sea and within the narrow confines of a two-miaster, one is impelled to take an active individual interest in his com- panions, and so it came that as soon as the towers and spires of Bombay had sunk out of sight on our weather beam I was eagerly and curiously studying my Surroundings and the characters of Officers and crew. Never have I been more swiftly or completely disenchanted. Perhaps and ignorant that I had so gayly cher- it | Was because I was young and foolish | ished illusion; perhaps it was the fine | name of the brig that had given me exalted and gorgeous ideas, but I had anticipated a holiday sail on sunlit seas in a sort of Cleopatra barge with companions fitly representing, if not the pomp and magnificence, at least the peetry and romance of the Orient. My punishment for indulging such fan- tastic reveries was speedy and condign. The Bird of Paradise bore as much re- semblance to the ship of my imagina- tion as a hedgehog bears to a leopard. In plain truth, she was an ill-smell- ing, leaky old coal bunker, with a crew of the most desperate-looking villains that ever swung from a yardarm. What their past had been it required little shrewdness to zuess. A glarice made it clear that what- ever easure, whatever romance there could be fn sailing with the dregs of Asiatic pirate crews of men, who for reasons to be comprehended by the simplest had found it expedient to lay aside for a little their natural vocation of cutting throats, such pleasure and romance were mine. Naturally I was amazed to find such men on Mr. Matheson’s ship, but the explanation came later. tT had for- gotten that the Scotch are frugal and did not know how Asia pours her scum upon the sea. My security, such as it was, lay in the fact that among themselves there was not the least evidence of good will. They were sullen, suspicious and incommunicative, and in all their lives had probably never known what it is to smile out of pure good nature of innocent hilarity, for their features were fixed in 2 nernetual scowl which nothing «culd soften. Taward each other, as toward their officers, they had the sulky, defiant demeanour of caged beasts of prey, and no doubt they hed «a sense of imprisonment. Oft duty or on, they indulged in no freecom of jollity of intercourse. No stories vere told: no songs were sing. The spirit was that of a chain gang working at the point of the bayonet or the muizie of the rifle. Misfor- tune, failur’ in hazardous and biocdy enterprise, had brought trem torether, and as yet they were not able to fraternr ize. The officers matched the Though Cantain Holden was an lishman, and Mr. Malcolm, the Scctch, there Ww nothing gracious prepossessiny in either of them. The captain was short and bread, square rigged, with a tremendous breadth of beam, as a sailor would say, and his squat, burly frame had in it the muscular strength and enersy cre . Ene- mate, or as ww of the ticer. Tis fs.ce, hairy as a Skve ter- rier’s, showed no feature in particular, Fave the huge nose, which, ow- ing to a long course of grog, had assumed the appearance of a purple knob, and bulging eyebrows heat hung over small, de ep-set eyes, as a cliff overhangs a cavern. His visage was truculent, and his temper and voice were in har- rony. His most caressing tones were the ‘growl of the thunder; his anger was the fury of a fiend. His natural qualities, too, had been Ww ell cultivated. of oaths he poured upon tis men whea anything went amiss was an achievement in profanity to be remembere:ii with a creepy shudder for a lifetime. and the gleam of his eyes and the way in which he fingered his pistols urder the stress of passion showed that he was not of those Ww ho value human life. As might be expected, his career had been eventful, his experiences start~- ling and varied. He boasted—and I am sure truthfully—that he could show more sword cuts and bullet scars than any other man of his size then living. “A man with a greater extent of hide might beat me,” he would sometimes say, “but to the square inch show me him who equals me. By Jupiter, if I was to preach on that kind of tattooing, a week would for my = onl” And mn ? ee later he sent another head foremost into the hold without so much as cast- ing a downward glance to see whether the man were dead or alive, and not a day passed that he did not distin- guish himself by some deed of cruelty or violence. Such, in brief, were my shipmates, and it will be eaisly understood how quickly and completely my dreams of a holiday voyage vanished. It enhanced the discomforts of the situation that I fancied myself regard- ed by the captain and mate as an in- terloper-a spy, whose proper place was with the sharks outside. But on that point I was unwittingly flattering my- self. Neither of them troubled his head in the least about me, nor even came near me except it were by chance and in the way of duty. To be sure, the captain usually rolled some hoarse greeting when we met in the morning, but he never delayed his ship for con- versation, and never once evinced a desire to know how I was enjoying my- self. Only at meal-times did we come into close contact, and then I was glad to get back to the deck and the dis- infecting air of heaven. Nor was the mate much more socia- ble. One evening, indeed, he spoke to me of Scotland, but as his talk was of nothing but tavern debaucheries, their accompaniments and results, I did not encourage him. He left me with a feeling of profound contempt, never again making any attempt to draw me into conversation. When we met, his looks declared as plainly as looks could that I was a priggish, puritanical landsman, who was no fit company for a jolly, blasphemous sailor like him- self Mr. Watson, the supercargo, was the only soul on board who took the small- est interest in me or mith whom I cared to speak. He understood my position, and I think had compassion for me. At any rate, he tolerated my amateur- ish views of seafaring men and things and sought opportunity to discover topics we could discuss with mutual pleasure. He was fond of talking of Edinburgh, which he knew well, having attended the High there. We compared notes on our reading, and he was certainly not the worse read man of the two. _ “This roving, free and easy life, Mr. Kilgour,’ he said one day, “has a ten- deney, as Burns to ‘harden a’ within and petrifvy the feeling,’ but I try to keep a fresh sweet corner in my affections for the thoughts and fancies of choice souls. After all, a good book is their riotous games at ninepins with virtue and character, and to read about a pretty girl better than to go about carousing with an ugly and debauched one. As Sancho Panza says about sleep, ‘God bless the man who invented books.’ ”’ Books, however, were the subjects of our bytalk only. Oftenest our conver- school says, better than is Sation was about India, Arabia, and cur companions. “Just look at them, Mr. Kilgour,” he Said once. “Aren't they a pretty set? Haven't thev the look of having been korn, »red, trained, educated fer tt Fpecial purpose of wallowing in crime”? Without ocular evidence could you imagine that so much rascality ceuld be condensed within a few skins’ They are the very essenve of villains sir, or rather the dregs, with not a henest or honorable instinct amene thern. IE vernly believe old Nick would be ashamed of them, for he, if reports be true, is an artist and w :rentleman but they—they are mere butchers. If justice Were any more than a thing 6f courts and fine talk, there isn’t a man of them that shouldn't long ago have adorned a gibbet.”’ “And how in the name of wonder do they come to be on Mr. Matheson’s ship ?” I asked. Mr. Watson screwed his face knowingly and winked. “" Ah, hea! you are,” he ed. ‘How comes the purse to ruie the conscience ? Mr. Matheson was born ayont the Tweed, and knows the value of bawbees. These rinsings ef creation are got cheap because they’re fiyine from tt rffold.”’ ‘Flying from the scaffold ie Mettiey O77 “From experience and the modicum of wit heaven gave me. Respectabil- ity’s a thing we don’t care to pay for laugh- there Ie S&C ! How de nl) ye on East India tr’ders. And that re- minds me, are you armed, Mr. Kil- gour ?"" “As nature armed me,” I rejoined. “J did not think that it was neces- sary to come on board Mr. Matheson’s ship armed.” ** Necessity’s just as you take it,’”’ he said, significantly. “In this golden clime it might not be necessary to wear clothes, but you do it all the same. A pistol’s not heavy, and sometimes it’s very handy. I always carry one, and this little thing besides,’ and turn- ing up the edge of his waistcoat he revealed the handle of a dagger. “That’s to prog them who might take a thought of progging me,” he exclaimed. ‘I have found it useful at close quarters more than once. Come this way, Mr. Kilgour.” He led me to his cabin, which was office and bedroom in one. When we were inside he carefully closed and fastened the door, then getting upon his knees he uniocked a heavy iron box, which notwithstanding its im- mense weight was fixed to the floor with iron rivets. (continued on page 8) ” _—_— .-.- 185 Now On In these goods at the Bargain Corner. i ee = a ca are = =e , Another of Our Specialties is ti Fine. Fit-the-form Glothing — We have all that is nobby and neat in Men’s Suits, The collection is really handsome. and the way we have lowered prices on these goods seems absurd, but we must lead the clothing trade, Also a large stock of clothing for children and boys as unequalled prices. W7. D. McR AY, Successor to McKay Woolen Co. thie ena fi ease At ti ee ig ote a sailings sega Fe ys 0 1.4 als 2 ttm, aie a pce: So) ao Ee pee ey se nee 45 Sei ore i = oii, 2 eS a a ite seme THE GUARANTEE which accompanies the pur- chase of AT _ Masse ~% \ . Harris ” + Se is from a reliable firm, and therefore worth : having. Massey-Harris Co,, Limited, MARK WRIGHT & CO. Agents, Ch’'town, * ROGERS & ROGERS, Agents, Summersite, 422% 94M NEM Me MEE USS Sa Teuku “ That Money Can Buy That des:ribes our aew stock of Gents’ Furnishings, <. aS rete ai ee een ee a 5-5 fans ee Twa: | wits rn Ve oi) i of : if e t eo See our new stock of White and Fancy Shirts. See our new stock of Ties. : See our new stock of Collers. See our new stock cf Underclothing. See cur new stock of Braces, Hdkis, Socks, Sweaters. Everything in Gents’ Furnishings going cheap. The peop'e that make most of their money buy at J.B. Macdonald & Co The Best Place to Buy Your Clothing a1 YOUNG WOMEN LOVE The D & A Corset, it fits so comfortably, supporting the figure, while yielding easily to every movement. It lasts well, and sells at popular prices. —MoRAL: YOUNG WOMEN WEAR tHe DO & A CORSET. (5) . 2 F NE al © eT aa