The young ™ wrried couple who are crown- ed with good health are really a king and quee?. They are possessed of an armor that gables them to w ithstand all the hardships sad misfertunes of life. Accid@ts aside, an wi live long, happy lives of mutua} By, ef4, agd they will be blessed with pel py? i lee otettdeue lial a bie, healthy criitren, They will sit ee ha eeflicht oF ld agé 4 took rogeth ey tn the Uviiignt oF o age anc .o¢ pick withont regret over a mutually hapr?, ofl, uscfyl, successful comparionsbip. , There are thousands of yerng couples every day who start wedded life with but one drawuack,~ons er the other, or both, suffer from ill-aealth. There can be no true gedded happsRess that is overshadowed by the black Grout of physical suffering. The » whe eontentplates matrimony, and re- ‘ees VRat through overwork or worry or gegiet’, he is suffering from ill- health, showid take the proper steps to remedy it tefore ke assumes the responsibilities of @ gasband. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis- covery is the bes of all medicines for men eho have neglected their health. It makes the appetite keen, the digestion perfect, the fiver active, and the blood pure and rick gith life-giving elements It is the great blood-maker and fiesh builder. It invigor- gies and gives virility, strength and vigor Ne woman should wed while she suffers fom weakness and disease in a womanite These ate the most disestrotrs of drs way. i endags from which a woman can suff. They break down her general health. Thev gnfit her for wifehood and motiterhand. Tee make ‘1er a weak. sick*y, nervous in- valid. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription eures al] weakness and dt » of the deli- este and important organs that bear the bur dens of wifehood and motherhood. I transforms weak, sufferiem, fretful invalids into healthy. happy wives and mothers Poth medicines are sok et all good med- wer sea a oe Corsets @re made in great variety of styles. ‘Whether tall, slim,stout or short you can gta D & A that will fit you comfortably, and at the Z fame time add a little to the natural grace of the figure. Q&A Corsets Weer aswellasthey fit. {;) Bold by most dry goods houses. «= Thin in flesh? Perhapsit’s natural. If perfectly well, this is probably the case. But many are suffering from frequent colds, nervous debility, pallor, and a hun- dred aches and pains, simply becaus. «ey are not fleshy enough. Scott's Eme‘sion of Cod- liver Oil with Hypophos- phites strengthens the diges- tion, gives new force to the Nerves, and makes rich, red blood. Itis a food in itself. | soc, and $1.0, all druggists. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, Toronte EPPS'S COCOA ENGLISH EREAKFAST COCOA Possesses the following Distinctive Merits: DELICACY OF FLAVOR. SUPERIORITY in QUALITY. GRATEFUL and COMFORTING to the NERVOUS or DYSPEPTIC. NUTPITIVE QUALITIES UNRIVALLE? In Quarter-Pound Tins only. Prenared by JAMES EPPS & CO., Ltd Homwopathic Chemists, London, Ercierd. SUMMER COTTAGE FOR SALE. For Sale, a comfortable cottage witl plot «f land, beautifally situated at Kep- Pech. with a delightful view of the strait« Good bathing, convenient to town, and * plewent holiday resort. Avply to sei JUDGE McLEOD, 8. Side. THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, MAY 3, 1898, SYNOPAIS, Peter Clephane ard Andi, Kilgour are cousirs, ecndeit® &i mdinLarg University, | between whom is a be'ter feud. Tire former is the eon of a rich city lawver amd | hia consin ie the heir of an estate io tre! Highlands that has alimo-t passed iam the hauds of creditors. Afier a bitte fight with bis cousin, Kilgour is om his way home when he falls in with compam'y at the “Hound and Stag” inn at Perth. Arrived home his companion on the jonrsey turns out to be his uacle, Peter Clephane’s father Yo retrive his fam:'y’s fortune Andrew is sent tol dia. CHAPTER XII (Continued.) “Sent y Mere wes @nothner oprief halt, and I cowld hear the Arabs in | whispered consultation. Then I knew that part‘of the compariy went one way and part anether, I sticking to my gun-barrel as if it were my sole hope } of salvation. Another breathless clamber followed, doubly trying to me in my blinded condition, and in a lit- tle while I understood from the free play of the air at !ast we had reached the tap. I had hardly time to wonder what was coming next, when one of my guards spoke. * We wish to be rid of thee,”’ he said. | bluntly. ‘Listen well to my words, for ‘they concern thy very life. While we were yet far down the gulf, some said, ‘Cut him in two and cast him to the fishes.’ Others—and well for thee they prevailed—answered, ‘No. rather let him live, if so be he go not to come back. I¢ he return, then shall his bloed be upon his own head.’ Now we are merciful. We will lead thee to a place of safety some dis- tance hence and there leave thee. Only if for the space of one hour thou triest to free thine ecyes from their covering, then as surely as thou dost it thou shalt die ere ‘thou hast time to look twice.” Without watting for a word from me he gave the order, and we went on again. The ground was broken and uneven, but after the pit sides we had climbed it was like the Queen’s high- way. We may have marched for an hour when we stopped. I was made to sit upon a stone. Then they untied my hands, admonishing me to remember the penalty for disobedience im respect to the bandage on my eyes, and hav- ing given me my pipes, which in a surprising spirit of generosity had been taken care of, they left me. I sat there awhile with perfect loy- alty, acutely mindful of the injunctions and admonitions I had received. I kept my hand tight on the green bag. In the stress of terror just gone through I had forgotten it, but now that it was returned its touch had for a moment something of the solace of an old friend’s presence. Partly to amuse myself, partly t« compute the flight of time, I began tc count the seconds, but it proved a weary process and was given up, only, however, to be begun again and again stopped, and j again resumed, to be finally abandoned in despair. In _ the usual reckoning an hour is but 60 short yet minutes—that hour was an eternity. With stoical resolution, though any- thine but stoical indifference, I tried to sit stockstill. imagining the while a hundred levelled spears at my side ready to be plunged into me at my The ordeal kept every in a flutter first movement. nerve aquiver, every sense of dread The disciples of Zeus have a pretty doctrine about arming “the obdurate beast with stubborn patience, as with triple steel. I hope they are able to do it in crucial emergencies. To me, seek it as I stubborn pa- tience would in vain 43 pricked the will, in vain recalied lofty maxims about the duty of bearing pain might, the not come. heroically. [It is gloricus shine as a hero, but at times nely diffi- eult. I canno« be of the godlike race, for the harder I strove for fortitude the faster my power of endurance ebb~ ed. T started ay + fide ted. listened, h-~ld my breath, shivered, shrank altogether and perspired; the air was full of om- sounds, and horrible slimy things seemed to be crawling over me. At last the agony of blind suspense became ; fferalb! Come whai micnt, ] would have my yes free. With trembling hands and a caution that was amazing in such burning im- patience, I raised the bandage and glanced from under its edge, first on one side, then on the other. Seeing ne watcher, I tore the cloth off and got to my feet, looking round with more } care and deliberation. Not a soul was |} about. I was alone. ' There was just light enough to enable | me to discern I was in the middle of | a wild desolation of gorges and piled- up cliffs, rising in the dim distance to what appeared to be a range of moun- tains. More for variety’s sake than from any definite object, I took up my pipes and began to walk forward from the sea. But some falls and frequent trippings With sudden glimpses of a yawning world of blackness at my very feet made it plain that to proceed in such a chacs of crags and clefts was to risk my neck at every step. Weary, faint, and in no heart to face un- known dangers, I sat down again, my back against a big to reflect on the new turn affairs had taken. Hunger fell upon me with the fierce- mess of a beast of prey. Most people I suppose have felt a sharp craving in their stomach, but mine was an acute pain that soon became a mad- dening anguish. You are to remem- ber that I had eaten nothing that day, that I was active, and had the edged appetite that comes with a full re- stone stone, covery from sickness when nature is “eoke up for lost time. Yet enwwpin~ *- =p. . . . as (Copyright, 1893, oy John Aloxandar Str sart? aii t could di Was to Uhr my waist- | who dine on such fare belt and think yearninely of the hard tack of the Bird cz Paradise, and dream ineffable dreams of the sumptuousness of home. Let me tell you that they are not likely to die of repletion. The sting of the eword or the bullet is keen, but give it to me before the inappeasable pang of starvation. The stars began to come out pres- ently, very large and lustrous, I sup- pose, to the proper eye, full of poetry. By and by a silver lightness fell on the landscape, and a little later the white moon rose in a sapphire sky, re- vealing the haggard dreariness of ‘the scene as clearly as if the time were noonday. & got. my feet, and some strange birds that had their dwelling among the fastnesses of this desert flocked about me in evident curiosity, then flew away, screaming at my invasion of their retreat. No other living crea- ture did I see or hear. Too weak and drows to make any effort for suc- cour, 1 crawled into a shady spot be- neath the led of a great rock, and in spite of trouble and pain, seon fell asleep. I awoke near the dawn chilled tothe marrow—for the dewy night air in these parts is sharp—and fallen to- gether like an emp’y sack. The pain of my stomach wus excruciating, hbe- ing for al! the world like a living, con- suming flame in my inside. To the tortures of hunger, too, was now add- ed that of thirst, and in all the black riven wilderness th#re was not adrop of water. Nor, what heartening, was sign or was equally dis- of human abode I to be ser n upation anywhere 1. The temptation was strong to lie down and rest, but as that would be mad- ness if I wanted to save my life, I staggered on once more, ignorant of mv direction and in the last ebb of hone. Weary hours passed—hours full of indescribable anguish of mind and body—without bringing cheer or solace. The sun came out, a huge white hot furnace enveloped in a pale haze ofits own heat. The earth blistered and cracked under my eyes; the rocks were scorching it; it seemed as if fire and famine were blackening the land together. A slight wind blew, but it was the breath of the crater or sul- phur pit let loose to destroy. Gasping to suffocation and dreading sunstroke, I hid in a deep cleft. Here {[ lay awhile in shade, but very soon the sun smote in upon me till the walls were like glowing iron. CraWiing out, I sought arother refuge, which, in turn, became an oven, forcing me to change. And so for the best part of that day I went from place to place among the rocks, seeking shade, and all the while getting. fainter and more parched from want of food and water. Late in the afternoon I resumed my march in sheer desperation. But it was woeful, heart-breaking work. I had got past the stage of acute pain from hunger, but the thirst was 4 worse agony than ever. Fortunately the hot, noxious wind had fallen abouj noon, so that I breathed more freely but it was still the struggle of a dy: ing man. énd indeed if relief dié not come quickly I should soon ceasj to be in need of it. (To be Continned.) Se CHEAT TIME. KEEP YOUNG. “ea «Don't let the hard of time paint “ga Wrinkles on your face, Keep young, Add sand to the glass by keeping the = blood pure and the digestive organs “wa in a healthful condition, ; “ye Health is youth—Disease and sick- “wa ness is old age, = ABBEY’S <s EFFERVESCENT 2 = ( SALT taken every morning before break- fast, keeps you in good spirits and robust health—fits you to ward off Eminent physicians, the world over, endorse and prescribe it » 2S an efficacious preventive and cure for La Grippe, Sleeplessuess, Spicen Affections, Loss of Appetite, Nervous Depression, Biliousness, Indigestion, Sick Headache, Sea Sickness, Con- stipation, Flatulency, Fever, Rheum- atism, Neuralgia, Gout, Skin and Kidney Complaints. It purifies the blood and clears the complexion. J. A. S. Brunclle, M.D., C.M., Mont- real, Professor of Surgery, Laval University Medical Faculty ; Surgeon to the Hotel-Dieu, etc., says:I have foundit particularly beneficial in the treatment of derangements of the liver and of the digestive organs, and consider that the regular use of a preparation of this nature has a decided tendency to prolong life, I am using it in my hospital practice.” All druggists sell this standard Eng- lish preparation. Price 2 6 or 60cts. a bottle, Trial size, 25 cts, B@-Sample bottle sent free, THE ABeer EFFERVESCENT SALT CO., LimTeD, MONTREAL, CANADA. disease, AARARARARIAAAAAA RRA aa We wage a ceasless war against high grade goods, GieD GOODS, LOW PRICES — | But they must be seen to be appreciated | For example, our prices on Children’s, Youths’ and Mens | Clothing, Ready-to-wear Clothing, are lower than Clothing has } Also startling valnes im | ever been seld on P- E (sland before, HATS & CAPS. W. D. McBAY, Successor to McKay Woolen Co. AFTER~— “LOVE AT FIRST- SIGHT ~ WAi prices and low you have wearied = looking at the blemishes and weakness ofa low grade: wheel, come’ ai and see the Massey © Harris © and compare the difference: MASSEY HARRIS CO., LIMIMED. Mark Wright & Co., Agents for Ch’town. Rogers & Rogers, | Agents for S’ade. = ena Ladies Hats. FLOWERS FEATHERS. RIBBONS Weare now showing our new stock. Miss Wade will be found on our first floor ready for her customers, — Es ees aoe T. J HARRIS, London House 4 Moana aa eae i treats CITRONIC DISEASES by the Salie-- bury method of persistent self-help, mm _ ving causes irom the blood. Coa- neous, inteligen! trealmentin person er by let‘er insures Minimam of suffer~ ; ingand Maximum of cure possible im ea6h case. Avoid attempts unaided Graduate of 4. Y, University . And the NEW YORIC HOSPITAL. Tven'y years practice in N. Y. City. Diploma registered in 17 8. and Canada, ADDRESS: CHARLUTTETOWN, P E I, CANADA. OFFICE, Victoria Row. Ageomodations reserved for patieuts. References on application, Oct 15 lyr | | Neuralgia in the head is almost invariably caused? Sey 7) decayed and abscessed teeth. Don’t saiiter needlessly when you can be relieve@ =p a few hours and cured in a few days bey aiee careful treatment we will give you. DR. J. H. AYERS DENTIST. le ’ Painless Extraction of Teeth. |