there ever a women in the wide world ‘ Was gho did not vearn to be the mother of a pright faced ppy, healthy, laughing, rol- licking child , there ever was such a oman, se wa vad o and while there ge many thoro ily bad men, there are P) gery few thor y bad women 7 It was God's and N ture’s interition that “y eves¥ wotar shoul be the mother of pealthy chil Tens of thous ands of BD gomen ¢ this beneficent design by SE weir ignorance and neglect. They suffer a from! weakness an 1 disease in a womanly qay, and take no measures, or the wrong peasures to remedy it. Dr. Pieree’s Fa- naalee Prescrit tion is a sure, speedy and emanent cure for all disorders of this s directly and only on gescription tt act yrtant organs that are life i1fe, eo SBS » and . he eit it ind i! a hold of TIT) human the thresh ! it makes them strong, healthy, vigorous and virile. it heals u'ceration, allays inflammation, gothes pain and tones and builds ap the serves. It banishes the trials of the period of impen ting maternity and makes baby’s entry to the world easy and almost pain- less. It clo way with the dangers of and shortens the period of lassitude It insures the health and a bountiful gotherh 0d weakness and B iittle newcome er’s goply of nourishment. It transforms weak many nervous invalids into happy, healthy wives and mothers. Thousands of women h ive testified to its marvelous mer- its. A dealer is not a physician, and has no gght to surgest a substitute for the prescrip- tion of ad eminent sp cial tlike Dr. Pierce Dr. Pie: Medical Adviser sent for 3! oneent st —_ to cover customs and mail- eg erly. oth bir di ng so stamps. Ad- drese Dr. R v. Pierce, Buffalo, N. ¥e perrererneererte: tenraetr itt A RECORD OF MANY YEARS IT NEVER FAILS HAVE YOU A dose will i: 4 COUGH HAVE YoU A few doses A COLD will remove it TRY IT ALSO FOR Whooping Cough, Asthma, Bronchitis DR. HARVEY’S SOUTHERN RED PINE CURES ONLY 25 CENTS PER BOTTLE As good for children as for adults “THE ESSENCE OF THE Y!RGINIA PINE” THE HARVEY MEDICINE CO., MONTREAL. (4) ODE a BAAD ERASE DR RAPRAARAMEARHARBAREDAANIRADSSS relieve it PARAAPRSAMAARARAPAARAIA AAAAARPAAAAAAR Cor aghs eal col ds need not be endured; they can be cured, and that quickly. Many mixtures are tem- Bporary in effect, but Scott's BEmulsion of Cod-liver Oil with Hypophosphites is a permanent remedy. The oil feeds the blooc find warms the body; the bypophosphites tone up the terves; the glycerine soothes mhe inflamed throat and lungs. cures. serious he combination may prevent mune troubles. 1 $1.00; VN Pa DT FPPS ENGLIS: BREAKFAST co ces *he ¥ stlowing erits: all druggists. Chemists, Toranto, foc. at COA Posse: Dis:inctive N DELICACY OF FLAVOR, Y Tt] AnTry TTA? ITY. ; T SU ominar I 1D IU ALA <T°Ty + v AN TIVO GRATE and COMPORTING %, Tr . -—-—- ~ rEomrmpDTT Te le the NT aK yf or DYS: ack Lhe marr RUTeITIVE QUALITIES UNRIVALLE! In Quarter-Pound Pteparea by JAMES Homeopathic Chex FOR SALE eottr ce with SUMMER CO TTAGS Pe v Sale, ry f¢ rtab! e plot of lan i, . I faltiv »* itnated at K >pD- poh, With a delichtful view of the atraits 5 “od bath ir e. ape enient to town, and & P'ewant holiday re«ort Avply to . JUDGE McLEOD, 8. Side. 38 uf tn te TO LET. with hot water, large bath room t andco'd water, elec ric Osseesion givin firs of May. SYNOPSIS. Peter Clephane and Andrew Kilgour are | Cousins, etudents at Edinburg University, between whom is a better fend. The hie cousin is the heir of an estate io the Highlands that has almost passed into the hands of creditors. Afier a bitter fight with his cousin, Kilgour on his way home when he fal! s in with company at the “Hound and Stag” inn at Perth. Arrived home his companion on the journey turns out to be his uncle, Peter Clephane’s father. To retrive his famiiv’s fortune Andrew is senttol dia. is CHAPTER XII (Continned.) While I was thus thinking ahd de- bating, a boat put off from the pirate ship and came toward me. Coming tlongside its crew climbed on board the brig, and judging it best to be civil, laam and a cordial marhaba, come. I might have saved my pains. Instead of returning my salutation, the leader came forward with drawn sword, demanding to know whether there was any treasure on board, and intimating that if he caught me in a lie my throat would be cut on the spot. I aysured him that I knew of no trea- sure, but invited them to search for themselves, since there might be secret covered. “Thou shalt be guide,” said the fel- low, “and, as thou valuest thy life, a true one. the taste of steel.” I meekly complied, cond .ictirg them faithfully into every corner above and beldw, fae the fear of death gives won- drous fidelity. They examined deliberately as they went along, prob- ing with their sword points into dark recesses and sounding with the hilts the boaris for concealed chambers, sometimes even kicking furiously in their fits of chagrin as time passed and no discovery was made. in an ugly inclination to hold me re- sponsible for their ill luck. Thev would spurt out angry questions about the former occupants of the brig, and be- fore I could reply turn upon me with menaces that more than once fairly brought my heart to my mouth. One fellow, muttering that I was playing the innocent just a little too much, thrust at me _ ferociously s\vvord, saying that if I did net wish to be cut in two I had better make a clean breast of it. Fortunatelv he was not close enough to do damage, and on my answering him, with a fervency that must have carried conviction to the heart of a stone, that I «new no more than he did, he passed on with a@ curse on my stupidity and blindness. Feeling their way foot by foot and taking nothing for granted, they went over the whole interior of the ship— hold, forecastle, cabin, officers’ quar- ters, and all—questioning, contradict- ing, threatening, and every minute getting more and more frightful with looks of disappointment and rage. My poor belongings they scattered like chaff, appropriating what they ecrsidered worth carrying away and effectually disposing of the remainder by cutting and tearing it into shreds and then throwing the rags into the sea. beside mv clothes they tock all weapons (save a pistol T had hid- and all tre a! m they my den) unitic could: find, tut Ly gcced chance I wa able to save my mother’s Bible and Duncan's pipes and Isabel’s two bunches of white heather, treasures which, as you may supp were al- most life to me. To this were rdded sccme powders and pills left by; Mr. Watson The rifling dene, 1 w: peremptorily ordered on deck, and I ascended alone. This arrat rent puzzied me, but I was soon enl tened. In a few min- utes a thin « n of smoke curled up through n't t«r-hatch ; then another rcse farther forward then another and another, till the several volum spread and blended into a thi *k aod. I was s 4 see the brig’s fate sealed in this wav. We had been friends lonz, and she had saved me Bsr e G erga 7 me ee 2 Aery ES oy ih & ad Ae he Hs 7 ay er “aba” GAs + and you cureits consequences. These 2 some of the consequences of cor Biliousness, loss of appetite, pim 1} il 8, S¢ stomach, d eT yression, coated ton gue, nigh. mare, paly it: ation, cold feet, debility, di ziness, weak bac *kach e, v iT itir . seme piles, pallor, stitch, irritability, vousness, headache, rape: >) ben heart- burn, foul breath, sleeplessness, drowsi- ness, hot skin, cramps, Ayer’s Pills Dr. J.C. Ayer’s Pills are a specific for all diseases of the liver, stomach, and bowels. a ness, ; “fee threbbi Dg uecu Are 2 Sure Cura for Constization “I suffered from constipation wl The Rew double tenement .bonse on! pribo> Poa, containing 10 large rocms teh 2 a3 i; ao - , u sumed such an obstinate form that If it would cause a stoppage of tl he boweis é After vainly trying yatious remedies, | be- gan to take Ayer's Pills. Two boxes effected a complete cure.” eare D. BURKE, Saco, Me. “Por eight years I was afflicted with constipation, which became eo bad that the doctors could do no more for me. Then i began to fake Ayer’s Pills, and soor the bowels re cavered their patoral ection. former is the son of a rich city Jawrer and | |; vessel we hove up anchor, 1 received them with a profound sa- | if wel- | recesses in the ship that I had not dis- | Perhaps thou knowest , very | Their bad humour showed itself also | . with his’ wen there wun co eould 1 do to sav2, her ? When the fire had got a sufficient hold to insure its _ speety victory, the incendiaries rear peared, and one of them, pointing \ th Lis ee to the beat alongside, growled th: I might get In an instant I was area and crouching meekly in the bows, where I was likeliest to be out of the way. The others followed quickly, and we rowed away, leaving the Bird of Para- dise in a sheet of fiame. Almost in the same moment my company of rats sprang into the water and struck out gallantly for the shore. In spite of fear I could not help giving them a hearty “ well done,” for farewell. CHAPTER XIII. IN THE HANDS OF THE PIRATES. Immediately on boarding the Arab set sails, and flew away to sea, with a smart breeze on our port quarter. The ship was a queer one, but it was soon proved that, however odd in appearance, she was an uncommonly swift and grace- ful sailor. She carried three masts, lateen sails, and a jib. The fore and mainmasts were without tops or top- and osstrees, gallants, of course without caps or ¢1 The long, slender hull was jet black, and, what was strang- est ef all, the upper deck was sharply convex, with level gratings running round the sides. The convexity, as I afterward discevered, was meant to make a ready way for water to the scuppers, or in times of stress for biood, while the gratings, by obviating the slant, made the footing firm, a matter of importance im storm or ac- tion. She carried no colours, nor did any inscription, such as ships usuallv bear, give a hint of her port or na tionality. Finally, though light, she was well armed. (The vessel was the dreaced Xebec, the terror of the hich seas when Alg still of Arabia.) Every stitch of her ocherous canvas was crowded on, and beautifully she swept 2clong, keeling and dipping un- der the bellying sails, the bright green water swishing from her gleaming sides and the snowdrift flying from her fore foot in a way that would have made pleasure-seekers dance for joy. Even I felt the gladness of the rush- rerine corsairs flourished, evil repute on the coasts and of ing, arrowy motion, though, on the whole, the speed was more ominous than inspiring, seeing what a doubtful dance might end the trip. The strain of dark uncertainty was somewhat re.ieved by the diversion of &tudying the crew, who were a living epitome of the fashions, past and cur- rent, of pretty nearly all the nations of the earth. Probably no company cof equal size ever displayed alike variety of costumes. A¢suredly none could beé on raore dist: mnt terms with tailor and lalindress, It was poe nee to say whic ave the creater distinction—the diversity, the dirt, or the tatters There wet Arab shirts reaching to the ankle, Indian turbans, Syrian com- bazes, European jerkins, top boots, jer- ¢eys, hats, and frock coats, Pérsian wns, breeches of all known cuts and countri 1 ry degree of foulness, in ¢ y stage of decay and ragged- I ill jumbled together as if some malicious artist had tried what effects ef incongruity and grotesqueness, what enirages on taste and decency, he was Capable of ncehieving. The cantain, as the chief personage on board, v naturally. the most con- < 1! x j f the rid ‘ylouvs. Hi elaboratel urrayed in steeple beaver. strongly suggestive of the de- funet missionary in spite of its jaunty ostrich plume and tarnished § silver bat a coarse woollen shirt, smeared lixe a hog mm antumn; a leathern gir- dle. from Which depended a swerd, 4 biace of pistols and a crcoked dagger full of sign tific ant i pti Bins; Turk- ish trousers that had originally been crimson, but were now of more hues than the maker of Joserh’s coat ever dreamed of: a pair of red boots that must once have shed their splendour on St assemblies and gatherings of rrandees, and sashes enough of various eclours to furnish a regiment of shei! The decorations were thickest in the rear. Indeed when the gallant cap- tain turned his back it might seem he was clad in porous plasters patched with canvas steeped in pitch, so heavy were % icrustations of tar, grease prririi i adhesive substances. No sense of absurdity, however, dis- turbed hic serene self-consequence. He pa t ieck with as proud a ste ar } and keen a look, as if he ¥ an admiral! of tl leet in faultless un fi nd the « idence of a luna? q \ blazi 1 his breast, sel cfr naing to iny familiarity with thos out him. never with me, hud- t j ] I nv { Y 7 We tore elong at an incredible ra end were soon beyond sight of land, though for a good while the smoke the burning brig showed our starting point. Whither we were dou! nd I could not suess, end durst not ask. I was free to conjecture, if I ple ased, that our course was for some nappy haven not far off, though appearances rather suggeste 1 we were scouring the sea for rey. ’ By and by we hauled our wind and began to fetch ina backward direction. But we had not gone a league W hen we ; a - : ther tack. and for the next hour or two we tacke 1 and changed so freyuently, running Ciose- hauled as if for our lives and dropping off as if in sheer perversity, that I completely lost my reckoning. It was wonderful how that strange- ly-built ship behaved, how sensitive she was to the gentlest pressure of the helm, how clean, quick and gra eful were all her movements, and how she rushed on her course when she got her head. In spite of rather rough sea- manship, only or did she make @4 mistake. Throuch a too hasty luff she happened to come dead into the wind S eye, and for the spac fa second sh¢ hung in ms wi loose sas. Sh lf with vexation, horse thrown Oo! seemed to shake herse “ reason, turne a he ¥ i like a highly its haunches spirit ed without quickly half round, caught shea again, and then, with het Taian spread to their utmost, weat S& niming along like a sea ‘bird. me = (To be Continned.) UR EF Clothing, Ready—to-wear Clothing, ever f so woh ee IAR, WAR, We wage a ceasless grade goods, OUR Gitd Gods, But they must Kor example, been sald on P- E (sland before. HATS & GA | Mdmsnsaaaieiscapugeetindiamensdtamientndar te taut TET LOT eR war against high prices and low ant sr ms tang I WAR. LOW PRICES be seen to be appreciated, our prices on Children’s, are lower than Clothing has Also startling valnes in Youths’ and Men's Pd, VW. D. McKRAY, Successor to McKay Woolen Co. i “LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT a SY MENS ME ML NE NE AS ae AS aN SAS USAT “a8 diuvvevvddevuvivudeeditwdvev dulce dt uecdeecunecueveUveuedweetrZ.. rad if T PP. E. ISLAN D- At all bookstores and at this office. se Mailed, post paid, on receipt of price, =[Ilustrated = —~ (9° 4 A COPY eww AppREss—= . . Examiner G ny We do not want to blow. por Bat just to let you know : The very latest news , About our Boots and Shoes, _ They are rigkt in style and price, And fit you, ~ Oh! 80 nice If you want to cut a dash, Come and buy from us for cach. \ VAVAAARAAAAAMARAMARAPRARAAAR ASAE AA es TES OS aS as ee Dont Get Sol in choosing your mount, but BUY) A --scnccnsiige Massey Harris Massey-Harris Co., : é 1898 i ae “Sey « LIMITED. ca Sih, % =e ® @ MARK WAIGHT & CD. Agents, Ch'town. he ad eanaeanals 2 4, MMM Meee SM Ae 4 AP UE TOA GH treats CHRONIC DISEASES Dv the ine bury me persistent +elf-he ip, nu rem. vving causes irom the blood. Crae- tinuous, inteligent treatment in person er by jetrer insures Minimum of suffer. tng an? Masimum of cure possibiein each Case, Avoid attemp‘'s unaided Graduate of 8. Y. University And the NEW YORK HOSPITAL. Tren y years practice in N. Y. City. yy met registered in U.S. and Canada, (ES8: CHARLOTTETOWN, P E I, Sa) hod of OFFICE, Victoria Row Aceomods tions reserved | } Ref ‘or patients, srenees On application, Oct 15 lyr i OR § — SALE That va halle 16 das 10 acre as situated on- po- ite the Quarrie, on Mx. Road. Apply to the office af L. L z fy. BEER. Neuralgia in the head is almost invarial ly cansed by lecayed and abscessed tcet} Don't suffe diessly when you can “t re! ieve din -w hours and cured in a few days areful treatment we will ; sive you. DR. J . LAYERS oa by mee ta eRe “LES A OE NGS I SE i Ei ag ‘ § a 4