% i, ae “ oe ye goon a ° “a ~e “wr a o s j ~~ 7 Saving a Husband's f) Life. bat ~~ Only the other } day the newspapers oom hua told the story of My a plucky woman 5 od a, who saved her hus- Ez <3 ™ band from drown- | f= LAI. ing on the rock Pam | 47 i \ bound Atlantic A =4} , coast. There are / wa 3’ other dangers be- Cm “wa oeasie” side that of drown- = ae oo Teer = ing fro which a strewd woman inay, oy a lithe diplomacy, save her ht A Mer uve vroverbielly reckless about ines “G? They do nof think it worth wh? env hecd to a slight indiges . ‘ , — fio>. a trifling biliou. attack, a little nerv- ousness of siceplessness, or a small loss of app cite, The iirst they know they have Gsytm@epsta, liver complaint, malarta, rheu- (A40SiG:, 116: -auN prostrati n or deadly con- soniotion yep then thcy are prone to vegiect their trouble until it is too late, A Wise wile will assume guardianship of Aer husbaw!'s tealth. She will always kawe uf hand a Sottle of Dr. Pierce’s Golden Meical %)-coverv. When ther husband feels out of sorts she will see that he takes it. It makes the appetite keen, the diges- tion pericct. (ue liver active, the blood pure and Use sver¢cs steady. It builds firm flesh, ¢iromy musecics, and healthy nerve tissues. It curss dvsp~ psia, liver complaint, malaria, rheumatism and net prostration. It cures 98 per cent. of all cases of consump- iio. Au honest dealer will always give gon what you ask for. ‘er from malaria,"’ writes Mr. R D. Hill, of Zento. Leuisa Co., Va. “ Two doctors failed to cure me. TI took three bottles of Dr. Pierce's Goiden V_edica! Discovery in connection with hie ‘ Picase xt Pellets,’ and was cured. I cay cow do as goot « day's work as any man.” Constipation often causes sickness. Dr. yous [ ware sot Pierce’s Fieasant Pellets cure constipation. Gae iittl “Pe let’ isagentle laxative and wo 4 mil cotbartic. They never gripe. | They are tiny. engar coated, anti-bilious | rraniles, im little vals. Druggists sell ‘hem and have notaing else ‘‘just as good They tegulat’ the Stomach, Liver anG Ucwels. | te D & A Corsets rir YOU They ere fashioned on living models, not on statues or theories, and the result is they fit with Ease and Comfort, Tury Wear WELL Last WELL AND SELL AT PopuLAR PRICcEs, (4) GLENLENT RAND | l j i peu Henan Wisk, of tering n ae G Leni Wi WEE Sanderson’s Glenlieth Whisky—Old— Pure — Mellow | Sanderson’s Glenleith Whisky na n eqval Sand: rson’s Glenleith the perfection of Scotch. Robertson, Sarderson & Co. Leith, Scotland. FOR SALE BY ALL LEADING WINE & SPIRIT MERCHANTS | Ltd., | Adrien reported wounded, everythinz DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, AUGUST 25 1898, a 4 - A S aay oA F Marae SA Zz = CHAPTER XII. St Titer anu sover seu varrica— tarried through the signless days when hope, finding nc*hing to feed upon, sickened and died; tarried through the rhort gray days of a somber winter, when the ungathered crops of Sans Sou- ci, missing the harvester’s hand, whit- ened and fel} garthward, ag uncared for as the winter's mow; tarried through fpring’s resuyrection days, when the birds sang Resurgens and built their nests in the apple trees that shed their blossoms over the tangled flower beds in Gabriella’s neglected garden; tarried through the long, hot summer hours, when the women applied themselves to inventive work and Seth grew more stooping with each day's labor over the growing vegetables that must be served on the madam’s table. He had promised to take geod care of all these women, and, with the patient watchfulness of a faithful dog, he was doing it. Into the inner temple of their anxieties and their emotions he could not enter, even with | the sandled feet of reverence, but that neither by day nor by night physical harm should come to them he had sworn, and he, too, was keeping the faith, carrying about with him the smoldering fires of his thwarted ambi- tions, chiding himself for the mean en- vy that would leap up fiercely in his heart whenever he thought of ‘‘the rest of the fellows.’’ Liza was ‘‘solid comfort’’ to him in those days. She would came out to him where he was hoeing the cabbages or watering the asparagus bed te ‘‘talk over things,’’ their chief topic being Adrien’s affairs. How queerly it had all turned out! Annabel Summers, the daughter of a Shingleton milliner, reigning almost su- preme at Sans Souci! Liza accounted for it sagacioasly: | “After all, Seth, it was the general ' eondition of affairs that made my task so easy. Do you suppose if I had walk- ed up to old Mrs. Strong during peace times, with Adrien just off on one of his pleasure jaunts, and presented Annabel and that boy with the very same evi- dence, she would even have heard me to the end?’’ **No, sir,’’ said Seth, drawing the hone briskly across the edge of his hoe. ‘‘Not she. But it was all so entirely different. The governor just gone. Mrs. WricnHr. or Norvat, OntT., EXPEeri- ENCES INTENSE SUFFERING FROM ECZEMA IN HER FERT. Raw From {ler Toes to ter Knees Dr. Chase Makes a Wonderful Cure. Mrs. Knight, 17 Hanover place, To- ronto, makes the following estate- ment :— My mother, Mrs. Wright, who lives at Norval, near Doncaster, suffered a summer and winter with Eczema in her feet. She could not walk, and very seldom got any sleep. It became so bad that she was perfectly raw from the toes to the ; knees. After trying every available remedy without receiving any fit, and almost hopeless of relief, she wus advised to try Dr. Chase’s Oint- ment. She has altogether used 8 boxes since commencing, but with the hap- piest results, for she is now complete- ly cured. There is but one scar on one of her feet, a memento of her fearful suffering condition. Any person de- siring further testimony in this case is at Hiberty to communicate with Mrs. Wright at her address, Norval P. O. Mrs. Knight says after such a grand success, is it any wonder we re- commend Dr. Chase’s Ointment ? W. H. De Long, Civil Engineer, ex- | Warden, and County Councillor, New Germany, Lunenburg Co., N. §&., Oct. 28th, 1897, says :—“I had. itching piles for thirty years, and have tried various kinds of pile cures, but none gave me permanent relief until I uged Dr. Ohase’s Ointment. I have recommend- ed it to others with the same result.” - _—- bene- | : > ™~* ar OFHING. SPOR OF * NTS BELLUM DAYS JEANNETTE H-WALWORTA a. RY . COPYRIGHT, 1887 BY THE auTHOh. - || that was startling and increainie be- come everyday happenings, the boy /80 appealingly beautiful and Annabel RO conspicuously in a decline that the | milliner side of the house will soon be eliminated, the madam so desoiate and ' the old house so empty—really, the af- I fair adjusted itself, Seth, Any goose ; 90Nld have done as much,’ L Liss was thinking abont all of this herself, sitting there on the sunny side gailery of the big house, where the La- marque roses clambered. Dren’s modest assertion that his grandmother could not do without him had made her smile and—remember. She was thinking of that morning, 12 months since it had dawned, when she, trembling with nerv- ousness, had gone boldly into the mad- am’s presence and told her all there was to tell her about Adrien’s wife and child. Ah, well, it had turned out all tight for everybody but Amy Chambliss. “Poor Amy!’’ **Poor who?’’ She had not known she had sighed the words audibly. She had forgotten all about Dren. Forgotten that he was still standing there ‘‘watching his hat grow,’’ with his short legs planted far apart, his tumbled yellow curls, softly moved by the wind that filtered through the rose trellis, lying in shining mass- es on his shoulders, a beautiful speci- men of the young aristocrat, whose ple- beian strain was strangely and merci- fully hidden so far from sight. Adrien was not given to long silence himself, and distinctly disapproved of them in any one upon whom he was for the time being dependent for his enter- tainment. “*My grandmother says my father ; wsed to ride ‘Stonewall Jackson,’ ’’ nod- ding toward the tailless, eyeless and maneless hobbyhorse, ‘‘but he wasn’t called ‘Stonewall Jackson’ then. He was called ‘Tim.’ Just plain ‘Tim.’ My grandmother says when the men stop fighting and all of her people come back home she is going to make her carriage driver break a sure enough pony for me —not a wooden horse. Her carriage driv- er is Uncle Dolbear, only there ain’t any horses here now.”’ ‘““You are a fortunate boy, Dren. What would you do without your grandmother?’ said Liza, placing the hat crown softly on top of the shining yellow curls. ‘““What would my grandmother de without me?” ‘*You insufferable little egotist!’’ ‘What is an e—a—what?’’ Then, | oblivious of all etymological interests, ‘‘T see your mother coming up the walk. What makes her puff so? My grand- mother don’t puff and get redin the face when she walks fast.’’ Mrs. Martin was in truth waddling toward them at a pace fuller of vigor than grace. She sent her errand a few feet in advance of herself: ‘‘Mamie says, for pity’s sake, come up to the loomroom, Liza. She’s got that leese in a perfec’ muss, and I’m that green I can’t help straighten it out. Seth wants to put that warp in the joom when he comes in for his dinner. I'll swap work with you.”’ ‘‘T am stitching on Dren’s everlasting ! bat. This rough palmetto hurts your rheumatic fingers. Perhaps you can help Mrs. Strong better.’’ ‘“‘What is she driving at today? I must blow a little before I help any- body. ? She had seated herself and was loos- ening the strings to her calico sunbon- net. Adrien watched her gravely and answered her question promptly: “She is cutting up the parlor cur- tains, my grandmother is.’’ ‘‘Cutting up the parlor curtains?’ ‘*To make shirts for the soldiers. ”’ Liza supplied this supplemental in- formation, while rolling the loose plait into a coil. ‘‘Not them yellow satin damisk cur- tains, Liza.’’ ae es. 2? ‘uy, that stuff cost $15 a yard. It’s satin brocade. It would a-lasted a lifetime. And them big, bare windows!”’ ‘‘Your sympathies seem to be with the denuded windows, mother. Mine go out to the men who will Bave to wear the scratchy stiff things, with flowers on them as big as washbowls.’’ ‘‘She might a-begun on the up stairs moreen,’’ Mrs. Martin wailed. ‘‘They would a-b’en good enough.”’ ‘‘All cut up into trousers—fearfully and wonderfully cut garments they are too. Look after Dren, mother. Annabel is asleep and everybody else up to the eyes in getting that box ready for Un- cle Dolbear to take out to Sessumsport tomorrow.”’ ‘‘What’s going on at Sessumsport?’’ ‘*Tomorrow is the day the women are to meet at the courthouse, you know, to make up all those gorgeous shirts. Won’t they make our soldiers look like regiments of marching sunflowers?’ ‘‘Oh, Lawd, Liza Martin, you can make a joke out of everything. As for | me,,I don’t seq where the joke comes in, ”’ | | ‘ a ene, an | AY?S | Mid Summer Sale. _ No exaggeration, we both talk and give dargains; with th’s special list of goo's and prices we have no occasion to exaggerate, as a call will convince the most fastidious. . thread gloves Better glove Sunshades, former price Silk cord for fancy work worth 10c, now 2c Fancy black braid for dress trimming le, 3c, oc per yard, worth from Ladies undervests, Hooks and eyes Silk dress laces worth Table doyles worth Colored Trimming silk from 10c to 25¢ yard worth double what we ask for them, Black sewing silk Colored twist worth from 4e¢ to 6 per yard, now 2c. Hemstitched hdkfs Lace trimmed aed She piucked at the ruttied rim of her big suubounet, bringing it farther for- ward over her distressed face. A chok- ing sob and audible sniffing came from its deep calico recesses : “Mother! his comes of your going up to the old house. It just makes you miserable. As long as we have torn it all to pieces and consented to stay here with Mrs. Strong until the men come back you had best not go there at all.’’ “*T expect you are right, honey. You most generally are. But Eben and me were very happy up yonder in the quar- ters, in the old overseer’s house, where every blessed child I’ve got was born.’’ With gusty sobs and gaspings that shook her ample form tempestuously Mrs. Martin gave vent to her feelings. “*If L only could have nursed ’em, my dear, amd asked Eben to forgive every cross word I ever spoke or ugly look I give him, I could stand it better. But to go that way—oh, my God, that way.”’ ‘“‘The way that thousands are going every day in these blood soaked times.’’ ‘*Well, that ever I shonld live to see the day! Is the world turned clean in- side ont, Liza, or is it only me—poor old Beck Martin — that’s lost her senses?” (To be Continued.) Wel ever en = After 2the Spin A=Wheel, ee! the most invigorating, re- = freshing, and thirst-satisfy- ) ‘ya ing drink you can take isa glass of Abbey’s Effervescent Salt. hoa wy . he Pe er aes , z : 7 oa ace eet a 4 ‘It takes the place of the nauseating mineral waters or insipid arated beverages, besides being health-giving Carry a 25 cent bottle in your “‘kit’’ and freshen yorr- self after arun. Sold by » druggists everywhere at 60 cents a large bottle. Trial Size 25 cents, wand strengthening. < _—_ te are i 4 10, 18, 22, good valua 12c, for 5¢ 25c, for 12¢ Prints 5¢ per yard, Black and colored sateens, former price 725¢c now 12 to 15c per yard 90c, now 25c | Colored and black vsilk elvet } pricec 50¢ for 25c yard 75¢ for 25¢ yard 1.00 for 50c yard 165 for 80c yard 10 to 25¢ le card Aberdeen skirt closer 10c, now 2c ' Dress Goods—see our prices on a few Lin +s 10c, now 5c 33¢ for ldc yard 36c for 19¢ yard 55¢ for 29c¢ yard 5dc for 30c 63c for 32c yard for 40c yad 1.48¢ tor 75c yard le skein 4 ,worth 10c 10c, worth 20c | - BD. MACKA Oe RE ne ERE a aan CROWN AND BRIDCE WORK tl >a > ct o> a a fr When teeth are eo far decayed that they canout be filled they can b restored to usefulness, beauty aod durability by our crown system. Crown and Bridge Work is one of the most beautiful operations ia dentistry. Crowns are so useful and so comfortable tothe wearer, that heor she s9on forgets they are different than his or her own teeth. It is astonishing to see howmany roots and teeth that are considered worthless can thus be made good comfortable teeth. Crown and Bridge work with its improve ments, when rightly performed, is scientific dentistry and coversa larg number of cases. We claim to be thoroughly UP-TO-DATE in our different branches and our Crown and Bridge Work is made and fitted by ourselves, thereby ensuring perfect results and warranting satisfaction. Call and see specimens of work. Our artficial teeth are guaranteed to give satisfaction in every respect. You can call in inthe moraing and have crown and bridge work or artilicial teeth same day. All Work Painless Charges Moderate ct > p> po BERLIN DENTAL PARLORS, Over Store of Prowse Bros. Office Hours—8 a m. to 8 p. m. wee a INTRENATIONAL EXH ST. JOHN, N. B. SEPTEMBER 13TH TO 23RD $13.000 IN PRIZES. All departments of Prize Lists revised and increased, Large Special Prizes in Live Stock and Dairy Products. Live stock enters Wednesday 14th and leaves Weduesday 21] st, Grand display of the Forest Life oj New Brunswick. Collection of Wild Animals, Birds, Insects, plants and fungi shownin tir natura Haunts, ’ The Paradise of the Sportsman and Delight of the Naturalist Two Museums will contribute Their whole Collections A Great Nature Lesson for all. Prizes offered for Nataral History Collections A Large and varied Dispiay of Fish Products and Fishery Apottenste, Machinery of all kinds in Motion—with many Manufacturing Novelties. Prizes offered for best Manufacturer’s Dispiay. HOLIDAY SEEKERS will find a varying round ofattractionsin Amusement Hal! andin the Wonderful performances, upon the Grounds, in tront of the New Grand Stand, Pyrotechnic Marvels. Banc Music Excursion rates from everywhere. MARK THE 13TH OF SEPTEMBER ON YOUR CALUNDAR For Prize List aad fuil information, Address, Chas. A. Everett, President W. C. Pitfield, Mi pager and Sec