i statins teint ae emer = THE THE DailY E Peaceable men don’t like to carry weapons, but tliere are times when a weapon saves a man's life. Sensible people don't like to ° al ways taking medicine; it is like flourishing fire arms on every needless occasion,— but the right ee atthe right time is often a g line life-saver. When your constitu wver-taxed by worry or « ened by an attack of in ligesti ness; of whenever your catural not quite up to the mark and fail tion ts xtra work, or weak mn or bilious energies are to respond to the demands upon them, Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery will meet the emergency promptly, and save you from dangerous or perhaps fatal illness It wards off disease by acting directly upon the vital orgams where disease origi- mates, It restores the liver’s capacity to filter poisonous impurities out of the blood, tive organs to ex- nourishing vitaliz- out disease-germs, i build up healthy and empowers the dige tract from the food thos ing elements whic h driv repair wasted tissue S an flesh and muscular force It is the most thoroughly scientific and effectual alterative remedy ever discovered in the whole history of medicine, and one of Dr. Pierce’s most valuable contributions to Materra Medica during his thirty years service as chief Consulting physician to the Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute of Buffalo, N. ¥ Mrs. A. I. Gibbs, of Russellville, Logan Co.. Ky., writes: “I @am heartily recommend your Golden Medical D: scovéry ' to amy one who is troubled with indigestion and torpid liver. ] was se bad I could ndt lie on my left side and could scarcely eat anything. Ih d a dull aching and pain in my stomach all the time. Now it is all geome after taking one bottle of your Medical Discovery.’ "’ Constipation is the commonest beginning snd first cause of many serious diseases and it should always be treated with Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets used in connection with the “ Disc overy. These are the most perfect matural laxatives and permanently cure. Golden TARTAN ot I = MONTE REAL. 1 Can ire CHAPTER XII, CHAPTER XXII The storm had spent itself. Not that fierce storm of shot and shell that had swept over the land, scorching the people with its lurid lightnings, laying low the hopes of a nation, leaving in its course wreckage and desolation; only a summer thun- derstorm that bent the yellow marguer- ites and the purple phloxes earthward, in the small garden that begirt the ‘*professor’s cottage’’ and left the gold- en honeysuckles all bedraggled by the piashing raindrops that fell too fast for the thirsty ground to drink them up. The professor and his daughter had taken refuge in this sma)l mansion on the outskirts of Sessumsport, for the “Oh, yes—oh, yes, indeed, father.” sole reason that it was theirs, their very own and only earthly possession. Smali, paintless, dilapidated, but inexpressi- bly precious as a port in storm. It was Mamie’s by right of inheritance from an almost forgetten grandmother. When the professor bad reached home, in company with Governor Strong, he hademphatically pronounced himself altogether superfluous in a changed world, but immediately began casting about him for fresh anchorage. It was Mamie who first remembered her despised inheritance: ‘*There is that hut in town, papa. We can take shelter in it. If you were still a college professor on a fair salary, dear one, and I was anything but a use- less girl, we might scorn such mean quarters. But we can’t stay on here NEWFOUNOLAND The Most Picturesque Summer Resort in America SPORTSMANS : PARADISE. Every river and lake alcng the line of the Newfoundland Rai! wav abounds with trout and salmon. The Shortest fca Voyage. Quickest and safest route to any part is via the KOYAL MAIL STEBMER “BRUCE ” (Classed A 1 at Lloyds) ZL. Leaves North Sydney every |- + ™ Luesday, Thursday aod Satur- day evening on arrival of the I.C.R.express. Returning leaves Port Aux Basque every Monday, Wednesaay and Frid Ay evenings on arrival of St. John express FARE Charlettetown to St. John’s, Nfld. Firet Clase 20.05 Second Clase 10.30 Return 33.81 Through tick ete on sale at all stations the L.U.R 2 P.R. at 11 Str. Nav. Co. - Ib rip wi only 6 Hours. k 4ii Information : piy to K -@. REID, St J obn’s Nfid,; or CO., Agents, AR HIBALD & North Sydney, CB. —_—_) el Mark Fisher, SONS & Go, Victoria Square, MONTREAL Importers of Fine Woollens and Tailors Trimmings . , £ 99 Sole proprietors of the “ Klondike Serge. Sample Room, 72) Prince Wim. St, St. John, *. B. H. H. HARVEY Agent. EXPEBI- ONT., SUFFERING FROM EczZEMA t® HER FEET. Mrs. WRIGHT, OF NORVAL. ENCES INTENSE Raw From fler Toes to Her Knees Dr. Chase ies a ies a Wale Cure. Knight, 17 Hanover place, To- makes the following state- Mrs. ron, ment :— My mother, Mrs. W lives at Norval, near suffered a summer 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 bene- fit, and almost hopeless of relief, she was 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 liberty 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 Councilor, New Germany, Lunenburg Co., N. 8., Oct. 28th, 1897, says :—‘‘I had itching piles for thirty years, and have tried various kinds of pile cures, but mone gave me t relief until I used Dr. right, who Doncaster, and winter perm Chase’s Ointment. I have recommend- ed it to others with the same result.” COPrnicut i 87 ay one ore - neem : XAMINER, cating the pvread ‘of charity’’—waving her hands comprehensively over the Strong mansion—‘‘and the sooner we get to work the better.’’ And they had got to work—the old man, with one of his trousers legs pinned up and empty, and the girl with only her endowment of indomitable spirit, ignorance and heroism. There were a few weeks of bewildered speculation as to what manner of work they should ‘‘get to;’’ a pathetic show- ing of their combined disabilities; a humbling of himself before the new or- der of things, a confession of confusion. “‘I think my Hebrew and Greek have no market value at present, my dear. Shingleton college will scarcely resume operations for some years, and when it does younger and less tired brains than mine will be in demand. I am afraid no one would intrust his mercantile interests with me. I am too ignorant, and my crutches would interfere with my activity. What would you sugges?, my dear?’’ And Mamie, langhing and crying in ene breath, had suggested the scroll saw as pleasant sedentary work, and ‘‘every- body wanted brackets and wall things these days.”’ And so, on this hot July forenoon, with the steam arising from the rain washed earth, with the great white winged butterflies flitting about the diamond crowned roses, with the mar- guerites and the phloxes righting them- selves bravely under the sun’s warm caressing, the professor bent patiently over his worktable, steering the jagged blade of his scroll. saw iaboriousl through a thin slab of black walm wood. His fine head, with its sparse fringe of waving white hair, was just visible above the window ledge, made gay with pots of brilliant fish geranium and the flame of many nasturtiums. 3y the rear window, where was the flowerless ledge and the plainer outlook over the chicken coops and the lye hop- per . snted against the kitchen chim- : Mamie turned the w heel of her unisy sewing machine swiftly. Piled on one side of her chair was a lot of un- made lowell eacks, on the other the fin- ished 6nes. The soft drone of bees was in the air; the scent of the honeysuckle mingled with the perfume of a thousand roses. A mocking bird perched boldly on the hand rail of the front portico and whistled a taunting refrain at the bent gray head behind the flaming nastur- tiums. The mocking bird clearly had the best of the professor and was so ex- ‘pressing himself. The professor straight- ened his back by a physical effort, and leaning his head against the silken pil- low Mamie had tied to the tall back of his chair folded his worn hands weari- ly across his breast. Work was an espe- cial burden when the warm, sweet carth was enticing him through all his senses, and he was not aware that the world was guivering with impatience for the clumsy products of his unskilled hands. He quite agreed with the mocking bird. Just beyond the garden fence was the principal street of Sessumsport. At its terminus the small wooden church stood, which, twice in every month, was opened and dusted for use by a bor- rowed clergyman, who came across the river in a skiff, rowing himself for economy’s sake from Adasland, to re- mind the Sessumsport people that they were all poor miserable sinners and that there was no health in them. ‘‘T should say that something unusu- al was happening in town tkis morn- ing,’’ said the professor, turning his eyes from the street toward Mamie with- out lifting his head. ‘*‘Why, papa?’’ ‘*Quite a concourse of people has pass- ed by the house, all going in direction of the church.”’ ‘‘Concourse! The large words that my Hebrew scholar will use for small things!’’ Mamie lifted the needle arm cf her machine and silenced its noisy whir. There were dark rings around the dear old eyes she was looking into and a pathetic air of languor about the folded hands. ‘You are tired, father.’’ ‘‘A trifle. I am afraid I am rather an ‘unserviceable member of society, daugh- ter. I seem never to have recovered from that attack of camp fever.’’ Mamie was sitting on the arm of his chair in another second, caressingly smoothing the thin white hair away from his forehead. ‘*There! It shan’t work another min- ate today. It is the heat, dear one, and this stuffy little room together. But how about that great concourse of pass- ing people?”’ ‘*Perhaps concourse was too extrava- gant a word, but a good many people have e by. The Strongs—that is, Mrs. Goce and Mrs. Martin, in that smart new harouche Jud his mother. And the C Martin gave blisses, all of them, and’’— “I know—I mow. It is at the ‘church. fiza’s boy is to be christened thera today.. And afterwgrd_ they are to — CHARLOTTETOWN, SEPTEMBER 9 1898 MACK AY? | aad Summer Sale. No exaggeration, ikread gloves 12c, for 5¢ 25c, for 12¢ 90c, now 25c Silk cord for fancy work worth 10v, now 2c Fancy black braid for dress trimming le, 3c, Better glove Sunshades, former price dc per yard, worth from 10 to 25¢ Ladies undervests,s 10, 18, 22, good valu Hooks and eyes le card Silk dress laces worth Table doyles worth 10c, now 5c Colored Trimming silk from 10c7to 25c yard worth double what we ask for them, ‘0c, now 2¢ Black sewing silk le skein Colored twist worth from 4c to 6 per yard, now 2c. H2mstiteched hdkfs Lace trimmed 4, worth 10c 10c, worth 20¢ have @ grand dinner at Sans Souci, a family reunion.’’ **And Mrs. Randal Chambliss never thought of inviting you?’ *““Oh, yes—oh, yes, indeed, father. - D. ee : 0 Hot Air Furnaces Prints now 12 to 15c per yard Colored and black vsilk elvet 4 50c for 25c yard 75¢ for 25c yard 1.00 for 50c yard 1.65 for 80c yard Aberdeen skirt clcser Dress Goods—see our prices on a few Lin +s 33e for 15¢ yard 36c for 19¢ yard 55¢ for 29¢ for 30cyade for 32c yard 63c for 40c yard 1.45¢ tor 75¢ yard 5c per y Black and colored sateens, former pric. ;° 4 pric With Hot Water | Lizanever forgets me. But I could not | #0, you know.”’ **Why not?’ ‘‘They are all to be there—all of the | Martins, father. I could not be there.”’ She got up and went back to her ma- chine and set it in motion once more with a violent jerk. The professor turn- ed his head away from her. It was pleasanter looking out.on the passersby than in on the lye hopper and the chick- en coops. ‘Then the governor will not be like- ly to remember that this is chess day.’’ Presently he said plaintively, ‘‘I am afraid my affliction makes me very de- pendent upon others. ”’ **Can’t you teach me to play chess, father, so that you shan’t be dependent upon outsiders for your entertainment? I think I am not too stupid to learn.”’ 5 Her voice was pitched in a querulous | @ tone, an unusual thing for her under the 1nost exasperating .circumstamces, | (To be Continued.) UUW a ee A refreshing s beverage. Water doesn’t seem to quench the thirst these hot summer days. What is more, itis hard to get good drinking water. A most ' refreshing and invigorating beverage for the warm days is a teaspoonful of | market. Pa sik il 3 Salt in a tumbler of water. aE braces you up, and fits you 8 to stand the oppressive $> heat—makes you feel like &€ ‘ep Work even on the hottest fs Gays. It is health-giving, too—regulates the system and tones the appetite. Sold by druggists every- where at 60 cents a large bottle. Trial size, 25 cts. - The Canada Lancet says: “ This Preparation deserves every good word which is being eafd of it.” i I TO LET —1 hat comfortable brick dwelling house, situate on Water Street, now ip posses- sion of Mrs McDonald. Possession given about 29th September, Apply to Peake Bros & Co, Aug. 2th, 186+, eod tf Walker s Curner Combination if desired. - -OUR. . Framous Florida for Coal with steel dome, low steel radietor end three steel fines, (insures quick heat without danger of cracking), is coms- } tructed on the principle of a baseburner stove, and is as easily regulated as one. The distance the heat has to travel compels “By its utmost radiation, and.consequently imsures | great heating power with economy of fuel. Lowpor, _ a Toronto, | lHigh Grade. English Manures are ube BEST, CHEAPEST, and Uuly Reliable Fertilizer on th. Have been largely used here for 10 years, Most gratifying results—nd without a single failure. Pamphlets ete., on application. V— Se ee reo eo eee Exceptionally heavy fire pot fitted with j either flat or duplex grate. DAMPERS CAN BE REGULATED PROM ROOMS ABOVE. We hold highest testimonials from users. ‘Twe McCLARY M6, Co. MonTREAL, Wirwirnc, Large ash pit. Vawcovver. If your local dealer cannot supply, write our nearest house. POS OF OOF OOS O06 OH OOSES ODDO ESOL COE OO SOS OSEPED OOD Best Quality CALL AND EXAMINE And Get Prices. SIMON WW CRABEBE STOVES & LARDWAR} we both talk and give sargains; with th’s special list of goods and prices we have no occasion to exaggerate, as a call will convince the most fastidious. SOSOSOSSSSOHSSSHS HSS OOSSOSSOS SOS SP SSO SOO OHNE FODOO 3.4 with A. 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