es a ~eceniinnettineats ~ait When Lady Marie Wortley Montague visited the household of the Sultan, she wrote home to England that the ladies of the f \ harem were smothered with laughter to dis- cover that her ladyship wore jan inner vest of stee) and whalebone, Y tight, impene- \ ..able and sti fling, in other words, a corset. a The ladies — {\of the harem = would no doubt have been astonishe’, though perhaps sot G to laughter, had they known that n § Western nations, through false elicacy wae in silence untold ind sometimes ith, through nee- their health in a womanly way. men,who suffer in this way shrink from » embarrassing examinations and local ¢ tpon by the majority of only knew it, there is ) necessity for these ordeals. An emi- ent and skillful pliysician long since dis- red a remedy that women may use in rivacy of their own homes. It is Dr. 's Favorite Prescription. It acts di- tly on the feminine organism, giving it ngth, vigor and elasticity. It stops all litating drains, It is the greatest of all tonics and invigorators for women. tsands of wottten who were weak. sick- “sero” insiste< ~ If th Lear reer opnwtrnr a ly, petulant and duspondent invalids are } » te "9 . to-day happy and healthy as the result of the use of this won lerful medicine. Good druggists do not ac vise substitutes for this inco: uparable reme ly. ‘> have used Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescrip- tion and ‘Golden Medical Discovery’ in my family.’’ writes Mrs. | A. C onner, of Alleghany Ci »., Va., “and have found -dicines ‘that I ever used,."’ Springs, Montgomery them to be the best n Send 31 one-cent mailing and custon Dispensary Medical tamps, to cover cost of $s only, to the World’s ispens; Association, Buffalo, N. Y., for a paper-covered copy of Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser; —Cloth binding 50 stamps. A whole Med- ical library in ome 1000-page volume, THE ONLY HOPE! For Victims of Bright's Disease is Dodd's Kidney Pills. Not a day passes on which the gewspapers do not record the death of Ore or more persons from Bright’s Disease. Already its victims num- ber hundreds of thousands. Day by day the awful total grows larger. No class is safe from this destroyer. War and intemperance, with all their miseries and fatalities, are not responsible for as many deaths as have been caused by Bright’s Dis- ease. Yet, there is a way of resisting t; of drawing its poisoned fangs, and making it as harmless as a summer breeze. That great medicine, Dodd’s Kidney Pills, has cured thousands of the worst cases. It never fails to cure, hopeless as the case may seem. Would you safely shield your loved ones from the fatal grip of this curse of mankind—Bright’s Disease? Then use /Dodd’s Kidney Pills, the only cure on earth for this disease. EPPSS COCOA GRATEFUL COMFORTING Distinguished everywhere for Delicacy o? Flavour, Supe- rior Quality, and Nutritive Properties. Specially grate- ful and comforting to the nervous and «lyspeptic. Sold only in }-lb. tins, labelled JAMES EPPS & Co., Ltd., Homeopathic Chemists, London, England. BREAKFAST SUPPER EPPSS GOGOA MORTGAGE SALE. To be sold by public auction, at the Court House, in Charlottetown, on Tuesday, the sixth of December noxt, A. D., 1895, at the hour of twelve o'clock noon, under and by vir- tue of a power Of sale contained in an inden- ture of mortgage, bearing date, the twenty- sixth day of April, A, D., 1882, and made be- tween John McQuaid and Mary McQuaid, his wife, of the one part, ond Georye Peake of the other part, which sai mortgage is now inves- ted in Alice Rebecca i'eake as Administratrix of the estate of Georgo Peake, deceased, All that tract piece and parcel of land situate lying and being in the Common Lot- | it in the byg of Charjottetown, Qacen’s County, Prince Ed- ward Island, boundec and described as fol- lows:—commencing #: a stake fixed at the cor- ner of the lane on th» west side of the road leading by @=pring Par*, thence running north fifty feet, thence running westwardly one hundred feer. thence -outhw-rdly fifty feet to tine aforesaid lane,«(hence eastwardly along said lane one hundred feet to the place of comimencement. If the above described “and is not sold at the place and time aforesaid, it will thereafter be sold by private sale, For further partict Peters Peters Charlottetown. Dated this 25th day of October, A. D, 1893, ALICE REBECCA PEAKE, Ac ministratrix of estate of? Geo Peake, deceasd Sinele Office TO LET ars apply at the office of ngs, rristers-at- Law, In Cameron Block apply to HORACE HASZARD. * SRR u ~ RRRR Ex * _ LR RRR § Woman CRINST Womah xweenwnwe we BY MRS. MARY E, HOLMES- “HE DAILY okemans ha RRS x a’ «> e ¥ % 2 4, OS > Author cf “A Woman's Love,” “The Wife’s Secret,” “A Heartless > xX Woman,” “Her Fatal Sin,” “A Wife's Peril,” 9 < - . « * Km “ A Desperate Woman.” SRR RIKI RRR ROM: (Continued, ) She must hive ridden some distance, ror even to her, who knew well for r ound, gone days, the counrry having walked this place was mile 3 strange. She looked round at first in surprise: then, a little alarmed, she began to feel weary from her agitation and exercise, when the sound of a cheery whistle was | bern te her ears, and the next minute a footstep rustled over the dying leaves, and a tall, towards her. well-built young man came He stopped amazed as he saw the lovely girl on horseback, her golden curls floating from their rough contact with the wind in picturesque confusion round her face and neck. “I beg your pardon, can I help you?’ he said suddenly, lifting his hat. Alice hesitated, then meeting frank, boyish face, she answered: “If you will, please. I have lost my his are just beyond those trees.” “The Abbey!” exclaimed Alice in sur Prise. “I thought I was quite in the opposite direction—they have taken the wrong path.” “You have become separated from your friends?” asked the young man, glancing again and again at her. “To: “Well, perhaps I can assist you. Do you want to find the Abbey?” “T think I had better go there, as they will in all probability make their way to it,” replied Alice. “Let me lead your horse, troduce myself? at your service.” “And I—<call me Alice,” young countess quietly. “Miss Alice!” what a pretty quaint nume—so old-fashioned. Do you like this part of the country? I am staying down here with friends. I have been shooting, as you see, though the sport is not good. Nothing seems to _iive round “the old Abbey—even the birds and insects desert it. It is dead, in- deed,” Alice listened to Frank Meredith’s easy chatter quietly. She agreed with him in his estimate of the spot. Never had she seen so weird and strange a place, and as they came in full sight of the ruins she could not repress a shud- der which the young man noticed. “Yes: is it not dismal? It looks like a great, grey ghost. I really don’t think I should care to venture into its gloomy vaults, even in broad daylight.” “Who owns it?” asked Alice suddenly, “My friends did tell me, but I have forgotten. I will ask them again when I go home. Now, Miss Alice, shall I leave you here alone, or will my pre sence annoy you if I remain?’ May I in- I am Frank Meredith said the “Oh, etay, please,” cried Alice, her nerves unstrung still by the terrible strain put on them at the time of Eus- tace Rivers’ murder; “perliaps they will not be alone.” “I wonder if I shall see you again,” said Frank Meredith, after a pause, while he stroked the horse’s neck; “I am staying here another fortnight.” “You may, perhaps,” answered Alice; she was drawn towards the )o9ung man by his frank ways. He seemed little more than a boy to her, though he numbered over twenty 72ars- SICK HEADACHE Positively cured by these Little Pills, They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsfa, indigestion and Too Hearty Eating, A per- fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsf- ness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. Small Pill. Small Dose. Small Price. Substitution the fraud uf the day.) See you get Carter's Ask for Carter's, Insist and demand Carter's Little Liver Piflg, way.” “You are in the Abbey Woods; we | are close to the old Abbey—the ruins | 2, @ “Tt seems a strange thing to say,” went on the young man quickly, “but anything for you, then paled. she asked Alice blushed a little “Why do this?’ hurriedly. “IT cannot say. you say know I would if you want me to do if I can, I will.” j I only } | give all I possess to be your friend. You don’t look happy. I should lke to help you.” Alice hesitated, then held out her hand. “You shall,” she said simply: not one friend in the whole world. shall be the first.” “T have You “Oh, thank you!” he cried. “If you want me, write to me there or there; be sure if I can I will always come,” handing her two cards. Alice took them quietly. Some curtons intituition seemed to come over her thag she should need his aid, but she said nothing, and the next instant the sound of voices came to their and the earl, Valerie and Lord Radine appeared } hefore them. “Whoet a fright you Lady Darrell!” he rode quickly ears, have given us, exclaimed the latter as up. Frank Meredith drew back. Lady Darrell! This young lovely girl who had just accepted his friendship! Gould it be true? he thought. “We thought you were lost, my Lady Alice,” observed Valerie with a drawl, glancing at her young rival with an ex- pression that said: “We wished it, too,”’ “How did you miss us?’ asked Roy coldly of his wife. “You have come much the longest way round.” “IT enjoyed my ride,” Alice replied, quictly and coldly, too. “IT am so sorry you did not see me beckon,” continued Lord Radine. “But now let us explore the ruins.” “By all means,” cried Valerie, Then in a lower tone: man?’ “This is Mr. Meredith, who was kind , enough to show me my way, Lord Dar- ' rell,” explained Alice quietly. The earl spoke a few cold words of ' thanks to the young man; then, with an | expressive glance at Alice, Frank Mere- | dith bowed and took his leave, still | plunged in amazement, yet strangely pleased to think he was her friend. “A very pretty boy!” exclaimed Val- “Who is this gentle erie. \ “Don’t you think so, my Lady Alice?” “tte Jooks good and honest,” Alice replied, speaking her thoughts, Lord Radine looked sulky, and Valerie observed once more, in alarm, that Roy was gazing at his wife with an expres- sion of strange interest. Could it be possible he was beginning to admire her, after all? She must work this hazards, “Now for the ruins! Roy give me your hand.” The earl was beside ber instanily, and she jumped to the ground. Lord Radine put up his hand to help Alice. “T don’t think I wiil come,” drawing back. “What, Lady Alice afraid!” observed tb Valerie with a sneer. “If you are nervous! remain out in the air. by all means,” said Roy almost ccntemptuously. When he was not looking at Alice, he forgot her charms, and only remember- ed her as the blot on his life. “] will stay with you,’ whispered Lord Radine. “No, I will go,” Atice said firmly, her away, at all she said face growing white beneath Valerie’s sneers, “I am only tired, not fright- ened.” She slipped from her horse, and gath- ering her habit in her hand, hurried after the others. Lord Radine tied the reins of the four horses to a stout branch and followed her. At first she crept Alice could see nothing, as through the damp, mouldy ruins of what had once been noble halls, but the forms of those two on ahead so Jost in one another’s presence, but as they penetrated into the gloomy vaults, her strange sense of fear re- turned, and she shuddered again and again. But for her pride she would have turned back and fled into the open air, but Valerie’s taunting voice came to her ears, They climbed up the broken fragment of stone steps to what had been a tower, Roy tenderly helping Valerie over the rough stones. Lord Radine went first up the steps, then bent to give his hand to Alice, when. elaneing round nervonsiy, she she thought she saw something glitter- ing from a dark corner beneath an am- cient archway. She checked the cry that rose to her lips, and glanced again; this time she saw plainly the something that glittered were two dark eyes set in a pale, grim foce, She drew her hand swiftly from Lord Radine’s bold. “I can go no farther; I am tired,” she said huriedly, and turning, she fied white and trembling back to the entr } ance. “Miv Ladr Alice is .frightened after CHARLOTTETOWN, NOVE MBER 1 188 UW trade this fall; we ought to ha Men’s S& ID breasted to Alaska—the only goods m man’s money. Suits for boys, our own right, all’ beg ' auieered v iheile ‘with a ' shért 1augh, Roy glanced at his wife’s pale face contemptuous!y, then turned tiful woman beside him. Lord Radine hurried up to Alice. “You are looking quite startled and ill, Lady Darrell,” he said in conster- nation. “What was it—did you gee a ghost?” “Yes, I saw a ghost,” Alice answer- ed faintly. She did not add that the ghost was a man of flesh and blood, with an ugly sear across his face: she was silent beneath Valerie’s scoffs and cruel sneers, firbearing to answer them as she might have done, for in that ghost in the dark corner she had recognized Valerie’s dis- graced and hated brother, Paul Ross. CHAPTER VII. The riding-party reached the Castle in time for a late lunch. Alice was lifted from her horse, and still white looking and nervous, gathered ther habit in her hand and turned towards the staircase and her own apartments. The glimpse she had canght of Paul Ross’ sinister face filled her with a vague sense of alarm. What was Valerie's brother doing in the Abbey ruins. Why was he lurking in dark corners? (To be Continued.) ~ Well Made Makes Well Hood’s Sarsaparilla is prepared by ex- perienced pharmacists of today, who have brought to the production of this great medicine the best results of medical re- search. Hood’s Sarsaparilla is a modern medicine, containing just those vegetable ingredients which were seemingly in- tended by Nature herself for the allevia- tion of human ills. It purifies and en- riches the blood, tones the stomach: and digestive ergans and creates an appetite; it absolutely cures all scrofula eruption boils, pimples, sores, salt rheum, sun every fy orm of skin disease; cures liver complaint, kidney troubles, strengthens and builds up the nervous system. It en- tirely overcomes that tired feeling, giving strength and energy in place of weakness and lIanguor. 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Qus This speaks well of our cloth. Men’s extra heavy suits, imported for $5.00, $6.00 and $8 09 per suit, extra value. 11.50, worth $15,00 of any cloth, the only thiug that will stand, If vour boy gets caught Youths’ Suits our A full range of gents’ furnishings. Prices are Inspection Invited. (Ras RD ne S The universal favorite and leading x Whiskey of the day is = z 2 vs abit ait i a olend of rare old Scotch, Known al] over the world for its purity. 8G" Ack your wine merchant for Glenleith. Sote Prorrizrors: Robertson, Sanderson & Co., Ltd., Leith Scotiand Established 1846, - Capital’ paid up, £350,000, For sale by all leadine Wine and Spirit Dealers, S.B. Townsenp & Co, MonTREAL, AGENTS FoR CANADA Tad at ad ke ee 3 ek To have a stock ct men’s Overcoats Ulsters, anil Reefers secondto none in the city, Our lines at $3.75 $450 $5 50 $6.00 are worth a great deal more as you will see if you inspect our stock, Well trimmed well finished well made equal in every respect to Custam made at lees than half the price. ee ed J. B. Macdonali & Best place to buy Clothing and Beots, Our Prices ARE ALWAYS RIGHT LOCK! We offer this lot viz:-— 1 bbl best Family Flour 5 Ibs of 28e Tea = lb of granulated Sugar 4 gals best Kero, Oil 9 bars Oak Leaf Soap FOR $6.70 Ez Figure up and see if the price is not right. We claim it is, Sanderson & Co. dk wky Flannelletes Cloakings Hosiery Underclothing Dress Goods Td HARRIS LONDON HOUSE BARGAIN CORNER. We Glaim