el THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, AUGUST 18, 1898 It is undoubtedly a fact that our grand- led more la- to-day. In sy : of this a ‘fact, they bore their hus- bands healthy, and did not invalids as qa spite iters, ling some weak coms< que nce mrt . ‘ acre are ‘ , i | cobably tit ‘évéeral reasons for ms. that thes Ont lived more in the open alr and another. and probably the most influential of all. is that they were less prudish than the women of to-day. They were not ashamed of their own physical m got too nice to take care of their health in awomanly way. Women now-a-days suf- fer untold tortures in silence, hecause of weakness and disease of the distinctly feminine organism, rather than consult a physician, or even talk upon the subject to their own husbands. They imagine that troubles of this description can only he cured by uncergoing the disgusting exam. jnations and local treatment insisted upon by the average modern physician. Doctor Pierce’s Favorite Prescription cures all dis- eases peculiar to women in the privacy of their own homes. It does away with the necessity for examinations and local treat- ment. It acts directly on the important omans concerned, making them strong, healthy and vigorous [t fits for wifehood and the burd.ns of household duties. — It allays inflammation, heals ulceration and soothes pain. It tones and builds up the nerves. It banishes the discomforts of the time of expectarty and makes baby’s ad- vent easy and almost painless. Thousands have testified to its merits. Over to know something ike-up. They were tooe pages of medical advice free. gi One-cent stamps, fo cover only, for vane Send “ustoms and mailing r-covered cop of Dr. Pierce’s Com- mon Seuse Medical Adviser. Cloth bound so @amps. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. ¥. t ¥ CHAPTER Nil. * Your aragon?’’ whispered Mamie. ‘My housekeeper. Placate her if you do not care to starve to death before morning,’’ said Strong, laughing light heartedly. **Oh, I’ve got used to starvation and every other conceivable horror since I started out on this awful trip. I don’t mind it for myself, but Annabel is so delicate and that boy of hers is such a young fiend, you know.”’ He did not ‘‘know,’’ and he did not Gare to know. They had passed by Vi- we , a “And you?” mey and gained the fireplace, where he was clumsily retarding Miss Colyer’s efforts to get out of her wet waterproof and muddy little rubber shoes by awk- ward assistance. He was quite content to leave Seth to cope with the pretty, white faced owner of that peevish voics and with the famished child whom Ma- mie had called ‘‘a young fiend.’”’ ‘*How many mo’ of you is they?’ Vi- mey asked, with sour inhospitality. Miss Colyer turned a placid face up- op her. are made in great variety of styles Whether tall, slim, stout or short you can get a D & A that will fit you comfortably, and at the same time add a little to the natural grace of ‘the figure. D&A Corsets Wear as well as they fit. 1) Bold by most dry goods houses. OS The King of Whiskieg — a9 “Glenlsith ” Paco Hicruan Wuisk, oe azs ert Sr = oe : — a Blended of the same rare old High- land Malt Whiskies, during more than years, Sanderson s CLENLEITE to day asinthe vast, the purest and best whisky in the world. Sole oroprietors: ber‘scn Sanderson & Co., Ltd., Leith Seot!) ind. : Established 1846- --Capital paid up £350,000. FOR SALE BY ALL LEADING WINE __ & SPIRIT MERGHABTS **Only two more of us, auntie. Young | Mrs. Adrien Strong and her little boy. | I promise you we will all be as good as | gold if you don’t turn us out into the ? storm again.’ And into this area of speechless sur- prise Seth surged at that moment, his crimsoned face and hatless head envi- toned by the flying fists and gyrating heels of the young fiend, whose disgust for these nocturnal proceedings was boundless and outspoken. CHAPTER XIV. **And you?”’ The professor’s daughter suddenly passed from recitative, slightly tinged with apology, to a challenging tone, which made Strong Martin’s heart thump heavily against his ribs. Ovérawing Seth by an assumption of reckless indifference was one thing. Seth was slow and receptive. Satisfying Mamie Colyer in the matter of his own dubious inertia quite another. Mamie was both fiery and exacting. His cheeks flamed hotly, but his lips refused to frame the inadequate apolo- gies which he knew would bring that laughing scorn into her bright eyes which had once been the terror of the whole college crew. His sullen silence irritated her. She had been alone with him now for nearly twohours, Viney’s crabbed hospitality had culminated in preparing the one bedroom of Neck or Nothing for the white faced, peevish young mother and her tempestuous cff- spring. Annabel and the boy were sleeping, intwined so closely in each other’s arms that their pretty slumber flushed checks touched, blending their soft roundiess into one curving profile. ' Seth had long ago climbed the cliff ‘and gone home, promising to ‘‘fetch sissy over first thing in the morning.’”’ ' He had been an open mouthed sharer with Strong in Miss Colyer’s explana ition of her errand. The recital had , been, to his simple, direct nature a rev- elation of astounding iniquity. Strong received it with contemptuous creduli ty. To him nothing that went to prove the darling of Sans Souci a fraud was ‘difficult of acceptance. In her own graphic style Mamie ‘had told them of Adrien’s marriage during his college term to a daughter of the woman from whom he rented a room. ‘‘Good people. Just as good as gold. -Annabel is a fool about him. Most wo- men are fools about somebody, I sup- pose. The silliest part of the whole per- formance was their giving their con- sent to keep this marriage a secret un- til Adrien took the helm at home. I fancy he underrated ‘his grandfather’s constitution. Bah! But that poor little simpleton,’’ nodding vigorously toward the sleeping apartment, ‘‘cared for noth- ing in life so long as Adrien Strong carne to see her tolerably regularly and -was decent to her and the boy. Now, however, that this rumpus has separat- ed thein things have come to an awful pass, and I just forced Annabel to as- sert herself and claim her rights. ‘*You know she only has her mother’s ‘business for a support, and now the bonnet business don’t amount to much. Her brother. little Fred Welsh, is in ag ia atti " Bi OWING, MARY SPO RP ANTS DELLUM DAYS, > GBALAETTE H-WALWORGE COPYRIGHT, 1897 BY THE AUTHOR. ; i ; » there is anybody on this green football a thee g ‘+ ° 4 the army: Only 16 years old. Think of it! Father is in it, too, fighting in Vir- ginia.’’ This with a proud uplifting of her head. ‘‘Dear me, I hope he isn’t farigg any worse than we are at home— no dour, no coffee, no sugar, lots of patriotism, sweetened with glorious an- ticipation. Dry diet, though. And, as I tell Annabel, when she has got to a pass when she can’t even keep her boy properly shod, it is time she was put- ting him where he belonged, in the af- fections of his grandmother and his great-grandfather. I am going to leave them in that grand house we passed this afternoon. I really did not have the courage to stop with Annabel look- ing so frouzy and the boy acting like a young Comanche, ”’ She summarized the situation crisply With practical acceptance of the inevi- table. *“‘Of course we must expect a scene, but I prefer daylight for a pitched bat- tle always.’’ It was then that Seth suggested Liza. Liza was the saving clause in the Mar- tin family. No affair involving tact or sensibility could be carried to an effect- ive climax without her supervision. Both of the me regarded the resolute face of Annabel’s little champion anx- iously. She looked supremely self reli- ant and adequate, but would she prove adequate to ‘‘the madam?’’ ‘I think I’ll fetch our Liza. She’s got a headpiece worth havin, and if that can stand up to the madam when she mounts her high horse it is our girl Liza.”’ ‘In union there is strength. our Liza, by all means,’’ said, had gone away, promising faithfully to be back promptly in the morning with that potent damsel. It was with a sense of infinite grati- tude to destiny, which so rarely played him a kind trick, that Strong had mend- ed the fire, surreptitiously blown the dust off the wooden mantelpiece with one blast from his powerful lungs and essayed a general betterment of his shabby sitting reom while Mamie ‘‘took a peep’’ at her sleeping charges in the still shabbier bedroom. (lo be Continued.) Fetch Mamie had with tragic eagerness, and Seth | Dr. A. W. OSise LetcromtNe at ANN ARBOR, MICH. THE MEDICAL PROFESSION Recommends Dr. A. W. Chase’s Ointment. Dr. C. M. Harlan, writing in the Am- erican Journal of Health, of Feburary 19, says :-— aaa ‘Among the proprietary medicines deserving recognition is ‘ Dr. Chase’s Ointment,’ compounded by THE DR. A. W. CHASE MEDICINE CcoO., Buf- falo, N. Y., and Ed@manson, Bates Co., Toronto, Ont., as a remedy for sores, eruptions, and skin dis- eases of all kinds, for which it has been used with marked success, and has effected remarkable cures in many obstinate cases which seemed to baffle the skilful medical attendant. The results were most favourable, proving the value of ‘Dr. Chase’s Ointment’ as a curative agent in the diseases named. The manufacturers of the remedy are well-known as ex- perienced pharmacists, careful and reliable. in addition to which we have made full examination, and find the article to be all that is claimed for it. “It is not the practice of the medical profession to indorse indis- criminately the use of proprictary medicines, but while we condemn the bad and worthless, we are still more ready to indorse and recommend remedy deserving the recognition. * Neither the physician nor the ré- sponsible Journal of Health now re- fuses to acknowledge the claims of such proprietary remedies 4s Dr. Chase's Ointment,’ which prove their virtues by curing where other agen- cies have failed. “We know that ‘Dr. Chase’s Oint- ment’ meets all requisitions of the highest standard of worth, that it will be held in high esteem wherever it ts used, and consequently we indorse it to every reader.” Cc. M. HARLAN, M. D. TO LET —The hous? and premises know as the “Old Londo. House, ’situateon Vate the | 3t., nextt>» Government Warebouse No 1 Apply to Peake Bros & Co, jan3—tu SA . . = MACK AY IS Mid Summer Sale. No exaggeration, we both talk and give dargains; with this special list of goods a d pr.ces we have no occasion to exaggerate, as a call will convince the most fastidious. Lisle thread gloves Prints 12c, for 5¢ 25c, for 12¢ 902, now 25c Silk cord for fancy work worth 10v, now 2c Better glove ‘heen YS 46 Sunshades, former price dc per yl Black and colored sateens, former price 5, 15c per yard Colored and black vsilk elvet 3 price 5 7 , Fancy black braid for dress trimming le, 3c, toy a po fr oc per yard, worth from 10 to 25¢ 100 for 50c ae Ladies undervests, 10, 18, 22, good valuz 1.65 for 80c yard Hooks and eyes le card Silk dress laces worth Table doyles worth 10c, now 5c Colored Trimming silk from 10c to 25c yard worth double what we ask for them, ‘0c, now 2¢ Aberdeen skirt cleser Dress Goods—seze our prices on a few lin.s. on ac 33¢ for 15¢ yard a9e for 19¢ yard Black sewing silk le skein 55e for 29c yard Colored twist worth from 4c to 6 per yard, 55¢ for 30c yard now 3c. 63c for 32c yard 79¢ for 40c yard Hemstitched hdkfs 4c, worth 10¢ Lace trimmed 10c, worth 20c | 75¢ yard MASSHY - HARRIS CO, LIMITED. Agents Ch’town Agents S’Side MARK WRIGHT & CO,, ROGERS & ROGERS, INTRENATIONAL EXHIBITION ST. JOHN, N. B. SEPTEMBER 13TH TO 23RD $13.000 IN :PRIZES. All departments of Prize Lists revised and increased. Large Special Prizes in Live Stock and Dairy Products. Live stock enters Wednesday 14th and leaves Wednesday 2] st. Grand display of the Forest Life oj New Brunswick. Collection of Wild Animals, Birds, Insects, plants and fungi shownin their nat ura Haunts, “ 1898 The Paradise of the Sportsman and Delight of the Naturalist Two Museums will contribute Their whole Collections A Great Nature Lesson for all. Prizes offered for Nataral History Collections, A Large and varied Dispiay of Fish Products and Fishery Appliances. Machinery of all kinds in Motion—with many Manufacturing Novelties. Prizes offered for best Manufacturer’s Display. , : HoLIpAY SEEKERS Will finda varying round ofattractionsin Amusement Hall andin the Wonderful performances, upon the Grounds, in front of the New Grand Stand, Pyrotechnic Marvels. Band Music : Excursion rates from éyerywhere. MARK THE 13TH OF SEPTEMBER ON YOUR CALENDAR For Prize List aad fuil information, Addregs, W. C. Pitfield, President Chas. A. Everett, Mz: nager and sec ae ee ———~ -_—_——— ——_—_—_$_ American Barb Wire Soe FFNNELL & CHAENDER PICKFORD & BLACK. LINE HALIFAX & CHARLOTTECOWN. SEASON OF 1898. 8.S.CITY OF GHENT wil! sail from Ubarlottetown every Friday at 10 a. m., during the the season of 1898, for Hal fax, salling at Summerside, Port Hastings. Port Hawkesbury, Arichat, Canso, Ienac Harbor, Salmon River, Sheet returning will lea,e Halitaxevery Tues day at 6 p. m., makiog same calle, The steamer has exceilent pussenger accom- modation. Saloon smidsbips Specia freighte will be given this season. For further information apply to W. W. CLARKE, Agent Ch’town, Mav 14, 1898. MARK FISHER, SONS & Go. Victoria Square, MONTREAL Importers of Fine Woollens and Tailors Trimmings Special lines in English Worsteas and Serges. Sample Room, 72) Prince Wm. St. St.Johm, N. B. jH H HARVEY Ag®nt. H arbor: ane est UNG NI ss ama a ee. RS SR ore Speman eo ~. 2 aa ela ee Be a SE SaaS NN NY Lae me * Rss SESS Bae SS LMT NE oe Pak iO I EOS ; Cm pe Sn ae ate ene em I BE GOS Sa BE. es OE SO I FE LENE mee? r Ue eta ee ee ae Ae Re ee a a FSR 6 = a a a eS ana a isc ~ oe ‘bi