THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, AUGUST 26, 1898 Although American wo- men do not lit- erally saw wood yet a great deal of work which in its way is quite as fatigu- ing comes of necessity upon every woman who takes any part in the afi- fairs of practical life. just as true of well-to-do soci- ety women as it y is of their less fortunate ters. Social ob- ligations may become no less burdensome sis- fail upon wo- men who work for their living. life would not be so hard for women if they were heal'hy and strong, but the con- tinual, draggiig, nerve-sapping weakness which most women endure renders every duty a burden, and turns every effort into @ source of misery and pain. There is no need of these difficulfies. There is not one case in a hundred of fe- me lis | oa TE 1} _ a ihe Lee AT et x. intl AY i a e 5 oe -~F- : i —_ — ER STOR OP * RANTS BELLUM DAS GEANAETTE H-WALWORTS a OFHING, 2 ood ‘COPYRIGHT, 1897 BY THE AUTHOR. - CHAPTER XU. aimmed blue eyes. “1 think it is the world, mother, not you, that is turned topsy turvy. Think of Mrs. Strong, and it will help you to bear it. Nota word from the governor since he left, nor from her son since that rumor of his being wounded. Now I must go to Mamie, if I don’t want that whole piece of cloth ruired.”’ ‘It is the stripes.’ Mrs. Martin In the long aperturé a delicate face tee that stood winter and summer on the front gallery of Sans Souci. ‘‘Adrien, go ask Grandma Strong please not to have the chicken fried for dinner today. I am so tired of grease,’’ she said languidly. “*I want it fried,’’ said Adrien, com- posedly preparing to mount his hobby horse again. **You bad, bad boy. Go instantly.’’ She subsided in graceful listlessness MACK A Mid Summer Sale. No exaggeration, we both talk and give dargains; with th # special list of go prices we have no occasion to exaggerate, as a call wil convince the most fastidious. , ikread gloves Better glove Silk cord for fancy work worth 10c, now 2c Fancy black braid for dress tr @2* 5c per yard, worth from Ladies undervests, 16, 18, Hooks and eyes Silk dress laces worth 12c, for 5e 25¢e, for 12¢ imming le, 3c, 10 to 25c 22, good valu: le card ‘0c, now 2c Prints sand 5c per yrrd Black and colored sateens, former price 725 now 12 to 15c per yard than family 42a stooped to kiss the plain red ; was framed, and Adrien Strong’s wife . : , cares, or the | ance, smiling pitifully imto the tear | glidéd through it toward the es wie} Sunshades, former price 90c, now 25c | Colored and black ysilk elvet 4 pric 50c for 25c yard yard 75¢ for 25¢ 1.00 for 50c yard 1.65 for 80c yard Aberdeen skirt clcser Dress Goods—see our prices on a few lin s male cut ed by Be Pieces Havonae | #MOUBRE of ‘the madam’” ond dried her | upoa the settee, arranging her long | Table doyles worth 0c, now Se rescription. Its purifing, healing, strength. | 7°: Mamie says if y ou hadn't been | draperies in graceful folds. Mrs. Mar- ; ‘ A : ening effect is oa complete health | ~ ambitious to be stylish, with your | tin eyed her sourly. That silken wrap- Colored Trimming silk¢from 10c§to 25¢ yard 33¢ f 15 d M Weal wives ad prospective mothers are | perplo stripes in them lowells, it would | per had been one of ‘“‘the madam’s worth double what we ask for them the ca tee made strong an’ cheerful by the use of this | ens oe ae ares enon best. ’” A wrapper that she had worn at 7 36c for 19¢ yard marvelous “ Prescription.”’ | width. Here, take my sunbonnet. Saratoga and Cape May and elsewhere Black sewing silk le skein 55¢ for 29¢ Jt is fe only scientifie preparation of ‘ Well, you see, mimmie,”’ said Liza, | in the splendid days when people had P ~. eo avs bode Meeia: seals _ tying the ugly headgear over her shin- | lived at all. But what could Adrien’s Colored twist worth from 4c to 6 per yard for 30cyade } Nearly a hundred cases of the severest | 1™8 brown hair, ‘‘that piece of cloth is , mother do, when his wife had been now 2c¢ ' for 32c yard formé of female complaint with the methods | for our own dresses, and I should like | ‘‘dumped down’’ at her door, with just 2 63c for 40c yard Lectibed sone catue a ae i 7 be distinguishable—slightly so— | one skimp black alpaca dress to bless Hemstitched hdkfs 4. worth 10c¢ 45 75 $ d thousand-page illustrated book. ‘The Peo. from Uncle Dolbear’s jacket, and Mam- herself with? The girl did look pretty 2 ? 1.45¢ tor 79c yar 3 ple’s Common Sense Medical Adviser.” , ae acy ‘ petticoats. There, now, in that soft apple blossom gows.. Of Lace {rimmed 10c worth “Ue Dent ahecbuaety ons in papet covers for the , that s done. Dren!’’ she held up her | course Adrien kad been gulled by her . | cont statape. or toth pares a cate coils of plaited palmetto, “if you dare | and ker mother. Oh, Lord, what fools Address, World’: Dispensary Medical Asso. touch these while I am up at the loom | men were, to be sure, ciation, Buffalo, N. Y. | house I will not take a stitch in your | Annoyel yawned audibly. Life was . hat for a whole week.”’ inexpressibly stupid—no men about at Kn nnennnneernme ————- | Dren waited prudently until the | all, save Seth, who scarcely counted for heavy front gate had swung to behind | any more than old Dolbear. She wished | @asRSINihiEnEEEeEEEEETERer One NO TICH | her retreating torm, then flung defiance | Adrien could see her in that silk wrap- | of the warp. A body loses all contréi of , | after her. | per. When she did get ‘‘hold of the] her nerves such times as these. Do read ‘*But my mother will.’’ | reins at San Souci,’’ she would make | that thing aloud. Perhaps your voice Notice is hereby given thet the first ‘*Your mother, indeed!’ | things move at a livelier pace, war or | will make it a degree less mysterious. ”’ Annual Meetioz. ofthe Wheutley River| Mother Martin reproached herself in- |; nowar. So far she had been sustained **No, it won’t.”’ But she complied: H iJ] Con. pany, will be held in the hall of | stantaneously for the contempt that had | by a sense of victory in having carried | “‘If any two of you women will come | Bj axes the said Compenov, at Wheatley River, io | crept'into her voice, but if ‘‘twas exas- this aristocratic stronghold so easily, | out to the family burying ground this | (Jueen’s County, on Monday, the twenty~| perating to see that milliner’s daughter | but that sensation was growing stale, | evening at 6 o'clock, you may obtain ninth day of An gust, A. D,, 1898, at seve)! riding rough shod over everything and | and she was pining for another. scine informaticn about Adrien Strong. BRIDGE Work o clock Pp. m., [or the purpose of crganiza-} everybody, just because she had come | ‘‘If I knew where Mr. Strong was to; No man need come unless you desire to lion, electing « ffisiers, making by~laws ' on the scene at a time when the madam | be found,’’ she said, addressing Mrs. | frustrate the whole scheme.’ ’’ i: and the transac ion ot general business. was that dazed and miserable about the | Martin for want of better audience, ‘‘I ‘*That leaves us without any protec- sf} |)» ~af! [In tf} > ey [fe «ill Ii oo this 1sih day of August, A. D., war and the niggers and Adrien and | should take Dolbear and the rockaway tion. Soth can’t go with us. What are a : : ALBERT McKAY | everything that she wouldnt a-turned | snd go 0 aac ik de ott ae eee r9a Fomg a do about it, Liza? went] When teeth are eo far decayed that they cannot be filled they can b Chains of Commnitter | a dog of Adrien s out of the house—no, Bre Ga, you would,’’ said Mrs. Martin “I a to be erg ; restored to usefulness, beauty and durability by our crown system. Crown 189 dv wif not even if it had took possession of the | ¢T!s)-Y. pe * : At the graveyard! At 6 o clock! and Bridge Work is one of the most beautiful operations in dentistry. } 7 best bed in the spare room. Not that | ‘Yes. Adrien could stay here with | Why, Lica Martin, it is quite dark by Crowns are so useful and so comfortable tothe wearer, that heor she soon - the spare room looked any too good now, | his gremdmother and the rest of you. 1| 6.” forgets they are different than his or her own teeth. It is astonishiug to Wr we se® ts often tl instead of d only reason is A pair glasses or & the mnuecia cure the he We hi: of fitting gis to have you any way wi! G. F QWucen St. | S©CROCSCECOCESCSES CORE SES LOCO CEOS EECR —— ——— + The Mon real, Tues: s.8. I Char 26th, a be due al Aug. Newfouadland, Horses, produce unde further partic passage apply Cattle . . Ch’town, Aug. Imp and Letter and T ceive prompt ¢ Wearing Tearing Headache * SC@erere }aereesectsoaoansoe eveceosesoveaesacoes ooeoseoo c r " That rddening e result of eye etrain ugs, in such cases the sbre and effectual remedy of properly fitted eye- which relieve and therefore ectaci+s, straiu udache. ve made a especial study ses, and would be glad call on us if troub'ed in ) your eres, HUTCHESON Graiuate Opticia © OSPSELE SEO SHOES OOS CHEE 15 HES HE RSMEOOD ee ee ere w | BLACK IIAMOND LINE INAVISTA sailing f.om av Mornipy, Aug 23rd, will ottetown Vriday moraing d will sail for St. John’s via N. Sydnev, carrying and Sheep on deck, end deck at Jow rates. For tlars as to freight and PEAKE BROS & CO. Agente. 19th’98 MARK FISHER, SONS & CO, Victoria . Square, MONTREAL orters of Fine Woollens Taicrs Trimmings elegraph orders re- od careful attention. Sample Keom, 72! Srince Wm. St. St, John, N. B. with the carpet sent off for soldiers’ blankets and the moreen curtains cut up into soldiers’ pants. Oh, Lord, what times! There she goes now.’”’ This in reference to a querulous call that floated through the open windows of the big parlor: ** Adrien!}’’ *4LT, = .. T 2m, Mamma. 9 Dr. Coasx Visirine Tae Sick, Raised from a Bed of Sickness. Dr. Chase's Catarrh Cure and Kid- mey-Liver Pills Combined for Per(cct Health—An Interesting Cure After Long Suffering. Jan, 18th, 1897. pumcoe, Messrs. Edmanson, Bates, and Co., To- ronto, Unt. :— Gentlemen,—For over five months I was confined to my bed, not being able to move. The best medical skill was called in, all treating me for catarrh of the stomach, but to no avail. i could not eat the most simple food without being in dreadful misery, and found no relief until same was vomited up.' After spending <a large sum in medic:.l advice, I was advised to try a box of Dr. Chase’s Catarrh Cure. I said it was no use, for I considered mine a hopeless case from which I rould not recover. At length I pur- chased a box from J. Austin and Com- pany, Simcoe, and to my surprise found great relief. Not being able to eat } tried a box of Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills; the ‘pains ‘left me the third day. My appetite has been fully restored. I consider myself perfectly cured, and fee! as well as when a young woman, although 1 am 65 years old at present. I was almosi a shadow, now I am as flestiy as before my sickness. Have used only three boxes of Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills, and only two boxes of Dr. Chase’s Catarrh Cure. I can do my house work as usual. I am positive that my marvellous cure (which I think it is) is due purely to Dr. Chase’s remedies, which I have used. I can honestly recommend the same to any persons suffering from symptoms similar to mine. Wishing you every success. Yours, truly, MRS. ANN CHUBPCHILL, Sr. om « “nema should quite enjoy it.’’ ‘‘T don’t donbt it.”’ *““T think Dolbear could find his way with me to Virginia. A wife has a right to secl: her husband. ’’ ‘*Does the madam approve?’’ Annabel laughed lightly, and, bend- ing over, possessed herself of the brim- less hat that Liza had left in her chair. tlowly she ran her fingers along the in- side. ‘‘My precious boy! To think his darling, soit little head should be cov- ered by such a thing as this.’’ ‘*Oh, Lawd!’’ Mrs. Martin was afraid to trust her- self farther. She got up with a jerk. “*T reckon the madam needs somebody to help pack that big box. Old Dolbear and Mam’ Lucy cfn’t do everything. ’’ She disappeared inside the big front door, leaying Annabel without an au- dience, Arother nap was her only re- source. Sh& Composed herself as Com fortable as the rigid conditions of the settee admitted of, and, drawing her slippered feet carefully under the folds of her siiken train, closed her eyes Jan- guidly, submitting to the geutie influ- ences of the bees droning about the helio- tropes ana the honeysuckles in Gabri- eila’s garcen. And np at the loom honse the clumsy haud loom stood still. The coarse pur- ple and white threads of plantation woven thread were in a hopeless snarl. Mamie Colyer’s ‘‘day at the shutsle’’ had not advanced the heavy texture by a single yard. "Tt all came of this, Liza.’’ She walk- ed cautiously from window to door of the loom room (the Martins’ old dining room) before handing Liza a soiled and carefully folded piece of paper. ‘‘What do you think of that? I was sitting here weaving away for dear life, wishiag—I must state parenthetically—that your vaulting ambition had not inflicted those purple stripes on me, when a hand was stuck up over the window sill and that thing flung vight on to the loom.’’ ‘* What color was the hand?’’. ‘‘Black, I think, but I won’t swear to it. If it had been canary colored or sky blue, it wouldn’t have frightened me worse. I gave-an awful jump, but ortunately did not scream. You know ‘ generally do scream, especially if there are mice orsnakes in view.’’ Liza nodded assent. ‘‘But your mother was in the other room, rummaging in those trunks that always do make her cry, poor thing, 80, after I read ‘that thing, I just concluded to have you up here for a consultation over it. You see it is addressed to no- body. ”’ *eeq.?’ ‘“‘So I just asked Mrs. Martin please to go down to the big house and send you to me in a hurry. I told her to tell you the whole stuff was in a snarl. So it is. “When that black hand came into sight‘so mysteriously, I gave a jump that jerked the shuttle out of my band, | ‘*Almost dark, not quite. I imagine the writer of this would have set the hour later if he could. Evidently he waits to be screened. ’’ ‘Put’ — ‘*Very well, Mamie, I see how you feel about going. Ishould prefer having you with me, but I have plenty of time to row across the lake and get Amy Chambliss. ’’ Mumie turned upon her indignantly: ‘Of all the imperious, impatient, impelling wretches cn earth, you are the greatest. You know-very well, Liza Marrin, that if any one is going out te that graversra ‘cht to be murdered m eald inie« thst nersan.’’ (To be Continued.) iH8 ONDY HOPE! For Victims of | Bright's Disease is Dodd's Kidney Pills, ; as ee Not 2 day oe on which the newspapers do not record the death of die or moté persons from Bright’s Disease. Alteady its victims num- ber hundteds of thousands. Day by day the awful total grows larger. ———— — — No class is safe from this destroyer. Vat 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 it; 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 ‘he 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. Pure Gold Jelly A most delicious ‘table dessert made instantly.—To make the jelly you've but to dissolve a package of Jelly in one pint of boiling water, put in a cool place to harden. 10¢ per package. For sale at the “Victoria Row Grocers.” see how :nany roots and teeth that are considered worthless can thus be made good confortable teeth. Crown acd Bridge work with its improve ments, when rightly performed,;is scientific dentistry and coversa larg number of cases. Key ome, We claim to be thoroughly UP-TO-DATE in our different branches and our Crown and Bridge Work is made and fitred by ourselvee, thereby ensuring perfect results and warranting satisfaction. Call and eee specimens of work. Ourartficial teeth are guaranteed (0 give satisfaction in every respect. ogee” You can callin inthe ncrnirg and have crown at 7 'hr'dge.work or artilicial teeth exe day, “——" All Work Painless Charges Matlérate 5 tl J em set pm > BERLIN DENTAL PARLORS, 3 Over Store of Prowse Bros. Office Hours—-8 a m. to 8 p, m, etme, ode el en ee INTRENATIONAL EXHIBITION ST. JOHN, N. B. . SEPTEMBER 13TH TO 23RD $13.000 IN :PRIZES. 1898 All departments of Prize Lists revised and increased. Large Special Prizes in Live Stock and Dairy Products. Live stock enters Wednesday 14: and leaves Wedue+day 2! st, Grand display of the Forest Life oc! New Brunswick. Collection of Wild Animals, Birds, Insects, plants and fungi shownin ti2ir natera Haunts, : Tie Paradise of the Sportsman and Delight of the Naturaliet Two Museums will contribute Their whole Collections A Great Nature Lesson for all. Prizes offered for Natora! History Collections. A Large and varied Vispiay of Fish Products and Fishery Appliances, Machinery of ali kinds ian Motion—with many Manufacturing Novelties, Prizes offered for best Manufacturer’s Dispiay. HoLIpAY SEEKEksS will finda varying round ofattractionsin Amusement Hall andin the Wonderful perfo: mance.-, upen the Grounds, in trout of the New Gra: i Stand. Pyrotechnic Marvels. Rand Music Excursion rates {rem everywhere. MARK THE 13TH OF SEPTEMBER UN YOUR CALENDAR For Prize List aad fuil info. mation, Address, W. C. Pitfield, Chas. A. Everett, £ 1e€siacut am. Bager aud Sec SANDERSON & CO | \ H. H. HARVEY Agent. i and there it is. sbnt vv in the middle