————————E Eee the old Cavs uf the Christian niartyrs it was not unusual for the sav- age Pagans to cast inno- of lions, to suffer horri- ble agony and fea je to their relief. In this Christian age ()) eivnization tens of thousands of = fer the slow tor- ments of ap- They do this bec ause of a false delicacy fre- que ntiv inculcated by their mothers. th it cures all weakness and disease of the inate femiinine organism. It acts di- concerned ™m maternity and makes them strong and healthy. It is Dr. Pierce’s Fa- cent women into a den fore death finally came and this land of * women daily suf- proaching death. There is a marvelous medicine for women re ctly on the delicate and important organs vorite Prescription. It allays inflammation, heals ulceration and soothes pain. It gives rest and tone to the tortured nerves. Under its magic influence the headaches and pains jn the back and sides, the dragzving and purning sensations, the nervousness, weak- sess. lassitude and c lcney that result from so-called female weakness are ban- ished. It fits for wif mo and motherhood. Taken during th <i of solicitude, it hanishes the usua! mforts and makes baby’s entry to the world easy and almost nainiess. Itinsures the new comer’s hea®th and an ample supply of nourishment. Thousands of women have testified to its l good drugcists sel? it. Sistersville, Twler v baby ts now nearly a n I had local weak- I took three bottles ription and it has my work.” better ‘to ig while ts marvelous merits. Al Mrs. Ursula Dunham, of Co... W. Va., writes M vear old After she ness. I could not of Dr Piet ime. I was bor stand e's Favorite Pres an now ao ati It is Dr. Pierce’s merci damage do the shir ht, structtre 1s re than wait until th whol idy to fail. Constipation is the one, all-e mbrac- ing disorder that is responsible for manv ether dis eases. fiers tor Pierce’s Plea asant .. *“leasant Pellets cure C ta Drug- gists sell them. They never alin. One little ‘‘Pellet'’ is a gentle laxative, and two a mild cathartic. They are tiny, sugar-coated granules Nothing else ‘just as :Pellets good \ permanent cure. ° is J Rarraavace. “See See | me “{MounrReat ConFte | ec@OeosCecececs Gray's yTUp of Red ; _— For Coughs, | Colds Bro n- Opruce chitis, Sore Pym KERRY, WATSON @ CO., @aoraicrons. MowTReEat. et Clhecececenensnenacene anaes | ' | DESIRABLEPROPERTY SIDMOUNT For Salo By £ uction I I ave received in+trnetions to eel] by Auction, atthe premises, on Wednesday, | the Ist day of June next, at 11 o’clock & m. Tie he autiful reside: Peters, “S dmount.” ice of the Hon. F. fis prope rry ee prises 2 Celien: » wiih large and wel] ng hou-e and out ba 0 of acres ex- con. modious ildir g*. le bit hhe house is fitted with modern im Provements. bey ng hot at d coid baths, Leated with sie Water, and iighted with Gectrie | ght : Phe groncde are beautifully laid ont and planted with ornementa: trees, Terms eas vyaud meder y L.. . sAKISTO, Auctionee: ) ateale. | 2 dk b. 4. McLEAN, Q.C BARRISTER, &c. brown's Block, CHARLOTTETOWN THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, MAY 30 1898, © tee to nerve cimging girth and and muscle, and faculty and power of hody and mind and will, bumped and bufteted that the wind was often knocked clean out of me and the world seerned whirling away into utter chaos, I was dragged along at the sneed of lizhtning. To hold on for many min- utes in that condition was im 1possible and to let go meant instant destruc- tien. Had I been able to cet mv toes Bleady on the earth for half a second. I could have sprung astride the flying animal, but at that fearful] velocity the — was beyond a tiger's ag rility. Yet if something could not he done ahd ‘dent quickly, I felt it would be vetter to breathe a preyer and fet the agony end. Smal] things cisive moments, hess is pommel indeed with vith every eCVeT y sense so are momentous in de- and sometimes weak- salvation. As the quivering sank lower meth trailed grasp relaxed I gradually and lower, till half my le on the ground, Two or three more little slips and my enemies could work their will. The darkness and dizziness of death were already upon me when my knee struck Some protuberance that with the mighty speed I bounded like a ball. _ It fave me my opportunity. Finding my- Self well in the air, I concentrated all my strength, drawing fiercely with the left hand. The lax muscles turned to steel in the moment of supreme need. I rose on that terrific pull. Then quicker than thought the girth was let go and the right hand shot across the eo saddle The hooked fingers caught something, and the next moment, wriz- sling, and nearly blind from excite- —— and exhaustion, the horse’s back. I lay half across Then, with such an eilfort as a man makes for his life, I Wriggled farther up, and before I Knew it Was in the saddle and veaching for the rein. As I got it a yell of rage Went up close behind, and another spear, less true in aim than the first, Whizzed past and buried itself in the sand —> (Copyright, 1893, by John Alexander Steuart.) Im a hug- a ship in a gale or cactie Highiand snowstorm. I ing like driving ged his neck, and ny mantle flew over my head. Well for me it did, for this was the dreaded simoon before which all Arabia falls down and covers its face as close as Cloth will roll. Ilay unable to br athe and in exquisite tor- ture, my horse scudding before the tempest. He stumbled often, and would have lain down but that I kept the spurs to him. Had he had is will, in less than half a minute we should both have been buried beneath a wreath of sand, to lie there until th winds came again to 1 arth our hleaching skeletons, The storm passed on like a solid yall, and as if By mag atmos phere cleared, though 1 could still see tre black line of the whirlwind far ahead. I looked eagerly about for company, but found myself complete- ly alone. No Bedouins in pursuit, n Bedo s in sight, nor indeed any liv- ing thing. The simoon had given me my lif but it left me desolate Jismour iting and looping the bridle ove my arm. I walked a little bit, shaking loads ef sand from the folds of my dress My right leg, howev was so § and stiff that 1 was soon compelled to sit down, though it was 2a long time before I had any heart for surgery. When at length I got sufficient command of my nerves to examine the wound, I found myself with an ugly cash in the right thigh frem the depths of which bloods still us . The clotted auter edees were fast hardening and stiffening, so that (To be Continned.) mie ICK HEADACHE BY ba Goan es Posilively cured by these Littic Pills. They also relieve Distress from: Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A per- fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea. Drowa: £.€Ss, Bad Tastein the Mouth, Coated Ton rie Pain in t ,» TORPID LIVER They R at cise Furely \ ls. Sal Pill. Gmail Bese. € wy FE ; ~ eel eg rico, oe Substitution tho fraud of the day. ‘See you get Carter's, For the next five minutes I flew in instant expectation of death. Crouch- ing, with the long spurs deep in my horse’s sides, and my heart afraid to beat, I pelted on. It was bound for bound of pursued and pursuers, a race as of hounds panting at the heels of | a stag that just managed to keep a| tongue’s-length in front. But woe be- tide the quarry in case of mishap or mistake Had anvthineg one wrong with me, had ray girth broken, or my horse stumbled or slipped or slackened pace for so much as the tenth part of a second, my blood had been poured out on = desert. " hither I was going. or whether the were many or f about, I could rot te 1. I saw nothi but a jumbl da. feverish vision of the !o craned head of the hor: » fivir mane, and a pai of reaching f fet, that never n- § ed to touch the g1 nd, but in my eat Was a noise tha old 1 death was riding hard at my back. The pume flak fiew up from mv horse's mouth, we my face, and I could feel the increasing heave of his flank Now and then, too, I had a glimpse . wen ame a: ener | like “a pit full of blood it was sheer crueity to goad him on. But W hat were ¢ nsiderations ¢ oe Itv 1 one with thi ! tehing within } three yards for his life? I was cruel | as cruel could be, plyin the long, | sharp spurs as fast and as hard as] heel could a: them, in spite of the! Sroanings and &§ kings of my icti | So great was th traiz of terror | that it may wel! be imagined no fresh | alarm could affect me. Yet whet vicious cry went up, as it appeared, at | my very ear, betoKen as I fancied, | the triumph of the | uins, I shut /j my eyes, with a creeping, shuddering | horror that mac m vu little scream. [ rode 1 dari for what } seemed an endless t1 _ a mentarily } expecting the thrust of cold steel in } the small of the back. As it did not | come, I ventured to open my eyes but | nothing could have induced me t look } behind. { It was now high noon, and the sun | en incandescent globe overhead. There may have been clouds in the sky, bu issuredly there was neither shadow nor breath of moving air on the earth. I, stewed in my soaked clothes, as if dis- | solving over a slow fire, and gasped |} and whee 1 like an asthmatic, shut up in an oven, for the quivering, sim- mering n¢ not only broiled the boay, j but was as a stinging 44 id in ; and nostrils, and as burning tumes in | the lungs. | All at once there came a sharp puff of wind, not sweet and refresh- ing, but charged with more pols ms than ever chemist dreamed of. Look ine upward, I saw a great glare in the sky. as it wer the reflection of some vast conflagration, and even as I | looked, the glare swiftly deepened, till | it appeared the heavens themselves were on fir Then the fiery redness was suddenly overcast, and a dull, cop- pery hue took its place, this yielding in turn, and very quickly, to a deep purple, and that again to an ominous black. All the while the wind came in spurts of even greater force and longer duration. I was wondering what all this might mean, when there burst upon my ear a great, prolonged roar, as of a mighty flood lashed to furv. and turning to the right-hand quarter, I saw a portentous black cloud rushing toward me with incon- ceivable velocity. The look showed me, too, that I was riding alone. The tedouins had abandoned the chase and aring off in another direc- were now te tion altogether. : I had not taken in the situation when I was enveloped in — os and sp as if a bottle of volatile salts ee eames to my nose. Atthe same time the wind nearly tore me from my seat, and though I could see nothing, I felt that my horse had turn- ed tail to the blast. and was drift- SN Sele TT NS senses seen = § Ask for Carter’s Insist and demand Carter's Little Liver Pills. AYGHED HE been rather price long period watch trade has fluctuating of late, first went up, after of low price the prices have dropped whether because of war variety cf preduction but the fact re- u can from us a reliable tim ekeeper cheaper than ever before, in fact that there is no need to buy shoddy _oods at all. lf the money, movement in : T the a now again, creater cannot say, or we that ve buy mains a good and also watch for the reccommend a gr od . nicke] instead want cheapest vou we ease of a poor one in a fine looking colored zase that wili only wear a verv sh time. Solicitirg # share of you patronage, we remain, Yous respectfully, Vv. PAYLOR, ViCTGRIA JEWELRY STORE. PROMPTLY SECURED CH UICKLS. VW rite to tu~tlay loca free copy of our big Book on Fatents “7e have extensive experience in the intricate patent lawsof 50 foreign countries, Send sketch. model hoto for free advice. MARION & MA. RIO . Experts, T enple Building, Montreal. sees a a acces 7 ~~ ae MACKRAY’S. — Tweed Department—We have made special efforts to have this department the largest and best on P. E,I. In addition ta those of our own make we have a special purchase from Mon- trea} auctions of black and blue worsteds, blue serges, Scoteh tweeds, Canadian Tweeds, ‘Fo any in want of Ist class goods at. prices half original value, should aot lose this opportunity of mak- ing your purcbases at once. Hats and Caps—-Every style available has been secured to fill this department, Feit hats, hard aad soft; crash hats, straw, all styles, English, American and Canadian Caps, We can assure © you this department cannot be surpassed; all kinds of head wear © from the smallest boy to th largest man, a Gents’ Furnishings—of every description, Our Neckties just = from Montreal auction, are now onsale at half price. Hose for i Ladies and Childrea, See our 25c cashmere hose for gentlemen: job lot of gents’ linen collars at 8c each, extra value. Sweaters for boys and men, in cotton and wool, at all prices; horse covers, the newest American Wool Taken in Exchange for Anything We Sell. Resto ds wht - a oenies BARGAIN CORNER EXPERIENCE arsvnpernnrannererevnnnnsvnnennnpynnyT Z| M | : mS | PS . hi Lit + | Trave Marns. ‘ DesiIGNs i CopyricuHTts &c - Anyone sending a sketch and description mae’ , quickly ascertain cur opinion free whether act: re invention is probably patentable. Communits- ; tions strictly confid 2ntial. Handbook on Patexmte sent free, Oldest avency for securing patents, ye Patents taken through Munn & Co. receiwr i special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American, are not half enjoyed Without you hive a Massey A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest er culation of any scient fic journal, Terme, £2 = in four months, $1 Soid by ail newsdeslens. } URN & Go,2° ei», New York ie a ee Harris CHARLOITETONY i tie to ride. Business Collere A quiet ride on + SUNNGIS! eee aes cee a bright summer’s day is ——P ase + a 2 7. 7 . q the essence of enjoyment. YW riting Aeademy a] t 4 . S49 NEN NS SE N4 NE SNES Let thesear chlight of practice illuminate the i UP AP AS UEP ASAE UES AE AE AEDS dark places of rhe wy. j A THOROUGHLY Progressive Practionk 3 { (Institution, in whicn :oung men and a4 gi . vomen are notonly taught Book keepiu e 4 . ’ rere ! a “4 Massey “Hai ris Co. 1 (dimallits applicationsto commerce) both im yi single and double entry, but are trained how | todo business, -y actual bu-iness transaet- | oe me ions. ‘the students act as buyers, sellers 4 LI MI | ED. traders, bankers, book-keepers and account- ; €Dts, iD actual business operations, ard th«* ; Currency issusd by the ‘ ollege Bank and t tue 5 + mdse, issued from the E myorium, are use d MARK WRIGHT & C0 | in bona fide business trausactions, just thes | Same asin mercantile aud bank! ng h OOS OH. ay | Book-keeping in itself may be learned w& Agents jn town. } home, but a knowlkdge of how to transac& ; business, canno’ be thas acquired. That ovsr | coume -vstem of training is eminently praes- ROCERS g ROSERS | ical gitite for testimonials trom business | Men, e@d from siudents who ale now bokw— ,; bg lucrativeai responsible positions. : 49 * SUBJE Ts: i re ‘ ‘ 2 e ¢ Ag uts for S'’side. Book-keeping by single and doable entey = | (theoreticai and pratical,) Actual Business ts Practice, Business Pe nm ipship, Busi ness 8 GAADAAAULADUGAANALOAMAUMAATS gala ci Buees rcial Law, Rai: vend. ng, ‘Steam new? chilis i ing, Banking, (actual practice inthe College — - SEE Mdkceatg emer cape = ooo | ti jank)lypewr! lg, Sb ri hand acd Na’ Lae te on. . ACULTY: F L. Principal, Teacher of Book- an B Miller, keeping, Arithmetic, Business Practiew. ; Ope | Business Corresponde nee, iypevriting asd’ i a Navigation, ; 5 ; J. W. Coulson, (Vice Principal,) Teacher | | Of Railroading, steam oating, danking. Ac | counting and Actuil Business Practice. { a i wt Harry Wiliiams, Teacher of Bu.ine® ie | Penmausiip } i Wm. Moran (licensed), Teacher of Sort | hand. He 5 George 8. Inman Erq, (Law Firm Me- : } Donald & Inman) J ecturer on Comm -retat Law. | For circularsand ‘ul! information, write or : | appiy to i L. B. MILLER; ie 5 Principal, Allivt:resicd are cordially invited tue al 4 tithe coiege ord ipeyect cur sysiem ti 2igiig@. #5¢ werk is ges esal. ' RS A ee se TENDERS Will be received by the undersigned, op to 12 o'clock noon, on Wedn-tday, 15th June, from parties willing to catert@ | A.O,H. sports, to be beld on St. Dan~ | stan’s College grounds, on Friday, Joly | le. i wattecns, Prints, ‘ome in and see our stock. W. F. PAYNE, Sec’y of Comm 116 Saw id sennasiaitcssancansnstin ane — : ~~ vrs i, TJ HARRIS, London house eeernr: eS _— 7 “_ “- I ney a yr te Seger oanr