THE PATLY EXAMIN'R, CHARLOTTETOWN MARCH 14, 1898. ee ~ SS" If awotman walked A bare-footed on the a: sharp edge of a Joe s¥Ord, would h ~ not undergo one. ‘\ , AVtenth of the agony a) 4 -,#/ daily borne by thou- ee ~eF sands of women ay \{ without complaint. GN, They suffer greater JIN4 f/ misery and pain \. >» than could be in- a flicted by all the pro- - f ional torturers that the world ever knew Day and » 2 night they suffer é ~y m headaches no on r } " dragging down and burning sensations, pains in the sides and back, hot and cold flushes, nervous and trem- : bling sen- 1 physical lassitude and mental rhe whole body is tortured th pain and the entire nervous system ' is racked. If they consult the average ob- scure physician, he will attribute their bad feelings to stomach, liver, kidney, heart or nervous ti If, by accident, he hits gpon the mght cause, he will insist upon the disgusting ¢xaminations and local treat ment so embarrassing to a sensitive. mod est Woman The real trouble is weakness or disease of the delicate and important organs that bear the burdens of maternity. There is no necessity for examinations or local treat- ment. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription cures all disorders of this nature in the privacy of the home. It acts directly on the sensitive organs concerned making them strong and well. It allays inflamma- tion, heals ulceration, soothes pain and tones and builds up the nerves. It stops exhausting drains. It banishes the discom- forts of the expectant months, and makes baby’s coming easy and almost painless It restores the beauty and vivacity lost through long months or years of pain and suffering. Thousands of women have tes- tified to its marvelous merits. At all med- icine stores. Avoid substitutes To cover customs and mailing on/y, send 3! one-cent stamps for paper-covered copy, or §0 for cloth-bound copy, of Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser, Address, Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. Tis tila G THAT GLITTERS Many ere taken in now-a-days, and are paying from ten to twenty doiiars for a waich not worth five, by buving from pedlere and others who are not watch- makers. Do not be Deceived. But when you want a reliable watch buy only of ove who understands the trade and asks only a fair price for a good article. G. H. TAYLOR Jeweler and Optician. Charlottetown, P. . Island Railway O- and after MONDAY, 27th Dee., seen brains of this Railwaw will run daily, (Sun avs excepted,) as under. ~~ { ; {Trains I Trains Out- — meat Read! STATIONS, ward, R down, | MIA M P.M, A. My 8 10 6 20) _ Charlottetown ...! 2 201: oe 8 UG 35). .Royaltv Tunetion.| 2 16 9 40 4 32|., North Wiltshire. | 1 49 8 68 St 7 2t\,. Hunter River. ../ 7 99) 8 4) » 05, 7 51). Rradalhane......] 2 99) 8 GI & 13, 7 53). Emerald.. .....-112 83] 7 G8 a 8 02! » SE MOMROWS ocasui 112 42} 7 a + 5 25).. Kensington ..... 12 24| 7 18 0, 8 wv a ee fl. 12 00) 6 48 7. M.'?. M t S’Side A, Mm 12 50iLv. | Ar. }10 80 1 11)..Miscouche ...... 110 10 1 37)... Wellington...... 9 47 2 19).. Port Hill .......| 9 00 ye, LEP ROREY. . ccoece 8 00 3 58}.. Bloomfield ...... 7 84 & 38). Alberton... sce 6 65 5 30}. .Tignish .... ....1 6 00 A. M A. M. A. - .. Charlottetown ... 10 ..Royalty Junction lio 1¢ .. Bedford seterese 9 37 wy Me Stewart 4.” : ! . Cardigan... .cooe. 7 bx . Georgetown eere *s ™. Ae Me P. Mz. A. M. 4 05), , Mt. Stewart 2...) 8 55 ' 443 oo MOTO... ncovece $17 5 12 ‘ St. Petera eeeeee 7 5 B7l,. eocceel 2 6 40 . SOUS. 006 aeeeee 6 a Pp. M. Ay Me) P. M. M 7 6 15!. .Eoerald sssead f | 46 05} .. Cage Traverse «. ‘2 By, TA ' ' tains are run by Eastern Standard Time —— Printing in all its branches at the Exam. Iver office, one cf the best equip- ped Job Printing Establishment, | on P, E. Island. ee fCovvrirht. 1497. by the Author.} | » BILLIAM. | ex “~3ey went down the dimly lighted, | €rTeasy stairs without meeting a soul. When they arrived at the foot, Billiam turned sharp to the left, and the hussar found himself in a darkish wide lane. in which were no gas lamps. At the end of the lane was a great coal station, full of wagons and stacks of coal, black and shining, dimly seen between two tall gateposts. The latest wagons of the day \rre just leaving the yard on the way to the city coal stores, there to be ready for the morning de- mand. They rumbled out in a long pre- cession, manned by men as rough and | grim and black as the coal they worked amiong. : The coal carters kept up a brisk in- terchange of compliments with one an- other, varying this by an occasional luinp of coal. Great wedges and nuts of it were also being jolted continnally off the carts as they jostled and lurched through the dark and deeply rutted lane. ‘‘Come on,’’ said Billiam. soon get enough.’’ ff among the grinding wheels, nipping up every piece of coal wich lay on the road and pushing it ints his ulster pockets with trained alacrity. His brother endeavored to imi- tate him, but he was unaccustomed and clumsy and got but few pieces, and thore small. It was interesting work, however, for the wagons surged and roared like a maelstrom between the high walls and the tail houses. Tho hvsear found that it needed much quick- hess to seize the prey and bag it, evad- ing meanwhile the succeeding carts, which came on at a race which was ai- nmicst a brisk trot. Presently a huge coal carter, standing up on his wagon, canght sight of the captain lifting a piece of coal from the side of the road. He sent a ready missile after him, which took effect just be- tween his shoulder blades. ‘Get oot o’ that, ye he shouted. Captain Ormithwaite of the One Hun- dred and Tenth hussars gprang toward his assailant to take him by the throat, but the watchful Billiam had his broth- er promptly by the arm. **Mind what you are about,’’ he said. **See; stand in there, and we’ll soon get enough to last us three or four days.’’ The brothers took shelter in a cellar doorway, both of them grimed to the eves. Billiam produced a hideous mask out of his side pocket and prt it on. ‘Then he slid off the doorstep and took up his position on a little mound of bard trodden earth and engine ash. ‘*li0, ha!’’ he cried. ‘‘ Ye are a set o’ dirty, lazy Gilmerton cairters!’’ Every coachman on the wagons leaped up at the word as if he had been stung, and the rain of coal cobs which fell about Billiam was astonishing and dead- ly, but by long practice he evaded every one of them, letting some slip past him and catching the straight ones as clever- ly as ever he had done the ball when he kept wicket on the green playing fields. Presently the captain found Billiam, now a very swollen and bulky Billiam, once more beside him. ‘*Yoa goand fill up at the back of the mound where Iwas guying ’em,’’ he gaid. ‘'There’s quite half a ton there.’’ And very obediently the hussar went, with oa grim delight in his heart to think of the fit his C. O. would have if be could only haveseen him. Present- ly he had filled up, and, leaving the roar of the coal avenuo for the quiet of the house, Billiam and his brother slank laboriously up stairs to their garret. ‘“‘Lord, shall I ever be clean again?’’ groaned the captain, looking at his hands. ‘To think what you have Iced an ofiicer of the queen into, you blessed roung gallows bird, Billiam!’ “We'll And he ran « skulker, ye!'’ Crue] nT RS Seem ee 5 woe” ee S ied ‘Saya 4 > Tye Sae Fey Jee , > Sick H-ANAGHE BOE wh La Positively cured by these Little Pills, They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, Indigestion «nd Too Hearty Eating. <A per- fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowst- fess, Bad Tastein the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. Small Pili, Email Dose. Smail Price. Substitution the frand of the day. \ See you get Carter’s, Ask for Carter's, Insist and demand Carter’s Little Liver Pills, delivery | TY) wahid pty the cours here,’ Filliam, and his brother por ; a : ¢ ~ very +t ai 7G iDto a iarg cf irt red out his iment built How BPiiliam could have carried so great a load was a puz- beside the window gie, but certuinly there could not have been less than a brndredy t of coal in his canvas pockets alone. He hasten- ea to fll a pot with water, and in a lit- tle while he bad a shallow bath full of Ww: ’ i he set out in the cor- her bchindarereen made of a gray sheet which hung upon a cord. ““Go in there,’’ he said, “‘and ge‘ yourself clean, yon herrible eyb: Ill go round the wards. ject to a little grime.”’ When ke came back to take his turn atthe bath, afresh pot full cf water a aoe ok owt was bright wlte Dogs don’t ob- Was reauy, and the room ‘ } ? ayhe a de o f “Lord, shall i ever be clean again?” and warm. The hussar had attended to the fire and had swept the floor. The brothers were in the inner room in which Billiam usually camped. There was a sofa in it now, and an easy chair of wickerwork. “I'll toss you for the sofa, young tn,’’ said the captain. ‘‘Right,’’ said Billiam promptly. age TT de ‘‘Heads it is,’’ cried the hussar with gome relief. ‘‘Glad of that,’’ qnoth cheerful Bil- liam. ‘‘I prefer the floor anyway. You an make quitea decent thing out of rugs and overcoats. And, besides, sleep- ing on the floor makes you so jolly glad to get up in the morning.’’ bo they turned in and slept the sleep of the just. Billiam was up by daylight and had acheerful fire burning when his brother awoke. He brought hima cup of tea and told him to roll over again. But the captain was now wide awake and eager for talk. ‘*Why do you keep on at this kind of thing,’’ he said, ‘‘and why don’t you buy your coals like an ordinary being?’’ ‘*Well,”’ said Billiam, ‘‘this is the sort of thing I take to, you see. It’s in- teresting all the time. I suck in oceans of learning all day till I’m tight, and then I practice it all the evening. And as for coals—well, sometimes I do buy them. But £150 year doesn’t spread far in rent, classes and victuals, not to speak of dressings and lint, and picking up coals in the lane down there is just nbout as exciting as soldiering, I guess.’ “See here,’’ said the captain, ‘‘] think I could get over the governor to double your allowance. I ve been pretty light on him lately, and he thinks me a good little man. If I da, will you leave off pigging up here and live dccent?”’ Billiam seized his hend. **You are a good chap sure,”’ he said. “Try it on the dad, Herb. Icould get proper cushions for the beasts then, an operating table, and perhaps I might even aficrd to hire a vard.”’ Tue captain leaped from his sofa and began to pace up and down in his py- jamas. ‘*Of all the fools God ever made, Bil- liam, you are the most confounded! Why in creation didn’t you settle down aud be a proper parson if you wanted to io all this kind of thing? It makes vie gick.”’ billiam looked at him awhile as if for once he wov!d try to explain, but the hopelessness of the task made bim turn away sadly. Nobody ever would understand. He must jusi goon and on till they put him in a lunatic asylum. **Sce here,’’ he said, ‘‘better put on your clothes, Herbert. You’ll be sure to catch cold, prancing about there in your right things, and you don’t look pret- ty,’’ he added, looking at him critically. **But why wouldn’t you be a parson, Billiam? That beats me dead. Yon’re just the sert of soit chap for a parson.’’ “‘Stuff!’? said Billiam. ‘‘Who ever heard of a parson just for splicing up dogs and cats and things? There’s enough of the other kind to go round surely. And there’s only one of Billiam for this sort of parsoning.’’ ‘*Well, Billiam,’’ said Captain Ormi- thwaite a little later, ‘‘I am off up to town. This is all very well for a night, but a little more of it would kill me. I declare I shall smell doggy and chloraty fora month. Here’s some sinews for you, Billiam. It’s all I can spare.’’ ‘‘Thank you,’’ said Billiam, pocket- ing the notes without demur. ‘‘I may be the prodigal chap in the parable, but I’m blowed if you are the old kind of elder brother, the fellow who would not go in.”’ “That's all right,’ said the caviain =o pe te me ‘commante: |} "Let us hear that you keep ribaid. I guess you'll slip into heaven ahead of some of the parsons yet, Billiam.’’ “It'll be when Peter’s not looking then,’’ said Billiam, shaking his head, ‘but if they do nick me atthe gate, why, I guess there’ll always be plenty for a fellow like me to turn his hand to in the other place.’ (This is not, however, the end of Billiam. For there was a seamstress across the landing who seriously inter- fered with his plans.) THE END. Newspaper Cuttings. This is the reply G. A. Sala sent to some one seeking the samc informa- tion: ‘“‘I keep mine as a trader keeps his books—in a wastebook, a journal, a ledger and a cashbook—the last for en- tries of notable statistics and historic latters of finance. But I will only in- dicate a mode of keeping the waste- book, which includes all kinds of vul- gar matter and polemical divisions, con- | secutively transcribed, just as they oc- cur in the course of reading. The proc- ess of keeping is simply this: The ex- tracts are at one end of the book and the index at the other. For example, I make this entry, ‘Queen Anne is dead and the Dutch have taken Holland.’ Against this I draw a circle, and in the circle I write in red ink a number consecutive to that of the preceding entry, which was, say, 4404. In the index I enter under the letter A, ‘Anne, Queen, her death indubitable,’ with the number 4405, and under the letter H and with the same numer (4465) I write, ‘Hol- land undeniably taken by the Dutch.’ ”’ W. H. might do better than follow this rather laborious method by keeping a very small index book separately and numbering the folios only of his cutting book, and he might do worse than tran- scribe on the fly leaf of each book Ba- con’s remarks upon ‘‘commonplaces’’ —vide “‘Advancement of Learning,’’ book 2. I have hoard that Mr. Sala put his cuttings and probably notes of his own in a book and indexed them, a plan I think much inferior to the following: Fold each ap to about the same size or paste on paper of about the same size if small, indorse the subjects and keep them in alphabetical order of subject. If there are two subjects, of course put across reference. You have no trouble in pasting into a book, nor need youcut out if the cutting is required for any purpose.~-Notes and Queries. Restore full, regular action s of the bowels, do net irri- pe E ; S all the delicate digestive or- ganism in perfect condition. Try them. 25 cents. tate or inflame, but leave Prepared only by ©. L. Hood & ©o., Lowell, Masa. 3 Gray’ Syrup For Coughs, Colds, Bron- chitis, Sore throat, ete. Cum KERRY, WATSON @ CO., Propnicrons, £ MONTREAL. : why Ps00e2 10280808 1 2008080808 80808. 8080008080800 Oe | Fat is absolutely neces- sary as an article of diet. 7 * > aad * ? . if it is not of the right kind itmay not bedigested. Then the body will not get enough of it. In this event there is fat-starvation. ocott’s Emulsion supplies this needed fat, of the right kind, in the right quantity, and in the form already partly digested. Asa result all the organs and tissues take on activity. soc. and $1.00, all druggists. SCOTTY & BOWNE, Chemists, Toronta LEGAL ‘ARD. MATHIESON « BENTLEY Barristers, Solicitors, &, OFFICES— Cameron Biock, Charlottetown. Main Street, Georgetown. MONEY TO LOAN. W. E, BentTiey. J. A. MATHIESON, Ch’town, Geo’town. cram | R.B. NORTON & CO, LTD Ss tn cae ls Se A me Mk 7 UGH! _.,|From India and Gayton PD | Tetley’s Elephant Brand Packets, filled with pure ‘ | good tea, and sold in 14 and 1 Ib. packets, at 40c., soc., Goc., 7oc. and $1.00 per Ib., | are certainly no matter which grade is purchased. Teas | % ELEPHANT BRAND... EAS AVAAGAA AAA AA NOTICE, WHAT CAN’T BE CURED MUST BE ENDURED _— —— & | * But Have You Tried A WEE DRAPPIE O’ PATTISON’S P Give un drinking poor spirits and try the best Scotland yields. For Medicinal Purposes aduiterated whisky is dangerous. For sideboard purposes it isabominable. A customer who once tries “A Wee Drappie 0’ Pattison’s ” is a customer always. For sale by a)l leading wine and epirit merchants, and wholesale by * BE hap 1h EEL he gk FE EES HARAASSRAARAR SAA CAAA eee ‘= For Sale Bv All Licensed Vendors SUEY AE EEE EEE SIXTUS McLELLAN wi a al SES CEM IO sai D. GORDON. YY ES —unr We are Tailors, some people know us ae only Tailors, and some peonle know usastheon!y Tailors, but be that as it may. We want you to know that we sell every thing men wear except shoes, or every thing they ought to wear; and this time of the year we. are giving special priceson every winter weight article in the store See Our White and Colored Shirts. Good clean fresh stosk, bonght for spot cash. We don’t keep shirts long enough to get soiled, neither do we hsndle any worn out samples. a good laundered white shirt for ‘any price from 45c to $2.50,and wade specially for a high elase furnishing trade. ) GORDON & McLELLAN Pofion Leaders, Upper Queen St. Next door ts McKay Weolen CO alam ges WE HAVE THE GOODS NOW We were right out of black and blue Worsteds. We are opening to-day one thousand dollars’ worth o black and blue worsteds, These goods have been entered under the new tariff, and are better valu : than anything we have ever placed before the pnbli Inspection solicited. JOHN MACLEOD & CO MERCHANT "TAILORS. Faaliediiieaidinas vuseie Vole iuniiiaioee . con a es ed Clear Them Out BUT—u ind a great big BUT, it must be for cash, what! Our Hay Bale Ties, the best in the market, 10} feet, gauge 14, at cost fcr spot cash, at the CITY - HARDWARE - STORE IRE A MEE TI I ERED REN aA AIR LN oe aI Be PP MIE em poses RE ead eee ry aan eee ee