LAUNCHING THE LIFE-BOAT. Phere are ere ater dangers than those of t dread disease—con- thee angry sca Aba eqmption), kilis men and women ina miore mriorTe generation than the sea has swallowed up since the earliest history of navigation. There is a sure and safe life-boat ever gay to be laun hed for men and women go suffer f s merciless destroyer. nis Dr. | s Golden Medical Discoy- ery. It cures per cent. of all cases of gnsumption, oro itis, asthma, laryn- ‘sis, weak lungs, spitting of blood and qyroat and nasal troubles. It acts directly ea the lungs, driving out all impurities and disease germs It soothes and heals the muceus membranes of the lungs, bronchial wbes, throat and nasal cavities. It restores the lost appetite, makes digestion and as- gmilation perfect, invigorates the liver, gnd purifies and enriches the blood. It §lis the blood with the life-giving elements of the food that build new and healthy giesties. It tears down, carries off and excretes the diseased and half dead tissues goon which the germs of consumption thrive. It checks the cough and facilitates expectoration until the lungs are thor- oughly cleared. It is the great blood- maker and flesh-builder. Unlike cod liver el, it does not build flabby flesh, but the frm, muscular tissues of health. It does not make corpulent people more corpulent. Thousands have testified to their cure guder this great medicine after they were gven up by the doctors, and all hope was gue. An honest dealer will not suggest gome inferior substitute for the sake of a ittie extra selfish profit. A man or woman who neglects constipation suffers from slow isoning. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets cure constipation. One little ‘‘Pell@t’’ is a gentle laxa- tive, and two a mild cathartic. All medicire dealers sell them. No other pills are *‘ just as good.”’ >< CORSETS ‘ Give Grace, Style and Comfort. Made ‘throughout of best materials, they give good wear, and while not expen- sive at fii st, compare stil! bet- ter with othe> makes, when their Jasting qualities are con- § sidered! : a X fold by mast dry goods dealers. | % (>) | a cet asset aan alle — ; 7 BA +. ENGLISH BREAKFAST COCOA Poscesses the following Distinctive’ Merits: > DELICACY OF FLAYOR. ‘SUPERIORITY in QUALITY. 4) GRATEFUL ard COMFORTING 9 the NERVOUS er DYSPEPTIC. B MUTRITIVE QUALITICSUNRIVALLED Ta Quarter-Ponnd Tins only. m pered by JAMUS MPPS & CO., Led Homeopathic Chemists, Londcv REMOVED &. G Jury has removed his jewel B® Lvsiness to Creat leo. et.. oppo- wii! be pleased to see all his old Sew ene mers. lle is now pre aks. to attend to all wat i repairing the m it is the stand sill guarantee to regulate 4 ihe town clock, as Be for time For Jewelry Wehes his prices can't be beat. Just and ae ze Hi¥ed, a new supply of watches, “es aud solid gold wedding rings. 1c. JORY ‘ rove street, = Uh town. W acres on Moant Edward Roa’, - house, fine vutbuildirge. Ao Orch “teaied about 1) miles from town. Me above farn willbe sold ata lar- sud on easy terme. Apply to CLEM. BENOIT, Eureka Hvtel, — pie | ment THE DAILY EXAMI‘\ER, SYNOPSIS. Peter Clephane and Andrew Kilgour are cousins, stndents at Edinburg University, between whom a better feud. The former is the son of a rich city lawrer and his consin is the heir of an estate in 18 the | Highlands that has almost pasced into the hands of creditors. Afier a bitter fight with bis cousin, Kilgour is on his way home when he fa)!s in witb company at the “Hound and Siag” inn at Perth. A | Arrived | home his companion on the journey turns | out to be hie uncle, Peter Clephane’s father lo retrive his family’s fortune Andrew is sent tol dia. CHAPTER X_ (Continned.) “re rveda tnis lite Tor a montn. ing all that time the weather glorious, and we enjoyed it ed. The brig floated lazily aiong, whatever wind there was being mostly steady in the same quarter. Nor a sail nor a soul did we see, and I had but the haziest notion of our where- abouts. if Abram ben Aden was bet- ter informed, he kept his knowledge sedulously to himself. He seemed deed too intent on providing entertain- to give a thought either to our course or our destination. We told tales and sang songs, and ate and drank and fenced and studied, and all alone on a derelict, waterlogged ship ied the most delectable existence imagina- ble. My companion fairly adored me. He anticipated my wishes, spoke un- ceasingly of the unequalled deeds I had done, and more than once showed a strong disposition to fall down and worship me. Dur- undist “TI have been a rover,” he would declare, with the unction of a man saying his prayers, ‘“‘ but may Azrael seize me this moment if I speak not the truth in saving that never have my eves seen a man who matches you in bravery and good fortune. And you are but a youth,” he would add, in a most engeging tone. This continued till I began to fancy T had enchanted the man, that he was verily my slave, and I had only to ex- ercise my magical power to bend ‘him to my will as compietely as the most docile and obedient genie in any Arabian tale of wonder. I dare say T plumed myself on my ascendancy, I dare say I put on airs, and I have no doubt whatever that Abram ben Aden, most adroit of courtiers, most subtle of flatterers, saw through me and took my measure with perfect accur- acy. One evening in our fencing exercise I thought he gressed harder on me than ever before, and that his blade reng with unaccustomed sharpness, But the quickened movements only made mv blood run the faster, for by this time I was beth confident and dexterous. We went at it as much in earnest perhaps as any two men who ever crossed blades for amuse- ment, and J remember the thrill caus- ed by the thought. What if he is try- irg to kill me? My opponent wus the first to cry halt. He was flushed and out of breath, and I fancied that under his everlasting smile there was a feeling of vexation. “By the right arm of the you are a gallant swordsma cried, recovering his breath. eye is the sun and your stroke a flash of lightning. I world not fight you for ten shiploads of gold. The man who fights you puts his life your sword point. As a jest you have taken prophet, nt” me on my wind away, and by the breath of the desert I am hot. Come, theu champion brandisher of steel, and let us refresh ourselves.” Ordinarily we put away our weaprns as our exercise was done, birt evening we took them as soon this and they lav .cross our Knees as we ate and drank. e Are we enemies ?” cried Adam ben Aden, lceughing immoderately at the idea of two peaceable and friendly men down to meat armed for a bafttl Yet somehow we d4id 10t lav the swords aside, and when we went to bed we still had them. IT slept soundly that night, and was late in a‘vekening next morning. On reaching the cabin I found that Abram ben Aden had not yet risen, and thinking to surprise him, J crept to bis door. It stood ajar, showing an empty bunk, made up as it had been left the dey before. I whistled Aoft- ly to myself. then going quickly on deck tooked for his boat. But it, too, was sone. eel QOHAPTER XI. SETTLING ACCOUNTS. Here was an unexpected turn of the wheel of fortune, a new mystery rack the mind or give an added relish to life, just as you might chance to look at it. [I was not at all sorry to find my companion gone, nor in truth greatly surprised, but his «cd: snight portend more than it was pleas- ant to speculate on I knew my man well enough to un- derstand at once that he had not left me upon any trivial motive nor to ao ecod by stealth. Too much of a rave to be a foal, on his own con- fession a consummate rascal, ignorant or contemptuous of moral scruples, in- sensible to gratitude, insatiablv avari- cious, bold in planning and ruthless in executing, I felt he must be bent on scme scheme that boded neither me nor the brig any good, I recollected with veculiar and not very agreeable sensations how he had pre essed me in cur bout on the before, and how on finding himself fairly matched evening his chagrin had broken through his well-trained emiles and courtier-like air of compliment. To be deprived of his company was a cause for rejeicine. for his absence relieved me of a constant source cf svenicicn and jtancer Rut hetter e "Tour i with ts, ] es | onty was , urb- | in- | present evil than a lurking enemy. With your eye on the foe you can de- fend yourself, but when he may spring uron you like a tiger in the jungle at any motment from anv quarter, back, front, side or oblique angele, why, the fezr is apt to fret the ner- vous. And indeed the legions of black thcughts came trooping back upon me with such disquieting effect that, un- Christian as it may sound. I would have given much to be able to run Abram ben Aden through with my sword, and there and then make an end of him. gut, as it was, I could conjecture, and conjecturinge on a matter of life and death is positive- Ty the most unsatisfactory exercise in which the human mind can engage. You may be kept a sharp Icokout that day, remaining constant- ly uncer my awning, save when I ran below to douse my head, which had a feverish tendency, or swallow a mouth- ful of food or drink. 3ut the day passed, and no boat or other object hove in sight. I saw neither land- mark nor watermark, nor even so much as the flash of a seabird’s wing—noth- ing but the dreary, blinding glitter of the eternal ocean plain. The darkness came, came at a stride, as Mr. Coleridge savs, for in thé tropics there is no twilight, but a leap from light to darkness as if the night were lying in wait and pounced upon the world as upon long expected sure I prey. The stars came out, like points of lambient flame in a fleckless, gray blue sky, and by and by the moon rose with a sense of sovereignty, @ majesty and magnificence never equal- ed on land. Higher and higher she mounted, her white, unveiled radiance nearly obliterating the stars in her path, and she smote with almost as crue! a stroke as the sun. There is a promise to the righteous that the sun shali not smite them by day nor the moon by night. The smiting of the sun dwellers in a temperate clime may partly understand, but the smit- ing of the moon never. You must go to the Bast and experience her addling, withering blight to comprehend the fact that a hard Arabian moon w&l drive a strong man stark mad in a single night if he lie unprotected from her light. Even with me under my covering she seemed to be sucking at my vitals. . Weary with watching, and, to say the truth, more than a trifle worried, I fed my rats and went to bed. I lay long awake in spite of fatigue, and the rcothing lullaby of lapping waters. At length I began to doze, frequently starting up, however, with a vivid impression of hearing Abram ben Aden calling mv name. Rising on my el- bow 1 would hearken, panting with ex- citement. But the great silence be- ing unbroken, save by the low. swceet- ly blended voices of wind and water, I would lie down again—to be honest, with something of the nervous shiv- ering of a frightened child. Once I was constrained to get up and ‘look out, first on one side, then cn the other. But the deep serenity of nature was undisturbed. The moon shone resplendently, and the sea, gent- ly crisped by the breeze, sparkled like | fretted silver or glowed with phoz- phorescent fire. The night wind, soft and warm and odorous, caressed my face and head with a wooing mur- mur that would have been delicious had © heen ir a frame of mind to en- | to } | | parture joy it, and far aloft the stars palpitated in their azure setting with a sort of tender .compassion. (To be Centinned.) or Colds and coughs and all Jung troubles Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral is the standard remedy. Medical Advice Free. Address, J.C. AYER CO., Lowell, Mass., U.S. How a person can gain a pound a day by taking an ounce of Scott’s Emulsiom is hard to explain, but it certainly happens. , It seems to start the diges- tive machinery working properly. You obtain a creater benefit from your food. The oil being predigested, ind combined with the hy- sophosphites, makes a food ‘onic of wonderful flesh- ‘orming power. All physicians know this ‘9 to be a fact. All druggists; soc. and $1.00 SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, Toronte ' ‘ i ' ‘ HARLOTTETOWN APRIL 25 1898 We wage a ceasless war against high prices and low grade goods, GOD GOODS, LOW PRICES But they must be seen to be appreciated, For example, our prices on Children’s, Youths’ and Men's Clothing, Ready-to-wear Clothing, are lower tian Clothing has ever been scald on P- E ltsland before, Also startling valnes in HATS & GAPS. W. D. McKRAY, Successor to McKay Woolen Co. Spring Shoes Ladies’ Tan Cloth Top Shoes, Ladies’ Black Cloth Lup Sheces, Ladies’ Dongola Self Tip Shees, Ladies’ Black and Tan Butten Boots, Ladies’ Black and Tan Lace Boots. W. H. STEWART & CO London House Building’ Clear Them Out BUT—and a great big BUT, it must be for cash. What! Our Hay Bale Ties, the best in the market, 10} fret, STORE gauge 14, at cost fcr spot cash, at the CITY - HARDWARE - R. B. NORTON & LTD CO Ladies Hats. FLOWERS FEATHERS. RIBBONS Weare now showing our new stock. — y ay i Miss Wede will be found on our first; floor ready fo her customers, —— — a ———— T. J HARRIS, London House a , NOTICE i | Application will be made at the presen eegsion of the Parliament of Canada, fo an actto incorporate the eubsidiary hizt eourt of the Ancient Order of Foresters, in the Dominion of Canada; afriendly an Benevolent Society, with al] other necea- sary power, incidental thereto, to carry out the eaid society’s objecte, anil for other purpores, Dated 28:h March, 1898. D. F. MACWATT, Dicitor?for applicants, 74 law9wke nA ® We have commenced burn ing, and can supply any quan tity ot best quality ot Lime, for farming and buildingypur- poses. ©. LYONS & vo. 85—pat. guar. 1 mo rat iy TO LET. Rooms in rearend of store, formerly occupied by R. Bearisio, suitable fur an office, possession at once. 77 W. D. McKAY Te See (wf 4. 4. MeLEAN, Q.C. BARRISTER, &c. CHARLOTTE? }ROWN’S BLOCK, WN. at ay SEED WHEAT, White F\fe Seed Wheat for sale. Excellent quality, from seed imported last year. J. & T. MORRIS Printing IER office, one of the best equip ped Job Printing Establishment, on P, E. Island, i i a} A . ft F. ; 4 if . — a eae i f t ¥ ie J _ & i ri ¥ 1) a in one i | hie f ij tt i ; t } t i ay + 4 : i i. ' 1 ’ ; bo * ft ; et i ; J { be i } eh ; » 4 ' c ' i ’ i ; ew) : Hy x Lb ' % y ‘ oF % rt i at eee in i ee : moe ed esa nm a a 5 ; ‘