~ Some the world persist in dingin methods. There are men who st rked stick in place of a modern | low There are also men, who. ire troubled with a disordered liver, resort to the old-fashioned $s that rack and rend the iwhile they give temporary ng run do the entire system when they stomach violent whole body itl relief, in the 1 remeacies agreat am tof harm Modern science has discovered remedies infinitely perior to these old-fashioned drugs, that de thetr work by promoting the gatural processes of excretion and secre tion a gently correcting all circulatory disturbances. When a man feels generally out of sorts, when he loses sleep at night, when he gets un headachey and with a bad taste in his mouth in the morning, when he feels dull and lethargic all day, when his appetite is poor and his food distresses hen work comes hard and recreatin1 is ati impossibility, that man, though he may not believe it, is a pretty sick maz. He is on the road to consumption, nervous — malaria, or some serious blood isease. In cases of this description a man should resort at once to Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. Itisthe best medicine for a weak stomach, impaired digestion ¢ disordered liver, It i¢ the great blood- maker and purifier, flesh-builder and nerve tonic. It cures 98 per cent. of all cases of consumption, bronchitis, lingering coughs and kindred ailments Thousands have ; na T him, wh 9 testified to its marvelous merits. It is c a mod scientific medicine that aids without goading nature, and that has stood the test for thirty years. Medicine dealers Geli it Dr. Pierce’s Pellets cure constipation. i (Continued.) (Bv some mistake the wrong instalment of the story was published yesterday and the day before. To-day we publish the tule in proper order so that our readers will not mise the continni'y.) ——~2ee : it must he understood that I was not to go solely as Sir Thomas’ emissary ee out Donald. I was going prim- arily on My Own account—to push my own fortune—and Sir Thomas’ mission was, as he was pleased to put it, “a mere act of charity done to a stranger out of the gocvdness of my heart.” Yet In truth the charity and goodness were all on the other side. Sir Thomag furnished me with letters of introd@uc- tion to the best known and most influential men in Bombay, besides Writing many private and special let- ters li, ray 28 behalf which I did not See. | ; My career was to be a meftantile one —that, on mature consideration, being | thought te afford the easiest and , Speediest way to affluence for one of | EPPS'S GOCOA ENGLISH EREAKFAST COCOA Possesses the following Distinctive Merits: DELICACY OF FLAVOR. SUPERIORITY in QUALITY. GRATEFUL and COMFORTING to the NERVOUS or DYSPEP7IiC. NUTRITIVE QUALITIES UNRIVALLED In Quarter-Pound Tins only, Prepared by JAMES EPPS & Co., Lrtd., Hom«opathic Chemists, London, England, coop vale for money expended, ia what we give in all goode in our line, to which we attribute our steady increase in business. We are showing a nice assortment of Ladies and Gentlemeus WATCHES tested before leaving ozr store, W- guarantee every watch sold by us to give satisfaction, by buying now you can procure @ good time piece VERY LOW as our goods are bonght low for po caeh , Call and eee for yourself, at— oe om W. N. TANTON Opposite Crabbe’s Hardwre Store. ee ern nememen ~PWARE - HOUSES PEAKE’ WARP (WO 1) Wharfage storage and yard. {2 at reasonable rates. Arthur @. Peake. Nov. 4 Peete : Wertilizer Dried Blood and 2. Tankage Seueaiiliamnememeteend wt in Ammopia | and P.osphoric rite us for prices aud analysis. B. & M. PAI TENBURY this season, which are all thoroughly | say my talents. “The richest Europeans in India are rrerchants and bankers,’ said Sir Themas, “and they are all, as the say- ing is, self-made men. Tne days of the East India Company are over. There are no fortunes being made in that service now, though,” in a signi- ficant voice, “it was not always so. But India is a wide field, and these letters, Mr. Andrew, will, I think, put you in a position to choose according to your tastes. I have no advice to offer except not to be in too much haste to decide. For whet Sir Thomas had specially at heart all provision was made both in letters and in money. Of the last there was to be alsolutely no stint. I Was to spend as much and as long as I should think proper, or in other words as long as there should be the faintest hope of tracking Donald. *“My bankers shall have full instruc- tions in the matter,’ said Sir Thomas, ‘and in the meantime we must not Yorget preliminary expenses.”’ Where- upon he insisted on my taking in ready rmmeney and bankers’ drafts a sum that seemed to me a fortune. Finally, as I was in great zlee with my prospects and protested against delay, it was arranged that in exactly three weeks from the date of my home-coming I was to sail from London in the steam- stip the Pearl, of the Orient, com- tranded by Captain Rogers, who, be- ing w friend of Sir Thomas, was charg- ed to provide for my comfort on ship- beard. And so the ultimate decision was made. I was to lift anchor and set sail for the unknown, as so many did before and so many will do after mie. How I fared there, how the reality be- lied all dreams and anticipations, how fate mocked at wv made naught of forethought and a plaything of me ‘isdom, it will be the business of succeeding paces to tell. Coming events cast no shadow before, and in the meantime Il was eager and happy. How’the three weeks passed I can- not very well say. J was a frequent guest at The Elms and saw a good deai of Isabel, whose vresence I learn- ed to bear without shrinking or shak- ing’. She talked to me of her life in India, and also of her brother, for whom she had the warmest affection and admiration. ‘They may tell you stories about Donuld,” she once said. “They may Say he Was a scamp, and all that, for it is easy talking. But don’t betiev them. He was high-spirited, that was his fault, and my tather crossed him His worst sin was to bec a selidier when his triends wanted him to be something else, and the records RN TS SN of the War Office show he was no cow- ard. He saved tne Britisn colouis When the enemv broke a Eeritign Squuie, and he has done many a biave Lilia. since if he had remained in Tie 7 , he’d have got got almost any rask, but he hadn't peac d that, anu its since he left it we lost trace cf him.” She never missed a chance of spea ing about him. Hie seemed to fill her whole soul, to be her only thought, a circumstance that secretiy piqued m not a little, ‘Oh,’ she would often break out the most irrelevant wey, “if you could only find my brother, you could only find Donald, I sheuld be so grateful to you, But indeed, indeed,” ana h she weuld look in my face till I thought I saw sions of heaven, *‘ 1 will be just as grateful to you if you never find him. Words cannot express your goodness in tryinz.” gnen 1 woulda reply that if Donald were in India I would find him, a speech which alwavs brought me a rapturous sroile of thanks and further | visions of paradise. 1 will pass swiftly over the vrepara- tion made at Kilburnie for ture. My dear mother toek care thas my outfit lacked nothing it was poss'!- ble for her to precure, and my father softened toward me, busying himself with my affairs and seeming con- science-stricken for having been so stern with me. “You do well, Andrew,” he said one evening, when we chanced to be by our- selves, and his voice was husky. “You. do well, Andrew, I have no doubt, in following your own instincts. When you go far away—for to a home- keeping rmiin like me it is so far away, though it is still in God’s universe— when you go away, do not forget that we are left behind, and you'll let us hear from you. And as to the other thing, we may find a way out of our troubles. (3od bless you, my boy. We are all in His hands.” And he could no more. At dinner, on the last evening, Dun- can, the ccachman, who was. aiso gamekeeper, factor, forester, and gen- eral factotura. and seryed the Kilgours, my depar- | (Copyright, 1893, by John Alexander Stenart.} man “arid Noy, for fifty yéars got our his pipes and serenaded us in his most stirring manner. “It is for Mr. Andrew,” he said. “He will be going away, God bless him, and he a big man, with black servants, and maybe Duncan will never set eyes on him again. And, God bless him, he will have the pipes to his denner whatever, just as loud as auld Duncan’s lungs can blaw. Ave, will he t And so lustily did Duncan blow that not a word of conversation could we have during the whole meal. Vhen his chanter:was silent, however, and the dusk had fallen, and we three ’¢ 0. my father, my mother, and myself, sat together, there was talk, but no Syllable of it will be set down here, for it was for ourselves alone. Next morning Duncan dreve me to the village to meet the stage—my father and mother accompanying. Thomas and Barly as was the hour, Sir and Isabel were waiting for greeted us with a fervour that was al- most silent. Isabel held in her hand two little bunches of white heather on us, which she looked down from time to time, as I fancied, with some embar- rassment. At last she came close to me, and with a soft emotion suffus- ing her cheek and shining in her eye, She said :—* This is for luck. One is for Donald—vou see I expect youn to find him The other,” and her voice fell to a mere whisper, ‘is for your self, Tt will keep you in mind of the old home, and perhaps I may see them both again.” AS she ceased speaking, the shrill notes of a bugle broke upon the morn- ing stillness, and a minute or two later the stage-coach came up at a handsome pace, the horses fresh and mettlesome and shaking their heads as if eager for the road. My bagrzage was quickly bundled up, farewells weve hastily taken, and I mounted to my place, feelingwjas if I were in an un- familiar region ‘of mists. Suddenly old Denean scrambled up beside me, a rarcel rolled in blue cloth in his hand. “Take it,” he said, huskily, pushing it into my arms. ‘“ God bless ye, take it. Stl UW SCE the CBRE pipes I learned ye to blaw on. Ayont the seas yell can gie a skirl at times to mind ve of old friends, and when ye come back ye’ll can march to your own quickstep, and maybe Donald will be there to fling his bonnet in the air. Hooch aye! God bless ye—God bless ye!’ and a tremulous hand pat- ted me like a bahy on the back. Then Duncan leaped down and stalked fiack to his horses, daring any one to say tears were on his cheeks or that his hands were shaking as if with a palsy. His was an odd gifc, but I took it, krowing how refusal would hurt him. In another minute the driver had gathered up the reins, touched the braniing leaders with his whip, and we were oft. I gazed back, waving my hand to the little group by the inn dcor till we turned a bend in the road. Then, seeing none too well, I termed, setting my face resolutely forward. CHAPTER V. E SEARCH FOR.DONALD GO! DON. my asd On the journey south, my spirits be- ing now mounting like mercury in the sun, I could not resist the temptation to spend an hour or two in KEKdin- burgh in the delectable diversion of waking my old comrades en The was not daifficuit. few Vious. A achievement sicnificant hints, and the sight af my letters and drafts brougat every of them as near to tursting as the frog in the fable. Some envied rm: the money, some the adventures, others said it was the beautiful com- bination of both that took their fancy, end all agreed I had certainly bee bern with the coveted silver spoon ir, my mouth. it’s one of th? shameless tricks of .Madam Fortune,” said an embr i divine, slapping me on the shoulder “Here you go out there to ride ele- phants and shoot tigers, and flUunkies, and enrich yourself from in- exhaustible trersures of gold and while I um left to wrestle with arrowing vroblems in theology. you call that fair ?” iw to write them v: gems, oo esas tun s about tte wonders of the Indies, and was to give particular information on these two poin namely, the feeling in- spired by a woundei tiger charging full upon you when your gun is empty, and what I thought of the heathen gcds-—from a financial point of view. ‘IT believ remarked one, with a taste for finance, those unconscion- able tageans make themselves deities of the finest ore set with precious stones, while we haven’t cash enough for an afternoon's outing. Just send us a god, old chappie, till we see how the heathen abomination would melt in the erucible of a Christian ¢old- smith.” They escorted me in a body to my coach For, being prosperous now, accuaintances became friends. They gave a prolonged cheer as the vehicle moved off, and a unanimous injunction | to mind my liver and be on my guarc | esainst the encroachments of pride when, as nabob with a retinue of slaves, I hobnobbed with the dusky and luxurious potentates of the East. Only one thing marred my enjoy- ment. I had it set in my mind to give Peter Clernhane the soundest drubbing he had ever had in his life, but as he happened to be absent in Dundee my virtuous intent did not blossom into action. (continued on page 8) PURE BLOOD is the foundation of health. Hood’s Sarsapariljamakes the blood pure, rich and nourishing and givesandmaintains good HEALTH. Caps. and remember A Reduct'on Sale F We trade, unequalled prices, THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN APRIL 13, 1898, VISIT if you want to see a display of the finest and newest Hats and) When we make a specialty of any artice you may be sure that that is a sufficient guarantee of the said article’s speciality,— In these goods at the Bargain Corner. Another of Our Specialties is ne, Fit-the-form Glothing have all that [he collection is really handsome. and the way prices on these goods seems absurd, but we must lead the clothing Also a large stock of clothing for children and boys ai R STORE --. 4s Now On gis an lt AONE A IE LAE Pe RM REA GN RR 5 wot = Se Se ae - ais “ an cpt i om ee ee cm stain MMe LEE peng cectice = Sen ee te is nobby and neat in Men’s Suits, we have lowered VW. D. McRAY, Successor to McKay Woolen Co. LG a ttt eet gy The D & A CORSET. For Evening Dress Women find the D & A CorseT as well suited for evening wear as it is for ordinary pu It gives { «chic’’ to the figure, without stiff- ness or discomfort. It is sold at popular prices. Wear the D&A Corset. { ~ oth OR “LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT ” ee NOR mcarren setlist THE GUARANTEE which accompanies the pur- chase of Aor _ Masse : Harris is from a reliable firm, ard \ therefore worth having. dex ~ PS Kale USMC Ie ~~ Massey-Harris (Co., Limited MARK WRIGHT & CO, Agents, Ch’town. 7. ROGERS & ROGERS, Agents, Summerside, M4 Me MEM SIM TS TS eae SURE lJ AIRE Seale seals ae she ase ate Se Sek The Best That Money Can Buy ant ee tape ahr seats 5 ems value That describes our new stock of Gents’ Furnishings. See our vew stock of White and Fancy Shirts, tee our new stock of Ties. See our new stock of Collers, See our new stock cf Underclothing. See cur new stock of Braces, Hdkfs, Socks, Sweaters, Everything n Gents’ Furnishings going cheap. The peop‘e that make most of their money buy at J. B. Macdonald & Co The Best Place to Bay Your lothirg and wih spay ae SS