tSBeVet =m 2s 2087 eo” ~Seeb*? 2047 oe? ' 1 . ‘ - 5 pyre rary. . THE WAILY EXAMINER. CHANLULYETOWN, JUNE 2s, :89¥ oo “- a — —-a = — err nr om anetnmenmemeneeimmmenmaainatl iERYOUS ‘ revere y . La ve : «Ua ) cCuvugL is am (oa) OL ce Des’ Guacers Pe r. 5 ees \ uy 4 1} {hi I with an apology A friend has quartered | in the r siment; but it was only discip- siicesiioniiones rage tate resey . \ 4 . su/ i/\/ age 4 couple Of babies upon us for the night, line that made the men _ obey him, and Moret ok deeded Seve ei eS a a, OC RRRT Saal on a - : ; : ; i ‘ ; i : d ; tidy G88 DEPRESSION _ want you’ to come and dine this | only civility thas made him tolerated at evening, and then to-morrow morning | mess. e n ‘ ‘mene you must come and stay as long as the - a . CHAPTERL ve 7 J “ I need not tell you the chance that ' Mearis Impoverished and Exhausted river will help u 7 to keep you. My wife | made us housemates. We lived under will pick you up in the tonga on her the same roof for four months, and I Nerves— Dr. A. W. Chase’s Nerve Food Restores and Revitalizes the Nerve Cells. Depressi y at fres y ¢ healthy and rn v t thou nd cis- ‘ : W h make their lives t : f nerve force results ina slow and sluggish tion of the heart, impaired digcs- t he ondency 1a fear to ‘ . ' nergy, Sice essness, iIncat i- tor ft r Or Dusi ness. With 1 > symptoms there is usually m r of death, which tends to i s, but there is every reason t il t right treatment is used, | Nerve | i contains all the nutri- t <i to create new brain and nerve t I parts to the nervous system that Lif , ciple which sendsa thrill of new strength and vigor through the system. 4. \V. Chase's Nerve Food will cure by t buil ip process, which enables the I rh at ¢ ase aed weakness. Face cut and {fac-simile signature of Dr. A. W. ( e on every box of the genuine. soc. a box al. dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Toronto, ene 6682 4 206440640086 ADVIZE AECUT pice. Ww Pe Da) en ordering a packege yper, Ginger, Allspice, Cin non or Cream of Tartar m your grocer you can al- vs feel sure of securing the best quality by asking for :: : Niott’s “QAP YOO SF GO86 024868 Important Testimony Prof. R. F, Ruttan, of McGill Univer- sity and Prof. Edwards, official analyst, Montreal, certify that CRESCENT STEEL ENAMELLED WARE fre We £SO23GG 2S ~* |G 2“ O24 BOE TB™ bsolutely non-injurious to food materials cooked in contact with it.’’ This is momentous testimony. Or- dinary cheap enamelled ware is not safe; it burns and chips—the enamel preperation is not pure. Rua no risk. Every piece of **Crescent’’ is labelled and guaranteed. «‘is MADE BY The Thos, Davidson Mfg. Co. MONTREAL. Watches in Nickel cases $3.00 to $1000 “ n Silver " 700 » 30.00 Gold 19.69 + 190.00 Uhains for Ladies $..Uv0 tv $20.00 Ribbon Guards 25e Gem Rings 1.00 to 50.00 Cuff studs and links 20 to 10.00 Collar Stads 05to 200 Brooches 25 to 20.00 Spectacles 50 to 10.00 Silverware nearly all kinds, in good quality plate. Also some in solid silver: BW. TAYLOR Dividend Notice Mercuayts Bayx or P. E. I. Charlottetown, June Ist, 1899 Notice is hereby given, that a half vearly dividend at the rate of 8 yer cent per aonum, on the capits)] stock of the bank has been declared payable at ite bank og house on and after July 3rd next The Transfer books will be closed from the loth June, to the 3rd of July next, both days inclusive. By order of the Board. J.M.'DAVISON. Cashier June Ist, 1899 **Yon'll be stopped at Sultanpur, you see if you’re not,’’ said my host r O'Kelly, R. E.. as arms resting on the a he ‘ window of the stood w car Tiage in which I had taken wy seat “If that Ghorwara bridge nds the flood that is on its way this roinute, why 1 know uncommonly little ri es, that’s all. Sol dr ypped a line yea- terday to Marston. Trust him for look nz aiter you. Time up, guar All right. Good-bye, old man, and good luck at home!’’ lt was before the railway communication : Nnerthwest of India and the great western harbor. | wasacaptain at that time and Was going back on sick leave after an attack of cholera. Ithad been a bad year and [had left more than one comrade in days of uanbroken hot " + , 1 Lanoa the sandy burial ground of Alikot. The new route tempted me—it looked so short on the map compared with that by Calcutta and Point de Galle But now I began to feardetention and roskon up the number of days to the departure of the P. and O. steamer that I wanted to catch. Sure enough, at the very next station to Sultanpur I caught the word ‘‘Gho- rawa’’ in a conversation that was going on between the station-master and the guard just outside the window of my carriage. Yes, four spans were gone, and now there was nothing for it but wait at Saltanpur until the company be able to organize arrangements for get- ting passengers and luggage across— three or four days at least. The travelers’ bungalow was not so bad, after all. The rains had wasned of com- away a twelve months’ accumulation unconsidered garbage from the pound, which was by a delicate green veil of three-days-old grass, not to mention splashy pools, their margins garnished with frogs as yellow and as noisy as canary birds. The tnside might certainly have been cleaner; but, by the time I had tubbed and established myself in a crazy old Chinese chair on the veranda, I felt little disposed to grumble. Theroad ran just outside the com- pound, and I remember watching with some interest a large horse, evidently ridden by a European, which came along ata sharp,level trot. It disappeared for an instant behind the tall edge of gaunt cactus, then the sound of the clat- tering hoofs turned toa quick thud as they left the metal and swung round through the gate with unslackened speed. The horse was reined up just in front of where I was sitting, and I saw that the visit was to me. It is not often that one sees in man and horse so well turned out. The horse was an Australian, a ‘‘waler,’’ as we call them there—a big chestnut thor- oughbred, with a coat like satin anda head as fine as a Nedjd Arab. He seemed to be used to be standing .with the reixs on his neck, for the rider dropped them as he pulled up, sitting far back in his saddle, with his boots stuck out in front and his hands in the pockets of his short flax-cloth jacket, with a perfect sans gene which in any one else would have been considered to have a touch of swag- ger in it. But it was impossible to look India | at Marston’s burly figure with its grand chest and shoulders, or to listen to the frankly dominant tones of his cheery voice without accepting his manner as the outcome of a thoroughly genial na- ture. The whole mman was in harmony with himself; the perfection of his cemi- sporting costume (he has just come from a meeting of stewards on the ruce course), the silver gloss of bit and stir- rup irons, the elaborate curl of his heavy brown moustache—it was all part parcel of a certain inborn completeness, which expressed itself spontaneously in all his belongings. “Captain Hillyar? O'Kelly told me t look out for you. Well, you will have to make the best of it with us fors day or two. But instead of coming down tor and h, v A mother pst’ fine a heavy price fot y the privilege of mother hood. The days of wai ing and hoping and an: iety before the little one comes; the after years of care and solicitude, nursing the little life into physical com- pleteness; guiding the little footsteps, the little hands and the gradually expanding mind~—all this is part of the bur- den of motherhood. Yet an_ expectant mother is happy with it all in blissful an- ticipation of the dear, s: ft nestling little bit of humanity which is all her very own, If the mother is physicially weak or ail- ing, the burden of motherhood is far heavier than it ought to be. The greatest lightener of the burdens of maternity which science bas ever discovered is Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. It was devised by an expert specialist for the express abject of strength- ening and healing the organs which make motherhood possible. i Taken before the baby comes, this won- derful “Prescription” relieves the ordeal of all danger and nearly all pain. It gives both mother and child a permanent in- crease of constitutional vigor. — The properties and uses of this wonder- working ‘‘ Prescription” are more fully de- scribed in one chapter of Dr. Pierce’s great thousand-page book, ‘‘ The People’s Com- mon Sense Medical Adviser,’’ which wiil be sent free, paper-bound, on receipt of thirty-one one-cent stamps to pay cost 0. customs and mailing only, Ot cloth-bound for fifty stamps. Address World’s Dispen- sary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y. Mrs. W. Robinson, of Springhill, Cumberland Co.. Nova Scotia, writes: ‘I feel that I cannot say enough about your ‘ Favorite _Prescription. a ws confined oti the 8th of April, and I was on'y sick about thirty minutes in all. I can truthfully say that your medicine worked wonders in my case. Although the physician was in the I did not seem to require his aid.” further embellished ,; might | way from the band. And now I must be got to like him and to believe that there off. ome up, you red brute!’’ was something wrong abcut the story, He gave the horse a friendly tap on It was in the June of 1855, just over the shoulder with the toe of his boot, } fifteen years azo. He was shoei a leu- Without picking up the reins, and the | ¢, nant with his regiment in the ¢ rimea, beast was round and off like a shot. He | They h t advanced trenches guard cout {train his horses to do anything {| on night, and th was a sudden attack with next to no trouble, I have heard. —one of those sharp little brushes the rome men can, Russians used to give vur fellows now _-—— und again. . l’ve heard, just to make CHAPTER IL. their own youngsters keep. It was all It was hadly dusk when Mrs. Marston at oe minutes; and then it tarnod pond coreg, Elect peal ee a oe oe friend was missing. turned her pair of gray Arab ponies into They thought he had been made pris- the compound. I had not expected her so early but by good luck I was ready. From nothing but my couple of utes’ talk with Marston I had got impression that his wife would b4as per- fect the rest of his appointments. A failure in that item wonld have in- fallibly left on his manner and bearings some certain trace of non-success: his assurance would not have been complete had it not rested upon a conviction that his supreme triumph was in the central enterprise of his life, Was it, I wondered at the first glance I gave to the little squippage, by some humorous design of making the beauti- ful creature I saw still more suggestive of a princess in fairy tale, that her hus- band had given her an ogre as an atten- dant? Vhe native groom who went to the min- as horses’ heads was certainly one of the most uncouth specimens of humanity I ever chanced to bebold. He was, I imagine, an Afghan—shcrt, squat, bow- legged, with an enormous chest, and a head that might have belonged to a giant. His beetle brows, nose and one i cheek were divided diagonally by a sword cot that must have sliced his } ; f — ~ skull like a pumkin, to judge from the scar it had left. The expresssion was not malign; tne submissive good nature of a brute that hardiy knows its own strength, or the surly surrender of a bear to it tamer—which is it? Mrs. Marton was only a girl, hardly one-and-twenty I should think. Very beautifnl, more perhaps, than any wom- an I had ever seen, but with a certain simplicity of grave girlishness in Ienk and bearing that struck me eyen more than her beauty. If she was shy, hershy- ness did not take the form of embarrass- ment. She was perfectly composed, and yet I do not think I ever knew any one get through the necessary formalities of greeting with so small an expenditure of words, She drove well, keeping her ponies up to their work, and standing no nonsense, They had no blinkers, and next to no 23 wld spiriced jittie bleaste 1 3372) ve drew up der the porch, witch as bucital with es ie : rois 1 f S wees, maisnauaei if ; } skje, ana J] itolinwsai be rousi lerge, cool rooms, exquisitel: resi: and frageant to the veranu.: on the - os rl al saw thas we were on the high : of a river, ucruss which i over ¢ Qrait pli.tn, aireauy gla) i l ii ro 1 G1 Vilight Obairs had been placed outside an ¢ ',eb spread almost on the edza of tre sandy cliff, below which the river spre wide in finod. She did not paus3 on t} r s» bet took me straight oa g iZ crdec to a servans us sh saroia said you were to lie down a long chair until bs eame,”’ sh : and i thought [ eould perceive na the savuisfaction of a person w i found a «ine toa puzzle ‘Au were to crink a giass of sherry. Tie, will bring it in a moment.’’ The j Sil AS lowr im lew ehnair arly oppasite and seemed, I thought, a littic at a loss, She nad prohably bee teld to amuse me until he came in, : cid not quite Know how it was to done. By and hy she began rather shyly :— ‘*Do you like India?’ ‘oe That is rather a large question, Mrz Marston I must localize my answer a little. I like along chair on an evening like this very well.’’ Perhaps I was still weak: my voice showed it, I dare say, for she went on:— ‘“*You must have been very ill. lam afraid you are very tired’’ ‘‘Your husband is determined to make me an invalid, so I have resigned myself, youses, I had madeup my mind that I was quite well again.’’ ‘‘A great many people died, didn’t they? Harold told me how bad it was there. I hope nune of your friends—”’ ‘*Every one is like a friend station, you know. ‘The manI missed most I knew least of, perhaps. He was not unhappy, I think, the friend who was in my mind when I spoke. He had carried a heavy load very travely and death lifted it off his shouiders and he could lie down and be at rest.’’ ‘“‘Will you tell me?’ she said, very gently. ‘‘Not ifit pains you, you know.”’ I felt Ll was doing an unwise thing; and yet I did it. She wanted to hear a sad story, poor child, that her own hap- piness might taste the sweeter afterward, perhaps; perhaps the still gloom and silence the gathering night made her thoughts find a fearful pleasure in hearing of death and sorrow. And I— the thing itsclf was so fresh in my memory, and yet my weary journey made the scene seem so remote. And then, explain it as you may, have felt since that a compulsion was upon me, “*‘T will tell you if you like,’’ I said. —_— CHAPTER JIL When I rejoined the regiment § at Alikot last year there was a man a few years senior to myseif who had been transferred to us in my absence. He was under acloud. They said he had misbehaved in action in the Crimea; but no one seemed to know what the real story was. He was a very quict, reserved fellow, with a tongue that could sting when he chose to use if, which he hardly ever did. A man who might have been popular; brains, good looks, everything in his favor—only that old story against him. Bpt that was of an | ng of the for a mo- appeared, had been sent by the offices in command with a massage to the bat- tery in rear of that pai the trenches. As bad inck would have it, the officer who sent him had been killed, I don’t suppose any one would have doubted the truth ey, if had pot men- tioned th her oflicer was stunding r was given, In- had been a question which of the two should be sent, So, al- most by chance, this man was asked what had passed, He said he had heard nothing of the fort, in an off-hand way enough at first, as if ne did not choosa to be mixed up in but when he was preased on the subject he asserted distinetly that My friend the order had not | battery; he had somethi sort and then all at once he id he coher or ment, He ws: t of f the st he ha AG ANYUEN by when the ord he said thera clause deed, the matter, been given. had not reached the turned baek on heating musketry fir- ing, he ssid. Well, thera was a private enquiry, and the result was that the thing was hushed up, passed over with out my friend being forinaily exonerated, Tbere had been a sort cf rivalry between him and the other fellow, but it was in- credible that any man could be guilty of a falsehood under such circumstances, The whole thing was in the regiment,and the commanaing oflicer was able to burke it. He probaby thought the young fellow’s nerve had failed him and wanted to give him another chance. (To be Cor tinued.) A Guaranteed Asthma Cure, Clarke’s Kola Compound Cares, Some years ago this would have been con- sidered an impoesibility, but Dr. C’arke sas solved the problem since completing n'‘s ex- periments with the wonderful Kola pliant in England. In December, 1893, he founJ, that by combining extracts from the Kola with other extracts made from ‘the Gren- doua nlant which grows in California, ibai the compound would cure the severest cases of asthma. Upon experiner.itg ‘2 one of the leading London uhornitais he found that 9% per cent. of the cis¢s were cured in from @ to 90 days’ v.reatment. Since the introduction of this 1emety into Canada in 1895 there have bee:y v7er S00 ecasee cured in Canada alone. Mr. R. N. flume, C. P. R. engineer, Western LY yisicn, writes : ‘“‘I have been a great suffe.er from asthma in its worst form for vver twe ve years, and never succeeded im vetting anything to help me permanent!y aatii the Cc. P. R. doctor prescribed Cakes Koa Compound for me in December, 18%, when two bottles entirely cured me; at least, I have not since had any return of the asih- ma. I am personally acquain.ied sith at least six persone who have bee» cure frem asthma by Clarke's Kola Compounl, and feel it my duty to recommend it ty» ali who may be troubled with this disease.” Three bottles are absolutely gverantecd to cure. A free sample bottle wi!l he seus to any person troubled with asthma. in a small ; | Address The Griffithe & Macpherson Ca.,, |} gole Canadian agenis, 121 Chiurck getreet, Toronto, Ontario. Sold by a‘! druggists. | Others mgy relieve, but C'xrke’s Kola | Compound for asthma permaneri'y .urea Scld by Geo. E. Hughe W hite’s Caramels and ‘Snowflake Chacolates =_ | | } | Can be had at any of the following first class stores: T. J. Morris D. L. Hooper W. Pickard & Co, W. A. Hatchesen W. EF. Carter Stewurt & Gates Sancersen & Co. Beer & Gell T LANDED Fire - Brrek —FRUM ENGLAND— Will be sold low Peake Bros & Co fe a Eee Co : ZZ wy Regtd WRUE/ WALTER'S TRUF, BRAND CUTLERY 1S MADE OF WARRANTED BEST STEEL, LEADING CEALERS SELt t¥. SAAN Castoria is fer Infants and Children. Cast S$ a harmiecss substitute for Castor Oil, Paregor._, ops and Soothing Syrups. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. It is Pleasant. Its guarantee thirty years’ use by Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays Feverish- Castoria cures Diarrhoea and Wind Coiic. Castoria Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. Castoria assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels of Infants and Children, giving healthy and natural sleep. Castoria is the Children’s »anacea—The Mother’s Friend. is ness, relieves 7 Castozia. | **Castoria is an excelient medicine for | children. Mothers have repeatedly told me of its good effect upon their children.” Castoria. ‘“Castoria Is sc well adapted to children that I recommend it as superior to any pre- | scription known to me.” H. A. ARCHER, M. D. Brookiyn, N. ¥ Dr. G. C. Oscoonp, Lowell, Mass. THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OF é APPEARS ON EVERY WRAPPER. THE CINT# JF COMPANY TT MURRAY STREET, NEW “ORK CrTY. ee EY Bee ee te he a ie ee ee sunt a. =~-Men’s and Boys Clothing SANUS GSAS ISU SS OS Sess a “> esi wis = rodinary Values that we wish you to see when we ask you to look at our Ready-to-Wear Clothing. Ordinary values you can see anywhere, but it’s a saving of at least 55 per cent, on your purchase. How can we do this? Because we bought the goods that much less, at the Doull and Gibson great retiring sale, and we give our customers the benefit of the low price paid for the goods, We always make it a rule when we bought at a bargain to sell at a bargain. MCDONALD & C0 J LEADERS IN LOW PRICE? Linen —=(Sollars 2 tcr 25 cents BEST VALUE. ‘ook cn Veo DA ES RUCE'S. BLACH SO3---- 3 PATRS FOR 25 cents D. & BRUCK, MORRIS BLOCK nares tare eT, = = . ; se eR RENE RUIN Bee se vem