SAI RHEUM TORTURES Die away before the gical effect of Dr. Chase’s Ointment Rhein : et moe be. y o c j iS u 2 y j : ws and oimntr are2 a’ Ve rise to furtber ds int ment ; ; There is assurance that y and hur ers at i | ve g Dr. Cl es vr M of Aultsville, Ont., writes: “FR \ ciw i Sulferer from Salz R! hands were s id I had to wear £ Nothing seemed to help me ed to try Dr, ¢ hase’s Oint- n x cured me completely, Th a tra f the Salt Rheum left.'* Dr es Ointment has effected most miract cures in all parts of this great I Could you have better assurance that it re 4 For sale by all dealers, er Ema Bates & Co., Toronto, a eee The Charlottetown Steam Nay- gation Co., Ltd. ERS )orthumberland & Princess Leave os below every day (Sun-~ days excepted) From POINT DU CHENE (on arrival of efteroon train from St, John) for Sum- merside, connecting there with express train for ( harlottetown. Frm © JMMERSIDE (on arrive! of morning train from Charlottetown (for Point Due Chene connecting with day train for St. John. ng at Moncton with train for dat St.John with steamers of 1a! Line and railways for United Canade. Connec Canada a) Internatic States an ICTOU (on arrival of day train fax) for Charlottetown. HARLOTTETOWN, seven a. icton, (connecting there with or Cape Breton and Balifax, at ith C. A.&.P Line for Boston. Through tickets to te had at Grand Trovk,Cinoadian Pacific, Intercolonial and P. E. I. Railwave, and on the Company’s Steamers and conuecting lines in United States. F. W. HALES, SECRETAR PLANT LINE. Fréow from Ha Frota ‘ m., for day train Halifax w Ch’town, P El > BO! Commencing May 16th The ‘avorite ““S. §. HALIFAX” e Charlottetown for BOSTON iday at noon (Standard Time) Hawkesbury and Halifax. will lea every F calling a Returning leave BOSTON every Tues- day at noo. MTARLOTTE~ ore con “HALIFAX” Passer gers leaviny TOWN via Picton, nection at Halifax witn S.5 and “LA GRANDE DUCHESSE.” Tick et» forsale at staticnson P. E. I Ratiway. For tickets, rates and all in- format 101 ay ply to W.W. CLARKE, Agent, Charlottetown orto H. L. CHIPMAN, Canadian Agent, Halifax, N. 8S. Yay 3- BLACK DIAMOND LINE The &.S. BONAVISTA sailing from Montrea ,Sunday moroing,Jupe 11, will be due at Ch’town, Tuescay tuorning, Jane 13th. ard on Wednesday forencon will sail for St. Johns, Nfld, via North Sydney, with horses, cattle and sheep on deck and produce under deck at lowest possible rates. For further particulars ae to freight aad passage apply to PEAKE BROS &CO., Ch'town, June 7, Agents | | | THE DAsw: EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, JUNE 13, 1859 Joe oF DW TV hs J0YOU Santee ¢ SAM « & x ~ oa Le Ke ee ed won wr APPAR IMD wr'w & By L ZANGWILL, ; COMRADE,” 8 Copyrieht, 1895, by the Author. ; t9 Q . BARA AAAA OOOO IDIOT NR ean, 4 **Well, what are yon gaping at? Why don’t you say something?’ And all the the rapt artist at being interrupted by anything but praise was in the outburst. **Holy Moses!’’ I gasped. ‘“‘Give a man a chance to get his breath. I fal] throngh a dark antechamber, over a bi- cycle, stumble round a _ screen, and, smack, a glare of oriental sunlight from a gigantic canvas, the vibration and glow of a group of joyous figures Beokiug with life and gweat—you the idealist, the seeker after pature’s beau- tiful moods and art’s beautiful pat- terns!’ ‘Beautiful moods!’’ “he echoed an grily. ‘‘And why isn’t this a béaytifa! mood? And what more beantiful pat tern than this—look, this line, this eweep, this g:cup herd, this clinging of the children rgund this miass—all ina glow—barinced by this ihass of cool shadow? The meaning doesn’t izterferc with tho pattern, you chump!”’ “‘Oh, so there isa meaiing! become an anecdotal painter !’’ ‘* Adjectives be hanged! i can't talk theory in the precious daylight. If yon can’t see’’— “T can see that yon are painting something you haven’t seen. You have not been in the east, have you?’’ “If I had, I haven’t got time to jaw about it now. Come and have an ab- sinth at the Cafe Victor in memory of old Paris days—Sixth avenne—any of the boys will tell you. Let me see, day- light till 6—half past 6. Au ‘voir, au *voir!’’ As I went down the steep dark stairs *‘Same old Dan,’’ I thought. ‘'Whe would imagine I was a stranger in New York looking up an eld fellow strucglerx on his native heath? If I didn’t know better, I might fancy his tremendous success had given him the same opinion of himself that America has of him. But, no; nothing.will change him—ihe same furious devotion to his canyas once he has quietly planned his picture, the same obstinate conviction that he is seeing something in the only right way And yet something has changed bina. Why has his brush suddenly gone east: Why this new kind of composition crowded with figures—ancient Jews Has he been taken with piety and is he going henceforward ostentatious] to proclaim his race? And who is cheerful central figure with the open face? ecene in Jewish history—or anything so joyous. Perhaps it’s a study of mod impatience of You's. ie toot th: fin tne “quiet corner pbenind the billiard tables. “I’ve juet been opalizing your eb- sinth for you,’’ he laughed as we sat down. ‘‘But what’s the matter? You look kind o’ scared.’’ ‘It’s your inferno of a city. As] } turned the corner of Sixth avenue an SR CNS OS TS CNL ES EP eae I don’t recollect any such | ern Jerusalem Jews, to show their life | is not all Wailing Wall and Jeremixh. Or perbaps it’s only decorative. ica is great on decoration justnow. No, he said the picture bad a meaning. Well, I chall know all about it tonight. Anyhow it’s a beautiful thing.’’ ‘Same old Dan,’’ I thonght more decisively as, when I opened door cf the little cafe, a burly, black bearded figure with audacious came at me with @ grip and a slap aid a roar of welcome and drarce: ever the eves — : What woman ¢< n't on want a dainty enough to be cradled in a snow- white lily? manly woman wants one, but she doesn’t want too daintya baby. A babv’s cheeks may be too waxen-white and its body too puny, and when that’s the case, baby’s cheeks won’t dimple or its lips laugh, and death is in its eyes. Above all things a woman wants a healthy baby, and she may have one if she will but BE FACTS \BOUT BARIES, | Aimer: ! ~s . baby—a dimpl- | fing, laughing darling, | Every wo- | use the right remedy for weakness and dis- } ease of the delicate and important organs that make baby a possibility. Favorite Prescription is the best of all med- icines for prospective or would-be mothers. It makes a woman’s distinetive organism strong, healthy and vigorous. It allays in- fiammation, soothes pain and heals ulcera- tian. It banishes the discomforts of the waiting time and maxes the little new- comer’s entree to the world easy and almost painless. It insures baby’s health. In writing for advice to Dr. R. V. Pierce, for thirty years chief consulting .physician to the Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute, at Buffalo, N. Y., a mother, wife or maid writes to one of the most eminent and skill- ful specialists in the world, at the head of a staff of physicians that has treated over 250,000 women, “ When I was taking your treatment, I sent in the names of three ladies who were sterile,” writes Mrs, M. A. Scott, of Park Rapids, Hubbard Co., Minn. “One had been married seven years and had no children, and after taking Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription she gave birth toa big girt inside of a year. The ot one was confined within a year and a half, after going six 7 without having any children. do not know how the third one came out, for we moved away. Torpid liver and constipation are surely and speedily cured by Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. They never gripe. They regulate, tone up and invigorate the liver stomach and bowels. No substitute urged by mer cenary dealers is as good. Dr. Pierce’s | ee , elevated train came shrieking and ram- bling, and a swirl of wind swept screeching round and round, enveloping me in a whirlpool cf smoke and steam, until, dazed and choked in what seemed the scalding effervescence of a collision, I had given upall hope of ever learning what your confcunded picture meant.”’ **Ahal’’? He took a complacent sip. “It staid with you, did it?’ And the light of triumph, flushing for an instant his rugged features, showed when it waned how pale and drawn they were by the feverish tension of his long day’s work. **Yes, itdid, old fellow,’’ I said affec- ticnately. ‘‘The joy and the glow of if, ana ¥3t also some strange antione simplicity and restfulno** Fon have got into 2, I know wot how, have been with me all day, comforting me in the midst of the tearing, griuding life of this closing nineteenth century after Christ.’’ A curious smile flitted across Dan's face. He tilted his chair back and reet- ed his head against the wall. ‘*There’s nothing that takes me se¢ much out of the nineteenth century after Christ,’’ he said dreamily, ‘‘as ‘his little French cafe. It wafts me back to my early student days, that lie somewhere amid the enchanted mists of the youth of the world, to the zest- ful toil of the studios, to the careless trips in quaint, gray Holland, or flam- ing, devil may cure Spain. Ah, what scenes shift and shuffle in the twinkle of the gas jet in this opalescent liquid —the hot shimmer of the arena at the Seville bullfight, with its swirl of colo1 and movement; the torchight procession of pilgrimsrcund the church at Lourdes, with the one black nun praying by her self in a shadowy corner; the lovely valley of the Tauba, where the tink) of the sheep bells mingles with the Lnu- theran hymn biown to the four winds from the old church tower; wines that were red; sunshine that was warm, mandolins.’’ His voice died away as in exquisite reverie. ** And the east?’’ I said slyly. A good natured smile dissipated his @elicions dream. **Am yes!” he said. ‘‘My east was the Tyrol.”’ “*The Tyrol! How do you mean?’’ *“IT see you won’t let me out of that story.’’ “‘Oh! There’s a story, is there?’’ **Oh, well, perhaps not what you lit- erary chaps would call a story! No lovemaking in it; you know.’’ 3’? ‘“‘Then it can wait. Tell me about your picture.”’ “But that’s mixed up with the story.’’ *‘Didn’t I say you had become an an- ecdotal artist?’’ “‘Tt’s no laughing matter,’’ he said gravely. ‘‘Yon remember when we parted at Munich a year ago last spring, you to go on to Vienna and I to ge back to America? Well, I had a sudden fancy to take one iast European trip all by myself, and started south through the Tyrol with a pack on my back. The third day out I fel] and bruised my thigh severely and could not make my little mountain town till moonlight. And I tell you I was mighty glad when I limped across the bridge over the rushing river and dropped on the hotel sofa. Next morning I was stiff as a poker, but I struggled up the four rick- ety flights to the local physician and being assured I only wanted rest I re- solved to take it with book and pipe and mug in a shady beer garden on the river. I had been reading for about an hour when five or six Tyrolese, oid men and young, in their gray and green costumes and their little hats, trooped in and occupied the large table near the inn door. Presently I was startled by the sound of the zither. They began to sing songs. The pretty daughter of the house came and joined in the sing- ing. I put down my book. “The old lady who had served me with my maass of beer, seeing my in- terest, came over and chatted about her guests. Oh, no, they were not villagers: they came from four hours away. The slim one was a schoolteacher, and the dicker was a tenor and sang in the chorus of the Passion spiel. The good looking young man was to be the St. John, Passion play! I pricked up my ears. When? Where? In their own vil- lage—three days hence—only given once every ten years—for hundreds and bundreds of years. Could strangers see it? What should strangers want to se¢ it for? But could they see it? Gewiss This was indeed a stroke of Iuck. I had always rather wanted to see the Passion clay, but the thonght of the fashion- “19 QOberammergan made me sick Would 2 pine “eT + LO ve VOTgestelil: matoer, t was not ten minutes after this in- troduction before I had settled to stay with St. John, and clouds of good American tobacco were rising from six Tyrolese pipes, and many an ‘auf Ihr Wohl’ was busying the pretty Kellner- inn. They trotted out all their repertory of quaint local songs for my benefit—it sounded bully, I tell vou, out there With the sunlight and the green leaves and the rush of the river—and in this aroma of beer and brotherhood I blessed my damaged thigh. Three days hence! Just time for it to heal. A providential world, after all. ‘‘And it was indeed with a buoyant step and a gay heart that I set out over the hiils at sunrise on that memorable morning. The play was to begin at 10, and I should just be on time. Whata walk! Imagine it! Clear coolness of dawn, fresh green sparkling dew, the road winding up and down, round hills, up cliffs, along valleys, through woods Where the green branches swayed in the morning wind and dappled the grass fantastically with dancing sunlight. And as fresh as the morning was I felt the artistic sensation awaiting me. J swung round the last hill shoulder, saw the quaint gables of the first honse peep- jng through the trees, the church spire rising beyond, then groups of Tyrolese converging from all the roads dipped down the valley, past the quiet lake, up the hills beyond, found myself caught in a stream of peasants, and, presto, was encked from the radiant day into the deep gloom of the barnlika theater, : (To be Cablistied. j a ct Guard! —_e AO Le 6 on our PILLS. Taye “ “FB see aqua geteett Te og ttt t : a ost atthe ate Ee rcgmetae tal Laity eRe aecnnse. 5 sib THE BEST Is always imitated, Dodd's Kidney Pills, sold only in boxes like this, are widely imitated, because they are the _— Kidney cure. Take none ————— aWIVAS. Tam open to purchase five hundred bbis Alewives ~ Horace Haszard, Charlottetown une | 18892w eod, wii. S$ Gity of Ghent PICKFORD & BLAGK eet nage = emcee ee eet ae mn ere zo 5 ress eee > = a es - = HALIFAX. AND CHARLOTTETOWN S.8. City of Ghent will eail from Charlottetown every Friday st 7 v’clock during the season of 1899 for Halifiax, calling at Summerside, Port. Hastings, Port Hawkesbarry, Aricha', Canso, leaac Harbor, Salmon River Sheet Harbor, re- turning, will leave Halifax every Toesday at 6 p. m. making some calle. The Steamer has excellent passenger accom - odatione. Salvonamidsbip. Special low freights will be given this st acon. Further information apply to W. W. CLARK Agent Ch’Town May 27 tf “ SUNNYSIDE” DENTISTRY NY NE Sea aCUs Office in New Prowse Blok, first door te the right up stairs, DR. AYEPS eG assassins wit _ ee cote hl ts we ee ee eee What is Fi ANS SNR Castoria is for Infants and Children. Cast Sa harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregor_, cops and Seothing Syrups. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years’ use by Milliens of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays Feverish- ness. Castoria cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. 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. Casteria is the Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend, relieves Castoria. Castoria. “Castoria is an excellent medicine for| ‘Castoria 1s sc well adapted to children children. Mothers have repeatedly told me | that I recommend it as superior to any pre- oi its good effect upon their children.” | Scription known to me.” Dr. G. C. OsGoon, Lowell, Mass. | H. A. ARCHER, M. D. Brooklyn, N. ¥ THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OF EMESIS - te ie —* ° . et SInvennanesntnt teennee reerenereetner tren eararnaten nner Men's et «tai Shirts Underwear Collars Ties Gloves t lit VOPEATITYDS PPYATATEY TES HPT MRT TET P PINE H AS PPT ATE PT ITT INT DSSS 9994 SOOO 06 OO GOSS SSHH OSE CH HD SSPE F906 1) BebAbiheMAdddeddbed AAAdddads MadQaeddddadddddddddaddddddadsddddd AMA WAUAAAAAAAAAAASMGGbUMMUUDADAAL4AL4AALSNUADUA «! AALAMMAMM 15: AAD PR EAST EIT STE 5. ED . LY TTS Your nearest friend Underwear. To-mcrrow or next day you mav require /yionds. We can show vhere these friends can be had m the good kind —they will cling to you and prove to be friends, indee’, Visit our store and we will incroduce you tc them DP. J. B. MACDONALD and Co’y WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED 10 dozen pairs of the celebrated Withim $3.00 shoe, for men, in nut brown, tans, and black, in boxcalf and dongola, in all widths Withim $3 shoe for men is giving the greatest satisfaction of any shoe made in Canada for the money, and better than many. told at more money by other makers. Try a pair, for sale hy J. B.MACDONALD & CO. GC own = i —~ SY MORRISBLOCK ie. ee as