THE ~ po) AILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, APRIL 23, 1898 Of all the | bereave m« nts which are possi : } to hom : ¢ ] = « ach 3 a perhaps t) most f aisappo | At ox id the ¢ bear ing | heated ell | * summer in New York City as many-as a thou- sand babies have died in week. Of course, in a crowded city, with its unsani- ¢ tary districts, Fs manyrof chese : deaths would 3 have occurred - any way. The SF act remmair s that this tremendous mortality gas to.a great extent cue to the lack of Eahefent resisting power in the victims. mese babies when born had in their bodies the seed Gise ass The deadly heated yen only shortened the period ef their {f a woman wishes her babies to be galthy and strong and able to resist the { gaa! ailrie nts of childhood, she must take Be oper care of herself in a womanly way Mane the period of gestation. A woman go saffers from weakness and disease of gectgans distinctly feminine is onfitted geviichood and meétherhood. Dr. Pierce’s rot’ Prescnption is a wonderfal med- sé or ailing womer It acts directly on ee délicate and important organs con- weréd. It makes them well and strong. faluys inflammation, heals ulceration, ptkes pain, stops exhausting drains and moves rest and tone tothe tortured nerves. Mousands of wamen. have testified to its Wimest miraculous merite. Many of them ive ppermitted their. mames, addresses riences and photographs to be te pro- eed mm Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Med- al Adviser. This great book used to sell $4.60, now it is absolutely free. It tells yiadeut the home-treatment of ordinary geasee. It contains too8 pages, and over giuluetrations. Several chapters are de- gedio the diseases of women. Fora pa- eecovered copy send 31,9 ¢-cent stamps, me cover cost of custome and mailing gly, t the World's Dispeasary Medical meociation. Buffalo, N. Y.; Cloth binding, geents. ‘' Favorite Prescrintion” is sold all. duvggists. : TheEssence of the Virginia Pine } DR. HARVEY’S SOUTHERN RED PINE itoushs <-° +Promptly °°*° : | Children like it . It likes them @; Dees-notupset the stoma ‘ i THE -HARVEY MEDICINE CO,.. MONTREAL. 100A RAO OOOO 000006,8 S'S COCO! { ENGLISH BREAKFAST COCOA Posaesses the following Distinctive»Merits: s DELICACY OF FLAVOR. SU ERIORITY in QUALITY. A GRATEFUL, and COMFORTING the NERTOUS or DYSPEPTIC. ITIVE QUALITIESUNRIVALLED In Quarte>#ound Tins only. evred by JAMIIS EPPS & CO., Lrd.. “Og@opathic Chemists, London, Encland. REMOVED, eee rn Rie — 5 *G Jury has removed his jewel 7 Canegs to st., Oppo r 41Stambels’s harness shop, where % Creat in @o. his old now pre- to see all he 17 ’ oan : ™ ia Waten repairine Py } } ‘ h De } lea & dl Lu .. ) ‘attend to : customers iS 4 iit "Hi guarantee to regulate the m Be toy n ch ck, as it is the stand _ lor Sime. Fr Yr J ews uy and es his prices can't be beat. J ust * i ved, & new supply of watche 8, | “Stud ealid gold wedding rings. WC. JOR Great C ecge S troet. Ch’ toew n. “te on Moun Edward Roa’, * » fe outbuildirga. An Orcb- el abcut 14 miles fram iown. "€ farm willbe sold ata Laer- op Paey terms. Apply to CLEM. BENOIT, Exreke Hotel ~ MARRY a = “= SYNOPSIS. Peter Clephane and Andrew Kilgour are cousins, students at Edinburg University, | between whom is a better fend. The | former is the son of a rich city lawyer and his consin is the heir of an estate in the Highlands that has almost pasced into the | hands of creditors. After a bitter fight with his cousin, Kilgour is ov his way home wheo he falls in with company at the “Houod and Stag” inn at Perth. Arrived home his companion on the journey turns out to be his uncle, Peter Clephane’s father. lo retrive his fam:iv’s fortune Andrew is | senttol dia. CHAPTER IX ‘Then you lied when I took you beard,” I said, sternly, interrupting | him in th midst of his narrative. Even a sea-robber may have his honour, and for the present foible was to hate lying. | * Could I guess your that girlish face 7?” he asked, with an’! impudent = grin. ‘You might be a | missionary ship.” | | (Continued.) on | cod: my of trade from ‘T em no liar,” I eaid, severely, while comscience whispered ‘“ Impos- toe. “ And I swear by the rover’s flag:I will follow truth,” said the rogue, with @ broader grin than ever. “Are we; not brothers, and should not .our souls | be as dials in the sunlight ? Yea, and I love the brave Englishman. In } Egypt and Africa have I not known | him, amd im the Persian gulf have 4 not see: with joy his skill in slashing eff heads ? He is the angel demon of the world. He will make good the | black Ethiopian, and sell rum and take ships and make himself rich with what others have gathered. I love him as a brother.” Naturally I was gratified hy high and impartial testimony to noble qualities of mry countrymen. In his rwumaging Abratin ben Aden came upon my armoury. “ What a man of arms you are tobe a boy in years’” he exclaimed, with some excitement. “ Here are weapons for a whole ship’s crew!” And select- ing a sword he drew it from the scab- bard and began to feel its edge. ‘Not so fast,” I sald, stepping up to him. “These are dangerous. You talk of magic ; let me warn you of the this the .and precious stores, and herooic magic| there is in these wez2pons:”’ “Yea, I believe in their magic,” ‘he amawered, complacently, “‘ but is it not the magic of the arm that wields them ? I know a good blade when 1. sex it. Choose ye one, and we will have | fome sport. May I perish if I am not ' forgetting the ring and the gleam of, steel! See, see how ft bends! Tis: a welhtiempered blade. Yea, and it is light \47% the hand.” And he made a Cimie .of sunbeams about his head. I stepped. back, my hand instinctively | seeking the hilt of my pistol, and said indifterently that I was not in the hn- | mowr ‘fer sport. The truth was I was not humour to take any present | risks «rot absolutely necessary. With | a shale of disappointment and vexa- | tion, he thrust the sword back into its sheath and returned it to its place. We fnad-am early supper, and went t getting a closed- Il lay awake un- | snore; then early to‘bed; my gu off berth to himeelf. til I heerti his stertorous I crept seftiy upstairs, and gathering ali the weapons toegther, carried them down ami ‘hid them in my cabin. It was better that Abram ben Aden should mot we tempted to do mischief While I siept. CHAPTER X, ALOXE ONCE MORE. } Whatever ewil,abram ben Aden may & «ve harboreé in.the secret chambers <y' his heart, his bearing toward me was the esseme.ef courtliness and friendship. My a@wn brother could not bie more #Qlicitous for my hap- pho f the m loval cf #enchmen readier.to do me service. Whe, f: 1 seme chance expressi ; ef mine, h liseyevered that I was jus r Com rin {from 242 ™m tal illness an broke into fresh shantings of my val- our a i tude, anr d on tak- ing on himself the duties of cook and genera rsonal ; lant It js not meet that heroes should do the work of slaves,” he said. ‘* Leave it to mee, who am but a common mor- tal. Iam happy in serving SO valiant @ master and s0 generous 2 benetfac- is should have been of the pee ar (a famous Arabian poet) tor, one whose dee the Kaahel Afi bimself.” A blunt man like myself i at a grave disadvantage in dealing with a courtier. In spite of his fine words, I mistrusted my guest as much as ever. | That he covetes! my possessions I knew, and that he haai designs on my throat inspiring theme ress I more than half suspected, yet I coulé4 not resist his advances nor deny his sallies of wit and humour the meed of a smile. He was insistently ami ' infectiously light-hearted, for he took life like a gambier’s game, in which | success and faliure should be accepted | with equal equanimity. Evidently he | had made up his mind not to be de- pre ssed. He had ether populas qualit besides To tpe aplomb the man of action and the peculiar knowledge of the man of the world, he united the imggination of the poet and the happy audacity of the born : mancer. His adventures had been many and marvellous, and no man was ever his own Homer to finer effect. He had seen more with his two bodily eyes than I had ever dreamed of, and he inyested his tales with a glamour that professional story-tellers would have enyied, I do not think his ree citals were remarkable for a strict ad- herence to fact, but there could be no question of their fascination. His ang charming ies ro- 1 ort talk was like @ sojourn in the land of enchagiment pnd fowers, and. fraerance | (Copyright, 1893, by John Alexander Steuart.? ant Tair Worien, and palaces and gold ex- the made Baron ploits, and all the raptures of brightest realms of fancy. He the Arabian Nights tame and Munchausen a common falsifier. To give variety to the entertain- ments, one day he proposed that he should teach me Arabic. “Know that.Abram ben Aden, though a rover, is likewise a master of liter- ature,” he said, with a superb flourish of his; arms; ‘“ the poets are his espe- Cial delight. They are greater than the magicians ; they are as a flame in the soul which fluminates the uni- verse. But how is the adventurer, the corsair, to.carry the songs of the poets With him’? Why, here,” tapping his forehead. ‘“‘Here is the chamber in which the poets have their abode, and here,” producing a greasy volume from the folds of his dress, “is what the prophet gave to the faithful as a con- solation till they are translated to en- joy forever the love of the houris. “You are an infidel, but what of that ? You know what joy is, you |} know what sorrow is. You have feel- ings, appetites, aspirations—you are a man. You hope to get to’*heaven. I will show you the way, and while I show you shall learn the Arab’s ton- gue. Come, my merry infidel, you shall yet converse as a brother with the children of the desert. Yea, and Shelebi dates and dip thy fin- the dish that swims with the More, my gal- eat El gZers in fat of sheep and goat. lant cut-throat— And thou on honey drew shalt feed And drink the milk of paradise. "Tis the song of one of our poets which thou shalt learn, my brave one.” And with an air of having the erudition of Alexandria at his fingers’ ends, he forthwith began my instruction. He proved a good teacher, and I was not an inattentive nor, I think, an inapt pupdl. One rule my tutor made and adhered to rigidly, and that was that we should talk nothing but Ara- bic. It was a sore trial of patience at first, but I persevered and in a week—such was my diligence—was able to converse with tolerable fluency. The second week I was deep in the Koran dnd able to follow my teacher in his recitations from the Arabian poets ; the third week I was reciting myself. Abram ben Aden was delighted with his success. “By the prophet’s mantle,” he said, “‘T will have you in paradise yet. Your speech diready is .as.of one pred in the desert. You have the Arab’s tongue, and next will come the Arab’s faith. And all thy brave deeds will be for- given. Why should not the bold cor- sair have happiness .at last ?’’ As a diversion to our studies, he lured me, rather against nry judgment, into. a daily bout with the sword. “It will keep your hand and eye true,” he said, insinuatingly. “Let the master practise on his slave. Methinks you take joy in the flash and ring of the steel. All brave men do. By the sword of Sikandar el Rumi, there is the stuff of a fighter in you. This sliip with all its plunder shows it. Yet you will not let your blade drink your servant’s blood.”’ It was not likely I would, but there Was no°* assurance that my = servaut would exercise a like restraint over his blade. Indeed, on second thoughts, his proposition seemed to me a ruse to try my mettie and wheedle me into an overweening comeeit with myself that would give him his opportunity. Happily, I was not entirely ignorant in the of the sword, for my graver studies had been interrupted, perhaps too often, by prolonged fencing bouts. But then I was far from thinking my- lf an expert. So that it was no light matter to stand up before a man of unknown skill and suspicious motive, whose greatest delight it might be to spit me at the very first go off. Never- use Se theless I had given my consent, and it would have been ‘both folly and cowardice to go back. So I put on my stoutest front, though, te be can- did, the naked, wicked flash of our weapons in the sun caused *re a nasty sensation. It was but momentary, for the demand of every fac- mind and body was too keen me.time to be afraid. discovered that Abram ben Aden was a skilful swordsman, with a sure and rapid eye, great length and suppleness of arm, and the confidence which comes of many triumphs. Yet however, uity of to leave I soon I rung him blow for blow, and ended the first encounter in a glow of satis- faction. We were both nimble as goats, and I believe a spectator would have said the fencing was lively. For in hour each day we exercised thus, and my companion’s good humour con- nued unabated, (To be Contioned.) * Ager’s Cherry Pectoral saved my little girls’ lives when they had Whooping Cough.” Mrs. A. H. BEERS, Barnes, N. Y. Adsice Free. Address, J. C. ATER CO., ee Lewell, Mass., U.S. WANTED. — Coat and Vest makers, at D. A, BRUCES -_— —_ i We wage a ceasless war against high grade goods, WAR. prices and low GOOD GOODS, LOW PRICES But they For example, our prices on Children Clothing, Ready-to-wear Clothing, are lower than Clothing has ever been sald on P- E (sland before, must be seen to be appreciated, ’s, Youths’ and Men's Also startling valnes in HATS & GAPS. W. D. McKBRAY, Successor to McKay Woolen Co. —~ pcan THEIR ONLY WANT STANDARD LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF HDIN BU RG=. (Established 1825) ; seated ASSETS, - - $42,000,000.00 Deposit with Dominion Government, - - - 3, Invested in Canada, - - - + © «© es e.« J POLICIES WORLD-WIDE AND FREE OF RESTRICTION PAYABLE IN GCLD. 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