A woman cannot be to health Her other is dependeat upo man should realize that he depends upon her health 1 When a woman complain gish, dizzy, nervous and average doctor attributes to heart trouble, or disord He is not right once in ten Ww hen a woman feels this ally sufferi: ig fr a Come the or rgans | listinct! y femin Favorite ’resc ription 1s known an for suffer acts directly on the delicat organs that bear the burde it makes them strong, he: ous. Thousands of women nervous, fretful and unhap day happy, heaithy, helpft the result of the use of this edv. It is the discovery of skillful physician, Dr. R thirty years chief consultir the Invalids’ Hotel and Su Buffalo, N. Y During th the assistance of a staff of ; he has prescribed for many -+7 Wii ters fror rite Presi ailing women He charge, answer let men. The ‘ Fave sale by all good medicine d ing else is ‘“‘just as good.” Sister Eliza I. de Falcon, o Nueces Co., Tex., writes: “ T! that I have been ill for twentv-c fina cured by your medicines tical Discovery and Favorite was completely cured after takir Laying of Corn OF KEW CHURG AT TRAC —AND— Crand - Ficnic On September Will be held on the Grounds, only a couple of from Tracadie Station. Tosee the Chur sh, to b games, oritory and mus iertained in most royal n the inviriable delight of al attend. Wi ithout further dé say, that we guarantee a | sermon on the occasion w by a distinguished pulpit « Besides reduced fares trains between Ch’town,Sc town ,special trains will le o'clock. 9.30 local, ai Jocal; returning will leave , o’clock. Snoould the weather prov it will be held on the follo —— happiness as 1 he best of ADIE. of her careful i wife agd it. Every wo- general health a womanly way. } of being slug- leap ndent the symptoms rs of the liver. mes, way she is usu- s or disease of e. Dr. Pierce’s all ig women. It and important s of maternity. thy and vigor- vho were weak, y wives are to- and robust as narvelous rem- in eminent and V. Pierce, for g physician to gical Institute, se years, with ble physicians, thousands of ladly, without | suffering wo- tiption’’ is for | alers and noth- 1esSC ' i Corpus Christi, | is 1s to tell you | 1€ years and was ‘Golden Med- Prescription.’ I | g this medicine.” | ey Stone H AT | * 90th. | udice, nothing more or less. ' young man’s course since?’’ He turned his piercing eyes abruptly New Charch minutes walk | | charmed by! and to be en- | anner, will “4 pas rtunate to taile sufficeit to g time. The | | be preached | rator. nm all regular iris and G-crge! - ive Ch’town at i Souris at & Tracadie at 5 e unfavorable ring day. i 0008 06090068 > 09:98 0068 OF + MONEY Te On Farm Property Estate within the limit jin 8ums of from twoto doi’ars at a reduction rates of interest. J. H. Reddi Block. Solirite NEWFOUNDLAND The Most Picturesque Summer: Resort in Am THE : SPORTSMAN’S F very river and lake along Newfoundland Railwa with trout t and eB The Shortest See Quickest Via the and safest route nOoYAL MAIL also on Real tor Cameron LOAN. 3 of the city ve bundred on current SHSSSSOSOSCOOS erica PARADISE. the hne of the v abounds mon. Voyage. to any STEBMER “BRUCE” A let] (Classe cd += Luesday, Thur lay evening or 1.C, LR. express. Returni Aux Basque every Mont and Friday evenings on arr express, FARE: Charlottetown to St. J: First Claes Second Clasa turn Leaves Nort! loyds) Sydney every lay aod Satur- arrival of the g leaves Port sy, Wedneraay val of St. Joho hn’s, Nfld. $20.05 10.30 33.81 Through tickets onsale at all stations on the I.C_R., C.P.R. and Str. Nav. Co. SB"The sex trip will be only 6 Hours. For all information app)y to R, G. REID, St. Joh 174t¢ ARCHIBALD & C' orth Sydney, C.B. n’s Nfid,; or )., Agents, | for part is | } | body S22 ee ee tee) yA rey tay er AN CHAPTER XII. ‘Bear fn mind that I was not origi- nally a secessionist. Seven years ago I went into the army because a lot of hot blooded fools had carried me along with my state out of the Union. There was no rebellion in my soul then. Three years ago I came back to my ruined plantation, scarred, heartsick, defeated, shattered in health and in fortune, with the black horror of reconstruction star- ing me in the face. It was then that I became a rebel at heart. You remember the affair that first brought me into per- sonal contact with our then provost marshal?’’ "ee." A shudder passed through the slight form by his side. The old man felt its vibrations through the small, cold hand he had taken caressingly between his own. **Good! I perceive that you are not altogether callous. Strong Martin, on that occasion, offered his life to wipe out the affront put upon me by a drunk- en negro. That the sacrifice was not complete is something we all have God to thank for. Have you followed that on her face. The crimson tide of con- sciousness mounted in a swift blush to her very temples. ‘*T hare done little else.’’ THE DAILY EXAMINER, ta rics SEPTEMBER 12 1898 oe SPOR OR RPANTS BELLU BAYES 7 Le SEALAERTE | How hee actu, COPYRIGHT. nr ves? © be tle ftont porch, whére he stood reflect- ing ® moment. Her sobs penetrated his ears and his heart. A sweet olive spread its glossy green canopy over the rustic bench where he and the professor fought their chess battles of evenings. He bent one of the limbs toward him and broke off a spray of the shining leaves and carried it back with him in- to the sitting room. Mamie sat where he had left her. She had conquered that wild impulse to sob and moan and was plaiting the fringe on the sofa arm with nervous fingers. **Good! I am glad you are not the hysterical sort that never stops crying when it once gets started. Adrien’s wife Was that kind.”’ ‘*Where is Annabel?’’ ‘‘In Cuba, the last we heard of her. I will give her the money to travel to Jericho if only she will leave us at peace. But—no, Martin is on the tapis just now. If he never earned the right to be called a hero during the war, child, he has during the harsher period of reconstruction. Who but he could have held in check the yelling, cursing, drinking demons that were howling for the blood of every white man within the radius of ten milesywhen the bullet riddled body of that rogue, Westmun, was brought here? It was a grand sight. that boy Strong, pallid from the loss oa The admission cost her a severe pang. | ‘Yes, but how? With the narrow personal iaterest of an angry, jealous | ‘woman, or from the broad platform of : one prepared to acknowledge his tran- | scendent merit?’’ **And.this from you?’’ **And this from me. Let me make a Sumbling admission before I go any farther. Through this entire period the prejudice that I have had the greatest difficulty in throttling is the prejudice against the overseer’s son—class prej- ‘‘I loved the overseer’s son,”’ said Mamie, her clear, candid eyes burning | the conviction of Her sincerity into his soul. ‘‘I believed in him and trusted him unti]—until— Oh, you cruel, cruel old man! Why have you come to tear the bandages off that old wound?’ ‘*Because I am too good a surgeon to leave a bandage on an unprobed wound. I have come to probe and to heal that old wound, dear child.’’ He got up and walked away from her. walked as far as the end of the Ht- ‘SUCCESSFUL MEN MANY OF THEM ARE HANDICAPPED WITH CATARRHAL DISEASES. Dr.A.W.CHASE COMES TO THEIR AID. Suecess in life is almost impossible a man with bad breath. Nobody wants to do »usiness with him. No- wants to associate with him. He is handicapped everywhere. Offen- sive breath comes from catarrh; some- from caterrh of the stomach, sometimes of the lungs, sometimes of the head, nose, and throat. It is from ecatarrh somewhere, and catarrh is an- other name for uncleanness, Many men understand this, and make every effort to cure it, but it is be- yond the reach of ordinary practice. No self-respecting man can ignore catarrh. If he has it in any form he makes constant effort to be rid of it. There is something about the man- ner of life and the climate of Canada that seems to breed diseases of the mucous membrane. Medical science ordinarily doesn’ t try to cure catarrh; it “relieves” it; but Dr, Chase has been curing catarrh for over thirty years, and his name is blessed by thousands who have shaken off the grasp of thi: insidious disease. Scld by all dealers, price 25 cents per box, blower free. times blood, suffering the tortures of a thousand deaths physically, springing in among them and cowering them by the mag- petic power of his voice and his daunt- less will. And since then. Ostracized, despised, musconstrued at every turn, he has pursued the rough tenor of his way with a dignity, an impartiality, a superb indifference to consequences that have marked him a truly great man.”’ ‘*He is fortunate in his eulogist,’’ said Mamie, smiling faintly into the fervent old face by her side. ‘*His eulogist! Not so. I am doing the man simple, bald justice. He has put this community where it could not have been put in a quarter of a century in point of prosperity unaided by his indomitable will and superior control of the freed masses of ignorance and la- ziness we have had to cope with. I tell you, girl, we cannot afford to give Strong Martin up. The neighborhood needs him. { need him. I am an old man, my child, and I have no son to hold up my feeble hands. His brother Seth is a good, well meaning child, who will live on, achieving his highest end {n administering his new duties as man- ager and paymaster to the hirelings on my place. He is well satisfied already with the new order of things. But he is. not Strong. Major Martin is my namesake, you know.’’ This with pat- ent pride. ‘‘Yes, I know, I know, but I don’t understand, You seem to be appealing to me—throwing this whole awful re- sponsibility on fay shoulders.’ ‘Ido. Lam. He is making his prep- ; arations to go away. He who for thres years noW has endured the torture of ostracism, hatred, injustice and cruelty from an entire neighborhood refuses any longer to stand the obdurate discourtesy of one stubborn girl.’’ ‘And is it you, the old aristocrat, who pleads the cause of the overseer’s son?”’ **T owe it to him.”’ **You owe it to him?’’ ‘“‘Yes, and a thousandfold more than I can ever repay. Girl, are you resolv- ed to make my abasement still more grievous? See, to carry my point, to bring a crumb of comfort to that noble, tired soul, I will tell you something I had never thought to breathe into 4 mortal’s ear. But if it will serve to con- vince you of the priceless value of the treasure you are about to fling away ig- norantly I will bare even that scar for your inspection. ‘*T owe Strong Martin a debt that far antedates and far transcends the war record he has made. Back yonder, in his college days—let me tell it as brief- ly as possible—my Adrien, poor weak son of a weak father, gambled himself into a disgraceful predicament. Strong Martin suffered vicariously for the un- detected wrongdoing of my grandson. His whole life was affected by it. It drove him into the enemy’s ranks. It was Adrien Strong who made a Federal of Strong Martin. It was from Adrien’s own lips I received this confession, when he thought he was going to die af the fever that made wreck of his intel- lect. Through all the imbittered years of his young manhood the overseer’s son protected my good name. Is that nothing to be grateful for? “Only within the last year has he known that I knew how much I owe him. I had not thought ever to let an- other mortal know it. Now do you mar- vel at my championship of his cause? Do you suppose it costs me nothing to place this perilows confidence in a girl?’’ She tarned her pitying, luminous eyes full upon him and laid her hand i gently on his shoulder: NTS alert mT ——~— MACKAY Mid Summer Sale. _ No exaggeration, we both talk and {give dargains; with this special list of ¢ 02 "s ard prices we have no occasion to exaggerate, as a call will convince the most fastidious. 12c, for 5¢ 25c, for 12¢ 90c, now, 25¢ Silk cord for fancy work worth 10c, now 2c ikread gloves Better glove Sunshades, former price Fancy black braid for dress trimming le, 3c, dc per yard, worth from 10 to 25c Ladies undervests, 106, 18, 22, good valuz Hooks and eyes ic card Silk dress laces worth Table doyles worth Colored Trimming silk from 10c}to 25c yard worth double what we ask for thei, Black sewing silk '0c, now 2¢ 10c, now dc le skein Colored twist worth from 4c to 6 per yard, now 2c. Hemstitsheld hdkfs Lace trimmed 4, worth 10c 10c, worth 20¢ Prints 5e per ¥ Black and colored sateens, former price now 12 to 15¢ per yard Colored and_black vsilk elvet } pric 50c for 25¢ yard 75¢ for 25¢ yard 1.00 for 50c yard 1.65 for 80c yard Aberdeen skirt clcser Dress Goods—see our prices on a few 1. » 33¢ for 15¢ yard 36c for 19¢ yard 55¢ for 29¢ for 30cyade for 32c yard 63c for 40c yard 1.45¢ tor 75c yard all these years. It wag ior that I first lovedhim. Ii Icould have proved it om your grandson, I would have done it—doue it gladly—but —did he—did he send you here to say all this to me?’’ **Martin send me here! No. But’’— he bent his white head in listening at- titude—-‘‘he is coming back for me. I hear his horses up the road.’’ He laid the spray of sweet olive upon her folded hands. ‘‘Mvy dear, may I not carry that olive branch to him from you? Love s@dom chooses so crabbed a go between, but I will carry your message to him faithfully and gladly, little girl. You alone can kesphim. Weneedhim. You are driving him away from us.’’ She stood up, trembling in every nerve. **T cannot, I cannot—I will not!’’ With a frightened cry she turned away from him. Theolive branch lay crushed and bruised beneath the old man’s heel. He ground it deeper into the matted floor, got up and went away without another glance at her. She heard him pace slowly down the garden walk, heard the gate close behind him, and a second later knew, by the furious trampling of horses’ feet, that Strong was conveying him homeward with all possible speed, “Thhve known it Tr | S j (To Le Continued.) THE ONLY HOPH! For Victims of Bright’s Disease is Dodd's — Pills, Not a day BRESCS on which the | newspapers do not record the death of one or more persons from Bright's ; Disease. Already its victims num- ber hundreds of thousands. by day the awful total grows larger. No class is safe from this destroyer. War and intemperance, with all their miseries and fatalities, are not responsible for as many deaths as have been caused by Bright’s Dis- ease. Yet, there is a way of resisting t; of drawing its poisoned fangs, and making it as harmless as a summer breeze. ‘That great medicine, Dodd’s | . most a ae ae e ‘e ae ae ot ve « te ee 4 ie KS oe * we e oe | The Universal Favorite. Gilentileith A blend cf rare old Scotch, known all over the world for its purity. Ask your wine merchant for Glenleith — Sole proprietors: Robertson Sanderson & Co. Ltd., Capital paid up $350.000. For Sale by all Leading Wine & Spirit Merchants it CE FEE" Y PETS > pga ie and leading Whisky of the day is PEL BY es Leith Scotland, Established 1846— BEPC E REY YE @ me el Sa mc High Grade. English Manures are the BEST, CHEAPEST, Day | market. Have been largely used here for 10 years, with gratifying results—ind without a single failure. Pamphlets etc., on application. and Only Reliable Fertilizer on th-o —————— I LT AULD BROS Kidney Pills, has cured thousands of ‘he worst cases. It never fails to cure, hopeless as the case may seem. Would you safely shield your loved ones from the fatal grip of this curse of mankind—Bright’s Disease? Then use.-Dodd’s Kidney Pills, the only cure on earth for this disease. Purnell’s Malt Vinegar. 7 PLAIN AND SPICED We have received a direct importa- ; ’ -< Ia tion from the old country of PuRNeL1’s Mar Vixecar. This vinegar cannot. be excelled for purity— The best vinegar for pickling— guaranteed to keep the pickles. The sPicep kind is particulary good. Try it. For Pickling—we sell all the difter- ent kinds of spices—also, currie powder in bulk, Tameric, and celery seed. SANDERSON & CO Wholesale & Retail. AMERICAN GINGER [WINE Best Quality CALL AND EXAMINE And Get Prices. SIMon VW Ca Walker s Corner STOVES & EARDWAR? sii a j | ae a a rtm a os er we: See 2