: “A wotman’s rank } fullness of her wo- * manhood.” A sick )weman, a nefvous swomgn, a fretfyl woman, a woman iwho suffers from weakness and dis- ease of the delicate and important or- gans that consti- tute womanhood, a woman doomed to childlessness, is mnoft a real woman The most glorious duty and privileg: of womanhood is motherhood. The childless woman cannot be a happy 4 woman iressing touch of full }a WOMAT ' who go through life without knowing the supreme happiness l, who go each y throuch a fait but ry round of work, and li 3s and usu ally pain-racked | they neg ¥ect to take « of themselves in a wo- manly way. Dr. Pieree’s Favorite Prescrip tion is the Tr ! 1 f ll medicine for ailing w tly on the lalin . et ’ . ’ s¢ delicate and import ns that mak maternity pos t makes them wel] and strong. It fits for wifehood and moth etrkood. It banishes the dangers of mater- nity. It does away with the discomforts of the period of anticipati nd makes baby’s coming easy and almos: painle 58 It in- sures the new comer’s health and an ample supply of nourishment. Thousands of homes that only lacked a baby as a final binding tie, now bless this marvelous rem- edy for the ring of childish laughter It othes pain, tones the nerves and makes a woman's work easy. Al! tiédicine dealers t ; 3 sell it. SU) a wniscarried four times.” writes Mrs. Flor- efice Hunter, of Corley, Logan Co., Ark. ‘‘ Then, after taking four bottles of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Pres ription I made my husband a present of a fine, healthy girl.’’ Tiny, sugar-coated granules that always cure biliousness and coustipation—Doctor Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. and invigorate the stomach, liver bowels. 7 All good med cine dealers have them. Nothing else ‘‘just as good.” ! % $ ’ ° 5 é ° ADVICE ABOUT 5 pice. When ordering a package of Pepper, Ginger, A llspice, Cin namop or Cream of Tartar from your grocer you can al- ways feel sure of securing the best quality by asking for: :: Mott's I Have Just Completed My Wew Oyster Place. Call and eee the brilliant display of beautiful oysters on and off the ehell. Onur Oyster king is standing in the window. Bee him, and then you will eat John P. Joy, VICTORIA CAFE Great George Street. ae bes @ 64 fF 6666 DB S&S 606646080664 eoe.e 2088 604634 28 Bt 1 eS Oe 8 : ? : : ———— + --- eewcoceceecesccoue THz —s& Birkbeck investment Security and Savings Company Head Office: TORONTO CAPITAL SUBSCRIBED PAID-UP = ~ + = -s $2,000,000 500,000. RESIDENT ADVISORY BOARD. CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND HON BENJAMIN ROGERS, Chairmat. W.H. AITKEN, Eeq,, M. P. HOGAN, Esq., S. W.CRABBE, Eeq., CHARLES LYONS, Esq., Solicitors: MESSRS. M. & D. C. McLEOD. Appraieer: HENRY C. LOWE. Localj Secretary -Treasuer: HORACE HASZARD, Esq. HORACE HASZARD, Agent FOR SALE OR T0 LET. That well known business Hotel on ichmond Street, near the market. Pe ood This Hotel conta‘ns about twenty rooms and shop, all in good repair. ’ lies in the | | py women | They regulate | and | | two lives? THE DOCTOR, (Continued. ) “What!” Can it #??¢ No, but you [ook like him, but he is dead, has been dead died years ago—what does it mean? Is my brain going wrong again? No, no, no, but you look so like him and he had no brother.” ‘Don’t excite yourself, Maggie; I come as your physician and mnst not endanger your life. But you are growing strong. I see that. A little care and the danger will be past. I am Edward Creighton, to whom you confessed your love more than six years ago. Iam not dead, though John Warn- dyke made you think so.” The dark eyes were centered on the countenance and for a minute she was silent. Not yet could she be fully assured of what she heard and saw. ‘‘VYes, it is he Edward. I know that noble countenance. He was the truest man that ever lived, and how I loved him |” She was murmuring to herself, and any one beside the Doctor would have believed her mind was wandering, but he knew her senses had crystallized and they were riewing each other through the windows of the soul. He still held the hand, but spoke not. ‘‘Edward, no woman ever loved man as I loved you, and no man ever loved woman more than you loved me. John sought me first, but I turned him aside for you. I thought he had given me up, but he came to me with the wotul word of your death at Petersburg. Iwas broken hearted, help- less, homeless, with no friends, and grateful when he offered himself again. He took me, it is | knowing my heart was with you.” A hot tear dropped upon tie tiny hand imprisoned in that of the Doctor, but that was all. “God knows I] cannot censure you, Maggie, but what of him who has wrecked I must settle with him.” “He is my husband, the father of little Alice there.” ‘I am mortal and his crime is beyond mortal forgiveness.” She repeated more softly, more gently, | more pleadingly than before, with the great lustrous eyes looking up in his : ‘fie is my husband—the father of little Alice there.” He shifted his gaze to that of the sleep- | ing child, ‘**Yes, your child—his daughter—with all your loveliness, and thank ‘iod, none of his | hard, cruel features.” The hand nestling in the broad palm crept out and the wasted fingers aed far as they could around those of the Doctor. Their grip tightened so strongly that he withdrew his gaze from the child and look- ed wonderingly into the mother’s face. **Will you promise me, Edward ?” **Promise you what, Maggie ?” **To harm him not—it is for my sake; it is for the sake of little Alice there. Ed- ward, have I your promise ?” The grand head bent lower and the lips esahel not hers, but the smooth, cool forehead, from which all fever had fled. He did not speak—he could not, but with a face as it was the face of an angel, she said, looking up in his face : “Thank you, Edward.” Through the moan and howl of the bliz- vard came the thudding report of a Win- chester just outside. The door was hastily pushed inward and John Warndyke, his cadaverous face livid as death itself, bound- ed in. “The guich is full of Indians! shall we do, Doctor?’ ‘*Fight.” was the calm reply, the .physi- What —— Seeieeeineiennenal _ - Dr, A. W, Chase Tells a Friend That Fighty Out of Every Hundred of Humanity are Afficted by Kidney and Liver Troubles, Dr. Chase in his wisdom foresaw the meed there would be for so grand & medicine as Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills, and so universally have they be- come known and used that go where you will round the globe, you'll be able to buy therm They are a pleasant medicine, effec- tive, quick to act, mild to use, but pow- erful in healing. For Constipation, Bil- jousness, Stomach Disorders, Bright's Disease, Diabetes, Urinary Troubles, Rheumatism, Skin Bruptions, Pimples, Impure Blood, they are specific. None genuine but those having the signature and thead-cut of Dr. A, W. Chase. Beware of counterfeits, THOS. MILLER, Esq., MERCHANT, LUCKNOW, ONT., Cured of Serious Stomach Troubies, Here is What He Says: I was troubled for twenty years with acute stomach trouble and consti- pation, and had tried almost every- thing I could hear of, but got no re- Mef. Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills were recommmended to me. The first dose I took gave me relief. I found them to be the thing I had been lwok- Stabling for thirty horse», with large yard pay gor They have cured me. ™ coanection, A-ply to THOMAS CAMPBELL ian rising to hrs teet as 1, having compiler ‘d his professional call, he was about to make another. **‘But—but they will barn us out: the cabin isn’t stronger than a cobweb; I have only a single rifle; you have none.” “I have my revolver; what else can we lo? If your wife was strong enouch to walk we might reach the other cabins.” A rustling caused the doctor to look tround, The woman was hastily dcenning her outer garments and shoes, ; “What does this mean? he asked sternly. ‘“*We must leave——~” ‘Impessible! I order you to lie down at mee; you may as well be shot here as out- side.” She gave no heed, but wrought with the deft celerity which only her sex can show in an emergency, the ill, weak patient had be come well and strong in a twinkling. Com- fortably clad, she donned all the heavy outer garments at command and hurridly swathed her child. : The little one roused from the deep sleep was stupid and without comprehension of what was going on around her. Listlass and passive as potter’s clay, she was quickly patterned by the potter. The Doctor surveyed the mother with the eye of a professional. ‘Your strength may last half an hour— possibly a little longer—then you will be weaker than before. The excitement nerves you unnaturally.” ‘*And will do so tothe end; if not, you or John may carry me; I weigh scarcely more than Alice.” ‘‘And what of her ?” “She is now wide awake; I will hold her hand and she will hurry down tho gulch. It is not far; we shall soon traverse it.” “Your plan sounds good, but the way may not be open; I'll take a look outside.” He stepped through the door, shutting it quickly behind him. The blizzard was howl- ing like ten thousand demons through the mountains. The pines doubled over with their whip- ping tops to the ground and moaned in their agonized resistance to the giant tugging to uproot them ; but amid the roar and tumult and swirl rifts of semi-gloom penetrated here and there. It was not the blackness of darkness ; the keen vision of the Doctor saw dimly for a few feet. A lump of gloom a few paces away as- sumed the grotesque outlines of a human figure. Somewhere in the night there was conceived, born and hurled forth a devil of dangling hair, snapping about his hideous visage, of a panther’s strength and agility, with the venom of a crushed corbra, a bundle of nerves, brawn and force, who leaped at the throat of the Doctor as straight as a javelin thrust of a Zulu war- rior. Brief was the distance, but in mid air the revolver flashed, as it did in the Angel’s Bower months before. The crouching Sioux imp, with a rasping screech, dropped like a bundle of rags whirled by the gale from the cliffs above and sent spinning to the earth. The door of the cabin was thrust open far enough for the army hat, the eyes and yel- fow beard to show. “Quick ! the way is clear !” John Warndyke stepped through, follow- ed by his wife, clasping the hand of the be- wildered Alice. ‘‘Now, right down the gulch as fast as you can go.” “But, Rivard, what of you ?” ‘I will linger a bit to cover the rear; don’t wait for me.” “But ought not John to stay with ‘ou ?” “Some of them may be in advance ;. you need him.’ ‘*Bat, Doctor, won’t you take my gun?” “You will want it; 1 have my revolver and plenty of cartridges; off with you! Not another second !” They vanished and alone. Holding tight the little hand within her own, the mother trod almost on the heels of her husband, who, grasping his Winches- ter and peering into the night, forgot the teeth of the knifelike blizzard. A little way only, and then John Warn- dyke heard that which he had never expect- ed to hear again in this life. When the gray coated Teslons rushed up the slope at Gettysburg, laughing as they looked into the muzzles of muskets and cannon spout- ing red death and pouring over every ob- struction, animate and human; at Chicka- mauga; in the Wilderness ; when Stone- wall Jackson sent the Eleventh Corps flying as if a thousand-ton bomb had fallen smok- ing in the middle of their camp; in the hell of battle, when the panting conflict was hand to hand—John Warnd yke had heard that electric cry. It was the old ‘‘rebel yell” which resourd- ed through Devil’s Gulch, above the shriek- ing of blizzard, the screech of Sioux and the explosion of revolver and rifle. Dr. Creigh- ton was fighting for the lives of those speeding down the gorge. In the thrill of the death carnival, with the old ecstasy tingling vein and brain, he knew not of the ery that escaped him—it was no more under his control than the pulsing of his heart. ‘ The door of the Angel’s Bower was dashed inward and a man half supporting a terrified and fainting wife and with a little child clinging to her dress staggered into the room. ‘For heaven’s sake, quick men! The Doctor is at our cabin fighting a hundred Indians! You haven’t a minute to spare !” The ‘bull dog” was the first to leap to his feet. With a hoarse oath he plunged through the door, the rest of us streaming after him. McGuigan & Wharndyke were the only men left. “Look after my wife that I may go “Yes, John ; you are needed; delay not a moment.” She spoke faintly and was so weak that the two had to carry her to the rear room, where she and her child were gently placed. Then her husband vanished with- out a word. Less than two hours later we returned bearing a still form among us. It was ten- derly laid at full length on the floor of the Angel’s Bower, where thefirelight fell onthe magnficent head and figure. The crimson right hand still clutched the empty revol- ver and the left was thrust in above the breast, as if to still the throbbing of the heart. Following the sleeve with my own hand till I reached the cold, stiff fingers, I felt the death grip closed around some- thing. «These are for you,” I said to the pale, speechless woman that had come from the inner room and leaned, white and breath- less, oves the form on the floor. She took the letter and nicture without a the Doctor was THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN SEPTEMBER 21, 1898 BARGAIN CORN ee - E We will have open to-day Wednesday, a $4000.00 stock of dry goods and cle*hing purchased at auction in Montreal. Soock consists of original cost, Clothing, Suits, Odd Coats, Men’s Reefers and Overcoats, Caildrens This stock is new, fresh, and will be sold at one half tne eefers and Over.- coats, Men’s Rainproof Coats, Shirts, Hose, Caps. Tweeds and Worsteds, Pantings, Kid Gloves, Xe. FOR. Rerree re: > te fe THE LADIES Cloaking, Plain and FancyfPatterns, Hose, Wool.Shawls, assorted trimmings, Hair Clo‘h ‘fer Skirts, Wool Mitts, Fur Collars, Hcods, Table Covers, Napkins, Flannel, Towels, Purser. WME. - pom tehlde., 4 eye” Everyone knows about our last cheap sale, Pye ery Bargains for ail, This one will be away ahead of it. Come and inspect it. BARGAIN CORNER. sign, for she knew that ‘it was her “hau that had penned the one and her own sweet features were limned on the other, and the last things clasped in life were they, where they nestled against-as noble a heart as ever throbbed in the breast of man. THE END. The Englishman’s Swear Words, “Tam a free trader, but there is one thing I do not care to see imported and that is British profanity,” said Mr. C.M.Sanborn of the Southern. ‘‘There is something par- ticularly repulsive about English profanity, and yet it is not, according to orthodox standards, as wicked as our OWA. swear words, The Englishman seldom takes the name of the Almighty in vain ; he does not even consign his enemy to Malebolge. His most emphatic imprecations are ‘blawsted ’ and ‘bloody,’ but he uses them with such reckless vigor that ‘dammit’ sounds like a Sunday school phrase in comparison, An | American may use his whole vocabulary of ‘cuss words’ in London without attracting much attention, but let a cockney cabby be- | gin to ‘blawst the bloody hize’ of his old crowbait and every lady in the bloek puts her fingers in her ears and rolls up her eyes in pious horror.”—St. Louis Globe Demo- crat. Onto Him at Last, Bombinski—Whom are you geing to kill next ?- Redflagski—A man who tyrannizes over the laboring men. Bombinski— Another capitalist, eh ? Redflagski—No. A walking delegate.— Puck. (To be Continued.) RT LY RO NL ET PTT The Ch’town Steam Nav. Co STEAMERS..... Northumberland & Princess Leave as below every day (Sundays Excepted) ‘ From POINT DU CHENE (on arrival of afiernoon train from St. John) for Summerside, connecting there with exprese train for Charlottetown. From SUMMERSIDE on arrival of morning train from Charlottetown) for Point Du Chene connecting with day train for St. John. ; . Connecton at Moncton with train. for Canada aud at St. John with Steamers of International Line and Raiiways for United States and Canada. From PICTOU (on arrivalof day train from Halifax) for Charlottetown. From CHARLOTTETOWN, seven a.m. (local) for Pictou, (connecting there with day train for Cape Breton and Hali-~ fix, at Halifax with C. A. & P. Line for Boston. F. W. HALES*' Ch’town, P. E. I. SECRETARY Never Before have good Watches been so low in price as to-day. We have them recently bought at the latest re- duced rates, and will sell low. G. H. TAYLOR Jeweler and Optician. arlotte wn. ’ Plausible, but Poor Imitations AYOID THEM There is only one —_“" BOV RIL. and it has stood the test of years A LITTLE CALCULATION shows that the present rate o sales is sufficient to supply annually over :'150,465,600 CUPS . sr abiads © How’s that for popularity. ™, 3 cs BOVR L LIMITED 30 Farringdon St., 25&27 St. Peter St London, Englend, Montreal, Canada. and ——— F'all Goods now Coming to Hand Ladies Jackets. Ladies Waterproof Cloaks. Ladies Hats. Feather Boas. Golf Jerseys, J.T. HARRIS. __LONDON HOUSE. Insurance FIRE AND MARINE A share of your business respestfully solicited. Policies and Certificates promptly issued at my office, Cameron Block, Queen Square. HORACE HASZARD, AGENT Western Assuranee Company Commercial Union Agsurance Ce ee LA ALR MTT TAT IP NE Rl