TH! DAILY xX °>™M ‘EB’, CHARLOTTETOWN, MARCH 1], 1895 the: ind that no one can en- ae ‘ Is not so situated that 5°) oneal ; she ca sting invalid, or rather, TTL ! 7 iVALIG, en t g tor there never was an interesting one The woman who suffers from weakness and diseas the distinctly feminine or- gans is ¢ 1 to become an invalid. No woman can suffer in this way and be a healthy, happy, amiable wife and a compe tent mother Troubles of this nature Sap) the strength, rack the nerves, paint lines of suffering upon the face, destroy the tera per, make the once bright eyes dull and the on ictive brain sluggish, and trans. form a vivacious woman into a weak, sickly invalid The for all disor nature 1s Dr me sure, speedy, permanent cure lers of the distinctly feminine Pierce's Favorite Prescription. It acts directly on the delicate and im port- ant organs concerned, and makes them strong, healthy, vigorous and elastic. It cures the internal ulceration and inflamma tion that give rise to a debilitating drain or: the system. It is the best medicine for overworked, ‘‘run-down’’ women. “About six vears ago my wife became afflicted with female weakness writes the Rev. [. j Copp t Elmo, Kaufman Co., Texas. ** Silie could not stand on her feet or get in any position m which she did mot suffer great pain. She despaired of ever again being well. She took six bottles of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription and has been well and happy for twelve months.” It is a drugvist’s business to give yo te tell you, what vou want 7 sce Thirty-one one-cent stamps cover the eustoms and mailing of a paper-covered copy of Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Med- jcal Adviser Cloth - bound, so stamps, ‘Send to Dr. R.V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. Delicate children! What a source of anxiety theyare! The parents wish them hearty and strong, but they keep thin and pale. To all these delicate cnil- dren Scott’s Emulsion of Cod-liver Oil with Hypo- | phosphites comes with the ‘best of news. It brings rich blood, strong bones, healthy nerves, and sound digestion. It 1s growth and _ prosperity to them. No matter how delicate the child, it is readily taken. soc. and $1.00, ali druggists. SCOTT & BOWNE. Chemists. Torontas P. &. Island Railway O+ and after MONDAY, 27th Dec., 180%, brains of this Railway will run daily, (Sun/ pays exoepted,) as under. ‘ $56: 308 380 8o Trains In Trains Gnt- ~ a s ae Read! STATIONS, ward, Read down, > ?. M.'A M.j P.M, A. My '8 10, 6 2) Charlottetown .../ 2 201 ot | 3 80) 6 35). Royaltv Tunction./ 2 16 9 40 417 7 12). North Wiltshire. | 1 49 8 58 14 31) 7 24). Hunter River. ..] 7 99) 8 42 19 05) 7 SL. Bradalbane..... -+2 00 8G 6 13, 7 58). Emerald... ......119 7 38 & 27| $ O98, Freetown ......- 12 a 7 3s 5 47) 8 25)... Kensington.....-/79 2a] 7 18 6 20 8 WiAc.) Lv. |12 00} 6 48 v7. MP. Mw ; S’Side - A, 12 5Olty. | | Ar. /10 30 | 1 il »»Miscouche ...... 10 10 } 37]. WeMington...... 2 47 2 10]. Port Hill .......1 9 00 es APO AMT. os cunaicd 8 00 3 58]... Bloomfield ...... 7 34 4 34)... Albertan........ 6 63 By Fee 6 00 A. » A. M. M. A. 3¢ 30 .. Charlottetown ... 10 i) ..Royalty Junction 10 1¢ a SOMES cccccees ; + 5 ar lv 10 rhe Stewart be 8 6¢ 22 SMe veccces 7 45 ..Georgetown .... 71 pM. A. Ma Pp. M. aM. j 4 05)... Mt. Stewart ....; 8 35 , 6 43). Movelll... ..cccee 3 7 | 5 12). St. Petert secacs q 6 57 ,. Bear River ccccce q 6 ve cous sonnel OS P. M. e | P. ‘. A, ‘ 5 15!, Emerald secoes | 6 05] ..Cape Traverse ..| 7 0 um BY. iA Printing in all its branches at the Exam- INER office, one cf the best equip- ped Job Printing Rstablishment, « mY, 2%, Island. . ) Standard Time | BILLIAM. By 8. R. OROOKETT, fCopvrieht. 1297. by the Author,} Billiam had once porsessed more fur- niture than this. He had a wooden bed which he had bought in the Cowgate for 4 shillings and carried up the Pleas- ance himself, post by post and plank by plank. He only slept upon it one night. The next day he began to cut it up for firewood. It was a good bed, though, he said, but not for sleeping on. After the first five minutes it began to bite him all over. So Billiam burned the 4 shilling bed, and it turned out all right that way. It crackled like green wood as it burned. Presently the fame of Billiam’s brass plate waxed great in the land. Dr. Macfarlane, a short winded and tem- pered man, came upon the announce- ment quite unexpectedly as he was puff- ing his way up the weary, grimy stone stairs to visit the sister of the seam- stress who lived upon the other side of the lauding from Billiam. To say simply that Dr. Macfarlane | Was astonished does considerable injus- tice to his state of mind. He stood re- garding the brightly polished, clearly lettered announcement for fully ten | minutes. Then he rang the bell, and an | seamstress’ sister, who volunteered this | a= a el el answering peal came from just the oth- er side of the panel, but no one arrived to cpeu, forit was the middle of the cay and Billiam was at his classes. Dr. Macfarlane could learn little from the seamstress or her sister beyond the gon- eral suspicion that their neighbor upon the other ‘side of the landing was ‘‘may- bes no verra richt in his mind.” It was not the seamstress, but the information. “But he sent us in these,’’ added the seamstress, who was a pale and exceed- ingly pretty girl, pointing to some nobly plumped purple grapes which lay on a plate on the little cracked table by the bedside. *“*He’ll be a kind o’ young doctor seekin a job, nae doot,’’ said the seam- stress’ sister, sinking back on her pil- lows, for gratitude was not her strong point. The suggestion excited ¢he doctor, for he was a man who had worked hard at ' his most uncertain and unremunerative t practice. Besides which he had a young family growing up about him. If, there- fore, he was to have a young interloper settling in the center of his sphere of influence, it was as well to know with whom he had to contend. So he called upon Billiam. It was 6 o'clock in the evening when ‘Dr. Macfarlane came stumbling up Bil- liam's stairs. The door stocd slightly ajar, and there came from the other side a confused murmur of voices, a yelping of dogs, with sundry other sounds which even the doctor’s trained ear could not distinguish. But, above all, there rose fitfully the shrill cry of an infant. Upon hearing this last the doctor pushed the door with the brass piate open, which, when he stepped within, seemed at first nearly full of people. It was brightly enough lighted, tor the broad flame of a No. 6 gas burn- er hissed with excess of pressure above the bare mantelpiece. A fire burned in the grate, which shone cheerfully enough, being heaped high with small lamps of coal. Most of the people were ranged along the walls cof the room, sitting with their backs against the wall paper, upon which their shoulders had made a gcasy brown stripe all round—young lads with dogs between their knees, girls holding cats in baskets, middle aged women nursing birds in cages. They talked to each cther in subdued tones or to their pets in reproving whis- pers. Sometimes a dog would become excited by the voice of a cat complain- ing of bonds and imprisonment near him, but he would be promptly cuffed into submission by his master, or 4 q > SICK HEADACHE Positively cared by these } Littic Piils. They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A per- fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsi ness, Bad Tastein the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. Small Pill. Smail Dose. Small Prico. Substitution a the fraud of the day. ' See you get Carter's, —_, Ask for Carter's, Insist and demand Carter's Little Liver Pills. Cabary womid sucaaenly fintter agasc the bars, warned by instinct of proximity of so many enemies. Mostly, however, there was a respect- ful silence. The doctor stood awhile rooted in amazement and did not even take any notice when several of his former patients nodded affably across to him. Presently, from an inner room, there came forth a hard featured man, cerry ing « large book under his arm. Billic: #1 Lilie followed behind him, his shock of hair | tossed and rumpled. He was stooping forward and eagerly explaining somie- thing to the man. So intent was he upon the matter in hand that he passed the doctor without so much as noticing him. “‘And T’ll lock in and see how the pair of you have gct on tomorrow,”’ Billiam said, shaking the hard featured man warmly by the hand at the door. Billiam turned and for the first time looked the doctor fair in the face. ‘*My name is Dr. Macfarlane. I have & practice in this neighborhood,’’ said the physician, ‘‘and I should like the favor of a few words with you.”’ “Certainly; by all means—with pleasure,’ replied Billiam. ‘**Come ti: way.”’ And they went together into the ond of the Montgomery street garrctr lt was nearly as bere of furniture as t- first. There was no more than a tab! some bottles and an instrument case, while round the room, arranged so as t¢ | make the most of themselves, stood Bil- liam’s three chairs. ‘‘Take one,’’ said the student polite- | ly, but Dr. Macfarlane pfeferred t« stand till he knew exactly where h« was. “‘T have the honor of addressing’’— he said and paused. “William Reginald Setoun Ormi- thwaite,’’ said Billiam quietly. ‘*You are a doctor?’’ queried his vis- itor. ‘‘By no means. I am only astudent,”’ said Billiam quickly, ‘‘but I give these people a hand with anything they bring along.’” ‘*Do you possess any qualifications?"’ persisted Dr. Macfarlane. ‘Qualification?’ said | Billiam, a lit- tle perplexed. ‘‘ Well, I’ve been patch- ing up dogs’ legs and things all my life.’’ ‘*But, sir,’’ cried the doctor indig- nantly, ‘‘this is no better than an eqauiv- ocation. I heard you with my own ears prescribing for the man who went out just now—an old patient of my own if I mistake not. And I saw you with these eyes taking a fee from him as he passed through the dour. Are you aware, sir, that the latter is an indictable offense?’’ Billiam smiled with his usual quietly infinite tolerance. ‘‘Dr, Macfarlane,’’ he said, ‘tif may sound strange to you, but the fact is He could often be scen walking along the Pleasance. ; that man came to consult me about a separation from bis wife, and he br ught his family Bible out of the pawnshop to show me the dates of his marriage and birth of his children. I gave him some- thing when he went away so that he would not need to take the Bible back into pawn, at least not immediately. Do you think 1 need any qualification for that?’’ ‘‘And those people outside?’’ said the doctor, not yet entirely convinced. “Will you go round the wards with me?’ said Billiam, smiling brightlr and irresistibly. Without another werd he led t) way to the door of the next rocm. 1 seemed to the foctor fuller than ¢{er, ‘‘Lame degs this way,’’ said Bsllicu. a © 7 in a matter of fact manner, and helf ez dozen men slouched after him. Very deftly Billiam laid out a row of smal) shining instruments upon the table, with salve, lint and bandages arranged behind him. Then he tock animal after animal in- to his hand, set it upon the table, passed his fingers lightly to and fro over its head and ears a time or two, listened to the owner’s voluble explanations with- out appearing to notice them, and forth- with proceeded to deliver a little clin- ical lecture. His deft fingers snipped away the matted hair from a neglected and festering sore. He cleaned the wound tenderly, the dog often instinc- tively turning to snap. Yet all the time Billiam never once flinched, but talked steadily, impartially and sympathetical- ly to the animal and his master till the sore was dressed and the patient rede- livered with all due directions to his owber. _.Before long Dr. Macfarlane became so * interested that he w.tcti while case after cnee was disposed of with the un- erring accuracy of a hospital expert. Sometimes he would instinctively have the lint or the bandage ready in his hand, just as if he had still been dresser at the old infirmary and waiting for Lister to work off his batch. At the end of half an hour he had no more remembrance of Billiam’s want of qualifications. He asked him to come round for supper and smokea pipe. But Billiam only smiled and suid, ‘‘Thank you a hundred times, doctor, but I have some private cases in the back room to attend to yet and then I must read up my stuff for tumorrow.’’ After awhile there came to visit Bil- liam a minister or two familiar with the district, the young resident mission- ary from the students’ hall, a stray law- yer’s clerk or two—and the superintend- ent of police. They all came to cavil, but one and all they remained to hold bandages and be handy with the vase- line. On one occasion the minister of St. Margaret's offered Billiam the use of a pew in his church, but Billiam said, ‘Sunday is my day for out patients, or I should be glad.’’ For Billiam was a gentleman and always answered even a dissenting clergyman politely. “*You should think cf your immortal soul,’’ said the minister. *‘Who knoweth,’’ said Billiam, ‘‘the spirit of the beast that goeth downward into the earth?"’ And Billiam could never find out why the minister went away so suddenly 6r why he shook his head ever afterward when they met in the street. It never crossed his mind that Mr. Gregson of St. Margaret's had taken him foran infidel and a dangerous subverter of the system of religion as by law established. Yet 80 it was. In due time Billiam's nest of garrets became known as the ‘'lame dogs’ home’”’ and grew famous throughout the entire city—that is, the southern city of high lands, steep streets, winding stairs and odorous closes, with their Arab popula- tion of boys and dogs. “You let that long, lanky chap alone,’’ cried one brawny burglar to an- other, ‘‘or I'll smash your dirty face like a rotten turnip! Now, mind me! Don’t you know the dog missionary?”’ Every policeman befriended Billiam, and the greater number of the police- man’s ordinary clients. He could often be seen walking along the Pleasance or past the breweries in the Laigh Calton, attended by a dozen dogs, which had followed Billiam far from their wonted haunts on the chance of a word from him and which departed obediently if unwillingly when be bade them return to their own niaces iz neace. (To be Continued.) ——— ’ vocd s Snould be in every family BE medicine chest and every mF travelier’s grip. They are Me invaluable when the stomach is out of order; cure headache, biliousness, and sli liver troubles. Mild and efficient. 2% cents Syrup eo Coughs, SOTUGS chitis, Sore Cu m throat, etc. KERRY, WATSON @ CO., Prornizrons, MONTREAL. o* » ) MeLFAN.O.G BARRISTER, &c. CHARIOTTRIOWN, ; * A Brown BLOCK, Sale of Vi uable Business Premises at Mrray Har- ber South, Iam instructed to offer for sale, the premises formerly owned, and occupied by the Jate Josiah Roberte, situate in the villege of Murray Hartor Scuth, contain- ing about ene half acre of Jand, with dwelling bouse, store, warehcures and orchard thereon. This property fronts on Murray Liver} and comprises & wherf effurding excellent shipping facilities, and is touched ly the proposed line of Railwav. If not soon disposed of }y private sale, the property will te offered at public anction, on the premises, on the }8th day of March next, at | o’clock p. m. To any person desirious of securing a well equipped business stand, in thie rising village,a rare opportunity ie now offered . For terms aud particulars, apply at the office of Mathieron & Bently. G, A. AITKEN. Georgetown Feb 3°98 w wks, =—=3 FROM INDIA AND CEYLON..*: & A COZPAW B2ZPrrumers » are filled with pure tea, selected from the crops of the best cultivated tea gardens of India and Ceylon. They are packed in % and r lb. packets, air tight, and sold all over America at 40c., 50c. 60c., 70°. and $1.00 per Ih. No matter which quality is selected, the purchaser gets good, pure tea. be ... THE BEST OF TEA VALUES. + 99000000096664066066606060660666606606900006 Trt ttt ORNING DEY CONCH WHISKY” A combination of the finest pure malt whiskies made in the Highlands of Scotland; thoroughly matured in wood FoR TEN YEARS, before bottling This sverling whisky, The Finest Bver Brought to Prince Edward Island, may be obtained of all leading wine and spirit merchants, hotels and stores, Wholesale from Is guaranteed absolutely the purest and best whisky shipped trom Scotland. Remember the “BLACK LABEL, Morning Dew Scotch.” Tetley’s Elephant Brafid Packets : SP 99OSSOOO OG OHOOLOO NS ( $ as on —_— * For Sale Bv All Licensed Vendors ; We ES SE SPER ES FEENEY. HARRAARAAAAAAAARARAAAS FRESE Fe REYES SEE EE D. GORDON. SIXTUS McLELLAN YY ES —r We are Tailors, some people know us as only Tailors, and some peovle know us asiheonly Tailors, bat be that as it may. We want you to know that we eell every thing men wear except shoes, or every thing they ought to wear; amd this time of the year we are giving special priceson every winter weight article in the store See Our White and Colored Shirts. Good clean fresh stock, bought for spot cash. We don’t keep shirts lon enough to get soiled, neither do we hendle any worn out samples. a good launde white shirt for any price from 45¢ to $2.50,and wade specially for a high clase furnishing trade, GORDON & McLELLAN Feshion Leaders, Upper Queen St. Next door to WoMcKay olen CG Ren Persie ei set ea eng ein he Ty sy erga behing fst Clearance Sael Boots & Shoes For 10 days, all our stock of Boots'and Shoes, will go regardless of cost. Broken Lots at HALF PRICE, We want toclear out ovr entire stock, to make room for spring goods. Come to us for shoe bargains. - J.B. MACDONALD & CO., For Best Bargains in Boots & Shoes, aaniannn eatneateees ramen Sea NN a a — anne BS Net bi bn bt gen emi ny INTERCOLONIAL GOAL MINING CO. Lid, (Drummond Colliery) Westville, N. S. The undersigned has been appointed agent of the above Company jor P. E. Island. All orders for Coal will be issued and payment therefor received at my office. Prices and further information furnished on application. FRED. W. HYNDMAN thir til, ee NT ei ei AB ae lle i ITNT. oot aeRO aid = ee ae cal eer ee ait —— cal eaereerna ed =. , q am 4 a