Scorching in Business. The bicycler is not the only man who scorches. There are scorchers, pro- fessional - scorchers, farme chan J eplab« busines scorchers and rer- scorchers, (Y The man who over: works, who scorches, no matter what his occupation, and at the same time neg- lects his health, will sooner or iater a penalty in SN Wc vi AX i} “LO ym Y 7 : 5 | ‘sickness and pos- ‘ bs a an _ ¥ \\ ) si hiv premature a »* fa man will al- AYS watch his health and correct minor eguiarities by a resort to the right rem- ly, he may do a reasonible amount of ‘orching without serious results. Nearly the result of im- ct nutrition is \l Serious maladies are verfect nutrition Imper just another mame for starvation A man may eat voraciously and still starve. He may put on an eighth of a ton of sickly flabby flesh and have a big corpulent stom. ach, and still be starving until he gces to the opposite extreme and gets thin as a rail, and he is still starving. The trouble lies in the fact that no matter scorchers, me- | Hé tiay scorch | rs < ee | aT me The Soe es ie aa Xa > | $2) Sd a 3% - CHAPTER XII. Trembling, wondering, but resolute, Mamie knelt down by the poor shatter- ed wreck. He drew ber closer with one fevered hand. **Tell Strong—tell Strong—I’ve tried to make it right—about—about—that college mess. I’ve confessed it to the governor. He'll be his friend. I con- fess it to you—because you—loved him. I'l) confess it above—soon.’’ Then in a how much food is taken it is not properly assimilated. The blood Coes not recive the life-giving elements of the food that build firm, healthy flesh, solid muscle and | _—_ stronger voice: ‘‘Ran—thank you, old boy. Yes—but a little while I will be at home,"’ vibrant nerve fibers. Dr. Pierce’s Golden H ' revo | Medical Discdtery makes the assimilation @ was at home. oo ‘perfect, ft makes solid. healthy flesh, Who was to tell them? without raising the Sp-gn' stove Nature’s ” ~~“ oT normal, At alt medicigé stores, , Ty 1S doves ax ot tlie t , CHAPTER XVIIL. £. M. Seavoll, § 427 Bac@esky St. Mount ; 6s ” mat Vernoy, tox Ue Bid Writt “Tean beartily They have come! ~ecommentl Your ‘Golden Meci@! Dimevery’ to any ot Who is troubled with indigestion and tor- pid liver; I was that bad it was about\Xronic with me. All the other medicines could #ve me no re- covery.’ I could scarcely eat i nything—it would put mein terrible distress in :ny stomach; I had a dull aching and grinding pain in my stomach with pain in my right side aod back, and head. ache, bad taste in my mouth; at night I was feverish and the soles of my feet burned. I took four bottles of the ‘Jiscovery’ and two vials of the ‘ Pellets." Tam well and hearty and can eat as well as any body can,—thanks to your *Discovery Dr. Pierce’s Pellets cu: _—— a The D & A CORSET. For Evening Dress Women find the D & A Corset as well suited for evening wear as it is for ordinary purposes. It gives ‘*chic”’ to the figure, without stiff- ness or discomfort. It is sold at popular prices. Wear the D.& A Corset. (7 Rothesay Church School. Rothesay College for Boys will re-open Monday, Sept. 5th. STAFF, 1888-9.— Principal, Rev. O. W. Howard, B. A., Bonor (iraduate and Gov- ernor-General’s Medali-t Toronto Univer- sity: Honor Gradnate Eurcn College Lon- don. Mathematics.—I. E. Honor Gradvate Unis School of Science, Tor Clase‘cs.— P. J. Rob nor Graduate, Toronto University. Modern Language-~-W. A. McClean, Esq., M. A., Graduate ‘I oronto University; Ontario Normal Colleg:; London Military College. . Correspondents sho Rev. O. W. Howard, BR Moore, Esq., B. A., ‘rsity ot Toronto, nto. 10D. Esq., B. Acs HW, Ad ld be addressed to thes iy. *“Kinghurst”’ will re-open on Wednesday Sept. 14th, 1898. | vu SALES H. J. Machin, formerly Lany Principal of *Edgehilj ’ will have charge of the school and will haya gp thoroughly “oy petant eteit of aseit QDs, Corre Ss} ondence sho ld be ad lressed to Miss Machin, Rothesay N. B, 192 dy 12%. There was no misunderstanding the emphasis placed upon that personal pro- ' noun by Liza, husky voiced as she was, lief; but at last, what came to my felief was that | wonderful medicine the ‘Go@en Medical Dis- , from the breath taking speed she had made between the loomroom and the big house. | The little colony of women we'te ' grouped at one end of the long back gallery, intent upon a new experiment. Mrs. Martin was quite sure a good sub- stitute for indigo could be evolved from constipation. | the wild coffeeweed that flaunted its yellow blossoms in every fence corner. neers | Hoe experiment was, so far, nothing more available than alot of dabby look- , ing messes on boards placed in the sun- | shine to evaporate. Without haste, but with a perturba- | tion that made visible the tremulous- ness of her delicate, blue veined hands, old Mrs. Strong (that was what they called her after Annabel came) rose to her feet, letting the ball of coarse plan- tation yarn fall unheeded from her lap. At another time she would have depre- cated such heedlessness, but not now. | She was white to the very lips with the _ terror of a great uncertainty. She stood for a second, clasping and unclasping her thin hands in an agony of irresolution. The rest had gone away and left her standing there all alone. With the swift directness of a well drilled military squad the group of wo- men had dissolved at sound of those three ominous words hurled at them by Liza while still afar off. Since the fall of Vicksburg had made the invasion of Sans Souci a mere ques- tion of time the role that each woman was to enact when the enemy was actu- Dr. A. W. Case at Work on His Last i GREAT REMEDY. DOCTORS FAIL WHEN THE CREAT PHYSICIAN CURES, TUREE YEARS IN BED From Kidney Dissase—Although 4 Man of Three-Scors and Ten, Dr. Chase’s Kidney - Liver Pills Gave Him Back Perfect Bealth. re” 7 ~ “a> > Shaw & Beairsto The Practical Plumbers all kinds of jobbing snd will be pleased ' » furnish estimates on al} branchee of the trade. If you are building it would be well to get their prices They are the practice! plumbers. Ave prepared to do HEARY R. LORDLY ©. E A.M Can. soc, C. E. Graduate College of Crvil Engine eriag Cornell University. Consulda Bogert for General Work, Specialties: Hydraulic, Sanitary Engineer- ing ana Bridge Desigaing. | Offices at Charlottetown.and St. aon Island correspowcence addres to gbarlottetown * This is to certify that I was sick in bed the most of the time for three years with kidney disease. I took several boxes of pills—different kinds patent medicines; under treatment by four different doc- tors during the time and not able toe work. aman nearly 70 years of age. ed me, JAMES SIMPSON, Newcomb Mills, Ont. and a decay of the takes place. betes, Gravel, Dr. all | instances end fatally. Kidney-Liver Pills cure troubles. Sold by ell $6 cents per box. i —and @ great many other kinds of besides that I was I began to take Dr. Chase's Kidnéy-Liver Pills, and since that time have been working every day an : Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills have cur- If the Kidneys are not in a perfectly clean and healthy condition, the blood becomes impregnated with impurities Kidneys s00n Bright's Disease, Dia- Stone in the Bladder, Inflammation of the Bladder, and a long ist of Kidney diseases become seated, and sooner or later in so many Chase's Kidney dealers, price RTS BELLWM BY -_ | a oe news ERY STOR OP * DAYS, Pee? SEAUNETTE H-WALIORRA ae o SOPYRIGHT, 1897 BY THE AUTHOR. ally in sight had been eareruly assign- ed and conscientiously rehearsed. Mrs. Strong—not Annabel; no one ever asked anything in the way of ac- tive co-operation from her—was given position over the two loosened planks in the floor of the front gallery, beneath which everything on the premises in shape of firearms was concealed. Old Dolbear’s joiner work was not above criticism, and there was a certain tell- tale raggedness at the edges of the re- placed planks which could be most ef- fectively concealed by Mrs. Strong's loug trained a Mrs. Martin was to stand guard over the smokehouse when ‘‘the plagues of Egypt swarmed,’’ which was her rath- er prolix designation for the entire Fed- eral army, “I think, honey,’’ she had said, ad- dressing Liza as the accepted adminis- trator of affairs, ‘‘I could sass ’em real comfortable if they dared to lay hands on that little pile of meat, all we got in this wide world. I could jaw a whole reg’ment of ’em.’’ The professor's daughter was to stay with Annabel and her boy, to pilot them safely through the vague terrors of the coming ordeal. ‘‘ Administrator Martin’’ assigned this post with many apologetic expressions. “‘I feel awfully shabby, dear, bat : one else cana keep Annabel quiet. You xct upon her like an anesthetic. She was hysterical enough before poor Adrien’s death. It will take Seth and Uncle Dolbear both to get what little stock there is left run into the woods. Mamma must try to save our pitiful pile of meat, and as for the madam, she will be too full of Adrien for another thought. As for myself, I will skirmish round generally—a sort of free lance, you know.”’ ‘‘Rover in croquet,’’ said Mamie, preferring comparisons that meant something within range of her own ex- perience. And now the time for executing all these carefully prepared plans had ar- rived. Liza, sitting at the clumsy little hand loom in the deserted overseer’s bouse, weaving plantation spun yarn into dress ntaterial for the fastidious mistress of Sans Souci. had seen a cloud 19 of dust rise suddenly above the tall weeds that outlined the grass grown wagon road across the fields. There was no explicable cause for that golden haze buat one. On ali of Sans Souci’s broad acres beasts enouzh to raise it could not be found. Seth, she knew, was plowing the potato patch, which meant so much to them in those days, with their one horse. She had helped him tie the untrustworthy har- ness together with bits of cloth befcre breakfast. Old Dolbear had gone to the woods for stove wood, with their only other beast of burden, Knock Kneed Jimmy, amule with a very long ex- perience of this troubled sphere. That swiftly advancing column of dust could mean but one thing. In intense excite- ment she flung*the shuttle from her, and, mounting the loom bench, shaded her eyes with one unsteady hand while she peered across the weed choked fields. The weeds grew lower and thinner about the big quarter lot gate, and when it, that clond of dust, paused for them to loosen the rusty chains that bound gate and post together it would be time for her to ‘‘draw in her picket line.’’ She must see first, however, what that dust was produced. by. A confused vision of horses’heads and visored caps, The horses did not belong to Sans Souci, and the caps were not ‘gray. That was enough. Thank heaven, more than two miles fay between her and them yet. Perhaps they would stop to burn the barns and the gin. She hop- ed they might. It would prolong the moment for preparation, Giye them a little more time to get ready for—what? With arrowy speed she made her way from the loomroom to the big house, bursting in upon the others with that breathléss ery, ‘‘They have come.”’ It was the work of & second to sweep the loose silver from the sideboard in the dining room into the ample home- spun apron that almost enveloped her slim figure, and then, with Mamie Col- yer close behind her, she sped up the long central stairway to find hiding places for it. Mrs. Martin, frantically grabbing fot the smokehouse key that ‘‘never had been hung so high before,’’ sent an ad- wonition after her. ‘‘Liza, your bustle!’ Without slackening her speed Liza flung a reassurance behind her. ‘‘That’s all right. Have been wearing it for a wee ” “My Lawd!’’ This ejaculation of hor- ror, not of piety, came from Mrs. Mar- tin ‘*Tt’s more’n enough to give you cur- ryture of the spine or something else spiney, Liza Martin, wearin a pad with 100 $20 goldpieces quilted into it. You oughtn’t to putiton, child, till you was *bliged ta,’’. —_—- . - CRs THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, AUGUST 30, 1898 MACK AW? Mid Summer Sale. _ No exaggeration, we both talk and] {give argains; with this special list of goo: s an prices we have no occasion to exaggerate, as a call will convince theJmost fastidious. Likread gloves Better glove Sunshades,‘former price Silk cord for fancy work worth 10, now 2c Fancy black braid for dress trimming le, 3c, oc per yard, worth from Ladies undervests,’ Hooks and eyes Silk dress laces worth Table doyles worth Colored Trimming silk*from 10cito 25c¢ yard worth double what we ask for them, Black sewing silk Colored twist worth from 4c to 6 per yard, now 2c. Hemstitched hdkfs Lace trimmed 16, 18, 22, good valu2 12¢, for 5¢ 25c, for 12¢ 90c, now 25c Prints 5e per yard Black and colored sateens, former price “5 now 12 to 15c per yard Colored and black vsilk elvet } prie 50c for 25¢ yard 75¢ for 25¢ yard 1.00 for 50¢ yard 1.65 for 80c yard 10 to 25c¢ ic card Aberdeen skirt clcser T0c, now 2¢ : : Dress Goods—see our prices on a few lin:s 10c, now 5c 33c for 15c yard 36c¢ tor 19¢ yard 55¢ for 29¢ for 30cyade for 32c yard 63c for 40c yard 1.45¢ tor 75¢ yard le skein 4, worth 10c | 10c, worth 20c ‘**There, there, mimmie, please dcn’t worry about my spine. It’s all right.’’ She paused on the stairway just long enough to fing a kiss from the tips of her fingers toward the two anxious faces uplifted from the hall below. Pres- ently they could hear her disposing of the loose silver with careful carelessness under the heaps cf dried palmetto that strewed the floor of the upper hall, in the bags of wocl that Scth had robbed their few remaining sheep of, and any- where else her ingenuity could devise. Annabel’s door opened and closed softly, and Maimie Colyer joined her be- fore the task was completed. “There now,” said Liza, stuffing the last fork in a crevice behind an unmov- able clothes press, “‘unless they get to kicking that palmetto and wool about for pure malice they will never suspect what is under it.’’ ‘Then they stood silently waiting and listening with fast beating hearts. The moment was too intense for common- place. The storm, whose mutterings in the distance they had been listening to with strained attention for so long, was about to burst upon their own heads. They looked into each other’s eyes lovingly, confidingly, and in that brief communion both found fresh strength. Suddenly Liza drew her friend’s soft round cheeks within kissing range and pressed her lips fervently to each in successian. (To be Continued.) Perfectly Cured Weak and Low Spirited — Nervous Prostration—Appetite Poor and Could Not Rest. ‘I take great pleasure in recommending Hood’s Sarsaparilla to others. It has been the means of restoring my wife to good health. She was stricken down with an attack of nervous prostration. She suf- fered with headaches and her nerves were under severe strain. She became very low spirited and so weak she could only do a little work without resting. Her? appetite was podr, and being so weak she could not get the proper rest at night. She decjded to try Hood’s Sarsaparills, as we had heard it highly praised, and I am glad to state thet Hood’s Sarsaparilla hag perfectly cured all her ailménts.” Q, BELLAMY, 321 Hannah St., West, Hamil- ton, Ontario. member a d 5. Sara- 004 S parila Is the Best—in fact the One True Blood Part. fier. All druggists. $1, six for $5. Get Hood's, Hood’s Pills are tasteless, mild, effec- tive. All druggists. 25, eer Furness Ling of Steamers. Halifax to Great Britain S. S. “Londoz City” leaves Halifax for London G. B. Sept- 8. Steam- ship Damara will leave Halifax for Liverpocl Aug. 31st Shippers of perishable produce should apply early. W. W. CLARKE, Agent | al As | evrrreenenonerrognetenenernenrrennenonnnereneennoi tenn SILVERWARE ‘a That Will Wear Right }}. Tea Sets consisting of Tea Pot, Coffee Pot, Sugar, Cream and Spoon Holders, Trays, Yalad Bowls, Cake Baskets, Butter and Pickle Dishes. ALSO IN SOLID SILVER, FINE ap0Ds 5 o'clock Spoons, Tea Spoons, Souyenir Spoons, Oyster Forks» Cheese Scoops, Cold Meat Forks, Tea Bells, Thimbles, {| TH ait} -{j «(tll > Baking, F¥VVTVCVSTe Te TTT TTT TeTT The cheapest ladies’ Watch that we think would be worth buying, $4.00, better ones $7.50 to $50.00, oe Watches for Boys, $2.75 to 10.00, Watches for men $5.00 to 100.00. Beautiful Rings Avy Birthday Stone Ring mace to Order Nearly every one knows we ace the'pioneers in the spectacle business and to keep up to date in our stock of spectacles and eyeglasses KE. W, TAYLOR, Victoria Jewellery Store Nearly opposite Post Office Charlottetown, P. E. I. ee A a ££2422444 tll «(| THE CHARLOTTETON DRIVING PARK RACES, 1898 Will be Held at Charlottetown WEDNESDAY AND THULSDAY September 14th & 15th HORSE RACES $1,050.00 Premiums $1,050.00 First Day, 14th September, 1898. Three Minute Claes...... ++. pessereeeePurse $150 00 CS CO. ccinctionte samnetal te ihc eadbbe cit deep 200.00 S40 Claas TE voters GG TOON) a oc once ng be teek pa oc ob dedecbens Secs vwess 150,00 Second Day, loth September, 1898, 3.60 Cla68.<<iicrcrccdeccorccesseces Sdbabbeseertdecseccéetbepeeoneeasedensss 69 dengue nt Glee Girne ee BIT os aiikals bide do Gis Oo bo bbb. vecdnd'c’ hy ko ikessetnatinak 250.06 2.30 NE 8 id acaittenied COREE ROHR ER HEHE MORTEM Oe EER HOR Oe o 150.00 Zotries close 7th September, 1898. No horse barred by record made after August lst, ) 898. All further particulars given on application to the Secretary. In addition to the above, the Guideless Horse “Tommy,” from Ontario, will give three exhibitions of speed on each of the race days. : Admissio& to grounds, 25c. Children under 12 years old, 1l5c. Special rates by steamers and railways. All communication to be addressed to the Secretary. L. HASZARD, C. R. SMALLWOOD, President. “Secretary. August'10—tue, thur &wy td