| THE DAILYEXAMINER, mere cP : 1 frontier dacs 3 of - / ; m « we 2 : ed and } i f ‘3 6 \ NS, 4 \ {4 . res et “9 ; ‘ A bh x ‘ mar must “ he € f létihing \ f le \ ov e \ 4 eTe % » ‘ " ) } ; ¢ ‘ 7% anas of c > + ‘ hy "a aS » are | ~ - ek \ 1 : Ww ‘er 4 alll edt & ed 1 at tl o* “_ = ‘ c ‘ Th bodies crv out but in a laneu that onl ’ . if Whe W his body < i slugvis!] y a brair tO A wa } "7 “ ?. } S64 , it t i { XY I -’ i/ « ‘ TT It st » is + xcre >. t +s S at T+ ‘ ¢? ‘ "The 1 i “ i Sit « cure t ? I Cc 1 m ‘ K i kine D r and am still t Do s ' Keen th } ti : T - i¢ s cnre co . a They never Bri] All x { 3. neces- of diet. If it is not of the right kind Fat is absolutely sary as an article it may not be digested. Then the body will not get enough of it. In this event there is fat-starvation. Scott’s Emulsion supplies this needed fat, of the right kind, in the right quantity, and in the form already partly digested. Asa result all the organs and tissues take on activity. soc. and $1.00, all druggists. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemi ts, Te ronta Valuable Property — WaeFor Sale The subscriber offers at private eale that large dwelling swouse and premises, consisting of Jarge baro and other out houses; situated on the Lower $3pring Park Road, formerly occupied by the late Mrs. Catherine Thorne. This is an excellent business stand, and ean be purchased at a reasonable figure. Everyvs thing in firstclass repair. Good title guaranteed. 8S. G. THORNE. P, R. Island Railway O- and after MONDAY, 27th Dec., 180%, frains of this Railway will run daily, (Suny ays excepted,) as uncer. { ! i : | Trains I Mele eal] STATIONS, ward ' down, —~ ee | M.A M P.M, A. 3 10, 6 20) é Charlottetown .. -| 2 3010 oe 3 50) 6 35 - Royalty Tunction.| 2 16 9 40 4 a 7 12 ..North Wiltshire. | 1 40 8 & 4 ou : + ..Hunter River. ..] 3 9g) 8 42 3 oa . Oa aha 1 00} 8 GI ood a .-Emerald.. ....../12 58 7 5% 27| § OO)... Freetown ......-/12 42 7 x 6 ai S$ 25}..Kensingion...... 12 28 7 1& 6 20, S dU) Ar. ae Lv. '12 00) 6 48 T. 2. r. Mi S’Side A, r 50} Ly. Ar. |10 30 | 1 11}..Miscouche ......i10 10 i 37 .. Wellington...... 3 47 j = 18)., Port Bells odocse 9 09 ’ 3 34 ..O’Lear + eerenwe 8 00 < 5s ,. Bloom eld re eee 7 34 ‘ 34 . Alberton. see cess 6 55 o At .. Tignish oree eee 6 OU eas” M ie erty . 1. A. M. © a 1 -Chastetiebotn ose - j-- Royalty Junction - ca Bedford ...eeee- oS id 10 ny Me Stewart {* g a 1 29 * ba fect) |r > M. ee g< ewer rm Sane we *eeeee Geet . St, Petera »» Bear River site te 466 weacee } } t ( i y om os 1BY HERBERT i WARD 5 a - _ oe ) |) Oe SS : NWN ig IG re Tass | 8 bees" |S. ‘ ne - <3 Es ee 3 ( = 5 geo e [ee= : 2 , (i COPYRIGHT, 1997, BY HERBERT D. WARD (Continued,) The foreman 41 his side o™r tog! Wortuely wis on corner for a whispvered consultation nearest the of’. The thought of their homes, of their | the sofa 1 n supper and of their crops made t ry | hi desperate. To be 1 i simp a Iie case Was an unpardonableact. Whocan ! then sat « : count the neighborhood enmities that | this with have had their bi in the : id ‘*We can’t starve him ont,’’ sa 7 ti Im: for 1 g @ « } him out. PU iat he d o Bit pa Wink f **Two of us can k 1 him t | at oe ll I ¢ \ Ke i unit he ( l } ' . rt t) After a few hi paign was organized. Then follo the fight. There are few people who underst what a jury room contest is. It is sand hold paper. It is mosquitoes. It is red a per. Itis vitriol. If there is only « and , man who stands out, he is tortured with "aoe % an inquisition that is varied by 11 cor- | aroun ’ q rosive imaginations. Food has ] a known to be so doctored that it cou . tt a not be eaten; water so fouled, that the is ! LN 7 os ; honest unfortunate was madden d into out 3 uid leave a , surrender, Aman has been known to foreman’s red n an ed be nagged for 86 hours without a let up | nothi He cl antil, fainting, almost ont of his intel- T! d is 1 ligence, he has denied his own right- vided ju are, : eousness lest he go insane. or on the floor, if at all. William The blacksmith must have h:# some Worthely had no sleep that night. He inkling of what was before him, for his | Wasconsumed with ti but th yes frreat jaws grew rigid as he folded his no water to be had—for him. All night arms in stolid defiance. Indeed he | long two men relieved each other, squad seemed like a great bull at bay before «, | after squad, keeping the blacksmith pack of snapping, snarling hounds. But | awake. They talked to him, they nudg- & the bull cannot gore all his tormentors before they worry him to his fate. The court had adjourned in disgust, subject to the call of the sheriff. The little town was as excited over the un- fwreseen division as if a cyclone had “illed, but in the jury room determina- tion sat upon every face. William Worthely, who was used to plenty of air as well as of mighty exer- cise, opened the window in front of him. The room was hot and stifling with the odor of angry men and of to- bacco. Ata wink from the foreman a member jumped forward and shut the window. With a flash of ange? the biscksmith started to remonstrate, buta quick look around showed him the fu- tility of wasting his strength.. He smiled a little in contempt and let it go. He refilled his pipe philosophically and searched for a match. He had used up his last one. Then it was discovered that there was not a match in the room —that is, no one had any to give hima light. At 6 o'clock an officer, petulant as the rest, came to take the jury to the hotel for supper. In a trice he knew the rea- son of their detention. The blacksmith was naturally a hearty eater, but the hotel meal was not only unpalatable to him in his strained state; it was too scanty to atford him nourishment. He covld but notice that the rest of his fellows had plenty and good enough food to eat. On the way out he tried to stop at the desk for matches, but the officer hurried them back to their room two by two, and this opportunity was lost. There were exactly eight chairs in the room and a. sofa. that-sarted four. SICK H=OACHE Positively cured by these Little Pills. They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A per fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsi- ress, Bad Tastein the Mouth, Coated Tongus Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. Smali Pill. Smal! Dose. Small Price. Tha Bist. Substitution ~ tho fraud of the day. \ See you get Carter’s,, Ask for Carter's, — Insist and demand Carter’s Little Liver Pills. . D. ‘ dreds of SE ROE RE ON OER eee ror ee oh BLEPNP a\f) ~ Fe LS xu bd & is @ Ges bi © s om ry = ed him when his eyes were closed cur- ing too long an interval, they devised a hundred petry and malicious schemes of cruelty. Just such methods have been in vogue in jury rooms for hun- Tt is only one of our many relics of barbarism. And now the blacksmith was at his forge, hammering his persecutors into ; horseshoes. And then the desperate j longing that it seemed impossible to years. ¥ control for freedom and food ‘and a smoke—for all the things that he had never rated before at their true worth— took possession of him. With one sweep of his brawny arm ke would smash the whole jury 1nd escape to his own home. Then he tightened his fingers into his coat and inwardly cursed his torment- ors. It was merning and then night of the third day. It had never occurred to the foreman of the jury to send word to the sheriff that the jury could not agree. He felt that this was the battle of his life, aud all the tenacity that the ter- Ee brought his great sist down, rier exhibits with the muskrat came out in this insignificant farmer. The jury was utterly exhausted. Already men whispered here and there of capitula- tion, and if it had not been for the mort- gages that the farmer held upon their homes they would have openly gone over tothe blacksmith. The 11 men had hitherto snatched only such sleep as soldiers steal on picket duty or sail- ors on watch. They slept in impossible attitudes in chairs, on the floor, at all times of day or night. But William Worthely had not slept for over 70 hours. And now the fourth night was upon him. ‘““Cor.g come!’ said a juryman bit- terly. ‘™ou have eased your conscience. Now give up and we'll all call it square. ’’ But the blacksmith shook his head without deigning an answer. The obstinate juror had already ar- rived at the stage of the heretic who slept upon the rack. Wasted beyond imagination during these three days of modern inquisition, even his old neigh- bors would hardly have recognized the stalwart man of independence. He was not only tortured by lack of sleep, but by lack of proper nourishment, lack of water, lack of smoking, and also by @ persistent mental irritation correspond- ing to the sting a man feels when he puts his arm into a beehive. What worse torture is there than not to be let_alons fpr eyen ten minutes om - « } { ve thé stretch, perately as the shipwrecked craves 1 when systema yr} Wiel 4 tT 7°" n the aigestive I } tn 9 wai atan belt > hi S to be nauseated Witla } . © | the { fa J 1 y — ’ , Fy ly lost con- 4 : few minutes, he got no | y il i r hi Uli- } ; ’ Aad : . 4 A t oTitiuies ly dissipate itself in a mental haze and his mind would lose itself in a tarmoil of rotation. His forge, his neighbors, yi ox ‘2 > e+ hin would revolve about him, «tS his Village, first slowly, then with frightful accel- eration, until one after another would fiy off on a horrible tangent, like a comet into space. Then he would reach out his trembling hands to save his own forge, and before he could open his uch and shriek he found himself Then he would clinch thank God he had not 7 i€eD. pulled awake his teeth and gone amuck in his s (Lo be Couunued.) te Se he eo ! 1 oy ~ cr CAN ‘ tne rac Al nb with a Lo S 3 4 b Cal t expec iO v4 - 2 i li €88 im «ote } i s i nis t iin 1 b : i + 1 e€¢€a id 9 ne y W Clones patie 16 Lf nine ths of all sicknes symp- {ft ares Ww i SHese, HO bad outh, sness and lassitude. Constipation | cured eas ly and certainly by the of Dr. Pierce’s Plearant Pellete. They e pot at all violent in their ection, and | ey are more certain than many are so strong that they | ; rr) ; of orde rf. ibe great | . lieines »hich meaicines wiich t the system all out Jeramiava F Lp ‘Plas »¥ Fall 9? hye vantage of the “Pleasant Pellets” is that } . "se } cy cur permanently. Ss {3 one-ceut tamps tO cover Cost] ciaae } 7.’ wedi » mailing only, and get his great book, People’s Common Sense Medical | Advise rT, absolutely FREE. Dir pe neary Medical Aasociation, No. 663 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y. —_ a 2 LED « <Eem— oe EASY CURE FOR DYSPEPSIA: “As painful and annoying as Gysypepsia is itmay be easy end quickly cured if the evfferer will only be carfnal in his daily diet,” writes Mrs. 8. T. Rorer in the Marcn Lad:es’? Heme Journal. “Abstain for a given time from all solid focds. Live for at least one week on milk, one quarter beriey water, or koumyss. Then, a8 the stomach grows stronger, take pure milk sipping it and swallowing it slowly. You mey take also the raw white of an egg shaken with a cupof milk,. Barthelow’s food, plum porridge, a little scraped beef broiled, and ficaliy bror'ed beef, boiled rice and pulled bread. A glass of cool, not iced, water, should be taku the first thing in the morn ing. A cup of warm, vot hot, water half an bour before breakfast. For boeakfast, three cunces of milk mixed with ove ounce of barley water. This schedule sdould be followed every three hours throughout the entire day for one week; tsking the last glass of milk half an hour before bedtime. Koumy+s may be substitud for the milk or used alternately.” FACTS ABOUT HEALTH It is Easy to Keep Well if We Know How—Some of the Conditions Neces- sary to Perfect Health. The importance of maintaining good health is easily uttderstood, and it is really a simple matter if we take @ cor- rect view of the conditions required. In perfect health the stomach promptly digests food, and thus prepares nourish- ment. The blood is employed to carry this nourishment to the organs, nerves, muscles and tissues which need it. The Grst great essential for good hee!th, there- tore, is pure, rich blood. Now it is cer- tainly a fact that no medicine has such @ record of cures as Hood’s Sarsaparilla. It is literally true that there are hundreds of people alive and well today who would have been in their graves had they not xy upon as a family medicine. and generai regulator of the system by tens of thon- sands of people. This is because Hood’s Sarsaparilia makes the blood pure. This is the secret of its great success, Keep your system in good health by keeping your blood pure with Hood’s Sarsaparilla, which absolutely cures when other medi- cines fail to do any good whatever. > . are the only pills to take Hood S Pills with Hood's Sarsaparilla. Neuralgia in the head is almost invariabiy caused by decayed and abscessed teeth. Don’t suffer needlessly when you can be relieved in few hours and cured in a few days by tbs careful treatment we will give you. DR. J. H. AYERS DENTIST. Painless Extraction of Teeth, ——— The Charlottetown Steam Navigation Co , Limited ———— Annual - Moecting. The annual Meeting of the above Com- pany will be beld in their office, corner of at George and Lower Water Strrets, Ubarlottetown, on Wednerday, the second day of March, ae the hour of eleven Yelock,am. By order, ae aR, W. HALES, Secretary. 41—td nerves crave Sleép as } + int * > This rare old whisky i 1 TE EARS OLD, and is ve uw Bx - & * taken Hood’s Sarsaparilla. It is depended. CHARLOTTETOWN MARCH 1, 1898 ae ee ~< — ee ADTALAARARLAASARAARASE OAR “MORNIN : SCORE wie eit whisky is cuarantee the produ t of noved pa Scotlaad. a? 3). ° eee ve “a i; Once Tried, Always Used. ear “ hs Ask for the “Black Label - MORNING DEW SCOTCH 0 42, I Ge So Fe Se Fe die Kes CF 4% F2 GAFBBBASADS GSS Addrese, World’s | < A good range of prices and qualities. i A! AL AE A A -T. J. HARRIS PF LIS FABIA PM ts EAE PPE LET SPECIAL —Shoe Bargains 35 pairs Ladies’ Dongola Oxford Shoes at $1, reduced from $1.25 and $1.35; sizes 3to 5. 25 pairs Ladies buttoned and Laced Dangvla Boots; reduced to $1 and $1.25; tizes, 5 to 6. These are snaps and will not last long at the prices. W. H. Stewart & CO weslesbalesledealeceleaasteaste aesieal ee ie dee gabled Wouldn't sellit for $40 if he couldnt get an- other one. This is what a well kncwn gentlewan in the city says about his Highland Range that has been in use for about 20ear ee FENNEL & CHANDLER On The Track Our parlor saits are winning their way into hundreds of homes The Price aud Quality does it. They are selected from the most up-to-date makers in the Dominion—who give us special cuts. We wiil make you special. Our large sales show the the public appreciate our effects-to give genuine bargains Solid Walnut suites $24.00, 26,00, 50.00 and up and get a bargain. JOHN NEWSON, | The Real Bargain Giver. ene me Ne ee i wma