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Goods Do You Trade There? time «o begin now— Sanderson & Co., GROCERS _—— Chocolates <= Can be had at any of the following firs. class store T. J. Morris D. L. Hooper W. Pickard & Co, W. A. Hutcheson W. F. Carter Stewart d Gates Sanderson & Co. J.D. McLeod & Ce R. H. Maso, ~ ~ ™- discovers a women who bave as he. supposes ,ab- duc'ed bis father. | diced in favor of Mr THE DAILY BKAasstiNtis CHARLOTILETOWN, [NOVEM”E’ 25, :£99 ce € gol THE ne AYST 7 _ANDRIANOE « SYNOPSIS. The hero of this’story, Boris Landrinof, ‘s avoung Ruesian, who waseent tofEng: , land to be educate / He is hastily sum moned home by his mother owing to the su’den disuppearance of his father, Count Landrivof. Shortly after, in Loudon, be is astoniebed when a triend tells him be hae just seen his father, Accompanied by thie friend be returns to Russia. Boris clue, and sets out in search of “Tay dear sir,” said the student blandly, *tyou are forgetting one thing and that is that the police will be preju- BY FRED WHISHAW COPYRIGHT 1895, BY THE AMERICAN PRESS ASSOCIATION i Andre, or rather of the count, as they suppose him.”’ “Why? I said angrily. talking nonsense, my friend. ”’ ‘‘Nonsense or wisdom, it is neverthe- less true. See here, now. The police have committed one of the stupidest blunders that ever effete officialdom performed, and that is saying much. They have sent the wrong man to Si- beria and left a dangerous revolutionist at large. Do you suppose, as a reason- able, reasoning creature, that they will be so very ready to admit their error at your bidding and on so flimsy a story as this you will bring them in support of your assertion? They will laugh in your face and say that you are a mad schoolboy and had better back to your English school or to the English asylum you have escaped from. Even if they believe your tale—which. of course, they may do, though they will pretend they do not—they will still laugh in your face and refase to move in the matter.”’ **Do you serionsly mean that they will refuse to set right this fearful blunder that they themselves have com- mitted?’’ I said. ‘You are saying all this, as Andre’s friend, in the hope that I will allow matters to remain as they are. You wish to screen Andre, and my father’s fate is nothing to you. But do not make that mistake, my friend. 1 shall move heaven and earth. I shall spend thousandsof pounds. I shall nev- er rest night and day until I have com- pelled the authorities to redeem their sinful blunder.’ £O “My dear sir, you rave!’’ said the stn tcoolly. ‘*Your father’s fate is, of irse, of little interest to me, ex- cepting in so far as—out of compliment to yourself—I should like to see so po- lite a friend as you have proved your- self gratified. But neither is Andre’s fate of any interest tome. To me it is nothing whether he lives in this palace or in Sakhalin. { have no personal af- fection for him. To prove that I do not wish to screen him, [ invite you to go soon as you piecase to the nearest pristaf of police, tel! him the whole story and see what te will say. You will not, of course, mention me, or give any hint of my existence, or, indeed, speak of the details of your father’s capture, andso on. Tell them simply as that their recapture of Kornilof cn such True happiness does not begin for a wo manly woman until ste becomes a mother. The fear of death stands Between thousands of women and this supreme joy. If a wo man will but take the right comrse, she may trample this fear out of her heart, and all cause for it out of her body There is practically no danger, and but littie pain, in maternity, for a woman whe is thoroughly healthy and strong in a wo manly way. Dr. Prerce’s Favorite ao tion makes the delicate organs that bear fhe burdens of maternity strong, healthy, virfle and elastic. It banishes fhe distres’ of the period of impending maternity, aad im- sures the neweonter’s health and #e agpc sepply of reuriéimnent. An forrest @os- gist will not try t get you te fake seme substitute for his profit’s sake. Prospeetive mothers who write to fv. RV. Pterce will feceive the best advice of an eminent and ekiliful specialist, for thirty years ehief oF N.Y sulting plrysician to the great [rrepfids’ tel oy | Sargical Institnte, at butais, “A neighbor of mine who was expecting the atrival of a baby very long, was ia very poor health,” writes a Rema 2, Posf- mistress, at Majella, Boutbon ansa®. I induced her to try Dr. Pietce’s Favorite Prescrip- tion. She used aed bottles, and has {ust been delitered of as fine a danghter as I ever saw. She was only a short ffme in labor and is now Going well.”’ ; e 9 For sick headache, bil- Pierce s&s jowsness and cOnstipa- tion, Dr. Piéroae’s Pleas- ant Pellets are the most rational cufe known. ‘bey are mifid but thorough and eff-ctive. They regniate and invigdrate prmach, liver and bow- els. Never gripe. No Peilets other pill is like them . ‘*You are } — wenn pe | L and such a day Wasa blunder, that they took this wrong man and that the right man is at this moment in your house See what the pristaf will say. He will laugh in your face. ”’ ‘‘And if he does, if he and his supe riors refuse to se* the thing right, am I to concur tamely in their decision? Not I, my friend. I will go to the czar him- self, but I will see justice done to my dear father!’’ ‘**There will be no need to go to the ezar,’’ laughed the student. “‘Gotoa lesser man, though perhaps as worthy a one. Go—or rather come back—to me. I shall have something to propose, only there must be another arrangement in this event—and another check!’ CHAPTER XXIV. THE COUNT’S EXILE TO SIBERIA. ‘Do you mean,’’ I said, ‘‘that you will be able to provide evidence that this man Andre is the convict Kornilof and not my father?’’ ‘*Perhaps,’’ said the student, smiling conceitedly. ‘It is ridiculous,’’ I cried hotly, ‘‘to suppose that the police will refuse to accept the evidence of a man’s own wife and child and will believe yours for the asking.’’ ‘**It may be ridiculous, but the police never admit a blunder if they can make any one else suffer for it instead of themselves. As for my part in the busi- ness, you forget that I possess informa- tion of various kinds with regard to Andre, which might be useful and even important to them and might throw a light on this matter.”’ ‘*T see,’’ I said. ‘‘But I shall be both surprised and disgusted if it prove to be as yom say, and the authorities re- fuse to believe our evidence. I shall leave yoa now and consult my friends. I believe your story as to father’s cap- ture; so yon may censider your check safe. At the same time you are to re- main where you are until other mat- ters are settled. You have no objection to continue as my guest ?’’ ‘‘So long as my safety is guaranteed I shall be charmed to remain,”’ said the student. ‘‘Does Andre enjoy the run of the house? He must not see me or know that lam kere. He would mur- der me, and your cause would be ruined.”’ ‘*He shall not come here or know of your presence. I shall see that only trusted persons are aware that I havea —an acquaintance staying in the house. ”’ ‘“‘“Geod! See that the same wine is served to me, like the generous host you are, and plenty of it!’’ He shouted the last words at me as I left the room. ‘‘T shall have you watched, my fine fellow,’’ I said to myself as I hurried away to confide my great news to Percy and Borofsky, ‘‘for you are a_ pearl of great price.”’ And I may say in this place that from this time until—well, until certain things had happened, either Percy or Borofsky or I was con- stantly on duty in-the passage outside the student’s room, both to see that he did not attempt to escape and to guard against surprises, from without, Andre being a kind of bugbear that one must suspect and fear all times. I found Boroefsky and Percy playing billiards. ‘“‘Well?”’ cried the latter. ‘What Iuck?’’ Both heand Porofsky laid down their cnes and waited for me to speak. Now that 1 was here and my heart bursting with the news I had to tell them, I was unable to utter a single word. I suppose I dreaded being dis- couraged. I had formed lovely hopes so many times and on each occasion they had been dashed from me that I sup- pose I feared to be told by Borofsky that all this which my student had told me Was mere buncombe; that he had taken me in, and there was not a word of truth in his story. ‘*You’ll probably say it’s all a tissue of lies,’’ I blurted at length, with diffi- culty. ‘‘That’s extremely probable,”’ said Borofsky, who had been soured of late by his ill successes and was not in the best of humors. ‘“‘At any rate, old man, we'll con- sider it in its bearings,’’ said Percy “Three heads are better than one, though I admit yours is not such a bad one. Is it so very incredible?’ ‘“‘On the contrary, I don’t think it is go at all,’’ I said, ‘‘but Bcrofsky may with his detective order of mind, and I simply dread to be told there’s nothing in it—because’’— ‘*Well—because what?’’ said Borof- sky. ‘‘I shall criticise. It is my duty. But I shall be only too glad to recognize a real clew!” ‘‘I think it is a real clew, and that I now ‘know what became of my poor fa- ther."’ I said. ‘‘You see, the student OS A Cc —_- couldn't have known that we’’-~— “Stop! You forget that we shor id like to hear the tale itself before listen- ee ey my LO JuUUur Cosusuciies Oe Ab, Borofsky Then I told them as clearly as I could, and without the circumlocution that wy conceited student garnished the tale with. how father had been cruelly and wickedly entrapped and substituted for a wretch who was wanted by th police, and how the police had faller into the ambush prepared for them ind bad in all probability deported fa ther to Siberia, while Andre was lef to live in luxury and freedom. | paused when I had finished the starvy Then. **Great Ceesar!’’ mur BOA py eu mured Percy. Borofsky meditated in silence. ‘*Well, Borofsky,’’ I said presently, ‘don't keep me in suspense. I long to hear yoir opinion. Is the tale true or a tissue of lies?’’ ‘Stop!’ said Borofsky. ‘Did you tell the rascal anything of your journey to Erinofka and your finding of a clew there?’’ I reflected a moment. ‘‘No,’’ I said, “I don't think Idid. I’msure I didn’t.” “‘Ah! Then the tale is trnue,’’ said Borofsky, ‘‘for it fits in with that which we know, unless, of course, he was sharp enough to put two and two together and build his tale on the rn- mors he may have heard of our re- searches at Erinofka. His precious so- ciety, or brotherhood, or gang of thieves, or whatever you like to call it, may have heard cf our being on the scent there, even though it were not they who murdered the wretched little peasant who brought you information.’ ‘*No,’’ said Percy. ‘*The Erinofka bit belongs all right; it is part of our affair The little peasant told us a true tale and suffered death for it. Who mur- dered him? Why, these infernal ras- cals; possibly the student himself. The story is consistent, Borofsky, from be- ginning to end. Boris has got hold of the right man at last. You were after him, I know, for weeks, and therefore the credit is yours as much as his; but Boris it was that nabbed him. Well done, Boris, old boy! You deserve your success. Gad, Borofsky! You wouldn’t have gone in after the fellow into an ice hole! Came. would you now ?”’ (To be Continued.) NERVOUS... DEPRESSION Means Impoverished and Exhausted Nerves— Dr. A. W. Chase’s Nerve Food Restores and Revitalizes the Nerve Cells. People who suffer from Nervous Depression and kxhaustion frequen‘ly look healthy and strong. ‘They alone know the thousand dis- tressing symptoms which make their lives miserable. The lack of nerve force results ina slow and sluggish action of the heart, impaired diges- tion, headache, desponde»cy, and a fear to venture, loss of energy, sleeplessness, incapa- rity for mental labor or business. 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