sy V c i OVE ‘ 12,000 PEOPLE Have purchased “HEINTZMAN’S PIANGS” In preference to all ‘ others We will {urnish vou with th t of their res if you desire it Intending purchas 7 2: Wi CO Wel TO SCTUL the ist closely, where they 1 Si k y recog ra : te . t vrit ) ia: Se Heintzman Piant ein AUGRCLGA uv. meng Mille Sras J 3 a i 3 its i ry ~ of each sheet note and letter sizes. MITCHELL’S BOOKSTORE Queen St. Empire Tabiets Tust wn ut you want. Crossed flags; Canadian ensign and Union lack, nicely printed in colors at top +} Can be had in both Opp. Prowse Bros. Celery We are making FOR WINTER SE al offer for 2 * ' a <7 tis month before packi ng away in green house, and it will be tothe a ive age of ony ore requiring a supply of celery to secure it be- fore the price goes up. The same celery cannot be boush it later on for nyt es less tha N 50 per cent more. We have it b ea shed for present use or green fi winter kee Uur price for November month only—$2.00 per barrel, or three barrels for $5.00 W also have veets for $1.10 r barrel; corret $1.15; parsnips, $1 25 r barrel; onions, Dé 50 OF ito Ibs in barrel; 1 mips, 65c per Dar el; cabdbave. Qre ner lorge sar } re ‘ ae 929c per large sngar barrel ; - f J.J. GAY & SON, harlo Ottetown. AS NAP Ww: ve receive } A GHINA TEA SETTS OTRIAN: 3 : c c Of th above thr ugh mi kK hip} ;. and if we dont atisfy l€ Duying public im thi rtiele we ty hot the low selling people that every one n we They’re selling very | Ww, v oe ; Were bout ma m go, ihey’re tk ick ies in town And +} An very latest style. Drop in and see them Everything i : ‘ e. ctsthing selling at the’ low price «ut which we are su noted W. P. COLWILL, THE CROC KERYWARE VWs L P. E, Island’s Greatest Crockery Store, Sun_ THE DAILY &XAMI On ARLOTTETOWN, NOVEM 2 eo eee ee BER 27, ee ome. f Ber shail j ; : Was { at +} hie sf seen en coer! ; 1. @ } } | With the Blan gs rs ask 1p i) iicoved ; »> yh ws ‘ 4 . « \ ‘ ecrul vo os a . ) r | CAPTAIN CHARLES K ' i AIN CHARLES KING, U.S. A. | Lk : } Ve = a { I> ¢ 7 Wyn ‘ T ti T Th * ra Al LHOR Of THE ( Ly INEL'S DAT GHTER “FROM THE Oe “re RANKS,’’ ETC Far Lcopyriaur, 1898, BY J. B. LIPPINCOTT co. | \ \ eg ; 8 - ; 7 rT. ° \ | skins 7 LV ARNG (( ontinted.) } Prery the Lerxc- a \ » say rs iokYy 5s i} ; $ Lay : “Oh, it’s of no consequence. You re- ea. i. . ee ma AN member Mr. Toots, don’t you?’’ he called Sa ee 1 ries eee ee : : g, sa é 3 lority, bu ‘ : back over his shoulder as he made his th a tee te cape from the car. mimesis Ate? aie che c es But on the plat- form without the flitting smile vanishes and his face grew gray and sad as he topped and took a long, long breath ‘‘Siesson number one, and a touge, Que, Darcy, my boy,’’ he panted. ‘‘My God, What is my name to be now?’ CHAPTER V. The —th had been having what Cap- tain Ray called a ‘‘poky’’ time most of that year, and when Ray’s usually sun- ny nature clouded over something was to be amiss with the professional side of the man. His domesiic side was perennial joy. Theregiment had knewn riany a hard winter, many a fierce sum- sure mer, Many a sharp campaign and savage battle. Its long exile in Arizona in the eld days was full of peril and suffering. Its sometimes desperate encounters with the red warriors of the northern plains and mountains had made sad inroads on itsmembersbip. Its records of cagual- ties embraced every conceivable catas- trophe—death by sunstroke, starvation freeaing, lightning, flood, fire, rattle- sbakes, explosions, thirst, arrow and tomahawk, shot, saber and shell. A peaceful year it never knew from the day of its first muster on the plains of Texas until a quarter century after, when, wirabile dictu, there hadn’t even been a horse thief to .@llow or an In- dian to chase until late in the summer it occurred toa band of Cheyennes to ride northward and call on some kin- dred up in the Powder river country, and these children of nature never thought of asking anybody's leave. The eth had been having, as Ray said, so poky a time at Russell—just drilling, drilling, drilling on that wide sweep of -upland prairie, instead of scouting and fighting through the mountains, their normal st®umer recreation—that the regiment shouted for very joy when it beard that Sharp Knife, the young Hot- spur that headed the raid, had soundly | thrashed the first detachment sent to bead him off, and, indignant at the dis- _ courtesy of tbe Great Father in essay- ing to curb bis inclination to roam, was helping himeelf to all the horned cattle, horses and household goods that lay in his way, not to mentien a few of the households, and was careering onward hound for « big time ia the Big Horn mountains, bragging to the northern Cheyennes of the fun he had had. Then away went Colonel Atherton, with Stannard and Mainwaring, the old and the new majors, and cight ‘‘husky’”’ troops, full tilé for the hills, only to find when they reacbed the broad valley of the Ska that Sharp Knife and his shifty followers bad crossed 48 hours abead and were circling westward across the Little Missouri by that time. Never is a stern chase so long a chase as when the Indian the lead. The depart- has | ment commander od by rail, stagecoach ard bucixbcard, and half the | took to the | hid ar | game tribe b troops in the tez ritor ies of Dalkecin Mon- tana and Wyoming were centering on the Cheyennes when Sharp Knife cut loose from all semblance of a base and Wot ds in His peo- pie scattered to the fonr winds. Some nong the northern bands of the », some slipped in among the Sioux at the great reservations in Da- kota, others scaitered far and wide, broke up into little squads of three cr rand even less and jogged back by circuitous routes to the southern plains aud swore they’d only been bunting along i! isas. There’s only one at an Indian—mur- look the image of Guia is Uric Acid in the blood. Unhealthy kidneys are the cause of being there. If the kidneys acted as they should they would strain the Uric A e6arbest. OP cus aU > 4 4 ka? (oe ArKRaD creature th a¢ can Bi der one minute spd ee Ne NS NIN : P > . . tne acid Acid out of the system and rheuma- tism wouldn't occur. Rheu- matism is a Kidney Dis- ease, Dodd’s Kidney Pills have made a great part of their reputation curing Rheumatism. So get at the cause of these fearful shooting pains and stiff, aching joints. There ig but one sure way— odd’s idney putz | j { an < a ne ed that stirred the socia —th to its foundations had been stationed for some yenrs : Russell, a big post on the Union Paci! but the department commander decide that be wanted Atherton and his season- ed cam paiguers closer to the malcon- tents, and, to the unspeakable—un specchless—indignation of nine-tenths of the ladies in the —th and the finan- Cial though unconfessed comfort of many of their lords, the order was is- sued that it should not return to Rus- sell, but direct its retrograde march on the older, smaller, but just now rather more iinportant post of Fort Ransom. *‘Squeeze into quarters as best you can,’’ said the general cheerfully, ‘‘and you won’t mind crowding this winter. Ve'll fit you out better in the spring.’’ Now, the winter was the time they most objected to being crowded, for then they had their friends from the east and their sccial pleasures, did these Games and damsels of the army, while in summor the troops were almost al- ways afield, and tho women, those who could afford it, went east. Few had done so this year, because the regiment was bot sent out for summer camp, ‘and when the Sharp Knife chase was or- dered it was too late in the season. So the two battalicns, then so called, marched in to Ransom. Then, so many ata time, tine officers were allowed to go to Russell te supervise the packing arc Shipment of their housohold gesde while the quartermaster and other ser- geants did as much for the companies Mrs. Atherton, with her lares and pena- tes, was there at Batte to welconie tho regiment when it arrived. Mrs. Main- waring, with her fair niece, Miss Le- roy, was to have becu thers, but, a3 we have seen, became involved iu a colli- sion in the mountain division. The ma- jor burried eastward to meet his keh matic at Pawnee, and there got full de- tails of the crash and scught among the passengers for the young man in tke wister and traveling cap who had been 30 halpful in time of need, but be had disappeared, said tbe conductor who took Mr. Jarvis’ load. The last seen of him he was taking dinner at Ford’s res taurant wit’: a couple of cowboys and 2 dilapidated party who bad Leen fellow passengers with him on No. 3 at the time of the wrecix. Then the cowboy: bad gone ore way and the yourg man another. Sergeant Kearney, who under Lieutonant Rawson was in charge the recruits. said, begging the new jor’s pardon, that the.conductor anil eD- gineer of No. 3 wero sure there was soniething queer about that party. Ii was believed they were all connected with a gang of train robbers. Whereat the major scoffed until Rawson came tp and corroborated what Kearney ha: said and was presented by the major t: his wife and Miss Leroy, who were ne overcordial. Women learn so mu more about their fellow passengers in the course of a few hours than do men. Then the major, in his happy way went on to chaff the wife of his bosom upon her having nearly captured a train robber, and then Miss Leroy spoke ker mind. She dida’té believe a word of it. At Butte, where they arrived lata ait night, while ~ iunjor bustiing about aitcy th bulance and baggage wagors, Ma ~s 4 pen window and gazixg out af tre flittcag lights on the platform oS awaiting the summons to leave the car, wes saddenly ted by tho sight « ga iittie detachment of ci uy 6 Vas »¥y) al) and attr er recruits marc! ing by. The young lady, too, was at 2 near window, and the sergeant, cater- ing a glimpse of her a vamiermill =ha conversation he had heard ut Pawnee and.ber prompt defense of the absent, and he had felt ili at ease and sham stricken ever since. What right had h to brand a man as a criminal on the qere susnicion of some railway employ- ees? The yourg lady's spirited stand|\in defense of the defamed had astonishled the major and delighted Kearney. }|A sudden thought struck the he ethos teal as ba was marching by, and, sp rings quickly to the side of the car, he hqld up to tha window the handsome silver topped flask. ‘‘I beg pardon,’’ said he, ‘‘but this belongs to that young gentte- man. I was to have given it to hirn, but I've got to return to St. Louis to the recruiting depot, and he’s stopped | back there about Pawnee. He wever came on this train at all, but he de- elared he was coming up to lort jRan- | it-to som later. Would you piease giv him, miss?”’ And before she knew what to yay the | A mother not spoken we/l of by | her children is an enemy of the state; she should not live within the Sindee sitting ai | ) yf ie ZS. re And what on earth was she to do with that handsome flusk? | hand—the stranger whom she could | have sworn she saw at Bonn and Co- logne not four months before—who thought it might have been his brother, | who wouldn’t 2 give his name, but who | had forgotten the handkerchief with most perfect form of concentrated nourishment. A cup of Bovrit will prove most efficacious in preventing or counteracting Colds and Chills. A Bovril Sandwich or Bovril spread on toast makes a perfect meal by the way. For Luncheon or Supper, for all the odd meals that children re- quire, Bovrit is handy, deli- cious and strengthening. | Which he had stanched the flow of blood from her temple—an vwnsightly relic at | the moment, to be sure, but safely towed in ber little satchel for all that, and already searched and not vainly for | a trace of ownership. Bathed own blood were the letters D. H. G. | (To be Continued.) Painful, Fatal One of the most commo.i symptoms | Of kidney disease is the smarting. seald- |ing sensation when passing water | which is likely to come very frequently |} and at inconvenient times. Then there a the dull, heavy aching in the small | of the back and down the limbs, When these pains are accompanied by ' for twenty-four hours, you may be sure ‘that you are a victim of kidney dis- ease, and should not lose a single dar in securing the world’s greatest k idne® | cure-—Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills, | Don’t imagine that you are experi- | menting when you use Dr, Chase’s Kid- | ney- -Liver Pills. They are almost as well known as his great Recipe Book, have made sorne of the most surprising | cures of kidney disease on record, and | have come to be considered the only | abe eure for kidney disease. Ask your neighbors about them. Nearly everybody can tell of some remarkable eure by their use. One pill a dose ; 25 cents a box, at all dealers’, or Edman- son, Bates & Co., Toronto. Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills. LIBERAL-CONSERVATIVE CONVENTION. A convention al the servitives of the First District « King’s Co. will be held in the Bene- volent Irish Society’s Hall, Souris lon Monday, the 26th November, ‘inst., at two o'clock p. m., for the| | purpose of choosing a candidate for | It the > fort! :coming election. CAN McLit NOV. 21, ‘OO JOHN , Convener. se uris, | N | All Rig ne t. name you Wudaill\ ale Gents Box Calf, lace, Goodyear | welt--- i 52.80 | | Gents’ Dongola Chocolate. tace i &2. 25. Gents’ Dongola Black, lace,Good Car WeEit, i ame wn nN “I _ | Gents’ Box Calf, Black ‘and ;Tan, Goodyear welt--- $2.75. Gents’ Box ° Calf, @Black, double sole. Goodyear welt, rubber heel, ‘best value in the city--- | $4.00. | J.H. BELL Kidney Disease Liberal-Con- of | ET SE EO. in her ace eG ity Paints, Oils, Fiardware Store BUILDERS’, FARMERS’ MECHANICS’ HARDWARE.. Giass, Carpenters’ Tools ALL CHEAP FOR GASH The Celebrated | Fr Now is The Time TO BRING TO US ANY Articles that have ceased to be of any use, wil a low full value Norton Machine Oil, R. B. MORTON & GO., Limited. | deposits in the urine after it has stool | as = _a aS as aS aS We exchange for goods, and in youmay be able to purchase ~ something—either atch, ot. Te a! OLD GOLD OR SILVER... ! Jewelry, Spectacle or clock—that woud be of serviee to you. E. W. TAYLOR | o. CAMERON BLOCK iOW | BRAHMIN | 2a ore, NEVER ITS SUPERIOR vine os what we READY-TO-PUT-ON CVYERCOAT. SOLD FOR $10.00 wish to state about our Its made from all wool fine blue beaver cloth, lined with an excellent quality italian or farmers satin, silk stitched, vels -ollar, good workmanship. W ‘the past 20 years hand): . millions of samples of cloth and think we knowa good deal abou quality, and we can confidently say we have not see a_ better coz for $10.00 than we are offering. We will be pieased to have you examine these coats. MORRIS BLOCK CHARLOTTETOWN D. A BRUCE MERCHANT TAILOR. HASZARD’S = 60,000 Pounds now Landing and to arrive. Ask your grocer for ‘‘Haszard’s Brahmin” anu take no other. — ee proves hot erences esate aaa reed - c a, ee Se St oe i ae Se Te as a f iy a oof Legg ma 7 ad ety poe per om roca io narvonm ae Sapo st Bas anes, ae tie er wrest o ae ttl meen cay <a mae ene tant wien emma NaLcnaee eet if ners Em Be - ag pageant etna aint Sete ope - o—_ 4 a ce