#e¢4\e aur Bes Dw ve Se ee Oe Oe ee \eee tee eme » CeCe TED TUE wer eeess ST) oe” ~S@eOb7Os" 12205532 4 S68 THE L.ALY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, JULY 24, lov 7 “a ~ — ee — v ‘th 4 7 f KIDNEY z a G J PILLS <7; Suwa Fis vf OR ALL K SECRET ARE EMER E SP eee reece se Ne eeE soe — D-O-D-D- DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS, the only positive, never-failing cure, ou earth, for all Kidney diseasea, Take No Other. Get the Genuine, Refuse Imitations, = There's Only One Dodd’a . @H Ge HG & 6898 EE88 ADVICE ABOUT Spice. When ordering a packrge Pepper, Ginger, A!lspice, Cin namon or Cream of Tartar from your grocer you can al- waye feel sure of securing the best quality by asking for ;:: Mott's S § City of Ghent PICKFORD & BLACK K@OO@’3O%>=a* @ BG © Gt OOF Chak sail from of Ghent will ottetown cvery Friday durir g ison of 1889 for Halifax, calling at Summersid-, Port Hastings, Port Hawks- bury, Aricbat, Canso, Isaac Harbor, Salmon River, Sheet Harbor, returning will leave Halifax every Tuesday at 6 p m making some ». , (37 ; } ] t ¢ OcIOCc , calls The steamer has exceilent passenger accomodations. Saloon amidships. Specia. low freights will be given this season Further ir formation apply to W W CLARKI Age ( Town May 27 tf Dubcee Steamship Co'y (Limited) Proposed Sailings from MONTREAL and QUEBEC During Soason of 1899. FOR PICTOU. N:-S:- — CALLING AT— Father Point, Gaepe, Mal Bay, Perce, Cape Cove, Summerside, Char; loitetown and Souris. From Montreal From Ch’town at 2 p. m at 6 p.m, Mon, 19th Jane Mon. 18h June do 3rd July do 26th do io 17th July do 10th July lo 3ist do do 24th do do i4th Aug. do Tth Aug. lo 2xth do do 2lst do do lth Sept. do 4thSept. io ©«25th do do 18th do io §=—.: 9th: Cet. do 2nd Oct. do 23rd do do 16th do do 30th do do 13th Nov GF Returniny will leave Pictou, N. S. every alternate Monday at noon, OD arrival of Trains from Halifax and St. John, call- og at Charlottetown, Susnmerside, Perce, Gaspe, Ma] Bay and Father Point. chunge should circumstance ao 6th Nov, Subject t equire it. CARVELL BROS, Agente aw. D. L. HOOPER Agent for the Windsor, N. 8. Plaster Co—Epglizh Selenite Cement and Cal- cined Plaster. Also agent for the Maritime Clay Work Brick. A stock dlwayson band. | Also a well furnished feed sore gdjoin- “oor a eee, Cor.Great George & Chesuta —— nT THE GAVE OF AVARICE By CLINTON ROSS “Here the writing stops,”” Fentoz gaid. ‘‘But there is one line more in another hand: “The devil has the soul of him who w known to the world as Miguel Santos.’ ‘*What a fool that old chap was, any- way!’’ said Dorden. ‘‘With all that money he might have had a time fit for a king without botherin himself about the hereafter.’’ ‘‘With all that money,’’ I said. ‘*Do you suppose it’ now ?”’ ‘*‘Do you spose it is? It fairly makes my mouth water,’’ Dorden obs ‘If it were there!’’ said the pale faced Fenton. ‘‘I’ve given up so much—to get money.”’ ‘‘No more than I,’”’ **No more than I,”’ But I s thi re rved. said Dorden. said I. was watching the yellowed parchment which Dorden was holding, as I have said, low over the candle. Black lines were appearing there. I gasped as Isaw them. Was this that old secret? Had he written it on the | back of the confession? Should we know it, then? Should we get the gold with | which I might make my restitution? ; ‘‘The paper’s back, Fenton!’’ I cried. Fénton turned the paper, scared, while Dorden sent the greasy pack scat tering. ‘*Read it—for God’s sake, read it! Can you?’’ Fenton read in a low voice: ‘As thou followest the disused road to the silver mine thou wilt come about five Spanish miles to a projecting rock. ern side of the rr which will bring bushes by the cliff side. find the opening of the cave. Push t! hand corner of the iron door, and it willswing open, and thou wilt be cursed as was Miguel o Going to the west <, pace due west 50 yards, » against the clump of Under these then wilt e¢ upper Lantos.” “It’s gospel truth, then,’’ said Dor- den. “That he was cursed!”’ starting. ‘Blank the curse!’’ Dorden replied ‘‘That treasure is there!’’ ‘*Yes, it may bé there,’’ said Fenton rising. ‘‘But the old road the fellow = of,’’ Dorden said. ‘‘Haven’t you read of it in ‘em papers?’’ “It is the path to the lIeftof th monastery,’’ said Fenton. ‘‘We'll go there at said Dorden, rising. ‘‘We'll divide.’ “Tf it’s true,’’ said L. ‘‘It’s got to be true,’’ Dorden retort- ed. ‘‘My luck has got to change son time. ’”’ Fenton sat there, the from his pale face. ‘““You pocr limp fool, contemptuously. ‘‘Now, the fir is for us to go to bed.’’ He seemed to direct us like a capt and we readily allowed him the | hip. Yet I fancied something 4 al eal said Fenton, stinrise, then,’ Toot + mrit sweat pouring ’? Dorden said : St thin ous in his eyes, and I remem] after I was in bed I and bolted my. door. What if the dream were nota dream? Aye, what if we shou!d find And then my arose that treasure? dream maddened me, and I tossed till the sun came over the mountain top—the moun- tain perhaps of the cave of the river. We started out after breakfast stealthily, as if we were on some thiev- ish errand. The manner of thieves seemed to fall to us easily. At first the search promised well. for the old road by the monastery was a marvelous piece of engineering for its day and time. Nature, so forceful in Mexico after all the years, had not de- stroyed man’s work. So anxiously we followed that splendid and forzotter If awoman walked bare-footed on the sharp edge of a sword, would not undergo one- tenth of the agony daily borne by thou- sands of women witheut complaint. They suffer greater misery and pain than could be in- flicted by all the pro- fessional torturers ‘that the world ever knew. Day and night they suffer from headaches, dragging down and burning sensations, pains in the sides and back, hot and cold flushes, nervous and trem- bling sen- sations and physical lassitude and mental despondency. The whole body is tortured with pain and the entire nervous system 1s racked. If they consult the average ob- secure physician, he will attribute their bad feelings to stomach, liver, kidney, heart or nervous trouble. If, by accident, he hits upon the right cause, he will insist upon the disgusting examinations and local treat. ment so embarrassing to a sensitive, mod- est woman. : The real trouble is weakness or disease of the delicate and important organs that bear the burdens of maternity. There is no necessity for examinations oT local treat- ment. r. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription cures all disorders of this mature in the privacy of the home. It acts directly on the sensitive organs concerned, making them strong and well. It allays inflamma- heals a — = ms a builds up the nerves. its weheontian drains. It banishes the a forts of the expectant months, and me es baby’s coming easy and almost painiess. she the beauty and vivacity lost cabana months or a of pain and cases. housands of women have tes- i its marvelous merits. At all med- a aaete. Avoid substitutes. sila To cover customs and mailing ouly, sen 41 one-cent stamps for peper-coveres. copy, or so for cloth-bound copy, of Dr. ner Common Sense Medical Adviser. Address, Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. ¥. ber t t | ( put on that jutting rock? I questioned. ay, Waich reminded us much as of an old Romen road such : you may see along the Mediterrancan Countless treasryr or the Adriatic isire pner- | haps had been dragged over it in the old | days before the mine to which it led | | been abandoned. Yes, it told of old ; (on , r¢ ha follow- | } | 3 l «a i t} pa +h, ‘ Ww ’ ¢ | Ore j the j y i 1t 1 | pa ‘ _ 2. ‘ ved I A + f > ¢ ae | i i nt | i I i 1 I follo 1 | is th r face of t ne | 1 Y d bh t 4 + \ a i S i d Mm qQver ta i ers Ol 1 z | trunis and leaves. A snake, so deadly in Sonora, ran out before him, yet D den persisted, and again we were favor ed, for we came directly, with scarcely an error, on the opening. Dorden ! brought a machete and now ] ed LO bushes away, and then we heard a low, distant dued thunder. ‘The river!’’ Fenton cried at this re- peated evidence. But what we saw was wraging, for the cave stop- ped at about 20 feet. It was walled by lichen covered. A hundred vriggling creatures were on the surface. But here was indeed what Miguel Santos, dead a full century and a half, had promised, and there was the iron door. rusted and discolored, so that we wondered if indeed it would answer to the pressure on the upper left hand cor- ner, wondered if in all the years the treasure had not been taken. Again it was Dorden making the trial, while we stood waiting. The road to riches—to the cave of Santos’ avarice—seemed easy indeed. The air that swept our faces was sin- gularly fresh and sweet, due to the wn- ters that we heard now in a deafening roar. Then the rush of air seemed to stop. Dorden had no difficulty in light- ing the candle, which gave a feeble glare in the vast place. ‘‘Careful,’’ he said as he advanced, and we saw we Were on the edge of a vast precipice, with the undistinguish- able mass of the roaring river far, far below. We all three turned about, our faces blanching, and then a strange thing occurred. A pale white light be- gan to be diffused. I could not account for it then, though now I understand that the shifting sun had reached some opening along the course of that under- ground river. It was a vast stream in- deed, a sheer fallof many hundred feet, as we now were able tosee. The farther shore we could not tell in that half light. Now it had become almost like early twilight. But it seemed to me ius broad as the Hudson. Whence did it and whither were those waters carried in their mad whirl? But I was interrupted by Dorden’s cry. He was pointing toward a projecting cliff, which hung out far over the water. It Was approached by a narrow neck, so that it formed a peninsula jutting into the air above the roaring waters. The space might have had a diameter of 50 feet. But what we saw astounded us even in our expectations, now raised by the success of every step of the search. On this space were above ascore of iron chests, their lids all opened, revealing in the increasing light the sheen of dia- monds, the blue and green of sapphires and the glow of rubies. They lay there beckoning, as Miguel Santos had left them. From many of the chests was | the absorbing yellow glare of golden coins, so many that in the moment we could not calculate their number. Yet we knew that here was wealth stich as rumble es of sub- masonry, come a Sroesus’ incalculable riches of gold and precious stones. But why had they been I don’t believe the others even ques- tioned. Now that we could see quixe plainly Dorden cast the candle down into the depths and almost ran toward the treasure. I saw him dizzily rushing along the narrow passage and kneeling before one of the chests and crying out like a maniac. Fenton was close behind him, gloating over the jewels. As I fol- lowed he picked from one of the chests a piece of manuscript. oe “What is this?’ he said, holding it up, for the light now was strong enough for us to read by it. “More of Santos’ words!"’ he added. “Look at the gold, not papers!’’ Dor den cried. But the instinct of the scholar mastered Fenton even in that moment. ‘‘Miguel Santos’ writing.’’ he said, and slowly he rendered “Gold thou comest by dishonestly shalt curse thee always, for sin must be penance Fool, thou shalt perish with thy gold and thy precious stones. The punishment of God on the miser is that he shall not keep what he gioats on.”’ ‘Fool!’ came Dorden’s voice, hissing over our shoulders. I looked at him al- most fearfully, for there was a maddish glare inhis eyes. Suddenly, like a fiend. a threw himself on us beth. “‘It shall be mine,”’ he cried, ‘‘only mine!’ The onslaught earried us all three near the edge, Fenton andl struggling to hold him back. Im some way—G knows how—I disentangled myself and turned just at theedge. My companions were not there, but from afar was & lit- tle splash, while @ voice cried out in horrid despair. It indeed may have been my strained imagination. and yet in- deed it may have been Dorden’s. “Cnreaed! COnreed!’’ came that fear- some cry. Fearsome, 1 say, for 1 was 7 : ine. Iwas across the narrow pas- f and as 1 reached the firmer earth I heard a great crunching and crum bling behind. Awed even in my fear, I about. The air seemed to be filled with flying coins and jewels, kk alse 1 sending out yellow and red, blue and rreen flashes, and then the earth gave way, that great crag sank, and a mo ment—yes, it might have been amo ment, but it seemed to me a tediously h trible d iv there came a mighty struck my fac so far above the ‘reat river which begins lsof the earth. Its splash, and a spray even where i stood, surface of that ; and ends in the bowe bottom at this point you may find, should yon examine, strewn with old | Spanish coins and jewels, and perhaps with the mes of men. Yet most of that great wealth ma ried by the forceful! current of the river far on under the earth, which gives and takes our riches as she gives and takes our bodies. As for me, I had then no desire to search, nor have I now Then I turned and ran out of that ac- cursed cave of avarice. Outside the warm Mexican sun beat on me But I did not dare to return to Corpus Christi I turned down the other mountain, thinking of the soul of guel Santos and those of my two late companions—God help them! For me in the few years left there is penance for my past, and soI have come back into the New England town where my crime was done. As for the riches of the cave of avarice, I would not touch them even for the comfort of restitu- tion to those I robbed. The secret. of Miguel Santos shall end with me, for the way to the cave is not as I have de- scribed, even should you chance in the village of Corpus Christi, in the state ot Sonora. (To be Continued ) r. A.W. GHASE # Triumphs over the Worst Forms of KIDNEY... DISEASE The wonderful success of Dr. Chase’s Kid- ney-Liver Pills adds to the fame of the great doctor whose name is familiar in almost every home as the author of the world famous Recipe Book. y have been car- the Mi- side of Scores and thousands of grateful men and women have been rescued from the miseries and dangers of kidney disease by this greatest of all kidney cures. fr. D. C. Simmons, Mabee, Ont., writes: “*My kidneys and back were so bad I was unable to work or sleep. My urine had sedi- ment like brick dust, I was compelled to get up four or jive times during the night. I saw Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills advertised and concluded to give thematrial. I have only used one box and am completely cured. I was a great sufferer for 18 years, but my kidneys do not bother me now. I enjoy good rest and sleep and consider Dr, Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills a boon to suffering humanity.” Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills, one pill a dose, 25c. a box, at all dealers, or Edmansan, Bates & Co., Toronto. : foean. -- cma] c=> Ss Se MUNK Prices Right HASZARD & MOORE SUNNYSIDE Hughes The Peoples’ Druggist Drugs are expensive, Sometimes they are more expensive than nerd be. And sometimes they are not so reiiable as they ongkt to be. There was atime when the prices of drugs were away up—too high altogether. That is not the case now. The Apoth- ecaries Hall chang«d that sume time ago. You can get perecriptions from pure drugs at the proper prices— no fancy profits You can get all my reliatie epecial remedies; they’ve been tried and found effective. The price — the maio thing —will be found right in every case. Geo. E, Hughes The Peoples Druggist Apothecaries Hal! 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Castoria. ‘“‘Castoria Is sc well adapted to children that I recommend it as superior to any pre- Castoria. for 2,01 “Castoria is an excellent medicine children oi its good effect upon their children.’ Dr. G. C. Oscoon, Lowell, Mass. Mothers have repeatedly told me ; scription known to me,’ H. A. ARCHER, M. D. Browkiyn, N. ¥ THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OF ¢ ¢ APPEARS ON EVERY WRAPPER. THE CINTA J @ COMPANY. 77 MUBRAY STREET, NEW YORK OrfY. TS a uct ll Bin taal i Ree nen ————— eee Mdsummer (rearance Sale at J BMcDONALD & Co'y Commencing 18th July and will centinue for SO days All our stock of Boots and ‘shoes, 20 to 50 per ceat discount Womens Oxford boots 50c a pair WOMENS SLIPPERS lOc a pair All our stock of men and boys 25 to 50 per cent discount Mieas underclothjng, white shirts, collars, ties hankerchi:fs 26 percent discount 50 pieces print cotton, Grey coiioa sheeting, dillow cotton, shirting, ‘ining towelling, towels dress goods ---25 per cent discount clothing & colored brices Print Cotton 3 cents a yard Nothing reserved, all must be cleared now is your time to buy cheap 4 See —— J.B. MACDONALD & CO LEADERS IN LOW PRICE....... 5 io — | HIGH CLASS Licht summer Coats -and Vests ae —LUSTRE AND CRASH JOHN McLEOD & CO ———— = ! ; ca a s Ps f a LE