-_ ae oe ~~ mem Why is it that nearly al’, lin? you think u expect? rs of wear 1to m aged persons are t| And yet, when of it, what could y Three score yea re encsil r cd ike Yet the and tear « the digestion weak. body must be fed, In Scott’s Emulsion, the wors 1S l] done that is ~*~) Tan *T > «se racta ot} th Oli : ae di 4 sted, ali SAG ‘ Khe l; > ' ready to be taken into the blood. lhe body reste ~ is and nour- ypophos. 4 while the ci ishes, and phites ma the nerves steady and ong. goc. and $1.0, all drug SCOTT & BOWNE, Cremist Kes cfr ~ A rists, Toronta THE QUESTION IS OFTEN ASKED, 40W 1S THE ASCENDENCY OF ROYAL OAK SOAP accounted for? The answer 3s simple enough, viz:—Be. sause there is none equal to it for intriusic imerits, firmness, parity, combined with great jasting and perties Send for premium list. J, D, LAPTHORN & C0., Charlottetown Soap Works | —— — . PHENIY of Hartrord v— Gash Assets Over, $5,000,000,00. A share of your patroneze is solicite] for this old Reliable Comyany PLEASING CONTRAOTS, GENEROUS SETTLEMENTS, LOWEST RATES, | the =< E. H. BEER, matt | | piped perpetually cleansing pro- | THE GAMBLERS OF GRAVEL MOUNTAIN By MORLEY ROBERTS. (Copyright, 1899, by Morley Roberts.) (Continued, ) found the western end, which Was clay bott red, hardest ti With, and there th Vv doubled the s and struts first and drove some bard wood wedges in, and bh cked with heavy by 10 that under such th thrusting planks, measuring 4 sawmill hum the inward, green tT came troma ming near the summit. the uprights showed no sign of buc- kling at first was the deadliest sign of all, for where the cement bottom was it Was necessary io put in square blocks betwixt each huge standard. then the groaning was mere horrid. new strains were established, the mass of timbers became more organic and Day by day the for- sent tribute to the devouring dragon of the underhill, and soon was almost impossible to see the clay save upon the bottom. Yet here and there it sqreezed out between close set . CSeS “Now you want my second thoughts?” balks and cants of sawed lamber in thin ribbons of deep pure bine. and some- times it protruded threugh a knothole | hanging down like solid pouring water | | | i ‘ Great (© £corRGE STREET | ; stuff, and, leveling the floor again, he Authorized Ageot for P. E. I Aleo representing ober. Accident Inenrance Companies. an W hite’s Caramels : and Snowflake Chacolates <= Can be had at any of the following firs. class store T. J. Morris Db. L. Hooper W. Pickard & Co. W. A, Hutcheson W. F. Carter Stewart & Gates Sanderson & Co. J.D. McLeod &£ Co R. H, Hason, * . ee ee received our stock of California Seeded —— a We have ust a Griffin Skelly’s Raisins. They are much superior to any other brand «nthe market. The Sede are all taken out of the raisizs pulp all a Ict of time by @ machine, | aving the ready for use, thus saving Preparing for beking We have also the Vale feded the same way. chaper than the Califern Sultana Raisins, Clear Cocking Figs, Candied I fresh and good for Xmat BEER & QUEF GROCERS icia Raisins, They come AS, ed Currants, els, &c, all baking. ' } | } ' ' ; ne} rift INURANCE Co, And hour by hour, day and night. mud | But that here ! And even | it | Keeley or his brother patrolled the tun- | which was now like a leaking ship They doubled their redoubled care and watched the massy framework per: petually. The roof was treble timbers. each 12 inches square. pinned it again and set angled struts ina complex latticework against the doubled walls. And the flat floor of ithe tunnel became convex. They saw it, and for a day assured each other thrt it was not so But at night they set a loag straight edge across the floor and leveied it. It tonched the middie. and, nailing both ends to » frame, they left it. vy the early dawn the middle of ‘the edge was 144 inches sunk in | The foreman said this was the end of it. But Keeley sent for more etr + : wey ds b iu Fire, Life and| 8timasolid bottom 14 inches thick and beat it down with sledges' Along the sides he set timbers lengthways, and on them three more struts against the roof. And he saw the floor was level. But the roof was convex, buiging downward. ‘“‘We've contractors. have made nothing bold’’— done ull we can,’’ said the “Tf it holds now, we sball And if it doesa’t They under: } a we nel was to stand a nionth before acc: ance. They went to their tents and played poker to pass the time. But, though they were now idle and their men dis- charged, the hill was busy. The next day cards were a weariness. They paced the groaning hole from dawn to eve. Men going east or w st, who had heard of the mud tunnel, looked in, and the strange noises scared some of them. On Sunday half the men from the contractors next above them came to view it. The end of the track pete was now but five miles away, and some | of the track layers came too. offered bets against its standing. came down and shook his head as he rode back. ‘**I give it a week,” he said. But in less than a week Keeley Hol- dredge came up to him. ‘*Yon’ll have to makea cut of it, after all,’’ he said. ‘Can you take on the job?’’ asked Ross. ‘*‘We're going over to the lakes, sir,” answered Holdredge. ‘‘I’vehad a letter from Andy Onderdonk. It was a gam- ble, and the cards were against as.” They shook hands and parted. The tunnel’s chorus was now porten- tous. It shrieked and cried and set a man’s teeth on edge with horrible grat- ing noises. The steps on which the up- rights stood were crushed through; each stancdard’s heavy heel was set in mere wood fiber, as soft, it seemed, as a hank of coir yarns. And where the side thrusts were greatest the short blocks splinter- ed. The ceiling was now a downward hanging arch. The bulging was very ob- vious. And by no trick of forcing the imagination could the eye behold a level tlocr. Little shakes and splinters rose on it, as when a man bends a lath to break- ing. And every hour or so came a sound like a gunshot, when some drier, over- wrought beam gave way utterly. Thongh its sound brought seeming si- lence in a moment more the cries of the strained wood were greater and more terrible. I myself, who write this, was then at work fur another contractor two miles up the pass, and one hot Sunday in Au- They gust. when wy mates were lying in their tents. | went to view the tunnel. And, thougi | was afraid, | walked through its whole dark burrow. It was not the first time | had done it, but it was the last. There was something uncanny in the groaning of the wood, something awe inspiring. When half way through in the intensest darkness, terror got hold of me, and my hair bristled. Wishing to run, I could not, and I sweated ice as I went. In the daylight at the west end I saw the hanging roof. It seemed to move; long splinters pointed more and more perpendicularly, and the side standards bent like bows. I walked on a curve of floor timbers driven upward by the rising clay. Here and there were jagged points; beams split and opened, ragged with tough fiber. In the hands of the mountain the mightiest trees were raatch wood. Aud outside by their tent I saw the Ho'dredges loading up a pack pony, while two other little cayuses stood ready saddled. I gave them good day, and they nodded—not uncheerfully, as I thought. And when the pony’'s load was fixed up I followed them at a little distance as they took their last walk to the tunnel’s mouth, which was now shapeless and distorted. Two great rafters had freed their ends and point- ed northwest and southwest. The sill was burst and the under clay rose in a | strange mud flower. From the tunnel’s For in the contract the finished trn- | oe ee eames enna When a tian neglects his health for a day he marks two days off the calendar of his life. When he neglects his health for two consecu- tive days he marks four days off his life’s cal- endar. And so on, That’s about the ratio, and it doesn’t take many days to cross off an entire year. And yet men recklessly neglect their health for weeks atatime. It is the easiest thing in the world for the aver- age man or woman to get good health and then keep it. It omly needs a little stitch bere and there. The big, dangerous maia- dies that threaten life are only the culmina- tion of the little illnesses that are neglected. If when a man feels ‘‘ knocked - out,’ ‘‘out-of-sorts,’’ “run-dewn,’’ overworked or overworried he will resort to Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery he will soon feel bright, strong and vigorous again and able to combat all the big maladies in the doctor- books. Moreover the ‘‘Golden Medical Discovery” is a sure and speedy cure for some of the most dangerous diseases. It cures 08 per cent. of all cases of consump- tion. It cures nervous prostration and ex- haustion. These are not mere assertions. Thousands of grateful men and women have testified to the facts, and hundreds of their names, addresses and photographs are printed in Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser. “ r. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discove for , ee Baar and indigestion, and obtain manent relief,” writes J. A. Williams, Esq., of Brit Brook, Washington Co., Tenn. }r. Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Ad- ia has had a larger sale than any other book of this ¢ ass ever offered the ublic. This book of 1,008 pages with 300 1 lustra- tions, is full from cover to cover, of practi- cal advice on kealth matters. This great bock, in heavy manilla covers, 1s DOW of- fered FREE to whoever will send 31 nee stamps to pay for customs and mailing ont. If an elegant French cloth binding is de- sired, send so stamps. World’s Dispensary Medica) Association, Buffalo, N.Y, | together depth came sounds which were half musical, half discordant, like the loud ery of breaking harp strings. “It’s settling now,’’ said Keeley Holdredge as he took his brother’s arm. And visibly, though with a peculiar slowness, as if of conscicus power, the jaws of the tunnel were being forced The riven roofing fringed its jagged mouth like vellow fangs, stained blue in places, until it seemed some living monster writhing in agony under a most intolerable weight. But the sounds of the deeper tunnel were muf- fied. We knew the clay was bursting in at a thousand places. Perhaps even now the long work of gravity was done there. One groan burst out of the «los- ing mouth, and then we heard the whistle of a driven wind hiss through the ragged teeth. But with that came a fall of gravel from the higher hill, and when the dust was dissipated th tunnel was seen no more. It might have been my imagination, but as the brothers turned away it seemed to me that a great.weight was off their minds. I met old Gordon a mile up the roag and stopped him. “The mud.tunnel’s down, Mr. Gor don,’’ I said. And he whistled. ‘Did you see the Holdredges, man ?” he asked. I nodded. “‘And what did they say?” “Oh, just ‘Dash iv.” ”’ said L they’ve gone away whistling were good men to work for.’’ ‘You ought to know,’’ cried Gordon grinning, ‘‘for, you know, they fired you!”’ But if I did get the sack at the mud tunnel it was only for having too much tosay. AndI bore the Holdredges na malice. “And They An Example. ‘Some of the greatest men in the world have met defeat in their dearest ambitions,’ remarked the statesman. , \ Ross | THE DalLY EXAMINER, ChHARLOTTETUWN, DECEMBER 8, 1899 The friend, who bad been moruse, looked up cheerfully and exclaimed “Of course, they have It’s happen: ing all the time Look at our basebal club. ’’—Washington Star. ANIMAL ODDITIES. A blind bat avoids wires and obstruc- tions as easily as if it could see perfectly. A French scientist says a caterpillar cannot see more than two-fifths of an inch ahead. The hairs on the body are said to be as much use as its eyes in letting it know what is going on around. Ilawks have been seen to follow in the wake of a moving railway train and swoop down on small birds that were suddenly disturbed and frightened by the noise and therefore for the moment were off their guard. In Fiji there is a curious sea worm which arrives in myriads on the coast on a certain day. The waters are so full of them as to resemble vermicelli soup. After laying their eggs nothing is left of them but empty skins. An ostrich cannot kick backward. When the time has come for the bird to be despoiled of its feathers, its head is inserted in a bag and the plucker stands behind his victim. A blow from its foot has vigor enough to kill a map. Nerves... Wastedand = Dr. A. W. Shattered by Worry Ch ase’s or Overwork are Revitalizedby Nerve Food ** Nerves”—what a world of meaning this word has to scores of thousands of womer who, through the strains of social life and the worry of home cares, are fast approaching the grave. Nervous headaches, dyspepsia, irritability by day, restlessness and sleeplessness by night. Pains and aches in the body, derangements of the organs peculiarly feminine, loss of energy and ambition, despondency and despair. These are some of the symptoms known to the woman of exhausted nerves. These are symptoms which entirely cisappear when Dr. A. W. Chase's Nerve Food is used. By creating new, rich blood and nerve tissue this great food cure of Dr. A. W. Chase re stores and revitalizes the wasted nerve cells, = new vigor and ar ee the system and ees woman of many ills which are due to exhausted nerves. Dr. A. W. Chase’s Nerve Food cures by the building-up process, which makes the body round and plump, and restores the glow of health to the pale, sallow cheek. soc. a box at all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Toronto. $e D What Cured Your Cough ? ADAISON’S BALSAM! No cough can stay after being treated with it. It simply soothes it out of existence. There is nothing harsh or im- — perative about AMSONS ea M eR AISAM It heals the sore parts, tones up the irritated air passages and strengthens the bronchial tubes — thus stopping the sources of the cough. 25ce. AT ALL DRUGGISTS, if SY SYA NS SY a ee @ AS Eerring Herrine Herring 300 Barrels Herring arrived J.T Pearcen Hay Presses Cheese Presses Presses great and presses small, Presses short ard presses tall; But the greatest press of all, Is our improved hay press. Which can be had at shori ° tran wave, n T. A. McLEAN, Charlottetown Office: Masonic Temple | Works; Spring St. ? — ch lama SAAS — AN ‘ " 4 . Y ys eo = Ps = 4 a -* A f , B MAN ANANSI ee and Children. Castoria is a Castor Oil, Paregoric, It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. It is Pleasant. Its thirty years’ use by Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays Feverish- Castoria cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. Castoria Teething Constipation and Flatulency. Castoria assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels of Infants and Children, giving healthy and natural sleep. Castoria is the Children’s »2anacea—The Mother’s Friend. is for Infants harmless substitute for Syrups. Castoria Drops and Svothing guarantee is ness. relieves Troubles, cures Castoria. ‘“‘Castoria is an excellent medicine for | 2hildren. Mothers have repeatedly told me of its good effect upon their children.”’ Dr. G. C. Oscoop, Lowell, Mass. THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OF Castoria. **Castoria Is sc well adapted to children that I recommend it as superior to any pre- scription known to me.” H. A. ARCHER, M. D. Brooklyn, N. ¥ é ¢ é APPEARS ON EVERY WRAPPER THE CENTAUR COMPANY, TT MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK CITY. Important Auction Sale T am ‘instructed to cell by Public Auction, at the Court House, in Charlottetown, on Wednetday, December 20tb, 1899, at 12 0’ lock, noon, that large four story brick bui ding on Grafton Street, now occupied by F. Perkins & Co., as a dry goods stor This buildirg was erected in 1896,and is one of the largest and most attractiee store buildings in the city; it is centrally Iccated, being immediately opposite the Post Office; and on thestreet which most personstrom the northern and eastern sce - tions of she country now use when driving into market,and which thore from the couchern districts will use, after the bridge over the Hillsborough River is built. This is one of the rare chances to secure property in the very centre of the busi- nesé pari of the city. Terme: Ten per cent at eale; ba'ancec. . -iivery of deed witnin ten days. R. BEARISTO, Auctioneer. Ch’town, Nov. 28, 1899— SS seemmnnvonnnnentniennrneyntrarenienenereyevernrieenentey ert The General Feeling is } s = = - = That the fa l weather is coming on and you are = = feeling colder, and there’is no time you fe] so _y a cold as when your fret are badly shod. Why feel = = miserable when youcan get a good substrntial = boot that will keep your feet warm and not cost = = you too much at = = = McQUAID'S = = LOWER QUEEN STREET ~ =- >> BOOT & SHOE STORE Ms eA AMAHARAALAALAAAAALAMAUUAAAWF AUAUbAAAAAAAAGdbdbALasdbddbdebiddade IN YE... OLDEN ooo S13 ME You had to buy any old stove that the dealer chose to sell you, and it wee always the one he mad: most profit on, because there was no competition To-day you have a choice of the best stoves made. See ours betore you buy. Tortise Heaters, Cooking Stoves FENNELL CHANDLER TORTOISE HE! Tortoise Heaters-—— FROM $7.50 UP IEATER 3 Island Crown $1750 Sampson Cook, No, 8 $13.56 Tuis price for 2 week Simon W. Crabte Waiker’s Corner STOVES & HARDWARE <<: SN tt et a a at a a ea phere porns Ne ee erent 9 sree me hepa 1S CNN IR RE wy RET FERRI IRD ne