e \ } Be AV4 Mt AIL BME N2ENeNS gle Eee NV iF PICTURESQUE = nt ice Edwa § P50 ati | Bool island “a | Nite | P~nikatoreas Sve | Aili Ds aL . “in aN | | > ¥ e - | Ap puss ; ah | j an \ Sauy SS ain Jsiand, : a yale Nt See fey tour SS | 1 te, A, ATA, Aide AZ as Ny Shee Me Ste Ne eM Se 2 - ~ . 1 >= ~ Apt: S29 Fag 8 “a AY ASP HS aN a ee 4) ' _AgARLOTTETOWN— ai “~ : s ik. . 8 4 r muy rT i [M i.) 4) and Departure of Trains and Steamers. irri - 1 in ork ach TRAINS z > an ' Pg « leave? for the west....e 8 35a m. ; ers, re acrive? from the west.. 9 50 p m. and dation leaves for the his geena® eoereeree eeeerreeee ee ro 10 p ™m. 0h “aati leaves for the , vom ation e Pies } ” meh ee Seed ee CO CCCEOOS CO SORE t 00 Pp m . ie sation arrives from the ” ’ eat eeeeee eeneereeree 1)55 am Li peeveeooe re” est Mipcomodation arrives from the he west poeeeeecoecoseeeee eeeeeeee 2 25 D mM. of a leaves for the evst...... 7 05 48 m. vil) jepress arrives from the east.. 9 10 a m. > Bi igmoda-ion leaves for the eae! eee tee 6 60 eeeeeee th eeeeeeer o 00 p mM. 2 FP -¢xnodation arrives from the of ete eccvee sseieee 48 m Bb. ccoccees** Pp ay - PRINCESS. raves for Pictou every morning we at pesesedevesson eo eee ee ee 0 0098 +20 a m jrrives from Pictou every evenu- ing Bt...10e seer eee se cottons 9 ORO OE LA GRANDE DUCHESSE. {rrives from Bostoa and Halifax every Monday........------ 12 pm. lves for Boston and Halifax to wery Wednesday .......... 0am. d HALIFAX. * F irives from Boston and Halifax ; , wery Thursday wssceee ceeeeeeee of PM - SB iaves for Halifax and Boston wery Friday .... seceee-s Lpm. CAMPANA. Anives from Montreal and Que- lec everv alternate Fridav.... Lares for Quebec and Montreal the following Monday evening. CITY OF GHENT. | brives from MHelifax every Tharaday afternOOu .....0008 .. leaves for Halifax every Friday 10a m. JACQU «38 CARTIBR. , leaves for O-well Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays........ 3p m | waves for Crapaud every Fr. Si acines.cceses nie ckeee- ¢ Sa ee leaves for Crapaud every Satur- base x< «0 egecsenccseserce SM Me FEXRY BOATS. “Hillsborouga” —Leaves Ferry Wharf for | ff Southport every half hour. “Eifio”—Leaves for Rocky Point daily at 5.30, me. tl.eam: :.7,4 S. O a localtime, Suadavs at9a m, 12.45, 43,4pm. Reuraiaz 1.15, 2.30, 3.15 and §.39 p m. “Svuthport”—Ruos up Eas. .tiver every Tuesday, leaving at 5.30 am, and 3 miocal. Ruus up West River every nday, leaving at 5.30 am,and 4pm ——— All Business Men eM a. j And most Professiona) men on Prince Edward Island wi!l bave to veacertaia amouxt of printing One this fall. If vou area business rain or a professional man we would like to ‘0 your printing for you—we would ike to give you prices on it auywav. We think we can give you better *alisfaction in the Job Printing line than you can get anywhere else. We have put in a lot of new ype, etc., this year, enabling us to furo ont better work than ever be~ fore~and—“we have work done Whea we promiee it.” Prices The Examiner Job Print Ch’town’s Leading Printers. Cor. Queen and Richmond Streets — upstairs, i >> 2 2 4 A CARD R. MACNEILL, M. D,, Having 3° years experience im the Wactice of his profession, may be con nn all branches of general medi "including the specia'ties. be and Residence—-Prince Street R door alrove Kindergarten Hall. > git dha Ila m tte 3 and wipe dy & wkly 3 mos f- > —&-&- <— | FS —&— | im! a Oe ae i THE ADLy KXAMINER C —_ Re ee sie toe ster nie ean eegee 0 PO eeteteteaeenaae WOO Sre- *~ ‘RLOUPTETOWN SEPTEMBER 24. 1900 $ 7 | Ne : ; to ‘ : daa TUG ; Qiao ¥ * ¢ ; A Story of she Golden Fleece. + ? ed ee + : BY ST. GEORGE RATHBORNE % x Author of “Miss Caprice,” “Dr Jack's Wrre,” : 3 “Dr. Jack,” Etc., Etc. £ (Cortinned,) rie was too ol« ‘ ¢ “as ‘ His study of these ative ee XA . : ' i t ; ’ Strangve neo- mah W , “4 , . m fed him to think such continuous to | re\ have exper Sasters must only increase the fury | ed qualms of con te that compest ne e blacks, and cause them to de~ | ed him to do everything in his pow- he upon more desperate plar | er to educate the mind of this wil to bring about the destry oq derness flower iy age af * OM upon the rocks Avain.and again Rex would find ef a. ee wes they heard} necessary to suddenly leave her sice > as marked a Warlike! in order to lend his assistance to- oe ry h mois —— the hoarse i ward repelling some sudden attack of the tom-tom throbbed upo He went from love to war with ‘ and’ there was a con-| the readiness such a soldier of for- 5 series of weird shouts, such| tune aiways shows. LEesides, he ex had heard the Zambodi War- | could not forget that his blows were vive e to when dancing! struck to defend Marian as well as round th council-fire. | in any other cause, and this thought N in told them what it meant— | alone Was enough to nerve his arm itch-doctor with others of his to wonderful deeds of valor d instituted this programme | Thank God! the night was wearing the design of arousing the lat-| on. t passion in the breasts of those A few more hours and in the east hose bitter experience in the earlier | would appear the first gray lines of eng@as ements might be inclined to coming Gawn. make them loath to again face the | Would they all be there to welcome iy guns of the besieved, it? Cezrees their savage natures | Who could savy? ad ke inflamed until the coaster | Each man was crimlv resolved to ‘as r ached where nothing could bold do his duty. No doubt, facing such — hack a dread outcome, their thoughts _ That was the hour Bludsoe looked roamed over vast distances to scenes forward to with apprehension, for he that Were dear to them. To Lord | KNEW their fate hung in the balance. | Bruno appeared his beloved England \sain seme trick was unearthed by How many m-riads of her sons yearn , of which they hoped to catch} after that green isle of the sea when the defenders of the heights happing. separated by desert and oceans from \gain a rallv, a fusillade of stones, - VM See ifeeUikces Vite. i Se Shee Sheet -e Te Ne ie eine hi enitine Si Oho ioe dice Mieco pA pe home? There is no country on earth, ‘ 4 ly eyt - : < ( Siot * . . pees & SENOS OF rit: o- however remote, where an English- This time as before, they were suc- man may not be found, driven there Pace Ff nic ley} , 1 ° E oe ‘ eoestul in dislodging the foe, whoac perhaps by the feverish pulse of bu- svicent Cesion it wae , her ‘ : ri ° evicent an 1t Was to annoy eT siness, or it may be, the love of ad- ratver than carry the fort: but the | venture, that has ever been and al- end was not achieved without some | ways will be a predominant trait in litte Waste of energy, and several | tye Anglo-Saxon constitution. 332 Cartridges t accou f Yr “¢ j bie : ; me oe , —e tor. Yhus far the allies had not gained NO Geubt the a Hassaje knew | any appreciable advantage, while } + > wae oi . « . : (dew a aan one . We. BON many of their men were placed hors about a systematic method of utiliz-; ge “combat by encounters with the ct Mae pananeany ge ee ies numbers. | missiles so energetically criven cown When a cetachment of his men had j upon their heads by those entrenched rown yvearyv hey co With- | : crow! wear: they could be vit } above. crawn and a fresh batch pushed for- Bludsoe wag inclined to believe the war in 3 4 -7 od 5 : ’ : wore in their stead, while with the impis were gathering for a grand as- per stig there wee 80 Peles. sault all along the line, when the rhe strain must _ tell in the end.} p,oiehts would be stormed in every This ms ) ) > oner- , bes this may not appear to be a gener-} qyailable quarter by eager fanatics ous mode of conducting warfare, but it is good soldiering, for the end and not the means count when foes meet in battle array. At midnight they had repelled just five such assaults, very much on the same order. There would come the discovery, a bombardment of stones and the flight of a few assegais from those points strong arms could send them the ramparts, the whole melee where over being accompanied by a= series. of screeches that a legion of fiends’ in Tophet might have envied, every war- rior in sight of the fort lending his voice to swell the racket. Then the whole affair would die away, and an interval elapse before the next outbreak. Such a night will remain stamped incelibly upon the memory until time shall be no more with those who take part in its tragic occurrences. Bludsoe and his employer held manv conferences, While Rex talked in a low voice with the young girl, whom he found bearing up under the strain in a remarkable manner,thanks to the self-relifince which necessity had taught her during her life among the brabarians. She never tired of asking questions about the world, which she knew only from reading, and the descrip- tiors given by the man she had call- ed her father. Rex found himself more than eve: sharmed by her naive simplicity, and the neble character. of her mind— . ceed, he could not remember ever AC eR AERO RIOR $$$ ee BRrRIGHT’sS ‘DISEASE is the deadliest and most painful malady to which mankind is subject. Dodd's Kidney Pills will cure any case of Bright's Disease. They have never failed in one single case. They are the only remedy that ever has cured it, and they are the only remedy that can. There are imitations of Dodd’s Kidney Pills—pill, box and name—but imita- tions are dangerous. The original and only genuine cure for Bright’s Disease is DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS Dodd's Kidney Pills are fifty cents a box at all druggists. 4 to whom death had little terror since the incantations of the witch- doctor had promised a quick passage to Paradise on the part of those who fell. In this particular the Matabele and their cousins are not unlike the Mo- hammedans, a part of whose belief it is that to fall. in battle is the most glorious fate allotted to man helow, siice those who die thus are favorites of the Prophet, being im- mediately transperted to rest in his bosom. in the beautiful gardens where | perpetual fountains play and all is ; peace Numerous little thinrs gave Jim j this idea, and his training toid him to beware of the hour before dawn. Strange that the instinct of savag- es the world over teaches them to select this time for an attack— doubtless because as a usual thing inen sleep the soundest at the latter end of the night. and are most like- ly to be surprised. Every precaution had been taten that lay within their power. The rest must be left to heaven. Many times Lord Bruno and Rex would crouch behind the ramparts and looking yearningly toward the region from whence help must come if it ever did come, listen with all their might, hoping to detect. some far away sound that would give them new courage—the distant trampling of hoofs, the faint melody of a bugle, or perhaps such cheers as Anglo-Saxon only hearty lungs’ are capable of sending forth. Alas! they waited in vain. No signal of hope came out of the south. It looked as though they were stranded there, and must win their own fight or die in the last ditch. The cowboys showed never a sign of alarm. Before now they had known What it was to lead a forlorn hope, and while perhaps none of them had ever experienced just such a preticament as this, it Was all the same in the end—plenty of work, with a possibility of a glorious end. Time crept Lord Bruno struck match after match in the endeavor to see the dial ef his watch. In half an hour the first thread of gray would appear. They might have taken heart of grace at this but fer the positive belief that the storm was about to burst the feeling was in the air — it affected them in divers ways ai’ knew it, and a equal to the task often words c of explaining What appeals to our convictions. Nor did they err. A brooding silence hung over ll, which, in itself was enough to engen- der suspicion, after the Gdamor thet on. id for ladies and Price eit at their nce fer =o Bichstttgina” oppinig Rice “Bae on es . i | ice Marby, Clothing Svere > SU whoa ij ead nh — had made night hideous ever since the sun went down. Phen vas alm ceeded itch-doctor came a Single Rex pro- which have tyrant cry . Positive must the old himself It came as a Signal. If the cover were infernal reg Tophet united of diabolical] st irom of a from the fiends of outburst result could that frenzied shouts following signal. thrown the one grand the exceeded ions, anu all in sounds, irdlv have . ’ hingnt ¢ Col yLTlart oO] 1On lx ’ . closely Hassaie’s CHAPTER XXXI. THE PASSING OF JIM BLUDSOE. Now Lach one of those seven men nerv- mself for the terrible the fact is positive that death are involved in the many a Weakling astonishes himself by the desperate energy he throws into his actions. The allies had carefully planned the assault, and those various little at- tacks Which were repelled without and tremendous display of force had for it. and life ordeal, when an ‘ and issue, been mere ‘‘feelers’’ as it were, to show What disposition the defenders would be apt to make of their strength. When the attack was on in earnest it seemed as though the black whelps sprang up in almost every quarter— they must have by degrees sought hiding-places along the walls in each previous assault, acting upon orders, | and remaining for hours awaiting the grand signal that meant business. Through the defile they came ina mass, those behind pushing the wretches in the van, to be presently treated to a dose of their own medi- Cywe Down came the avalanche of rocks, dense and the little canyon becaine a slaughter pen, for men went under like ripe grain. Still these behind pushed on trampling upon the bodies of their comrades. Men, weapons and great ox-hide shields all mingled in the greatest ccrfusion, but those who had not yet tasted death advanced like so many machines. It was a cruel business, but those who Were above had nerved them- selves for anything, and so long as the sharp-pointed missiles held out they showed no signs of halting. By mere numbers alone, pushed on by their fanatical belief in the favor of the gods whom Hassafe represent- ed, the horde of black, sinewy forms might crush its way to the top. Having run the gauntlet of rocks they must face the blasting, wither- ing fire of the Winchesters and revol- vers, and if in spite of all this they forged to the top of the pass, mak- ing a gory mat out of their luckless fellows, it would be to meet three men who could fight like gladiators hand-to-dand, swinging their gun; like cricket bats and hurling the im- pis back as fast as they crossed the line, so long as human nature could stand it. And while this scene was taking place on one side of the fort,others hardly less desperate were occurring neur by. Every man had his hands full. Rex who had not suspected the enemy could steal such a march upon them was amazed to see the number of biack forms that started to crawl over the barrier. He hardly knew Which one to fire at first, but realiz- ing the folly of delay made a start. Such was the infernal din that he would hardly have known his piece had been discharged only from _ the flash of fire that shot from the muz- zie, and the fact that his target fell off the wall. Monsieur Jules had also found an obiect at which to blaze away, and the tremendous bellow of the great yager gun mike its impression upon the general din. As for the savant, the recoil tumbled him over in a heap, though he was speedily on his feet again, as spry as a feline. There was an abundance of work on hand for every member of that little band. Had they been individ- ually favored with four hands _in- stead of two, théy might have kept busy. (To be Continued. } -. OO See Nervous Debility. A Sufferer From Weak Biood and Ex- hausted Nerves Tells of His Cure by Using Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food. Mr. A. T. P. Lalame, railway agent at Clarenceville, Que. writes:—‘ For twelve years I have been run down with nervous debility. I suffered much, and consulted doctors, and used medicines in vain. Some months ago! heard of Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food, used two boxes, and my health improved so rapidly that I ordered twelve more. “I can say, frankly, that this treat- ment has no equal in the medical world. While using Dr. Chase’e Nerve Food 1 ceuld feel my system being built up until now I am strong and healthy. I cannot recommend it too highly for weak, nervous people.” Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food is a tonio and restorative of inestimable worth. It qmakes the blood rich, the nerves strong, increases the weight, and cures ail weaknesses and diseases of the netves and blood. In pill form, 50 cen’ a box, at all dealers, or "Dhnandod SS tener When"you sre spending good money get good clothing in re- j turn for it. The kind of clothinz we sell is standard made— its worth every p-nny you pat izto it, it gives good service aad looks well as jou as you wear it. The beginning of this month opens up the ful trade for which we are thoroughly prepared. We have received 500 pairs pants trom 75e to $4.50. 225 Men’s Suits from $3.50 to $15.00. 125 Boy’s Suits from $1.06 to $7.50. 300 dozen Men’s Underclothing from 40c to $2.50. Top Snirts from 25e up. Will shake up the balance of our stock of summer under- clothing at half price. If suving $’s is a hobby of your’s, come in, well encourage the hobby. J.B. MACDONALD = UO. W here worth and low prices meet. Z PASAT PASAT SISASAD PASAT PAS ATRAN BAN TPA TARR PAID! t® Tub LUNG AND q MONT Ue Ui} Is to get a boot that will wear and fit you, then you will have sati+faciion. You also want something tu suit you in price. Yu will find them all at McQUAID’S, LOW ER‘QUEEN‘STREET =. Boot and Shce Sture. Ree caked te es ele eked aimed alee . NEV oe Beautiful Enamelld Belt and neck clasps, broaches, cuff links, nat pins, scar pms, coffee end tea spoons. We kave them with British, Canadian,%Scotch, frish"and French coats of arms. Also flag and maple leaf pins from 10c. and 15¢c. up. We have sold a number of wedding ringa lately, but as we are MAKERS of rimgs can quickly supply any style of ring required. New gold spectacles and eyeglasses. EW .‘Tawvlior OFPTICIANW Qameroa Blick, Charlottetow April 2nd 1990, To Those a Interested, Tne makers of 'dE HIGHLAND RANGES were unsh'e to sbip all of our ranges this week but we expect to have at large shipment by next trip of S.S. Halifax from BUSTUON and those who have ordered may count on getting them then. We ask your kind indulgence for the delay. “Agents for American Ranges.” FENNELL & CHANDLER net ve i A i i i, pe to ee