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H, Mason, W W CLARKE, Agent fHE DAiwY EXAMINER, CHARLUTTETOWN, NOVEMBER 24, (895, COPYRIGHT 1899, BY THE AMERICAN PRESS ASSOCIATION SYNOPSIS, Icould have twisted the ‘little rascal's The hero of thie$story, Boris Landrinof, weer oe on ig aoe — . z ee as “— Se “Well, thirdly, then, Ivanof had the and to be educate eis hastily sum- , 2 : moned home by his mother sider te the eayeaptlesd ag another gratiemen sudden dissppearance of his father, Count ser es the count, an Englishman named Landrinof, Shortly after, in London, he erbert, or Hulbert, and of hearing the is astonished when a friend tells him he} 24 of your father’s conversation with hae just seen his father. Accompanied by | bim, which fell in marvelously well this friend he returns to Russia. Boris| With Ivanof’s plans. The two gentle- discovers a clue, and sets out insearch of | Men were, in fact, arranging for a twomen who have as he! supposes ,ab- | shooting party at a place called Erinof- ducted bis father. ka, and fixed upon the days and hours —_—_— for their sport in Ivanof’s presence. Then our friend laid his plans, which were made very easy for him by his visit to the count and what he had learned there. **‘Do you follow me now? Have you mastered the plot ef my tale? Need I go on?’’ “But as this part of the tale is so very interesting we will drink a glass of wine to steady our nerves. ”’ “Drink the whole bottle and be hanged, only go on!’’ I raved. **Good wines should never be taken too fast,’’ said the little rascal, delib- erately sipping from his glass. ‘‘And this is good wine—claret, do you call it, or burgundy? I don’t often have the | opportunity of sampling these expen- } CHAPTER XXIIL ABDUCTION OF THE COUNT. “I think | begin to understand the detestable plot a little,’’ I said. ‘‘My father fell, I suppose, into the hands of the precious villains who are your ac- complices. What have they done with him? For by all that’s sure’’— ‘‘Not so fast! I am no accomplice, so far as you can prove. May not a man discover a plot without being set down at once as an accomplice? I am coming to your father’s fate.”’ ‘*For,’’ I repeated. springing to my feet and seizing the little rascal by the shoulders and shaking him as a cat would a mouse, ‘‘see here, you vile lit- tle wretch, if you dare to tell me that these people have injured a hair of my father’s head I swear to you that no promise or anything else shall save you and your abominable friends! I’’— ‘‘Do be a reasonable creature and al- low me to finish my ’* said my companion, twisting himself out of my clutches. ‘‘I did not say your father was injured, did I? If he was injured, it was not, at any rate, by our people. Will you allow me to go on in peace or not? I will not be hustled; remember that. You are sironger thaa I, but I have a will which is perhaps more than equal to your own. You cannot compel mle to speak. There is much more to tel. but I will not tell it unless sive vintages, and therefore I do not claim to be much of a judge. Takea glass. You won’t? Well, I see you are excited to hear what I have to tell you, so here goes. “One of us—one of them, I should say—conceived this idea. Andre, he knew, they all knew, was well connect- ed. He owned toa brother who ranked as a patrician among the patricians. Moreover, Andre made it a boast that he bore more than a streng family like- ness to his brother, the great Count Landrinof. ‘“‘This ingenious person, the hatcher ef the plot, took the trouble to visit Count Landrincf at this very aristo- cratic and palatial establishment in which I am at this moment an honored guest. He came ostensibly to ask for a contribution for some benevolent enter- prise which he mentally evolved for the occasion, but in reality to judge whether the brothers were really so much alike that there was reasonable expectation that they might be mistaken one for the other. ‘“‘Well, he met with extraordinary success; double—nay, treble—success. Your father, he found, was a generous man, and, pardon me, more than a lit- 4 ows scory, tle foolish. He subscribed 5 rubles to- | you promise to behave like a gentle- ward ivanof’s fund (we will call hitman; man.’’ Iva: convenience), which 5 ru- *‘Go on, then,’”’ I said, ‘‘but if I find bles [vanof found very useful. “Secondly, Ivanof saw at a glance that Andre and his brother were quite exceptionally and marvelously alike | and might easily be mistaken the one , forthe other. That thisis so none knows , you have lied, and your friends have done father any injury, heaven help you, for I think I should kill you!”’ ‘“‘Bah! Iam not afraid. You are nct the kind to kill a fellow creature, espe better than yourself, for to this fact | you are indebted for the pleasnre of | Andre's presence under your roof.”’ ‘Go on!" Isaid. Even now I could | not for the i:fe of me foresee what was coming “Thirdly, Ivanof. while waiting in the great hall down stairs—a splendid hall, by the way: but is it not cold in | winter? A space of that size would. [ ; should say’’— **“(Goon'”’ 2 ried. stamnine mv fen You are not the kind to kill a fel- low creature,” cially one who is trying his best to do you a very great service. Besides, I might not be so easily killed. Killing isa game of which it is necessary to understand the elements. There is sci- ence in it. Maybe I have thought over such matters more than you have, and understand more thoroughly the tricks of the trade.” “You are welcome to your knowl- edge,’’ Isaid. ‘‘For all I know you may be a murderer already, but it is certain that I will thrash you within an inch of your lifeincertainevents. Therefore be careful how you tell your story.” ‘“‘Bah!’’ said the student, who asstr- edly was no coward, though he was the most conceited and detestable little ras- cal, I should say, that ever breathed God’s air. ‘‘Bah! I shall tell the tale as I think best. If you do not like my manner of telling it, that is your mis- fortune, but not my fault. Well, then. Ivanof’s plan was this: Arrangements Were made to seize your father at Erinofka. on the moor cr at the lodge “Bahl —— = en eet ee A SEA OF FLAME. On the evening of November, 28th, 1878, a fire broke out in the British ship Melanie, loaded with soo barrels of petroleum. Au awful mass of flames shot up from the main hatch and the vessel quivered from stem to stern with explosion of the barrels. Her seams opened and the blazing petroleum poured out into the river, spreading a helt of fire around her. The master and seamen jumped overboard. Captain Sharp, whose vessel was lying close-by, propelled a smal! boat through the blazing river and after a severe scorching and imminent peril, saved the seamen from a horrible death. All over civilization there are thousands of men in more imminent danger than were those seamen. They are threatened with consumption or are already in the clutch of that deadly disease. If they only knew it, help is at hand. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Med- ical Discovery cures 98 per cent. of all cases of consumption. It also cures bronchitis, asthma, throat and nasal troubles and all diseases of the air passages. It is the great blood-maker, flesh-builder, and nerve-tonic. It makes the appetite hearty, the digestion 2 3 ae ~ perfect and the liver active. The Golden Medical Discovery” is the product of that eminent specialist, Dr. R. V. Pierce, who, during the thirty years that he has been chief consulting physician to the great Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute, at Buffalo, has treated more cases than fifty ordinary physicians treat in a_ lifetime. Thousands given up by doctors, have tes- tified to complete recovery under this mar- velous medicine. Constipation causes and aggravates many serious diseases. It is speedily cured by Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pcliets. or wherever it should prove te be mest racticable. From there he should be brought by road to the kouse of—it Goes not matter whose honse—and there he should be shut up. Then some one, i cpeof the circle of friends, should go ee a a eee ~_—_ Wilh @ taie lo tue that by meansof accidentally overhear- ing a conversation he had become aware of the hiding place of one upon whom he believed the police desired to lay their hands. The police would then send ani arrest your father, believing him to be Andre, and Andre himself would quiet- ly depart for England, dressed en grand seigneur, and, batz,. there’s the end!’’ ‘I see,’’ I gasped. ‘‘And did this all happen, then, as arranged? Father was captured, as I believe, at Erinofka What happened then? Tell me the truth.” ‘*Why should I lie? The count was brought to St. Petersburg by road, as per programme He was dressed ina suit of Andre’s clothes and looked, | am told, marvelously like Andre—in- deed the police had no doubt whatever that he was that very individual. They bagged him neatly, and I have no doubt that they are still firmly under the im- pression that they have in their clutches somewhere Andre, or Kornilof, as they call him, and no other. ‘**As for the real Andre, you know all about his doings. He went to London like a milord, and like a milord he re- turned. He fell on his feet and still stands upright. Who knows it better than yourself?’ ‘Stop, you infernal little rascal!"’ I cried, stamping my foot with rage “What of my father? I have heard enough of your detestable Andre. Tell me of my father. Where is he? What have they done with him?” ‘“‘Ah, you must ask the police that question,’’ said the student. ‘‘Probably he is at Sakhalin or in that neighborhood. He was taken out of orr —out of Andre’s friends’—hands eee. I cannot be supposed to be in th: confidence of the third section. which is the section of police spies Can l now? Be reasonable!" ‘I suppose not.’’ Igrcaned. ‘Dut great heavens, what are we todo? tlow ure We to get at the authorities? Wit they believe us?’ “Ah. that is a very Gelicate qnestio: pyuuce AAs ae dds choice von : i } should say they will not. but it is worth trying.’ “Wheat will Andre's attitude be surposing we go to the police and ex- plain that. thongh passing as the connt mr ia this inan is not try r L n ster?" Aly dear sir, do I know the mind cf Ancre? Theugh acquainted with bim as Font eTre : re, I cannot ther > he wonld dounder a vi vi stances. Ext 1 will say this— t tT prona ly our ¢ 1 friend ot i LO | ne ge i I yrorag H- eas9 ie Pe ot ‘] :t y time ToAmmight for reasons of yout awh @isown him and declare that thongh you have pretended that hei Connt Landrinef, ke is in effect nothing of the Lind, but Mr. Kernilof. the esezped convict. He will probably sa; you xre mad. and that your moth er. the countess. is no less, cr that the countess has reusons for cherishing ani mosity agaimst him, and that you are with her—being a mother’s child—to rid her in this ernde way cf a husband of whom she has grown tired.” ridiculous cock and ball story would never take in the police!’ I cried scornfully (To be Continued.) “Snech a Tortured by mo liching almost driven Insane. Instant Relief in Dr. A. W. Chase’s Ointment One of the most distressing symptoms ima- ginable is the almost unbearable itching which is an accompaniment of Leucorrhea_or whites. The nerves are irritated by the poisonous dis- charge, and the result is an itchipg*which is only rendered more excruciating by rubbing or scratching. Especially at night, when the body is warm, the patient is tormented beyond the powers ¢f human endurance. Sleep or rest is out of the question. Nervouswess, irritability and des- pondency are a natural result. 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