My. . Best. . Friend owes his speedy re- covery to the gore a’ tonic influence of Wilson’s Invalids’ Pom... ® pure port wine with Peruvian Bark in pro- portions prescribed hy the E-nelish and French pharmacopoe ias. Endorsed and pres- ~sthed hy : cribed by ou >é ig” y our leading physicians, Liou ik THE WONDER OF THE CENTURY ; COPPER ha: © nede fortunes fir thousan’ss LLQUID AIR destined to revol ti nize, refrigeration and powcr, ANPREW J. CHASE the recegnized and world renowr- ed au'herity on refrigeration and venti ation, is atthe head cf the Liquid Air Refr geration and Powcr Co. The first bleck of steck at $2.00 rer share is ove!-sutecrited, and the sEkt OND FLOUK is row open for silseripuon for « +! ort time ony at S56@ per share—Par Value St0O CO non-nsscssable ‘his isthe only andforlkinal Liquid AirCo is Call or £end for Particulars NM ake Checks cr } ones Ciders pa): bie to ANDREW J. CHASE = Trustee. R ow 301, Sudbury Bidy., Sudturyst POSTON, Mass GRATEFUL COMFORTING Distinguished everywhere for Deiicacy of Flavour, Supe- rior Quality, and Nutritive Properties. Specially grate- ful and comforting to tle nervous and dyspeptic. Sold ¥,. f "ie . =e Our Pe wer only in }-lb. tins, labelled JAMES EPPS & Co., Ltd., Hommopathic Chernists, London, England. BREAKFAST SUPPER RAY oy Ore EPPSS G2E9A as Si ie GR — PLANT . LINE ice BOSTON 33 Commencing May 10th The Favorite “S. §. HALIFAX” wiil leave Charlottetown for BOSTON every Tuesday at noon (Standard Time) csliing at Hawkesbury and Hal:fax. teturning leave BOSTON every Satur- da -at noon. Passengers leaving CHARLOTTE TOWN Wednesday morning, via Pictov, cai make close connection st Halifex with 8,8. “HALIFAX” sailing Wednrs~ dsp evening at 11 p. mw. . Tickete forsale at staticns on P. F. T Rulway. For tickets,, rates ard all in- formation apply to W. W. CLARK®, Agent, Chai lotietow orto H. L. CHIPMAN, Canadian Agent, Halifax, N. S. May 3— _ J. O. SIMS — 16 America Square, London, England CANNED Goops AND PRODUCE BROKER. An extensive City and Shipping Trade gives me a feaiittien for handling to best ad vantage yonr shipments of Lobste Cheese Batter, Secon, Eggs and Poultry. e Correspondence solicited. Top Market Pricesand prompt RetnrasGun nieed’ Mar, 2ad—meod . | | THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, M_ Y 6 DARD OPBDPMPO DODD) BOODOEOMOEY YOON YF SBE Sd Ge. eed 5S SSO Us “ comme oe TP] ES +s me PHANTOM RICKSHAW. > anmme « ES + comm » RUDYARD KIPLING. MPMI FGI WG * Be I OP OP LIC PP CP FF FF CF GP CAP EC OF OW mven as sne spoge her horse, swery- from a laden mule, torew himself directly in front of the advancing rick- ehbaw. I had scarcely time to utter a word of warning when, to my unntter- horror, horse and rider passed threugh men and carriage asif they had been thin air “What's matter?’ cried Kitty ‘‘What made you call out so fo lishly, If I am engaged, I don't want ull creation to know about it. There was lots of space between the mule and the veranda, and if you think | ride— There! Whereupon willful Kitty set off. her dainty little head in the air. at a band gallop in the direction of the band stund, fully expeciing. as she herself afterward told me. that I shonld foliow her. What was the matter? Nothing indeed, elther thet | was mad or drunk or that Simla was haunted with devils. | reined in my impatient cob and turnec round The rickshaw had turned, too and now stood immediately facing me. near the left railing of the Combermere bridge “Jack! Jack. darling!" There was no mistake about the words this time They rang through my brain as if they had been shouted in my ear ‘‘It’s some hideous mistake, I'm sure Please forgive me, Jack, and let’s be friends again The rickshaw hood had fallen back and inside, as | hope and pray daily for the death | dread by night. sat Mrs Keith Wessington, handkerchief in hand and golden head bowed on her breast How long I stared motionless | do not know Finally | was aroused by my syce tuking the waler’s bridle and ask- iny whether | was ill From the horri- ble to the coummonplace is but a step ! triubled off my horse and dashed. half fainting into Peliti’s for a glass of cherry brandy ‘There two or three cou- ples were gathered round the coffee ta bles discussing the gossip of the day Their trivialities were more comfortivg just then than the consolations of religicn could have been I pinnged into the midst of the conversation at chatted. langhed and jested with n face (when I canght a glimpse of it in a mirror) as white and drawn that of a corpse Three or four men no- ticed my condition and, evidently set- ng it down tothe results of overmany charitably endeavored to draw me apart from the rest of the loungers but | refused to be led away I wanted the’ company of my kind—as a child rashes into the midst of the -dinner erty after a frigit inthe dark. | must bnve talked for about ten minutes or though it seemed an eternity to me, rhen | heard Kitty's clear voice out- » ingniring for me. In another min- ute she had entered the shop, prepared roundly apbraid me for failing so ly in my Something in ce stopped her ime able the Jack t can t te me once THtre ® ’ } . . wpAl aunties ; f: The stories cf slaughter 1A Gs y)that the old soldier couid tel . 1 . -é his little son are so aw- < 4 birch ful that they would - i. Me Se + . Sheree Niaxe A>) Ee fp Ad ym FA \ : a 4 a sensitive child ‘p with horror and But all the stories -yof war on sea and Jf }iand shrink into * insignificance be- —fore the dreadful massacre of micn —aind wemen, for which that relent- less enemy of life, consumption, each year respon sible. Scientists state one-fourth of the adult men and wo- is that Mae men in the civilized world have in their bodies the seeds of this grim destroyer. A single grain of dirt taken from a city street, under the microcope sometimes reveals as many as a million of the minute but murder- ous bacilli of consumption. There has never been but one medicine discovered that will prevent and cure this disease. It is Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. _ It acts directly on the lungs, driving out Gis- ease germs and building new and healthy tissues. It allays inflammation of the mucous membranes. It is the great blood- maker, flesh-builder and nerve tonic. It cures 98 per cent. of all cases of consump- tion and diseases of the air passages. All medicine dealers sell it. Mrs. Louisa Steinmann, of 67th St., Brooklyn, N. Y., writes: ‘‘ Three years ago I was so sick I could ‘not eat, sleep or walk, for I coughed all day and night. My weight was reduced from Iso to 127 pounds. The first night that [I slept four hours at one time, was after I had taken three doses of Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. The offensive matter expectorated grew less every day and when I had taken the whole of one bottle I could sleep all night without coughing, and have been well ever since and weigh 178 pounds.” When someone is sick in the family and the doctor is called in, what is the first question he asks? ‘‘Are the bowels regu- lar? That’s the question, isn’t it? If a wife and mother will see to it that when any member of the family is troubled with constipation a prompt resort is had to Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets, there will be mighty little sickness in the family. One little “ Pellet’’ is a gentle laxative and two a mild cathartic. They cure constipation and biliousness and never gripe. They reg- ulate and invigorate the stomach, liver and bovels. Found at all medicine stores. as | —_— ge ‘Why Jack she cried. ‘what have you been doing’ What has happened? Are yon ill’? Thus driven into a direct sun had been a lit- lie too mach for ime It was close upon of a clondy April afternoon, ind the sen had been bidden all day 1 the words ie | sania that tue of el» »O CLOCK aw my thiistake as soan as vere out of my month. artempted to ecovel It blandered b re i sty and ollowed Kitty iv a regal ra ont of oors amid the siniles of my acquaint inces) LT imede some excase (2 have for roiten what)on the score of my feeling faint and cantered away te iny hotel! leaving Kitty to finish the ride by ber f ; in wy room | and tried sat down ‘aluily to reason ont the. matter ler was L. Theobaid Jack Pansay. a well edneated Benvzal civilian in the year of grace 1885. presaimably sane. certainly healthy driven in terror frou my sweetheart’s side by the apparition of a woman Who bad been dead and buried eight months These were facts that! ‘conid not biink Nothing was farth fromiiny thonght than any memory ¢ Mrs Wessington when Kitty and | ioft) = Famiits shop Nothing wa ntter!y commonplace then. tu dl opposite Peliti's It wx ns nrore stretch of w brond dagiizht The read was full s people. and get here, dow. yon. in dei ance of every law of protability. in @ rect outrage of pature’s ordinances there had appeared to me a face frou the grave Kitty's-Arab had gone throngh th rickshaw. so that my first woura niarvelonssy Wessineton bad bired the carriage an the coolies with their old livers wa- lost Again again | went rown this treadmill of thonyght and again an again gave np bafiled and The voice was as inexplicabie as the ap purition | had originally some wil notion of confiding it all to Kitty. o begving her to marry me at once in her arms defying the gho: nant af the ricxshaw ‘‘After all argued “‘the presence of the rickshas Hope tv some like Airs kod in despa ane Liv occu tx in itself enongh to prove the ex ence of asp ctral iliasion One tay sé vhosts of men and wowen hot srr uever of coches and carriages The wi thing is absurd) = PFaucy the ghost «tf hiilman’ Next morning | sent a penitent no- to Kitty tmpleriug her to overlo strange condnet of the previons i poon My diviutiy was still very wrot and a personal apology Was necessa: 1 gxplainest with a flneney born « night long pen over a fie thirt | had been palipitatian «al iering Aitacked with a snd the heart the reanit : indigestion This eminently practic sointion bad its effect and Kitty an! : rode cat that afternoon with the sanction. of my first he dividing us Nothing wonld please ber save a can ter ronnd Jukko With my nerves stil unstrang from the previons nizht feebly protested against the Dotior suggesting Observatory hill, Jatech th Soilennynnyve rend anything rathe than the Jakko road Kitty was angry abpda littl uert Sol yielded from fen of provering ferther misunderstanding amd we setoont together toward Chot: doagreater parte th Situla We waltlre wav and aceording to oar custom tered frotn a mite or so below the con vent to the stretch of level road by thi Sanjowhe. reservoir The wret: ppeared to fiy. and. my bear beat quicker and gnieker as we peared the crest of the ascent My mind had foll of Mrs Wessingten all afternoon and every inch of the Jakko round bore witness to our old time welks can horses a h ait been and talxs The bowlders were full of it the pines sang it alond overhead the rain fed torrents giggled and chuckled unseen over the shameful stury and the wind in my ears charted the iniquity alond As a fitting climax. in the middie of the level men eall the Ladies’ mile the horror Wasawaiting me Noother rick haw was in sight. only the four black 4d white jhampanies. the fellow pan eled carriage and the golden head of the woman within, all apparently just as I had left them eight months and one fortnight ago! For an instant I fancied that Kitty must see what I saw—we were 80 marvelously sympathetic in all things. Her next words undeceived me. “Not a soul in sight! Come along, Jack, and I'll race you to the reservoir buildings!’’ Her wiry little Arab was off like a bird, my waler following close behind, and in this order we dashed un- der the cliffs. Half a minute brought us within 50 yards of the rickshaw. I pulled my waler and fell back a little. The rickshaw was directly in the mid- dle of the road, and once more the Arab passed through it, my horse following. “Jack, Jack, dear! Please forgive me!” rang with a wail in my ears and, after an interval, ‘It’s alla mistake, a hid- eous mista)” . tsparred my borse sessed like a Wal pus When | turned my head at the reservoir works, the black and white liveries were still waiting—patiently waiting—under the gray billside. and the wind bronght mea mocking echo of the words I had just heard Kitty ban tere] me a good deal on my silence throughout the remainder cf theride 1 had been talking "p till then wildly and at random To save my life I could not seak afterward naturally and from Sanjowlie to the church wisely held my vongne | was to dine with the Manuneripgs that night and had barely time to cap ter home to dress On the road to Ely sini hill | overheard two men talking together in the dusk. ‘‘It’s a curions thing.” said one, ‘*how completely all trace of it disappeared) You know any wife was insanely fond of the woman— never could see anything in her myself —and wanted me to pick up her old rickshaw and coolies if they were to be got for love or money Morbid sort cf fancy | call it. bnt I've got to do what the memsahib tells me Would yon believe that man she hired it from tells men that all four of the men ~-they were brothers—-died of cholera on the way to Eardwar, poor devils and the rickshaw has been broken up by the man himself? Told me he never used a dead memsahib’s rickshaw Spoiled his Iuck Qneer notion. wasn't the itt Faney poor little Mrs Wessington spoiling any one’s Inck except her own!’ If laughed alond at this point, and my langh jarred on me as I uttered it. So there were ghosts of rickshaws, after all, and ghostly ewiployments in the other world! How much did Mrs “Wessington give her men? What were -neir hours? Where did they go? (Continved on page $ ) WJ ROKG (BEA OFr.«-« VSPEPSIA Fe ot By * 28 bese Throws al! ths Blame on the Stomach—tThe Keal Seat of Trouble is the Intestines— the Permanent Cure is Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills. It is an old idea long since exploded that digestion is confined to the stomach. No modern scientist denies that by far the greater part of digestion and the more difficult part takes place in the intestines. This explains why dyspepsia is never really cured by pre- parations which merely aid stomach digestion and act only on thé stomach, This fact also explains why Dr. Chase's K id- ney-Liver Pills have been so remarkably suc- cessful as a cure for the worst forms of dyspep- sia and indigestion. Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills act directly on the kidneys, liver and bowels, and give new A 1899, SPRING the same means: We can supply you with COVERT OVERGOATS ent BIGYCLE SUITS Waterproofed by tlie Rigby Process, at thesame price as unproofed goods. Rigby Porous Waitcr- proof goods look and feel goods—they admit the air but keep out the rain and allow the free xespiration of the skin. They are all tailor made and up to date. A Shorey’s Guarantee Card is in the pocket of each garment SATISFACTION or YOUR MONEY BACK. JAMES PATON & CO’Y. # 4AGCENTS FOR SH TOWiIW CYERCGATS as unproofed whicn e tone and vigor to the intestines, and make them able to perform their work of digesting | the substances on which the stomach has no | effect. Stomach treatment may do well enough for slight indigestion, but if you have chronic in- digestion or dyspepsia of a serious nature you | can profit by the experience of scores of thou. | sands who have been permanently cured by using Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills. One pill a dose, 2=e, a box, at all dealers, co! Edmanson, Ba Co., Toronte, ooo _ ehVe eee ® Se SUE SBOE ADVICE ABIII n PLG S. When orderme a pack: ge Pepper, Ginger, Allspice, Cin namon or Cream of Tartar 7 ; SO hh RR = from your grocer you can al- wavs feel sure of securing the best quality by asking fur ::: ott's QO VOTO F GEST DBE LH HAMAP Hess s 0% OOD - eo" -*8se »V @2OwWw * te Paper Jamiesons---- For Tronk Lining. 8 Yds 25 cts SURE DEATH TO MOTHS eS aS aS = REDDIN : BRO Opposite P. O, CESS EEE SEES *. KAAS AAAAAAS HARGAAAA AM AHH o2 _ EERCRUCY LUNs PERE VEN Ee vy nN mn a SHERWiN-U/ILLIAKS PAINTS Ti:ey are made in the best way and put upsothey can be ap- plied in the best manner and will give the best results. for our little book (it’s free) and get acquainted. THE SHERWIN-WILLIAMS CO., PAINT AND COLOR MAKERS. Canadian Dept., 21 St. Antoine S:reet, Montreal PTET al SYLAR LT ORS es | SHE H TTA YE TINY ALLL ; SH Te MTT! TRG a Ke »& Wor a UST Te aie SHES Soe! Uy oe F eb eS ~ hoes aap 7 . SS ane ges ca, Y/ fre, Me = EeA Sf £7 _ GB iS ea = sit si -=ss pa Wes i — S a we have been studying paint—its best composition and its best =: == = application. We have only one aim. That isto makethe best ===" —— paint possible. The murkets of the world are open to us. If all S23 =——— += white lead or all zine made the best paint it would be wise for us to pe == make it so. But experience shows thatacombination of these ====3 =———= two substances makes fur better paint than either one alone. == 3 === Therefore, as we are neither white lead dealers, nor zine dealers, == === == weuse enough of each to produce the best result, and with pure === == _ oil and the best drier, we make the paints that have made us. =: = THE. = 9 Send eM ili l li | For: Bele 7 8 Ml Ae . Ly Bn ws te The latest and nobbies' styles in Christies Londs. , Just opened up “~O\1a MelLsod & at ies that | are Ties po inaticaeeeriienn ls D. A. bas OPO, am ee a The tailor’s goose is supposed to be al- ways hot. Doii’t be a goose yourself; you pay for the best and you ought to have it, That's what we guarantee to give you D. A. BRUCE.