ee RN a e on = Guard! TBBNVOL THE BEST Is always imitated. Dodd's Kidney Piiis, solid only in boxes iike this, are widely imitated, because they are the best Kidaey cure. Take none Erna D-O-D-D-S GRAND Provincial Bazaar AID OF THE=— NEW ST. CUNSTAN'S CATHEDRAL —TO BE CYENED IN THE~— Cathecral Basement Hall, Ch'town —-=-ON Monday Evening, October 16th at eight o’c\ock, and to be continued on Tues. Wed. Thur. and Fri. Oct. 17th, 18th, 19th & 20th A cordial invitat‘on tendered to every man, woman and child in the Province. Ample room for every person who attends Excellent meais provided for all visitors. Select musical entertainments every even ing by the League of the Crose Band (New $600 set of¢iiver instruments), aud other sources of armusement. Come one—Conie all. Cheap Excursion Tickets to the City will be issued at all stations on TUES- DAY, OCT. 17th, good to returo on sam- and following day; and againon THURS DAY, OCT. 19:h, good to return on same and following day, at the following RED- ‘ceD RATES, from all stations between Tignish and Piusville, inclusive $1 25 Bloomfield and Portage’ cis oe Conway and Richmond.... «sec. 952 Wellington and St. Eleanora....... 85> Summerside and Freetown oe. THC Emerald and Fred ricton...... . eerserees 60c Clyde and North Wiltshire.......... 45¢ Colville and Loyaliet..........--- 35¢ Cape Traverse andi Kinkora....... 75¢ Souris and Bear J iver......... imetngl . 85c¢ Rollo Bay and Midgell......0.-+++«. poo, 1 Merie and Douglinas............-- 60c St. Andrews and ‘'racadie......... ‘oa’ oe 3edford and Suffolk..........-06: 35¢ BO cocks 5sdc hes decease th Chet wos 25c UD BIR ccccccc cence - pemttneheedecnse 20c Georgetown and Perth..... 0000... 75c 48 Road and Peake’s.... .......-> 60c Pi Squid ....0 .« o. v-ceccccscccceepecssoees 45c Passengers holding Railway Tickets will be required to have them stamped by the Bazaar Committe, before they w Il be boncured for return on the trains. By order of committee. THOMAS DRISCOLL, 222—tu, thur, eat &w Secretary — . _ COTTA PACIFIC KY. LOY’ RATE EXCURSIONS — FROM— CHARLOTTETOWN, P.E.'I a... Sept. 28th, 29th, 30th Oct. 2nd & 3rd For round trip tickets to MONTREAL $13.30 On Sept. 28th, 29th and vUth, Kound Trip Tickets to Ctrawa, Onr.,............ $16.80 Toronto, Ont., Detriot, Mich., Port Huron Nigara Falls, Ont.,...... $24.65 Chicago, [| hhene endeedis ee 65 _ Tickets good to return leaving destina- tion up to and including October 16th, 1899. THE POPULAR ROUTE 1S Janadian Pacific Railway VIA. ST. JOHN. For rates to other points callon any ticket agent in Maritime Provinces, or write, A. J. HEATH, Die:. Passr. Agent, CPR St. John, N. B. JOHN 0 HYNDMAN, Soliciting Agent C P R., Ch’town, PET sosegs -.. -$23.30 | “From the > ON > RL ¢ | © S HC COCSSALU “ReSources. one , %y’ ¢ i> Ie er Pay IOIDY SPE THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, OCTOBER 2 1839 a Ds COPYRIGHT, I@2O: BY A.00. HAWN (Continued.) She looked at him fora moment. He | Mr. Byers assumed a “doubtful alr. had allowed himself tosneer. Her man- ner as she went on without taking any notice of his question proved that Lady Craigenoch had been right in saying that she was a lady. : ‘*My work will be done,”’ she said. first moment I knew the | prince I determined to use my influence in this way. He only—he only needed a little encouragement.”’ *‘And a little money ?”’ “IT gave him one; you’re giving him the other. We shall both be repaid by his success.”’ ‘“*You’re a very strange woman,’”’ he said. Probably he did not know how straight and hard his eyes were set on her. They could not leave her. What a pity it was that she would not go with the prince—as his wife or even, to use Lady Craigenoch’s charitable evasive phrase, as she was now. To set the prince on the seat of his ancestors was not an exploit that appealed to Mr Byers, but to set this woman on a throne would be worth—well, how much? Mr. Byers detected this question in his own heart. He could not help re- ducing things to figures. ‘‘Why don’t you go with him?’’ he asked bluntly. “It would prejudice him,’’ she an- swered simply, folding her hands in her lap. Then she stretched ont a hand toward | him and said suddenly with a sudden quiver in her voice, ‘‘I talk to you like this, and all the time I’m wanting to go down on my knees and kiss your | hands, because you’re doing this.’’ The lean hand held the square jaw. The attitude was a favorite one with Mr. Byers, and his eyes wera still on her. ‘‘Yes, that’s what I want to do,’’ she said, with a nervous laugh. ‘‘It’s so splendid of you.’’ Her breath came fast. Her eyes were very bright. At that moment Mr. Byers wished that the quick breath and the bright eyes were for him himse?f, not for the helper of the prince, and for that moment he for- got Mrs. Byers and the babies in Port- land place. It was years since he had had any such wish about any woman. He felt a sympathy with Prince Julian who had almost cried when he signed the manifesto, because if he mounted the throne Ellen Rivers would leave him. ‘“‘We want money now directly,’’ she went on. ‘‘We want the manifesto in every house. I can manage the distri- bution. And we must pay people— bribe them. We must sow seed. It'll soon come up. And the prince will act at the proper time.”’ ‘‘How much do you want now?’ he asked. ‘“‘Half a million now and another next month,’’ she said. ‘*And more before the end?’ ‘*Yes, most likely. You can get it. you know. ”’ ‘And shall I ever get it back?” ‘The prince has given his werd" ——— — - - _—————— oe ee ew When a man who has neglected his health finally realizes that he is being attacked by serious ill s health it is no =>) time for half- =") way measures. a Death is an enemy that must be knocked out i the first round, or he is pretty sure \\ to conquer in \ the end. r A weak stomach, an impaired di- gestion and a disordered liver mean that a man is fighting the first round with death. Unless he manages to strike the knock-out blow, it means that death will come up in the second round in the guise of some serious malady. When a man’s stomach is weak and his digestion is impaired, the life-giving elements of the food he takes are not assimilated into the blood. The blood gets thin and weak, and the body slowly starves. In the meantime the disordered liver and the sluggish bow- els have forced into the blood all manner of impurities. The body is hungry and eagerly consumes anything that the blood- stream carries to it. In place of healthy nutriment, it receives for food foul poisons that should have been ¢xcreted by the bowels. Continued, this system of Rerite tion combined with poisoning, will wreck every organ in the body. Naturally, the weakest organ will give way first. If a man is naturally nervous, he will break down with nervous exhaustion or prostra- tion. If he inherits weak lungs, the con- sequence will be consumption, bronchitis, asthiva, or some disease of the air-passages. If he has a naturally sluggish liver, he will suffer from a serious bilious or malarial at- tavk. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discov- ery cures all disorders of the stomach, di- gestion and liver. It purifies the blood and fills it with the life-giving elements of the food that build new and healthy tissue. It is the great blood-maker and esh-bnilder and nerve tonic. It mae per cent. of all cases of consumption. Thousands have testified to their recovery from this dread disease under this great medicine. Dr. Pierce’s Pellets cure constipation. ‘Oh, you’re not as stupid as that. You believe him,’’ she added, almost con- temptuously. ‘‘Do you mean it’s a speculation? Of course it is. I thought you had courage.’’ “So I have,’’ said Byers. And he added, ‘‘I may want it all too.”?’ What he would want it for was in his mind, but he did not tell her. He thought a great deal about the matter that evening as he sat by the fire opposite to Mrs. Byers, who knitted a stocking and said nothing. She never broke in upon his thoughts, believing that a careless interruption might cost a million. Millions were in his mind There was his faith with his asscciates. | They were all waiting his word. When he gave it, rumors would die away, re- ports be contradicted, the manifesto poohpoohed. There would be buyings, the stock would lift up her head again, confidence would return, and the first to buy, the first to return to faith in the stock, would be Mr. Byers and his asso- ciates. The public would come in after- ward, and when the public came in he and his associates would go out again, richer by vastsums. The money and his good faith—his honor among financiers —bound him, and the triumph of his brains, the beauty of his coup, the ad- miration of his fellows, the unwilling applause of the hard hit—all these-al- there was nothing except the necessity of disappointing Mrs. Rivers, of telling ! ! | lured him mightily. On the other side, - her that the necessary resources were | not forthcoming; that the agitation and the manifesto had served their turn; that the prince had been madea fool of; that she herself had been madea fool of too. Many such a revelation had he made to defeated opponents, calmly, jestingly perhaps, between the puffs of his cigar, not minding what they thought. Why should he mind what Mrs. Rivers thought? She would no longer wish to kiss that lean, strong hand of his; she might cry (she had Lady Craigenoch to cry to). He looked across at his wife, who was knitting; he would not have minded telling any- thing to her. But so intensely did he mind telling what he had to tell to Ellen Rivers that the millions, his good faith, the joy of winning and the beau- ty of the coup all hung doubtful in the balance against the look in the eyes of the lady at Prince Julian’s. ‘*‘Whatan infernal fool I am!’’ he groaned. Mrs. Byers glanced up for a moment, smiled sympathetically, and went on with her knitting. She supposed that there must be some temporary hitch about the latest million or perhaps Shum had been troablesome; that was sometimes what was upsetting Mr. Byers. The next morning Mr. Shum was troublesome. He thought that the mc- ment for action had come; the poor stock had been blown upon enough; the process of rehabilitation should begin. Various other gentlemen, weighty with money, dropped in with their hats on the back of their heads and expressed the same views. Byers fenced with them, discussed the question rather in- conclusively, took now this side and now that, hesitated, vacillated, shilly shallied. The men wondered at him, they knew they were right, and, right or wrong, Byers had been wont to know his own mind. Their money was at stake; they looked at one another un- comfortably. Then the youngest of them, a fair boy, great at dances and late suppers, but with a brain for fig- ures and a cool boldness which made him already rich and respected in the city, tilted his shining hat still a little farther back and drawled out, ‘‘If you've lost your nerve, Byers, you'd | better let somebody else engineer the thing.’”’ What her fair fame is to a proud woman the prestige of his nerve was to Mr. Byers. The boy had spoken the de- cisive word by chance, by the unerring instinct which in any sphere of thought is genius. In half an hour all was plan- ned, the government of the prince's country saved and the agitation at an end. The necessary resources would now be forthcoming, confidence would be made, the coup brought off, the tri- umph won. So in the next fortnight it happened. Prince Julian looked on with vague bewilderment, reading the articles and paragraphs which told him that he had abandoned all thought of action, had resigned himself to wait for an express recall from his loving subjects (which might be expected to assail his ears on the Greek kalends); that, in fact, he would donothing. Mrs. Rivers read the paragraphs, too, and waited and waited and waited for the coming of Mr. Byers and the necessary resources. She smiied at what she read, for she had confidence in the cause, or at least in‘herself and in Mr. Byers. But the days went on 4 Slowly the stock rose; then in went the now, and other things than millions. | public with a rusp. Ihe paragraphs and the articles dwindled and ceased; there was a commotion somewhere else in Europe; Prince Julian and his mani- festo were forgotten. What didit mean? She wrote a note asking Mr. Byers to call. It was just at this time also that Mr. Henry Shum accepted the invitation of the Conservative Associ ition of Hatton Garden Division of Holborn Bars to contest the seat at the approaching general election, and that Lady Craig- enoch gave orders for the complete ren- ovation of her town house. actions involved, of ex- pense—how much it is hard to say pre- cisely. The house was rather large, the seat was very safe. Prince Julian sat in his library in Palace Gate and Mrs. Rivers stood be- side him, her hand resting on the arm of his chair. Now and then the prin glanced up at her face rather timidly. They had agreed that matters showed no progress. Then Mrs. Rivers had be- come silent. ‘“‘Has Byers thrown us over?’ the prince asked at last. ‘‘Hush, hush!’’ she answered ina low voice. ‘‘Wait till he’s been. He’s com- ing today.’’ Her voice sank lower still as She whispered: ‘‘He can’t have. Oh, he can’t!’’ There was silence again. A few min- utes passed before the prince broke out fretfully: ‘‘I’m sick of the whole thing! I’m very well as I am. If they want me, let them send for me. I can’t force myself on them.”’ She looked down for a moment and touched his hair with her hand. “If this has come to nothing, I'l) never try again. I don’t like being made a fool of.’’ Her hand rested for a moment on his forehead. He looked up smiling. ‘‘We can be happy together,’’ he murmured. ‘‘Let’s throw up the whole thing and be happy together.’’ He caught her handin his. ‘‘You’ll stay with me anyhow ?’’ (to be continued ) course, some SALT RHEUM TORTURES Die away before the magica! effect of Dr. Chase’s Ointment The tortures of Salt Rheum are almost be- rond human endurance, and as the fiesh be- tomes raw, and and burning increase, the suffenng iniense as to almost drive one crazy. In desperation saives and ointments are upplied, only to give rise to further disap point- ment and despair, But there is hope. There is assurance that you can be cured just as seeres and huacreds of others have been by using Dr, Chase's Ointment. Mr John Siron, of Aultsville, Ont., writes: ‘For seven years J was a sufferer from Salt Rheum, and my hands were’so bad I had to wear greased gloves. Nothing seemed to help me, but | was induced to try Dr Chase's Oint- and one box cnred me completely, Chere is not a trace of the Salt Rheum left.” the itching '$ SO nent men, Dr. Chase's Orint-aent has effected most miraculous cures -in all parts of this great Orninion. Could vou have better assurance tit wilcure you? For sale by ail dealers. Rah Mates & Co., Toronto. ' i ninsonr, Gradually but surely the “CRESCENT” is supplanting the old-+heavy, cum- bersome, rough crockery for toilet purposes. It is handier, cleaner and vastly more economical. Each piece bears our label. MADE BY THE THOS, DAVIDSON M’F’G CO. Montreal. CARD. W. F. H. CARVELL, B, A, BARRISTER-AT-LAW Bank of Nova Scotia Building CHARLOTTETOWN. Telephone No. 170 L F] e Money to Loan. ures CHRONIJC-DISE 4SES and RUPTURE D R s by Salisbury rut, Send stamp for infor mation, or at Truro, ova Scotia. Offic- Meroiaass Bank of dax Satdirgale the | Both these | "d |} Ee EN Ga od Me tk aa 7 we, 8 WS GINS MANCRAN ON Castoria is fin fants and Children. Cast harmicss sts te for Castor Oil, Parcgor._, op ainl Seothing Syrups. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. It is Pleasant. [ts guarantee is thirty years’ use by Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays Feverish- Castoria cuxes Diarrho. and Wind Colic. Castoria Troubles, cures Constipation and Castoria assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach’: Bowels of Infants and Children, giving theSS. me i 8 Fecthineg relieves Fiatulencey. . : — ha mee a van ’ healthy and nacurai sleep. Czastoria is the Children’s oe a ae Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. ¢? in c+ 2 ri ; amas ie st a Castoria. — “Castoria is au excelient medicine for **Castoria Is so wel! adapied to childrem Mothers have iepeatedly told me | that I recommend it as superior to any pre- of its good effect upon their chileren.’”’ | scription known to me.”’ H, A. ARCHER, M. D. Brooklyn, N.Y _ children. r . ee Dr. G. C. OsGoov, Lowell, Mass. THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OF ° ¢é APPEARS ON EVERY WRAPPER. THE CENTAYR COMPANY Y7 MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK CITY. . y g Kid Ci oves Every pair of Kid Gioves sold at MY STOR is guaranteed. If they don’t give satirfaction in every way bring them back and we will give youa new pair for them cheerfully—no questions asked Puc Penis Pmt prio yh prep laypan desseabaeencsipliioys Our Lily Glove, buttoned....c.secereeee SUC Oar Lily Glove, laced.....eseeescee- eevee GC Our Adonis Glove (in buttoned, laced or dime fastened... .cccccsccessseseses seve lO Our Muriel, Jaced...ceccsceccccceesccee@l.al' Our celebrated Dapline..........+0..++ $1.55 We have all the newest shades, u Orders by mail promptly attende to. Sentner, McLeod & Co'y. Successors to BEER BROS rien BRUCES S$I5 CUSTOM MADE SUITS. THE BEST VALUE IN THE CITY D. A. BRUCE ROWER Hh VF f ad =o Cf all Wine Merchants Wholesale‘from the distiller, A.G. Taouiox & Vo, Giasgow ~~ ll