THE D.fLY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, AUGUST 17, wal (He BEST is always imitated, Dodd's Kidney Piils, sold onty jp boxes like this, are widely j@itated, \ecatise they are the best Kidecy cure. Take none )-0-D-D?S. idan bi —— - _ —_ —-— -_———— i a0 Improved — Milk Gall}—~ By the introduction of ‘wachinery, we have overcome wae trouble complained of in Bhhe slopping over of milk cans A Ail orders fo» NON-SL OPP. haNG MILK CANS | filled Promptly, wholesale or retail, f A McLEAN, Masenic Temple, Charlottetown cee EC RE q rs ~~ se e~ Queen ee Murine | The greatest remedy for sore and inflamed eyes, is meeting with wonderful success, 7 | It affords almost in- stant relief and in many cases complet- ely cures. 1 50c Beitle G, F, HUTCHESON a Jeweler and ; Optician ~_m»a~a aon eo ee @? Jee @ @ & @ 6660: ~~ a2 eo = @ @ aA os ©. oS LLY’S & 60'S. * + GROCERIES re always to depende i on.... Uniy the best kept in stock. eatisfies If you want tobe satiefied with your Gccerie deal with us, Try the TEA we seli. Special atten- hon was given toits eelecticn. Uur cus .omers are customers. Be AND BE ¥ SATISFIED oY | | point The came | tare is exercised in buying a)! other liner. | ; ' i | } veen S » Dt I La ocot House Ci rner Pec av | Se —— ooo ’ : ‘ . We +) Rag eing 6 percent speveus Ont prope ome of the best aie. i ‘ | Ai ' S ¢ : nore 1 ut : a ha: slue of the prot quired we | Slarantee both principal ar blerest i _ ann es the mortegs ire paya i me Ifst.); 4 ; Adyone wan'ing a thorug ily safe A) ment having a wood rate oO! in!“rest saould a Sommunicate witn ua. Wealso have a large number of very de- | p . zat e ri for sale in the Winniner D , =if. al prices which are beard todoubie in * Very chort time. fend for »articulars. 4$ HASLAM &sWRIGHT Private Ban«ers \ 320 }'cIntyre Block W innipeg 4 # \ /* Pr’ 4 ‘ » specific gravity of oe ““' thought of that, of course,” said the detective calmiy. ‘‘A newly fallen | meteorite, superheated as it mnust be, would undoubtedly sear hnman flesh, so that traces of it would probably be dis- cernible, even after the burned part had been submerged in water for several hours. I never for a moment beiieved that the meteorite made the wound. If you remember, I said that this corner of the meteorite might make a break al- most exactly like that in the skull. Al- most exactly, but not quite It fits the wound pretty well, certainly much bet- ter than the handle of that stick. but it doesn't fit it quite accurately enough Things have to be exact in matters of this sort to be of munch value. Now here isa rock,”’ picking up the frag- ment broken from the cliff, ‘‘that fills our wants better. This singular shaped corner fits the wound exactly, and here, gentlemen, undoubtedly is the instru- ment that caused the death of Burke The meteorite struck the rock just as the doomed man was climbing the path and bounded off into the water without doing further damage itself. The fatal destructiveness lay in this piece of rock, which being broken from the solid rock with great violence was dashed against Burke’s head, knocking him off the path into the river and then falling in after him. The body, borne away by the current, which at this point sets to ward the opposite shore, would by the next morning be likely to reach the spot where the fishermen found it Some water was found in Burke's lungs enough to make the medica] men be lieve that death occurred from drown ing, yet probably not enough gained en trance before his death to make the the body grester than that of the water. which explains why the body floated instead of sinking ‘Gentlemen, do you think my theory is correct ?”’ A buzz of admiration followed, and Arnold began to clap his hands. There wasa singular look in Professor G:) man’s eyes as he noticed this ‘‘Mr. Fosdick,”’ said the sherif en thusiastically, all his reluctance to ac knowledge the professional superiority in + A PS <a of the other disappearing, *‘you area most remarkable man. Your explan: } tion is complete and satisfactory, and this mystery, thanks to your skiil asa detective, is cleared up.”’ CHAPTER VIII PROFESSOR GILMAN HAS SOMETHING TO SAY ‘*Permit me to say a few words.’ It was Professor Gilman who spoke 7 . . Every one his tone, present, a little startled at turned to look athim He said ‘‘Mr. Fosdick is a remarkable man I fully agree with the sheriff on that His theory of Burke's likewise remarkable, I may say almost Gentlemen, there prob- indred ; 1 , oa? : GP@avu , 77 too remarkable ably is not million of a man meeting death in the 7 < ’ one chance 17 a Qi ies | | The old-fash- | ioned watck- } man who prowled about the streets of medieval Lon- don, with a lan- tern in his j hand to pro- j claim his com- | ing, and who | announced his passage ‘through streets by shouting “‘All’s m well,’ was a very inefficient protector when ——. compared with the metropoll- ; tan police of a Wew York City, commonly known as ‘Finesft.’’ The lees not proclaim his doer by shouting or by He does his work more 3 ‘ oid-tasno the Lie than the walks of life and hange and knowl- ’ , . an this re “a4 e tt91 pation Litt edge and efficiency increase. 1 t medical sc has kept pace with the advance in other lines. Physicians and skillful. : be at sts have grown rapidiy more ‘ ere are medicinal preparations now-a days that cure diseas that were a few wears aro considered absolutely incurable The final triumph in this respect 1s Dr. Pi s Golden Medical Discovery. it was first given to the world thirty years aco, and has stood the test ever since that tire It cures 9S per cent. of all cases of consumption, bronchial, throat und kindred afections. Thousands whe were hopeless a ferers. and had been given up by the ec rs. have testified to its marvelous merits It is the great blood- maker and It makes the appetite hearty, flesh-builder. he a t ‘ assimilation perfect, the tion and iv tive. the blood pure and rich with th no elements of the food, and the 1 nd stea [t acts directly on t : r-passages, driving out all impurities and disease germs. An hon- ‘ tonter will not try to persuade you to t ‘ bstitute for the sake of a f aed prokt s Pleas Pellets cure constt . 1 t ll eT me stores. ; i ee men aman iLhat fact alone manner just described. makes it almost if not quite necessary to abandon such a theory, a theory which, I admit. is peculiarly fascinat- ing At one time its fascination lured me. I had constructed a theory sub- stantially like the one that has just j been explained and was preparing to gather evidence in support of it when I accidentally learned that Mr. Fosdick was working along the same line of thought. I came here today wishing to learn if he had followed the road to its end, but I perceive that he has stopped somewhat short of his destination. Be fore proceeding further I will ask yon, Mr. Sheriff, to place Mr. Arnold under arrest for the murder of Burke.’ Each member of the company was visibly astonished at these words. The detective had put some gum in his mouth when the professor began talking and swallowed it in his astonishment But he did not wince, and no one no- ticed it. Arnold was observed to turn pale Professor Gilman, continuing, said ‘Il agree perfectly with Mr. Fosdick as to the instrument that made the wound on Burke’s skull. It was undoubtedly this fragment of rock. Before Mr. Fos- dick examined the ridge near the pier I had carefully scrutinized it and dis- covered, as he afterward did, that a piece of rock had been broken off. 1 marked the place with a stick, which I have no doubt Mr. Fosdick remembers having seen there afterward.”’ Fosdick nodded and said, ‘‘Go on.’ He evidently was greatly interested. Professor Gilman resumed, and as he proceeded his usually mild manner be- came unusually emphatic. “This fragment, as 1 say, doubtless was he instrument that made the wound, but that it was hurled at Burke by the blind and motiveless forces of nature I deny most emphatically Ido not say such a thing could not happen [t could. And there lies the allurement, the fascination of the idea’ What 1 contend is that it wouldn't happen— not in & thousand years—nuay, nor in ten thousand It is too uuusual The percentage of its probability as against its improbability is too infinitesimal Therefore—and, | admit. with some relnctance—I rejected the theory and traveled a little further along the line of thought I had started on ‘‘T returned to the footprints on the road between the hotel and the west pier and asked myself: ‘What was Burke searching for? Was it really a rod of steel? bought for a few cents. Their imme- diate need at the observatory was not urgent. Therefore, even supposing he bad dropped one without noticing it— a thing really nct very likely to occur —I] donbted if, upou discovering the loss. he would spend any time looking for it But if it was not the steel, what was he searching for? I could not think of anything that Burke would be likely to discover missing as he walked along in the dark. If he did not know that he had lost something, of course he would not be looking for anything. So, as in fancy I walked along with him trying to think of something he should discov- er missing, I found myself presently at the west pier, where the boat was se- cured with chain and padlock, just as he had left it earlier in the evening Then I seemed to know, as clearly as if I had been there in fact instead of fancy, what he had lost. It was his bunch of keys, of course. When the body was discovered, they were found in his hip pocket together with a pocket handkerchief. Somewhere on the road. then, he had pulled out his handker- chief and the keys with it. His deaf- ness doubtless prevented his hearing them rattle as they fell to the ground The padlock was especially prized by and he would not willingly break it Rather than do so he would walk a considerable distance. Besides, there were other keys than the one to the padlock on the ring which he would not want to lose “Having reached this conclusion, | obtained a wax impression of Burke's lark IUT KE, shoe h examine the ground. On my way I saw Mr. Fosdick’s submarine diver at work and was confident | knew what he was searching for. Many footprints were in the soft clay around the landing by the time I got there. but I managed to dis- tingnish among them those made by Burke the night of his death. I could not, however, ascertain what I wanted to in the immediate vicinity of the pier, owing to the confusion of foot- prints, but passing up the road a few rods I was rewarded. Among the other footprints I could distinguish those made by Burke, and lo! there were two sets of footprints going in each direc- tion. Consequently, Burke must have gone over that road twice that night in- stead of cnce. Between’the spct where the burned matches were found and the hotel there was but one set of Burke's One of those reds can be ; eel, and went to the west pier to | | Laborers - Wanted footprints. between the pier and the spot where the search was made that he traversed twice. It was clear that this double journey had not been.made early in the evening on his way to Jackson, for at that hour of the burned matches shows that it was dark when the search was made. These facts confirmed my belief that 1t was Therefore, it was the space | | it was yet light, whereas the presence his keys he had lost. Presumably Burke, conjecturing in what manner he had lost them, remembered about where he had used his handkerchief, for the evi- dences do not show that he hunted for any great distance along the road. The place where the search was made is about two-thirds, or perhaps three- fourths, of a mile from the west pier Some of you may be asking yourselves ‘What has all this to do with the case? What part of Mr. PFosdick’s theory does it conflict with? I perceive. by the expression of Mr. Fosdick’s face that he realizes of what vast impor tance it is He world tell yon, as I now tell you. that its innportance Nes in th tter of time To be Continued.) = Doctors said Incurable But the Notary, Mr. Lemire, was cured of Kidney Disease in two months by Dr. Chase’s Kidney- Liver Pills. It is only when thoroughly convinced of the superior merit of a remedy that public men will give their sanction. Mr. E. H. Lemire, Notary Public, 3692 Notre Dame Street, Montreal, tells of his re- markable recovery from a severe attack of kid- ney disease. When doctors had failed, Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills saved his life. He writes: ‘‘I give this statement, first because it is only just that the merit of Dr. Chase’s Kid- ney-Liver Pills should be made known, and again in order that others may profit by my experience. For years 1 suffered with kidney disease which doctors pronounced incurable. Thanks to Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills, which I have used for two months, Iam com- pletely cured. They he!ped me from the first, and the cure is now perfect.” Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills act directly on the kidneys, and through their combined influence on the kidneys and liver, cure the most complicated diseases of these delicate organs, One pilla dose. 25 cents a box at all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co,, Toronto. = 2 = a Ih» Il» i» & = hey All Do They All Are: Finding out that we give the best values in Boots and Shoes. See our Job Lots in win- dows and on counters for 3 days. Big reductions to clear. Fal] Geods coming in. J. HW. BELL {}yu th» wena |p NC <i ees hance aeeeeeeeei The Cheap Boot Store. | SSSe See SSeeesre | Se ee ee eed Marmalade. We have jnet received a new kind 1 ORANGE MARMALADE, put up in gias- pots, which we are now Offering at the ‘ow rate of 2 Pots for 25 cents | Also just opened a case of Pine: apple Marmalade which is of very fisvor. The Pineapple and Ginger Marmalsce bas al:o given excellent satis- faction. Those are sil new goods and you shouldtry them if you want something nice and tasty. flue | | | however | | ihe. Ihe in D LIVIA NEUES GR! CERS NADIAN’ +). 1 PS A; nat _ “ . 5,000 In the Wheat Fields of Manitoba and Assiniboie. eee $14.00 frcm all stations ip the Maritime Provipees to alk points in Manitoba and Asstniboia, as foilews, West, South-west, and North-west. of Winnipeg. as far as Moosejaw, | : ’ Estevan, Yorkton, and Cowan, inclusive. Rate $14.0 From a)! Statious In Mari- time Proviucesto all points in Man.,and Assiniboia, DATES—Aug. J5th from Prince Edward | sland, RETU RN—At $14.00—After_working for armer, for mouth or more, Limit—Nov. 15, 899 TICKETS—Are second Class throvghont and not good on the Imperial Limited (West o : mae A. J}. HEATH List. Passr Agent St. John, N. B i } Morris Block------ vas lt 2 The oppressive heat of summer keeps many a be #$ one tossing all night on a sleepless couch, and so 5 za drowsy and listless in the day time that work is re 3% impossible. . lee a This kind of thing will run down the strong- ce est constitution. A teaspoonful of Abbey’s Effervescent Salt in a tumbler of water, taken night and morning, will keep the blood cool, invigorate the system and bring restful sleep at night. Drink it at any time, ’twill and refresh the system. ’ 4 » < a % WY satisfy your thirst SANS (ome The Canadian Pharmaceutical Journal says: “We have tried Abbey's Effervescent Salt, and find it an excellent compound, It was most favorably commented upon Ly the medical profession at the meeting in Montreal of the British Medical As- sociation. The Company was not afraid of submitting it to the criticism of Ail were invited to sam- f; medical men. m ; . 5 s Se +. f sla i i =ople and pass jucgment On it, s was baal invariably favorable, some expressing Fahe the opinion thet it was superior if Pim . io le in points to any other om t.1¢ tari a rT ‘ ce a eer rd morning drauett of this stimuloting ta preparation wil send a man to his = . . . ph , ee, daily occupation invigorated and ready «, 1 ai for any task.” oot aoe rE) x Re FURNITURE: BIG DISCOUNT It will be money ip yonr pocket to trade with us, JOHN NEWSON aaa eS SALE N = Cn > oo ere ot - (EE Sera oe an ars Tld is Her e—— We Warm Weather You require lighter Underclo‘hing. @. sec You with the Finest Balbriggan, Cotton and Natural Wo}, the thir kind. Shirts and Drawers 35 cents. Straw Hats Are reduced in price to make them move at a livel | Do you want one. D. A. Bruce cs o ' ‘et Dow LRPORTARNT TO THOSE WHO INTEND PUTTING IN SEWERAGE If you have to buy a stove to heat your bath : boiler, get a Highland (wade in Roston) and For sale only by PENNELL ax» CHANDLER have satisfaction. i ee BONE ser ner Oa aint raceme AAP ee enn