popys ™ KIDNEY 2 —_— fail ~~ ~ SUSATECE SEs eh eeceesseenecesesanee de DODD'S KIDNEY PILIS, the only positive, never-failing cure, ou earth, for all Kidney diseases. Take No Other. Get the Genuine. Refuse Imitaiicns. There's Oniy One Dodd'a WE WANT HOUSEKEEPERS To come in an 1 lock over our Our stock is fine and fresh and guaranteed to be satisfactory. thing in our line that is neces- sary. FOR HOUSEKEEPING The prices—well, that is wuai we want you to see when you groceries are looking at our goods. fheir lowness will surprise you. DRISCOLL and HORNSBY (QUEEN 8) REET ee: ho WEEK'S GROCERIES.... <gE— Perhaps you would like to get a jittie more for what you spend. Perhaps you would like to have everything fresh and nice. If you will try my store I think you will find that your money wil! go farther. And all the groceries you get will be good and fresh. JOHN McKENNA. QUEED ST. GROCER PLANT LINE. EXCURSIONS CHARLOTTETOWN TO BOSTON AND RETURN FOR $11.00 Good for 30 Days: Commencing Oct 31d, the well known ©... Halifax leaves Charlottetown every Tuesday nt nocn for Boston, via Hawkes-~ bury and Halifax. From Halifax—Every Wedneeday at 11 pm. Passengers ticke\ed via Pictou on Wednesdays. — From Boston every Saturday st noon Tickets for cale at S.etions on PE Reilwey. For tickets, rates on freight an a}] information apply H L CHIPMAN, Supt, Halifax. W W CLARKE, Agent NL. Dunstan's College Classical and Commercial. AFFILIATED 170 Lava UNIVERSITY * The claeees in St. Dunstan’s Colleg will be resumed on TUESDAY, the 12the Septemler nex’. For further particulars apply to A. P. McLELLAN, Rector St Duustan’s College, Ch’town, Aug 30, ‘99 We keep every- , , 4 Th 4 ‘ WAT ANNs \ eu. By OUTOLIFFE HYNE. Conti ued.) The white frail of tlie air tube led me down the stair to the lowest berth deck, then yway right aft, and with a hatch in 17 along the all t 1 into the cabin, ine floor. Sitting on the lid of the hatch was Cameron, who turned around when my light fell upon him. He beckoned me with an impatient gesture and slip- ped down into the blackness below. It was clear he did not recognize me. He took it for granted that I was Storey delayed by some accident. For a mo- ment I staid outside irresclate, and a shoal of small fish, attracted by the lig brushed past my legs. I remem- bered that they had been browsing on corpses and were prospecting me as food and the idea made me shudder in- The gold was benenth and around us, in iron bound boxes. side my rubber clothes. Then I thought good to see exactly what was going to happen and slipped through the hatch after Cameron. We were in Corinth’s strong room. The gold was beneath and around us, in iron bound boxes, built together like the bricks of a wall. Cameron lifted an end of one of the boxes and nodded his helmeted head toward me impatiently. I took hold, and together we swung it up through the water and out through the hatches. Then he scrambled up him- self, and I followed. Again we lifted the box, treading with care along the slimy alleyways so as not to foul our air pipes. I could feel the bones of the dead shift beneath my feet, and my chest was tight with labor. In spite of the buoyancy of the water, the box of gold was as much as the pair of us could struggle along with. At last. with infinite trouble, we came out through the companion hatch and lowered the box with a rope down to the bed of slime below. We followed it, lifting it between us again and wal- lowed on with it through the morass of slime. The herbage of the sea brushed our shoulders as we struggled on. The skeletons of the dead stood sentinel along our path, and the golden silence of the water crushed into my spirit. We held our way_right round the steamer’s Every woman weafr @ crown who is the mother of a healthy baby. The mother of a puny, sickly, pee- vish baby bears a cross. It rests with every woman to de- cide for herself which kind of a mother she will be. The woman who takes the right care of herself — during the months i\t preceding ma- \\ ternity may rest content in the as- surance that her baby will be a strong, healthy, happy one. The woman who suf- fers from disor- ders of the dis- tinctly feminine organism during this critical period, and fails to resort to the right remedy, is pretty sure to have a puny, peevish, sickly baby, born into the world with the seeds of weak- ness and disease already implanted in its little body. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Pre- scription is the best of all medicines for prospective mothers. It imparts health, strength, vigor, and elasticity to the deli- cate and important organs that bear the brunt of motherhood. It prepares a wo- man for the time of trial and danger. It strengthens and invigorates, and insures the erfect well-being and absolute health of Poth mother and child. It does away with the squeamishness of the interesting pe- riod. It makes sure an ample supply of nourishment for the little new-comer. It transforms weak, sickly, nervous and de- spondent invalids into healthy, happy wives and mothers. Thousands of homes to which babies once came to stay but for a brief day and then die, now bless this won- derful medicine for the gift of happy, ealthful babies. . The dealer who tries to persuade you to take some other ee than that you - insults your intelligence. 7 ine bese eedare in Kansas City told me that unless I went to the hogpital and had an opera- tion performed J could not live,” writes Miss Broohie Galloway, of Wilder, Johnson as Kans. “I had ulceration and weakness, an each month I would get down in bed and suffer severely for twenty-fou: hours. Four bottles of your ‘ Favorite Prescripiion ' cured me.” For coustipation—Dr. Pierce’s Pellets. TH Te, aguinst her Keel upon a pit lt came had been through the slime with infinite labor and shored up with planking With a rope we lowe red t) . cold chest down into the pit and Cameron followed. I witched on my lar pb and saw him hi g and thrusting it downa gallery which led far beneath the iron sh ath- ing of the wreck. A shovel lay ayainst a sea shrub at the lip of the pit. | took it in my hand. [| was away from the world of air in this lonely world of wa- ter. Cameron and I ws re the only ba man occnpants, with none to overlook us, and | felt that I ought to be on my guard against him. From his point of View it was clear I knew too much Presently he returned from out of the pit and was about to go back again round the bows of the steamer, put I touched him with my shovel and he turned. Then I pointed to the front glass of my helmet, and he came up close aud peered at my face, and as quickly recoiled. Then again he came toward me—this time with clinched fists—but I menaced him with the up- lifted shovel and he kept his distance How I longed for speech then to say to him what I wished! For a full minute we’ stared at one another and then witha sudden gesture he picked a fragment of stone from the ground and wrote a message on the rusted plating of the wreck. ‘“‘Hold your tongue, Mac,’”’ I read, *fand you shall share.’’ ‘I wrote a laborious reply with tho ; peak of the shovel: ‘‘Cannot deal with you. Am bound to employvers.”’ He scribbled ‘‘£25,000’’ and watched my face. I shook my head inside the helmet. He wrote ‘£30,000’ and looked at me again. I wrote ‘‘Not for £270,000.” I saw he was ready to spring upon me and held the shovel edge above my shoulder handy to cut him down. He considered for a minute and then wrote: “If you blowon me you will kill her. She knows. She never liked the idea, but I persuaded her into it. We wanted to marry, we wanted to be rich. There was no other way. She is half dead with anxiety. You must have seen that.”’ I nodded. He wrote on: ‘Then consider her, Mac, and make your own fortune at the same time.”’ I could not stand any more of this. I have been poor enough all my life, and, God knows, I ken the value of siller. If it had not been that Captain Boyd treat- ed me in the way he did, and looked in my eye when he gave me the job, I’ll not say what might have happened. It takes a strong man to resist the bigger kind of temptaticns, and—I’m no ower lusty. I beckoned to the water surface above with my shovel and took a step forward. With his arm he implored me to pause. ‘*‘Are you going to report what you have seen?’’ he wrote. I shrugged my shoulders. **I give you fair warning,’’ he wrote on the rusted iron, ‘‘that if you dol will kill you first and then myself. So you will not find it cheap to ruin me.”’ I nodded my head to show I under- stood and beckoned him togoon. He lifted his hands—I thought he was go- ing to grapple with me, and I slashed at him with the shovel. He drew back and, once on the moves, I drove him be- fore me furiously. He might be desper- ate, but I was savage enough myself. The thought of all that wealth lying within touch made me grit my teeth in cruel rage. If only the skipper had not said what he did! We plowed our way across the slimy sea flocr to where the boats lay at moor- ings, and first Cameron went up, and then I followed. On the row back to the Gleaner we said nothing, either of us, and for long enough we did not find op- portunity of being alone. But that night, when most of the hands were turned in, he and I sat out together on the bridge deck, and he talked while I looked cut at the stars where they hung above the black ridges of the island. He told me the whole tale of what he and Storey intended todo. They cculd not go far from the wreck, as the air bubbles, rising to the surface, would advise their movements, so they had to set to work and make a hiding place for their plunder close at hand. They de- cided to dig out a chamber beneath the steamer, and infinite labor it cost them. Meanwhile, to mask what they were doing, they gave out the tale of the ooze covering the treasure out of reach. Their efforts were nearly ended when Storey got his stroke. The pit was made, part of the gold was already transport- ed, and, when the rest was hid, then they intended to cover the mouth of the pit so that it never could be found by chance explorers. Then they were going to tell Captain Boyd that the jcb beat them and get his permission to blow into the Corinth’s strong room with dynamite from the outside. The explo- sion would be so contrived that the steamer would be rived to pieces and the ooze would cover all her fragments. ‘*You think that the Gleaner would return home then?”’ I asked. ‘‘There would be nothing else for it.” ‘But the company would send out another expedition. ”’ ‘Let them send out ten; they’d find nothing.”’ ‘“‘And afterward?” ‘Storey and I were going to charter a schooner, put diving tackle on board and come out here again by ourselves. = DalLY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, OCTOBER 7 1839 days, and I know of a market.”’ ‘Well, Storey will never use limbs or tongue again.’’ ‘‘I’m sure of it. Mac. You must take his place’ We two and one other can work the schooner, and a year from now We ll be rich men. Think of it, lad —rich beyond what you ever thought of! Think of it—no more having to stand your watch at sea, no more sea at all! You can stay in England and mar- ry and live a decent life. Think of it, Mac!”’ I was thinking of it. wat the heat lightning wink among the black hills of the island I was remembering that it was a chance such as I had never had before in all my life, and one which would never come to me again. I'd been kicked about the world ever since I first went a wee bit wrong in Ballindrochater, and I'd sworn never to see the place more till I'd enough siller to build a house there as big as the manse itself. 1 hungered for the old spot again, with its gray honses and the brown moorland at the back. My mother was still there and poor. I could do a power of good in the place As I sat there hing (the de’il tcld me then) if I went back rich and enlightened with all my store of foreign travel. But then what the captain had said to me came back—how he reminded me I had been bor a gen- tleman, and how he’d treat mnfe as my father’s son and trust tomy honor—and > 200d to my. feet and swore. (to be continued ) RONG IDEA i\YSPEPSIA Throws all the Blame on the Stomach—The Real 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 the stomach, This fact also explains why Dr. Chase's Kid. ney-Liver Pills have been so remarkably suc- cessful as a cure for the worst forms of Gyspep- sia and indigestion, Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills act directly on the /ridneys, liver and bowels, and give new tone and vigor to the intestines, and make them able to perform their work of digesting the substances on which the stomach has ne eclect. Stomach treatment may do well enough tor slighrindigestion, 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-¢. a box, at all dealers, op "dmanson, Bai®™ & Ca., Toronto. iful Golde FREE! 2: itaire Ring in exquis- ite plush-lined case for selling 1 doz. gold topped Lev- er Collar Buttons at 10c. each. We send buttons postpaid. Sell them, return money, and = wesend you ring, all charges me paid. tever Button Co., Box. ¢ x Toronto. & Cut this ont and return ‘ to us, with name of your nearest express office and we willsend this watch there for you to examine. It is ar opeli-face, gold-plated, dust proof Case, handsomely engraved, fitted with American model 7 jewelled stem wind and set movement, lady’s or gent’s size. inisa good time piece, equal in ap- pearance to a $25.00 watch, and is just the thing tor tradi purposes. If, on careful exaniination you are convinced this watch is worth far more than we ask, pay the express agent $5.95 and express charges and it is yours. rry Watch Co., . Box Cc Feronte, Can. CHARLOTTETOWN School of Music W. Harry Warts, DIRECTOR This beaut- ON ts We Aa ae >» i all -” Fall term opens September 5th. Students :ecommencing will kindly call at the studio or write, notifying the Director of date of recommence- ment Vacancies for a limited number of new students. Studio hours, 9 a m to 12; 2p m to >. pm fOR RENT. The euktscriber offers for rent his residen ce, orner of Hillsborough and Richmond Street |} The bouse centains ten rooms and is ‘urpis h- ed with electric lightand fitted with bath, etc., connected with the Tharilottetow n Sewerage fystem. Possession given at unc e Apply to HENRY SMITH Sept llth 1899 ln re Estate of Reubin Tuplin, of Kensington, deceased All persons having any demand upon ibe estate of the abcve named deceared, are hereby required to eahibit the seme dul; attested, as by law required, at the office of Charles R Smallwood, Solicitor, Charlottetown, within one yearfrom the date of this advertisment. Dated this 2nd day of September, A. D. 1899. JAMES TUPLIN, R R FITZGERALD, SW BODD, Executors. We could Weigh the gold ina couple ol ee ae ; . DMINAT, kY a A LTTE S23 DR POU Wah AF anno oak toe MEF VAL VaRARA ; PR aU Sa SUES AE NEE \- a as oe De nt eens Starving es ‘Amongst plenty. 7 i e- oe Ea t , on a << em It isn’t only lack of food that causes one to = f Bi, , ge Starve. Many a one’s digestive organs are so out q SI ; 54 “a of order that they cannot get the nourishment they % @% should out of the!s ie food. aa “4 oy q? ™ - * < a > t a ‘ les fone UD ic System ana improve the c-gestion S| f e be r th, . a ter co” f . wu 7 id 12 Gaiuy Use 0 tr u - eS ef 3 A 1.f. or F ff Teen 1+ baat fA C y S erves Lit ait. oo.s 4 esed a Gk ah) oy . Goes _ if] ox At al hf +4 2: Tt will give you a healthful appetite, and keep the % -_-*- (aye e ” a ot 5 ~ we : * “ar J es1 digestive organs in perfect running order, weet Ay oabe otal ape vas cc y ‘save civen Al)! . ‘s ifferves- 2Ee ce) : ta very th vvh trial, Oa, : . . a oe have found ruicularly m4 ousefulin case of Tila cy. Head- ot ache and Chronic Constipation, (ee “ ave n Csiaiion in re- Lip I have no ih hie . axY commending Abbey's I.t.ervescent at Salt as a thoroughly reliable "x preparation. I may add that I use Abbey’s Effervescent Salt mv- self every day, and have found it wnore beneficial in my own case 4 than any similar thing that I have > ever tried.’’ fs Dn. CHas L. DE MARTIGNY, ¥) Montreal, Canada, Fiftv years a physician. ee Te phe ree Sold by all druggists. 6o0c a 250%" (te OF Pm bottle, trial size 25c. yay 7 aS mo Std, Wee, a y PHONE KC NONE KON CONC ONC PEN CAC ENCE CUNC New GoodsOG omine =— Daily to Hand MEN'S HATS, CAPS LADIES’ HATS Nen’s Underwea- A good range difierent weights, including Stanfield’s Unehrinkeble.: T.JHARRIS, LO } LADIES’ COATS — ee er This cool weather You will want warm Blankets We have them and out they go if !ow prices will do if, 50 pair white wool blankets, sizes 50x 76, $2.00 50 pairs white wool blan kets, 80, $2.56 25 pairs all wool, grey. fine make $1.90 These blankets are very cheap as they were sizes 60x bought early in the season before the ad- vance in prices, Buy now. J B Macdonald & Cc LEADERS IN LOW PRICE