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VW ‘ I \ ee, rs, H | I ] \ | Par : | I sar’ Send Se for sample copy. The P. E. Island Magazine, P.O, BOX 698, Charlottetown, P. E. I. KBLLY'S & GO’S. ~~ GROCFRIES ’ _ Are always to be dependet on.... Only the best kept in stock. Our customers are satisfied cusiomers. If vo wart tobe satisfied with your grece . d-al with us, he TEA we seli. Special atten- tion en to ite eelection. Thesame care is exercised in buying al! other linee. i JAMES KELLY &(60 ear London House Corner. s os Qa “ae gl COME ———ew AND BE Queen St., D. L. HOOPER Agent for the Windeor, N.S. Plaster Co.—Englich Selenite Cement and Cal- cined Plaster. Also agentfor the Maritime Clay Work Brick. A stock always on hand. Also a well furmished¢feed sore ,djoin- 0.2L. HOOPER, Cor Great; GeorgeC& hestnut Sd Dg, grocery. +%O06068 2% Se O @ & 4&7 436988 “SSATISFIED j ee a ee THE the man was in regard to his height He was tall Why she told that much I amunableto say. Thatof itself could have furnished clew to the iden- tity of the caller. There are many tall men. But one particular tall man I had in mind as the possible caller. Why I had him in mind will appear later. “Going upon the assumption that this man was the caller, I questioned the servant and surprised her into the statement that she had recognized the caller, but for reasons that had seemed to her sufficient had chosen not to tell the police. That man was the one whom I have designated as the chief conspir- ator. He is sitting with us in this room, and you have, of course, guessed whom I mean. It is Mr. Rice.’’ ‘Yes, professor. I was the caller there that night,’’ confessed Ben Rice ‘‘Your narrative is very interesting. I am waiting to learn how you propose to connect me with the murder. Asa precautionary measure, it might be well for Mr. Hopper to handcuff me if he happens to have a pair of bracelets with him.” “It is quite unnecessary,”’ replied Professor Gilman coolly. ‘‘Because you happened to call for Mr. Damon and because he left the house with you does not necessarily prove that you had a hand in killing him. Indeed I will say right here, lest some present may be harboring unjust suspicions, that Mr. Rice is entirely guiltless of the murder of his friend.”’ Josephine Maxwell and her mother smnall looked greatly relieved at this Rice and the students looked puzzled. The professor indulged in his wintry smile. ‘I have called Mr. Rice the chief conspirator. I believe the appellation to be apt. Mr. Sexton here is another of the conspirators. Nutt and one or two others were also engaged in the conspiracy. Yet none of them is re- sponsible for the crime. There was still name I hav: one who made another conspirator whose not told, a1 away with Damon mon himself. ’’ There was an impressive silence, dur- ad he was the That man was Da- ing which the sound of a cough in the next room was distinctly audible ‘Do you mean asked Josephine Maxwell, pe sed and with a grave look on her f ice, *‘that Luth r Damon committed s le?’ CHAPTER V “That.”” esaid Prof r Gilman ‘*brings us to th ibject of the di v- ery made in the basement of 430 Tay lor street. The body found there had been decapitated. It would, of courss be extravagant to suppose that a suicide could discover means of beheading him self and hiding his he: 7 ; . Montague to England that the ladies of the harem mothered with laughter to dis cover that her 7 7 he? were a ysnip wore in inner vest steel and whalebone, tight, impene- ble and sti- ling, in other words, a corset. The ladies llof the harem would no doubt ‘ have been equa ist red, the perhaps not disposed to laugl had they known that the women of western nations, through false ideas of delicacy, suff nce untold ggony, and sometimes death, through neg- lect of their health in a womanly way Women,who suffer in this way shrink from the embat exatniuations and local treatment insisted upon by the majority of 1orh gn in sil rassing physicians. If they oniy knew it, there is mo necessitv fo! thes oO le ils An emi- nent and skillful phy ien long since dis- covered a remedy that women may use in the privacy of their own homes, It is Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. It acts di- rectly on the feminine organism, giving it strength, vigor and elasticity. It stops all debilitating drains. It is the greatest of all nerve tonics and invigorators for women. Thousands of women who were weak, sick- ly, petulant and despondent invalids are to-day happy and healthy as the result of the use of this wonderful medicine. Good druggists do not advise substitutes for this incomparable remedy. “~ have used Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescrip- tion and ‘Golden Medical Discovery’ in my family,” writes Mrs. G. A. Conner, of Alleghany Springs, Montgomery Co., Va., “ aud have found them to he the best medicines that I ever used.” Send 31 one-cent stamps, to cover cost of mailing and customs only, to the World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y., for a paper-covered copy of , Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Medival Adviser; —Cloth binding so stamps. A 'vhole Med- ical library in one 1000-page v lume. DAILY ' found on the body was the absence « EXAMINER, CHAKLULLTETOWN, JULY 14, 3899 ee OT BS Sad Pe. PEE LST 8 CPE AA ETS ONE saree ~~" 4 : . ee ae x — ue n f en a f 3 eee . a /\3 75 ‘ ~ <' / e buif, . P pa, Se Cine Fes a > ee LA grt ha § X ig . <= 7} f “ ei * A . 4 aw ea ee f ane e Go ut Owe cu: oye “, i “SZ Ss. Sa J OO Se (RAS ¢ NE - x 3 — y Yu i er cera : rf Ey 7 , LAR G Re A } (4) (, y —Ae J A KES ern ad y* | , a ee ao by uy J iD 4 a if {im ae o>} : oe \ it « 3 ban BPA WAR ORR | } , \ f Ss ‘ : Pare . — ae ; as WO bei 3PE-HDHRASKT orto I~J ¥ 2 E> EE BY aX Re. | 8 ‘ SS R53 i ? (@YOW7T®) 1} wir er 1eagg 2 fSevnvre 4 TPN NIE) . COPYRIGHT Ye U&S C) ZA (2) x/ V Ue AYWULR Ge SL <a Sa RR ee anc men Seer eer ened, (Continued.) where 1t could not be found and his = . . . . wy we ‘ rvoyt e: 3 body in another and di t hi , ar t ) rine that 1 ht piace So, ot the risk of puzzling n t + ce : ares : ink of enn Maxwell yet more, 1 am afraid IL shail mn! Q 1 s that « oO . wl ’ a 4 . +} ly : 1 have to say that the idea of suicide had it? : KT I nan Sil > iii . ath nad « , . alee eae The not occurred to me ord am l eared questioning fi , a a ter iamsitinthed teat i, td ' aan ‘The condition in which that body on aescription iat she nad given o clew to the that the the rprisea was found furnished whole case. | ali sil clew has not occurred to allof you Perhaps it has to some of you. The one startling fact that stood out above all others was not that the body was head less, but rather why was it h ‘“‘Can yon conceive any possible rea- son for the murderer beheading his vic- tim? You might venture the theory that it was for the purpose of destrey- ing his identity. That would be the nat- ural thought and also the reasonable one except for the other facts in the case. It is these other facts that make it impossible to believe it. A murderer seeking to destroy the identity of his victim would never leave his victim’s body clothed in apparel that would identify him just as surely and swiftly as his face could do it. Yet we find that this body was so clothed. It had upon it a suit that several different persons could swear was Damon’s, but to set ell doubt at rest, on the vest was the tailor’s mark, bearing the name of Da- mon—proof conclusive that the suit was his) There were, moreover, other articles on the body to identify it. There was the intaglioring with an old English ‘D’ cut in the stone, and en- graved on the inside of the band were the initials ‘M. L. D.’ Damon's friends could swear the ring was his: also in one of the pockets was found a cardcase containing six cards engraved with the name ‘Mr. Martin Luther Damon.’ It could scarcely be questioned whose prop erty this was ‘Quite as remarkable as the things f 37 Liess certain other articles. Damon’s watc! and pocketbook were not found. Those of course, might have been stolen. though the theory held by the police :li not embrace theft asa motive for the crime. But the man’s keys, his pocket knife, his match safe—it seems Damon and carried one— even every student carric , smodcer was a his lead pencil one—were missing. Most singular of ail, not even a pocket han hief was found in the pockets. It is idle to sup pose a man in Damon's class would } without a handkerchief. Yet ail those articles were missing—a most remar! able circumstance, J maintain. Every article found could be used for purpos of identification. Not an article w: found that could not aid in doing tl not any one of a dozen trifies that migitt to one man as well as another might say that the body ng t ) DC i In fact, you guffered from overidentification lt was enough to arouse suspicion ‘‘And yet over against these circum g stances to prove the man’s identity was the missing head—removed presumably for the purpose of destroying identity seemingly two opposing circumstances “That the head had been removed for the purpose of destroying the ider tity I entertained no doubt in spite of the easily identified articles found upon the body. Inasmuch as the murderer would not be foolish enough to seek to both destroy and preserve the identity of his victim, there was but one reason- able deduction to be made, and I have no doubt many of you have made it namely, that the body found was not the body of Damon ‘It was equally clear that it was in tended to be taken for his body, Da- mon’s clothing and other property be- ing witness to that. “Tf not Damon’s body, then whore was it? That was the next question t« be answered. It did not look too difii- cult. You must bear in mind that I had already formulated a theory, which was helpful to me in indicating thé course to pursue. I vsiited the public reading room and looked throngh the files of daily papers bearing date some days prior to Wednesday. At last I found what I was looking for. It wasa brief item stating that on Monday an unknown man had been run down by a train at a street crossing and fatally in jared. He had been removed to Mercy hospital, the item stated. ‘IT next paid a visit to Mercy hos- pital and there was permitted to see the hospital record of the unknown man. He had never recovered conscious ness and died Tuesday night ‘*] ought to state here that. after visiting the undertaker’s Saturday in company with Mr. Rice and Mr. Sex ton, | returned and made a carefnl ex- amination of the corpse. I discovered that the big toe and the second toe of the left foot had been cut off The amputation was anold one. The pital record showed that the same niem- bers were missing from the body of the unknown man who had died there Tuesday. I had expected to learn that, for I was convinced that the body found in the vacant bonsea. in Tavlar street hos APS Pe aT | | | was probably that of the unknown mun killed by the train. ‘I was also given. thongh somewhat reluctantly, the information that the hospital sometimes furnished cadavers “ for the use of surgical practice by stn dents and professors at Rusk college Whether the cadaver of the unknown man had been removed there for that purpose I was not told’ I did not care to be. I knew ‘‘And now we come to the conspiracy ich I have me med. Mr. Ri i have named the chicf conspirator. After lling for Mr. Damon Wednesday ht the two went directly to Rusk college, I assume. Nutt and Sexton were also there. and other students also perhay I don’t know how many From the college Nutt and Damon went to the house in Taylor street. They waited outside till some one happened along who would be sure to them, and then they entered the house under that person’s observation. Nutt had a key to the house, which explains why that house was chosen. Later in the evening Rice, Sexton and as many more as may have been required went to the honse, taking with them the cadaver from the hospital. This honse is so situated that it may be approached from an alley in the rear with little danger of being observed by neighbors A church stands next to it on one side, and the brick barn of the house on the other side shields the approach from that direction. So it may not bs won- dered at that no one has come forward with a story about seeing them enter it from the rear. 00D HEALTH ror WOMEN Dr. A. W. Chase's Nerve Food Re- stores Weak, Sickiy Women to Robust Health. Any irregularities in the monthly uterine action is sufficient cause for women to be alarmed about their health. Whether painful, suppressed or profuse menstruation, the cause can be traced to some derangement of the nerves, A few boxes of Dr. A. W. Chase’s Nerve Food will completely build up the exhausted nerves and restore the regular monthly action which removes from the body the clogged mat- ter that would otherwise cause pain and serious disease. It is as & restorative for pale, weak women that Dr. A. W. Chase’s Nerve Food has been singularly successful. It counteracts the debi- litating diseases peculiar to women by feeding the nerves and creating new nerve fluid, the vital force of the human body. Dr. A. W. Chase’s Nerve Food has restored scores of hundreds of weak, sickly women to robust health. soc. a box at all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Toronto. Dr. Chase's new illustrated book ‘' The Iils of Life and How to Cure Them,” sent free to your address. Tecogeni Ze Sure of getting the best kitchen utensils if the label CRESCENT STEEL AGATE WARE is on every piece you buy ! We yuarautee them to be absolutely pure, and very durable. 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