ro oman lie Ae Pe eee ee ee etna ae: ee HE DAILY EXAMI Tak Leavive DatLy NEwsrareR ov P. E. Isianpb, jaened every afternoon, f oom be ExAMINeER PUBLISHING ser.ate read. R ,.oadon House Bualldiag, Qpe RATES OF SUBSCRiriius tan (IN ADVANCE) i One YRaAR vee 84.00 Six Monrus . 200 Tuxke MontHes - 1.00 One MONTH » O03 Sent post paid to any part of Canada or the United States The Weekly Examiner ssued every Friday morning from office. it ie made up of which has appeared in the Daily editions, and irst-class weekly newspaper ofthe latest news. pu shers’ laa iteresting CALENVAR FOR Full Moon, 2 jay, lih 5.8m Last Quar 9th day, { New Moon, | lay, 0 5 First Quar, 24 lay, 3 2m. } NOVEMBER, ta a im. tm. m. } ™m. Day of Week. Sua S mJ H go wr FROM ’ rises sels water | j | + . 5 . * -——' ss we Dominion Coal Co's. Mines in 6. 8 1 | Friday 6 47 : 10 13 | . 7 3 | Saturday ee 10 48 Now Landing and to Arrive per 3 ; Ss jay o0 | ti BL Oe z | Monday 52 6 | af 51a . °F ee | | >| at ©) Steamship Albert, 650 Tons Sydney Slack. 6 | Wednesday | 4 | 1 3¢|Sehooner Maggie Bell, 64 “* «6 ‘“ yy hw ; me 9 9! ‘ 1 . > . - Se ee | asl 32) 22 | : cw. Geith, 116° “ " “ 9 | Saturday si 2 442 ey Lizzie C., 20 6¢:l eee t| Sunday | S93} 23) 6 2] - Carmena, 100 “ Sydney “* ‘ “Uouday i i zi 7 é 7 > ‘ 7 +. 6 12 | Tuesday 3} 3 slit e a Screened. 13 i We lr es lay | 5 j Zi ¥ 0 | a a. B. Fa wa 90 -" “6 - “4 |) Thursday j | 92 ‘ 3 ‘“ - ~ 4 Thursday 1; 2 9 4. Telephone, 50 é< ‘“ 66 5 | Friday 1 ox} 22] 10 39] ; , , 16 Sat irday | a i 21 ll ; i fe ou sary ai Run of Mine. .7 | Sunday 10 24 Lt 65 - Albert r.. LOG 7 _ ¥ +4 Monday 12 | 19} morn | é< Elien Mav Ny) ‘ ‘cc “ £ | Tuesday a, 0 38 | “atte shay» : a eteasieg | 14) 18] 31 | zs Alice Phoebe, 56 tons Sydney Screened and 50 | Lbursday 16 } 17 * 2) ee ¢ 22 | a” [ ast wel 368i Sydney Run of Mines, 3 | Saturday i 19 | 15 42 . . ; i $4 | Sunday | aol asl aa which will be sold at ve.y lowest rates whilst landing. 25 | Monday i gi] 13) B64 —$<$_—$—$ 26 | Tuesday |} 3 1] 643 ; 27 Wednesday at} 12 2 3 28 | Thursday 23) 11 ® «¢ ‘ 2 . - ye . ’ - " 2 ® 29 \ Pritey | ~~ <0 . | 2 36 . 7 30 | Saturday [723}8 10] 9 49 Selling Agents Dominion Coal Company, Ltd. = Charlottetown, October 26, 1295 P E. Island Railway On and after TUESDAY, 8th October, 1895, ne trains of this Railway wili run daily updays exces ted) as follows .— Trains Outward Trains Inward. the matier TERMS : Four Dollars a Year VOL 35. antes Coal! Coal! Coal! eel eae Besa PAA BY BIO Se FARTS aS OREA 2 x > 5 y Read down. Read up, PM AM PM PM SH” OMiui cee Chariottetown..... 1215 645 337 650....Royalty Junction 1213 6 31 ¥ $z 73 += arth Wiltshire 88 S8825T SE FOB. ccces unter ive7.....10 58 5 47 SM SOisk.ca ities... Ww 21 333 > e : . . in’ on... ae vo fe A man got separated from his wife while 646 833 Froetown 956 597 r : : Z @u6 837........Kensington.... 9355 452] on a shopping tour about the city, and @# 900 Ar (Lv90 430] © kf * { sammorats §) started to hunter. He asked a friend 7 10 li 40 Ly} (ars 345 y . . 735 1203 .......Miscouche.... so (salt where he would be likely to find her. 4 7 4 23 nae Fellingt< - 786i 253 és > * a : . gi3 dtr... Port t - i... “What isshe buying?’ asked he. “Well, aiheded O’Leary.........62) 124 ’ : Wee nk 2 ta 30 . ‘ss i... 60 1219 she’s looking for a Bedroom Suit,” said SO Gib. .s<...c eereem. ... .... sil 1140 em : . . 7 Ota... tenia Su) We | & the man. “The. you'll find her at 4 A M A . . ‘ es * - . TMP * ae ¥ JOHN NEWSON’S,” sxid his friend; 625 300......Charlottetown. .... 92 oe) “everyli < ere.”’ ‘ 36 $e. gpaly Sacto $2 845 everybody goes there. He came ’ ais ..Bed s ‘tiv and sur i 7m 8H... ford... 84) 449 directly here, and sure enough he i : tt Stewart . $16 40 Ly r 80 4m . 3m 4 ris Morell 742 32 D 3 62: 50.. Os Peters ..... +0. 7 2m 3 Wil 53: Bear River....... 64) 203 * WM 66... . Souris . 66 12 : AM PM PM - aM PM $3 410.....MWount Stewart..... 810 350 1 ge ean Cardigan....... 717 238 i rc. Vi ii y oo i... Georgetown..... 70 215 ewson Block, Victoria Row, AM PM|> PM AM UE. cadbeneddeeslan Emerald........ 8 08 b- eeeeee a . BB Gane rnrene Tis PEM BUN eee COTE Oe DOR SAT om - Se ee Trainsare run by Eastern Standard Time A. McDONALD, D. POTTINGER, Supertntepdent, Gen Mgr Govt. Rys, Charlottetown. Moncton, N B. _ Railway Office, Oct 5, 1895. ne DR. H. D. JOHNSON EYE AND EAR, NOSE AND THROAI Office -- Kent Street Aug 16, 94—ly Professional Card. A. A. MoLEAN, 0. C. BARRISTER, <XKe., Prown’s Block, Charlottetown. MONEY TO LOAN. sept3 —3m law (2) & wky Back-Ache, Face-Ache, Sciatic Palins, Neuralgic Pains, Pain in the Side, ete. Promptly Relieved and Cured by The “D. & L.” : Menthol Plaster ¢ | Maving used your D. & L. Menthol Plaster for severe pain in the back and lumbago, I shesitatingly recommend same as &@ safe, ec: ¢ and repid remedy : in fact. they act like megic.—A LAPUINTE, Elizabetht wn, Unt, Price 25e. DAVIS & LAWRENCE CO., Lrp. roprietors MonTREAL. Make a Wote of it! Our stock of WATCHES is large and well assort- ed, and celebrated for NOTICE — -—— I To Shoemakers an ¢ thers. We have now on hand and. to arrive & fal! stock o eathers and Shoe Fiodiy.gs, comprising Sole Leather, best grades; French and ote Kips, Calf, Dongola, Fre-nch Kid, Pebble, Neats, Tan, Calf, Lining Skins. In Findings we have Lusts, all styles, Crimps, Screws, Leather aod Rubber Cements, Threat, Wap., Hairs, Shoe Nails and Ta:ks all kinds, Pegs, Awls and Hafts, Sand and Emery Paper, Shoe and Welt Knives, Rasps, pinchers, Machine Linens and Silks, Heel Bails, Boo. and Gaiter Web, Sole and Heel Plates, Elastic Web, also closed Uppers, all kinds an¢. grades, &. All of which we. wil sell at the lowest possible y rices. J. H. BELL, " T!se Reliable Boot and Shoe Dealer. Sept. 24 It is now a well established fact in medical science that nervousness is due to impure blood. Therefore the trut way to cure nervousness is by purify: ing and enriching the blood. The great blood purifier is Hood’s Sarsa parilla. Read this letter: “Por the last two years I have been s great sufferer with nervous prosiration and palpitation of the heart. I was weak fn my limbs and had smothered sensa- tions. At last my physician advised me to try Hood’s Sarsaparilia which I did, and I am happy to say that Iam now strong and well. Iam still using Hood’s Sarsaparilla and would not be without it. I recommend it to all who are sufferjng with nervous prostration and palpitation of the heart.”” Mrs. DALTON, & Alice St., Toronto, Ontario. Get Hood’s, because Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is the Only True Blood Purifier Prominently in the public eye today. It is not what we say but what Hood’s Bar- taparilla does that tells the story. Hood’s Pills act harmoniously with Hood's Sarsaparilla, 25, T'S BE SURE GOOD YOU GET oe UNC A FOR 1895 A SPLENDID BOOK OF REFCACNCE, 400 PAGES Given Free ‘Sunlight’ TO USERS OF SOAP HOW Commencin: November, TO GET 1895, and until all are given away, purchasers of iT 3 packages cr 9 bars of Sunticut Soap will receive from their grocers, 1 SUNLIGHT ALMANAC FREE. Contains complete Almanac, Home Management, Language of Flowess, Gardening, Fashions «nd Patterns, Dreams and their significance, Kecipes, ae. . Seeton & Mitchell, Halifax, Agente fo Nova Scotia and P. E. Island. GRATEFUL— COMFORTING. EPPS'S COCOA BREAKFAST — SUPPER. * By a thorough knowledge of the natural Jaws which govern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful application of the fine properties of well selected Cocoa, Mr. Epps has provided for our breakfast and supper a delicately flavored beverage which may save use many heavy doctors’ bills. It is by the judicious use of such articles of diet ¢hat a constitution may be gradually built up until strong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around us ready to attack wherever there is a weak point. We may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves well fortified with pure blood and a properly nourished frame,”’ Civil Service Gazette JAMES EPPS & CO., Ltd, Homeopathic Chemists, London, England. BUSS 3S FESS BOSS SOS -SCVSsSsesssqeswe RIPANS ONE GIVES RELIEF. CSVSGSTVSSVSVSVVVENS — HOWARD FLOUR If you have not yet used it ask for it and take no other, ALL RELIABLE GROCERS KEEP IT. octl—246 their good time-keeping qualities. REPAIRS on shcrt notice. G. H. TAYLOR, ceil North Side Queen Squy re, W. N. TANTON, (L.te in the employ of W. W. Wellner Hi L - ie { _ 1 , — A la ig > oe Pry eed , Pe j ee z. ama aes, Having opened a Jewelry Store on east tile Upper Great George Street, wishes to announce that ke intends to pay speci.) attention to REPAIRING OF WATCHF 8 CLOCKS, JEWELRY, etc. Having 'yo4 eighteen years’ experience at repairin 3 be isin @ position ‘0 guarantee ratisfa stign and deliver promptly all work en gusted wo his care. F Will also kcepon hand a se'ect ]j if Watches, Clocks and Jewelry. a W. N. TANTON, East Side Upper G : uae ee ee b wee Geese Weiter, © HIGHEST PRICE paid ‘for all Gecee! Feathers, JOHN NEWLON ce ere y sctB—dyy a wy}? EV ENING OF— —- 'CHARLUTTETOWN BUSINESS COLLEGE!:===""* Aind Writing Academy Opens cm MONDAY NEXT, at 7.30 p. m. Those who wish to learn the science of Accounts should atti :na this Session. L. B, MILLER. PRINCIPAL. “SESSION — UNDERTAKING Having bought out the whole under- taking outfit of the late Isaac W, Wad- man, I am now prepared to supply every thing necessary for the business at the shortest at Mr. Wadman’s old stand, Gratton Street. J. R. DAVISON. Nov. 2—if notice, To the Citizens of (Charlottetown : se We have gone {0 considerable expense “This is true Liberty, when Free’Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Euripides. E DAILY EXAMINER. Single Oopies Two Cents - . aD 7 i] Tv)! ae ga me \\) | > | A A y cl Pe ed —— M Auth,, ee ' (Copyright 1895, by Bacheller, Johnson and Bacheller. ) PART L It was early in the summer of last year, when Sir Nicolas Steele and I took different roads in life. They tell me that be has now settled down in a little vil- age near Pau, but from him I hear nothing. It may be that my company would trouble him in these days; it may be that he would be very glad to see me if I knocked on his door. Those are questions I don’t care to ask myself. Marriage changes a man they say, Pos- sibly it has changed him. It was in the summer of the year when I left him; and the early autumn brought | me to America. I knew that there was breathing room across the water; and once I had done with Nicky Steele, I did not lose much time in putting the sea between me and those who troubled themselves with my concerns. And that’s astep I have never regretted. There’s room for every man in the States so long as he carries a dec2nt head on his shoulders, and a bis of brass in his pocket, They don’t ask you there if you came by your own honestly. Char- | acter is a cheap article and reputation is put by in museums. I sailed for America, that I wrote these papers. They won’t hurt Sir Nicolas Steele—and if they do, that’s bis business. Mine is to make the money while I can; but as for what the | law can do to me, 1 don't care a snap of the fingers. So far as that goes, I doubt if there’s much in our past that any judge could spout upon, All said and } done, it’s easy to be a rogue by act of parliament. If Nicky and I got our dues, ' we should have a statue all to ourselves op St. Stephen’s Green, and our portraits would be hung in the Kerry town hall. But this is a short-sighted world, and it knows nothing of its greatest men, It is a year since I left my master, many things have happened since then— though none of them so odd as the events which led up to that parting. We had returned to Paris quietly enough after our fool’s errand to Britany, and and it was there and there was no thought in our heads of anything but a slow season and an un- profitable summer, Such of our friends as had been useful had gone their ways, | some to London, some to America. There | was no pigeon to pluck that I knew of; no Yankee who would buy diamonds. | Sir Nicolas had little to do but drive and play with the old impecunious lot; and right well he did it. ‘*While the money’s left be hanged to the care,’’ he would say; and for the matter of that, all the lifebelts in France couldn’t have saved that same dull care when he set out to drown her, ‘Lime and again I told him that if nothing was to be done in Paris, we might find work enough in Maécrid or in Berlin. He wouldn’t so much as listen to me. “Is ita bagman I am?’ he asked one day when I was harping on the old_string again, ‘‘must I be running round the country seeing who’ll buy me wares? In- deed, and I’Jl stop where Iam—’’ ‘Until the money is spent, hinted. ‘*A curse upon the money,’’ said he, ‘it’s nothing but the money you think of the week through. Am Ia pauper, then? And who’s to put gold in me purse in Germany? Bedad! I'd as soon spend a week in the Mazas as in that country. « ‘here was no gentleman eyer came out of Germany, no, nor honest liquor, either. I'd be dead in a week of their beef. ’’ | I did not answer him, for he never was ; aman you could persuade when he was | in one of his tempers. He dined that | night at the Hotel Scribe with Jack | Ames and his lot; and it was not until one o’clock in the morning that I saw | him again. He was pretty well warmed | up with the drink then, and directly | he set his eyes on me he called out at the | top of his lungs: ‘*Hildebrand, it’s yerself I want and. no other; fetch me the whisky and don’t ye sing hymns on the way.’’ I got him | the drink and when he had pulled out a) great handful of cigars and dropped hali of them on the pavement, he burst out with his news. | ‘*Man,’’ said he, ‘‘it’s fine intelligence | I have for ye. We're to be in St, Peters- burg in three days."' ‘* Be where, sir?’’ I gasped, for I made sure that he was joking. “In St. Petersburg, and else,’’ replied be, holding the match about a foot away from the cigar; ‘‘in St. Petersburz, I’m telling ye. I’ve a fancy to see the Russians, and there’s one of Jack Ames’ lot that will take us through. It’s an officer of the guards he is, and ye'll not forget to pack me yeo- sir,” I nowhere this fall increasing our plant to supply Incandescent Lights. and we are now about prepared to con- tract for any number of lights that may be required within the limits of the city. We, therefore, ask ai], not to enter into any contract before getting Our rates. About first of December we purpose run ping our plant twenty h urs out of the twenty four. P. E. |. Electric Co James waddell, MANAGER. Nov. 13—<d 1m eod ee MORTGAGE SALE. To be sold at Publie Avuetion, at the Conrt House in Summerside, in Prince ¢ oupnty, on MONDAY, the sixteenth day of December, A 1), 1895, at tha hour of twelve o'clock, no’ b, under a power of sale contained ina Mort- gage dated the tenth day or October, AD 1589, and made between Sylvain Martin and Maggie Martin (his wife) of the one part, and ' ws: Commencing on the south side 0 } a ar Road, in the north-east angle of land conveyed to the said Syivain Martin wd Thomas Martin by deed bearing date the IS8t day of November, A J}, 1886; thence south along the same thirty ehains or to land of William Haywood; thence east tourteen and one-half chains, or to land of Richard Cor- nish; thence north to the road; thence along e same to the place of commencement, Con- taining forty-five and one-half acres of land, , or less. Por further particulars apply to the under- gigned at fais office, Summerside. we Pated this ith day of November, A D, 180 manry clothes, tuough the Queen, God bless her, has dispensed with my services. ’' “Then it’s certain that you are going, sir?’’ said 1. ‘As certain as the moon is round,’ cried he, ‘‘which is a geographical fact, Hildebrand—a geo-grap-cail fac, 1 assure you—’"’ What more he would have said, I don’t know, for he broke off sudden and went singing and swaggering ijke # trooper 0 the line. I thought at the time that he was telling me some whim of his cups; but when the morning came he had still head eaough to repeat the story and to yemember that he had mentioned it. ‘*You’ll not be forgetting that we leave by the Berlin mail to-night,’’ said he ‘it’s all fixed up that we spend a fort- night in St, Petersburg as the guest of Count Fedor Uspensky. I’ve a wish to see the city, and the arrangement suits me finely. He’s a big man there, and has big friends; and he’s to have the charge of us. There would be more sur- prising things than that we should make money there. Ye'll not omit the uniform. It’s a poor figure I’d cut in civilian clothes, don't you think?’ I heard him out and then dressed hjm You may be sure that 1 was pleased enough, since Paris was just stagnation then, and it was queer if something did EET —— An Op Ann Wet Triep Remepy. Mrs. Winsloe’s Soothing Svrup has beed used for over fifty years by millione of mothers for their children while teeth nig, with perfect snccess. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays the pain, cures the colic, and is the beat remedy for Diarrhea, Is pleasnt to the taste. Sold by Druggists iu every part of the world, Twenty-five cents a bottle. Its value ie incalculable. Be sure and ask for Mrs. Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup, and take no J. EDWARD WYATT, noyi2—1i law (2) Mortgag<e, ther kind.—m. w. f. wkly—l y Imprecmavit aE they are, let me tell you—the widow and three days in the country. He hadn't an inkling of it then, however, and I was no wiser, needless to tell. All I saw , It was about half a day’s journey from : horses and men that we'd come to a slap- to bed, which was the best place for him, ! CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1895. ' yw. PEM BERT not turn up ina new city and among new people. Little did I think, however, that this was the last journey Sir Nicolas Steele and I were to rhake together, yet so it proved, as this story will tell you. We arrived at St. Petersburg on Wed- nesday morning, and by the following Saturday night I had learned enough Russian to bawl *‘Hisworshik’’ to a cab- man and get a gless of beer at a bar. The man whose guests we were took us to the Hotel Klee ; but I soon found that we were not to stup long in the city, he being about to set out for the house of one of his kinswomen, whose place was ten miles from Novgorod. And here let me say that Count Fedor Uspensky was never a friend to me, though I stood by him to the end of it. He was a cur right through; » swaggering, bullying, lcud- mouthed swashbuckler that set my right arm itching every time he came near me. How it was that he made a friend of Nicolas Steele the Lord only knows. Yet friends they were from the first; and I don’t think my master ever did so much for any man as he did for this little Rus- sian captain, who was his host in St. Petersburg. It was a sight to see these two, just as different as chalk from cheese, walking arm-in-arm down the Neoski Propekt, or ogling the women in Isaac’s cathedral. Perhaps it was ghat each thought he would do the other; perhaps they fell together out of that odd sympathy which men who have known ups and downs show for each other. Anyway, they were as thick as thieves; and little it was I saw of them during the five days we spent in the city. This didn’t matter to me, you may be sure. If ever there was a town to leta man play the fine gentleman in, that town is Petersburg. The very breadth of the streets, the miles of palaces, the overstocked shops, put a se.se of gentil- ity intu you. ‘Turn where yeu will, there are uniforms and pretty women to see. he whole city lives to kow-tow to its great folks; evena gentleman’s gentle- man can find plenty to touch their hats to him and cali him excellency. I lived like a fighting cock the whole time I was there, and when the day came for us to move into the country there was no man less pleased than I was. Nor did I under- stand, until Sir Nicolas told me, why we should move atall. ‘It’s his way,’’ said he, speaking at bedtime on the last night we were at the Hotel Klee; ‘‘there’s a cousin of the count’s to be married, and we're to go to the wedding with him. Rich people daughter of Field Marshal Pouzatov that was. The girl carried on with my friend a couple of years ago, and he’s fretting to see the last of her. It wouldn't be decent to stand against his whim. We'll just have a week in the country, and there will be the end of it. Ye’ll take plenty of silver with us, for you can’t look up to the sky in this cursed place without tossing a rouble to the angels.’’ He spoke light enough, but his talk would have been different if he had kpown the black thing we were to see at that very Novgorod, and the end of those before us was a holiday in a Russian vil- lage; and while that was not much to look forward to, I remembered that a wedding might smarten things up a bit, **dhere'll be girls about,’’ said I, ‘‘and plenty to eat and drink, and though the women here have got faces like frying- Tu = = oe a **A GEO-GRAPH-CAL FACT, I ASSURE YOU,” pans, I'll manage to put up with them for a day ortwo.’’ And with this to keep my spirits gpI packed his bag again and set off to Novgorod by the early morning train. the city to Mme. Pouzatov's place, and when ws arrived at the station there were two four-horse carriages—‘‘chet- verkas’’ they call them—waiting there to meet us. I saw at once from the ' silver on the harness and the cut of the up house; and ky and by, when the count and Sir.Nicolas had done bowing and scraping to the young lady who sat ; with another gentieman in the first car- riage, I came to the conclusion that the people that we were to stay with were the right sort, As for miss, she was the best imitation of a pretty girl I had seen in Russia ; and though I never had an eye for dark-haired women myself, I could not . help but be struck by Marya Pouzatoy, {it was as good as & glass of wine any day to see her laugn. She had those speaking dark eyes which would make the fortune of the plainest woman alive. And chat- ter—I believe she talked from the minute we came out of the station until she pulled up the steaming horses at her own aoor. | Lhave said that the drive from the great Moscow railway to the house where the _ wedding was to be-might be reckoned at an hour. It wasn’t a pretty drive, for the country was as flat as a carpet, and what trees I saw were pines in square- cut clumps. We passed a few ragged | peasants on the dusty road, and met a priest going to market; but for right Not WHAT WE SAY, but IM What Hood's Sarsaparilla Does, that tells the story of its merit and suc- cess. Remember HOOD’S Cures. TO LET. A Terement house on Dorchester Street (West) containing six rooms, a good celler, rent moderate, Apply at the Connolly Estate Office, Queen Street. NO 127 down loneliness and desolation send me to the czar’s dominions, and I'll never ask to see anything worse. I was glad enough when the house came in sight at last—a long white building, for all the world like three or four bungalows plank- ed together. There was an attempt at a bit of garden round about it, and what the people would have called a park be- yond that; but it was not until you were inside the house that the means of the lady who kept it were displayed; and that they were first-class I never hada doubt. It was a mansion fit for an Eng- lish nobleman; and many’s the noble- man’s place I’ve been into that wasn’t a patch upon it. As for Sir Nicolas, he was beside himself from the start, and when I took him up his hot water for dinner, he could do nothing but talk about it. ‘It’s beautiful quarters we've found, entirely,’’ said he, ‘‘and pretty people. I don’t suppose ye’ve much to say about the money here. Faith, I'm beginning to wish I was the general myself. There’s 20,000 goes with the girl, the count tells me, and the reversion of the place. Ie’s many qualities in a wife I could dis- pense with at a price like that.”’ ‘So she’s to marry a general, sir?’’ asked L “No one else,’’ said he, “but Gen. Stolitzoff, that was against O®man Pacha before Plevna. A great man, with as many medals on bis coat as I have but- tons.”’ "#4 wouldn’t be young, sir,”’ I gested. **He would be 55, I’m told, and young at that. It was her father’s wish on his deathbed that she should have him; and she leads him the devil's own dance, from all I hear. Trutb, she’s a very sug- sweet little woman—and then there’s the money.’’ **Is the wedding soon, **Tt’s for to-day week, sir?’’ I asked but we'll have MY PASTIME IN RUSSIA, gay times between. They dance to-mor- row when the general comes from. Nov- gorod —luckry devil that he is."’ (To be Continued.) THE ARMY. Proclaiming Full and Free Salvation to All. A SOLDIER TELLS HOW SHE WAS SAVED. Sha Says: “| thank God for the Wonders Paine’s Celery Com- pornd Accomplished for me.” General Booth and his vast army of Salvationiets are now a mighty power in every quarter of the globe. Their drums, music, soul-inspiring songs and prayers are etirring up the cold, callous, indiffer- ent and wicked in every country under Heaven, and they are accomplishing a work that puts to shame the united efforts of all our Christian churches. The members of the Salvation Army endure triale, hardships and persecutions as did the valiant abostle Paul in his time. Many of these faithfu! Salvationists labor on from day te day, suffering from thorns in the flesh, no doubt of a like character to that endured by the great preacher to the Gentiles; but a merciful and wise Ruler has, through science, provided for His afflicted and diseased servants. Mrs. H. Barbour, of Winnipeg, Man:, a faithful veteran of the great Salvation Army, was for atime obliged to give up active work uwing tothe agonies and suf- ferings of heart disease, kidney trouble and general weakness. Knowing well that her great work de- manded a strong and vigorous body, she wisely determined teuse Paine’s Celery Compound, after hearing what it had done for thé tens of thousands in Canada. The results were surprising to herself as weil as to her brother and sister soldiers. Mrs. Harbour’s experiences with Paine’s Celery Compound induced hundreds of other Salvationists to seek anew physical life from the same great medicine. Reader, this same wonderful Paime’s Celery Compound will doa like work for you if you are ailing an! suffering. Your friends and neighbors have tested it, and it has made them well and strong, after they failed with the common medicines of the day. Mrs. Harbour writes as follows, with the view of benefitting all sick people: nov, “Tt iswith great pleesure that I write Diamonds, Emeralds, tubies, Opals, Pearle, with their combinations set in the bright or colored gold, make beautiful goods for gifts, oct21 E. W. TAYLOR. . ee to thank you for your wonderful medi cine, Paine’s Celery Compound. Some time ago I was very sick aad happened to see ove of your publications, in which I read of others being cured. I coveluded to try Paine’s Celery Compound myself, and I now thank God for the w ynders it accon: plished for me. I was suffering kidney trouble and and some days was not able to stand without yg pain; my appetite poor. Since I used the Compcund Iam able to get about the house and work, and can now eat ani thing put before me. “T trast my testimony may lead many o try your valuable remedy.” from heart disease, geneal weakness ; experiencing great was aiso very <e- A*brass band com poeed entirely of Pen- obscot Indians bas been organized in Maine and it is said to be _ Whether this is & hopeful or a hopeless sign in regard to the progress of the red man is perhaps a question for the philoso- pher rather than the cynic. well. "“s0ing A RESIARKABLE CASE. Rheumatism of 20 years’ standing radically cured by Scoti’s Sarsaparilia. Mrs, Sarah Browning, an estimable resident of the Ambitious City, was for twenty years a sufferer from acute rheu- matism, and her restoration to health is soremarkable that we present the case for the benefit of our readers, many of whom are doubtless sufferers from this painful complaint which arises from blood poison, Mrs. Browning says; “1 used only one bottle of Scott’s Sarsapasilla and received such benefit that ] continued taking only at intervals for two months. That is seven months ago, and the pain has not returned, | had spent a fortune in various “‘ treatments ” and was told by one medical man that a cure was ime possible as I had suffered so long.” Scott’s Sarsaparilla cures by making and keeping the bloodpure. It increases flesh by digesting fiesh-forming foods. It is the most successful medicine in the world to-day, for dyspepsia, nervous troubles, rheumatism, sciatica, syphilitic afflictions, pimples and all diseases originating in a foul condition of the blood. Dose from one half to one tca- spoonful. Sold Whole-ale and Retail by Geo 43. Hughes, Charlctietown. Canada Atlantic and Plant STEAMSHIP LINE. FOR BOSTON, — CALLING AT—— Hawkesbury and Halifax. Last Trips ‘of the Season. 8s. 8S. HALIFAX will leave Navigation Co’s. Wharf, Char lottetown, Tuesdays, November 19th and 26th, ard December 3rd, at 4 o’clock. FROM BOSTON.—Last sailing of the season, Saturday, Nov. 30th. HALIFAX SERVICE. §8.S. HALIFAX will leave Plant Wharf Halifax, THURSDAY, Oct. ‘7th, at 8 a.m , and every Thursday thereafter. Passengers arriving in Halifax WED NESDAY evenings can go directly on board steamer without extra charge. For rates of passage, freight, etc., apply to P. E. Island Railway Stations and at office of Charlott.town Steam Navigation Com pany. H. L. CHIPMAN, Canadian Agent, novl8 Plant Wharf, Halifax. site rsigailisiliecsinale daiicil i ilies BRISTOL’S Cure Biliousness, Sick Head- ache, Dyspepsia, Sluggish Liver and all Stomach Troubles. | BRISTOL'S PILLS Are Purely Vegetable, elegantly Sugar-Coated, and do not gripe or sicken. _ | BRISTOLWS | Pitas Act gently but promptly and thoroughly. “The safest tamily medicine.” All Druggists keep BRISTOL’S © PILLS | FURNESS LINE. Regular Fortnightly Sailings between LONDON and HALIFAX. Under spe cial contract with the Dominion Govern- ment. S. 8. HALIFAX CITY, 3,000 Tons. 8S. 8. ST. JOHN CITY, 3,000 Tons. S. S. DAMARA, 2,500 Tons. _ The Furness Steamships are the finest on this route. Al] boats are Clyde built with saloon and sleeping berths amidships where least motion is felt. 8.8. St. John City and Halifax City are electrically lighted, and carry ship’s doc- tors. Freight accommodation unsur- passed. For information regarding sailing dates, etc., apply to FURNESS, WITBY & CO., Lrp., People’s Bank Building, Halifax, N.S. Or W.W.Clarke, Passenger Agent Charlottetown, P. E. I. oct22 RUBBER STAMPS. Somebody in your town cught to iake orders for Hand Stamps and send them to us. There is money in this for the right man. We make only the best. Our Agent’s Price List shows just what everything in the line will cost Laip Down, WALTON & COMPANY, Hand Stamps, Seals & Stencils, novd—Im d&w Sherbrooke, Que,