Mh Se OH2428 &OG4E9 E488 eo” “~“S@6L7 OO" £14206663 4 66068 Prince Edward XY axirw ace Baw Shs Bis Bie eNe ee ee ee ee ee ri ee ks nwiee eae Raw ews -* ” KER a wae Dae Dae wks KK. Mason’s News stand. **Abezwe "~-(€ sadled on the Wave, Front- is } rece 1# oom) by late Thomas A LePage The First se:tlers of St. Kleanors, by Hub- ert Gr ( npton **Where the Speckled Trout Doth Jump” by TI LE DAiny EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, JULY 1 &, 1869 e Nile rae eereceetied b e® on our Guard! |2§ LLS > n JR ALL & ” a ne Pree gent! Hy we en er sphibes* ** Syetatertat’ “eel Seat NSaedese ell TNE BEST is always imitated. Dodd's Ki‘ney Pills, sold only in boxes ike this, are widely imitated, | ecause they are the pene Kidacy cure. Take none _O O-D-D"S ADVIZE ABOUT spice. When ordering a packege Pepper, Ginger, Allapice, Cin namop or Cream of Tartar from your grocer you can al- ways feel sure of securing the best quality by asking for : : : Mott's: “@OSO 0108 4 6444 02888 a00e08 322434 4 O@” © * 6569? a *THE™ Island Magazine NOW ON SALE.... Atall the Bookstores and at R. E. Smith A Story of Newfoundland by Benjamin Davies Silas Tertius and, (a Poem) by J. S.Clarke | When we bevanto Kick—III (Illustrated) by J. M. Sullivan Belle Marie (o Story) by Jessie Hogg Charlottetown in **the Olden [fime” (Illus- | trated) A. Irwin I Cwenty— From Forest to Farm—lI, by J. A. Ready, B. A. In ( Grove, by Lawrence W. Watson Charlottetown's Attractions for Visitors, by} Horace Ilaszard Tennis Grounds, Victoria Park, Charlotte- iown (Lllostration) tarSend Sc for sample copy The P. E. Island Magazine, >, O. BOX 698, Charlottetown, P. E. 1. a — KELLY’S & CO’S. ~~ GROCERIES TT eS . Are always to be dependet OM eece FF} Only the best kept im stock. Our customers are satisfied customers. If y int to be satisfied with your grocer i With us. Try the TEA we seli. Special atten- tion was given to ite selection. The eame care is exercised in buyivg al! other lines. COME ———nay wr ; you! ‘The Telegraph Message. 3y ROBERT BARR (Lontia ied admit 1 expertness “lt mt am astonttred at It may not be strictly businesslike to acknowledge so much to whom |! one am about to make the hardest bargain I can with. but haps you will not take advantage of the confession. You are a very good teleg raphist indeed, Miss Elinor. I n ist express my admiration of the way in which you have faced the realities of life. We like to think our girls so re sourceful that they can fill with credit to themselves any position which fate assignus to them, whether it is office of a merchant or the parlors of the White House. You have been srd- denly confronted with a very difficuit problem, Miss Elinor, and you have set about its sulution in a way that com- mands my deepest respect. " “Oh, Mr. Gandys!’’ exclaimed the girl, blushing deeply and drawing a long, quivering breath, but quite evi- dently glowing with gratification at the praise of aman whom she knew to be sparing in his commendation. ‘‘Now, I am not sure,’’ he continued. ‘“‘but your coming here today has set- tled in the right way a matter that has been troublieg me for some weeks past. There is a telegraphic situation in this city which has been the cause of more the « worry to me than any of the: hundreds under my control It is th office at the board of trade.’ **At the board of trade!’’ echoed Miss Elinor, looking at him in some alarm ‘*Yes,’" he answered. ‘‘That situation demands quelities aside from those of key or pen. which I should be loath tc think unobtainable. but which I, late, have had some difficulty in secrr ing. What we need there is absolute se erecy. There must be nosuspicion. even ef any leakage from the wires, because messages come there that make and 1 make fortunes. Of course, many of the ] of m aac messages are in cipher, but ucverth less, cipher or not,the ntmost caution must be observed so that none, save those to whom the messages are sent, shall get the slightest inkling of their contents. I have changed operators there three times in as many months, and while against the present man I have no direct proof—if I had I would discharge him—there have been com- plaints and vague rumors of leakage which are, to say the least, most annoy- ing. I have made up my mind, in any case, to remove that young man to the interior of the state, and the only rea- son he has not been removed before now is that Ican’t for the life of me tell with whom to replace him. Until you came in it never occurred to me to give the situation toa woman. It doesn’t quite jump with our preconceived no- tions of things that a woman, of all persons, should be the one to keep a se- cret, but most of onr preconceived no- tions are wrong, and if you are willing to try the experiment lam. Of course, you would be dealing entirely with men, but I am sure you would meet with nothing but the utmost courtesy from all.’’ ‘“‘Oh, Iam sure of that,’’ said Miss McClintoch earnestly. ‘“‘If you give me the opportunity, I don’t think you will have reason to regret it.”’ ‘*‘Very well. Then we shall look on it as settled. Call here tomorrow morning at 10 o’clock, and I will myself escort you to the board of trade. I shall leave one of my assistants with you in the oftice for a week, and by that time you wi]l probably be familiar with vor new Vanity in women is forgivable. It was Nature’s in- tention that wo- man should be vain of her per sonal appearance, and the woman who fails of this fails of her full womanhood. No woman snoui satisfied to go through the world with a complex- ion made hideous by unsightly blotches, pimples and eruptiong. No woman should be satisfied to have a sallow, sickly complex- ion. The remedy for these conditions does not lie in cosmetics. Skin disease is caused by impurities in the blood, and by nervous disorders due to weakness and disease of the distinctly feminine organism. Doctor Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery 1s the greatest of all known blood purifiers. It not only drives all impurities trom the life- stream, but fills it with the sich, life-giving Dr. Pierce’s Favor- + AND BE “SSATISFIED JAMES KELLY &€0 car London House Corner. Queen St.. weod any _-D. L. HOOPER — the Windsor, N. S. Plaster 1 Selenite Cement and Cal- Claoed Plaster tfor the Maritime Clay Work steck always on bend. ‘ll furnished feed sore gdjoia- 0. L. HOOPER, Al-O aw Rg grocery elements of the food F | ite Prescription acts directly on the d licate and important organs that bear the burdens of wifehood and motherhood. It makes them pure, strong, well and vigorous. A course of these two great medicines will transform a weak, sickly, nervous, despond- } | ent wotnan, who suffers from unsightly eruptions of the skin, intoa healthy, happy, amiable companion, with a skin that is clear and wholesome. These medicines are made from herbs and roots, and contain no minerals of any description. They sim- ply assist the natural processes of assimila- tion, secretion and excretion. Medicine salers sell them. : 7 is a druggist’s business to give you, not to tell you, what you want. “ About four years ago,” writes Thomas Har- ris. of Wakefield Station, Sussex Co., Va., "My daughter Helen was afflicted with eczema in & distressing form Dr. Pierce's medicines cured her after all other remedies hac failed. In sending for a free copy of Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser, enclose z1 one-cent stamps, to cover customs and mailing only, if a paper-covered copy 1s desired, or 50 stamps for cloth - binding. Ccr‘+reat George & Chestaut S/ BAAcace Ne DV WV Dierna Dadsole WW duty Anything you do not under stand he will be at hand to explain.’’ Prot tly at the appointed hour Eli no. itpon the manager at his of f together they walked to the -in which was housed the 1 of tra the only legal gam place in the city, where methods l somewhat from those at Mguté th differences being entirely i Mediterranean r : re the unscrupulous gambler « ) ntage over his compara I nt competitor,and lies have al market value. Every city in iholds up its hands in horror at of Monte Carlo. but points with - ist pride to its Stock Exchange Thus do we honestly acquire t ation of being a humorous peopie Mr. Sandys was silent during the greater part of the walk, and Elinor’s mind was busy picturi the new life about to open before her, so greatly dis- ny tes Simiiar to the old. The crisp freshness of the air and the bracing influence of her long walk to the manager’s office had exhilarated the girl, who experi- enced without knowing it the glorious prerogative of youth. Added to: this was the delicious sense of being about to earn honestly what money she need- blessed independence, the greatest boon that can be bestowed upon any living creature. CA- Sandys had pretended the day before that their conference had been based entirely on business principles, but no question of salary arose between them, which would have been one of the first points to be discussed with any one else by the manager after the qnestion of skill was settled. The girl had felt no anxiety on this score, being content to leave the amount to her father’s old friend, and her confidence was not mis- placed. ‘‘That is the board of trade building,’’ said her companion, speak- ing for the first time since they set out together. “Yes,” she replied. “I walked around to see it after my talk with you, but I did not go in.”’ ‘Well, we will go in now. I hope you have weighed well what I said to you yesterday. There is no doubt in my mind-that after you learn the ways of the office you will prove quite com- petent to fill the situation. But you must never forget that the great quali- fication, equal in importance to your speed at the key, is secrecy—absolute secrecy. Not even in the sanctity of your own home, to your own mother, nust you breathe a hint of anything that comes over the wires. You under- stand that thoroughly, I trust.’’ ‘“‘Oh, yes, Mr. Sandys! You need never have the least fear about that. I feel as if I had joined some awful so- ciety and taken a most terrible oath with perfectly dreadful penalties. I thought about it last night until I fell asleep, and then I dreamed the most frightful things—that masked men with redhot pinchers were trying to make me tell what your occupation was and what you had said to me; but, although I screamed and awoke myself, all in a tremble, I never told.”’ The manager smiled grimly and said seriously: “That is the right spirit, and here we are at the door of the inquisition.’”’ At the end of a large hall, wide and lofty double doors standing open gave a view of the interior of an immense room, in which several men were walk- ing about with their hands in their pockets. A man ina sort of uniform guarded the door and sharply scruti- nized all comers. Sandys, however, did not enter the huge room, but opened a small door at the right and went into the telegraph office, Elinor, with fast beating heart, following him. The telegraph office was comparative- ly small and was practically an alcove of the ample apartment used by the board of trade, divided from it bya counter whose broad polished oaken top was littered with telegraph blanks ana splashed here and tl In the center of the office was table halved longitudinally by a partition of glass. while crosswise were other glass bulkheads, parceling out the table top into sections, in each one of whicha telegraph instrument occupied the cen- ter. Asa usual thing one operator was enough to do the business of the office but in times of stress, l by a fiut- ter in the market, help had to be called for from the central office, and some- times the six compartments were i4 shattering activity. ‘‘Now, Miss Elinor,’’ said the man- ager, ‘this is your workroom. Johnnie Fielders here will be in charge fora week or as much longer as is necessary, and vou will be his assistant. As soon as you are ready to take full control I shall remove him elsewhere, for he is a most useful young man.”’ Sandys left the room and strolled into the board of trade, the doorkeeper nodding to him, for the head of the Western Union was a privileged indi- vidual. The spacious chamber of com- merce was rapidly filling up, and a ris- ing murmur of conversation quivered in the air. Now and then some exuber- ant person with a silk hat on the back of his head yelled ont a startling ex- clamation which made Miss MeClintoch jump the first time she heard it, little dreaming of thepandemonium to which she would later become accustomed She thought there’, had been a dreadful accident, but nobody paid the slightest attention, and she learned that this was merely the preliminary sparring for the re with ink a Wide caused by a alnietes Ina fleid winver up vei mu i . Sandys!"’ s | y ] r ny the head of the V r ther 1 ‘ > c mes ‘ tre Ly The beauty. Mr. Howar 5 of ne, nswered the ui ‘ The young 1 laughed I surmis vw i . iY th , a ment from you. I never « h nd i ition 28 ] ot ? S { lL? . 7 tor } Chis 1 i beginning to find « 7 ! rt ex SiTCCE ul in I se you } with anything. But I sav. Sandys. ron ere surely never going to place so p1 a girl in the telegraph ofice ‘*‘T have already done so, and I hav told her, furthermore. that she wi i find every man she met here a gentle £ waan. ‘Oh, you always were an optimist. Sandys! I think, you stretching it a bit to call old Grim- wood. who is now about to honor u with his presence, a gentleman. Merel My. orn - A ; 7 are 3} you are s opinion... of. course, ”’ (T. be Continued) ITCHING PILES... Positively and permanently cured by Dr. A. W. Chase’s Ointment. Dr. A. W. Chase's Ointment is an absoluts cure for piles, and bas never been known to fail to cure the worst forms of thisdisease which has baffled medical skill for ages. This statement may sound rather strong to persons who do not know the superior merits of Dr, A. W. Chase's Ointment, but it is per- fectiy true, and heartily endorsed by the grate- ful testimony of thousands of men and women whe have been cured by itafter years of suffer- ing, and after trying many preparations and consulting the best doctors, Mr. H. Bull, Belleville, Ont., says: ‘‘I take pleasure in stating that after thirty years of suffering with Itching Piles, Dr. Chase's Oint- ment has completely cured me. __ I tried every remedy that was advertised, with little or no benefit, but as I have told different persons affected as I was, Dr. Chase’s Ointment made @ perfect cure.” Dr. Chase’s Ointment has a record of cures unparalleled in the history of medicine. It is guaranteed to cure any case of piles. For sale hy all dealers, or Edmansom, Bates & Co. Toronto Seo. H. Caok “arr PROTO STUDIO ANNOUNCEMENT Having obtained the services of Mr. A. E. Lyon, a skilled artist, who has had large experience in first ciass Photography the public are cordinally invited to in- the excellent results now being obtained. Studio - Appointment - Perfect Our latest productions demonstrate that our work is superior to anything done in the city. > epect Hughes The Peoples’ Druggist Drugs are expensive, Sometimes they are more expensive than need he. And sometimes they are not co reiiable as they onght to be. There was atime when the prices of druge were away Up—too high aliogetber, "hat is not the case now. The A poth- ecaries Hall chang:d that some _ time ago. You can get perscriptions from pure drugs at the proper prices— no fancy profit You can get all my reliatle epecial remedies; they’ve been tried and found effective. - The price — the main tning —will in every case. Géo. E, Hughes The Peoples Druggist be found right Apothecaries Hall Sunnyside Charlottetown rOR SALE — —— We have for sale mortgages, being 6 percent interest on farm properties in some of the best ilstricts in Manitoba. The mortg2ges do not represent more than half the value of the property. If required we guarantee both principal ana interest, _ In most cases the mortages are paydble in instalments. Anyone wanting a thoroughly safe invest ment having a good rate of intrest snould communicate with uae, Wealso have alarge number of very de- sirable farms for sale in the Winnipeg Dis- ‘ricts, at prices which are bound to double in very short time. Send for particulars, HASLAM {é& WRIGHT Private Bangers PP Wn ate: POR NN. are . “a ~ SUMMER RESORT easSide : Hotel RUSTICO BEACH, P, E. ISLAND JOHN NEWSOYV & CO., Proprietors Surface and Still Water Bathing. Covered Ball Alley os eeesCROQUET AND TENNIS GROUND Coach will leave Charlottetown for the atove Hotel every Tuesday, Thursday and finicay evening, cailing for guests. Retur: ing Monday, Wednesday and Friday morning Trains leave Ci’town for Hunter River at 7409 am,and130and310pm. Same merside to Hunter Kiver at 6 55,8 35a m, and 7 35 pm. Trains run on Eastern time, which is an hour slower than local time. Address al] corrgspondence to , JOHN NEWSON & CO, Chariottetown, P. E. | TYVOPPPPPPEPEYP RET PPAPRTRRE NTT PPS OPER PS PNT TPP RPT RNIN Per PP Skery Men’ s Shirts Underwear Collars Ties Gloves : ' HS TYOVTTAYPNTTON NNT TATA NNT HeRT HH NNT TTT ET INT NTP PPP TTY | QI = = = = = [ = = = i [ ts © 5 Collars | 2 fcr 25 cents BEST VALUE se hg eee Me D.- . B.SRUCLS. BLACK SO2---- , 3 PAIRS FOR 25 cents Cee ne ea nr To clear out the bal- ance of our stock og refriferators we will sell them at 20 per centr off. We have them as low as $9.20 Dodd & Rogers