THE DAILY BXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, DECEMBER 14, 1900. | His babyship ee at, one will be woncerfully freshened up, and his whcle little fat body will shine with health and cleanliness after his tub with the “ Albert * j j 9 f Baby’s Own | ‘ ; | Soap. | i This soap ts made entirely with | i wegetable fats, has a faint put ex- | | quisite fragrance, and is umsurpass | i ed as a nursery and toilet soap | Beware of imitations. } ALBERT TOILET SOAP C0., Mfrs. i MONTREAL. fy al ——— . Fall... & A 2 - p ¢ : 3 > By i 2 “2 Footweai Our Lines are All Right. BESS arta Why pay high prices fora nam when we give you |Qualitv at low prices < SRD $2.80; ’ Dongola jChocoilate. &2.25. Gents’ D ms la Bl ck, |lace,Good- year welt, F--- $2.75. fa ok ee ge tun. Gents’ Box Calf, Black andj|Tan, Goodyear welt---§ a $2.75. ae > ao ct U (ven A 4 KIC Gents’ Box Calf, Black, double sole. Goodvear welt, rubber best value in the city--- $4.00. J. H. BELL Ta2 Poovari shoma. A SNAP AUSTRIAN CHINA TEA SETTS W 2’yv2 passivy] j suse yf the carough misik + rn l if Siusiy tic biying public in this are not th> low selling pe knows we are. ab ve w2do1 article we ple that every on 1: »” SALOD2rs. They’re selling very low, We're bouud to make ’ em g9, They’re the nicest ones in town And the very te ttwla ~* And the very la est style, Drop in and see them. Everything else selling for which we are so note:l. W. P. COLWILL. THE |CROCKERYWARE MAN, Pp. E. {sland’s Greatast rockery Store, Sun nyside, Charlottetown, NIGHT CLASSES —AT THE— C.B.C., 5 Sessions per Week OPENED ON Monday, Nov. 22, 1900 at 7.30 p. m. Thorough instruction in Book Keeping, _ Business Penmanship, Arithmetic, Commercial Law,Short , and Typewritinu. Intending ‘Students are asked to enter at once, or a 800n as possible. Terms, etc. ‘On application to (Try ‘L.. B. MILLER Principal | ceration on the charge of heel, | at*: the * ning | at, the low? price [coprriaatT, 1898, By Ray’s Recruit soho e's. odie CAPTAIN CHARLES KING, U.S. A. AUTHOR OF “THE COLONEL’S DAUGHTER,”’ RANKS,”’ J. “FROM THE ETC, B. LIPPINCOTT Co. | (Continued. ) And, besides Trooper fiunter’s incar- aiding and abetting in the robbery and destruction of the magazine, the senior major had the following matters now to tackle: Captain Blake, in arrest for using in- subordinate language to the command- ing officer (‘‘Said that compared with iy mental condition the magazine | Wasn't a circumstance in the way of a wreck, to his begad,’’ explained Mainwaring senior, who strove to keep a straight face, but couldn’t); Mrs. Merri- weather, disappeared since the night of Hunter’s transfer from hospital to guardhouse; Sergeant Merriweather, trausferred from guardhouse to hospital with a bullet through one lung anda knife wound in the other; Corporal Croxford and Trooper Elzey, deserted— two hitherto shining lights of the gar- rison and admirers of Mrs. Merriweath er (‘‘Could Mrs. Merriweather have gone with either of them?’’ asked some one of the ladies, ‘‘Or with both?’’ asked certain brutes am the offic —an finally, Li tel oes ,a ba nalian \ Irlt AAWSOD, Al tt f in quarters With an Irish orderly in at- ; ; tendance, tor doctors would bave noth- fine to do with him The way Stannard sailed in was char- acteristic. Brady had not been drunk on duty. He had taken advantage of the absence of Atherton and Stannard to relax the reins of kis self control, but had only got a good start when he sought and received aseven days’ leave from Major Mainwaring, which enabled him to meet Rawson at Pawnee. This was about ten days after the explosion. He was to have staid his week away, but in two days suddenly reappeared in Butte, full of whisky and information. Mainwaring, who knew him but slight- ly, received a dispatch saying that he had news of a most important character resulting from discoveries he had made at Pawnee and urging the commanding officer to meet him at the railway sta- tion on his arrival, which Mainwaring did, and then the very next night or- gered Hunter’s arrest. “T always said that when Brady drank he could be depended upon to make an ass of himself,’’ said Blake, ‘‘and this proves it.’’ But what Brady’s revelations might have been Mainwar- ing refus2d to disclose. It was enough, he said, to hang Hunter high as the hayman, and the hay contractor, -in Mainwaring’s opinion, was the double dashedest scoundrel that ever lived. This statement s0 rejoiced Blake’s heart that be repeated it broadcast and was in the merriest of moods until he heard | that Mainwaring had forbidden Captain Ray’s kaving an interview with bis im- prisoned recruit. Then Blake boiled over and made the odious comparison | between Mainwaring’s brain and the ' blown up building which resulted in his own summary confinement to quar- ters. Brady’s leave had still two days to run when Stannard got back, but Stannard had heard enough of his do- ings in Butte to warrant the immediate | action taken. An officer tvas sent with the post ambulance and orders to fetch him forthwith. Then and there Dana | waited on him with the major’s mes- | sage to the effect that he would give | bim 24 hours in which to scber up and face the music, and Brady had sense enough to know he had no time to lose. Then another snarl bad to be disen- tangled in which Stannard could not help, cince it was purely domestic. Tbe veteran post surgeon had had a flare up with Mainwaring, all on account of Trosper Hunter. The doctor protested against his patient’s being put in the } HEART | DISEASE is a symptom of Kidney Disease. A_ well-known doctor has said, ‘‘ I never yet madea post-mortem ex- aminationinacaseoft death from Heart Disease with- out finding the kidneys wereat fault.” The Kidney medicine which was first on the market, most success- ful for Heart Disease and all Kidney Troubles, and most widely imitated is Dodd’s Kidney Pills (J | RUATANGCUSe, GOCiaTiug wise : what the charges were he was entitled to humane as weil as medical treatment. Muinwaring said the man of his own volition had removed himself from hos pital and therefore deserved no consid- eration. The doctor said if Hunter were | kept in the prison room with the garri- son malefactors overnight he would | hold Mainwaring responsible for ill re- | sults that were certain to occur, which | staggered Mainwaring for a minute. | He finally compromised, ordered Hun- | ter sent back to hospital, but put in a | room by himself with a sentry at th door and another at the window, and orders prohibiting his being seen or spoken to by anybody except the doc- tors and the steward, unless it were himself or on his own written ordsr Then Mainwaring had to go home an face the women folk, and there for the LvU first time (Miss Leroy, shocked and stun ned, having gone to her rcom) did Mrs fainwaring have him to herself and the identification of Hun tell him of as tho polite and helpful stranger of the night on the train. Then, furthermore, did she add her plea to the doctor’s and finally admit that, much to her own « tress and consternation, she feared ret was actually deeply if not indeed very painfully interested in this mysterious trooper. In justice to Pet, she must say that that young lacy was probably un- aware of the feeling that bad. been grow- ing upon her until the denonement of that evening. She(Mrs. Mainwaring) had striven to wean her from the morn- ing services, but without success, and now she kyew not what had happened, for Pet bad shut herself in ber room and begged to be left undisturbed. Which was more than Pet would permit the major to be next day, bow- ever, for she was up and on the lookout | for him on his return from stables. He marveled and was shocked at the pallor | of her face, the trouble in her eyes. | Without preliminary remark, she went | straight to ber subject. ‘‘Major Mainwaring, at what time and where may I see Trooper Hunter, as you call him, today:’’ ‘*‘Well—I, I’m sure I don’t know, Kate,’’ for the major, like riany a lion among men, was a lamb among women. ‘*I—don’t think you—ought to wish to} see him.’’ **But Ide wish it, major. Moreover, , I should be ashamed of myself if I did | not.”’ And tbe reply conveyed all the more weight because of the calm deci- sion of her manner. And so the first written order Main- + waring signed was one to permit the bearer to visit the prisoner Hunter, and at 10 o’clock that morning, when, pale, calm, but resolute as ever and smiling still despite her sleepless night, Miss Leroy entered the hospital for the cus- tomary reading, she sent the steward to tell Mr. Hunter that she hoped he | would be able to see ber soon after 11 and then indomitably went on with her self appointed task. At 11:15 the post surgeon came, 8i- lently gave her his armas they left the big sunshiny ward and led her to a doorway up the corridor in front of which a sentry was pacing—a sertry who halted and presented arms as the doctor opened the door and ushered her in. It was that night that Merriweather was brought back from town to the guardhouse, shot and stabbed, as has been said. Mrs. Merriweather bad fled during the previous night, and the ser- geant had been missing since reveille. It was the next night that Stannard re- turned and had Brady hunted up. Then tame new labors and honors for Sheriff Conway, and this time there were no troops to divide the honors of the cap- ture with him, for his prisoners were deserters al!—one from an overindul- geet husband. the others from a not too — indulgent Uncle Sam. Pawnee was the Mecca of the fugitives. Thither bad Mrs. Merriweather fied to a married sis- ter. Thither bad Croxford and Elzey followed, after having remained to cover her retreat and settle matters with the sergeant, which they had done only too effectually, for Merriweather’s days were numbered. Two days later Stannard had straight- ened out affairs at the post in marvelous fashion (all save matters domestic— wherein, said he, no wise man med- died), and the man to start him on the right scent was that scapegrace, the Kid, whom he had disciplined time and again in Arizona days and appreciated at his true value. The Kid’s derisive and explosive laughter when told that Major Mainwaring had ordered Trooper Hunter confined as accessory to the mag- gzine robbery, etc., had been promptly reported to Stannard on his return, and that versatile young reprobate was sent for, marched to the adjutant’s office and collared by his old time troop command- er, for one of his several enlistments the Kid had spent with Stannard, and knew him well. And this was what the Kid divulged. Bvery one know he could nan a loses | agents A WORD like 4 cowboy, and Croxiord had asked him, just for deviltry, to join him and ‘“‘some other fellers’’ in roping the swell, Hunter, on the midnight relief, and he was going to, but happened to hear that Merriweather was in it, and that set him to thinking. ‘\He’d beard the women talking about Mrs. Merri- | weather’s boasting that she had made a conquest of the swell recruit, and he | remembered Blerriweather’s black eve and the rumer that it was Hunter ‘laid him out,’’ and the Kid scented mischief and backed out. Then Oroxford came | and told him it would be best for him | to keep his promise, as he might get the | credit of it anyhow, which prompted | the Kid to tell them all to go to Baily- | hack. But when Elzey and Hughes later came and ‘‘stumped him’’ to join them | | in @ spree to town that night and dis- | played their money he forgot Croxford’s | | threat in the prospect of whisky and, anything for a frolic, started with | them, only to run foul of the patrol just across the creek. ut the moment he heard of Hunter’s being hauied out of the stream after the | explosion the whole plot dawned on him, and something more, for he re- membered the stories of forage and car- | tridges being sold in town and saw that if was planned to fix the guilt on Hun- ter, and, if not, to fix the crime of the | assault on the sacred person of a sentry | upon himself, the innocent Kid. Then Stannard would have cross questioned the two deserters, for such they were, despite staiwart protestations that they were only out for 24 hours’ fun, but de- tec ferreting their movements, warned him to make noattempt. Merri- weather might make an antemortem statement, but’ not these men. Neither would Mrs. Merriweather ‘‘peach.’’ She was In the county jail begging piteous- ly to be taken to her Danny and declar- ing he and she were only going to Paw- nee to see her sister for a day, and he must haye been waylaid in town. au ; (i0 be Continued.) tives People Whe Have Used [t | Say that Dr. Chase’s Syrup of Linseed | and Turpentine affords wonderfully prompt relief coughs and colds. Everybody has confidence in Dr. Chase, | in his great recipe book and famous family remedies. They have learned by | experience that it pays to insist on hav- ing Dr. Chase’s Syrup of Linseed and | Turpentine instead af accepting the | various unscientific i which | some druggists offer as “just as good.” | Dr. Chase’s Syrup of Linseed and| Turpentine contains many of the most | valuable and mast effective remedial | for throat and lung troubles} that science has discovered. It acts so directly and promptly as to be of| incalculable worth in ail cases of croup, bronchitis and whooping cough. It is | so far-reaching in Its effects as to} foosen the tigntest chest cough and | cure the cold of long standing. 25c a| bottle : family size, three times as | much, 60c. at all dealers’, or Edman- son, Bates & Co., Toronto. Dr. Chase’s Syrup of Linseed and Turpentine. tor e¢ , + 7 Y 9? mix-ups TO THE BOYS | WHO SKATE We want you to call and | see our Hockey Boots be- | fore you buy elsewhere. | A larger stock than ever this year. The latest im- provements. | OUR $2 HOCKEY BOOT | the. best value we i s_ ever offered. BOYS’ HOCKEYS, $1.50 and $1.75, R. K. JOST, Stam de2r’s Corm” Ralston... Breakfast Food A BREAKFAST FOR 30 PEOPLE IN A TWO POUND PACKAGE One cup Ralston Breakfast Food cooks enough for five persons---there aré six full cups in every package. Sliced dates and Ralston Break- fast Food make a delicious desert. Our “Little Book of Ralston Re- ceipes’’ tells of ether dainty dishes. A cupon in every package secures a copy. For sale by JENKINS & SON CORRER GROCERS. JUST OPENED..... A large shipment of Thos. Ellin & Co's, Needham Veall & Tylack’s and Jonathan Crooke’'s celebrated Cutlery... In Tables, Pockets, Scissors, Razors, etc FENNELL & CHANDLER. GLEARING OUT SALE. VERY STABLE JUTRLT FOR SALE BY AUCTION. ene am instructed by the executors of the estate of the late A. N. Large Esq, to sell by auction, at the stables, Corner Queen and Kent Streets, commencing on Thursday, 20th day of December at 11 o'clock, a. m.. and to continue until the whole STAB stock is cleared out. LES.—Eight Horses, 8 Mares, includn, x the cel ebrated trotting horse Montrose, record 2.2034, and Go'den, 7064, record 2.29%. COACH HOUSE.—Four Barouches, 5 Carry-ails, 17 Buggies, 2 Concord Wagons, 2 |Cart, 1 Cart, 9 Single Sleighs, 3 Doubie Sleighs, 1 three ‘seated Sleigh, 2 |S'eighs, 5 Carriage Poles. 5 sets Double Harness, 15 sets Sing’e Har and Hames, Express Wagons, 1 Road > Sleighs, 1 Ray Rox Gladstone Sleigh, 2 Word ness, 2 Riding Saddles and Bridle, jot of Collars 10 strings Sleigh Bells, 19 Sleigh Robes, 3 dozen Carriage Wraps, lot of Horse Ruggs, etc, RESTAURANT.—Lot | 1 Sideboard, 1 Safe, Tab es, Chairs, Carpets, Oilcloths, Por-'| tiers, Stoves, Pictures. Crockery, Cut ery, etc.; 1 Bottliag | ' Lable, lot. of empty bottles. Any one wishing to inspect the stock can do so at any time before of Furniture, eic, consisting of | Also 5 the sale The horses to be sold the first day. TERMs.—A!l sums over $40 three months will be given Here Furn But |on approved joint notes with the bank discount added. R. BEAIRSTO, Auctioneer. You'll Find iture Bargains we don’t like to use the word. So many advertisersuse +t anddon’t mean it. Webster says, ‘‘a gainful transaction’’---that’s how we ticun {t---a gainful transaction for our customers. We would like you to call and satisfy yourself that what say is true. JOHN NEWSON. cov? areel® F hes, And get . ing, in Men assortment, cong OUR...... IG CLEARING SALE zreatest values in Men’s and Boys’ Undercloth and Beys’ Gloves and Mitts, in Top Shirts, big in Men’s and Boys’ Ulsters ond overcoats, im Men’s and Boys, Reefers and Suits, in Boots, Shoes and Rubbers. goods at It will be money in your pockets to buy these J. B, MAGDONALD & GO, cans Appoleiaris Water. win z =, * Pee ae ee: ee Sey oo ap * wren gic erences aS on ene yng on ee ee meio ae 4 #4 i 2 oR . - - ee a ee od on sete te Pee wt: linen garam “ AaStNBaGar aed: -” “a, PO Ia % = - - pteciemeaeet ~ a fhe sits, Willies be 6 BES BE PE ts GBR ll Naini tii ae ge ge me a ch imp ROBY - ‘age aoe ¥ ° Fi Sjellli aane anced. Be MGI caro ~ pee ee ‘ ppt 5m aot bale Se a> Bi Ae SA site es a oe ce al Sa ea % a a + ne uw sks ey AN fe 134 etn i ’ eee = en sans mre na se ate . ne. | a te a ote Pe een ne tee ae nile Mie aaa a _ ee oo cata | ii thie ae: i tee ee = ic ids a marca, wl nc is, Mt we z i i ree teen ase re alia rs es oe