gt ae arr TROT PUTS And if they ry | ry Hi are diseased BJ ) . use the 7 nn Wty world’s 1 Lb Sreatest kidney cure *: Kidney-Liver Pills < 4 : n , ‘ ; Dr ‘ n t vou s € t ; : - soe > I nd . he ; f “a , a } ¥ b al or i & « SHS 2368S HUBH5E008 ADVICE AECUT “pice. ev ordering a packrge ion: Miieaiaa adie Cin men or Cream of Tartar ym your grocer you Can al~ WI Pe n f ways feel sure of sec oe the be Mott’s CUS. 9g 8 — GROCERIES Are always to be depende‘! on.... eo” ~Sse@e2kF @©2G? 31340677 2 @ 02408086 cree@ed? ®&eo “ae @@ @~ @&s SY Only the best kept in stock. Our customers are satisfied customers. Lf ye want to be satisfied with your groceries deal with us. } Try the TEA we sell. Special atter- t10n war gisen to its seiection. The same care is exercised in buying all other lines. AND BE “SS ATISFIED JAMES KELLY & C0) , Dear London House Corner. W hite’s Caramels anc Snowflake Chocolates <= nf ¥7) } Can be hal following t T. J. Morris D. L. Hooper W. Plekard & Co. WW. A. Hutcheson W. F. Carter Stewart & Gates Sanderson & Co Beer & Goff ~ FOR SALE for sale mortgages, being 6 percent farm properties in some of the best Manitoba. The mortgages do not represent more than half the velue of the property. If required we gUarantee both principal ana interest, ¥ tf Aime ¢ We hay interest o listricts i _ In most cases the mortages are payable in instalmen's. Anyone wantiny a thoroughly safe invest ment having a good rate of intrest snould communicate with us, Wealse have alarge number of very de- sirable ferms for sale in the Winnipeg Dis- “ricts, at prices which are bound to double in very ehort time. Send for particulars. HASLAM j& WRIGHT Private Ban«ers 320 McIntyre Block W imnipeg Man - a NTC ~Karen of the | uss Stores: | ‘ °4“7 y - THE DAiwx EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, JULY 5, 189 EL TSS PI "= SE TE RS TAY SL EMEP IT OM LOT OE A See ane se | —_ ww ee Faas i re suvs that when he left the house | . r dinner he went to the Lincoln ho | bong 7 a ~ } 4 vi &. where u friend of | v in ‘ Bh = > ; | nt the noie vVenineg a 8 : i Cade” bot Me ¥ Pb Me i Ls o =i — , rg , ; ae, oes > @ y’ aie ! om i“ X Mason, was in the city - f r only a short } a Oh ot A» Ae, at | tli and he left for M sxico the & yj yw a a es a a 4 Nc © ; | it ning. He told Nutt thename of } _ » “ . } C MEE ——— a ms ~ ft i nlace he was going to, but Nutt } re LN S a ee 4 és Monit Merican ran } . AO LE FY « eS, vs it was some difficult Mexican name, | Y ue Vis oN Ne eee ee a eomber what it wan | WO Te eee aoe > > Bes, 4 ra . do - y ee .. oe au ve iia it We ( i fay SA —& i ee il —? | That makes it impossible to communi- | a ‘ ; ve y7 } iM Pa be c ey Ba RAYMOND Fey oY fof | catewith hin | Wire Sereens for Windows Ny ff UD Ras Y fk ~~ ae i | ‘‘The hotel register shows that a man | . Sw % oy Ba ee ax Kk. S& , ae ' rs es ja. ” ss : a 5 i j ; - ‘ “ s. s > COPYTROGRIT, yr Ig 99. PR ~7 y P% NOOR \ | named Matthew Mason, who regi: tered G reen By ire Clo th Se ee a een Pesan i“ opine from New ta * | oe a | night, and that Thu rniz prine Hinges 1 Catch: ~~ : i t m1 I I ' eT VW i “ tak ui in one of tl h t . & ry $ pring Inges anne J we ~ ‘ ‘4% : } . | . c in . o_o } : | s i ed ed a ie j os S ne a oe 7 ' to the station of a railroad that is . poment ago mow she was to be away. Afriend | Connection with s rood Tunning to Simon W. Crabb shas you run I that she met at church invited her to Mark Oe eae i. ¥ te | de we o o, t t I i | i t ‘ : » 1 ; MEXICO NONI 1g — — ' ‘ ‘ r . + ‘ . a P 29 ‘ na a a 1 ua were this man M: on at tp Line i ! alkej we} { orner ST \ ES & HARDWARE streets to your mn :as an illustration. 1ot here to dinner i have not seen | Se Pa ae i He nad ever been the Oo [ar Such 3 i have in th at line—I guy one since y¥ 1 retur! 1 who could as tl . ae ; } } i - —_—s . a viit 4 br A ii e i teli you. How did you know?’ | aeelt , t] SY ' ve scribes him as a young man with sm sw 1 Ay MY Professor Gilman smiled. ‘* ‘Obser | aia "i Ce tat ae sia : _ in 4s, y “i vation and deduction,’ ’’ he said. ‘‘It | 7 blue eyes and brown, curly | NZ iG id i 3% | VSOBEIES OEE COME ELON, 6 sak ‘} | of medium height i vs he wo! ae ar | appears that on Sundays we are provid- | prown mts ote-aeat "ts aac ge SE SM MSE SIE NE ESL Se Se Ne NN NE NG i } a ma OHlisl . G « “a i «, ¢ *, Wve | ed with fresh napkins—at least I per | Shi ci be ae need deceit Shale Ae AS GS UP AP UP AS AS AP VAS AP AY AS AS AP AS TW oetve gx a srems ane : here at MY} Nntt there that night, but Nutt Eau e 3 . place. also see a fresh one at your eae a 1 ; . : : ‘ - plains that he knew the cation ol ‘ | mother’s place, w ith her napkin ring | 43 and went right up to the room wiil- LSee a | beside it. But yours, I noticed, was ut speaking Pio ll ae > } rolled up and in your napkin ring, and (To be Conti.ned ) likewise * se of the other boarders, Srp e < ih 8 If your n ale rT had been here to dinner, | Nave evabdv eve aeyZZ ve hers would have been rolled up in her N } ring the same as the others; but, not yV } th t ra | t th : being, I conclude that she was not alues al we WIS Lyou 0 see when wi bere ie Ki - you to lool Ready-to-W “I begin to see,’’. said Josephine, It is | il as} you to 00 < at our : ea y-to- eal ‘*how rou unravel mysteries. You seem Cl 1 i 1 : : | th Ordinary values y | to see always all there is to see.’”’ | i | 0 ing. rc inary va ues J ou Can see ‘.*6 . | RRNA Pa atab ae | anywhere, but it’s a saving ofat least 35 “I see your mother was not here to dir ner.” don’t claim that I have extraordinary enes—lie in exactly this direction—the power to see things plain enough to any eye, and also the power to see the mean- ing of things that are plain enough, or should be, to any mind. Summed up, it is the power of observation and the power of deduction; that is all. ‘*‘Many people right at things which they never see, and others who see the things fail to note their mean- ing. Yet it is not because it is difficult or because it requires a mind and eye especially adapted to that sort of thing; not at all It is simply that mind and eye are indifferent— oo grown callous to things ( hildre see many things that we old fel miss. and they often detect the meaning of things when older persons fail to, which is another way of saying that their eyes loOOoOK Lhe Ws and minds are not indifferent to the things around them They are not yet old enough to have become callous te things ‘*T see your meatting,”’ said the gir! “But ‘the power of observation and de- duction,’ as you c@gll it, doesn’t seem nearly so easy to me as it seems to 1 I think it must bea special gift, aficr all, just as some men are gif ed with wonderfully keen eyesight. ’ a Barnard, for instance sai the professor. ‘‘Well, perhaj y may be right." When they reached home, it ‘ time for tea, and they entered the din ing room together. As the prof down he remarked, ‘‘I see your mother wes not here to dinner.”’ ‘*No,’”’ said the girl And tf n a moment she looked sat him in son wonder and said Bat, Px 38 Gail ti - re is eis “ imp : in ~ Pa every 1 in a ~ . } of lov f life . © 1ST strong enough Oe SZ eds hs unde Tiree leittt a Civ} to make hit ve Oe an ae pmbhlie and Kote ~ ~ ae 4 4 tremble ana ei3 9 (ies ZF kneel before MOSS Ze =death when he a7 VW, srouchiv ree- ath aH thor ughly rec a 41, ognizes 1 f proach he trouble with men is that thev do not rec- Ognize death sit comes x I tT V10 ky OF T nid a‘ i uy umption kills more 1 than. wars, far ines lag and accid ‘ but its approach do not realize that in its itch. While consumption = disease, the bacilli will not in- va and } thy lungs. The lungs m la sed condition mean feels a littl out of sorts. Pr yverworked and has given t > ug ping and rest- ing. H ippetite falls off. His digestion gets out of order and his bl ona does not receive the proper amount of life-giving nutriment. The liver becomes torpid and the bieod is filled with impurities. These are pumpe: d into every organ of the bodr, building up u nhealthy, half-dead tissues. The most harm is done at the weakest spot, and most frequently that spot is in the lungs. A slight cold leads to inflamma- tion, the bacilli invade the lungs and we have a case of consumption Ninety-eight per cent. of all cases of consumption are cured by Dr. Pierce’s tsolden Medical Discovery. It is the great blood-maker and flesh-builder. It restores the lost appetite, makes the digestion per- fect, invigorates the liver, purifies the blood, builds new and healthy flesh and drives out all impurities and disease germs. It cures weak lungs, spitting of blood, obsti- nate coughs and kindred ailments. No hon- est druggist will recommend a substitute. Mrs, Ursula Dunh am. of Sistersville, Tyler Co., W. Va., writes: “I had a pain in my side all the time, had but little appetite and grew very thin. The ‘Golden Medical Discovery’ promptly cured the pain, restored my appetite and im ‘creased my weight.” CHAPTER IL At the breakfast table the following Friday morning the medical students vere discussing a disappearance. ‘‘T can’t imagine what has become of Damon,’’ said Ben Rice. ‘‘His friends haven't seen or heard anything of him since Wednesday night. It looks to me like foul play. Damon was a man of steady habits and the last fellow you would expect to drop out of sight this way. I don’t believe he has done it in tentionally.’ Professor Gilman was eating breal- fast over at his table. He happened to be alone at the table, and the student: epoke lond enough for him to hear whut J : Mrs. Maxwell cand 1 came in to breakfast, and Rice, after saying gcod cae to them, asked, ‘‘Miss Maxwell, did yen hear about Luther Damon’ s patton ts : ai Ly} i “4 i ince?’ : The girl turned quickly and faced Rice. **No,’’ she said. ‘*Tell m / it. ‘Wher, he hasn’t been seen at collecce nor at his boarding house ¢ t Wed y night E ‘ ithe cor if 526 y Eno T) ervant t t 9 o'clock W day t mt 4 I i ilied at the d l Mr. Damon. & s SI while h ‘ I I b Can t GQeSCTi ve his | i v in’t know him | Ww n $] led 10n, Who \ ipin his room, the man waiting for outside meanwhile. Damon put +}, <y sii 26 out, and is hat end went nof hin. The t t any one has se lic have been notified and are search ng for him, but have found no trace of him so far.’’ Rice, who had finished his breakfast, now came over and sat down'in cone of the vacant chairs at the other table. ‘‘What gives an ugly look to the busi ness,”” he continued, ‘‘is the fact that the day before Damon disappeared he juarreled with a student named Nutt, who boarded’ at the same place and whose room was next toDamon’s Just what the qrarrel was about isn’t clear but high words between them were overheard by Nutt’s roommate, who was inthe next room. He says he heard one of them say: ‘Take care! Don’t go too far or you'll besorry forit!’ But he can’t tell which one it was. ‘‘The next night Nutt left the house directly after dinner and didn’t return till 12 o’clock. One of the other board ers who came home about the time saw him and taought he looked as if he had been drinking. The servant who saw the unknown man about 9 o'clock is quite sure it was not Nutt whose face and voice she is perfectly familiar with, though she denies that she should know the man if she saw him again. The police have no idea the man was Nutt, but what they want to find out now is who wastheman. They believe Nutt knows, end that he and the unknown man can tell what became of Damon. “Nutt is popular among the stu- dents, and we don’t any of us like to think he has done anything criminal. but circumstances make it look rather black for him.”’ Josephine Maxwell had listened in tently, and when Rice paused she said “Why, isn't it awful! Luther Damon was such a nice young man too.’ **Yes,"’ said Rice. ‘‘He was a very bricht fellow. Of course we all hope he will turn upagain safe, but there is ap parently no reason for his abscuting himself from college, aud. altogether it is very puzzling. ”’ Professor Gilman had listened to all that Rice said, and now he aszed ‘Where does this Mr. Nrtt claim to have spent Wednesday evening—the time that he was absent from bis bowra mg placel same nt ee lent qualities, it is the ~— wonderful regulator health known. eecdvurubevevunddveddverddrdver eae Fibbey’s Effervescent Salt (\ us < “aa “ta taken daily, will purify your ey blood and cleanse your sys- Tw te m. Its effect is mild— asa almost imperceptible—but Sp Certain. Take it every day wand you will enjoy constant a “me vood health. Abbey’s Ef- <x {crvescent Salt, which ap rescribed and endorsed a Oa phy sicians,’ is a standard <a English preparation which “all druggists sell at 60 a ma cents a large bottle. $1ze, 25 cents. ( Trial | : ee “ FURSERARARNIRADAR / Pleasure best Deht in Cherlottetosn, abd being pro. dec with aji fhe lities tor up-tcrcere work, it follows hat py bot. graphs give Entire Setir ac Lb = They are acknow!edzced to re “ibe highest piich of exce)~ % Jence ” & ie y Call acd exemine j} arrange a } Fitting Fhotegraphs that Cive I ETE Te i are thore made by G. H. Cook, Wueea Street. a Having the edvaniage of the a ae G. H. COOK Hub Cafe Ke-opened Meals and lunches served at short notice. Alsoa choice line of Cigars, Cigarettes and Ginger Ale. Open from 7 a, m. tilll12 pm Don’t forget the place next door to R. B. Norton's Hard- ware store. wud Cafe Don’t be under the im- pression that Abbey’s Ef- fervescent Salt is unpalat- able. It is a most delicious preparation to the taste— so pleasant, in fact, that it is oftentimes taken as a beverage. It is an un- equalled thirst - quencher. Sut aside from these excel- per cent. on your purchase, How can we do this? Because we bought the | goods that .vuch less, at che Doull and Gibson great retiring sale, and we give our customers the benefit of the low price paid for the goods. We always | make it a rule when we bought at a bargain to sell at a bargain. J 6B MCDONALD & CO LEADERS IN LOW PRICES, EICH GRADE Englisn Manures ICON TAIN...... MORE MORE MORE NITROGEN HOS. ACID POTASH PRODUCKE.... | BETTER CROPS LASTS LONGER More RELIABLE , Ss And are cheaper than any other Fertil cer eve sold on P. EK. Island. AULD BRO- Charlottetown, May 27th, 189-9.- Linen —=—Oollars 2tcr 25 cents BEST VALUE \+< cee eee See D. A. BRuce's. BLACH SO2---- 3 PAIRS FOR 25 cents Dp. & BRUER, MORRIS BLOCK