THE DAinY EXAMINER, nies si sieht EPTEMBER 27 (895, - oa G uard! ‘a TT Pe a, ag tee ie iy ey nae erect e Oot Pivg." ME gate vt Pity BE nut CVCTES 988 THE BEST Is a! yay imitated, Dodd's Kidney POls, sold only in bexes like t} s are widely imitate’, because they are the he Kidaey cure. Take none ut ———— a D-O-D-D°S aia Provincial Bazaar: — IN AID CF THE— NEW ST. CUNSTAN’S CATHEDRAL —TO BE O! ENED IN THE~— Cathezral Basement Hall, Ch'towa ie} Monday Evening, October 16th. ock, and to be nued on Thur. and Fri. 18th, 19th & 20th at eight 0” cont Tues. Wed. t. 17th on tendered to every shild in the Province. “ry person who attends »vided for all visitors. A cordial invita man, woman and Ample room for es Excellent meais pr Select musical ent ing by the Leag (New £600 set ofs a sources of ar Come one— Cone all. Cheap Excursioa Tickets to the City wil! be issued at all stations on TUES- DAY, OCT. 17th, ood to’returo on sam- | and following day; and again on THUKS DAY, OCT. 19th, good to return on same and following day, at the following RED all stations between iver instruments), avd jusrement, UCED RATES, fron Tignieh and Piusv.|le, inclusive $1 25 | Bloomfield and Portage as ocf hae Conway aod Richmond... . .cccccccce 95C Wellington and St. Eleanore. 8d° Summerside and Freetown ........-.. Tdc Emerald and Fredricton.............5.. 60¢ Clyde and North Wiltshire.......... 45c Colville and Loyalist...... a Cape Traverse and Kinkora. 75¢ Souris and Bear Ri ver..........cee00+- . 85c Rollo Bay and Midzell.............. 9406 Msrie and Douglass.............. 60c St. Andrews and Tracasie.......... 45¢ | Bedford and Suffolk.............. 352 BOM c ccc ccae ct Gee oes - 26e Union. ‘ eT ee 20c Georgetown and ‘Pe Gidea... 600 46 Read end Peakte'Gs aie wicccccce 60¢ Pisquid.. « «00s Ha atees ss Passengers hold ing Railway Tickets will be required to have them stamped by the Bazaar Committe, before they will be bhoncured for return on the trains. By order of committee. THOMAS DRISCOLL, Secretary 222—tu, thur, eat &w CANADIAN PACIFIC KY. LOW RATE EXCURSIONS —FROM— CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E.!I a ON— 28th, 29th, 30th Oct. 2nd & 3rd Sept. For round trip tickets to MONTREAL $13.30 28th, 29th and Trip Tickets to .. - $16.80 On Sept. S0th, Round Cttawa, Ont. Toronto, Out. — Detriot, Mich., }..........$23.30 Port Huron j Nigara Falls, Uot.,...... $24.65 > veseenns eee return leaving destina~ cluding October 16:b, Chicago, 1) a Ticketa good to tion up to and i 1899, THE POFULAR ROUTE 1S Janadian Pacific Railway VIA, ST. JOHN, For rates to other points callon any ticket agent in Maritime F rovinces, or write, A. J. HEATH, Passr. Agent, CP K St. John, N. B. JOHN 9 HYNDMAN, Soliciting Ageat C P R., Ch’town, P EI Diet. rtainments every €ven | ie of the Cross Band | BEYOND THE PALE, By RUDYARD KIPLING. rs beg Love heeds not caste nor sleep a broken bed I went in irch of love and lost myself.—Hin doo Prover A man uh uld, whatever happens, keep | to his own caste, race and breed. Let the white go to the white and the black to the black. Then whatever trouble falls is in the ordinary course of things neither sudden, alien nor unexpected. This is the story of a man who will- fully stepped decent everyday society and paid for it heavily. beyond the safe limits of | | letter leaves much He knew too much in the first in- stance, and he saw too much in the second. He took too deep an interest in | native life. But he will never do go again. Deep away in the heart of the city, Nath’s gully, which ends in a dead wall pierced by one grated window. At the head of the gully is a big cowbyre, and the walls on either side of the gully are Without windows. Neither Suchet Singh nor Gaur Chand approves of his women folk looking into the world. If Durga Charan had been of their opin- ion, he would have been a happier man tcday, and little Bisesa would have been able to knead her own bread. Her room looked out through the grated window into the narrow dark gully, where the sun never came and where the buffaloes wallowed in the blue slime She was a widow, about 15 years old, and she prayed the gods day and night to send her a lover, for she did not ap- prove of living alone. One day the man—Trejago his name was—came into Amir Nath’s gully on an aimless wandering, and after he had passed the buffaloes stumbled over a big heap of cattle food. Then he saw that the gully ended in a trap and heard a little laugh from behind the grated window. It was a pretty little langh, and Trejago, know- ing that for ail practical purposes the oid ‘‘Arabian Nights’’ are good guides, went forward to the window and whis- pered that verse of ‘‘The Love Song of Har Dyal,’’ which begins: Can a man stand upright in the face of the naked sun or a lover in the presence of his be- loved? If my feet fail me, O heart of my heart, am I to blame, being blinded by the glimpse of your beauty? There came the faint tchinks of a woman's bracelets from behind the grating, and a little voice went on with the song at the fifth verse: Alas, alas! Can the moon tell the Lotus of her love when the gate of heaven is shut and the clouds gather for the rains? They have taken my beloved and driven her with the pack horses to the north. There are iron chains on the feet that were get on my heart. Call to the bowmen to make ready— The voice stopped suddenly, and Tre- jago walked out of Amir Nath’s gully wondering who in the world could have capped ‘‘The Love Song of Har Dyal’ 80 neatly. Next morning, as he was driving to office, an old woman threw a packet into his dogcart. In the packet was the half of a broken glass bangle, one flower ,| of the blood red dhak, a pinch of bhusa or cattle food and 11 cardamoms. That packet was a letter—not a clumsy, com- promising letter, but an innocent unin- telligible lover’s epistle. Trejago knew far too much about these things, as I have said. No Eng- lishman should be able to translate ob- ject letters. But Trejago spread all the trifles on the lid of his office box and | mecessity What a man attains to seems for a little time to be the high- i est rung in the /ladder, and dur- //ing that brief pe- riod he may be jj} content, but when he discovers that there are other } rungs, still higher ./ up, ambition gives birth to discontent, and he begins once more to climb, Toe climb is realfy man’s chief end. It isn’t in attainment, but in work, that man finds his real happiness, conse- / quently it is not strange j A that we find men working '] ‘f/ until they break down when there is no reg! for it. If men only knew it, they could work to almost any extent on through middle life and into old age, if they would only take a little common sense care of their heaith. The trouble is that they do not take the lit. tle stitches here ang there that are neces- gary to preserve health. They pay no at- tention to the signs of on-coming ill-health. A little bilicusness, a little indigestion, a fiitle loss of sleep and appetite, a little mervousness, a little headache, a little shakiness in the morning, and a little dull- ness all day, a little this and a little that— all these little things they neglect. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery makes the appetite keen, digestion and assimila- tion perfect, the liver active, the blood pure and the nerves steady. It is the great lood-maker and flesh-builder. I: is the great liver invigorator and nerve tonic. It fits a man to work and work and work, Medicine dealers sell it and have nothing else “just as good.’’ ‘Iwas a sufferer five or six years from indi- gestion,”’ ee. B. F. Holmes, of Gaffney, Spartanburg Co., 9. C., “also from sore stomach and constant headache. I then used Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and ‘Pleasant Pel- lets.’ which in a few days gave me permanent relief.”’ A man or woman who neglects constipa- tion suffers from slow poisoning. Doctor Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets cure constipa- tion. One little ‘' Pellet ’’ is a gentle laxa- tive, and two a mild cathartic. All medi- cine dealers sell them. x | widow. behind Jitha Megji’s bustee, lies Amir | san tO ‘puzzle them out. A broken giass bangle stands for a Hindoo widow all India over, because, when her husband dies, a woman’s bracelets are broken on her wrists. Tre- jago saw the meaning of the little bit of the glass. The flower of the dhak means diversely ‘‘desire,’’ ‘‘come,’ “‘write’’ or ‘‘danger,’’ according to the other things with it. One cardamom means ‘‘jealousy,’’ but when any arti- cle is duplicated in an object letter it loses its symbolic meaning and stands merely for one of a nt umber indicating time, or, if incense, curds or saffron be sent ‘also, place. The message ran then: “‘A widow—dhak flower and bhusa— at 11 o’clock.’’ The pinch of bhusa en- lightend Trejago. He saw—this kind of to instinctive knowl- edge—that the bhusa referred to the big heap of cattle food over which he had fallen in Amir Nath’s and that the message must come from the person behind the grating, she being a So the message ran then: ‘‘A in the gully in which is the head gully, widow, , of bhusa, desires you to come at 11 a o’clock.’’ So he went that very night at 11 into Amir Nath’s gully, clad in a boorka, which cloaks a man as well as a wom- an. Directly the gongs in the city made the hour the little voice behind the grating took up ‘‘The Love Song of Har Dyal’’ at the verse where the Paythan girl calls upon Har Dyal toreturn. The song is really pretty in the vernacular. In the English you miss the wail of it. It runs something like this: Alone upon the house tops, to the north I turn and watch the lightning in the sky— The glamour of thy footsteps in the north. Come back to me, beloved, or I die! Below my feet the still bazaar is laid; Far, far below the weary camels lie— The camels and the captives of thy raid. Come back to me, beloved, or I die! | My father’s wife is old and harsh with years, And drudge of all my father’s house am L My bread is sorrow, and my drink is tears. Come back to me, beloved, or I die! As the song stopped Trejago stepped up under the grating and whispered, ‘*l am here.”’ Bisesa was good to look upon. That night was the beginning of many strange things and of a double life so wild that Trejago today some- times wonders if it were not all a dream. Bisesa or her old handmaiden who had thrown the cbject letter had detached the heavy grating from the brickwork of the wall, so that the window slid inside, leaving only » sgnare of raw masonry into which an iclive man might climb. In the daytime Trejago through his routine of office work o1 put on his calling clothes and called on the ladies of the station, wondering how long they would know him if they knew of poor little At night, whew all the city was still, came the walk under the evil smelling boorka. the patrol through Jitha Megji’s bustee, the quik ‘k turn into Amir Nath's gully between the sleeping cattle and the dead and then, last of all, Bi- sesa and the ‘deep, even breathing of the old woman who slept ontside the door cf the bare little room that Durga Charan allotted tohis sister’s daughter Who or what Durga Charan was Tre- jago never inquired. And why in the world he was not discovered and knifed never occurred to him till his madness was over, and Bisesa— But this comes later. Bisesa was an endless delight to Tre- jago. She was as ignorant as a bird, and her distorted versions of the rumors from the outside world that had reached her in her room amused Trejago almost as much as her lisping attempts to pro- nounce his name—Christopher. The first syllable was always more than she could manage, and she made funny lit- tle gestures with her rose leaf hands, as one throwing the name away, and then, kneeling before Trejago, asked him, ex- actly as an English woman would do, if he were sure he loved her. Trejago swore that he loved her more than any one else in the world, which was true. After a month of this folly the exi- gencies of his other life compelled Tre- jago to be especially attentive to a lady of his acquaintance. The news flew in the usual mysterious fashion from mouth to mouth till Bisesa’s duenna heard of it and told Bisesa. The child was so troubled that she did the house- hold -work evilly and was beaten by Durga Charan’s wife in consequence. A week later Bisesa taxed Trejago with the flirtation. She understood no gradations and spoke openly. Trejago laughed, and Bisesa stamped her little feet—little feet, light as marigold flow- ers, that could lie in the palm of a man’s one hand. Muck that is written about ‘‘oriental passion and impulsiveness” is exagger- ated and compiled at secondhand, but a little of it is true, and when an Eng- lishman finds that little it is quite as startling as any passion in his own proper life. Bisesa raged and stormed and finally threatened to kill herself if Trejago did not at once drop the alien memsahib who had come between them. Trejago tried to explain and to show her that she did not understand these things from a western standpoint. Bi- sesa drew herself up and said simply: “I donot. I know only this—it is not good that I should have made you dearer than my own heart to me, sahib. You are an Englishman. I am only a black girl’’—she was fairer than bar gold in the mint—‘‘and the widow of a black man.’ Then she sobbed and said: ‘‘But, on my soul and my mother’s soul, I love GTOVE ~s 21sesa. in Stee W aiis, | you. ‘Lnere svali DO harm come to you whatever happens to me.” Trejago argued with the child and tried to soothe her, but she seemed quite unreasonably disturbed. Nothing would satisfy ber save that all relations between them should end. He was to go away at once. And he went dropped out at the window she his forehead twice, and he walked home wonde ering. A week, and then three weeks, passed As he kissed Without a sign from Bisesa. Trejago, thinking that the rupture had lasted quite long enorgh, went down to Amir Nath’s gully for the fifth time in the three weeks, hoping that his rap at the sill of the shifting grating would be an- swered. He was not disappointed. There was a young moon, and one stream of light fell down into Amir Nath’s gully and struck the grating which was drawn away as he knocked From the black dark Bisesa held cut her arms into the moonlight. Both hands had been cut off at the wrists, and the stumps were nearly healed. Then, as Bisesa bowed her head be- tween her arms and sobbed, some onein the room grunted like a wild beast, and something sharp—knife, sword or spear —thrust at Trejago in his boorka. The stroke missed his body, but cut into one of the muscles of the groin, and he limped slightly from the wound for the rest of his days. The grating went into its place. There was no sign whatever from in- side the house, nothing but the moon- light strip on the high wall and the blackness of Amir Nath’s gully behind The next thing Trejago remembers, after raging and shouting like a mad- man between those pitiless walls, is that he found himself near the river as the dawn was breaking, threw away his boorka and went home bareheaded. e - 7 . o * - What the tragedy was—whether Bi- sesa had in a fit of causeless despair told everything or the intrigue had been discovered and she tortured to tell, whether Durga Charan knew his name and what became of Bisesa—Trejago does not know to this day. Somethirg Ate he continned ) BRAIN FAG is the result of Overwork and an Exhausted Nervous System. Dr. A. W. Chase’s Nerve Food creates New Brain and Nerve Tissue. Business and professional men, accountants, stenographers, teachers, students and all brain workers know only too well what it means to have the brain so tired out that concentration of thought is almost impossible One-fifth ot all the blood in the human body fs found in the brain, and unless the) blood is pure and rich the brain becomes exhatsted for want of proper nourishment. Dr. A. W. Chase's Blood Food creates new brain and nerve tissue, and produces rich red blood, ‘‘ the vital fiuid” of the body. All brain workers quickly recognize the merits of this great food cure, and after a few doses enter on their work with new energy and ambi- tion. Brain fag is unknown to persons whose brain and nerve have been invigorated by the use of Dr. A. W. Chase's Nerve Food, which is fur sale by all dealers at soc. a box. Dr. Chase’s New Book, ‘‘ The Ils of Life and How To Cure Them,” sent free to your address. Edmanson, Bates & Co., Toronto The Big Maritime Fair Nova Scotia Provincial Exhibition EPTEMBER 61d to Oth, 1899 $1700— Offered in Priza; Increased prizes in Cattle, Sheep, Poul- try, Agricultural Products, Flowers and Fish. Improvep Faci.iries 1n Every DzPaRTMENT. BGS" Write for Prize List. Four Day’s Racing—RBig Pur- ses—for Trotting & Pacing SPECIAL ATLRACTIONS surpassing the eplendid programmes of previous years The world’s Greatest Artists in Marvel- ous Feats of Dexterity and Side Splittiog Specialties. Concluding every evening with a realistic presentation cof hritish Soldiers in Actual Warfare. “Lord Robert's War With the Afghans Famous March to Kandahar,” and ‘rhe Storming of Peiwar K otal,” a noted Afghan Stronghold, pro duced with over two hundred British Sallors and Soldiers from the wJarrison, a number of whem actually took partin the Afghan War Fireworks ‘Galore. , Magnificent Display Every Evening, For Prize List and all{information apply to J, E. WOOD, 5—d&aw Man. and *ecy WANTED. Several hundred laborers for the Dominion Iron and Steel Company, Ltd., Sydney, Cape Breton, Also hors-s and carts. Passage money advanced, For particulars apply to F W HYNDMAN, Agent 222 dtf ieee _—_————— What is SSS WN AS S ~ _ Cs A Ai ig a ." Castoria is fo nfants an’? Children. Cast harmless tte for Castor Oil, Parcgor._, .-c<op and Svothing Syrups. Ii contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years’ use by Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays Feverish- Castoria cures Diarrhoe.. and Wind Collie. relieves Toething Troubles, astoria Castoria HiCss. cures Constipation and Food, regulates the Stomach oc Bowels of Infants and Children, giving “Natulency. C assimilates the heaithy and natural sleep. Castoria is the Children’s Panecea—The Mother’s Friend. A ’ -25 Castoria. Castoria. ““Castoria is an excelient medicine for **Castoria Is sc well adapied to children children. Mothers have repeatedly told me | that I recommend it as superiur to any pre : scription known to me.”’ H. A. ARCHER, M. D. or its good effect upon their children.’’ Dr. G. C. Oscoon, Lowell, Mass. Brooklyn, N. ¥ THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OF ¢ APPEARS ON EVERY WRAPPER. ih THE CEONT# JP COMPANY. TT MURRAY STREET, NEW VORK City. Ge a ts the a LO aN ot gt Se 4 ————s Facey © Artificial Teeth on Metal Plates A dentist who knows his business, and one ‘that hae any regard for his*patients will always advise them tohave a metal plate. Prov. Me.vitie B, Buckier, Instructor Bosion Destal Col'ege, Boston Maes In view ofthe vast amount ofinjury done to the mouths of wear- ers of rubber or vulcanite plates, bythe retention of undue beat, owing to the non condactibility of rubber, and as slumium i+ now eo cheaply produced, and making as it does a rigid, light, cleanly, uns objectionable plate there seems 90 reason why anv person sho ald wear a rubber or vulcan te plate. Not only ‘this, but better results in fit and adhesion are « ‘tained in difficult ,ases, than in the use 3! rutber. 8 L.-P.E wea D. DS Chicag TH Dental School The above quotations are from hundreas py eminent dentists whose close observation in many years experience in plate work has learned them the many advantages of metal over rubber. Many persons who are compelled to wear artificial teeth onja plate find that the ordinary plate causes heating of the mouth, tad taste, sbr.nkage of the gums, etc., finally causing the plate t» get loos, ¥. sometimes sore lips, sore mouths and sore threate, ani caus d directly from the wearingof an ordinary plate. “ify r . We recommendsa metal plate either of $5 Gold, Platinum, Aluminum. ¥: 1 It isa conductor of heat and cold, it is non-irritating, aad is thio M7 er, lighter, and stronger than any other plate. < x We have testimonials from persons for whom we have made “f mets] plates—not one wouid wearan ordinary plae a ain. You é bs, can have your impression taken, and a metal plate mai- came dav, “Zhe fully guaranteed because we make them onrselves, aid know al; about the material used. Cail and see specimens of our work Every piece of work done by us must give eotire satisfaction ww tbe patient, else we will not allow it to leave our office. See our artificial teeth without plates. * ° paavoneenceanceccee eens Pals = * bbe pad tae ge KILL THE BUG ! | —- BY USINGc—— ACyclonelnsect Destroyer isin cine ET canes Berger's EnglishParis Green. WHOLESALE & RETAIL Simon W. Crabbe STOVES & HARDWAR Waiker’s Corner isin SS