sc ie ne . oe THE DAILY EXAMIN#! CHARLOTTETOWN, OCTOBER 14, 1899 Success. . < ang A sluggish liver poor digestion never did accomplish much in this world—it never ee ee will. The tru genius ot success is health. ot The daily use of Ab- bey’s Effervescent Salt keeps the liver and digestive organs in per- fect order, and gives the health that wins success, S&S SF JF WE WANT : WOUSEKEEPERS © lo come in and look over our | Our stock is fine! and fresh and euaranteed to be satisfac tory. thing in our line that is neces- sary. POR HOUSEKERPING ‘The prices— well, that is wuat we want you to see when you oroceries \ e keep every- ere looking at cur gocds. Their lewness will surprise | you. (QUEEN STREET a He FCWesley Co} CHE EEE: 1 12 ne Zinc Ercuinc, ELEGTROTYPING. Se 7\ Dock sy “== SF ———w } DRISCOLL and GLORNSBY | M St. JOHN. N.B. PLANT LINE. EXCURSIONS CHARLOTTETOWN TO BOSTON AND RETURN FOR $11.00 Good for 30 Days. Commencing Oct 3:d, ‘he well known 8.8. Halifax leaves Charlottetown every Tuesday nt nocn for Boston, via Hawkes- bury and Halifax. From Halifax—Every Wednerdsy at 11 _ Passengers ticketed via Pictou on fednesdays. From Boston cvery Sa'urday st noon Tickets for cale at Sietions cn P Railwoy. For tickets, rates on freight an al) information apply HL CHIPMAN, Supt, Halitax. W W CLARKE, Agent Pe SALT! SALT 12000 Bags Common £al!t now landing 6000 ve “ “ now du? 500 factory filled te arrive Buycrs ordering ex. ship save ccst cf storing here. For sale low to the taade. For prices write CHARLES 2°4 dlwk LAKPER, Shediac, N. B ROYAL OAK SOAP In every home there are dainty clothes, delicate in cclor and fabric, or both, that caure anxiety when going to the wash. They want washing, but are unequal to wear and tear of the wash tub. ROYAL UAK SOAP is specially prepared for the washing of fine materials, It is pure and vafe. _ Itextracts dirt and stains without sub- Jecting ciothes to friction or chemical rot. Sold everywhere. Savethe wrappers. Send for premium list. JAS. D LAPTHORNE, Ch’towa Soap Worke, A Yi WiLKOUT A ORI By MORGAN ROBERTSON. Copyright, 1899, by Morgan Robertson It was in the early days of were small, dis traffic, when vessels cl} line lax, and when each forecastle ht contain one or more part owners. Dunkirk Sam, Bill Tubbs and Starboard x, composing the crew of the little schooner Alma, ! | no such dual rela- tions with their captain. They drew wag ts. But, as their captain ? pronts. was old Long Tom and whom they and advised and obeyed as they pleased, their treatment of calculated to impress any other belief town, loved **sasseqd”’ strangers the whole vessel—and Captain Tom too. At Kingston, after discharging cargo, they had put on their shore clothes and selfishly with himself or the cook as he liked. ine , The mate, newly shipped, fled to the bosom of his family. captain sulked for awhile under elight put upon him by his ‘‘boys,” went ashore alone, met his agent, then him secured him hunted up his mate and aboard, for the agent had a load from Port Hope to Oswego. Then he hied himself to the one the town, bought a ticket, went in and vainly coaxed the three unj: to heed the callof duty. Useless en- deavor! They were kind to him—asked him to sit with them, but would not budge until the performance ended. Captain Tom coaxed, ordered, fumed and finally swore; then was collared by a scandalized fat policeman and cast forth into outer darkness, followed by sent the heartless threat of the three to tell his wife and the minister when they got home, for Captain Tucker was a sturdy pillar of the church. Filled to the brim with ‘‘aggrava- tion,’’ he returned to the wharf where his vessel lay and helped the mate loose the canvas, vowing to pay off the three ‘*‘sogers’’ The three left the theater at 11 o’clock and leisurely made their way to the vessel. Had they seen a restaurant they would have satisfied their slight hunger before putting themselves under Cap- tain Tom’s domination—not that they anticipated increased peril from weakness attending empty stomachs, but they knew that the cook, as indif- ferent to nautical etiquette as them- had turned in for the night: hence. there would be no prepared—and it was a long time until breakfast Discussing made them hungrier. Starboard Jack suggested the advisability of ing f: ‘the skipper won't turn for ns tonight. but he'll bis own nibble from the galley.”” They agreed to this, and Captain Tom’s prospective selfishness condoned their own mutinous injury outrageously when a_ rooster voices. arose to fri und settles seives, the matter turning back and bunt ran eating **for, the get house, ‘he suid cook out behavior. giving the balance of to them nnngry They tecame halted their d at them down again. Fatal mistake Starboard Jack testified later that visions of a chicken potpie. partaken of at h red his brain. and th: ry odor seemed to | that revi and aroused by stature, clutter: ine. ent save >in his nostrils Bill Tubbs admits theugl Lis Way Ware ts serenely wedan oft re i wetter! Breed early cissipation. in which bt bad diszgracefully attended a cockficr Drev>iuxk’ Sam never comeritted pos i . A LITTLE LIGHT. Every young wo- man needs a little light upon the sub- ject of health. There) is far too much new- fashioned prude among mothers. ery young woman should have ex- plained to her the supreme neces- sity of keeping herself pure and wholesome and free from weak- y ness and disease } in a womanly way. eneral health, her future happiness, ood looks, her physical strength, her capability as a wife and mother, and the health and strength of generations to come re dependent upon this. z Nothing in the world will destroy the good looks, wholesomeness, the amiability, and the usefulness of a woman quicker than disorders of the delicate and important organs that bear the burdens of maternity. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is the best of all medicines for women who are ailing in this way. It makes a woman strong and healthy where a woman most meeds health and strength. It relieves pain, soothes inflammation, heals ulcera- tion and gives rest and tone to the tortured nerves. It cures all the ills and pains too commonly considered an uncomfortable in- heritance of womankind. It has been used for over thirty years with an unbroken record of success. More of it has been sold than of all the other medicines for women combined. It is the discovery of Dr. R. V. Pierce, for thirty years chief consulting physician to the Invalids’ Hote! and Sur- gical Institute, at Buffalo, N. Y. He will cheerfully answer, without charge, all let- ters from ailing women. sa s ears ago,’’ writes Mrs. J. N. Messler, of rot vendea Avenue, New York, N. Y., “the best physiciams in this cit said there was = cure for me—unless I wou —— to a hospital — have an operation performed. I could mot wa: across the roons. I took Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription and after three bottles I cowd work, walk and ride.’’ Torpid liver and constipation are surely and speedily cured by Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. They never gripe. They regulate, tone up and invigorate the liver, stomacs and bowels. No substitute urged by met- cenary dealexs is as v- Tucker of their own him was in no way with than that they owned y gone to the theater, leaving Captain Tom to keep ship or go ashore rl lived in Kingston, and early in the evening had The the theater of generates at the first American port. | the nightdInanch | butit is on recorq that Dunkitre Satu was the first to sneak ‘*Mighty fine rooster - Shanghai. too.’ he said aay ‘ P ** Niceand fat. remar ke 1 Bill Tubbs tor Ine’ enna . t, +1 } t nin juare the other way. thi put ting temptation behind him Why cLIs¢ 8 the devion ‘ ? o! criminal thoughts thr ugh the dorbt } at ’ . . a. a 1 tears of LYonCcYriminal brains’? Ter rrw slieit ] ] tarry QiZits closed around the neck of 1 1» ; ted :as , 4 ? ° , § : 1 the drowsy bird, stifling the indienant outery ove were later remov a tO The stru ne claws, threat ing t Stair ird Jack's ne ishors and three guilty maranders {J lth: the dark: t yy hlin i?) : ; It was blind, illogica} crime for crime’s sake alcne KK Their hunger may have suggested the abduction: the al duction could in no hunger. But this dia not occur to them Guilty fear possessed their cluding other thorghts, even of their empty stomachs With the rooster snugly imprisoned under Starboard Jack's arm, they tum- bled over the Alma’s rail and down the forecastle stairs, unheeding the tirade of reproach launched at them by Cap- tain Tom. Here a hurried confab re- sulted in the raising of the trapdoor and the unceremonious bundling of the nearly choked fowl into the inky dark- ness of the fore peak. One protesting squeak arose from the depths. Then they changed their clothes, went up and made sail, meekly taking the scold- ing they had earned, but Captain Tom’s wrath finally gave way to astonishment at their submissiveness, and he desisted, for they had given him not one word of *‘back talk.’’ How could they? Captain Tom Tucker was a Lake Erie navigator and had brought his little schooner down to glean some of the lucrative barley trade of the lower lake. Knowing nothing of Lake Ontario, he had secured a mate who did, and this was enough—for summer sailing at least. He had no use for charts—would not have one aboard—or any other salt water methods. He believed in carry- ing courses and distances in his head, where he could get at them when needed. An heur after the mate had given the course up the north shore and turned in, the fog shut down, moist and thick, blotting out the patch of blacker darkness that loomed up as land to the northward and making the voice of Dunkirk Sam. heaving the Way satisfy thei souls, ex- lead at the request of the anxious cap- tain, sound hoarse and resonant as he called out, ‘‘No bottom ”’ Captain Tucker wished, not for a chart, bat that he knew that shore bet- ter and, not caring to call the mate, took his stand at the weather bow, tooting the fog horn and straining sight and hearing into the wet blanket ahead. The wind was off the land at an angle which just allowed Bill Tubbs at the wheel to lay his course, In his bunk in the forecastle was Starboard Jack, making the best he could of his watch below, and beneath him, be it remembered, was the confis- cated rooster. Either his conscience or his empty stomach or the fog horn: above kept Starboard Jack awake, and | he rolled out to enjoy the usual sailor’s relief from insomnia-—-he lighted his pipe. It was not daylight, nor time for it, and the occupant of the fore peak had no legitimate right or reason to think so, but, he was, no doubt, rather upset by the night’s adventure and his pow- ers of discernment unequal to the task of distinguishing between daylight and the flicker of a lighted match showing through the chinks in the forecastle floor. Or it may be that he understood and merely expressed approval of the light shed on his darkness. He gave vent to a hearty, long drawn crow, which, reaching the ears of Captain Tom on the weather bow, muffled and indistinct, seemed to him to come from the lee side, where there should be noth- ing but open water. ‘“‘Great snakes, where are we?’’ he shouted. ‘‘Hear that, Dunkirk? Did you hear it? Light up the jib sheets. Hard-a-lee. There’s land over there.’”’ Around went the little vessel. Star- board Jack heard with dismay the sounds beneath and above and started up to forestall any further mischief by honest confession, but the sight of Dun- kirk Sam’s round face, shaking with silent, unholy glee as he peered down the hatch during the transit from jib sheet to jib sheet, sent him back. Dun- kirk Sam returned to the lead, while Captain Tom tooted the horn from the weather bow, now, of course, the other side. When a lonely rooster begins to crow, it is hard to guess when he will stop. The schooner had been skimming along straight for the shore for five minutes, and Dunkirk Sam had just called out, ‘‘Mark 20, hard bottom,” when Captain Tom distinctly heard an- other rooster—not the first; they were leaving that astern. This one was on the lee bow, as before, but in another direction. “Oh, my good Lord,” he groaned, ‘‘where in Sam Hill are we—barnyards all round—we’re goin up some river. Hard up, Bill,”’ he yelled. ‘‘Hard up. Slack off the main sheet an get her ’fore the wind.” He ran aft to look at the compass and call the mate if necessary, waving his long arms and shouting. Dunkirk Sam jerked the lead inboard and sped to the forecastle hatch. ‘“‘Starboard!’’ he called in a hoarse whisper, ‘‘you awake?’’ ‘What?’ our full-sized Linen Doylies at mail your watch free. Unsold Doylies seturnabdle. j Wring his neck; the old man’s goin daft. He near beached her. Dunkirk Sam’s sense left him when his lead reached bottom. Captain Tom steadied his vessel due southeast and had partially recovered his wits, when from straight abead he heard another rooster. The misguided fowl in the fore peak had proclaimed his third defiance just as Starboard Jack raised the trapdoor to descend upon him. Lond and clear came the elaz ion note to the ears of the perplexed skipper, to Whom it seemed not tl lengths ahead ‘‘Hard down,”’ he avinnine ih. a; ie grinning Bill: ‘‘hard dx snarled to the Wh, nan; ’ “Chicken thieves, that wheel what you langhin at? He seized the spokes and ground the wheel over scoundrels, ingrates.’ with We're goin ashore; Down with it!’’ (to be continued) Tortured by i= Itching almost driven Insane. Instant Relief in Dr. A. W. Chase’s Ointment One of the most distressing symptoms ima- ginable is the almost unbearable itching which is an accompaniment of Leucorrhea or whites. The nerves are irritated by the poisonous dis- charge, and the result is an itching which is only rendered more excruciating by rubbing or scratching. Especially at night, when the body is warm, the patient is tormented beyond the powers of human endurance. Sleep or rest is out of the question. Nervouswess, irritability and dese pondency are a natural result. In these offices there are on the file thou- sands of letters from grateful women who have found in Dr. Chase’s Ointment a quick and certain cure for this itching to which women are subject. During the expectant period many women suffer similar agony from itching of the parts, or itching piles, which are absolutely cured by Dr. Chase’s Ointment. The first application of this great ey of Dr. A. W. Chase will afford prompt relie At all dealers- or Edmanson, Bates & Ca., Toronto. fn —— em —— ’ This beautiful little 47BS : Lady's Watch for eyo selling 3 doz. of 10 cents each. Fine Boy's 4 Watch for selling 2 doz. Latest and prettiest designs; sell at sight. Ne Money Required. Simply write and we send Ylies postpaid. Sell them, return money, and we LINEN DOYLEY CO. DEPT. _ », TORONTO DANCING ccooe AND... PHYSICIAL CULTURE. PROWSE BLOCK, SUNAYSIDE Miss H. C. Macdorald’s select School cpens for the season, October ord, Afternoon and» evening classes now ferming. Just time for one term before Rink opens. Choice of days to tnose who come first. Ar- rangements can be made for private classes and private lesscns on #f plic— ation. 233 dtf srasnsamsnibetenaaecnseseaainenessansncenesaseaesnny <meta —_— —____—__-__--—. —-- EVENING GLASSES For You Will be opened on the 16th inst., at the Charlottetown Business College and Writing Academy, where inetructions will be given in Book-Keeping, Bueinets Pract ice, Correspondence, Business Penman- ship, Practical Arithmetic, Shorthand and Typewriting. Classes ogen from 7.309 to 930 p. m. Five sessions per week. Enter a. any time but NOW ie the best. Students may study any branches de~ sired. Individual iastructions given by the following teachere:—J Harry Will- iams (Penmanship); Wm Moran, Licensed Teacher of Phonography; AC McMullae, (Licensed). L. B. MILLER, Principal Apply at College for partizulars. eee a of humor had { three Gown | ray AP Pan cs : a ae a te . > . s n - : ~ ‘ - . : ‘ >} , _ > ¢ oot 3S y . Ae = 4 “ : we ‘ a aoe , ol a : ‘e Y — ~— AD ; y ij Ls f A rs <a re wey me J p Ne > ee | = ts - aw . ‘4 ye es _ - poet A a -. a : J . . on my . i = ba ¥ om Pn 4 nd ~ ar = - ‘ee Ke Sa. 4. rr - phate fom See cn of x? Py fy a BOVRIL is a combination of all the nutritious constituents of Fresh Jean beef with the Stimulating properties of Extract of Meat. BOVRIL is infinitely more nourishing than Extract of Meat or Home Made Beef Tea. LADIES’ COATS New Goods Coming =— Daily to Band TY "TLV W 9 ¥ SLEN’S (APS LADIES’ HATS Men's Lice A gcod range difierent weights, including Stanfield’s Urchrinkeble. Lvca@r T.JHARRIS, LOND N Ht Usk THE GREAT BAZAAR DAYS! 16th, 17th, 18th, 19th. Extraordinary Sale “——— Great ieduction in Prices on Bazaar Days Ready made Clothing in Overcoats, U!sters, Reefers and Suits, Underclothing, Hats and Cap:, Dry Goods and Boots and Shoes, Farmersand then families visiting the city on Bazaar Days, will have an opyortunity of buying their wants at greatly rednced prices. Speciol low fares by rail to the Bazaar. Special low prices for our goods on Baziar Days. Come in and see J B Macdonald & Cc ' LEADERS IN LOW PRICE é eres a ; ee ee A 6 RL Rm a se ORNS sateen gg ey mn Nt te RECUR Ata a peers corti