ws ’ DODDS DODD'S) ~~ ~ / SUatReeee teeta eeesseeoeceeeseses él S recu BRIGHTS DIAGETES D-O-D-D:S DODD’ . KI NEY PILLS, the only positive, never-failing cure, on earth, for all Kidney diseases, Take No Other. Get the (lenuine. Refuse Imitations. c— There's Valy One Dodé’a — ee GRAND Provincial Bazaar N AID OF -_-- THE— NEW ST. CUNSTAN'S CATHEDRAL —TO BE OCPEX ED IN THE— Cathecral Basement Hall, Ch’town Monday Evening, October {6th at eight o’clock, and tu be continued on Tues. Wed. Thur. and Fri. Oct. 17th, 18th, 19th & 20th A cordial] invitation tendered to every man, woman and chi'din the Province. Ample room tor every person who atterds ent meais prov: ded for all visitors. Select mut.cal enterta nments every even iog by the weague of the Crosse Band (New $600 set of si,ver instruments), aud other sources of amusement. Come one— Come all. Cheap Excursion Tickets to the City will be issued at all stations on TUES- DAY, OCT. 17th, gooi to réturo on sam- and foliowing day; and again on THURS- DAY, OCT. 19.h, good to return on same and following day, at the following RED- Excei UCED RATES, ‘from a!! stations between Tignish and Piusville, inclusive $1 25 Bloomfield and Portage 115 Conway and Richmond... sec... 952 Wellington and St. Eleanora.... 85> Summerside and Freetown ........... 75¢ Emerald and Fredrictoo.......eeeeeeeee 60€ Clyde and North Wiltshire aay Oe Colville and Loyaliet............ - w6c Cape Traverse and Kiakora....... 75c Souris and Bear River.........scccerses 5c Rollo Bay and Midge} 75¢ Msrie and Douglaas.............. 60c St. Andrews and Tracadie 45c Bedford and Suffolk.............. 35e York $06 Heres Se oon cde tee eseour . 25¢ TONE cies st ciinenahait cabtinka d caw ae Georgetown and Pertb............ 75¢ 48 Road and Peake’s.... .......- - 60c Pitquid..... ee ee eee 45c Passengers holding Railway Tickets will be required to have them stamped by the Bazaar Comwitte, before they will be boncured for return on the trains. By order of committee. THOMAS DRISCOLL, 222—tu, thur, eat &w Secretary PAP NPT YS a ACIFIC KY. LOW RATE EXCURSIONS — FROM— CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E.'I Sept. 2seiiloth 30th 2nd & 3rd * Oct. For round win t ckets to MONTREAL $13.30 Qn Sept. 28th, 29th and vUth, Round Trip Tickets to Ctiawa, Ont.,............$16.80 Toronto, Out » I ; Detriot, Mich., }..........$23.30 Port Huron} i Nigara Falls, Uot.,...,.. $24.65 Chicago, li).... reves. $29.65 ; ticketa good to return leaving destina- top up to and including October 16th, 11899, { THE POPULAR ROUTEIS anadian Pacific Railway VIA, ST. JOHN. For rates to other points callon any ticket ageDtin Maritime Provinces, or write, 4. J. HEATH, Diet. Passr. Agent, CPR St. John, N. B. JOHN 9 HYNDMAN, Soliciting Agent © P R.., Ch’town, P EI | THE DAiLY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, SEPTEMBER 29 1895, The affair had three obvious results the marriage of Prince Julian, Sir Henry Shum’s baronetcy and the com- plete renovation of Lady Craigenoch’s town house. Its other effects, if any, were more obscure. By accident of birth and of political events Prince JuliageWas a pretender, one of several gentlemen who occupied that position in regard to the throne of an important European country. Bya necessity of their natures Messrs. Shum & Byers were finaficiers. Thanks toa fall in rents and a taste for speculation, | Lady Craigenoch was hard put to it for | money and had become a good friend —— ' and ally of Mr. Shum. Sometimes he allowed her to put a finger in one of his pies and draw out a little plum for herself. Byers, hearing one day of his partner’s acquaintance with Lady Craigenoch, observed, ‘‘She might in- troduce us to Prince Julian.’’ Shum asked no questions, but obeyed. That was the way to be comfortable and to grow rich if you were Mr. Byers’ part- ner The introduction was duly effect- ed. The prince wondered vaguely, al- most ruefully, what these men expect- ed to get out of him. Byers asked him- self quite as dolefully whether anything could be made out of an indolent, ar- tistic, lazy young man like the prince. Pretenders such as he served only to buttress existing governments. “Yes,’’ agreed Shum. ‘‘Besides, he’s entangled with that woman.” ‘‘Is there a woman?” asked Byers **T should like to know her.”’ So, on his second visit to Palace Gate, Mr. Byers was introduced to the lady who was an inmate in Prince Julian’s house, but was not received in society Lady Craigenoch, however, opining, justly enough, that since she had no girls she might know whom she pleased, had called on the lady and was on friendly terms with her. The lady was named Mrs. Rivers and was under- stood to be a widow. ‘‘And surely one needn't ask for his death _ certificatel’’ pleaded Lady Craigenoch. Byers, as he took tea in Mrs. Rivers’ boudoir, was quite of the same mind. He nursed his square chin in his lean hand and regarded his host- ess with marked attention. She was handsome—that fact concerned Byers very little; she was also magnificently self confident—that trait roused his in- terest in amoment. He came to see her more than once again, for now an idea had begun to shape itself in bis brain. He mentioned it to nobody, least of all to Mrs. Rivers. But one day she said to him, with the careless contempt that he admired “If I had all your money, I should do something with it.” ‘*Don’tI?’’ he asked, half liking, half resenting, her manner ‘Oh, you make more money with it. 1 suppose.” She paused for a moment, and then, leaning forward, began to discuss Eu- ropean politics with esnecial reference to the condition of affairs in Prince ~s This is the picture of a man who ig healthy, clear- headed, success- ful and impartial —Lord Herschell, the Ex-Lord Chancellor of England. You may be very sure /m--@ ~. his blood is pure. ¢ , The man who e , suffers from im- pure blood isn’t likely to achieve eminence in any walk of life. You cannot pump im- pure blood inte the brain, and ex- ect the brain to be active and keen. If you feed the brain tells on impure blood, you are sure to have weak, sluggish brain cells. If you pump bad blood into the lungs, you will have weak lungs. Pump bad blood into the liver, and the result is torpidity of the liver’ Feed the heart on impure blood, and the consequence is a weak heart. Nourish the skin with impure blood, and the result is all manner of unsightly skin diseases. The best of all known blood purifiers is Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. It Makes the appetite hearty, the digestion perfect, the liver active and fills the arteries with the rich, red blood of health. It is the great blood-maker and flesh-builder. It cures all forms of eruptive skin diseases. It cures 98 per cent. of all cases of con- sumption. It cures bronchitis, weak lungs, spitting of blood, obstinate coughs and kindred ailments. It gives vigor and health to the muscles and activity to the brain. Thousands have testified to the benefits derived from the use of this wonderful medicine. All medicine stores sell it. Mrs. Ella Howell, of Derby, Perry Co., Ind., writes: ‘In the year of 1894, I was taken with stomach trouble—nervous dyspepsia. There was a coldness in my stomach and a weight which seemed like a rock. Everything that 1 ate gave me great pain; I had « bearing down fensation: was swelled across my stomach; had a ridge around my right side, and in a short time I was bloated. I was treated by three of our best physicians but got no relief. I was so : could not walk across the room without assis tance. I took Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis covery and one bottle of the ‘ Pleasant Pellets. I began to improve very fast after the use of s few bottles. It cured me and thank God my a. 3 en - - suie is permauent.”’ —_- | Was not SS \ COPY KIGHT, ISSO: BY “A. OO. WAWMORA, eulian’s country. syers iistened 1n s1- lence. She told him much that he knew, a few things which had escaped him. She told him also one thing which he did not believe—that Prince Julian’s indolent airs covered a character of rare resolution and tenacity. She repeated this twice, thereby betraying that she sure her first statement had carried conviction. Then she showed | that the existing government in the | prince’s country was weak, divided, un- popular and poor, and then she ran over the list of rival pretenders and proved how deficient all of them were in the qualities necessary to gain or keepa throne. At this point she stopped and asked Mr. Byers to take a second cup of tea. He looked at her with interest and amusement in his shrewdeyes. She had all the genius, the native power, with none of the training, none of the knowl- edge, of men. He read her so easily, but | there was a good deal toread. In one point, however, he read her wrongly. Almost the only mistakes he made were due to forgetting the possible existence of unselfish emotion. Prince Julian had plenty of imagina- tion; without any difficulty he imagined himself regaining his ancestral throne, sitting on it in majesty and establish- ing it in power. This vision Mrs. Riv- ers called up before his receptive mind py detailing her conversation with Mr. Byers. ‘‘You want nothing but money to do it,’’ she said. And Byers had money in great heaps; Shum had it, too, and Shum was for present purposes Byers; so were a number of other per- sons, all with money. ‘‘I believe the people are devoted to me in their hearts,’’ said Prince Julian; then he caught Mrs. Rivers by both her hands and cried, ‘‘And then you shall be my queen. ”’ ‘‘Indeed I won’t,”’ said she, and she added almost fiercely: ‘‘Why do you bring that up again now? It would spoil it all.”” For, contrary to what the world thought, Prince Julian had offer- ed several times to marry the lady who was not received or visited, except of course by Lady Craigenoch. Stranger still, this marriage was the thing which the prince desired above all things, for failing it he feared that some day, owing to a conscience and other consid- erations, Mrs. Rivers would leave him, and he really did not krow what he should do then. When he imagined himself on his ancestral throne, Mrs. Rivers was always very near at hand; ~hether actually on the throne beside him or just behind it was a point he was prone toshirk. At any cost, though, she must be very near. As time went on there were many meetings at Palace Gate. The prince, Mr. Shum and Lady Craigenoch were present sometimes. Mrs. Rivers and Byers were never wanting. The prince’s imagination was immensely stimulated in those days. Lady’s Craigenoch’s love for a speculation was splendidly indulg- ed. Mr. Shum’s cautious disposition re- ceived terrible shocks. Mrs. Rivers dis- cussed European politics, the attitude of the church and the secret quarrels of the cabinet in Prince Julian’s country, and Byers silently gathered together all the money of his own and other peo- ple’s on which he could lay hands. He was meditating a great coup, and just now and then he felt a queer touch of remorse when he reflected that his coup was so very different from the coup to which Mrs. Rivers’ disquisitions and the prince’s vivid imagination invited him. But be believed in the survival of the fittest, and, although Mrs. Rivers was very fit, he himself was just by a little bit fitter still) Meanwhile the government in the prince’s country faced its many difficulties with much boldness and seemed on the whole safe enough. The birth and attributes of rumor have often engaged the attention of peets. Whocan doubt that their rhet- oric would have been embellished and their metaphors multiplied had they possessed more intimate acquaint- ance with the places where money is bought and sold? For in respect of awakening widespread interest and af- fecting the happiness of homes what is the character of any lady, however highborn, conspicuous or beautiful, compared with the character of a stock? Here indeed is a field for calumny, for innuendo, for bints of frailty, for whis- pers of intrigue, for scandal mongers have their turn to serve, and the hold- ers are swift to distrtigt. When some- body writes Sheridam’s comedy anew, let him lay the scene of it in a bourse. Between his slandereq stock and his elandered dame he may work out avery pretty and fanciful parallel. Here, however, the facts can be set down only plainly and prosafcally. Op all the exchanges there arose a feeling of uneasiness respecting the stock of the government of Prince Julian's coun- (to be continued) i bit RICKEST UE LHEUVENANT (ul ii | } ILI By RUDYARD KIPLING. (Continued.) ‘eara any one to touch this ere ‘orfi- ’ They were not angry with him. They rather admired him. They had some beer at the refreshment room and offered Golightly some, too, because he had ‘‘swore won'erful.’’ They asked him to tell them all about the adven- tures of Private John Binkle while he was loose on the countryside, and that made Golightly wilder than ever. If he ae had kept his wits about him, be would | have kept quiet until an officer came. ' but he attempted to run. Now, the butt of a Martini in the | small of your back hurts a great deal and rotten, rain soaked khaki tears easily when two men are jerking at your collar. Golightly rose from the floor feeling very sick and giddy, with his shirt rip- ped open all down his breast and nearly alldown his back. He yielded to his | luck, and at that point the down train from Lahore came in, carrying one of Golightly’s majors. This is the major’s evidence in full: ‘*There was the sound of a scuffle in the second class refreshment room, so I went in and saw the most villainous loafer that I ever set eyeson. His boots and breeches were plastered with mud and beer stains. He wore a muddy white dunghill sort of thing on his head and it hung down in slips on his shoul- ders, which were a good deal scratched. He was half in and half out of a shirt as nearly in two pieces as it could be, and he was begging the guard to look at the name on the tail of it. Ashe had rucked the shirt all over his head, I couldn't at first see who he was, but I fancied that he was a man in the first stage of D. T. from the way he swore while he wrestled with his rags. When he turned round, and I had made allow- ances for alump as big as a pork pie over one eye and some green war paint on the face and some violet stripes round the neck, I saw that it was Go- lightly. He was very glad to see me,” said the major, ‘‘and he hoped I would not tell the mess about it. I didn’t, but you can, if you like, now that Golightly has gone home.”’ Golightly spent the greater part of that summer in trying to get the cor- poral and the two soldiers tried by court martial for arresting an ‘‘officer and a gentleman.”’ They were, of course, very sorry for their error. But the tale leaked into the regimental can- teen and thence ran about the province. ee eee The (~HARM OF =C BEAUTY Not in the Features so much as in the Grace and Vitality of a Healthy Body--Dr. A. W. Chase’s Nerveand Blood Pills make Women Beautiful. There's a certain charm of beauty in the graceful, elastic movement and clear come plexion of a healthy woman in which the feae tures do not play an important part. The pale, sallow complexion and dull leaden color of the skin, dark circles under the eyes, headaches, pains in the back and sides, duil eyes, weakness, nervousness, despondency and low spirits are symptoms of weak, watery blood and im properiy-nourished nerves, No woman can be beautiful until the blood is enriched and the nerves strengthened. Dr. A. W. Chase’s Nerve Food is a food for the blood and nerves. Dr. A. W. Chase's Nerve Food restores the energy and strength to a run-down system. Note your weight before using them, and the increase week by week as the brighiness re- turns to the eyes, the coler to the cheeks and the form rounds out with firm, healthy flesh, the natural result of rich, pure blood and a healthy nervous system, Face cut and facsimile signature of Dr. A, W., Chase on every box of the genuine. a a box, all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Teronta C— — Ch’town Steam Navigation Co LIMITED. HALIFAX, N. S. EXHIBITION. From Ch’town via, Picteu, Sept 22 to 28 inclusive. good to return not later than October 2ud for tbe round trip, $5.00. Ou Monday, 25th September. good to return on the 27th; and on Wednerday, 271b, good to returo on the 29.h, for the ound trip, $2.25. F. W. HALES, Secretary Sept 21— a—_- eee a | Dr, H, L Dickey Late of Royal London Ophthalmic Hos pital, Moorfields, and Central Lon- don Throat & Ear Hospital Specialist in diseases of the Eye, Ear, Nose & Throat Otiee—CAnmsnen ew Residence--" HOTEL DA * Office Hours~9.30 to 1 p. m., 2 to 3p. m. ,7 to p. m, Eyes tested for glasses 129 daw WAN TED oe oung man for our Retail Department— =, nave — ee = the dry ere goods business and “good Sees & Os. 12 Si eod The Peoples store we eemnea CNN a % \, mi ie oe SOY Castoria is i ‘ete oes nig. «estat ? ad Put) rer a ’ 2 ph ; oi A erates Oe . “3 . : . , Bs, 2 R ie s : } ve f ; } eR PES " : 4 ANXNNS VAN at — ~ a e A ee tN oh a A 2 8 SCENT NSAAANASAARAAAA SS SORE “v2 . ‘ 1 and Children. Cast 8°: i) for Castor Of], Paregor ~- SOF iF «} Sootinimm raps f monteing neither O F¥2 VED ] bea nIRPAPR bdo dS, , ips. av contains mewemerx pt 5 eee. 4 “To rphine nov cther Narectic substance. It is Pleasant. ie r settara + is thirty ycars’ use by Millions of i ictirers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays Feverish.— : - ness. Castoria curves Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. Castoria EG eves Teetzing TZroubles, cures Constipation and / > latulency. Castceria assimilates the Food, regulates ue . . ‘ . . . ~ tue Stomachtes.t Iiowels of Infants and Children, giving s Leatthy and natura: sleep. Castoria is the Children’s te . : Panacea—The Moether’s Friend. a & ‘ ot 1 Castor... yastorica. ' “Cestoria is au exceli licine for| ‘*Castoria 1s sce weil ad: pted to chil@icem chi’cres Mothers have rej.ca told me | that I recommend it as superior to any grew | or its vod effect upon their ch en.’ | sctiption known to me.” Le Dr. G. C. Oscoon, Lvuedl, Mass. H. A. ARCHER, M. D. Brocklyn, 2. 2 . 1 | ; THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OF § ri ao % > ~ . me | | 2 | e 0 WER A dentist who knows his business, and one ‘that has any regard for his'patients wil] always advise them tohave a metal plate. Pror. Metvitie B. Buckier, Instructor Boston Deotai Col'ege, Boston Mass In view ofthe vast amount ofinjury done to the mouths of wear~ ers of rubber or vulcanite plates, bythe retention of undue heat, owing to the non conductibility of rubber, and as slumium is now 80 cheaply produced, and making as it does a rigid, light, cleanly, un- objectionable plate these seems no reason why anv person should wear a rubber or vulcan'‘2 plate. Not only thie, but betier resulia in fit and adbesion are «4 Stained in difficult .ase¢,iban in the use jf < Cae aR Oe rulber. fe Le Sst D. DP. &. ee Chicag ‘i} Dental Schoo! The above quotations are from hundreas ny eminent dentists o ; whose close observation in many years experience in plate work has learned them the many advantages of metal over rubber. Many persons who ate compelled to wear artificial teeth ona plate find that the ordinary plate causes heating of the mouth, bad taste, sbr nkage of the gums, etc., finally causing the plate to get loose, somctimes sore lips, sore mouths and sore throate, and caused directly from the wearing of an ordinary plate. We recommendca metal plate either of Gold, Platinum, Aluminum. It isa conductor of heat and cold, it is non~irritating, aud is thin. er, lighter, and stronger than any other plate. We have testimonials from persons for whom we have made metel plates—not one would wearan orcinary plate again. You cad have your impression taken, and a meta! plate mad» eame dar, & AS RES fully guaranteed because we make them onrselves, and know al! “3. about the materia: used. Cail and see epecimens of our work. Bo Every piece of work done by us must give entire sati-facstion tothe Zaye 3 patient, else we will not allow itto leave our office. * High « ve See our artificial teeth without plates. OSS ~ Pip» * : > BERLIN DENTAL PARLORS CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. I. ® ~, 1% oe Seah * ~ ot i ll a IMPORTANT i If you have to buy a stove to heut your bath bolier, get a Highland (made in Boston) and have satisfaction. TO THOSE WHO INTEND PUTTING IN SEWERAGE For sale only by é a, PENNELL aso CHANDLE pest eeetesait i. Great rush at P 'AGHAN'SS, Queen St is selling crockery\ @ ware and grocériga * reduced prices,