dag ete... SEP BLUNT : ig.” 4H “tara mty sata aH ga i syne: ih H..di @ yee want a horve werth S100, pews be sily te pay $100 for his photo on if you need DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS you'd be silly to buy an imitation. DODD'S ARE = - -_ LIKE THIS, D-O-D-D2S GRAND Provincial Bazaar —- IN AID OF THE— AEW ST. CUNSTAN’S CATHEDRAL —-TO BE CPENE)) IN THE— Cathecral Basement Hall, Ch'town —on — Monday Evening, October 16th at eight o’clock, and to be continue on Tues. Wed. Thur. and Fri. Oct. 17th, 18th, 19th & 20th A cordial invitat‘on tendered to every man, woman and childin the Province. Ample room tor every person who attends Excel] lent meais provided for all visitors. Select musical enterta oments every even ing by the League of the Crosse Band (New $600 cet ofei.ver instruments), and ot her sources of amusement, Come one— Come a! Cheap Excursion Tickets to the City wil} be issued at all stations on TUES: DAY, GCT. 17th, good to return on same and following day; anc againon THURS DAY, OCT. 19th, good to return on same and tollowing day, at the following RED- UCED RATES, from al) stations between Tignich and Piusville, inclusive $1 25 Bloomfield and Portage = 115 Conway aod Richmond .... «sec. 952 Wellington and St. Ele;wnore....... 85> Summerside and Freetown ... ‘ 75: Emerald and Fredricton. a Clyde and North Wilts bire.. escreee 45c Colville and Loyalist............. 35¢ Cape Traverse and Kinkora....... 75c Sourie and Bear River......... saaeinedt 5c Rollo Bay and Midgell................. 75¢ Msrie and Douglaze.............- 60c St. Andrews and Tracatie............ 45¢ Bedford and Suffolk.............. 352 BGs okbs Ciaze rides - b4neeeess . 260 Union. od ap th» dete» akon ae 20c Georgetown and ‘Perth... Lsedics Ske | On 48 Road and Peake’s..:. ........ - 60s PiSqurid ...c0 oss vecsces-.e0e oa Passengers holding Reilway Tickets will be required to have them stamped by the Bazaar Committe, beforethey w ll be boncured for return on the trains. By order of committee. THOMAS DRISCOLL, 222—tu, thur, eat &w Secretary a NADIAN PACIFIC KY. LOW RATE EXCURSIONS - FROM— '@." CHARLOTTETOWN, P.E.I satin < Sept, 28th, 29th, 30th Oct. 2nd & 3rd For round trip tickets to MONTRE AL $13.30) On Sept 9 th: 29th and th, Round Trip Tickets to seccse Guna $16.80 " | a $23 30 N 24.65 Chicag $29 65 lestina~ 16th, POF ULAR ROUTE 1S : ; 4 i! fis Te J 1q)] ny, Co’iown, P El crc ee rr to | wouldn’t have gone with him.” | effects. When a man ’s digestion is dis eee his hin ver sluggish, his bowels i: tive, the blood is ‘aeoted of the proper food elements, and the sluggish liver ind ; : Me, bowels supply in their place, the t of isons. The biood 1s the life-strea Wi is full of foul poisons, it carries and deposits them in every organ and tis- Gt : ] ; | 76 . iuscle - ii t i he fibres are all fed upon bad, pois onous food Si ill-health is bound to result ie : ‘ atened rv fiber of his b man is weakened in every fib f hi ; t . ; a ghecically mentally and He is weakened plhysicaliy, mentai i +4 TY oo n ° 4 ‘ ; a distress in stomach after meals, giddiness siness, loss of D, had taste in the mouth, shakiness in the morning, and dullness througno y, and lassitude and an indisp« siti yn to wi rk Ss f r late these conditions develop , rvous w emtrati sn, m an ria Cc ? > : . : 4 ° G n Me al Discove ‘ 1 vn medicines for amt n id women : : ; t nich nd ricl . } iicines are C ers. (Continued.) “ft doesn’t make all that difference you,” he said roughly. ‘You She turned her face to him for a mo- ment. She did not look her best; how could she? But Mr. Byers did not no- tice that. ‘I love him, and I wanted to do it.”’ 3yers bad ‘‘wanted to doit,’’ too, and their desires had clashed. But in his desire there had been no alloy of love; it was all true metal, true metal of self. He stood over her for a minute without speaking. A strange feeling seized him then; he had felt it once before with regard to this woman. “If it had been for you, I'd have blanked the money and gone ahead,’ he blurted out in an indistinct, impetu- ous utterance. Again she lcoked up. There was no surprise, no resentment, in her face, only a_ heartbreaking plaintiveness. “Oh, why couldn’t you be hunest with me?’’ she moaned. But she stopped sob- bing and sat straight on the sofa again. ‘“*You’ll think me still more of a fool for doing this,’’ she said. Was the abuse never coming? Mr Byers began to long for it. If he were abused enough, he thought that he might be able to find something to say for himself. ‘“*You think that because—because I live as I do I know the world, and— and so on. I don’t a bit. It doesn’t fol-° low really, you know. Fancy my think- ing I could do anything for Julian| What do I know of business? Well, you've told me now!” “If it had been for you, I’d have risked it, and gone ahead,’’ said Byers again. “I don’t know what you mean by that,’’ she murmured vaguely. Byers did not try to describe to her the odd, strong impulse which had inspired his speech. ‘‘I must go and tell the prince about it,”” she said. ‘‘What are you going to do?’’ he de- manded. ‘*‘Do? What is there to do? Nothing, I suppose. What can we do?”’ “IT wish to God I’d—I’d met a wom- an like you! Shall you marry him now ?”’ She looked up. A faint smile ap- peared on her face. ‘**Yes,’’ she said. now, and he’ll like it. him now.”’ Two visions—one was of Mrs. Byers and the babies in Portland place—rose before Byers’ thoughts. ‘‘He hasn't lost much, then,’’ he said. ‘‘And you? You'll be just as happy ?”’ **It was the whole world to me,”’ said she. and for the last time she put her handkerchief to her eyes. Then she stowed it away in her pocket and looked expectantly at her visitor. Here was the permission to go. ‘*Will you take the money ?”’ “What money?’ “Whet I've made—my share of it.’ —_—_—_—_—_—__—— —— - - = = **it doesn’t matter Yes, I'll marry said he. It is teaiestlio admirabie when a man, by dint of sheer will, wrings a for- tune from niggardly circumstances. The world is full of instances where men have done tkis, but never in ““@ history was this accomplished $ by a weak and unhealthy man. Ill-health <e- not only weakens every physical function but ev- Cery mental fac- ulty and every moral quality. If a man will stop and reason for a mom: nt, he does no a physician to understand the have to be causes of i ~ blood, or its far-re: achi ng Gur, Se us By Soke OD. GO ~ Oo epee eee ow ——— | the marriage of Prince Julian. THE Dally EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, OCTOBER 4 1839 KAY CT ORS S30 “Oh, don’t be silly! What dol care what money you've made?’ He spoke lower as he put his second question. ‘‘Will you forgive me?’’ he asked. ‘Forgive you?’’ She laughed a little, yet looked puzzled. ‘‘I didn’t think about you like that,’’ she explained. ‘*Yon’re not a man to me.”’ ‘*You’re a woman to me. I to you, then?’’ ‘I don’t know. Things in general— the world—bvsiness—the truth about myself. Yes, you’re the truth about myself to me.’’ She laughed again nervously, tentatively, almost appeal- ingly, as though she wanted him to un- derstand how he seemed to her. He drew in his breath and buttoned his coat. ‘‘And you’re the truth about myself to me,’’ he said. ‘‘And the truth is that I'ma miserable scoundrel. ”’ ‘‘Are you?’ she asked, as it seemed half in surprise, half in indifference. *‘Oh, I suppose you’re no worse thap other people! Only I was such a fool. Goodby, Mr. Byers.’’ She held out her hand. He had not meant to offer his. But he took hers and pressed it. He had a vague desire to tell her that he was not a type of all humanity; that other men were better than he was; that there were unselfish men, true men, men who did not make fools, for mon- ey’s sake, of women; yes, of women whose sboes they were not worthy to black. But he could not say anything of all this, and he left her without an- other word. And the next morning he bought the ‘‘call’’ of a big block of the stock; for the news of Prince Julian’s marriage with Mrs. Rivers would send itup a point or two. Habit is very strong. When he was gone, Mrs. Rivers went up stairs to her room and bathed her face. Then she rejoined Prince Julian in the library. Weary of waiting, he had gone to sleep, but he woke up and was rejoiced to see her. He listened to her story, called Nr. Byers an infernal rogue and, with an expression of relief on his face, said: ‘‘There’s the end of that! darling’’ “*Yes, Ill marry you now,”’ ‘*It doesn’t matter now.’”’ Thus, as has been said, the whole af- fair had only three obvious effects—the renovation of Lady Craigenoch’s town house, a baronetcy for Sir Henry Shum (services to the party are a recognized claim cn the favor of her majesty) and But from it both Mrs. Rivers and Mr. Byers derived some new ideas of the world and of themselves. Shall women weep and hard men curse their own work without result? The temple of truth is not a national institution. So, of course, one pays to goin. Even when you are in, itis difficult to look at more than one side of it at once. Perhaps Mrs. Rivers did not realize this, and Mr. Byers could not while he seemed still to hear her crying. He heard the sobs for so many evenings, mingling oddly with the click of his wife’s knitting needles. What am And now, she said. And Ruaes It. ‘(Do you approve of coeducational schools?’’ asked the father of three live- ly boys. “‘Oh, they have their advantages and their disadvantages, of course,’’ said the person to whom he appealed. ‘‘I judge from your course with Harold that you are in favor of the system. Professor James tells me he is a very bright scholar.’”’ ‘‘Perhaps so,’’ said the father doubt- fully. ‘‘But I had a little conversation with Harold yesterday that stays in my mind. I said pleasantly to him. ‘Harold, somebody told me the other day that the girls and boys at Codman hall were better known for caricatures and puns than for scholarship.’ ‘* ‘Oh,’ said Harold, ‘that all comes of the story that’s leaked out about the eketch made on the blackboard by Ann Drew ; An n drew Andrew Andrews and rues it!’ ’’—Youth’s Companion. Morgan’s Riflemen. The rifle corps which Morgan formed from marksmen from the whole Revo- lutio: lary army is usually Tr ferred. to as **‘Morgan’s eee ns,”’ but, as a | matter of fact, two-thirds of them were | Pennsy i incinding: a consider- | able number of Pt BR ylvania Germans | One of the latter, 5, auk, who was with Morgan from ‘the acini ts the end of the war, was the last survivor of the corns. Once, when Morgan waa I 9 att Side Lights ov History. The mole connecting the mainland with the island on which that mighty city Tyre had stood invulnerable for centaries was at last complete, and Alexander the Great was overseeing ia person the work of the great battering rams that had been placed in position and were thundering against the walls of the bi leaguered c1lty ‘Your majesty,’’ said a flunky. re spectfa lly touching his pasteboard hel- met, ‘‘dinner is served in the royal tent.” ‘*i shalleat nodinner,’’ replied Alex- ander, with a look of noble resolve on his youthful but majestic face have punctured the enemy's Tyre Ont of this incident grew the custorn of alluding to Tyre as the Windy C.ty a title that has come down with twe ages. —Chicago Tribune. Resentment, ‘“‘Clementine awfully fout.*” ‘She is?’’ ‘Yes; she quit speaking to me be- cause she dreamed J said a whole lot of mean things alout her.’’—Chicage Record. is matter of (to be continued) SALT RURUM TORTURES Die away before the magical effect of Dr. Chase’s Ointment The tortures of Salt Rheum are almost be- yond human endurance, and as the flesh be- comes raw, and the itching and burning increase, the suffering is so intense as to elmost drive one crazy. In desperation saives and ointments are applied, only to give rise to further disappoint- gent and despair. But there is hope. ‘There is assurance that you can be cured just aS scures and hundreds of others have been by using Dr, Chase's Ointment. Mr John Siron, of Aultsville, Ont., writes: “For seven years ] was a sufferer from Salt Rheum, and my hands were so bad I had to wear greased gloves. Nothing seemed to help me, but | was induced to try Dr Chase's Oint- ment, and one box cured me completely, Vhere is not a trace of the Salt Rheum left.” Dr. Chase's O:ntaent has effectec most miraculous cures in all parts of this great Dominion. Could vou have better assurance r sale by all dealers. ec . Toronto. leure you? Fx nenr, Teot3o: &€C thar it wi THE WEEK'S GROCERIES ag = Perhaps you would like to get a little more for what you spend. Perhaps you would like to have everything fiesh and nice. If you will try my store I think you will find that your money will go farther. And all the groceries you get will be good and fresh. JOHN McKENNA. QUEEN ST. GROCER CHARLOTTETOWN = School of Music . Harry Warts, DIRECTOR Fall term opens September 5th. Students recommencing will kindly call at the studio or write, notifying the Director of date of recommence- ment Vacancies for a limited number of new students. Studio thours, 9 09 pm ain to 12;2p m to ral 0 Si. Duastan’s College Uiessical and eumufeesial AFFILIATED TO LAVAL UNIVERSITY in St. Dunstan’s will be resumed on TU ESDAY, Sep tember nex’. 1} 2 clasees Colleg } 9 the 12the Ea Sept ilth 1899 ¥ ‘ } : Ried } For further particulars apply to oF Sol > A. P. McLELLAN, Rector St Dunstan’e Cc lege, Ch’town, Ang 30, 99 comedic a. ¥ ? ; £f0OR RENT. The aubeckiies ies 4k or is re nee orner of Hillsb orough apd ih tmond Stree rhe house contains tengroom 3 ‘urnish- ed ith electri light ahd fitted with barn, etc., onne cled with the ynariotteto wn Se werage Ys ster Possession given at unce to eae a 7 a Ty f SS SANS . <TTK : Rv ERE mt 4. AAS SNNANANY ants amd Childri for Oil, Syrups, Castoria is fi Cast fy - harmless subs nia as OP and Morphine nor te Castor Svothine Ti contains neith« Opium, as other Narcotic substanee. It is Pleasant. ’ Its guarantee is thirty years’ use by Milliens of ts Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays Castoriz curves Diarrhos. and Wind Colic. Castoria Troubles, cures Constipation and Castoria assimilates the Food, regulates Stomachse" Bowels of Infants and Children, giving and macturai sleep. : Feverish=- hess. relieves Tecthing iatulency. he § healthy Castoria is the Children’s q Panacea—The Mother’s Friend, { Castoria. Castoria. “Castoria i an exoxitedit medicine for) ‘*Castoria Is so well adap ted to childrem 3 Mothers have repeatedly oot me | that [ recommend it as superior to any pre scription known to me.”’ H. A. ARCHER, M. D. Brooklyn, N. ¥ children. oi its good effect WR their chil¢ren.’ Dr. G. C. OsGoov, Lowell, Mass. THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OF iS @ APPEARS ON EVERY WRAPPER. ia THE CONTAUR Sears 77 MURRAY STREET, NEw YORK CITY. PLATE. GLASS ij PLATE GLASS INSURANCE i CITY -HARDWARE- STORE | We are agents for the DOMINION PLATE GLASS INSURANCE CO Don’t run the risk of having to replace broken plate glass when you cau have it attended to for a trifle. We buy and sell plate Plate G'ass, all sizes. carry a full line of Builder’s and General Hardware at the CITY HARD.- tS WARE STORE. | R. B. NORTON & CO. LTD iE & a ——? a —— New Goods Coming =—Daily to Hand LADIES’ HATS HATS, g cars| i . ‘ Men’s Underwoar | A good range ae LADIES COATS difierent weights, u { including i Stanfield’s Unehrinkahie. 9 & T.J HARRIS, wens KILL THE BUG ! | ACyclonelnsect Destroyer Pe NRC mea r Parl at Berger's EnglishParis Green. ——FOR SALE—— JHOLESALE & RETAIL Crabbe HARDWAR Simon W. TT \ UF} S e.. Ww Wiaker's Corner ~