life is worth it 1s worth ring care of. \ ecklessness coes not pay, either in . work or * ~ te W hen people ; . read of a young i than who has been killed while performm- ing some reck- less feat on a toboggan cr at ~ some other haz- araous sport, ¥ oy their sympathy i ) ¥ ,an/ Jf is mixed with y ' [Sl Wi! ff surprise that VES any human being iss should thus care- ~v SY iessity risk life ’ Sf. There are thon. sands of men wihio are recklessly risking their lives while they t the common every-day avoca- YY} ‘ ene be 1 . ‘ They over-work, they do not take sufficient time from business or labor to eat r rest, or to care for their hea’th. ed nature throws out danger signals, h they pay no heed They sufer yilious or nervous disorders, frorn headache, giddiness, drowsiness, cold flushings of heat, shortness of blotches on the skin, loss of ap- ' uncomfortable sensations in the stomach after meals, loss of sleep, lass ‘and trembling sensations. These are 1dvance symptoms of serious and fatal maladies All disorders of this nature are cured »vw r. Pierce len Medical Discovery. It stores the lost appetite, gives sound and freshing sleep, makes the digestion per- ct, the liver active. It purifies the blood and makes it rich with the life-giving ele. ments of the food It is the great blood. maker and flesh-builder. It makes the body active and the brain keen. It is the best of nerve tonics. Thousands have testified to its merits. No honest dealer will urge upon you a substitute for the little extra profit it may afford The taan or woman who neglects const:- pation is gathering in the system a store of disorders that will culminate in some s Gok rand serious and possibly fatal malady Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are a safe, sttre, speedy and permanent cure for constipa- tion, One little ** Pellet’’ is a gentle laxa- tive, and two a mild cathartic. -—_— = Scott’s Emuision is not a “haby food,’ but is a most excellent food for babies who are not well nourished. A part of a teaspoonful mixed in milk and given every three or four hours, will give the most happy results. The cod-liver oil with the hypophosphites added, as in this palatable emulsion, not only to feeds the child, but also regulates its digestive functions. Ask your doctor about this. 50¢. and $1.00 ; SCOTT & BOWNE, Valuable Property wea" For Sale The subsoriber offers at private sale th at large dwelling .wouse and premises, co osistiag of large barn and ober out houses; situated on the Lower spring Park Road, formerly occupied by the all druggists, Chemists, Toronto lace Mra. Catherine Thorne. This is aa excelleat business stand, and ean be pirchaved at a reasonable figure. Everv-~ thing in first class £4 Scanteed. repair. Good title S. G. THORNE. DB. Island Railway +, and after MONDAY, 27th Dec., 180%, frains of this Railway will ran daily, (Suny ays excepted,) as under, ~ — { ' } Trains Out- oa \Trains I ward. Read STATIONS, jward. Read down, > > M.A M. i om 4 ' 3 10 6 20) _ Charlottetewn oui 2 301 ot 3 50) 6 35)... Royaltv Junction.| 2 16 9 40 417) 7 12). .North Wiltshire. | 1 49 8 68 4 31\ 7 24|., Hunter River. ..} 7 99) 8 43 » 05) 7 51].. Bradalbane...... 10; 80 1 13 7 58)..Emerald.. .... + (12 58) 7 & 16 27| 8 O91, Freetown ....... 12 42) 7 3 5 47) S 25]... Kensington......\j9 941 7 18 & 20) 8 ov th { Lv. 12 00] 6 48 Pi M.IP. M° S’Side - A. 12 50/ Lv. Ar. |10 30 : 1 11), .Miscouche ....../10 10 { 1 37|., Wellington......) 9 47 j 2 19). . Port Fae + suhsen 9 09 } 3 34). .O’Leary....ccoeel 8 OO » OS), , Bloomfield ......] 7 34 ‘ 84 . Avoca ces 6 65 | 5 2). .Tignish .... e+] 6 00 eit i. M ie A. M.] * we) i A. M. - pod |: a a eee ~ 2 jo .. Royalty Junction - saa "Bedford Se abide cf. i4 10) iy} Mt Stewart 2 . a 15 22 .Cardigan....s00. 7 16 45 . Georgetown eeee 7 1 pM. A. Ms P. M. A. M- ; 405). Mt. Stewart ....) 8 55 4 43 Ma dcicccds 817 ! 5 12). St. Petere :....66 748 ; 6 67 1 «Bear River @etede 7 8 : 6 40 + SOuris, oo6 oseeee 8 — P. M,. As N, > M i 5 tbl, eeeeee " 66 | 16 03). Rais A 8 W. A Trains are run by Eastern Staadard Tia: mee THE DAILYEXAMIN®«R, CHARLOTTETOWN MARCH 3, 1898 HUERFANO BILL. By OY WARMAN, {Copyright, 1897, by the Author.] CHAPTER I. The roar and rumble of distant thun- der had been heard in the hills all morning, and along about noon a big black cloud came creeping up over the crest of the continent, listed a little, when a peak of one of the hills caught the Lower corner, ripped it open and let the water out. It didn’t rain; the wa- ter simply fell ont of the cloud and went rushing down the side of the mountain as it rushes off the roof of a house in a hard April shower. The little fissures were filled first, then the gorges, gullies and rough ra- vines, and when these emptied into the countless rills that ran away toward the foot of the range every rill became arushing river. Leaves and brush and fallen trees were borne away on the breast of the flood that grew im volume and increased in speed alarmingly. When all this water came rushing down into the main canyon, the song of the stream that rippled there wags hushed, the bed of the creek was filled with big bowlders that had been rolled down by the floed, and a great river went roar- ing down toward the plain. Up through this narrow, crooked canyon a narrow gauge railroad ran to Silver Cliff. Sil- ver Cliff at one time had 30,000 people, then 8,000, and now not more than 30 people live there unless their business compels them to do so. It produced some silver, a sensational murder, one congressman and petered out. When the flood had gone a mile in the main canyon and picked up eight or ten railrozd bridges and all the cesd timber in the gulch, it presented a roil- ing front 25 feet high and reached from hlil to hill. Great spruce trees were uprooted, the track, with the crossties still hanging to the rails, was ripped up and the rails, bending like baling wire, wound about the rolling debris and clogged the can- yon. Then the welling flood would fill the whole gorge and roll on with such a mass of bridge timber and fallen trees pushed in front of it that you could see no sign of water as the flood bore down upon you, but cnlya tangled mass of rails and ties and twisted trees. A couple of prospectors heard the roar of it and climbed the canyon wall just in time to save themselves, while the little burros, with their packs on their backs, went dowa to a watery grave. Next came a long string of freight teams bringing lumber down from a little mountain sawmill. The rattle and voise of the heavy wagons made it impossible for the freighters to hear the roar of the flood, and, as they were coming down the canyon, they had their backs to it, and so were overtaken in a narrow place. Some of the men, leaping from their wagons, scrambled up the steep hill out of the way of the water, whiie others took to the tall trees, but when the fiood came the stoutest trees in the gulch went down like sunflowers in a cyclone’s path and the luckless freight- ers mingled with the horses and wagons and were washed away. Fortunately for us, we were an hon: late leaving the junction that day and had not yet reached the narrow part of the canyon. The engineer had been watching the black cloud as it came up over the range, and knew we were duc to run into a washout at any moment, ‘The very winds that came down the canyon, fresh and cool, seemed to have water in them. The three day coaches were filled with a heterogeneous herd pushing to the cliff, which, like many other camps, was then posing 2s ‘‘a sec- ond Leadville.’ There were preachers and play actors, miners and merchants, cowboys and confidence men, and here and there gaunt faced girls, with peach- blow complexion and wonderful, im- possible hair, billed for the varicty. Up near the engine the express mes- senger sat ona little iron safe. Upon either hip he wore a heavy six shooter The rifle, slipping from his grasp, shot down into the river. and across his lap lay a winchester rifle. He vas as nearly contented and happy as men may reasonably hope to be on this earth. The refreshing breeze that came to him was sweet with the scent of summer. The hills were green and bis heart was glad. But his heart was not in the hills. That very Sunday morning he had given it into the keep- ing of the warden’s daughter as they walked without the walls of the gray prison down by the junction. Almost within hearing of the townspeople who passed up and down to and from ths mineral springs that..gusbed from the aw hehe of his heart. The color coming to her face the whil she heard the tale told him that she was listening, When they had come to the corner of the wall, one step beyond which would bring them into full view of the warden’s residence, he had pressed her for an answer. She could find no voice to answer, but put out her hand as if she would say goodby. He took it, and the touch of it told him all he he had told her the secret wished to know. Now he grew so glad, thinking it all over, that ke clasped his hands together asa girl would do, and the rifle, slipping from his lap, shot down into the river that ran beside the track. The door at his back and next the canyon wall was closed and barred. The opposite door, overlooking the little river, was thrown wide open, and to the messenger sitting there came the splash of water and the smell of pine. He remembered that the agent, ran- ning alongside of his car as he was leav- ing the junction, had pointed to the iron safe and said, ‘‘Keep your eye on the gun.’’ The little safe held $40,900 in paper, and over in one corner of the car, in an old clay stained ore sack, we: $10,000 in gold. We were cutting across a little piece of high ground in the bend of the river when the awful flood burst forth from the narrow canyon just in front of us The engineer’s first thought was to back | down and run away from the flood, but the recollection that a double headed freight train was following us caused him to change his mind. The trainmen hurried the passengers all out, the mes- senger carried the mail and express matter to a safe place, and every one gazed in wonderment while the roaring flood went by. The main force of it, ro3 fcllovring the bed of the creek, hugged the opposite hill, but none of our party was jealous. Broad as the valley was here, it was soon filled, and the water rose high enough to float the rear coach ; but the engine, being on higher ground, acted as an anchor and held the train. In less than five minutes the water had swept around and carried away the bridge which we had just crossed, and there we were on about 300 yards of track, and nothing before or behind us. The freight train, having a clear track, backed away to the junction, told the story of our distress, and at mid- night the company agent came to the top of the canyon with a white light, and, in a little while we were all taken out, and after tramping over a moun- tain trail fora half hour, loaded into wagons and hauled back to the junction. CHAPTER II. **Let’s have a drink afore we go.”’ ‘‘Nary drink,’’ said the dark man at the head of the table, and one could see at a glance that wherever he sat would be the head of the table. ‘‘You promis- ed me up in the gulch that day that you’d never get drunk again, and I prom- ise you right now, Skinny, that if you do you'll never get sober, for I intend to have you shot while yer happy.’’ Nobody replied to this. The man ad- dressed only glanced across the table, and then, dropping his eyes, brushed the ashes from his cigar with the tip of his little finger. “Phe man at the speak- er’s right smiled quietly over at his vis-a-vis, and then there was silence for a@ moment. The freighter and the prospector, leaning on the bar, paid no attention to the four men who sat and smoked by the little pine table in a dark corner of the log saloon. The Lone Spruce, as the place was called, had done a rushing business in the boom days, but Ruby Camp was dying, even as Silver Cliff, Gunnison and dozens of other camps have died since—as Creede is dying to- day—and business wasslow. A drunken Ute reeled in and wanted to play poker, shake dice or shoot with any dog of a white man in the place. When all the rest had put him aside coldly, he came over ,to, the corner, and the dark man, A es ec SICK HEADAGHE .. Positively cured by these Little Pilis, They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. <A per- fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsi- ness, Bad Tastein the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. Small Pill. Small Dose. F Small Price. Substitution the fraud of the day. See you get Carter's, Ask for Carter's, Insist and demand Carter’s Little Liver Pills. | HARRIS. ‘being deep 1n thongnt ana not-wisoing to be disturbed, arose, and picking his way between the two guns which dan- gled from the hips of the noble red man kicked him along down the room and out into the night. Having done his duty in removing the red nuisance—for he hated a drunkard —the dark man bade the barkeeper good | night and passed out by the back door. The three men at the pine table followed him. All this occurred in the last half of the closing hour of the week. Thirty | minutes later, when the four mountain- | cers rode away from the Black Bear carrel, it was Sunday, but the people of Ruby Camp took no note of time. When the sun came up on that beautiful Sun- day morning, it found the dark man aud his companions at the top of the range overlooking the wet mountain | valley. Before they had reached the foothills the sun caught the two threads of steel that stretched away across the park and disappeared at the entrance of the canyon at the foot of the vale. All night they had ridden single file, but now as they entered the broad valley they bunched their horses and conversed as they went along. The dark man kept his eyes upon a barren peak that stood at the foot of the valley, where the rail- road track, gliding smoothly over the mesa, seemed to tumble into the canyon as swift Niagara tumbles over the falls. At that point the little party expected to dismount and take the train for the Cliff. The leader, who w: ; able to read both print and writing, had noticed a paragraph in the Denver Tribune to the effect that the new Custer County be~k would open for business at Silver C. f July 10. He had been assured by his own banker at Gunnison that the new institution weuld be perfectly reliable, backed, as it was, by the First National of Denver. Being a man of good judg- ment, he reasoned that the necessary funds for the new bank would in all probability leave Denver Saturday night and go up from the junction by the one daily train on Sunday. That was why he wished to take the train. (To be Continued.) +>? Gn The man with a weight on hie leg can’t hope to win in the rece. A man witha weight on his health can’t expect to com- pete in life and burivess with those who are not handicapped. If his brain is beavy and his biood slrggish, because of constipation, he wi.l not succeed in doing anything very well. Constipation is the cause Of vine-teuthe of all sickness. Symp- toms of it are sallownese, listiessnes*, poor appetite, bad taste in the mouth, dizziness, biltiousness and lassitude. Constipation can be cured easily and certainly by the uee of Dr. Pierce’s Pit arant Pellets. They are not st all violent in their ection, and yetthey are more certain than many wedicines which are +o strong that they put the system all out of order, The grest advantage of the “Pleacant Pellets” is that they cure permanently. Send 3 one-ceat stamps to cover cost of maihng only, and get his great book, The People’s Common Sense Medical Adviser, absolute'y Frer. Address, World’ Dispensary Medical Aasociation, No. 663 Maino Street, Buffalo, N. Y. a) Those goods have got to be sold, for we have got te leave. We will sell ava big iscount rather than remove them to anotber place. Call and see our goo’s. —W. P. Golwill. Skin Sores CELERY KING 22277" THE BLOOD And never fails to heal and cure skin diseases— Sold by all druggists. 25 cents a large package. WOODWARD MEDICINE CO., TORONTO, CANADA ATENTS GET RiCH QUICKLY. Write to-day fora free copy of our big Book on Patents. We have extensive experience in the intricate patent lawsof 50 foreign countries, Send sketch. modei or photo for free advice. MARION & MA«~ RION, Experts, Temple Building, Montreal. Wants, Lost, Found & The persen who found wallet lost on 23 inst, (searing jowner’s neme,) will confera favor erelosing -ll pavers, (valuatle to own: (n’y,) in anu envelop, and maiiing same fo “(, box 49. (ia murey will alse be th ink uijy received.) vl li JO LET.— One half of the threes ory Gwel ling house, containing eigat large ;eoms, on Prinee St oa-sssion given on 2ndMayp xt W. W. Wellner 42 REWA KD —A libers reward given the -on returning w: let lost yes'erday, name) cor taining a sum of bearing owners - 46 tf money and slovalvable papers, WANT+D.—A good, smart steady boy, about 16 years of age, who understands look- ing aftt~ a horse and cow,and eeneral useful abouta heus: Apply at this offie> 43 tf Wa NTED —Acockandahousemtid, zf ply to Mrs Edward bayfield Os LOS’. On Upper Qu2en St yesterdav,purs’ conteining $).warnd v.O. Ky. «inder will be rewarded vy leaving itatthis office 50 Wa NTE! —-A servant for eeneral house work. Apply to Mrs Hed ey Paloacr, Yount Edward Road, 49 tf BOARPER? W4NFED—Two or three gentiemen boar lerscan he Per Spam in a private family. Apply at this otce Pp r pp 49 Iw pa TO RENT,—That pleasantly ‘situated house en the Brighton Kord, now occupied by Mrs Cameron within a few » inates walk of bath- ing hous-sin Victoria Park, and nine min- utes yaik from P st Office. h+ving lawn en hawthorn hedge infront The hovs+is heat- ed with hot water, having bath room etc. Possession givenJst Jun-. Apply to a C. ae % (HHA SASAHA ARR ARH EACAARAARRAAR EAR ALAA TBOD AK —_—— * WHAT CAN’T BE CURED MUST BE ENDURED % But Have You Tried A WEE DRAPPIE O’ PATTISON’S 2 Give vn @rinking poor epirite and try the best Scotland yields. For Medicinal Purposes adulterated whisky is dangerons. For sidetoard purposes it is abominable. “A Wee Drappie 0’ Pattison’s ” is a customer always. For sale by all leading wine and spirit merchants, and wholesale by For Sale By All Licensed Vendors : AR EE FFLYYYELLYER ES ye Natasa nn ett ainaatiliainte eaten te. daimastian seaiapaaapmtinnate RUBBERS 2 OVEI =. eam gm ¢ A customer wh) once tries MEE EE ap SE EE Fp EA a a er ee ee ed \ etme ae ASK FOR THE CANADIAN RUBBER CO.’S WELL KNOWN BRANDS. BEST QUALITY LATEST STYLES All Dealers.,. oe keep them. w« . .» STANDARD NEVER LOWERED. er ee FROM INDIA AND CEYLON... “nets TEAS P, LEASp? If you want a really fine, full flavored, rich * bodied'"’ tea, to offer your guests, or for the family circle, get 2 Nonfd TEAS ¢ For Guests Elephant Brand—of course the more expensive grades are best —but all are good pure tea, and whether you get the 4goc., soc., 6oc., 7oc’ or $1. per lb. grade: any of them are BEST OF TEA VALUES > Sold at above prices by all good grocers, in 14 & 1 Ib. cir tight load packets. : COD . 6 Always Puro, Always Fresh. $ 000000000000000 A I fy Es That become painful and tired when roa ling or sewing, probably need classes I - >? y 7 wa he due? That-are sore and inflamed and ex:remely sensative to light, probably re= quire glasses... Do your ETS Trouble you in any way glasses are necessary. If so, allow me to examine them and find if Gf. HUTCHESON. Opp. é. 1. MeTead's. Graduate Philadelphia Optical Dellege a eee Charicttetow2. ranvilie Sircel, WEEE VEC ud added eee We aN eV ee ere ee WN ee eens Q Ms 3 eV ede dred cee sdce dered eer eee eee Cae MECC Cee ee eRe ae EEE EC ET ECC ESCECMEES VERT RPED UDC OUTYCULERED Luu un A Pure Bred Poultry. PAAPPAPA AAD 27945 3/595 70A 88998959 BFLDRASS BSBPBARSARADR DOSS SI ERAS! ASESASE SE 2ESES8" SRARDADS BPRAROAP DA S ABA RAARN SDS ADSA LAAN RASARARDRAARD?Y NG > STROM 43 EE ge = Biue Barred Plymouth Rocks, *“ Biack Breasted Ked Game, Single Comb Black Minorca, Light Bramas, Buf Cochins. Si.co PER sS7iT. {13 Eaos) ar" ALFRED RIGGS. # ae en Re REE ER RIS Da tan ip Mle ee oe a