— atten erronTs ouaseres 3 -0- - only positive, never-fail] ag cure, 2 2 on earth, for all Kidney diseasea, nf Take No Other. ¥ Get the Genu'ne. ; Refuse imitations, ‘ot There's Only One oefe, y i soap and water. will not crack Pure, DD'S KIDNEY PIS, the fasily K Kept Clean Om Noscrubbing or scouring, just use oS ee “CRESCENT” Steel Agate Ware scorch and therefore offers no rough places for dirt to achere. serviceable and economical. @ label. < MADE BY Montreal, Que. BB IC; BARGAINS: TA ——— ef ee = LINES AND SIZES IN BBOOTS SHOES , «ND SLIP PERS for fr cllicking abrut round the a LARGE and ‘an fit you Lacirs and babies. Kine you want + dust the bolidays—for ‘o' Otntry, and f have A In lact we 4 weil assorted stock. ies we 7 - Su. sens scampering We Bovs , Bio Stock Small Prices . BEFORE YOU BUY PLEASE TRY ———— ©.E. ISUAND 15th August, inst. 4 the | ran hes of a thorough we lraini: g, and equals the it Our Sherthand and ee 20urses cannot be excelled. ¢ Text-Books, the latest and , tearing date 1899 are in wis, Our terms are Our st , rh whha P.O Box 242 I Uhtown Aue 11899 Prin. limo v we i sat 1: WAYS Sf ’ Phone 174 tg i Each piece bears our guarantee THE THOS. DAVIDSON M’F’G CO, BISSES’ AND CHILDREN’S ODD THE he hh ed * : GOPYRIGH TS, New, Ikey Cohen, though not a strong man nor yet one of conspicuous pluck, was one of those peculiarly con- stituted individuals who gain a sort of secondary courage through stress of circumstances, somewhat as runners get their second wind. From what the There scemed to be a discussion of some little heat. inspector had said he saw that he knew a good deal more about his late adven ture ‘‘on the other side’’ than he tnought he did. Suspicions ares times as goodeas knowledge. He stuck his hands deep dewn into his pockets. looked the inspector squarely in the face and said: “If you want nie to sell you a pup, Mr. Lipinski, I'l] be happy to oblige you. ican’t sell you that one, because it’s dead. But I think I could tell you the name of the man who ordered it to be killed. Anyhow—I—guess—you'd —a—recog-nized—his voice—as kerlate—I—did.”’ Ikey didn’t do the Yankee draw] at all badly, and the shot went right home. , For the first and the last time in his life Inspector Lipinski lost his self command in public. But his start was only momentary, and the flush came into his cheeks died out again in an instant. ‘“‘What do you cme- mean it. sir? by th: 1¢ asked in atone as usual, calm as “Just about what he says, I reckon,’ drawled Mickey .Muratti, who was about as good a mimic as he was a jug- gler. ‘‘If you don’t recognize that twang. I do. That was well done, [key, boy. What'll you take? The next’s with me.”’ What might bave happened after this no one will ever know, for just at that moment one of the inspector's men en tered hurriedly and handed him a note He opened it. glanced at it, crushed it up in his hand and said: ‘‘Gentlemen, I’m sorry, but, so far as I’m concerned, this entertainment will have to be postponed. Another man Weeks & Warren COMMERCIAL COLLEGE. RE-OPENS TUESDAY, ce Our Business Course comprises all Business very best. Ty pewriting ee tisfactory to | dents. Send card for prospectus OX ENHAM & Prop. . O,. Box #2 26 i Uffice in New Prowse Block, | to the right ~=4 bee ne — —— bow a — bane cm —_ AYEPS There are many thousands of wise wo- men in this an? country son ; who, when they found 4 } > were «ne a 1 that they were suffer- aing from weak- //ness or disease of }] their distinctly womanly organ- isms, promptly wrote to an emu- nent and skillful physician, with a world-wide repu- tation, instead of trusting their cases to some ob- scure physician with but limited ‘ A practice and ex- périence. There gre many reas, ; woman fol- chances are that an ms why a wise urse. The ows this c< obscure physician of small practice will not diagnose troubles of this nature prop- rly If he does, he will insist on the obnoxious examinations and local treat- nent from which every sensitive, modest woman shrinks. The specialist referred to is Dr. R. V. Pierce, for thirty years chief consulting n to the Invalids’ Hotel and Surgi- tute, at Buffalo, N. Y. Thirty vears ago he discovered a wonderful medicine j; for diseases peculiar to women, that may be used effectively in the privacy cf the home, vay with all necessity for exam- and does av inations and treatment. This medi- iOCAal cine is known as Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Pre- scription. It acts directly on the delicate and important organs concerned in wife- bh 1 and motherhood. It makes them strong, healthy and vigorous. It allays in- filammation, heals ulceration, soothes pain and tones and buil ds up the nerves, Taken during the pe riod of prospective maternity, e. 1 ani ishes the usual discomforts and makes baby’s coming easy and almost pain- less, It insures the little new-comer’s health and an ample supply of nourish- ment Over ninety thousand women have testified to its marvelous merits. Medicine TS s¢ ll it. ruggist’s business to give you, not to te i you, what you want. Any ailing woman may write to Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y., and get free advice. By inclosing 31 one -cent stamps in her letter, o cover cost of customs and mailing only, she may secure a paper-covered copy of the ‘People’s Common Sense Medical Adviser.’' Cloth bound, 50 stamps, a “Sod. BY THE WETHOR.. —_—_—_ that m+ writh « lien hras "InN< “| but with a distinctly threatening rirmg | , i — DulLY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, AUGUST 30, 1593 Yants to See we very dog. * uUrgentiy avout a With this hed of his whisky and soda and turned and walked to the door, followed b Vv his offi- cial satellite. nota little pleased at sach an opportunely geod ‘‘get out’ from ¢ sitvation which was bidding fair to be come embarrassing It pleased the fates to draw out the tragedy which thus began with the in- human butchery of poor little Tommy into more scenes than could be duced here howeve of them, repro- The present narrative is, only concerned with the last or perhaps it would be more correct to say the last but one, and that | which bronght the curtain down. As week after week went by the out rages committed by the mysterious border gang. as the unknown desper- adves who had so suldenly invaded th« hitherto cemparatively safe frontiers of the Free State and Griqualand West very soon came to be call a seemed to increase in namler and daring It was quite a curious situation— such a one as the student of human crime had never had the chance of studying before and pever may have again. It wasa sort of three cornered contest between underhand roguery, open violence and the forces which worked for law and order. The old struggle between the police and the L D. B., or diamond smuggling, fraternity went on as before, but with an added terror for the evildoer, who, if he elud- ed the clutches of the law, might the next hour fall into the no more merci- ful grasp of the gang. The honest and rank off the remains lawful trader still hated the L D. Bb. as} his worst enemy, but the gang robbed | both with an impartiality worthy of a! more honorable calling. ° | The police, naturally, had anything | | but a happy time of it. If they devoted an adequate amount of time and force | to haunting for the gang—which was | never where it was expected or wanted —the occupation of the I. D. B. became comparatively pleasant and easy, while if they did their proper work thorongh- ly the gang promptly went on the warpath with renewed vigor and ex- tended its scope and raked in the der with both hands from the and dishonest alike It will be readily state of affairs c Gistasteful to Mr than this. Not only was his professional credit at stake, but men like Mnuratti. Ikey Cohen, Sandy Fraser and Alexander knew either to be or to have been in- volved in extensive I. D. B. transac- tions, but who were now getting rich. and therefore men of infiuence i town where the faculty of making meén- ey anyhow was the only one that ‘‘got a man on,’’ were making sarcastic com- plaun- understood that no ld possibly be more parisons between Hounslow Heath 100 | years ago and the diamond fields of to- | day, and were asking ugly questions about the efficiency, nay, even the in- corruptibility, of the police force in general and the detective department in particular. It was this last suspicion that touch- ed the puzzled and harassed inspector most keenly. As a practical man he had no belief in miraculous escapes or the possibility of people being in two different places at once, and gradually the conviction forced itself upon him that the immunity of the gang from apture and its invasion of trap after trap that he had laid for it with all the skill and cunning at his command could only be due to the connivance of some of his own men andthe Free State police, which he knew to be anything but im- maculate. This conviction led him at last to the resolve to risk not only reputation and position, but life itself, in the attempt to personally break up the gang, or at least to penetrate the mystery which shrouded its doings and shielded it from justice. This resolve once made, it did not takea man of his character very long to translate it into action. He caused certain information to leak out, as it were, through undergrcund channels which were always at his service, to the effect that in consequence of strong suspicions that the Diamond mail to Vryburg was going to be held up by the border gang on a certain night when it would be carrying an ex- mepeonelty valueble consignment of gems the stones would be run the night before, as though they were an illicit parcel, over the border to Freetown and thence conveyed in the usual way to Port Elizabeth instead of Cape Town. The Diamond mail of the following day was to take no consignment at all, but was to be accompanied by a double guard. On the appointed night the inspector had a score of his best and most trusted men, armed to the teeth, posted along ‘ora border within bail of the point ee honest Inspector Lipinski | Macadain, who he absolutely | sesve . namareseanegietiasnnenntetetannaneteansttetstnceatananmnanncaay hartesinpentia tt ea aapatisemensrernemnaeste | ! | | | | | Mick: y | where the road to Freetown crosses It. On the other side a detachment of the Free State police was by arrangement with the district chief to be lying in wait ready to act in concert with them and to catch the gang between the two forces at the moment of attack. When Inspector Lipinski set out that night to take his part in the working out of his scheme, he took an even more than usually affectionate leave of his daughter—a pretty, graceful girl of be- tween 16 and 17, who was the incarna- tion of the one romamce of his life, the daughter of the only woman he had ever looked upon to love omy long for and the one rose that he Had saved out of the paradise that he had once dwelt in. He went to his office and changed his tniform for a suit of clothes that he had never been seen in, a sort of semi sporMing rig, that he had had up spe- cially from Cape Town, put his favorite Smith-Wesson in his right hand coat rm cket, and then started out to walk to Beaconsfield. On the way he overtook his Kaffir groom, leading his best horse He mounted, saw that the pair of heavy k anecven more than usually affee tionate leave of his daughter. Colts in the holsters were ready for im- mediate use, and then cantered off to- ward the border, which he had timed i" reach a little before I in the (To be Continued. ) DR. A. W. CHASE’S REMEDIES. Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills, for diseases of the Kidneys, Liver, Bladder and Bowels. a pill a dose; 25¢. a box, Chase's Catarrh Cure, for Cold in the Head, Catarrh, Dropping in the Throat, and Hay Fever. 25¢. a box, blower free. Dr. Chase's Oint- ment for Eczema, Sait Rheum, Piles and all itching skin diseases. 60 cents a box. Dr. Chase's Nerve Food, for exhausted, worne out nerves and thin, watery, diseased wtf? = soc. alarge Dr. Chase’s Liver Cure, a diseases of the Liver, Jaundice and Biliousness. soc. a bottle, Dr. Chase’s Syrup of Linseed and Turpen- tine, a positive cure for Croup, Asthma, Brone chitis and all Coughs and Colds. asc. a large bottle. At all dealers, Geo. H. Cook > PHOTO STUDIO ANNOUNCEMENT Having obtained the services of Mr. A. &. Lyon, a skilled artist, who has had urge experience in first ciuse Photography he public are cordinally invited to in- spect the excellens results now being obtained, studio - Appointment - Perfect Qur latest rroductions demcnstrate that ont work is supericr 10 anything done the city. Removed —T0 HY OLD STAND— Richmond Street Fourth House from Queen St. —around the— www—{ ondon House Corser Thomas Campbell fs SP ) ’ “ xe {j 1 ele . ; roy I : Pog RSS 4 y aN Ay WS ; a , ~ fants and Children. harmless subs ‘tte for Castor Oil, Paregor._, op and Svothing Syrups. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. It is Pleasant, Its guarantee is thirty years’ use by Milliens of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays Feverish- Casteria cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. Castoria. relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. Castoria assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach 2d Bowels of Infants and Children, giving healthy and naturat sleep. Castoria is the Children's Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. Castoria is for Cast "' hess. Castoria. Castoria. mnie ; — *‘Castoria is an excelient medicine for **Casteria Is so well adapted to childrem children. oi its good effect upon their children.” Dr. G. C. Oscoon, Lowel, Afass. Mothers have repeatedly told me | that I recommend it as superior to any pre | scription known to me.” H. A. ARCHER, M. D. Brooklyn, N. ¥ THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OF 6 APPEARS ON EVERY WRAPPER. TME CINTAYUR Company T7 MURRAY STREET, Now YORK CIty. SIUC ae Es Of all the CHEWS That ever I CHEWED I never CHEWED A CHEW CHEWED CHEW CHEWS TUPUUTESS CUE ELELOATDPERED, CED EDEERS SEDDDEERES SEES O00 xB A rs -), : few We ee Gut iatis © a CTT eee = : Navy Chewing Tobacco = DOIINIGN TOBACCO CO., - MONTREAL. Tecensneneneiiaiiieaaniiaiin EBEULREGSGREPEDEEE CER SETDEDESELLESEECTELEEE GES DEEPER SEA EER EE EPEREU DEERE ——C. hue &, A.—- Annual Sports! The Annval Sports of the Charlottetown Amateur Athletic Associatic held on their grounds, CHARLOTTETOWN Wednesday, September Eth, 1899 The fol owing is tue yrogramme and prize list: — 1.—Qne Mile Bicycle Race, Novice—lat 7—440 Yards Ran—1isi Gold M-d.] Goid Meds]; 2nd and 3rd Silver Metal Silver Medal 8— r ii ere! Riee (L‘5) 2.--Half Mile Bicycle Race (Time Limit) Two Mi eB j . - .e 7 2nd, Geld Medals; 3rd, Sil-er Me —Jla* acd 20. Gold Meouls; 3:d S. Medal Gas Mike Mas Be > — ile Bieye'e Rave 3—220 Yards Run—lIst, Gold Medal; } anet time with permissiou for pac 2nd, Silver Medal 4—1 Mile Bicycle Race (Time Limit)— Im and 20d,Gold Meda.s; 3rd, Silver Medal 5--One Mile Bicycle Race (Boys under 15)—let, Gold Medal; 2ud Silver Medal Distence Bicycle Race—lst 2nd and 3rd, Gold Meda's 10—880 Yards Run—Ist, Gli M 2nd, Silver Medal. li—Three Mile Bicycle Rela Teams of Three representing Clabs 4. Mitel otherwise, Silver Cup. p— G or ; ao : a Y ; 2; and 2od Gold Medale; 3rd, Silver Medal. 12-5 Mile Bicycle Team) Race— Massey-Harris Trophy. Entries close September ist with the secretary. Entrante fees 25c eich entry, which must accompany the entry, otherwise it will not be considered complete —Rand In Attendance TRAIN ARRANGEMENTS »nlar train..........500 2m nish, re ? = —_ joan 5 cebdde Coden babe pecaen See GT... FARES “ Bloomfield..............+e0....606a m | Jignieh to Pinsville........ 0+ 0s acrvenseal ad i eed ekanbewel 621 aim | Bleemfieid to Portage....-..++- WW cis oes “Ld as Port Hill... gree 7 i4am | Couway to Richmond.... & * Wellington. 745am | Wellington to st. Eleanon 8 “ Miscouche a R OLA = ; Summerside to Freetc wn ss = oI «60 hens ibs es Suan) 82\am i cae a Fr = POR ide os's vibe dbcenieeey te . Kensington. -10eey > ocak bwoaue tl 348 @ in | ouput eather eee 4 “ PYRORIAG. bons e ssudes sss 903 4m } Colville'to Char ottet /wo, single fares “ i a 9132 1 | eet tn Car ad ry; PRP UNOS 6s tice dd a 7 . Brada ADE ip i ébuiees seuauel 919am | Rollo B » Bea ar ik FOP... ieee cco timpes codnte 85 a6 | MUON RERUN i sven ov enee 943am | Olio Bay to Midgeil......... 050... ...0e » 6 Wiltshire...... ag cove. 19 50 Oke | MORENO UP RGORING.... 6. oc eee ce cccesees ce e s Ro yalty Junction ............1025am ; St. Andrewe to Vracadie..,. — arrive C — Peso. i...’ * stir oad thee am pee oe oe letown, single . fares . l a. Special Jeaves Chariotte |. “OWD UO PETUD... 002.000 ee sseeevceee 75 > a + For W est town at 5.00 p m, con- | is Road to Pe ake a te necting in ery te with reguiar for Tig- | *15dUId.,.........,.. 45 nish, leaving at »pm —— s (res gular trai MOR civ ewebas 510am ree ee 3 Bea ee eds tnny eeaes »41 am A em ¢ be} j ks ae - aaa Arrangements are being made with the ~~ eee eer errr ee ee . «2f@e § <7 : . Y7TD 7 aac dai one ck oe -- 637 am IC RK to issue Ra TURN TICKETS at ° Cari getown........ sree ereeed es a mo One First-Clase Fare from al! Stations in QPCIRAR.. 4 oc con cesceseseccosvons ) am 7 . im 4 eM et ee “tao New Brunswick and Nova Scotia to Char- “ Moant Stew ES cals ..ceee..7 10am | jottetowa on the 5:h September, good te “ ifor: seve od ae : ~~? .<. , ecunt Sanction 2 hon | Tetara up to and on the Bth. IS GiLy if bed cm. wene at ae . arrive CharlottetowD....++.... ...... 815 am Pictou to Charlottet own, and Point do For East Special oes Charlotte- | Chene to Sammerside, Si ngle Pare, goor met town for Georgetown and for ssage on Tnesday, Sept Souris at 5.30 p m } SOF paceag Sept. Sth, returr Thureday, Sept. 7th. 22 Ali Standard Time-BQ Stand 10c, Admission 25c. Grand Sports begin at 1 p, m. shar B, C. PROWSE, President, E. H, BEER, Secretary nal = ten ll ee - _ snail Becca rg a a | sesame a teen a a sal n wt be (Ag~ re) ist, Race— Se ot wt~' wt pe A A ee on no Cn eel oe