, ders ~? The Story Tellier. In eastern countries, place of our story- they have professional story- It is their art to interest their listeners with ¢ leve, and marveleus adventure ind hairy breadth escapes, and magic cures. Theresa story of a womder- ful medicine that hes made thousands of cures that seemed a|most magical, which een writers, tellers me it 11eS ¢« every woman shoul! read or hear. To have heard it or to read it, may save a wo man her own life or that of her husband. The mediciue jis the discovery of Dr. R. V. Pierce, an eminent and skillful spe- cialist, for thirty years chief omsulting physician to the great Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute, at Buffalo, N. ¥Y. It is known as Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis- covery, It makes the appetite hearty, the the liver active, the digestion periect the nerves steady, the blood pure and rich brain clear and the bodv strong. It is the great blood-maker and fiesh-builder. It cures o8 per cent. of 1 cases of consump- tion and dt ses of the air-passages. It cures nervous diseases and isthe best med- icine { rverworked inen and women. A women may ve her husbeand’s life by k nthe house, and getting h re » it wien tbe feels out-of- sort All men are heedless about their h h. Medicines stores aé]]l it. Doctor i e's reputation is world+wide, and his tov men, of HKuffalo, N. Y., think ily of him that thee made him their ! ntative in Congress, but his great love for his profession caused him to resign that honorable position that he might de- vote the remainder of kis :tie to the relief and cure of the sick Another good thing to have in the house savial of Dr. Piercc’s Picasant They eure biliousness and never gripe. EPPS'S GOGNA GRATEFUL COMFORTING Distinguished ‘everywhere for Delicacy of Il*tavour, Supe- rior Quality, and Nutritive Properties. Specially grate- ful and comforting to the mervous and dyspeptic. Sold only in }-lb. tins, labelled JAMES EPPS & Co., Ltd., Bomeopathic Chemists, London, England. BREAKFAST EPPS'S COGOA The Ch’town Steam Nav. Co STEAMERS..... Pellets. constipation ana Northumberland & Princess | Leave as below every day (Sundays Excepted) From POINT DU CHENE (on arrival, f afternoon train from St. Jobo) for. S4umanerside, connecting there with exprest train for Charlottetown. From SUMMERSIDE on arrival of morning train from Charlottetown) for Point Du Chene connecting witn day train for St. Joba. Cennecton at Monctoa with train for Canada aud at St. John with Steamers of Intermational Live and Raiiways for Uniued States and Canada. From PICTOU (on arrivalof day traio-¢rom Halifax) for Charlottetown. From CHARLOTTETOWN, seven a. m.@loca!) for Pictou, (convecting there with dey train for Cape Breton and Hali fi, at Halifax with C. A. & P. Line fot Bostor. F. W. HALES Ch*towa, P. E. I. SECRETARY —_— -——— CARD. The andereigned wishes to intimate to the young ladies and gentlemen of Cnar- lottetown, that ic is her imtention to con-~ tinue the <lancing class:s0 euccesefully conducted vy her mother, for the past 50 vears at TERPSICHOKE HALL, Great Georze Street. Classes will be opened for the season, oc Tuesaay, Get. 4th, at 4 aod 8p. m. Private leesons given as neual. JANE ®@ORRIS. 228 dytd&w ne BLACK DIAMOND LINE The 8.S. COBAN sailing from Mon treal, Friday morning; Oct 2lsi, will be ‘ue at Ch’town, Monday morning, Oct 24th, and will sail tor St. John’s. and Harbor Grace Newfoundland, via, North Syiney, carrying horses, cattle and theep on deck and pro-dice under deck at lowest possible rates. Por farther particulars as to freight and pasage, apply to PEAKE BROS & JO, ye Agents. <u town, Oct 17, 98—-24] SUPPER 4 — ——— +-Con’t stay long; there's the boy's snpper | to get, and [m worked to death.” without a THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, OCTOBRR 20, 1898 “ - . , %e el " i - KKXRX OKIE ER RRS XK S “s x W S AGAINS : a's x WOMmMaf) Oman :; w Be X Ke KR % as SS “Sf x BY MRS. MARY E. HOLMES- o, ¢ x Author cf “A Woman's Love,” “ The Wife’s Secret,” “A Heartless Be x Woman,” “Her Fatal Sin,” “A Wife's Peril,” ~ Xx “A Desperate Woman.” ~ x : S% SER TR KR RR RR RK ROA IK RII ION OO OOS CHAPTER IL, Alicel AYice! Alice! The shrill tones resotnded throngch the chill evening air. They reached the eurs of a girl reading, curled up in e of a deserced old barn, corner At the anyry tones, she closed her hook with a sigh, and vising slowly, made her way to the step-ladder that led fron: the varn to the yard, A wonrin stood here—a coarse, stout wonmn, with arms akimbo. “Where ‘ave you idle yagrant that you are!’ she cried loudly, as the girl crept down the ladder. ‘€n the barn,” Alice answered. “In the barn, indeed! Tl] have that door locked that j will, or else Vl kuew the reason why. Do you think I've got nothing to do but keep you in food been, basket up to Mrs. Grey at the Castle: it ought to have been there this hour past.” “To the Castie” faltered Alice shrinking back, ““‘to+wteht? Oh, Aunt Martha!” ‘What, are you frightened?” said Mrs. Martha Brown with an angry laugh. “What are you fit for, Alice? Your head's just stuffed with all the hnensense you can get out of beoks. Off with you! Here's the basket.” “It is se dark,’ murmured the gir, leiting her great eyes wander from the | yard to the deserted country lane, “and then there’s ‘Madman’s Drift’ to pass.” “Well, what of it?” asked the other. fastening down the basket-lid vigoreus- ly. “A place where « madman put an end to his life. Dead men do no harm, you poor feol tT” Alice shuddered, but there was no sign of merey in her -aunt’s face. “Give me the basket.” she said sud- derly. “Any message?’ “No: unless you ask Mrs. Grey when ‘she wants the next lot of ergs. Now * liea turned away word. Dr. CHaseE DAILY KeceIvinG TESTIMONIALS FROw THANKFUL PEOPLE AFAR AND NEAR, Inteliigent Citizens Pronounce Strowgly in Favour of Pr.Chase’s Oimtment, KHidney-Liver Pills, nnd Catarrh Cure. Sceptics are at Liberty te Write to the Fetiowing Parties to Get Their Endorwation of Testimonials. INCIPIENT CATARRH CURED. Mrs. Rosie Stearn, 30 Walton street, Toronto, says :—“I suf- fered at every change im _ the weather with cold in the head. At times it was so bad that I was umable to speak, being completely stuffed up. I was advised to try Dr. Chase’s Ca- tarrh Cure, and did so, and received immediate relief. I am pleased to tes- tify to its worth gladly. I also receiv- ed a sample box of Dr. Chase’s Oint- ment for itching of the skin, and it is the best remedy I have ever used. I shall at all times reeommend to suffer- ers Dr. Chase’s remedies. His recipes are indeed wonderful” KIDNEY DISEASE CURED. Mr. J. Kilfedder, 28 Gerrard street west, Toronto, an old and “re- epected resident of the city, says :—‘*I thave been suffering from Kid trouble since last fall and found the lightest kind of exercise very painful. I concluded to try Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills, which I saw advertised, and the effect was won- @erful, the first box removing the pains in my beck, and leaving me feeling very much better in every way. I can cheerfully recommend them as the workingman’s friend. They are well named K. and L. Pills. The meaning which I took to be Knights of Labour ro" One pill e dose. 25 cents @ x. Od tte a te OG and drink—to let you idle your days ! through as you like? If you do, you’er ‘mistaken finely, | ean tell you.” Alice stood silent as the aucry Wwo- iman scolded on; her small hands were clasped tightly together, a mute look was on her pale face. “What do you want me _ for?’ she vasked at last. The woman ceased. Never before in er remembrance had Alice taken her scolding so quiethy. “Get on your hat, amd carry me this | ~~ | groans * before her she saw two men, one utter- She round her supple young th autumn night struck chilly, and stepped inte the lane, fer thoughts were a tangled mass she hurried anger and weurimess of spirit, 2s her mind turned to her aunt, under whose figure, for the as aiong: eare she had lived ever since she could remember; disappoint- ment at leaving the beautiful story in her book, and fright of the dark. lonely path which grew greater at every step she took. “Oh, if Sam were only here!” she said to herself as she hurried on, not daring to ela tothe right orthe left for feur ef seeing phantom forms her vivid im- ach lied, Sam was one of the farm-helps. Under any other circumstances Alice shunned him, but now she would have welcomed him with open arms.” She left the lane, and approached an nee ition supplied open waste of land. It was the dreaded Madman’s Drift. \ sndden break in the road at one side, showed a steep incline and chasm, ( n which the unfortunate man who his name to the spot had sought his « h. \lice crept towards the dreaded place, quivering with fear. Although grown out of her childhood, she still lived in a world of fairies, evil S$] and phantoms. As she stole through the dusk, with her pale face peeping from beneath the mass of golden curls, her small hand clutching the basket as if for support, she looked almost a fairy herself—a strange frail flower to belong to go coarse and common a woman as the farmer’s wife she called aunt, All the village girls regarded this pale, slender creature with contempt. She was so white and poorlooking beside their buxom charms—fit for nothing but books. Alice heeded not their contempt. She would have been happy with her beloved bc oks, but she had a hard life—nothing bet scoldings from Martha Brown, jeers from the boys and maids about the farm for her strange quiet ways, and heavy work for her young hands, which broucht the teams often to her beautiful eyes and a sob from her lonely heart, When work was over and she was alone in bed, she turned once more to her beloved books, and her mind was crammed with weird stories of knights and chivalry that pleased and excited her. She crept past the Madman’s Drift With closed eyes, and gave a sigh of gindness when she was once safe away from it. Her arms ached, her limbs trembled with her excitement and exertion, and ber steps crew slower as she entered the wood which led to the back of the Castie. Suddenly, as her heart was growing more settled, it gave one leap into her mouth; she eclutehed her basket, stag- gered to a tree, and then waited and listened. The rapid thump, thump, of her heart was the only sound in her ears at first; then came more terrible ones—mufiled and confused then just noises, ing faint erties, while the other’s arms were wound round him, grasping him till he sank to the ground and lay motionless. Alice. leaning against a tree, saw all this, vet it seemed to her like a hideoas dream: she was cold almost to death, Her basket slipped from her arm—she had no power to stop it—and fell with a erash, causing the man who was stooping over the body to start, utter a then stride towards her. She had only time to catch a fleeting glimpse of a dark face, with cruel eyes, hot with anger, a torn collar, and marks of blood on his cheek, to hear his low hurried words, ‘A girl, by all that’s ex- ecrable!’ and she lost all remembrance, her eyes closed, her head dropped, and she fell into his arms in a swoon. “Good,” muttered the man as he plac- ed her gently on the ground; “she will know nothing, as for you, poor fool,” moving back to the prostrate form of the man, “you have served my pnrpose -revyenge for which I have waited so gong has come at last. Ah, you move.” He bent over the man and listened to and sick loud curse, the muttered words from between the pale lips. “Pustace—give—me—yrour hand; I— do not believe it. You will not take--my hand! What—she 1s false—vou say— you vJlsin—you black-hearted scoundrel —that that! Good God!—he is dead! Erstace—speak to me—speak—he is dead—I—have murdered him.” The listener rose; there was a curious light on his face, “What!” he whispered to himself; “the thinks it was his hand. Could anything he better? He does not even remember pic. Stay, let me think—this is delirium; it may when he wakes to his snees. I must impress this belief on its brain by stronger evidence. The cil dies not move, Good—in one moment more,” pass pulled her thin cotton jacket close | j MekKays Just opened.--New Clothing, Hats and caps, ties and staple goods. Inspection invited, BARGAIN CORNER W. D. MCKAY fle glanced rowvnd, and ‘stdle throngh In a few seconds, a curious | the hedge. sound might have reached the ears of the two silent forms, but they were dim, The man emerged again, he was drag- ging something with difficulty; it was a body, the misty light of the moon shoe on a dead face—on a limp inanimate form. “Now,” muttered the worker, “now all is complete. Eustace Rivers is dead —dead by the hand of his friend Roy Darrell; there evidence enough to damn an angel, and he will die for it. Now I must be gone; he moves again, and the girl will awaken. So, Brue Gardyne, your revenge is complete.” He stole gently away, and gradually the form of the man he had called Roy Darrell moved from the ground, with trembling hands he raised his weak body to a kneeling position, then let his eyes, dazed with faintness and horror, wander round. They rested on the figure of Alice with wonder and scarce comprehension; then they moved slowly on till they rest- ed on the dead man, and with a shud- der of horror he eovered his face with his hands and groaned aloud. . “It is no dream; it is the horrible truth! Oh, Eustace, my friend, my almost brother, dead, and by my hand!” His hoarse whisner fell on Alice's ears. She was recovering. She helped herself to rise by the aid of the tree, then learned ajrainst it, faint and weak, to try and think. Her basket lay unheeded at her feet. She seemed vet to be living in a hideous nightmare, till looking round, her eyes fell on the kneeling man and the dead body. She uttered a faint shriek, and in an- other moment Roy Darrell was stand- ing before her, glaring into her face. “Who are you?” he asked, hoarsely. “Where do you come from? Answer at once!” ‘ “I am Alice Dornton,” gasped rather than spoke the girl. “Oh, do not hurt ine, sir! I was on my way to the Castle for my aunt, when, when—~—” Her voice faltered. He grasped ther hand. “What?” he demanded huskfly, He would know the truth. For a moment a flash of joy went through his mind. This girl might have seen the fatal blow struck, the hand that took the life of his friend Eustace. She might have seen that phantom third form that haunted his memory. is "(To be Continued ) ETE ERE ET PREY TRE DER EF atten neither The People’s Faith Firmly Grounded Upon Real Merit —They Know Hood’s Sarsaparilla Absolutely and Permanently Cures When All Others Fail. Hood’s Sarsaparilla is not merely a simple preparation of Sarsaparilla, Dock, Stil- lingia and a little Iodide of Potassium. Besides these excellent alteratives, it also contains those great anti-bilious and liver remedies, Mandrake and Dande- lion. It also contains those great kidney remedies, Uva Ursi, Juniper Berries, and Pipsissewa. Nor are these all. Other very valuable curative agents are harmoniously com- bined in Hood’s Sarsaparilla and it is carefully prepared under the personal supervision of a regularly educated pharmacist. Knowing these facts, is the abiding faith the people have in Hood’s Sarsaparilla @ matter of surprise? You can see why Hood's Sarsaparilla cures, when other medicines totally, absolutely fail. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Isthe best—in fact the Qne True Blood Purifier, Sold by all druggists. $1; six for $5. are the best after-dianer pills, aid digestion. Me Hood’s Piiis ae en a ne ee Chil To Keep Out the Cold. Changeable Weather ‘throws the human machinery out ot gear and renders 1f mor. ‘susceptible to prevalent ailments. After a “mugzy” period the first cold day ‘strikes hon> unless the system is well fortified by strengthening stimu! »t- iag nourishment, of which the most perfect form 1s BOV RIL. Return this advertisement to us with 2 cent stro and we will send you Whonharts Great War Puzzle: We i.e offering $100.00 for the solution af this puzzle. BO V R a LIMITED, 20 Farringdon St., 25 & 27 St. Peter St 'London, England, Montreal, Canada. ——_ — and eS —- = om With every $2.00 worth of Boots you buy of us at our Mil | ! well known low prices we Slippers fancy patterns pretty and comfortable ee J. B. Macdonald & Co. ~—-—-- me COLD! COLD! COLD Can be Keht Out by the QUE 3EC HEATER The cold weather is coming—so is a stock of QUEBEC HEATERS, waste time putting up your old hard coal base burner, but buy a QUEBEC HEATER Also get more heat, STORE will give a pair of Childrens Slippers free of cost, These are nice new fall and winter —s Pee — Don and save time, dirt, dust, coal, worry and labor. Sold only at the CITY - HARDWARE - BUT—FOR CASH, ; R, B. NORTON & CO LTD