S$ a symptom of Kidney ry Se I] t | s¢ 2. \ Wel known : - 7. 268 ci, a) never \ i a St-mortem exe AK ise of death } He il L) scase with. kidneys ie PT INI1GreY Cuwas first on Most su ! He art Disease and Troubles, and tate. alea 1s Dodd’s Kidney Pills They All Want It! CCCSS< AFTER ONCE USING HOLLY See Bright Chewing Tobacco NO OTHER WILL DO, A It Elevates the Tasie. Pure, Wholesome and Fine Flavored. DOMINION TOBACCO Co., MONTREAL. T BeOS Ll, =aee*6 2s 420287 2 Oe SUAP , TO THE MAKERS QUEEN ~s = 2 @ @ 402 eee @2e@ —A ROYAL TRIO-— sunlight and Lifebuoy —SOAPS— The best laundry and wwilet soaps made in the world, guaranteed to be absolutely pure. “MONKEY BRAND” which cannot be equalled as a scour— ng aud polishing soap. TRY SOME Ez All are 5c large twin bar THE QUESTION I$ OFTEN ASKED, HOW I$ THE ASCENDENCY OF ROYAL OAK SOAP accounted for? The answer is simple enough, viz:—Be. cause there is none equal to it ‘or intrinsic merits, firm ness, purity, combiued with great lasting and cleansing pro- perties Send for premium list. J, D, LAPTHORN & C0., Charlottetown Soap Works ’ OF COUNT 2 J LANDRINOE « BY FRED WHISHAVYZ COPYRIGHT 1899, BY THE AMERICAN PRESS ASSOCIATION, ( Continued) | SYNOPSIS, | The hero of this story, Boris Landrinof, | jis ayoung Russian, who wassrent to Bog land to be educaie- He is hasuly sum- j moved bome by bis mother owiug to the | sudden diseppearance ot his father, Count | Landrivof. Shortly after, in Loudon, be is as'oulrhed when a friend tells him be | bar just teen bis father. Accompanied by } this frend he returns to Russia. Boris discevers a clue, and sets out in search of twomen who bave as he supposes ab- | ducied bis father. He took his meais at a restaurant ip | Tottenham Court road, Borofsky wrote. (I could not belp laughing to hear this. | Why, in the name of wonder, I thonght, did father choose such a queer venue for a restaurant?) And it was at this | place that Borofsky made his acquaint- ance. Having discovered father’s weird eating house, Borofsky went one even- ing and dined there, choosing a table alongside that which father always oc- ecupied. (I am calling him ‘‘father’’ ba- cause both mother and I. and of course Percy, were at this time quite agreed that the unknown was certainly my fa- ther and none other. ) Half way through dinner father came | in and sat down at the table next to Borofsky, who presently started a con- versation. Father began by being brusque and silent, but warmed up by degrees. They spoke in French, neither being proficient in English, but Borof- sky, desiring to show that Russian was his natural language, suddenly upset the salt on purpose, uttering an ex- clamation of anger in Ryssian. ‘““Vui Kajetsya Russki!’’ (‘‘Why, you’re a Russian!’’) exclaimed father in surprise, and from that moment con- versation was easy, and the unknown one became, in the joy of his heart to bave met a compatriot, more communi cative. Borofsky introduced himself as a young Russian compelled, for political —— native country. The unknown one laughed at this. ‘‘Ah,”’ he said, ‘‘there are many in that position. I, too, might tell a tale, but that in this country—which is nev- ertheless the best in the world for those situated as some of us are—one never knows who are the bona fide politicians and who are the spies!’’ Borofsky laughed with his companion at this sally and declared that if the stranger felt any compunctions as to confiding in him he at least need not return the compliment, for no one in his senses and with any elementary no- tion as to ‘‘who is who’’ would ever dream of mistaking fora spy so well known a persorality as—the unknown himself. ‘“‘Do you mean to tell me you know who I am?” asked Borofsky’s compan- ion, scanning him euspiciously and freezing up a little. —_ Seatenien snetstuniahentattttinemensmanaetllli ~ihaeamaninenadecangteatemeaineiene meee 7 In the old frontier daya a hundreds of LZ, pioneers were e-—">tortured and “ 5 burned at the stake by cruel Indians. The tortures en- dured by these mar- tyrs must have been something horrible. There are thousands of men to-day who are be- i slowly we Corre to . - eath at the "Ia 2 stake of dis- ease. Their bodies cry out but im a language that only the sufferers themselves can hear. When a man is suffering in this way his body cries out with an aching head, a sluggish body, muscles that are lax and lazy, a brain that % dull, a stomach that disdains food and nerves that will not rest. A wise man will heed these warnings and will resort to the right remedy before it is teo late. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis- covery makes the appetite keen and hearty. It invigorates the liver. It promotes the natural processes of secretion and exere- tion. It makes the digestion and assimila- tion perfect. It purifies the blood and fills it with the life-giving elements of the food. It tears down old and worn-out tissues and replaces them with the firm, muscular tis- sues of health. It is the great blood-maker and flesh-builder. It is the best nerve tonic. It cures 98 per cent. of all cases of consump- tion, weak lungs, bronchitis, lingering coughs and kindred ailments. Found at all medicine stores. Accept no substitute that may be represented as “‘just as good.” The ‘‘just as good’’ kind doesn’t effect cures like the following : “ Twenty-five years ago eight different doctors told me that I would live but a short time, that I had consmmption and must die,” writes Geo. R. Coape, Esq., of Myers Valley, Pottawatomie Co., Kans. “I finally commenced taking Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and am still in the land and among the living."’ i Don’t suffer from constipation. Keep the body clean inside as weli as outside. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets cure con- etipation and biliousness. They never gtipe. All good dealers have them. reasons, to seek an asylum outside his ; renee > err eters eee rer emer cme emer eae ere ee a ES TN ““yery one knows Count Landrinof!’ said our acute little detective. At this, wrote Borofsky, the count gaveagreat jump. Then he set dowr: his knife and fork and began to laugh so that the table shook, *‘which shows,’ Borofsky commented. ‘‘that the count is not melancholy mad, whatever his ailment may be. "’ ‘““Why.”” he said at last, ‘‘I did think I would pass unknown in these queer haunts, at any rate, but I suppose there are more people that know a big man like Landrinof than Landrinof knows.” ‘“‘There would be many to wender why so biga man should have the fancy to live in these queer haunts, as your excellence calls them,”’ said Borofsky, and the other replied that he was living in London strictly incog. in order to in- quire privately into ce:tain financial speculations in which he was engaged. ' “Tt cannot matter much to my friends at home whereabouts in London I pitch my tent,’’ he added, and Borofsky agreed that every man was free to live where he liked. ‘“‘The countess would laugh to see a grandee of Russia dining in a restau- rant in Tottenham Court road,’’ he add- ed. ‘“‘My wife has given mea holiday,’ laughed the count. ‘‘You needn’t men- tion having seen me here. I wish my incognito strictly preserved.’ ‘‘Better to have no address than one in the purlieus of Tottenham Court The count gave a great jump. ”? road, excellence,’’ said Borofsky, laugh- ing also. ‘‘But what if your friends should be seriously anxious, being ig- norant of your whereabouts?”’ At this the count froze up at once. *‘That is a matter which may be left to my friends and myself,’’ he said coldly, and the conversation closed for the evening. This was the extent of the letter, which the writer had evidently penned while in a condition of great excite- ment. ‘‘The count parted from me in some displeasure,’’ ended Borofsky ‘‘But all will be well, for 1 intend to improve our acquaintance at the first opportunity, and if I do not bring the count back within a fortnight you need never trust me again.”’ CHAPTER XI. DETECTIVE’S LIFE IN PERIL. Borofsky’s letter was the source of much thought and of much agitated conversation among our little party of three, for. though it seemed indeed to establish the fact that he had seen my dear father himself, yet it did little to- ward elucidating the painful mystery of his disappearance or the still more painful and bewildering mystery of his silence. Here was father obvionsly a free agent and able if he chose to write home with explanations of his absence, yet. he preferred to live a secret and semi hidden life in a slummy, or at least third rate, quarter of London. He was free and living alone. Those rascals who had carried him off from Erinofka and conveyed him over the frontier and away were no longer with him. He was out of their power. But, if out of their power, why did he not return or write? Had they some mysterious hold upon him, forbidding him under pain of sudden death—a death such as had be- fallen the unfortunate little talebearer at Erinofka—to ccmmunicate in any way whatever with those who were familiar with him at home? ‘“‘No,”’ said I heartily, when this theory was put forward by Percy, ‘‘cer- tainly not. Father would never tamely submit to such a thing. Once out of their hands and free to do as_ he liked, father would soon find means to turn the tables on the rascals, blackmailers or whatever they may be, and it is quite possible, if they exist at all in connection with this affair, that they are blackmailers.’”’ ‘“‘What would they blackmail your father for?’’ asked Percy quite indig- nantly. ‘‘He is not at all the man to have a skeleton in the cupboard that he is afraid to show to all the world.”’ “Quite true,” I said, ‘‘but there’s — —_ ' they were up to some game which n:» |- THE DLualLY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETUWN, NOVEUBEkK II, 1849 J y, Why ‘nur- to murder son : they exist, may t and are thr jeaven knows W up some huge sn f | ven this doesn’t ext Oo! 3 mysterl us Joul }, either. unless he has aise funds But be would hi.:ve nother know as soon as he was tree am cocksure cf it.’ ‘‘Unless they heve driven him on his senses for the time being,’’ mot sighed ‘‘No, mother,’’ I said, ‘‘I’ll tell what I think I’ve come to the con sion that those Crinofka rascals h nothing whatever to do with itor w us. Their affair was merely a n dence as regards father and his dis: pearance. They were there, granted i ed secrecy and even murdered an in who divulged their secret, but the dr» <- ged man (I conclude he was drugg:') or the sick man was not father \V» thought we had struck a trail. but it was a false scent.’”’ *““God grant it, dear Boris,’ said mother, ‘for I cannot bear to think of your father having fallen into snch hands. But why have you come to this conclusion ?”' “For two reasons—one is that if these fellows had any good reason fcr bagging father and carrying him away they would not have let him go free as they have done, and the other is that, as I have said, now father is free and we know that he is. If his silence and disappearance and all had been brought about by these people, he would cer- tainly communicate with us. There must be another reason for his flight. These Erinofka fellows had nothing to do with it.” Yet, neither I nor mother nor Percy could put forth any good theory to re- place the old one, and the situation re- mained unchanged and the mystery un- solved. We must await further. devel- opments from the other side of the wa- ter, and trust to Borofsky’s talent and exertions to bring light into our dark places, and this he could only do by re- storing poor father to his right mind and persuading him to return to us. I think I should have set out myself. presently, in order to see father and find out, in person, what ailed him and whether an appeal from me, and in mother’s name, would restore him to reason, but a few days later we hada second and a very exciting letter from Borofsky. ‘‘T have met with astonishing success since my last letter,’’ he wrote, ‘‘thongh not withont much patience and some personal risk.” ‘‘Personal risk!'' echoed mother, in- terrapting me as I read aloud. ‘“‘Then those rascals are still hanging about. May God protect dear Vladimir and also this poor Borofsky1"’ I, too, had been surprised to see the expression used—‘‘personal risk.” I ecntinned to read the letter aloud: ‘“‘The count, at our last interview, had suddenly ciosed the conversation, angrily giving me to understand that he considered my last remark a liberty. He rose from the table. bowed and left the restaurant, I following a minute later. The count returned home. | saw him to his lodgings and I re-entered ny own, which were nearly opposite, ang wrote and posted my letter. (To be Continued.) No Cure for... Bright’s Disease tn its advanced stages—The Rea- son Why-—Danger Prevented by the Timely Use of Dr. A. W. Chase’s Kidneoy-Liver Piits. To understand Bright s Disease 1s to know that in its advanced stages it is past the reach ef human aid. The cells of the kidneys undergo a wasting change, which leaves them dead so far as performing their functions is concerned. Just think of having the kidneys dead. Think of the poisons left ia the system when these organs could no longer perform their duties as filters of the blood. It would be difficult to conceive of anything more dreadful, and yet this is the goal to which every case of neglected kiduey disease must lead. When the back aches, when urinating is dificult or too frequent, when there are de- posits in the urine after standing for 24 hours, there is no time to lose in procuring Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills. It is not claimed that they will cure Bright's Disease in its last stages. They are an abso- lute cure for kidney disease, and so long as the kidnevs are not entirely wasted away they will give new strength and vigor and enable them to resume their duties of filtering the blood. Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills will stop backache and headache in short order by re- moving the cause, and will positively prevent Bright's Disease. | One pill a dose, 25c. a box. At all dealers, or Edmanson, Baies & Ca, Toronto, e ESTABLISHED 1887 LEITH HOUSE Telephone 174 P. 0. Box 326 82 to 38 Queen Street Haring secured the agency of the fam - ous “Silver Spring Brewing Sherbrooke” P. @.,I am prepared to eupply ale and porter of unsurpassed quality at prices that cannot fail to please. Write for. prices and be prepared for a genuine sur- prise. A. MACDONALD Not Made to Order But Made to Fit. | | SHOREY’S Rigby Proofed ; rrieze Ulsters | | : at ~~ 1 ir Ben hey ¢ AN Mey Le \ PL et Wane > Witutids. £> \ ey Pin P F j ‘ eet, i . 4 , r é " Hl = i In seven shades. 52 inches long. Deep Storm Collar. 5 pockets—deep flaps. Made f Frieze—not Etoffe. Guar- anteed to please or your money back. Sold by all Up-to-Date Clothing Dealers for $7.50 These goods may be obtained from JAS. PATON & CO. THE Holiday and Spring Samples Ate — NOW ON THE ROADS Newest Swell ¥ eckwear of Foreign & Canadian M nufacture FOR THE CHRISTMAS TRADE Largest range in Underwear, Shirts and Collars, fee CLOVER & BRAIS. 194, 196, 198 McGill St... Montreal a ENE. — ——_ See D. A, Bruce’s show window for bar- gains in Underwear, Worth your while— SNAPS. WD. A. BRUCE Great rush at P MON AGHAN'S, Queen St. He is selling crockery, glass- Ware and groceries at ~ reduced prices. hepiiliata ttamgpuysuntigiceniierathciatinn f 9 * . a ; s , ri = wo > npn pnt eek pocrnseeecinastian Moastiptoe : mn eneam Sa . " ” en dic | 4 + Aa aeiaiiemnned a aapnemrentespnsnnaticenaniniahens p , - ‘ “ ‘ eas ‘ - z = ie a pgp lastname gence inners 5 Fe) , , : Ui - i ' ; * r + ; n remaacalraesntieeramanag aes ; mi