Nite Aife Nfs SILe SB S'E JEST RS 3N ERK AP AP * § iv iN — i wae Pit i A “aS “ee” 9c atali pvooKsiores, aN . » , . Oye ?} I trated b ok oO I . K. ay esting Souvenir so Bs Ws Whe Dl: 2he Bhs he Me Te 4 > wo = rs oe Alt, Nh 2% SoLee > @ woe be Z : . Ae ae a ae an AN div “eae * _CHARLOTTETOWN Mi TABLE (LOCAL TIME.) grival aud Daparturs of Trains and Steamers. ——s TRAINS reas leaves for the west... reas arrives from s a —...... or os scomodation leaves for tne e656 00pm ~ 10 55 am. 1e 225 0m. . T05a m. .9 10am. “T ne Se rer e 35 am. Bxp 5 8 . 959 pm. @ oeeeee teeeneecere © Wel veceeere coeveeeee menennnyy Accomodation arrives from t HEAL noereeee pasepeoes seeeeeeeeree Aecomedation arrives from t eeeceeeee? eecee WOM .cccereees leaves for the east... Bxpress arrives from the east odation leaves tor tue — e eee teceeecee seoeer+ ee 3 00 Pp m. modation arrives from (ue Ss eseoe + 450 pm. STEAMERS (PRINCESS. Leaves for Pictou every morn ng eee Bh cccovcecceeeess eeeeeeoeee © 9 ¥0, a m Arrives from Pictou every even- ID Btreevee eters esers eeeeereee 8 30 p mw. LA GRANDE DUCHESSE. Arrives from Boston and Bal) fax every Monday....-.----+--- Leaves for Boston and Halifa every Wednesday .....+-++- HALIFAX. Arcives from Boston and Ha! fax every Thursday ws.evee seerceeee Leavea for Halifax and Bostoa every Friday .... sscsereee. os CAMPANA. Arrives from Montreal and Que~ bec every alternate Friday.... Leaves for Quebec and Montreal the following Monday evening. CITY OF GHENT, Arrives from MHolifax every Thursday afternooa ........ .. Leaves for Halifax every Friday JACQUES CARTIBR. Leaves for Orwell Tueadays, Wednesdays, Thursdays........ Leaves for Crapaud every Fries a Leaves for Crapaud every NE cris 6» « ates FERRY BOATS, “Hillsb..crgu”? Leaves Ferry Wharf for Southpor. exer, half hour. “E'fio”—lcay s for Rocky Point daily ai 630, 8,9, ll,am; 1, 2, 4, 6.30, pm, localtime. Sundays at9-a m, 12.45 2,3,4pm. Returnin, 1.15, 2.30, 3.15 and 5 pm. “Southport”—Runs up Eas. iver every Tuesday, leaving at 530 a m, and 3 miocal. Runs up We-t River every oat” leaving at 5,30 a mw, and 4pm 12 p m. 10am. 7pm lpm. 10a m. 3pm 3p tm. Satur- 2p m. —_— HTS Acc) M MODATION. For the benefi: of tourists ani c*hers We publish the following lies of hotels and Oarding houses in Charlottetown and tlewhere : — Charlottetown—Hotel Davies, Queeo olel, Revere Hotel, Eureka House, 8D House, Railway House, Lepage were? Duncan House, Finlay House, CPadyen House. Ummerside— Clifton House, Russ otel, Camptell Hotel, Perry House. ris—Sea View Hotel, Ocean Ouse, Tracadie— Acadia Hotel. Rustico—Sea Side Hotel. Stanhope—Cliff House, Mutch House. racklev Point—Shaw House. Albertoo—Seaforth Houses Albion > al pak j th Bhore Hues, odgson House, Nor Ownal--Florida Hotel, Dominion qc River Bridge—Finlay House. rgetown—Aitken House, Tapper House, Acadia Hoase. 7 _ Traverse—Lanedowne Hotel. Seid meee House, Bellevue Railway Hotel. sat maington—Clarke’s Hotel, Commer- Montagne-—M acdonald House. Mount Stewart—Clarke’s Hotel; Man- Hampto: —Pleasant View House. Port Hill—Port Hill House. f — Beer ee oe THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN SEPTEMBER 12, 1900 ape ober er spe eee shee te: freee sd) og. * ¢ =e a ¢ 24 ae NS ( Coatiaued,) ’ } ? ii Grilled 1 ; Hastings examined his revolver which he found in first-rate condition. Then he reached out and pickea » the asserai to which h had clung while escaping from the! vicinity of the scene where his deadly | duel with the war chief had occur- | red. ; It was Walkulle’s assegai, and as fine a stick as could be run across |} from Zululand to Damaraland on the} west coast. iis next move was to extinguish the light so that the. little cabin should be wrapped in darkness. This done he too stepped outside, desirous of being a witness to the} strange scene about to oceur. The first thing that attracted his attention was the weird light aris- Ins from a myriad of blazing torches carried by the crowd of blacks on the | steep hillside. Rex stepped forward to find a place where he could see without exposing himself, for the tumult was enough to arouse his curiosity, even if his life had not been in prril. What he saw he never forgot. It Was a picture to haunt an artist’s dreams—a page from the nether world, a mingling of countless black and painted faces, and flashing smoking flambeaux. Ye gods, what a weird spectacle. He forgot for the moment that it was his life they sought, and only measured the scene as a basis upon which a masterpiece fit for the best hanging at the Paris Salon could be built. This sensation more practical. What was about to happen—wovld the mad impis for- eet their veneration for the fair god- @dess, and overwhelm her in their search for the person who had slain their chief? Rex noticed with uneasiness that some of those in the advance were bending over as they edvanced, fave way to one a He did not require the training of Bludsoe to understand what this eoegere ors | these men were the ex- pert trailers of the tribe, and that they had followed his tracks from be- side the smouldering council fire where the valiant Walkulla fell, to the retreat of the white god. Did they know the war chief had been slain by a hated paleface—-per- haps Walkulla had retained sufficient strength to inform them with his last breath, or possibly the foot- prints revealed this much to their keen eyes. The main thing of course was the means to be employed in baffling their fury. All depended on the girl. Rex drew back and glanced toward her as she stood upon an elevation. A peculiar glow began to surround her form, an unearthly white light very like that produced by electricity. Her figure stood out like a pale sta- tue. She had discarded the black robe and Was now as he had first seen her, an angelic being in purest white. As the peculiar light increased even Rex was astonished—it seemed to proceed from the figure itself, just as may be seen in the glow-worm or the fire-fly. Of he knew the cause Was sone ingenious contriv- ance which had been arranged by her course father, with the purpose in view of controlling the superstitious blacks. The shouts began tuo grow less in HEART | DISEASE is a symptcem of Kidney Disease. A_ well-known doctor has said, ‘* I never yet madea post-mortem ex- aminationinacaseot death from Heart Disease with- out finding the kidneys wereat fault.” The Kidney medicine which was first on the market, most success. ful for Heart Disease and all Kidney Troubles, and most widely imitated is Dodd’s Kidney Pills ee be o@ect > oat ’ . és Tre-th-e jrs@-3}--0- Oe o}r Deny he sg ee Ce pre yTe uoddess of Afr A Story of she Golden Fleece. aie ? BY ST. GEORGE RATHBORNE L Author of “Miss Capricr,” ‘Dr. Jacx’s Wire,” si vam. Jace,” Exc, Ete. ERROR COCO Mee ie ie Seematire KE eee ine hee a ee ONE ae i Why ; scheme grotesyue forms ! t | — Or bere owe OD ee", 0 § voiume as those below: caugnt signt of the girl at whose shrine they had Worship; ed these vears. She spoke to them in their own tongue, and an answer came back What was said Rex could only sur- tuise, but he felt sure it concerned him. Curiosity again urged him to glance over the edge. A few of the blacks were on their knees, but the main throng stood erect. Rebellion was in the air-—--the evil influence of old liassaje had made itself felt, and Ouly by a supreme effert could the lair god regain her superiority over | these Wavering superstitious minds, sO prone to be led by a show of power. Could she do it? Somehow he had a great faith in her ability to cope with this new di- lemma, One thing he noticed, and this was the absence of the witch-doctor. had he not kept up with the procession—was he deep in for the overthrow white god? Apparently she was explaining the presence of a stranger in some way to excite their wonder—perhaps she even hinted that it was the spirit of sophistry and of | the departed returned to hold com- munion with her. They were inclin- ed to scoff at the idea, and she felt called upon to draw on her resources, as bequeathed to her by her father. These were simple enough in the eyes of one accustomed to the won- ders of the latter-end of our present century; but when a hand mirror or a string of colored beads arouses the cupidity of a savage beast, small things appear gigantic before their vision. So With a wave of the hand she caused the white light to turn intoa ruby glow, and then gradually into a pale green. More heads went down, while those figures that still held forth were wavering between the dread that made their hearts sick, and a sullen dependence upon the crafty witch doctor who had asaured them he had the wires Jaid to overcome this wo- may spirit Whose influence had ever been in the line of peace, rather than the natural aggressiveness of their race. Then the girl brought about a cli- max—it was such a little thing that Rex would have laughed only for the grave consequences resting upon it— merely the commonest of all fire- works, known far and wide as a Roman candle, but to those black Warriors a sputtering fire-demon bearing flaming messages of red and blue from dread M’limo. Perhaps she had never sion to use one of these before. At any rate its effect on the most obstinate of the Zambodj warriors was profound, They gazed awe-struck upon the spouting shower of sparks, but when with a barg a fiery red ball shot up over their heads, to mysteriously dis- appear, there was a howl of mortal terror, and to a man they threw themselves upon their knees. And with each report, the flight of the colored ball was accompanied by a chorus of groans and cries that promised poor returns for the pro- phet Hassaje’s future dealings with his wretched people. The victéry Seemed Won, for the blacks would not dare advance upon the retreat of their white god after this exhibition of her intercourse with the terror by night, the spirit of the hilis, dread M’limo himself. When Rex arrived at this pleasant solution to the problem, he sudden- ly remembered tnrere was one Person not taken into consideration when thus settling the matter. The witch doctor! Where was Hassaje the cunning manipulator of charms, the magician who would invoke a blessing or a curse, who talked with M’limo in the thunder of the storm, and received his messages on the forked lightning that scorched the towering oak or brought death to the huddled cat- tle! Rex knew, and the information came to him with a shock. He caught sight of a skulking fig- ure that crawled and crept along foot by foot in the rear of the shining form of the girl; and he’ knew this must be the desperate conqueror who had resolved to stake his all upon ene effort to regain his lost hold on the minds of his former slaves, in danger of being emancipated by the strenger influence of his girl rival. Yes, he had crawled up a secret path while the others advanced along the face of the hill, his object being to come upon the white object of worship from the rear, to take her by surprise as it Were, and thus bring her reign to an end. Heaven looked not with favor upon his dark plans. No sooner had Hastings discovered the crafty witch man than he knew found occa- LOST.—In June, between Queen Street and Of elething Navigation Co’s Whari, a pareel ee me ai thls odlen. — some | the } ene geno a to what use he could put his si- | shooter. To trust to an assezai With uch at stake would many chances. Nearer crept that creeps bent until so be taking Loo Hassaje, like a upon its prey-——low he was almost flat the ground; but his glittering never his intended No his of 1 Inyvrtad 1.ewer he upon eyes leit prey. doubt it sight sparks that fell like apparently from the extended hand of the being he hated and fear- ed; but he had primed his soul for one supreme effort to his would not allow the coward flesh to control his actions. Nearer still. Rex fiesh crept he rain this assert ae cas & <n at ¢« : authority, and raised his arm, and allowed his Weapon to cover the wretched charlatan. He felt no pity —~- the fellow had conspired to take the life of that beautiful and thus merited his doom. being, of the African, woods he Was about to shoot Had it been a chimpanzee down Rex would not have aimed more deliberateiy. He saw that Hassaje had slowly arisen—that he held something in his hand, something that glittered in the flash of the fountain of sparks. it Was a knife, perhaps a _ poisoned blade. Some of these Zulus and Zam- bodi warriors show amazing skill in casting such a Weapon even at a distance of ten yards, and it was evidently the intention of the zealous witch-doctor to send this blade hurt- Itng through space, directed at the beautiful figure in white, emblematic of purity. Hastings’ intentions were all right, but. he did not have occasion to use his firearm. The girl suddenly turned and point- ed directly at the magician, who had even drawn back his arm as if to inmake the cast. Rex caught his breath, but Hassaje caught something more, for a sput- tering fiery cotton ball of intensest scarlet hue shot out of the little tube she held—its last stroke as it prov- ed—and struck him fairly between the eyes, as though directed by a sharpshooter. It was a beautiful sight. The witch-doctor’s desperate valor Was not proof against such an_ on- set. He gave a seream that would have shamed a terrified elephant, and for- getting all about his desire to re- gain his old-time supremacy, thought only of escape. When Rex saw him scrambling over the brink, while still covering the squat figure he refrained from firing. It was just as well, since the magi- cian’s one idea was to put a little space between his precious body and the spouting fire-god. He fairly tum- bled over the edge, and Rex could hear him rolling down the steep, now on his head and angn on his back, shrieking imprecations and in- cantations in the Zambodi tongue as only a sadly demeralized priest would be capable of doing. Ai all events the evil maghinations of the desperate’ sorcerer had been brought to naught, and for the pres- ent at least the refuge of the fair god- dess remained sacred. CHAPTER XXII. MAID MIRIAN. Gradually the sounds of excitement died away. The black warriors, when their lovely goddess had van- ished, lost no time in sneaking down the hillside, as though afraid to re main longer near such sacred ground. But they did not return to the kraal. Rex could see the glow of their tor- ches through the trees, and now and then a puff of air from that quarter would bring to his ears the sound of a high pitched voice which he knew belonged to the demoralized charlatan. Hassaje Was not yet ready to give up the fight, while an arrow remained jn his quiver or his scheming tind could plot new de signs. The girl had discovered Hastings’ presence near by, and seemed affected by it, as though she could under- stand what motive had _ influenced him to thus issue forth. Perhaps she had also known of his design upon the life of the necromancer, for he still held his weapon in his hand when, garbed again in her sombre robe, she came to his side. (To be Continued.) a OP = aad Piles a — —_—— ta a WHEN HEATING WITH WOOD USE A , 4, Se HL al Uf FAMOUS MAGNET ‘OF (pty WOOD FURNACE SIXTEEN styles and sizes, For brick or galvanized casings, Fire travels THREE TIMES the length of furnace before entering smoke pipe. Direct or In. direct Draft. STEEI, radia- tor gives quick heat. Cup Joints throughout. Smoke cannot escape. Sectional Grates. Large Ashpit. The most easily cleaned furnace made. All operations from the front. PAMPHLETS AND ESTIMATES FREE from our local agent or our nearest house. THE MeCLARY MEG. Lonpon GO. Toronto MonrrRraL WINNIPEG AND VANCOUVER S. W. Crabbe, Laval Agent, Charlettetown, te | $8.25 WILL BUYA DOUBLE BREASTED ALL WOOL WORSTEZD SUIF AT DD). A. Bruces TT The undersigned offers fur sale taa bargain the following : One 40-Horse Power Engine and Boiler. 14 Driving Pulleys with Shaft and Belting. One Rip Saw and bench with carriage. One 36 in. Saw. One 24 in. Planer—Ore set hvisting blocks, One Matching acd Moulding M- chine, Fifty-one Moulding Knivey, One Band Saw complete. One Buzz Piarer. One Swing Saw compiete, One Turning Latte and Shaft - One Vice : Two Emery Wheele—One Jig Saw. Three Circular Saws and tables. All in first-class order. MATTHEW & MCLEAN —_——— For 9 Years 3ominion laspector of Stcamscats Cured by Cr. Chase’s Cintment. False modesty and fear of the sur- gcon'’s knife prevent most people from appesling to their paysiciaus fcr a cure for fi.ce. Many people suffer on year after year, robbed of their rest and sleep by the terrible itching, when they could ve entirely cured by a single box of Dr. Chase's Ointment. Mr. O. P. St. John, Dominion Iinspec- tor of steamboats, living at 246 Shaw street, Toronto, states:—‘I suffered for nine years from itching piles, at ‘times being unable to rest on account of the annoyance caused by thera. After trying almost all remedies in vain I pegan the use of Dr. Chases Ointment, which entirely cured ine. I cannot speak too highly of it. I have recommended it to several friende, all of whom have been cured by its use.” Dr. Chase's Ointment is recognized ‘y physicians, druggists, and the pub- fie in general as the only absolute urs for piles: 60 cents a box, at ail dealers, er Edmanson, Bates and Co., Toronta ~~ THi “~~ Ocean Accident & Guarantee Oorporation, Ltd OF -LONDON. Special Travelling Accident & Sickness Coupon Policy. _The above policy has just been issued by the greatest and most pregressi Accident Company in the world to-day. The policy is issued by the agent in Charlottetown’at a moment’s notice and enclosed in a substantial pocket book. The indeminities are as follows:— Death caused by accident in passenger Railway conveyance $1500.00, Temporary Disablement caused by accident in Railway conveyance $10.00 per week. Temporary Disablement caused by Smallpox, Varioloid Diphtheria, Meas les, Asiatic, Cholera, Erysipilas, Appendicitis, Diabetes, Peritonitis, Pleurisy Pneumonia, Meningitis or.Tetanus, $10.00 per week. PRICE OF ,POLICY—$3.00 per annum. OmaELorIToWN AGENT “* 2 a ee