THE DAILY EXAMINER CHARLOTTETOWN, OCTOBER 11 1899 AE e on our THE BEST ts always imitated. Dodd's Kidney Pils, solid only im boxes like thi., are widely imitated, because they are the pees Kideey cure. ‘Jake none WE WANT HOUSEKEEPERS To come in and look over our | groceries Our stock fine | and fresh and guaranteed to be | satisfactory. We keep every- | thing in our line that is neces- sary. FOR HOUSEKEEPING The prices—well, that is wuat we want you to see when you is are looking at our gocds. Their lowness will surprise you. DAISCOLL and HORNSBY THE WEEK'S GROCERIES... Le Perhaps you would like to cet a little more for what you spend. Perhaps you would like to have everything fresh and) nice. If you will try my store I| think you will find that your money will go farther. And all the groceries you get will be good and fresh. JOHN McKENNA. QUEEN ST. GROCER —-= PLANT LINE. EXCURSIONS CHARLOTTETOWN TO Boston) AND RETURN FOR $11.00 Good for 30 Days: Commencing Oct 3rd, the well known §.S. Halifax leaves Charlottetown every Tuesday nt noon for Boston, via Hawkes~ bury and Halifax. From Halifax—Every Wednesday at 11 pm. Passengers tickeied via Pictou on Wednesdays. Frem Bosten every Tiekets for cale at S etions cn P B tailwcy. For tickets, rates on freight an a!l information apply H L CHIPMAN, Supt, Halifax. aturday st noon W W CLARKE, Agent SALT! SALT | fetched | rom and some tol acco, and were as com- . ;*) 2000 Bags Common falt new landin 6000 “6 ‘6 “ now du2 : : 500 factory filled te arrive Buycrs ordering ex. ship save cost cf storing here. For sale low to the a 5 ade. or prices write CHARLE* HAKPER, 224 dlwk Shediac, N. B | | | } } Guard! ONE TREE ISLAND. By JOHN BLOUNDELLE-BURTON. (Cor ed.) : : ; > . 7 **Bat with the night there seemed to come but little le previously been in the day, and was for remaining all night on the tre ind the good skipper his permission free en ugh for them to doit. Some, however, who pre- ferred their bert in the fo’castle to the sand and sbingle of the island went ick to the ship, but I was one who coolness than bh id some shi re unaer oe gave hs i ashore. ‘‘Well, the night fell swift upon us, and, having slept much and refreshed ourselves during the day, we was not oversleepy at night, and so we sat talk- ing and yarning, and sometimes giving a friendly haJloo to the men on the ship, and asking them how they did, and we out rations ashore, with + Svait our fortable as with the heat we well might be, and, gradually, one by one, the men dropped off to sleep, me and a seaman named Collis being the last to keep awake, and now a strange thing hap- pened. ‘Collis and I was a-sitting side by ' side, not lying down like the rest, and | Iwas idly tossing the stones beneath us about—aiming at a whiter one than the rest that was some feet away—when Collis turns fierce upon me and says, ‘What makes you touch my hair like that?’ and moves off a bit away from me, as though offended like. ‘**Touch your hair, mate!’ says I. ‘Why have I got three arms and hands? I am a-chucking stones, ain’t 1?’ ‘Collis looked at mea moment, unbe- lieving like, and then he says, ‘All the same, you touched my hair—lifted it up like. Don’t do it no more.’ ‘‘Now, Collis was the man what had been aboard to fetch the food and rum, and thinks I to myself that when at the stores he had taken a drop extra for himself. So I says no more, but only laughs. But blow me, shipmates allin this here room in Portsmouth town, if there weren’t a echo to that laugh close by into my ear. Butit were a kind of gurgling, cruel laugh, which didn’t sound like mine. At least, I hoped not. Then Collis gets up, after staring at me again for a moment, and says, says he: ‘Bos’n, good night I’ve changed my humor; I’m a-going aboard,’ and with that he starts off duwn the sand to the ship, it being now low tide, and I see him a-clamber- ing up her side by aid of a rope chucked him by the watch. ‘Well, I was a-pondering deep upon that langh I heerd, when, bust me, if I didn’t feel something a-dragging of my hairtp ina kind of manner as, when we was boys, we dragged a stone up with a sucker. Then I gives my head a wrench and so seems to get free of whatever had got hold on it, and I myself moves off a bit. Lain’t got none of them sooperstitions what most on them in our calling has, or I should have thought the island was haunted. But that, I says to myself, could not be. There wern’t no ghost up in that tree, I could make very sure, seeing as how I could see every branch of it and nearly count every leaf on it in the clear moonlight, and there was no- where else for a ghost to harbor. ‘*Then I looks down at the men, think- ing as how perhaps some on them was a-playing of a trick on us, but they was all asleep—if ever | see men asleep It is altogether admirable when a man, by dint of sheer will, wrings a for- tune from niggardly circumstances. The world is full of instances where men have done tk1s, but never in history was this acconiplished by a weak and unhealthy man. Ill-health not only weakens every physical yiunction but ev- ery mental fac- ulty and every moral quality. If a man will r stop and reason ] for a moment, cet he does not have to be a physician to understand the causes of impure blood, or its far-reaching effects. When a man’s digestion is disor- dered, his liver sluggish, his bowels inac- tive, the blood is deprived of the proper food elements, and the sluggish liver and bowels supply in their place, the foulest of poisons. The blood is the life-stream. When it is full of foul poisons, it carries and deposits them in every organ and tis- <e: sue of the body. Bone, sinew, muscle, and | flesh-tissue, the brain cells and the nerve fibres are all fed upon bad, poisonous food. Serious ill-health is bound to result. The man is weakened in every fiber of his body. He is weakened physically, mentally and morally. He suffers from sick headache, distress in stomach after meals, giddiness and drowsiness, loss of appetite and sleep, bad taste in the mouth, shakiness in the morning, and dullness throughout the day, and lassitude and an indisposition to work. Sooner or later these conditions develop consumption, nervous prostration, malaria, rheumatism, or some blood or skin disease. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery 13 the best of all known medicines for ambi- tious. hard-working men and women. It 1s the great blood-maker and flesh-builder. It makes the appetite keen and hearty, and the digestion and assimilation perfect, the liver active, the blood pure and rich, the nerves steady, the body vigorous and the brain alert. Where there is also constipa- | tion Dr, Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets should be ; used. Both of these great medicines are for sale by all medicine dealers. ib ny lise le @ywucY Wao Wai ' and so they was a minute before. but even as I looked at them they all with one accord springs up, some sitting some standing, some rubbing their ev some cursing and swearing. and two on em falling to a-fightineg ‘Stop this h ways |. a-interp | ing between the two fighting « ‘I'll have no fighting bere. I’m in com ; Mand on this island. Stop, I say! Bp * ‘He pniled me up out ot ) } Says on : a liar,’ | ? rT 5 i " la ; On ¢ ] (s up it traicht, an 1 says he, ‘God, I feels like death!’ ; | all t} t s mumbled and muttered to the j | me. There’s a something on this island | as ain'tright. Whether it’s in the air | or whether it’s in the soil or whether | it’s in the sea around us [ know not. But there’s something here as should not be. You was all a-sleeping peaceful two moments ago and nobody pulled | anyon you, and yet here you all are saying as how some one did do so, and one on you says as how he feels like death.’ ‘* ‘And so I do,’ Winter by name. me.’ ** “To the fiend with death,’ says I; ‘get up and walk abont.’ ‘** *T can’t,’ says he; ‘I can’t. I can’t move.’ And he couldn't. that man was in a kind of parlytic state, as the doctors cail it, and he could not move. ‘* *Then,’ says I, ‘this won’t do, men. This here is worse nor the storm. Let’s hail the ship.’ And with that we bailed her. ‘What cheer?’ I sings out to the man I could see on the fo’castle. ‘What cheer, shipmate?’ And he sings back: ‘All’s well abuard. What cheer, shipmate, ashore?’ ‘* ‘Bad,’ answered |. ‘We think this land is infected. Teli the captain Will Winter says he’s dying.’ Well, with that we hears voices on the ship and see a lantern moving, and then the cap- tain hails us. ‘What’s this, I hear, Bunce?’ he calls to me. ‘* “Will Winter took with sickness, skipper,’ I replies, ‘and I think we are all going mad, captain. We can says the man—Will ‘I feel death upon - “Yes,” he began, “this is how it goes.” feel something as we can’t see a-catch- ing hold on us and a-dragging of us.’ ‘**Come aboard,’ halloos’ back the skipper, ‘all on you, at onst.’ But here was a difficulty. We others could all have clambered up the ship’s side—all on us excepting Will Winter. But, as for him, he conldn’t move, and there wern’t no moving of him—and naterel, and sailorlike, we wasn’t a-going to leave him there—the more so as there was no doubt that he was like to die. You could see it in his face, friends, as he lay there under the tree—mateys, you could see it in the horror of his eyes! ‘‘However, I sends all the others down to the ship, and I halloos off to the captain, telling him that all my men was coming on board, excepting only Will Winter, who couldn’t move, and myself, who was a-going to stand by with him and help him. And of this the captain approved. ‘So off they goes to the ship, and right glad, I think, they was to do it, and, although the Loving Friend weren't a-lying more nor two cables or two ca- bles and a half’s length from the shore, I felt a bit lonesome and creepylike as I recollected that here was I on a island about which there was something most certainly strange and with a man mark- ed for death alongside of me. However. I tried to dismiss them thoughts from my mind and to see what I could do for Will. He, poor man, was now a-ly- ing flat on his back, with his eyes star- ing up to the stars through the branch- es of the tree, and with his hands a twitching convulsivelike, and he was a muttering something of which I could catch no words, or only the word ‘tree.’ But what he was talking abont. or what he wanted to say, I have never known. ‘““*What is it, shipmate?’ I said. a-bending over him and moistening his lips with some rum and water. ‘What cheer? WhatcanI dofor you?’ But be give no answer as I could under- stand, so I made him as comfortable as I could, and then I lay down near him, but away from him a bit and nearer to the sea, and so, sometimes raising myself to look at him, and wondering as to whether he would live till morning, I commended bim and myself to God—as all good, right feeling sailors should do —and so I fel] asleep. ‘I fell asleep, I say, but, oh, friends all, what ¢ sleep it was!. At first I Friends all, } Vv iii ¥ at | Was stfrove¢elinyg t wake. upa help bim, but that something beld to the € h i that all the tine t ives the ¢ 4 \ rostlin: . to j | at ’ { 1) (| i j hogverili s \ = Ti! n ] pottiy ! j : : | LA i lY’Y, asa cat | S Wha ¢ hi} pay i bat all e Wi | ui r = | holl > ja it f [ l 1) of ti) > H si] is | } 1 dia ‘1 VY er Yelling and screan for p 1 crliing on his Make i t ve as | m 1 could Wage oor stretch ont a hand to h him Bat awake at last I did. ty ti llooing of many voices in my ears at by rough bands shaking me. am springing np into a sitting posture saw tout the daybreak had come, tha the sun was up above the sea and that half the crew of the Loving Fricud had come ashore—also the captain— and was all a-standing round me creamed that | was dend. and then tb Wi) f the skipper asks, looking down stern upon tne as I sat thure keep watch over a sick comrade? ‘**Keep watch, captain, says L ‘Why, | done my best for him—and— and—is he deal?’ ‘**What does this mean. Bance? ‘And is this how vou (to be continned) Doctors said Incurable But the Notary, Mr. Lemire, was cured of Kidney Disease in two months by Dr. Chase’s Kidney- Liver Pills. It is only when thoroughly convinced of the superior merit of a remedy that public men will give their sanction. Mr. E. H. Lemire, Notary Public, 1692 Notre Dame Street, Montreal, tells of his re- markable recovery from a severe attack of kid- ney disease. When doctors had failed, Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills saved his life. He writes: ‘‘I give this statement, first because it is only just that the merit of Dr, Chase's Kid- ney-Liver Pills should be made known, and again in order that others may profit by my experience. For years 1 suffered with kidney disease which doctors pronounced incurable, Thanks to Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills, which I have used for two months, Iam com. pletely cured. They helped me from the first, and the cure is now perfect.” Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills act directly on the kidneys, and through their combined influence on the kidneys and liver, cure the most complicated diseases of these delicate organs, One pilla dose. 25 cents a box at all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Toronta, Not Easily Broken. \ a iM AD, 2. j 2.5 ¢ as a i: Be: ; Vinter \ is Cu mnie 1 he aa ¥ & aZZZ it The purity of ma- terial used in the manufacture of GRESCENT ” Steel Agate Ware Be Noy . ahs os As: enables it to withstand ac] hard usage. iN Rg: The enamel will not me, “teed chip or burn and is im- Mc.te.| permeable to fruit acids, The best is always the cheapest. Each piece guar- ea Ml anteed, MADE BY THE THOS. DAVIDSON MFG, CO., Montreal. EEnmnbieneneyomnnnaen en POSTPONED RACES At Souris Tre reces which weve to have taken place at Sonris yesterday were postponed Ob acconnt of rain uotwl Thursday the 12:h October inst. There will bea match race between the stal ione, Prince Regeut, Prospector and Progres- Lad fora pur-e of $159; a three minute race for a purse of $75; and a green race for a purse of $30. Entrance fee 10 per cent. of purse. Ent: es tocloseon Tuesday Races will be called at 12 0’clock sharp. Special train will leave Charlottetown at 8.30 local time a, m. on day of race; re- turn fare one dollar. Return tickete at one first clase fare wil! be issued from al! stations weai of Charlottetown. F. 8. MACDONALD, dy & wkly As td 4 ‘eG TRE Zinc ETCHING, ELECTROTYPING., | 71 DOCK Sr a =, : St. JOHN, N.B. Secretary. Castoria is fou ‘ints and. Children. Cast % farmiless § for Castor Oil, Paregor.., cop aud Svothiing Syrups. Is contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. It is Pleasant. [ts guarantee is thirty years’ use by TFiilliens of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays Feverish- Castoria cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. Teething Troubles, Von 4 wees ¢ QE LOPLA Castoria bc li ae sl , cures Constipation and assimilates the Food, regulates e Stomachienc Dowels of Infants and Children, giving ness. relieves Piantulency. th heaithy and natura sleep. Castoria is the Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend, s™ ° . “7 ~ ‘J vm Castoria. Castoria. “Castoria is an excelicnt medicine for **Castoria ls sco well adapted tu children children. Mothers have repeateaiy told me | that I recommend it as superio: to any pre- ot its good effect upon their chiieren.”’ | Dr. G. C. Oscoon, Lowed/, Mass. scription known to me.”’ H. A. ARCHER, M. D. Brooklyn, N,-¥ THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OF s APPEARS ON EVERY WRAPPER. THE CENTS sR COMPANY TT? MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK Crry. ) THAT'S THE STUFF y NO GTHER CHEWS a A \ \ wt r es, / ‘y i § y Argent ag ae BA . wih a Os =“ 1 a, \ 2 Cis if ._& ae + - res Na NO a BLACY Navy Chewing, Tobacco - Dominicn Tecace eer ee a tae ——— = Tempting Bargains IN-——— MENS UONDERWEAR SUITS S36c to $7.00 White and Co’ored Shirts, Collars, Tie’, etc. thing in Men’s Underwear excepting boots. All at selling prices. D. A- BRUCE. _moaris sock _ ee Every €: all Wine Merchants Wholesale from the di stiller, A.G. Tuouscn & Co, Glasgow scree en sd S| eg