- ’ Frere eee Tt eS * 4 Til. JAA. ¢ iia AR HRN FRI. a Be we oer weet . were | ——— | | : y « . 5 WX ( \ VV oman’s WY , cr ‘ess aale y Wea Mi LY <a een neem . ‘ ‘ 4 ‘ a-i Dodd’s Kidney Pills Top of the Heap! 1 For Purity and Savoriness HOLLY BRIGHT CHEWING TOBACCO is AT THE TOP OF ALL OTHER BRANDS. Montrea). | OOMINION TOBACCO CO., oe Bs Ll, —A ROYAL TRIO- Dublight and Lifebuoy Ore The best laundry end tuilet soaps made in the world, guaranteed to be absolutely pure, “MONKEY |: RAND” shich cannot be equalled as a scour- ng aud polishing soap. TRY SOME EF All are fic large twin bar Seen Victoria Cafe | Greet George Street... Charlottctown, P. &. Islan To My Customers anil j tome i3:— Prospective Cus- Permit me to cell your attention to the fact that lam better prepared than ever tfore tosupply your wants in Freeh Oys ters, lt 18 & fact that in erder to be euc- — tn the Oyster business one must be able 4 ‘© to hand.e them in large quantities. Ith this object in vie’, 1 bez leave to Solict your patronage, and can assure you of Patiefaction . ; I may eay tha: my Oyster Parlor wil * conducied iv the neual firet claes man- See, where the delicate Bivalve may be p rbtained jp every «tyle to satisry the e of the most exacting epicure. Yours, &c., JOHN P. JOY, The P, E. I, Oyster King | flushing with agitation, | thought, was the beginning of a clew. | there was no doubt whatever. : & a : AN 8 —" “ SS 4 ‘ti A. > aly ae ' a ’ rad. >, Fes 7 wii (( — a ——— SS) mvc = ct? uw &” a s FET! — « " COPYRIGHT ‘ a TS Cor inl “Did S » (tl } drive bim to th nz”: 3 Spiridon scr: he flected. I drew a w at a ve ‘*You were drunk when on n came to interview you, Spirid oie said. **Confess it. You don’t remez |- ber what you told him.’’ “I certainly went heme with the count from the moor,’’ he when we reached the house he gave a ruble and sent me back to the moor. to the other gentleman and Armin, say- ing they might want me to carry ga e. He had no luggage and would walk to the station.’’ Then Spiridon grinned and scratched his head. ‘‘I may have been a little drunk when your man came down,’”’ he added; ‘‘the gentlemen had both tipped me generously. ”’ There was no more to be got out of Spiridon. Then I went to the station and in- quired of the station master, who said he knew the count well, whether he had seen my father on the day in ques- tion. ‘Did he travel home by the afternoon train on Wednesday the —?’’ I asked. ‘“‘Wednesday, the—,’’ repeated the wai éthy sala, ut man reflectively, consulting bis day- book. ‘‘Ah, I thought so—no, he did not, for that was the afternoon that the line was blocked. Some rascal bad laid a tree across and the engine ran off the line—the up engine—and plowed the metals. I remember your father coming to the station, but he did not travel.’’ ‘*‘What did he do, then?’’ | asked, for here, I ‘*Well, I can’t tell you,”’ he said. | “He left the station, and, now I come to think of it, he did not reappear. The other gentleman took the train next | day, but not the count.” ‘‘Not the count!"’ I repeated. ‘Are you sure?’ ‘Quite sure!’’ said the man. ‘He came on the Tuesday, but—well, he has not gone back yet, and that’s a fact!” CHAPTER IV. A SLIGHT CLEW FOUND. Here was « surprise indeed. Father had come to this place, of that He had been out on the moors, that was equal- _ ly certain, and he had presented him- _ self at the station with the intention of returning to town, but had been balked of his train and— And there was an end of the trail so far. ‘*Please think again.”’ I murmured. *“*Are yon perfectly certain the count did not catch some other train later in the day or perhaps early the next morn- ing? Did you see each train away?” **l have not missed a single train, in or ont. since Easter.’’ said the station Luaster ‘Could he have gone home any other way?’ L asked presently. ‘‘{t is too far to drive ina village cart or to ride LAUNCHING THE LIFE-BOAT. There are greater dangers than those of the angry sea. That dread disease—con- sumption, kills more men and women in a@ generation than the sea has swallowed up since the earliest history of navigation. There is a sure and safe life-boat ever ready to be launched for men and women who suffer from this merciless destroyer. It is Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discov- ery. It cures 98 per cent. of all cases of consumption, bronchitis, asthma, “yee gitis, weak lungs, spitting of blood an throat and nasal troubles. It acts directly on the lungs, driving out all impurities and disease germs. It soothes and heals the mucous membranes of the lungs, bronchial tubes, throat and nasal cavities. | It restores the lost appetite, makes digestion and as- similation perfect, invigorates the liver, and purifies and enriches the blood. It fills the blood with the life-giving elements of the food that build new and healthy tissues. It tears down, carries off and excretes the diseased and half dead tissues upon which the germs of consumption thrive. It checks the cough and gg we expectoration until the lungs oes “1 oughly cleared. It 1s the oS - - maker and flesh-builder. Unlike c he oil, it does not build flabby flesh, = e firm, muscular tissues of health. It — not make corpulent people more corpu ent. Thousands have testified to their cure under this great medicine after ov da given up by the doctors, and all hope wes gone. An honest dealer will not sugees some inferior substitute for the sake of a little extra selfish profit. A man or woman who neglects constipation suffers from a poisoning. Dr. Pierce s Pleasan Pellets cure constipation. One little ‘‘Pellet’’ is a. gentle laxa- tive, and two a mild cathartic. All medicine dealers sell them. No other pills are ‘‘just as good, hua ard J AN rh, ced + - the SO ee a ‘ ’ I i 3 to travel ( ’ st t n 7 i a, oid ‘ ] ¢ a he we lrive all ¢} >) Arive ili the way round by i ‘ . 4 le road The count would searcely have done that.” AY triend, as ¢ ‘er npon the rail- Way, a new i1 and very proud - = , cherished an obvious scorn for the old fashioned method of travel- ing by post road ““Still,’’ I said, “‘if he was ina great hurry he might have chesen that way in spite of the slowness and discomfort of the journey.” **Perhaps,’’ 1e@ station master and relapsing into a scornful silence of his office Ce ee Said ti , a8 a protest doubtless against the very Z suggestion of any person of light and leading using the post road under any circumstances, now that the railway was laid. Heshowed no further inclina- tion to converse. I wired Percy at our home in St. Petersburg that I had found a slight clew and begged him to come up and help me work it as soon as pos- sible after his arrival, after which I set myself to make inquiries among the peasants in the village, hoping that I might find one among them who hada seen my father on the fatal Wednesday and perhaps even driven him to Balota, to the post station there. I interviewed half a dozen of the vil- lagers, each one more crassly stupid than the last. They did not know the gentlemen who hired the shooting, even by sight, they declared. They knew the Mother dried her tears and told me her story. keepers. But what had they, the peas- ants, to do with the sportsmen? There was nothing to be got out of them, for they came to shoot, and shot and went away again, being in a hurry all tbe while, and therefore it was useless t& cultivate their acquaintance. Even the offer of a ‘‘nachaiok,™ ™ tip, though it awakened the interest of the sleepy rascals, did not seem to stimulate their memories or even their inventive talents. The Russian moujik is the finest and most accomplished liar in the world if you give him time, but you must not hurry him. He is not in- tellectual enough toconjure up a plau- sible tale at a moment’s notice. How- ever, these men declared that they had seen neither count nor any one else on the Wednesday, and each one asked for a tip on the plea that to cast back one’s memory so far was a serious exertion. One man explained that a tip was due to him for his truthfulness. ‘‘You can see I’m an honest man,’”’ he said, ‘‘for if I had lied and said I drove this barin to Balota you would have believed me and given me twice as much as I now ask.’’ But a short while after I had returned to the lodge, dispirited and bewildered and uncertain what next to do, a little peasant man came mysteriously into the room in which I sat. He bowed and crossed himself in front of the ikon in the corner and then oilily approached my chair and with finger to lip whis- pered ‘‘“Sh-h!’’ Then he glanced melo- dramatically over his shoulder and back again at me and whispered, ‘‘May I speak to you, barin?”’ I could scarcely help laughing at the comical little creature. I remembered him perfectly as one of those I had in- terviewed up at the village a few hours azo. He had sworn that he had never heard of or seen any gentleman answer- ing to my description of my father. — “Speak on by all means,’’ | said, “bat no lies, mind!” ‘‘Lord have mercy, barin, would Ilie to you?” “It strikes me you have done so once already, my friend,’’ Isaid—‘‘that is, if you have anything to te!l me now. . “Shh!” he said, glancing round again. ‘‘Not so loud, barin; that was necessary, because others were present who might not hear, but all the while I aid to myself, ‘When it is safe, and I can see this good barin alone, I will go ané tell him al) the truth,’ and eg l DLE SL PE'VUO WN, REE he aa bli | ] ’ uld } 1 wf ¥ Vi promised myseir, soa wave performed . Here Lam!” i ‘Very well,” I said. 5 rubles if {your tale sounds satisfactory, and an- other 5 if on inquiry it proves to have been true. ”’ The f¢ llow’s eyes sparkled. “Glory to | the highest!" hesaid. *‘*Then lam sure ’ . »* | of my money. ‘Then the little rascal. spun a most circumstantial tale of how one day, a \ very short while since— ‘Last week?’ | interposed. ‘Yes, last certainly, last k,’’ he said, he had been driving his “opal week, we: ' } W | cart from the fields near the village n three men in the road called to to stop. One seemed ill, and the } other two supported him. They asked | whether he could drive them to Batota the post station, and he replied that ra certain sum he wou!d do so, but the sum he mentioned was a large one , because his horse was tired ‘Drive us there in an hour.” they said. ‘tand you shall have double that! Then, glad at heart—for money is sea in these parts—he drove them quickly to Balota. At the post station they curried the sick man in. Then one came out and gave him the money, four times as rce were reasons why he should not breathe a word to living man or woman about lota. On the other hand, they would be sure to know if his tongue should wag, and, by all that was sure and terrible, death would be his reward—a sudden and violent death—when he least ex- pected it! My little informant at this point looked so pale and so obviously alarmed at his owr temerity in telling me the story that [I could not help be- ing impressed by it. Either he spoke the truth or he was a most consammate actor as well as liar. ‘‘Look here, my man,” I said, wish- ing to test him further. ‘*You are very rash. Supposing that I should prove to be the friend of these persons who em- ployed you, sent by them purposely to try the good faith of the man they had trusted by offering a bribe as though from the other side. Why, you would be as good as a dead man and’’—- The wretched fellow was on his knees in a moment; tears rushed to his eyes; he groaned and wailed and moaned, crossing himself vehemently and utter- tering inarticulate words — probably prayers—as unmistakable a picture of abject terror as the eye could see. Real or assumed, his fear took me in at once, and I believed his tale. (To be Continued.) qin GIRL eev PLUMP while using Dr. A. W. Chase’s Nerve Food. There comes a critical time in tne life of every woman when the bud of girlhood is unfolding into the full blown flower of womanhood, Mothers at this time should carefully guard their daughters’ health, for this is a time when many a girl falls victim to insidious diseases which make life a misery. Loss of flesh, headaches, pains in back and side, nervousness, irritability, dull eyes anda pale, sallow complexion, these are the symp- toms that warn you to use Dr. A. W. Chase's Nerve Food. The blood is impoverished and the nerves require nutrition. Nature must have assistance and there is no better way to help nature than by using Dr. A, W. Chase’s Nerve Food. It is a food for blood and nerves, and creates rich, red blood, solid flesh and new nerve tissue. The color will return to the cheek, the bright- ness to the eye, and increase in weight will teli of solid advance in health. Dr. A. W. Chase’s Nerve Food, soc. a box At all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co, Toronto, Mrs. Housewife Used to Wort Because the groce ry‘mon ey did not go far enougb on Saurday night NOW SHE DOES NOT WORRY Because she gets so much for the same money and such good groceries at John McKenna’s QUEEN STREET ; qt ar ES pan GHING, ELECTROTYPING.” St-Joun.NB. TO LET The northend of a house situated on Prince Street, conta'ning nine rooms, enit- able for s hoarding house or private resid - ence. Apply to paces oo THOMAS MeQUAID, ~ 241 Lower Princ much as he had asked, and said that , this much was paid him because there | nn . —_ a pee Om prey HEM, Be RY MOTH ER Ss aete p Rae <a Have itinthe House YW => ‘To cure the common ailments that may y A Y jy Sa Occur in qvety taney a6 long as life M4 : : JOHNSONSANODYNE LINIMENT ‘ cad ie. h “tr gle e , A 8 fe paso ee ¥ i lesa TS Wir bo Ay st Paes a oh WS 9 se j ¥é kw has been used and indorsed since 1810, torelieve or cure every form of Pain and Inflammation:!s Safe, 4p) Soothing,Sure. Otherwise it could ky not have existed foralmost NT is strictly a family remedy for ~ Internal as much as External use To cure Colds, Croup, Coughs, Catarrh Cramps and Colic it acts promptly.~ sf¢ 8 ORIGINATED BY AN OLD FAMILY PHYSICIAN. 3% #¢ Nis There is not a medieine in use which possesses the confidence of the public to a Best greater extent than Johnson’s Anodyne Liniment. For almost a century it has stood upon its intrinsic merit, while generations after generations have use‘ it. 2% The best evidence of its virtue is the fact that in the state where it originated the 2; sale is steadily increasing. You can safely trust what time has indorsed, 4 LS. Jounson, Esq.—Fifty years ago this month, your father, Dr. Johnson. left me some wot Johnson’s Anodyne Liniment. I have sold it ever since. I can most truly say that it has maintained its high standard and oreetee from that time to the present. St JOHN B. RAND, North Waterford, Maine, January, 1991. Send for our Book on INFLAMMATION, mailed free. Sold by all Druggists. Put up in Two Sizes, Price 25 and 50cts. I. 8. JOHNSON & CO., Boston, Mass. Bt naving driven this party of three to Ba- | THE wit spring Shirts and Collars, Underwear and Half Hose Umbrellas and Rubber Coats Also, full line of Fall “Men’s Furnishings” TRIRRIDIRTE ES AR AE AAR a All our travellers are now on the road in every province Jerseys and Sweaters Pee GLOVER & BRAIS. 194, 196, 198 McGill St., Montreal e22eleceeeeec& 550 COMPLETE SETS OF Arica Teeth at $0.5 We have completed a trade by which w have secured a great bargain in material {)) making artificial teeth. We have enlarged our workrooms, and hav added increased facilities for doing .a gica’cr amount of work. With our increased facilities, and large stock ot material bought at sacrifice prices, we are in position to give to he people of Charlottetown nd P. E. I. the greatest offer ever made in the atificial teeth line. While this lot of material arts we will make A Full Set of Artificial Teeth for $5.50 and upwards, and fully guaranteed. “he large number of setts we make enables us to make the best teeth at lower prices than is usually charged for inferior. We use our new patent suction on all plates. Call and examine specimens of our work. Teeth extracted free of charge when preparing for plate. Call in morning and get your teeth same day. BERLIN DENTAL PARLORS Over store of Prowse Bros. CHARLOTTETOWN, PEE. I. CS SEO CLCLP OOK LE LCLA ee SaaS Se eo Sahay SS a4 et fekaieabotes ~ =