« ra Ne PA LLS . BEST GROCERIES ali your money to buy. j the hoase will like. F On premises’ "yy & Ei 5% Darou MXAMINER CHARLUTTETOWN, AUGUST J?, 189,, eel O-D-D°S ~*S‘ \¥ DODD'S ™) a KIDNEY 2 — a4! ~ = NAY y ANN .' ~ > anes ee ee hem sartesssencasanvasss dt 4 HAA AAAS ! > p r Q Ki en, Cun R ALL o's! c ES Racumar'shst] oy’-7 ‘ty earicuTs 0! Ly _ DIABETES wed gt at lm ait aah oe” yt ye RB gr ogee: peach! cena tice DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS. the _ oa $s os “@* only positive, never-failing cure, ou earth, for all Kidney diseases, Take No Other. Get the Genuine. Refuse Imitations. There's Only One Dodd's». \D-O-D-D-S | Nicest Freshest eeceANDecee Groceries that will tempt the appeiite. Groceries that do not take Groceries that everyore in Buy and try. Comein and Bsee US, Drisci.. c& Hornsby QUEEN STREET-— KELLY'S & 60°S. ~ GROCERIES Bt Only the best kept in stock. Our cus.omere are satisfied customers. If you want tobe satisfied with your roceries deal with us. . Try the TEA we eeli. Spec al atten- 10D Was ciren to ite select on. The fame care is exercited in buying al! other lines. COME ——__e remy AND BE JAMES KELLY & C0 near London H« Lure ej f , Queen St orner. wer & ky Prices Right HASZARD & MOORE SUNNYSIDE FARM FOR SALE Sixty acres of arable land and* acre: of Marsh ‘and at Mc. Herbert, Lo: 48, about 45 &cres of farm in # good state of cuitivation Good dwelling honse, barns ap coach house The property is well situated, Convenient to churches, school, and good shipping facilities, An everlasting supply of marsh mud on the Borerty. Terms easy Apply at the office o r.A A McLean, \Solicitor, Ch’town, or to the unders ned . PATRICiI<c O'GRADY, \ Pownal St, Ch’town SSATISFIED | | (Orreest7, fasa by Jie Avrnan oe ‘pMrne, yuu re a cneat! ourke, who was quite deaf, stared at his accuser, as if he had not understood him. “What did you say, sir?’’ he asked Chapin repeated his words in a loud- er tone. They were scarcely out of his mouth before Burke retorted, ‘‘You’re a itiar!’’ accompanying his words with a blow from his fist. Chapin warded it off and would have dealt one in return if others present had not come between and separated them. When Chapin appealed to the other two players, they were unable to sup- port him in his allegation against Burke. They believed a motion of Burke’s had been misconstrued by Chapin. Thereupon Burke demanded an apology from Chapin, which the lat- ter reluctantly and with poor grace made. Chapin left the hotel immediate- ly afterward, obviously in a very un- | pleasant frame of mind. Burke remained awhile, but there was no morecard playing. Mr. Dobson, the hotel proprietor, and Burke were warm friends, and they chatted togeth- er while they smoked their cigars. Pres- , ently Burke arose, remarking that he must be getting back across the river He was passing out when Dobson called to him ‘‘What time is it, Burke? I set my watch.” Burke carried a fine timepiece, and prided himself on ite excellent running qualities. Drawing it from his pocket he said: ‘‘In a few seconds it will be che minute to 10,"’ and then after a brief panse, ‘‘It is now just on the dot.’ **Much obliged, Burke.’’ Dobson said as he turned the hands of his watch | Just then the clock of a neighboring tower struck 10, and then Dobson re marked, ‘‘The town clock’s a wminnte fast.’’ He went to the door with Burke and stood for a moment looking out ‘*It’s a fine night,’ Dobson said. with his characteristic drawl, and added. **! suppose the professors don’t let such a night pass without making use of it ‘‘No; they use the telescope pretty near every clear night." Burke an swered ‘‘When’ll you be over again?” son asked as Burke was moving off ‘‘T don’t know,’’ responded the latter ‘“Donbtful things are uncertain. I may get drowned going over.” His light laugh, however, indicated that he had little fear of such an acci dent Dobson stood in the doorway for a few moments after saying good night When Burke had disappeared fron view, the notes of a popular air that i rant to Doh was whistling were borne back through larkness larann = the summer CHAPTER IIL IT LOOKS LIKE FOUL PLAY About 5 o’clock the next meorni: two men. who had come down to fish about a mile below Jackson. west the river. discovered a ‘‘floater’ In J. Fenimore Cooper’s Leather | Stocking Tales, we ; yread stories of f/f, wonderful agility, endurance unerring ac- curacy of the eve« } the American Indian | when he reigned su- preme over this conti- | nent. Before he was |} debauched by modern civilization, he was a magnificent specimen of physical manhood. He lived entirely in the | | i ' physical and the Laat the open air, and , save the simple herbs s satu r< Civilized man leads an unnatural and an unhealthy life Unlike the Indian if he would maintain his physical and mental health, be must take reasonable precau- tions to combat disease Nearly all dis- eases have their inception in disorders of the digestion, torpidity of the liver and impurity of the blood. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery is made of simple herbs. It restores the lost appetite, makes diges- tion and assimilation perfect, invigorates the liver, purifies the blood and promotes the natural prvucesses of excretion and se- cretion. It sends the rich, red, life-giving blood bounding through the arteries and corrects all circulatory disturbances. It dispels headaches, nervousness, drowsi- ness, lassitude, and drives out all impuri- ties and disease germs. It cures 98 per cent. of all cases of consumption, bron- chitis, asthma and diseases of the air-pas- sages. It gives sound and refresving sleep, drives away all bodily aud mental fatigue and imparts vigor and health to ev = gan of the body. Medicine dealers sell it, and have nothing else, ‘just as good. “A few of my symptoms,” writes Charles Be ok. of Climax, Kalamazoo Co., Mich., “ were burn, fullness after eating, pain in my ' 11 taste im my mouth, and occasional fever and hot flushes. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Médical Discovery cured all these and I am perfectiy well.’ Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets are sure, speedy and permanent cure for constipa- tion. One little “Pellet” isa gentle laxa- tive and two a mild cathertic. They never gripe. Found at all medicine stores. “ae ener . heart ’ a ma o> ta “y —_—— there | remembered the stick very well and water. ‘Ihe body, that of a man, liad apparently been brought down by the current from up stream. The men waded out and got the body, which was taken to an undertaker’s in Jackson There it was identified by Dobson and others as the body of Burke. Later Pro- fessor Gilman also recognized the re- mains, making the identification com- plete. Apparently there had been foul play for on the left side of the skull, a little above and to the rear of the ear, wasa wound sufficient, the medical examiner stated. to cause death. That portion of the skull had been crushed in by a blow from some blunt or jagged instrument The condition of the lungs indicated that the man had been drowned before death could ensue as a result of the blow. At the investigation that followed the facts concerning Burke’s quarrel with Chapin were learned and also the fact that Burke had last been seen alive at 10 o'clock the night before by Dob- son. Burke’s boat was found at the pier on the east or observatory side of the river, secured in the usual manner The key ring upon which with other keys was attached the one to the boat’s padlock was found in the right hand hip pocket of Burke’s trousers, his usual place of carrying it. A pocket handkerchief was fourd in the same pocket. His watch was found in the vest pocket where he usually placed it and his pocketbook, containing $60 won that night at the card table, together with about $40 more, was in its cus- tomary place in an inside vest pocket. Nothing of any value seemed to be missing. If he had been murdered, the motive for the crime had not been rob- bery An examination of the road between the hotel and the west pier showed no evidence of any struggle. At one place, however, were footprints pointing in both directions, as if some one had walked back and forth a short distance searching for something. These foot- prints were all made by the same per- son and corresponded exactly to prints made by the shoes on the feet of Burke when the body was found. At this spot four burned matches were also found It looked as if on his way home Burke had dropped something and spent a few minctes searching for it. Dobson remembered that Burke had two rods of steel in his hand when he left the hotel As they were some 15 or 18 inch es long. he could not carry them easily in his pocket. They were not wrapped in paper Sheriff Estes, who had un- dertaken the task of unraveling the mystery, concluded that one of these rods had slipped from Burke's hand ticed and fallen to the ground. He would be apt to notice it was miss- ing very soon and doubtless had been obliged to search the grround for no great distance before finding the miss ing rod. These rods were the only things missing when Burke’s body was found. The spot where the footprints were seen was nearer the hotel than the pier [It was about two-thirds of a mile from the latter point When Chapin left Dobson’s hotel the night before, be carried a heavy walk- ing stick, as three or four persons, Dob- son among the number, bore witness to. The stick had an oxidized silver handle, rough of surface and rude of shape. The sheriff visited the room oc- cupied by Chapin, which was in a boarding house in Jackson, but no trace of the walking stick was found Mrs. Meadows, the landlady, r\t k4sias 4 the place where Chapin usually kept it when not having it with him. To the mind of the sheriff the absence of the stick from its customary place looked suspicious. Questioning him afterward, Chapin was not able to give what the sheriff regarded a satisfactory account of his whereabouts and doings between 10 and 12 o’clock the night of his quarrel with Burke. The story Chapin told was that when he left the hotel he was ip a much heat- ed temper, what with his losses and the chagrin felt at being constrained to j apologize for his words to Burke. He yas in no frame cf mind to meet any one, and so wandered off along the river bank. He went as far north as the bluffs, and there sat down, letting the refreshing breeze from the water cool his hot blood. He sat there and smoked for a long time, becoming interested in watching the many meteors flashing across the sky. He had noticed one specially brilliant one, which lighted up the landscape around him. At last the calm and peace of the night, the cooling breeze and perhaps more than all else the gazing into the great uni- verse that is revealed in the darkness of aclear night soothed him, his pas- sion passed and his troubled mind grew calm and philosophic. He did not start to return to his room in the village till be beard the town clock striking 11 *Faculty of Arts — ce ane ——_ encanta | He started then and reached the house , at about 20 minutes past 11. Allexcept Mrs. Meadows had retired. She saw him enter and talked with him for a moment. He then went to his room. and immediately went to bed. Such was the story Chapin told, and Mrs. Meadows corroborated it as far as the time of his return was concerned. At this time Chapin was ignorant of Burke's death, or assumed to be. After learning of it he still adhered to his story, but admitted it would look bet- ter for him if he could give a_ better account of himself during the hcur be- tween 10 and 11 that night. Believing the evidence against him anufficient to warrant it, the sheriff placed Chapin under arrest The afternoon of the arrest Chapin‘'s stick was found among some rocks be- low the bluffs north of the west pier It was here that Chapin claimed he had sat while smoking and gazing at the stars). When asked how the stick came there, he could only say that he supposed it must have slipped over the bluff while he was sitting there. When be arose to leave “the place, he had for- gotten that he had the stick with him, and, in fact, had not thought of it from that time to this. A close exami- nation of the handle revealed in two places on its rough surface minute stains, which experts declared to be hu man bload. (To be Continued.) DR. GAUTHIER ENDORSES * The statement that Mr. Major owes his life to . .« « : DR, CHASE'S Midney Liver Pills Dr. J. T. A. Gauthier, of Valleyfield, Que., writes: ‘*], the undersigned, certify that the contents of this letter, in regard to the cure of Mr. Isadore Major, by the use of Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills, is correct.” Here is Mr. Major's letter: ‘* After 20 years of suffering from backache and kidney disease i owe my life to Dr. A. W. Chase. I had tried an endless variety of remedies to no avail, and on the recommendation of a friend began the use of Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills. Two pills that night and two next morning gave great relief, and I continued their use until now lam completely cured. My friends are surprised and pleased to see me well again, for 1 spent hundreds of dollars in vain trying to get cured. Before using Dr. Chase's Kid- ney-Liver Pills ray back ached sol could not put on my shoes and couldn't lift 20 lbs. My shoulders were sore, I had headachesanda bad taste in the mouth. These troubles are now entirely gone and what I say I am ready to rove. I have told my friends of my wonder- ul cure, and many have been greatly benefited by using these pills,” Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills are the great- est kidney eure the world has ever known One pill a dose, esc. a box at all dealers, or K.manson, Bates & Co., Toronto, NoGILL UNIVERSITY, Montreal Session 1899-1900, Martriculation Examinations, prelimin- ary to tue various Courees of Study will be he'd ss under: (Men and Wome nm} t Faculy cf spplied Science { Faculiy of Medicine Feculcy of Law, Tue, Faculty of Comparative Medicine and Veterinary Science, Sat. -Thurs. 14th Sept 5th Sept, 16th Sept *In the Facnity of Arts (Revised Curriculum the courses arc open also to PARTIAL sTUD- ENTS without Matriculation tin the faculty of Applied Science the cours sin Civil, Mechanical, Electrical, and Min- no Engineering, Chemistry and Architecture are also open to PARTIAL STUDENTS without martriculation. yy xemination FE XUNHIBITIONS in the Faculty of Arts. ranging from $90 to $124, wil] be held on the 4th Sept emberat Monreal. Charlottetown, +t Jchn a Jcin’s, Nfld and other centres. The RovaL VIcTORIA COLLEGE, the rew residentia) college for women, will be ready or Gccuration in September. The MoGILL NORMAL SOHOOL will re-cpen on ist September. Particnlars of Examinations and copies of Calendar, containixg fuil information as to Conditions of Entrance, Courses of Study, Regulations of Degrees, Kxhibitions and Scholarship, Fees, etc, may be obtained on application to W. VAUGHAN Registrar. Heli‘ax mt rei. 000 Improved Milk Cals—~ By a the introduction of machinery, we have overcome the trouble complained of in the slopping over of milk cans All orders for NON-8LPP- ING MILK CANS _ filled promptly, wholesale or retail, f A McLEAN, Masonic Temple, Charlottetown PORTO RICO SUGAR Thirty tons Just landed For sale by. ' HORACE HASZARD Charlotietown lst August 1899 2 w eod for FIRST YEAR FNTRANCE | —— 22 THE Bimbashi Blue Weckurveer Now Ready GLOVER & BRAIS _ Montreal Artificial Teeth on Metal Plates A dentist who knows his business, and one tuat base any regard for his patients will always adviee them tobave a metal plate. Pror. Metvi.ie B. Buceiey, Instructor Boston Deotai College, — Boston Mass In view ofthe vast amount ofinjury done to tbe mouths of wears ersof rubber or vulcanite plates, bythe retention of undue heat, owing to the non conductibility of rubber, and as alumium 18 DOW 80 cheaply produced, and making as it does a rigid, light, cleanly, un~ objectionable plate theve seems no reason why any person should wear a rubber or vulcar ‘te plate. Not only this, but better results in fit and adhesion are « ‘stained in difficult set, than in the uee if rubber, L. wt... D.D.S Chicag °] Dental Schooi — The above guolations are from hundreas vy eminent dentists whose Close observation in many years experience in plate work bas learned them the many advantages of metal over rubber. Many persons who are compelled to wear artificial teeth ona plate find that !he ordinary plate causes beating of the mouth, bad taste, sbrinkage of the gums, etc., finally causing the plate to get Joose, somctimes sore Jipe, sore mouths and sore throate, and caueed directly from the wearingof an ordinary plate. We recommend a metal plate either of Gold, Platinum, Aluminum. I: isa conductor of heat and cold, it is non irritating, er, lighter, and stronger than any other plate. ~~ &) CS QO ‘a and is thino- We have testimonials from persons for whom we have made “yy mets] platese vot one wouid wearan ordinary plate asain. You )= cap have vour impression taken, and a metal plate mad~ same de , sie fally guaranteed because we make them ourselves, and know all <i about the material uxed; Cail and see spe im«n+ of our work. As Every piece of work done by us must give entire satiefa siion to the or patient, else we will not allow itto leave our Office. 5 5 See our artificial teeth without plates. < e BERLIN DENTAL PARLORS * CHARLOTTETOWN, . . oye sxbye SY 28 pn ee ies pile on oe he gis O AS Che Fs Y Ay GQ - LBs & v PAY. THE WORLD'S GREATEST CIM The Mutual Life Insurance Co. of New York RICHARD A. [IcCURDY, President ASS ETS—$277,517,325.36. ANNUAL INCOME—$55,006,629.43 INSURANCE IN FORCE —$971,711,997.7¢ Wea All Canadian Policies payable iu coli=ay Before placing your insurance; please call or write for estimates. JOHN HeHACHERN, AGENT May 27—Sat & Mon Imo- HOUSEKERPERS WILL FIND AT THE CITY HARDWARE STORE ——A FULL LINE O0F—— {Howsecleanine SUPPLBS.I Builders will also find a complete line of goods, tableuw to their requirements. . Do you want a Fairchild Washing Machine? Ourrmseit are easy. KR. B. NORTON & CO. LTD ees io i . a L einen con pee coos.