ae ee ee ee eS eS Va ' * : ; ‘ , j.> SANDERSON & CO THE L..aiLY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETUWN, AUGUST 15, 15'9 had n and. so far as 1 have been » boat, — —— *~ 7 = rr ~~ { Prem Ussesas, Wise Bate coaasd scence be bas a O I} [)- complishing his purpose These things ™ [D- oe "ee S convinced me that Chapin was not the | , murderer, whoever else wight be He | wis on the west side of the river He | : PILLS WA aan D-O-D-D:S DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS, the only positive, never-failin cure, on earth, for all Ki th, for all Kidney diseases, Take No Other. Get the Genuine. Refuse Imitations, e— There's Oniy One Dodd’a —_—— 500 Improved Milk Gans—~ —_ By the introduction machinery, we have overcome the trouble complained of in the slopping over of milk cans All orders for NON-SLUPP- ING MILK CANS | filled promptly, wholesale or retail, f A McLEAN, Masenic Temple, Charlottetown a ' Murine | The greatest remedy for sore and inflamed eyes, is meeting with wonderiul success, ( f ( | . ( ( ; ( ( a It affords almost in- stant relief and in many cases complet- ely cures 50c Bcttla G. F, HUTCHERSON , Jeweler and Optician => @ * ~* +e 4 @2*O ©3242 TO OO = eo = = * 2 & = <. rocks, nail hock Prices Right HASZARD & MOORE SUNNYSIDE | co Preserving Time — Is Here We are prepared are You? Preserve Jars th Ciass } the an e kind hat gave sich satisfaction last year. We have them in three pints cvartsand 3 gal We sell them at aright price. . +97 ‘ Se;ers SCRSRSRASREWE AEP eee eee oeeesaees Oe of »Dneaea @ @ @e Jee © @ eS 6606 i ' | ; RE a A Sa ek i | (Grresctir, /a93, oy Jace Avior in a lew minutes the diver gave ay particularly interested were invited to signal and was hauled up up with him a piece of rock about ten inches in diameter. Fosdick looked at it keenly, but only for a moment, and then shook his head. The diver went down again. The detective sat in the boat patiently chewing gum. While he sat there Professor Gilman came down the path from the observatory. “Good morning, Mr. Fosdick!’’. he | called out. ‘Are you fishing ?’’ ‘‘No, not exactly,’’ returned the de- tective. The professor glanced at the surface paraphernalia of the diver. ‘‘Oh, lost something in the river, did you?’" He went on down the path to the pier and ntered a boat. As he wasrowing away he said ‘By the way, if your man while he’s hunting happens to stumble on that meteorite that we thought fell soime- ; where round here, I wish you'd let me have it. The university would be glad to get it.”’ By way of reply Fosdick gave a sort of grunt. Before long the diver came ‘ip again. him something that instantly caught the attention of the detective. It was a slender bar of steel about 15 inches long. Fosdick wiped the water from it and carefully did the bar up in a piece of brown paper that he tock from his pocket. Once more the diver went down, and the next time that he ascend- ed he handed the detective a_ piece of rock, which the latter seized eagerly The fragment was roughly pyramidical in shape and weighed not over pounds. Fosdick spoke a few words tu the diver, who once more descended The detective then sprang ashore with the rock in his hand Ascending the path he placed one side of the fre.cmeut against the solid rock at the spot where a piece had been broken off. He ha not been mistaken. It fitted it exact The fragment in his hand had without doubt been broken off at that spot Looking across the river, Fosdick saw Professor Gilman moving about the west pier ‘*l wonder what he’s deing ovet there,"’ mused the detective the professor disappeared up the rot leading to Jackson, leaving bis fastened to the pier Returning to the found that the diver had brought up three or four more fragments of rock After examining these he signaled to the diver t to the and then they rowed away toward Jackson When detective saw Professor Gilman return ing from the west but too far away to speak to them tel hear r . . Presenti' DOat boat the detective o come surface they had gone some distance. the shore, he Wds CHAPTER VL THE DETECTIVE’S NARRATIVE. The next morning a little company was gathered in the office of the sher- iff. Fosdick’s theory regarding Burke's death was perfected, and a few of those Coen ~~ - — % . Fxnert bicyclists J, A . , Wn Y {/A, have already suc- y+ | fA -eded in riding a v i ' wheel, or single Be unicycle, for short \ listances. In years i iW} to come the unicy- <1) cle may become oF ga ‘3 1 as common a i? ; ill mode of loco- de” ae } “ motion as the ij ! bicycle. Onlya “//- ~ > few years ago vy iff ~_ people would ~ NY, have laughed at Lae 7.) J the idea that —_} \ sD all the world Uh ) —would shortly | f \ / oe J be awheel. ee It is not in me- te chanics alone that the world is making rapid progress. Not many years ago all physicians pronounced consumption an incurable disease. To-day a larve pt rtion of people recognize that it is a dist tlv curable disease. Doctor Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery cures o8 per nt. of all cases of consumption. It ha 1 the test for thirty years. Thou- sands of people who were given up by their doctor ind had t all hope owe their lives to this marvelous remedy. It acts directly on the lungs, driving out all im- purities and disease germs. It restores the appetite, corrects all disorders of the diges- +} Laie weak stomach, makes the life-giving elements tion, strengthens t the assimilation of of the food perfect, invigorates the liver, urifies the blood and t >the nerves. It is the great blood-maker and flesh-builder It does not make flabby flesh like cod liver oil, but the firm, muscular tissue of abso- lute health An honest dealer will not offer you an inferior substitute for the sake of a little added profit. Miss Mary Whitman, of East Dickinson, Franklin Co., N. Y¥., writes: *‘ For nearly ten months I have had a bad cough, and instead of getting better, it grew worse. I was said to have consumption. Itr ~1 Dr. Pierce’s Golden Med- ical Discovery, and when the second bottle was - ” empty I had no cough and was cured. e, Pierce’S wees mate: Good temper is largely of good health, and good hea! s largely a matter of healthy activity of the bowels Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets cure constipation. They are safe, sure and speedy, and on taken do not have to be taken always. One little “ Pellet” is @ gentile laxative. and two a mild | i catharti rhev J on Pel ets. gripe. Druggis’s : This time he brought with ! He brought | come and hear his explanation ~~ | i ‘ Besides Fosdick there were present the sheriff, Professor Gilman, Arnold, Dobson and General Kerr. The latter appeared to be in high spirits. pin was brought in, remaining there un- der the watchful eye of an officer. Fos- dick sat by a desk on which were group- ed the silver handled stick belonging to Chapin, a short rod of steel and two pieces of rock or mineral, one (the lar- ger) much darker than the other. There was also a plaster cast of part of a frac- tured skull. The company having found chairs, the detective said: “‘Gentlemen, our friend Sheriff Estes tells me that his belief in the guilt of Mr. Chapin is still unshaken, and’'— touching the walking stick lightly with his hand—‘‘this he believes to be the in- strument with which he struck Burke. 1 do not agree with him, however, as yon will see. ‘This plaster cast is an accurate rep- resentation of the left side of Burke's skull after the blow had broken it. Its appearance indicates that but one blow, and that a heavy one, was struck. Aft- er carefully noting the size and shape of the wound, and also the shape and size of this stick handle, I was convine- ed that this was not the instrument used. The blood found on the handle, which seems to have had much weight with Mr. Estes, counted for but little with me It might easily have come there in some perfectly innocent way. I was willing to accept Mr. Chapin’s explanaticn regarding it. The very fact of blood being on it was to me rather an indication that it was not the weap- on used. A guilty man would be quite certain to remove every blood stain, even the smallest. ‘‘Another reason for supposing this not to be the weapon is that apparently there was little attempt to conceal it It was a most clumsy concealment. if concealment was for it was found lying among the by the river, in plain view of any one passing along the bluffs above. It was, in fact. exactly where yon would expect it to be if it had slipped over the blnff. as Mr. Chapin supposes it must have done, but exactly where you would expect it not to be if one man had killed another J “4 . 7 aesired, eo rocys | with it A murdeter would have been sure to throw the stick far out into the river if not asing the more certain means of fire for destroying such damn- ing evidence against him. Sol dismiss- ed all idea of this being the weapon used. ‘That, however. did not necessarily remove all suspicion from Mr Chapin, though it did remove a great deal. I[ have a habit of chewing gum. as some | of yon know, and while I was engaged pee ee OO ED SD OE Oe in this not unpleasing occupaticn the first afternoon of my work on this case I reflected somewhat in this manner: ‘Suppose Mr. Chapin did leave the ho- tel that night angry enough to kill Burke, would be he likely to do it? Would not the very fact of his having quarreled with him serve rather asa preventive?’ ‘‘Mr. Chapin is by no means a low and ignorant man. We all know that. Now. as I say, suppose he was angry enough to kill Burke, suppose the thought of killing him came into his | mind, would not such a man, especially with the night wind cooling his heated temper, be apt to reason somewhat in this fashion: ‘I have quarreled with Burke in the presence of numerous wit- nesses. If he is murdered, on whom will suspicion fall so quic’:ly as on me? On noone. No, it will not kill him, at least not tonight. ‘Reasoning tnus. I grew doubtful if Chapin would have dared to do the deed But added to this was the cir- -nmstance of the boat being in its usual place. Assuming that Burke was mur- dered, the presence of the boat there in- dicated one of two things—first, that he had crossed the river, securing his boat in the customary manner, and was afterward murdered, or, second, that if he was struck that fatal blow on the west side his slayer must subsequently have crossed the river, bringing the body with him and, after locking the boat with chain and padlock, returned the keys to the dead man’s pocket where they were afterward found. ‘‘T am not unmindful cf duplicate key theories and all that, but am delib- erately rejecting them. The key and lock were, as we know, of a very un- usual pattern, and the existence of a duplicate key is altogether improbable. The theory that Burke was murdered on the west side would also make neces- sary the assumption that the murderer drowned his victim before crossing the river with him, or in the act of cross- ing, because the experts say that Burke was drowned before he had time to die of his wound. Tome this seemed to argue against the theory of murder, for when a man murders another it is rare- be safe to ly indeed that midway in bis work he ; At his request Cha- | able to discover, no available means for crossing the river were at hand. ‘No one | has come forward with a story of hav- ing carried him over the river that | night, as would be likely if such a thing had really occurred. We must remem- ) “When I have finished I believe you will agree with me,”’ ber that the assumption of Chapin be- ing the murderer is based on his sudden quarrel with Burke. Between the time of that quarrel and the death of Burke there was no time for Chapin to enter into a conspiracy with a second person for murdering the man he had thus sud- denly grown to feel enmity for. With- out au accomplice it would have been next to impossible for him to have mur- dered Burke, left things as they were afterward found and been back at his boarding place at the time Mrs. Mead- | ows saw him enter. eeeee222e2| Screamed ia WITH.. ony From the Terrible Itching, Burning Tortures of ... Eczema on the Scalp Some of the cures effected by Dr. Chase’s Ointment are more like miracles than anything else. ‘The case recorded here was one of the worst ever brought tothe attention of Toronto's best physicians, and when doctors gave up all hope of recovery Dr. Chase’s Ointment was successful in producing a perfect cure. Mr. James Scott, 136 Wright Ave., Toronto, states: ‘‘My boy Tom, aged ten, was for nearly three years afflicted with a bad form of Eczema of the scalp, which was very unsightly and resisted all kinds of remedies and doctor's treatment. His head was in a terrible state. We had to keep bim from school, and at times his head would bleed, and the child would Scream with agony. For two and a half years we battled with it in vain, but at last found a cure in Dr. Chase’s Ointment. About five boxes were used. ‘The original sores dried up, leaving the skin in its normal condition. To say it is a pleasure to testify to the wonderful merits of Dr. Chase’s Ointment is putting it very mildly.” Dr. Chase’s Ointment, at all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co . Toronta. BIG BARGAINS MISSES’ AND CHILDREN’S ODD LINES AND SIZES EN BOOTS SHOES in) SLIPPERS SHAAN Just the xine you want for the holidays—for frollicking abrut the ountry, and scampering around the In fact we have a LARGE and well assorted stock. We can fit you all. Mens. Boys, Laeirs and babies. Big Stock Smali Prices BEFORE YOU BUY PLEASE TRY Weeks & Warren Removed —TO MY OLD STAND — Richmond Street Fourth House from Queen St. | —around the— ~w=—London House Ceres: | Th omas Campbe You require ligh the Finest. Balbr kind. mn Warm Weather is Here—— ter Underclothing. We can suit you with iggan, Cotton and Natural Wool, the thin Shirts and Drawers 35 cents. Straw Hats Are reduced in price to make them move at a livel Do you want one. D. A.. ESRUCE Morris Block:----- Artificial Teeth on Metal Fliates A dentist w for his patients ers of rubber or objectionable pl in fit and adbesi rutber. Many persons find that the ord shr.nkage of the somctimes sore It isa conduet a0: about the mater Every piece of work done by us must give entire satisfaction to the patient, else we See our artificial teeth without plates. BERL see e oye orhor~ 01 Ae oe mes eon SBE BA BAA | | hi» a Fe —— In view ofthe vast amount ofinjury done to the mouths of wear-~ owing to the non conductibility of rubber, and as alumium is now 80 cheaply produced, and making as it does a rigid, light, cleanly, un-~ wear a rubber or vulcan'te plate. Not only this, but better resulis The above quotations are from hundreas py eminent dentists whose close observation in many years experience in plate work has learned them the many advantages of meta! over rubber. directly from the wearing of ao ordinary plate, We recommend a metal plate either of er, lighter, and stronger than any otber plate. We bave testimonials from persons metal plates—not one would wearan ordinary plate again. cap have your impression taken, and a metal plate made same day, fully guaranteed because we make them ourselves, and know all eR AA AEA ATA AOR FOR THE GARVEST OF 1699 Deering Harvesting Machinery ho knows his business, and one that hae any regard will always advice them tobave a metal plate. Pror. Metviiie B. Buckiey, Instrucior Boston Dentai College, Boston Mass vulcanite plates, bythe retention of undue heat, ate thee seems no reason why any person ehould on are « Stained in difficult .ase¢, than in the uee of LP.E Ubicag ‘2 “ru D. D. S. Dental School who are compelled to wear artificial teeth ona plate inary plate causes beating of the mouth, bad taste, gums, etc., finally causing the plate to get Joose, lips, core mouths and sore throats, and caused Gold, Platinum, Aluminum. or of heat and cold, it is non irritating, and is thin- made Y ou for whom we have ialueed. Cail and see epecimens of our work. will not allow itto leave our oftice. N DENTAL PARLORS CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. I. 2 -. o&- + errs rae ee ee SRY & Will take the lead s% a S% Ne jn Try a Deering Ideal Binder for lightness of drait, str ength and ’ we rability. a, Gx ae, * mt, wm, zr, < at, Ideal Mowers will start in any crop, without backing the team. Call and see tnem before buying. Deering Binder Twine :ons @89 fe93 io the pound 3B® feet longer than avy other twine. be-CALL AND GET A CATOLOGUE W. GRANT & GO, ¥¥LS¥ O¥SY STIs Agents ff eae - - ww wews = wa Se TREO Bic . { IMPORTANT TO THOSE WHO INTEND PUTTING IN SEW ERAGE If you have to buy a stove to heat your bath boiler, get a Highland (1uade in Boston) and have satisfaction. For sale only by FENNELL «x0 CHANDLER Ae a see MMP a ss a pil.