: ey ae ee ee ee ee eS OS SS here aS lee eS ON rea Or Na ll ae We ——_— ——— CHE DAILY EXAMINER CHARLOTTETOWN, JONE 3, 1899 YSPEPSIA Throws all the Blame on the Stomach--The Real Seat of Trouble is the Intestines The Permanent Cure is Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Piils. It isan cds ; ng since expl vied t! t dig to the stomach. No n t by far the greater part e more d ficult part takes tines. This explains why 2 is ver really cured by ; para i iid stomach digestion anda n th@ stomach, This fact , lains why Dr, Chase’s Kid. nes i I * been so remarkably cessful as a cure for the worst forms of dyspep- ga n Dr. Cha Kidney-Liver Pills act directly on the kidae ys *r and bowels, and give ne W tone at i v gor to the intestines. and make them a | m their work of digesting the substar ses on which the stomach has no en Stomach treatment may do well enough for slight y-stion, but if you have chronic in- dig lyspepsia of a serious nature you ean the experience of scores of thou- sands who have been permanently cured by sing | hase’s Kidney-Liver Pills. One nil ‘ ox, at all dealers, o1 a acc. a manson. Bat@#”& Co., Toronto. PICKFORD & BLAGK 8.8. will sail from sity of Ghent Charlottetown every Fridav :t 10 o’clock dering the season of 1899 for Halifiax, calling at Summerside, Port Hasting:, Port Haw «esbury, Arichat, Caneo, lsaac Harbur, Salmon River She+t Harbor, re- turning, ® ill leave Halifax every Tuesday at 6 p. wm. making some calls. The Steamer has excellent passenger accom - odatione. Saloonamidship. Special iow freighta will be given this season. Fartber information ap;ly to W. W. CLARK Agen! Cb’Towr Mey 27 tf Cheap Rates to Montreal ' Just one cent invested in a Post Cari and directed to:G. A. Holland & Son, Montreal. will bring you a neat ,ample book of their magnificent ; + : ime of Wallpapers i byr Sper al al turn mail—free of charge—with scount rates. > English Wallpapers Japanese Wallpapers Scotch Wallpapers American Wallpapers French Walipapers Canadian Wallpapers. } > ‘ts are in touch with the leading i ma: ufacturers of the world and buy- ing in large quantities enables us, through the Press, to supply the i people of Canada with a very €x- i tep.ive assortment of Wallpapers at miv imum prices. | THE POST CARD. " | n writing your card mention $ Limit price Colors wanted hKooms to be papered Size of Rooms. G. A. HOLLAND & SON Established 56 Years Canada’s Great Wallpaper Store | 2411 ST. CATHERINE ST. H MONTREAL. P 5.—Agents for the Dominion of Ca- nada forC. J. & G. G. Potter. Darwen, England. i =— Brown's Lawn& Garden At Auction Weil sda, Tth June at 12 o'clock That most desirable Building Lot with fruit varden and glase house, with a front age < eighty feet on Fitzroy Street and sbon! oce hundred and seventy feet back The best available building lot in the city, wide enough for two cottages ora large donb'e house,and ashort dietance from Post Office, churches and schools. Terma made known at sale, R. BEAIRSTO, Arctioneer. May 23— eed td 5 § Gily of Bhent RONG IDEA THE KING’ By GEORGE GRIFF { ‘ ; ros see how my plan works out. “NOW They know I’ve got stones from Ridley, but they don’t know what stones. See? Shey come here with their warrant, arrest us both and search us, find this other little lot en you and jump to the conclusion that they’re the right ones | and that I’ve just given ’em to you, but | there’s no proof of that, and they can’t one, for you'll play the funk, own swear you bought ’em from a get ap ann Kaffir, while I ‘do tuous lay. ‘‘You needn*t be afraid of Ridley. They don’t want him yet. They'll wait for him and nab ‘him when convenient, It’s me want. De Beers would give a good bit just now ‘to plant me on the breakwater fora few years while they put this amalgamation business tit indignant vir- they through. Thats where my game comes in. ‘his parcel should pan out at £36,- 600 at the very least, and that’s just tyhat i -ant to fight these amalgama- tors on treir own ground. ‘‘l? I got nabbed, the -whole game would,be up, ‘but if you go for me, I'll make my fortune, and yours, too, my pippin. Muratti will go Jossey, matter of thousands then, Jossey; itll be millions, uxy boy, millions, and you ehall have your share when you come out, never fear. ‘*‘You know, ‘if you were left ‘to yourself, Jossey, you’d never make £1,000 in a century of blue moons, let alone £10,000 in three years or s0. Come, now, what do you say? You'll have to look-sharp, for they may be here any minute—ah, yes, I thought so! There’s the official knock. Now, don’t act the goat and fly in the face of good fortune. Here’s the gonivahs. That’s it in ¢crour waistcoat pocket. Now, button your coat. That'll do!’’ ‘‘Well, gentlemen, good evening. What can I do for you this evening, if it isn’t morning already?’’ ‘*You can hand over that parcel of diamonds you got from Frank Ridley tonight, Mr. Muratti, and then you can come with us,” replied Inspector Li- pinski politely, but still a trifle stiffly. ‘I’ve a search warrant here, but you'll save us a lotof troubleand yourself and household a Ict of inconvenience by passing over the stomes at once. We know they’re in the house.’’ “Then you know a mighty lot more about my house than I do myself, Mr. Lipinski,’’ snapped the little man some- what viciously. ‘‘There are’ no. dia- monds here but what are my own law- ful property, and they’re all cut stones, so I’m afraid 1 can't give you what you've come for. But of course if you've got a warrant you can act on it, though it’s a piece of most unwarrantable tyr- anny. And this a British colony too! W sy don’t they call it penal settlement and kave done with it? Shall I ask my wife to get up and come down?”’ ‘‘I hope there’J] be no necessity fur that,’’ replied the inspector, with & pleasant smile. ‘*But now, gentlemen, we must get to work, please. It isn’t pleasant for any of ua, [ Buuw, Dac 3's our duty, and it must be done.’’ The formality resulted exactly as tha astute Mickey had predicted it would. The diamonds, a parcel of stones werth about £200 at first cost, were promptly found in Jossey’s pocket, and he played the tyro in J. D. B. with a perfection that was by no means all art. Mickey of course did the virtuonusly - MOTHER AND BABE. Nature is cruel and visits upen mother and babe alike the results Rm of the mother’s neglect mae of herown health. It wy is an oft-told tale—the GZ» mother dies in the ag- p———_ ony of child-birth, and Pe in a few short months or the sweet babe follows her to the cemetery. If women will only learn, and teach their daughters, the supreme importance of keeping the distinctly feminine organism in a perfectly vigorous and healthy condi- t recurring tragedy will soon be a story of the past. If women who suf fer fromm weakness and disease of these del- icate organs will write to,Dr. R. V. Fierce at Buffalo, N. Y., they will learn that in order to recover and maintain their health in tnis respect, it is not generally necessary te submit to the humiliating examinations and local applications insisted upon by physicians. In writing confidentially te Dr. Pierce, a woman places her case, with- out charge, in the hands of an eminent ana skillful specialist, for thirty years chief con. sulting physician to the Invalids Hotel and Surgical Institute at Buffalo, N. ¥.—one of the leading medical institutions in the world, with a staff of nearly a score of emi- nent practitioners. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription cures all weakness and disease of the organs distinctly feminine. Honest druggists recommend it instead of urging a substitute for a little extra profit. “T have been a great sufferer from female dis- eases.’ writes Mrs. C. C. Clark, of New Rome, Floyd Co., Ga. “Iwas confined to my bed three years. Nine bottles of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Pre- scription completely cured me.” G largely a matter Dr. Pierce’s #2 2s and good health is largely a matter of healthy activity of the bowels. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets cure constipation. They are safe, sure and speedy, and once taken do not have to be taken always. One little “ Pellet” is a gentle laxative, and two a mild Pellets. tion, this ever- ood temper is cathartic. They never gtipe. Druggists sell them. indignant relative and disappotnted benefactor without a flaw, not only at the moment of discovery, but at the police court the next morning. So well indeed did both play their parts that to Inspector Lipinski’s intense disgust the magistrate refused to send the chief criminal to the special court for trial, und so after providing generously for the defense of his erring relative he left the courthouse a triumphantly whitewashed man. At the next sitting of the special _ court Jossey got five years, and the same train which took him to Cape Town happened also to take Mrs. Mi- chael Muratti, who, for reasons of health, had been advised to take a trip to Europe to avoid the worst of the hot season in Kimberley. Inspector Lipin- ski still had bis suspicions, but even they did net go eo far as to put a value of about £30,000 on the high and hol- | low heels of the lady's dainty French ; | denve in Lancaster Gate. made boots. * - * s a o & Nearly five years later Michael Mu- ratti, Esq., was sitting at the writing table in the library cf his town resi- He was read- ing a letter and swearing softly uader his breath at every line of it. When he had read it through for the second time, he crushed it up in his band, stuffed it into his trousers pocket, went and stood on the hearth rug with his short, sturdy legs wide apart, and said to a life sized portrait of himself which hung in tbe flying up sxy high, and it won't bea middle-of the opposite wall: ‘*No, bust me if I do! I’ve been gen- erous to both of them, and I can’t stick it any longer. I'll give ’em just another £1,000 apiece for old times’ sake, and that’s ‘the lot. Half a million apiece, whew! Why don’t they asix for the whole caboodle at once? I'll see them selling fried fish first.’’ The explanation of this resolution may be briefly given as follows: Thanks to exemplary bebavior and a certain amount of judiciously applied influence, Mr. Mauratti’s scapegoat had got off with a little over three years. The day he came out he received the welcome but not unexpected intelligence that through the death of a relative in Lon- don he had came into about £5,000 ready cash and property and securities yielding about another £1,000 a year. The same evening he*renewed the ac- quaintance of Frank Ridley, who had been discharged without any assigned reason in a few weeks after the great coup which had proved so worthiess to him. The bank had been advised by cable that a leaf had been stolen out of Mr. Muratti’s London checkbook and cautioned not to cash any checks with- out further notice. Hence the first £2, - 500 had not been paid. The IO U Mr. Muratti bad laughed at. The stones had cost him quite enough already or would do so before be had done with Jossey, and he didn’t propose to pay any nmiore. It wasa case of dog eating dog, but Ridley could do nothing without dis- closing the whole transaction, and that would mean not less than ten years on the breakwater for him, so he grinned and bore it and waited till Jossey came ont. Meanwhile Mr. flourished exceedingly. Muratti grew and Everything he totichel* turned either to goid or dia- inonds, though he never touched any- thing illicit after the last big deal. He was quite a great man now; buat, as every one knows him, there is noe need to repeat that, and there was not a cloud on his financial or social] horizon eave bis connection with Jossey aud the present impossibility of getting intro- guced to the Prince of Wales. He had given Ridley a couple of thousand in cash on Jossey’s strong rep- resentation and fondly thought that would settle his unprovable claim for good, but that was just where he had made the biggest mistake of his life. Jossey came out of penal servitude 2 very different person from the shiftless ne’er do well that he was when he en- tered it. It had done him a lot of good. It had put backbone into him, and be- sides he had learned many things that he woitted not of before. fter more than three years of penal toil and discipline, imbittered by depri- vation of all creature comforts, it was only in the course of nature when he regained his freedom and found himself in command of plenty of money he The interview was not exactly a friendly one. should be strongly inclined to compen- sate himeelf for his vicarious sufferings on a somewhat liberal scale. It was inthis humor that Ridley had found him. He had made a little money, more or less honeetly since bis diecharge. and so there was mo sugges- tion of sponging, but he was very sore still about the check and the I O U, and in Jossey he thought he saw the means of getting square with the millionaire who had done him such an unecrupu- ious ‘‘shos in the eye.’’ To thie end he worked both skillfully and successfully on tho ex-convict’s feelings until he came to look upon himeelf aga martyrand Michael Murat- tiasa (monster of ingratitude. What were a few paltry thousands to the mil- lions that were literally rolling in—the millions which would never have been his if he, Joshua, had not borne the penalty of his crime? He had the plain- ect right toa good substantial share of them, and so, too, for the matter of that, kad the man from whom Mickey bad so dishonestly obtained the stones on which his new fortunes had been founded. As time went on these arguments were very strongly enforced by the fact that the aforesaid ‘‘paltry thousands’’ did not go very far when Mr. Joshua Mosen- stein bad once learned the joya of spend- ing money with the cheerful freedom that is born of a sure and certain hope that, when it is done, there wili be plenty more forthcoming. The logical result was that the two worthies, now fast friends and allies in a common ob- ject, had made demand after demand on the apparently bottomless purse of the multimillionaire, until at last a certain fact had come to their knowl- edge which, after due deliberation to- gether, had inspired them to write the joint letter that had so disturbed Mr. Linvratti’c conanimity. (Continnel oan page 8. ) “Every Well Man Hath His Itt Day.” A doctor’s examination might show that kidneys, liver and stomach are norrnal, but the doctor cannot analyze the blood upon which these organs depend. Hood’s Sarsaparilla purifies, vitalizes | and enriches the blood. It cures you | when ‘‘a,bit off’’ or when seriously affiicted. Jt never disappoints. ened a AOS ON ar. i NE ewson's Fine Furniture Our big discount sale will be continued until the whole stock is disposed of, Kverything will be sold at tremendous discounts-for cash only, ? Theusands of Dollars worth of the best furniture ever shown in Charlottetown, must be cleared out ai ouce. Hundreds have made their purchases here, and are fully satisfied that we are giving genuine vargains, Buy Now Farniture is still going up iu price, but we are selling at the old prices—with big discounts for cash, If you want to save money, buy now John N eurson hn Rheumatism—‘“ I believe Hood’s Sar- saparilla has no equal for rheumatism, It bas done me more good than any other medicine I haye taken.” Mrs. Patricx Kenney, Brampton, Ont. .—* After my iong illness, I was very weak and had a bad cough. I could not eat or sleep. Different remedies did not help me but Hood’s Sarsaparilla built me up and I am now able to attend to my work.” MINNIE JAQues, Osh@ho, Ont. Ah Ae ees Tes _ Hood's Pills cure tiver ills; the non-irritating and | only cathartic te take with Hood’s Sarsaparilla. | } yt cl] al a ek Gurning ai Penny Candle, to look for a Farthing,” That is what some folks do whee they try ‘osave cents in the purchasn of adulterated soap made from ch: ap Groceries, ¢ Crockery ¢ and » Glassware —_—Retail at Wholesale Prices———— ng lapecd Ios eZ a 3 C Se i LORIE ie : by Wait 4 = WHE 3° 2 w/t eeey on. a ee “ j ae. — —aeg TE oe See ieee ot ro C25) = ~ = oe Six piece Glass Table Sets selling at 26c, regular price : 25 ccnts. } 100 Flower Pots from lc up 1000 Teapots from 10c up. 1000 Jugs very low Berry Sets, 7 picces, 2le P. MONAGHAN Offer Building QUEEN sTRELT syargneneiqenn ney mmttnnenen anette rae rt e oils. They not only ‘burr. the can- = 4 = dle” bet they “Jose the farthing” = = as well, when they subdject costly fa- | = . r ° ” « - > ries to the e-rrosive action of such|}$=- >= . o-— soaps. Dollars are literally thrown} oe . - away in washing fabrics Jike lace, | $= >t muslin, damask, eretonnes, silks, and|$— i S .s 8 = cambris with trashy imported soaps] ¢- 3 wade from inferior oil. = 3 ~ oo ; ae } ‘¥ am ”- -_ i Oyai Yak 0a = & . ee =~ is vxpressly manufactured for the | . ; : a washing of sucharticles, It is made | >» % from the purest materials; white goods become whiter and colored goods brighter when washed with it. A purer soap is beyond the art of soap making. Ask your dealer. For sale every where. J.D UAPTHORN & CO Charlottetown Soap Works ey «ll a ol? e» i p> > >» Eo Dividend Notice Mercuax7s Bayk or P. E. 1, Charlottetown, June Let, 1899 Notice is hereby given, that a half- vearly dividend at the rate of 8 yer cent per annum, on the capital st ck of the bank has been declared payable at it: banking house on and after Ju'y 3rd next. Phe Transfer books will be closed from the 1%b June, to the 3rd of July next, both days inclusive. By order ot the Board. J.M. DAVISON, Cashirr. June Ist, 1899 . ’ Collars Ties Gloves QBAAMALAMAAAARAADAAAD SEbGASSE 4 AAA AAL LALbAbLGGAASEL LAGLUA Ad Ad bdb dates AAAAAA AAR AAA AAAARARAAAARAAAG: BOSH 82 BSE BGOS O25 $6 OOOS OH YS OOOO CE 7S OOHS 3O04 % ‘guid V2 as i | It ls Surprising ~~» How people allow themselves to be imposed upon. They see an article advertised as the best of ite kind made, and buy and uee it, thiok- ing it is good, witLou* making auy Comparisons. Sunlight & Lifebuoy Soaps are universally acknowledged to be the best all rovod family Soap? made; but don’t believe iton this statement alone, test them for yourseives with apy other brand on the market, laundry or \oilet, and be convinced of the fact Sunlight & Lifebuoy are the only guaranteed, pure laundry SOAPS on sale in Cacada. parrPrice Se per large twin bar, wine: raieeeeee AE ge ae A ai ey gp a. on Rca lin caiitahceiaictaestseaetiit it eR Sn ARR IO e eRE peTyc sapere ie etemmcoiiniiamen ir emmen a a ec ar ge “oi Bee SER IS Tee Sein se a of airman eres aT OST sag oes Ul iG ens OB EE Re OnE caren teehes cenmmens anemia armen vara mneen., on, i ceatha dieiiendtiin adamnaneaiinamemnsien eae M p renee -— a i r Se ee a acto Spats ae RC ie AE IE i itadiiiaiie . ic 7 ma At ES sbeubul é Zz o ow ew —s owe ppg oo