: ; # 3 a é s Z és Z a THE DAILY EXsAsUNER, CHANLOU'TLETOWN, OCTOBER 6, -_ oar G uard ! “pops KIDNEY —/i SS, 1) Oa THE BEST is always imitated, Dodd's Kidney Plils, sold only in boxes like this, are widely imitated, because they are the best Kidnucy cure. Take none Pet ee. WE WANT HOUSEKEEPERS To come in and look over our groceries Our stock is fine and fresh and guaranteed to be satisfactory. We keep every- thing in our line that is neces- sary. HOUSEKEEPING The prices— well, that is wuat we want you to see when you are looking at our goods. [heir lowness will surprise you. DRISCOLL and HORNSBY THE WEEK'S GROCERIES... <gEe Perhaps you would like to get a little more for what you spend. Perhaps you would like to have everything fresh and nice. FOR {f 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 3:4, the well known 8.3. Halifax leaves Charlottetown every Tuesday nt nocn for Boston, via Hawkes- bury and Halifax. From Halifax—Every Wednesday at 11 pm. Passengers ticketed via Pictou on Wednesdays, Frow boston every Saturday at noon Tickets for tale at Svetions on PE Railway. For tickete, rates on freight an 1] information apply H L CHIPMAN, W W CLARKE, Supt, Halifax. Agent SL. Dunstan's College Classical aud Commercial. AFFILIATED TO LAVAL UNIVERSITY The clasees in St. Dunstan’s Colleg will be resumed on TUESDAY, the 12the Septemter next. or further particulars apply to A. |’. McLELLAN, ay] if Lh | By OUTOLIFFE HYNE. — ——____—_____—__——. | (Continued.) ' . was om watch and stood leaning my elbows on the t’ gallant rail of the lower deck and smoked and looked about me. The water was full of these little pink sailed jellyfish that we sea_ folk call | Portuguese men-o’-war, though ‘‘nau- | tilus’’ is, I believe, the fancy name. I | pointed them out to Miss Bradbury, who was standing near, and asked her | if she’d like one caught. ‘‘Do you think there’s much danger, Mr. McTodd?’’ says she. ‘*They’ve just a wee sting to them if they get upon your hands,”’ said L ‘‘But there’s no need to touch them. | You can just gratify your eyes, and then | we will fling them overboard again. They’re no beauties that you’d care to keep and take home with you, likea | canary bird.’”’ | ‘What do you mean?" says she. | ‘I’m talking of these Portuguese ' men-o’-war.”’ She put her hand upon my arm, and | Tlocked up into her face and saw it was as white as paper, saving for black | rings under the eyes. ‘‘I beg your par- | don, Mr. McTodd, for being so inat- tentive. I’m afraid my thoughts are under the sea instead of on top of it. | Is this diving very dangerous work? | Their air tubes might get entangled.”’ **They’re too old hands to let them foul.”’ “Or they may get swept away by currents. ’’ ‘‘Their life lines will keep them in tow.’”’ “Or sharks.” *‘Sharks are always feared at divers, Miss Bradbury. No, miss, you may be- lieve me, those two men are as safe down at work below as yon are here, or safer, seeing that they can’t get sun- stroke, and you very likely will if you stay here away from the awnings with no hat on.”’ She shivered, and thanked me, and went away into the shade, and I turned again and watched the boats and the two moving patches of muddied water which they were following. It struck me at the moment that the Steamship Corinth Salvage association were put- ting a vast deal of trust inthe two men whom they employed as their divers— £270,000 worth of gold is a very vast bulk of wealth for poor men to be near. They did not find the wreck that day or the next. Indeed not till a week had passed did they come across her, and then they found that she had settled on her broadside into a little gulley on the silt over her till she was almost coverea out of sight. They buoyed her when she was found and that day I went off in Cameron’s boat and tried to see if I could make her out from above. But she lay in 16 fathoms, and the water was gray with mud from them working below. Looking down into it was like peering through a mist. The Gleaner swung at her anchor over the western ocean swells, and the sun bleached her awnings to the white- ness of new fallen snow. For myself, but for one thing, I never had such an easy time on full pay during all my seagoing. There was no work todo. A lot of grog was served out, coast fash- ion, at eight bells, and the slop chest tobacco burnt. slowly and cost only 2 A man may talk of disdaining physical strength and prowess unti) Doomsday, but the fact remains that he cannot look at a picture of an old-time knight, magnifi- cent in his physical pro- portions, dauntless ia his physical courage, and armed, ready and eager for a contest to the death with any comer, without a thrill of admiration. Mental J al superior- ity is desirable and admirable, but is the ‘“‘game Yworth the can- dle,”’? when it is won at the ex ense of phys- ical health and strength ? The unhealthy Vinan may gain the pity and even the admiration of men and women, but it is a question whether such a man ever thoroughly gains their respect. The man whose arteries bound with the rich, red blood of health carries with him a force and an intensity that command re- spect, even though he be slightly inferior mentally to the weak, nervous man. While mo medicine in the world will add an inck to a man’s stature, there is one famous medicine that will fill the veins and arte- ries with the rich, red, bounding blood of erfect health. It is Dr. Pierce’s Golden fedical Discovery. It is the great blood- maker and blood-purifier. When the blood is pure and rich and red and plenty, and filled with the life-giving elements that pourish every tissue of the body, it is im- possible for a man to suffer from ill-health of any description. When every little blood-vessel in the lungs quivers with the rush of healthy blood, it is impossible to have unhealthy lungs. When the walls of the stomach are nourished with healthy blood, dyspepsia and indigestion are im- possibilities. When the liver is supplied with healthy blood it is bound to be active. The skin that is nourished with healthy biood will be clear and fresh and td with health. ‘‘ Discovery’’ is sold by druggists. Mr. Isaac E. Downs, of Spring Valley, Rock- land Co., N. Y., writes: ‘‘ For three years I suf- fered from that terrible disease, consumption, I Rector St Dunstan’s College, Ch’town, Aug 30, 99 had wasted away to a skeleton. To-day I tip the scales at 187, 7nd am well and strong. * The Golden Medical Discovery’ cured me.” ~ | long. sea floor where a current had carried | shillings a pound. Sut tifere was one thing worried me and that was Miss Bradbury. She had joined at Liverpool as rosy a lassie as one could wish to meet, and here she was getting whiter and thinner every dav You could al most see the flesh slin ay bones, vav II ! er and she’ j an annearnance f serorTre e.4 ‘ < appearance . ©) SBLail and worry about her face that made one sick to look at. All hands Saw li Was no avoiding sucha thing. Butth put it down to anxiety about Cameron ihe pair of them were opeu! } rae 1 ¢5 marry hy this ti? ‘ and ] must say the way that he and the other diver worked was a caution. Oj the water was warm, but it was fairish deep. and I never saw men stay down longer They never seemed to ; ive in while they had strength left to lifta hand, and when they came to the sur- face and had their gear taken off they'd be almost fainting with weariness what they’d gone through. And it was not a one day occurrence either. They were always the same, and the weeks from slipped away till they had run intoa | month, and still none of the gold had been brought to the Gleaner. The silt was the trouble, it seemed. As fast as they dug it cnt just so fast did it slide down again into the steam- er’s bowels, and the strong room, which lay right down against her keel, could not be come at. Of course one under- stood that Camerbdn’s reputation de- pended upon his bringing off this sal- vage job successfully, but I don’t see the force of a man killing himself, and I told him so more than once. I fancied ' at the time that Miss Bradbury was telling him the same every day. But he didn’t take any notice of either of us, nor did Storey, the other diver, and the pair of them just worked theniselves to rags. A stopper was put on their game, however, in a way they did not expect. The steward brought word one morning that the captain wanted to see me, and turned out of my bunk and went on deck. He seemed in a bit of a worry. ‘‘Mr. Storey’s had a stroke,’’ says he. “I’ve told that man a dozen times ta take drugs, sir,’’ said I, ‘‘and he never would.’’ ‘‘Drugs are all very well for us, Mac,”’ says he, ‘‘that have ordinary stomachs, but drugs wouldn’t have saved Storey what he’s got, and that’s paralysis.”’ “*My certie!’’ said L ° ‘It’s true,’’ said the old man. ‘‘It took him while he was in the boat. Cameron had just gone down and Storey was going to follow when he was seized. They took off his helmet and brought him back here, and he’s down in his room now with half of him dead and no speech left. ‘It’s a complaint, I’ve heard, that often does seize divers.”’ **It does if they stick to the trade too Well, Mac, I’m wanting some one to take his place, and I give you first offer. It'll mean £5 a week above and beyond your present pay, and there’s nothing to hinder your earning — ‘‘Nothing that I see, sir. Storey and I are just in a build and I can wear his sujt.’’ ‘“‘Very well, then, just give me your hand for half a minute and look me in the eye.’’ I did that. ‘“‘Now,’’ said he, ‘‘yon’rea servant of the Corinth Salvage asscciation, and I’m another. Your father was a gentle- man, wasn’t he?’’ ‘‘He was that, sir, and one of the most honored Free kirk ministers in Scotland.”’ ‘“‘Then you must be a gentleman, too, though I dare say you are not always treated assuch. Now swear to me, Mac, on your honor, as a gentleman, that you'll be true to those that are employ- ing you.’”’ I Jooked at him in the faceand did it cheerfully. When a man treats me properly (and God knows few enough of them have tried it) he’s got a fellow to work for bim he ought to value highly. a 7 + * * . e I got into the suit as the boat rowed me out to the buoy, and when we pick- ed up the mcoring the men screwed on the helmet for me and started the air pump. It wasn’t a new experience to nie; I’d been diving before in the Clyde to bore holes into a sunken pier with a ratchet drill. I went over the side, took the rope and lowered myself hand over fist throttgh the gray water till the leaden soles on my feet touched ground. The corky feeling was a bit new again at first, but I soon got over that, and then, as my air valves were working all right, and I could breathe quite easily, I set about looking for Cameron. He was somewhere out of sight, but his air tube was lying on the mud among the sea shrubs, like a thin white eel, and I followed that eastly enough. It led me to the Corinth, where she lay with her decks straight up and down, and I saw it passing away throngh the watery blackness down her companion hatch. There seemed some- thing wrong here. Where were all the great moving banks of slime the divers had told us about? Where was the filthy ooze which slid back against the steam- er as fast as they dug it away? Slime there was in plenty, I sank in it knee deep in spite of the buoyancy of the suit, but it was quite manageable, and the Corinth’s companion lay far above its mark. A rope lay against the up- right deck beside the white air tube. I thought a minute and then laid hold — to know that trouble might ‘ | the same time I liked Cameron; he was put [ switched on light in the electric lamp I had with me, and the glow lit the place like a foggy street. The first step landed me on something that crunched, I[ looked down and saw it was a suit of bones, skimmed clean by the fishes. Some poor wretch had been drowned here when the steamer foundered. Well, of course, I had seen a skeleton before, but somehow or other those bones didn’t seem to cheer me. There was something wrong. The yarn the divers had bronght up and the real | thing as it lay were two entirely differ- | ent matters. It occurred to me that I | had stumbled (by the accident of Storey’s paralysis) upon something in- tended to be hid, and I was quite man very possibly follow. I stopped where I was and thought. I’d a big mind to go back then and re- port what I had seen. I felt I should be earning my pay by doing that. But at a fellow countryman and more besides, and I didn’t want to report him as act- ing off the square, so I stoutened my cart and went on down below. (io be continued) ITCHING } PILES... Positively and permanently cured by Dr. A. W. Chase’s Ointment. Dr. A. *¥. Chase's Ointment is an absoluts cure for piles, and has never been known to fail to cure the worst forms of this disease which has baffled medical skill for ages, This statement may sound rather strong to persons who do not know the superior merits of Dr. A. W. Chase’s Ointmeut, but it is per- fectly true, and heartily endorsed by the grate- ful testimony of thousands of men and women who have been cured by itafter years of suffer- ing, and after trying many preparations and consulting the best coctors. Mr. H. Bull, Belleville, Ont., says: ‘‘I take pleasure in stating that after thirty years of suffering with Itching Piles, Dr. Chase's Oint- ment has completely cured me. I tried every remedy that was advertised, with little or no benefit, but as I have told different persons affected as I was, Dr. Chase's Ointment made a perfect cure.” Dr. Chase's Ointment has a record of cures unparalleled in the history of medicine, It is guaranteed to cure any case of piies. For sale >y all dealers, or Eimansoa, Bates & Ca Toronta CRESCENT? lasts longer than other makes is because it is made from the original process. Only the most skilled workmen areemployed. It is made with the greatest care. Finding our label on any article you buy ensures greater durability, smoothness, cleanliness and ge- neral satisfaction, and at no greater cost than poorer grades. Ask for it. MADE BY The Thos. Davidson M’f’g Co. MONTREAL. CHARLOTTETOWN Schoo! of Music W. Harry Warts, DIRECTOR —_—— Fall term opens September 5th. Students recommencing will kindly call at the studio or write, notifying the Director of date of recommence- ment Vacancies for a limited number of new students. Studio hours, 9 a m to 12; 2 p m to oP m £0R RENT. The subscriber offers for rent his residence, orner of Hillsborough and Rict mond Street The house contains tea rooms and is ‘urnish- ed with electric light and fitted with bath, etc., connected with the Tharlottetown Sewerage ~ystem, Possession given at unce Arey HENRY SMITH Sept lith 1899 fn re Estate of Reubin Tuplin, of Kensington, deceased we ee All persous having any demand upon ibe estate of the abcve named deceased, are hereby required to eahibit the seme duly attested, as by law required, at the office of Charles R Smallwood, Solicitor, Charlottetown, within one yearfrom the date of this advertisment. Dated this 2nd day of September, A. D. 1899. JAMES TUPLIN, Sas QR “A UE ~ . 7 * a a ~ se ae ie on ‘ ets. hal A i oN Uy , ey > § o He os + m We og “ts ety A it fol y he 4 . > cas ae i s , eat 4 Bi ; ; . ‘ & Castoria is & “fants and Children. Cast ‘5 | harmicss subs ‘e for Castor Oil, Paregez a7 SOF and Soothing Syrups. Is contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. It is Pleasant. | I{s guarantce is thirty years’ use by Millions of AS nt hers. Mot! Castoria destroys Worms and allays Feverish- Castoria cures Diarrhoea and Wind Celie. ‘Troubles, Ness. Castoria cures Constipation and Castorta assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach*ot. Bowels of Infants and Children, giving } urai sleep. Castoria is the Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend, relieves Teething Viatuiency. rcalthy and na: 4- "v « “~ { CG : Castoria. | astoria. “Casteria is an excelicit medicine for| ‘*Castoria 1s sco well adapicd to childres: children. Mothers have :epeatealy told me | that I recommend it as superio: to any pee oi its good effect upon their chii‘ren.” | scription known to me.”’ Dr. G. C. Oscoon, Luwedl, Mass. H. A. ARCHER, M. D. Drovklyn, AL & THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OF APPEARS ON EVERY WRAPPER. THE CTNTAUR COMPANY T7 MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK OTTY. ee me ee — DIRECT Steamship Service s/ ra a ee ~ AS ma Thats red | TE rv hae Ow lyre em = eo urse ws a bebe) 6 Pr rk Pete Te EASE iad tines ee = clenenar weeny N/E & TO LIVERPOOL, G. B. The Elder Dempster & Co’s Steamship LAK E HURGN 4040 tons, having cold storage acco novation ani decks proper ly fitted for carrying live stock, is intended to sa‘! from Car lottetown for Liverpool, direct, on or about the {3th October also on or about the 18th November. The Lake Huron has splendid accomodation fur a | number of cabin passengers, at very moderate rates. For rates of freight and other particulars apply to N. RATTENBURY ———_ AGENT Cl’town, August, 26th, 1899 Ga New Goods Coming =— Daily to Mand MEN’S HATS, CAPS LADIES HATS Men’s Underwear aA good range difierent weights, including Stanfield’s Unehrinkable. « T.JH ARRIS, L ON LADIES’ COATS apd swarmed up. Inside. all .was dark. RR FITZGER si Executors. S W BODD,