S —— — Ce 2 AH WH pgneteeee © picTURESQUE % “i> Me oof pinceEdwart Island = te 7 , 2 Bite & t. A 2 A . is ra Hie? ae WO UY AY Ae . om «CF. *&E. istand ) Seal ‘sy 1r a We j mercies ( (pile wa" see feo es eye tical preparation for aa | ; . aAsiICt re) : ’ porous 8 , is he adg¢ oo spor pueiness Life is called to td Ivans | were gered hy ris College Book~ } i sages U ws ‘ _ metic a ae Commersia’ Lue: A new a sh p, 0g 1, Uorrespod iaace, ee sulk our aie Mf ethos Shorthand, Type- a 38 widh , a a atc. areraugot in the mos direct . 7, e10., & : ; : i eas ieal manuer Soeciai atleotion Ber mai ng graiuacea vood “ved 0 local ~ ‘ a ong tigi8. New term Oj ‘ne? 00 ae inst.,. at 0.30 a, 7 ATG. 20.0 BeeeDAT, AU wT P.O. Bon 342 i bea! for prose pag acl ISAAC OXENHAM / Peincips! and Proprietor J&a-— t'. TT ‘farm For Sale & 0 | Shae a ; : , the property of the late - Al, - nie contains 80 acres of vala- 6 ignd, 50 being ueder cultivation, and it Bi. bslance is covered with an excellent At wit of hardwood std rails. There are the premises besides a com/ortable B, Blisciling souse,» large vew bare aed s @ Fick house, also a fine thriving young M ccebard ; while a never-failing stream of Nester ows throagh the centre of the This place is nicely situated in @ pres- it community, aud is also convenient obarches, schools and ocher practical jements. Any person wanting & to TE comfortable ard attractive bome would do ‘Bedi ‘o purchase ; acd, moreever, it JE iw ibe advaniage ot being ready fer oc. MS copsncy at any ume. The best of terms vilte given. Wer further particulars applz at the office of D C MeLeod, Chare igieown, or to Mra. P F Tynan, 13 North IB Cron St. Semervilic, Mass, wk. 4in, ae a WANTED | j a Hy Ayounz man with some ex- ; | j perience at carpenter work to | ' learn the art of pattern making! App'y to | t ' oil pf, Htaoe Stewart and Cr. ¢ ce Engineers, Machinists and Boiler Makere. f Steam Nav. Co’s Wharf / Ch’town, PE J Phone 125 _a <<. sa ~<a ee ~>s ae & > f ACARD B. MACNEILL. M. D. aving 30 years experience in the tactice of his profession, may be con wtited on all branches of gemerai medi ; Me including the speciaities. and Residerce—Prince Stree: $id door above Kindergarten Hall. ours—g to If a. uw. Ite 3 and ‘98 . p. m. dy & wkly 3 mos Wlleral-Conservative oavan tin, BA convention of delegates for the Electoral Dis‘rict of King's go. will be held in the Hall at Cardi- b fe Wednesday, Oct, 17th, at 2 Stork, P. m., for the purpose of _ 7 Suinating & candidate to {ili the miney caused by the death of the : lamented Oyrus Shaw, Esq. rmeéen of polls will ste that a ist of ten delegates be apy ointed. g' D.C MORSON, President. ..__J. A. DEWAR, Secretary. -\Quction Sale. liable Farm Property at Black River, Lot 35. l yj . will sell at Public Auction at th hour of foc a Pp. m., on Thursday, the tst day of Mack Riv. hext, 1900, on the premises, ; ver, Let 35, that valuable farm, be- Gag. property owned by the late William ar ning 112 acres of good land, 90 table a aeennce covered with lumber een and scantling, situate in a | Maen: m pent, near musse, miud, and cen- lox fy arenes, schools, etc, z ther particulars see handbills. § easy and made known at sale, es” —arae Oe JOHN COl RT, Oe 5—3i Executor W pd. e : (HE DAILY KXAMINER @HARLOITETOWN OCTOBER, 15 noee ove Finds A Way. : a ie Ce BY JEANNETTE H. WALWORTH, Copyrig. t, 1:99, by Jeannette H. Walworth. setelliieeiiat Continued,) 1y Vv ) surfeited with hae . oO cely la 1d weve that it s ia ublesome i ist | J pret i. S rar i the recollection of | S) ng lids and her candid y: ns. } { ws of white teeth. I fanes 1e i sicep without rock- ing tonight—today, rather. How pret- ty she looked in spite of all she had | le through! She bas grown into a lovely young woman while I have Deen grubbin mars. Why, it seems to me only yes- terday that | left her a little romp, trundling her hoop and playing witb her dolls. The fellows will soon be’— Mr. Matthews clipped this sentence in two with sharp petulance. “Not at all, not at all, Thomas. |, shall listen to nothing of that sort, sir, for a great many years to come. | It is an absurd idea, and as such 1 resent it. sir—res, resent it!” ‘Tom stared at him in natural sur- prise. Such an acrimonious outburst from aman whom he had never seen moved out of the most urbane com- posure lacked logic. “| fail to see anything in my remarks to call forth resentment, sir,” he said, with lifted bead. Matthews changed the abruptly. “Your judgment in the matter of cigars. Thomas, defies criticist:. This is superfine.” Hie took the cigar from between his lips. gazed reflectively at its cobesive white ash, flicked it free with his tin- subject ger and gazed meditatively at the ceil- | ing. Tom gave a thoughtful twist to the soft brown fringe that clothed his up- , per lip with promises and changed the position of his tong legs restlessly. Was this premature display of pa- rental hostility meant for his especial benefit? He smiled at the futility of it. Did this ogre of a papa think he could give the world one glimpse of his ra- diant child and then shut her up in his own ravished heart forever? He frown- ed at the daring of it. A vision of the future was already shaping itself in the boy’s active brain, a vision which comported so perfectly with what he called “the common sense of the situation” that this valiant show of opposition on the part of the man he had selected as a father-in-law had the effect of a slap on his cheek. Tom was not yet schooled in the wisdom of cheek turning. He would bide his time, he said to himself, but he would not b* deterred from asking Olivia Matthews to marry him, when that time came, by all the fathers in the universe. Com- mon sense dictated waiting, and Tom. never turned a deaf ear to common sense. His yision had come to him unbid- den, but now that it had come he hug- ged it close with defiant tightness. The frowning front his guardian showed could not affect it in the least. It bad come to him first in the little pavilion under the sycamores, where he bad made one of four happy young things who ate ices. wasted cake and talked the most delicious nonsense with an abiding conviction of profun- dity. It was there and then that he had drunk in Ollie’s loveliness from the crown of her pretty head to the -- ~ - arn ae —+ ET EE OO TTT ] are the only medicine that will cure Dia- betes. Like Bright’s Dis- ease this dis- y ease was in- e curable until Dodd’s Kidney Pills cured it. Doctors themselves confess T that without Dodd’s Sidney Pills they are powerless against Dia- betes. Dodd's Kidney Pills are the first medicine that ever cured Diabetes, Imitations—box, name and pill, are advertised to do so, but the medicine that does cure Diabetes is Dodd’s Kidney Pills. Dodd's Kidney Pills are fifty cents a box at all druggists. Se = gat my Greek and Latin gram- | _ : , sweetness of her mouth, with | bRs 1dy los, iad been one of the four, the | chiefest, the only one of the slightest | importance. A Miss Westover (Jeanne, he believed Ollie had called her) and a Mir. Westover (Clarence, he believed his sister had called him) made up the quartet. | The Westovers were of no more yval- ue to Tom's vision than the daubs of green and brown paint the artist flings in for a background to his portrait of a lady. | It was the portrait of his lady, the daintiest, sweetest bit of womankind that artist ever limned or lover mooned over, that filled in all the foreground of Tom’s vision—no nebulous fancy- ings, with neither beginning por end, yision quite perfect in all its essential roundings, a vision which cast a rosy glow over all the veiled “to come” and made him | feel as if he bad been taking great drafts of some new, strange intoxi- cant. It was the probable made posi- | tive, the fitting final. “But he would wait. When he got through with books and / college and came home to study law under his guardian, it would be time to look at his lovely vision in detail. | No danger of its fading from memory. | He was placidly sure he should never | See anything prettier, sweeter or more | entirely to be desired than Olivia Mat- | thews. She was the cornersione of bis ' vision. He did not propose to be in any clumsy baste about asking her to ' be his wife. She was too young, and so ' was he. He was giad bis youth was the most serious impediment. Some fel- lows had to labor so hard before dar- ing to speak of love to their chosen / ones. For the first time in his life he ‘rejoiced in the possession of great riches. “For your sake, little one, all for you! You looked regal in your jewels tonight. You shall have every desire of your heart, Ollie, mine!’ He apostrophized his new found love fervently and mutely while he was holding out the cigar box to her father. His beautiful vision had come to him entirely unbidden. When he obeyed Olivia’s urgent telegram “to come,” it was solely with the good natured mo- tive of entirely sanctioning the free use of his house and all that it con- tained. The little girl wrote that she would be much better satisfied if he shared the responsibility of welcoming her friends to Broxton Hall. That her father was not in entire accord with this sentiment Tom was just finding out. But even Ollie’s father was only a bit of the necessary background daubed into Tom’s portrait of a lady. While the lawyer talked lugubriously of the depreciation of property in and around Mandeville Tom smoked and mused. When he had mastered a pro- fession and was actually a lawyer in his own right, he should turn his atten- tion toward making Broxton Hall very beautiful. Ollie had said the wall pa- pering was too dark and so gloomy. It should be replaced by something more modern and distinctly cheerful. Then —oh, several years further on in the future, perhaps when his guardian should have taken him into full part- nership—he would ask Ollie to marry him. It had all been arranged to his entire mental satisfaction in the time it had taken them to consume their water ices, amid a lot of laughter and non- sense such as only the young and light bearted know bow to intermingle with their feasting. It seemed such an entirely proper climax to his social relations with his guardian that it would bave been al- most like doubting Providence to en- tertain the slightest fear of nonfrui- tion. Mr. Matthews had lingered later than the smoking of a cigar demanded. His saddled horse was champing the bit restlessly at the rack outside. It would be absurd to tell the boy what he had seen in his father’s study that other night, and yet he had some compunc- tions about letting Tom risk a similar experience by remaining alone at the Hall. He had not been able to acccunt for that occurrence to himself yet. “I am sorry, Thomas, we have not a bed to offer you at the cottage,” he said apologetically, but Olivia’s dress- maker, up from the city, occupies our oply spare room.” “Don’t mention it, sir.” “You are sure you don’t object to staying here by yourself tonight?” Tom stretched his handsome eyes wide. “Here, in my own house? Why, 00, sir. Why should I? I expect to spend a great many nights here alone when I _get through with college life.” liv Substance; 4 selse pos f-e -© | are wiser Siena caciacloeneee ae eee ~Wi-—-yes, peraaps. ~ i nerve a good deal to say to you on tbat subject, Tom. I hardly anticipated talking with you on It before your graduation. You know your being here is a eomplete surprise to me.” “Something of one to me, toa sir,” aid Tom, with a clear, frank laugh. “Ollie Wrote me that | must eome, and L fan we all obey when she com- An es Loe Ys i lid that after tonigut, sir, the world will decline your definition. fhe chrysalis never reverts to the # Mir. Maiti} waved fils hand im- periously. “We Were speaking of your- lf, Thomas. Olivia has occupied our i to the exclusion of more im- portant things. J presume you return to cullese tomorrow 2?” That would get me back ns on Friday. My leave of me to spend Sunday at home.” “Ob, it does!” “Yes, sir.” He was not unmindful of the uncordial acceptance the idea met with. “Well, then, there is more time for talking over affairs than I expected. Now that you are here we may as well discuss several projects which I bave on foot for your benefit—Broxton Hall, for instance. Westover has taken a great fancy to it. That was one of my objects in holding the fete here. The old place put its best foot foremost to- night. Westover wants a house just this size. Now that his daughter Jeanne is in society they will be wanting to ertertain a good deal, I presume. He is charmed with the place.” Tom flushed hotly. (To be Contined. ie Walked the Floor ta Agrony With Pains In the Back—Sieop Impossi3ic—Medicina of no Avail Un- tile got Br. Chase's Kicnsy-Liver Pills. ~ ee ag eee a - a pair up. Mr. Patrick J. MeLaughian, Beau- harnols, Que., states:—‘‘ I was troubled with Kidney Disease and Dyspepsia for 89 years ard have been so bad that I could not sleep at nights on account of pains in the back, but would walk the foor all night and suffered terrible agony. “TI tried all serta of medicines but got no relief until I began using Dr. Cnase’s IKXidney-Liver Pills. They made a new man of me, and the old troubles seem to be driven out of my system.” Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills have an ewormious sale and owe their popu- larity to the fact that they can be ab- solutely relied upon to cure all aii- ments of the kidneys, liver, and stom- ach. They are purely vegetable in composition, prompt and effective in action, and cure permanently. One pil! a cose, 25 cents a bex, at all dealers, e Edimansen, Mates and Co, Turenta. Tomatoes for Chow Chow, Ripe Tomatoes Red Peppers. Smali Cucumbers Cauli- flower. a White Portucle Pickling (nions. NOTICE— As the season is very short for the above it will be wise on your part to secure a full supply now. We do not beok orders to be filled next month (we may not have them th n) we have them now. A fall supply of cerery sugar corn, yellow corn, cabbage, bee's, carrots, persnips, turnips, lettuce, squash pumpkin, green beans, butter beans, large red cnions,, large si‘ver skin onions, etc, etc, at Gav's Market Stalls CLARY . Crabbe, Local Agent, Charottetown., Gloves | Gloves ! ‘Several Hundred Pairs Just Qvened “HOiwin ig o olled chud, nething but j led child,” said her father, so } . Y ’ : j § r ot ‘ » EL =P that a inuech datler witted man Meu’s Gloy es, Leather d0e, de, TOC. 1 Ton | ‘ \ iid have captur- Meu’s Kid Gloves 752, $1.00 $1.25. Men’s Mocho Gloves, 81 00, $1.25, $1.50, Men’s Kid Fur Top, $1.25 $1.50. | Men’s Dogskin Yur 7op eS Men's Buckskin (special) $2.00 a. 9 ‘ a » " 1 Men’s Sarnae 85: etinadahs _ -Men’s Astrakax driving gloves $1.50, Also a large line of leather mitts, lined and unlined. from 35 “Oe, S12 ¢ . . rv Boy's Glover and Mitts in gieat variety 3 Cc « @ ate i his Way tor your gloves at * J.B. MACDONALD = (0 Leaders in low priccs, Decrease the Coal Bill and Increase Your Comfort by using a famous Baseburner _ Three sizes without Oven, Two sizes with oven. Every stove a double heater. One third more heating surface than any other. Fire passes through three flues, while other stoves have cnlytwo, and thussecur- ing one third more heat from the same fuel. Parlor stoves draw the cold air off the floor, Removable firepot ; flat or dup- lex grates; removable nickel jackets. The oven bakes perfectly. You run no risk, we guarantee them. The handsomest Baseburner in Canada. Pamphlet free from our local agent or our nearest louse. LONDON, TORONTO, MONTREAL, WINNIPEG AND VANCOUVER, MFG, CO. —-—.__ ______ “ Happy Thought. blood relation of the Thought.” results. meets its match. DON’T WORRY ! For sale by Walker‘s Corner, Charlottetown, Oct. Ist, 1900, IN ALL THE WORLD no cause\of worry so constant, so insisten', sa widespread as inferior cooking apparatus. WHAT WOMAN can help worrying che result of whose skill and care is damaged or destrcyed by an iuferior Range, DEAL FAIRLY by your household and yourself—install Buck’s “fg Trought” Pange in your kitchen and if you can’t quit worrying entirely your wife will. The worry fiend holds sway supreme in many kitchens, He isa dyspepsia of like ilk, Banish them, buy a “Happy The manufacturers of the “Happy Thought” are doing your culinary worry- ing for you fer all time—take advantage ot it. They have worried over and have perfected every detail of Range construz tion, which though not always apparent on the surface, is most important in Planned like an engine, fitted like a wateh, as durable as the hills, the “Happy ‘Lhought” is ever in the lead,und there it will romain until perfection Use Buck's Happy Thought” Rarge | Simon w. Crabbe. Stovesand Hardware, Se 3a 6} OD 6 o> ws what we say is true. ~s7e e@~we -- ter 6 youll F ind Tesesoece Furniture Bargains But we don’t like tu use the word. So!many ad- vertisers use it and don’t mean it, Webster says, “a gainful tramsaction”—that’s how we reean it—-a gainful trarsaction for our custome~s, We would like you to call and satisfy }yourse!f that John Newson DOD st 6S7F GO®. 6SEDB i SEEM 4 B43 DOD! DOW toed oe “ ee , oe OSES SES. HOSDOHG HOT t ot a SEES age SRR NM Peg BE. SOR EEL RO SOE EER I es hg OR GE “> Aes hm Spt: sei Geena, tr nineteen meen on ee oe mr i splits