lg without a"doubt the safhst and most r»ii`=\=1° remedy 1° for .pin-riim. Dywlwry. Colin., Icnmps, Pain in the Stomach, lflhoiers. Cholera lorima, Cholera lnfantum, Sol Sick!\¢33» Intl all Summer Complaints. lt has been a household remedy for nearly sixty years. _ its efoota Bro instantaneous and it does not leave the bowels con- stipated. Dcn’t accept substitutes. '.l`hey'ra dangerquh Potatoos t for Solo at Puhlio Auction We are instructed by the agent of the Plant Line to sell at public auction, at Plant Line warehouse, at 3o’c1oc‘< Tuesdayjuly rgth, two hundred bags potatoes, which were shipped from hereto Boston and subsequently re- turned to the original shipper. The potatoes are of good quality and in good condition, and will be sold in lots to suit purchase: without reserve. Terms cash. BBNJ. CARTER & Co. , Auctioneers. iii d si __-- Ever see one of our portraits in itil Color ? painted by an artist who knows how to paint. They are worth coming miles to see- snd you are right here in town. Drop iu. Gauvin, Gentzel & Co., NTliiTEf. On and after Saturday. the |601. our store will be closed on Sctturdcty night. at 9 p. m, Sharp. las. Paton or Zo; For Sale _ rire undersigned oiiera for sale his entire nerd cf choice milk corn, GEORGE STEWART, Southport ‘ I5 d w ti Lot 45. WANTE D At Hotel Acadia,Grand Tracadie Beach it Pastry cook, an assistant cook, 2 good driving horses. lgapli or write to Hotel or Beer & Go , C arlottetown. I. C. HALL- J““= 27. 1904-as dt! FOR t SALE l in. »....Z*...’ia 32.55". it ,to his olensaat the 'Lincoln Hehe. In ` »`l‘Hl 'lhe prettiest romance that Boston has ever lrnownis about to have its happy ‘ending when Ellery Harding Clark, millionaire, clubman, lawyer and athlete, in a few weeks will marry pretty Vittoria ,Madalane,the little Italian girl of the South End slums. It Is a romance that shows that the days of chivalry have not gone by. It savore of fairy stories. like the com- ing of the prince for poor little Cinderella. Butit is better than the story of knights and princes and forlcrn little maids in castles or kitchens. For it is a story of love and riches, poverty and devotion, that has taken piece right among us. lt. is one of those things that glorify humdrum, every day modern life. Of course, everybody has heard of E.lery Clark, the world-famous Harvard athlete and amateur woric's champion. He is the sen of the very wealthy Ben- jamin Cutler Clark, whose home is No. 43 on fashionable Bay State read. Rorranrrc nova in aos'roN snow urs ii-ari=rsn’a noual 'ro a rsirnirasr. Two years ago Ellery Clark's Back Bay friends and the members of the Athletic Club were astonished at the news that the famous young lawyer-athlete had for- saken his Back Bay home and gone to live at the Hotel Florence, in the South E id. The lziotel Florence is really a tenement house, with a saloon on the corner front and living apartments of working people above. It faces on busy, bustling Washington street, and the elevated trains thunder by the upper windows. Iu the side streets swarm the children of the tenements. Vice, poverty and crime seem to fill the atmosphere. Why should arich young lawyer and clubman go there to live t Mr. Clark allowed the impression to go out that it was because he was to become a candidate for the School Committee from the South End. But the real truth was that Ellery Clarlr`s romance had begun. On the top floor of the Florence tene ment house lived the Madaienas, an Itslianfam|ly.Thsllawer of the family was a little fair~iiaircd,blue»eyed girl of seventeen. Vittoria Madalena was of that rare type of Italian beauty which ’l`itisn,the great mediaeval painter first discovered and immortalized in art. She had the olive skin of her race en' riched by a rare coloring in lips and cheeks. But the thing about the girl that drew peopie'a attention to her was a pair of blue eyes with an expressive, appealing, bewitchlng look. A Pam oifnvas LIKE “rr-rr: ni.uE aram- 'ri¢rmaNEAN." "Mia faverina has eyes like the blue Mediterranean," Daniele Madalena, her father, used io say as his daughter sat on his knees while he stroked her fair hair and he thought of his beloved Italy. But to Ellery Clark that pair of blue? eyes had another meaning; they had awakened in him the first deep love of his life. He had been used to the coquatry of fashionable belies and debutantes at Back Bay society fu notions. He 'had reiiibed I’ ilra 4 laid for wealthy t'cs. depths of those blue eyes he forgot every- thing but bhelcveiy lit.l: maid before him. What was class distinction i What was a proud old family-wliat were mere wealth and society, what was ` anything in the world tc him ~»v.thout th .i light of those blue eyes i S0 Ellery Clark cash aside society and , took up the course which luvi- and his philanthropic tastes dioraial. All his spare time he divided between Lincoln I-louse Settlement, on Shawmut avenue, over in the South End, and his home with the Mudalenaa nearby. HER() OE Millionaire Goes to Live in.aa.,ltalian T ` ' the Slums-A Romance Like the --1? the slums, at the Hotel Florence. he hired aroomin the Madalena tenemeit. The whole family, mother, father, ghd two older brothers, had all become enlist- ed in the settlement work under Hr' Clark's magnetic influence. ”_f_ Fitoar THE BACK RAY currn r=ULLs QM 'ro 'rua sunrs. t It was not long before the oint- dwellera in the tenement house suspected that it was more than a triendship forthe Missions rauuy that isa Mr. ciarkm, take up his home with them. “Vittoria has a lover," was the g ip that. passed from lip to lin when the ll- dreesrd, ruddy-faced young man of %b- letic build was seen passing in and Dui? of the house each iay. ‘oi At first nc one seemed to know wnoiihg was except. that he was “Mr Clerkfiii of the Lincoln House. But when be iss elecud tothe School Committee an it became known that he was the we 'hy young Mr Clark of the Back Bay, t rs was a profound sensation in that qu ` _ r of B;sto`n's slums. i ‘ The fact that they had among them-,f he mostlfamous amateur athletic cham on in the world was an added wonder. The year Eilary Clark graduated m Htrvard, in 1896, he went to mga Greece, as a member of the American' tb: letic team and won the coveted laurof? in the Olympian games. ' The next year he won the all-roiuud championship at Bergen Point, wnich gave him the title of being the 'b-st amateur athlete in the world. He 'iwas defeated by Harry Gill in 1000 but ln_l903 on July 4, at Celtic Park, New York, he regained the championship title, which he still holds. The coming of this famous millionaire athlete to live right among the people of the slums, and as the lover of their own little queen of the tenements, was almost too romantic and positively fascinatingito believe. “The millionaire is coming" was the word that would pass from lip to lip, and heads would be thrust out of windows, ani curious eyes peer through dark hall~ waysto catch a glmpse of this modern prince in disguise. Eilary Clark minded not at all che excitement and curious interest, in his comings and goings in the slums. Neither did he appear to care for Lhe gossip that began to circulate among the Back Bay clubs that be had fallen in love with a little girl of the slums. He always was a very democratic sort of fellow. Now that be had found the girl of his choice, he paid no attention to what other ponple thought of his course. Vittoria Madalena's father was the pastry cook at the Castle Square hotel Her older brother Josef, was an insurance solicitor. They might have lived in much more comfortrble quarters than in the crowded tenement house. But they had the thrift that is characteristic cf all Ifiulinns. now A Rrrr-i MAN Mav wm 'rua woman i-rs: Lovins. Vittoria Mndalena’s parents were picr, they never allowed their daughter, the pat of the family, to do the mt-.nial work imposed on so many Italians girls. She had never gone ouw to work in s‘oi'e or factory Sheattended the Ho-ten public all the w .cs ant p. ~ young m,,n_,md W" (1,-,|b|,m Coward me achoolsand the clas es ntthc Lincoln lflouse conlirmrd bnclinlorhooii of the early thir- 5iD0@ HND WHS l\1ilUPf iliii-BF lllllkilwt fthe best of every opportunity throan in he way she had managed ti acquire nn The witchery of Victoria Madelena was quue a duferent kmd 6| sD,.ce,y_ 1; was e"ucation quite as good as the superficial ' I i ocence and iove' and boarding school and seminary training of the sorcery o nn adoration of he, Ih.Hsh|de,,1_ many girls belonging to families of wealth ' d When Eilary Clark looked into the “Wi 3°°‘“i V “M05- So she was in n measure fitted to step JUST IN TIME. A motor-msn in Chicago ran his car onto the appirosch of an open bridge but lopped it th the fender actually over- hanging the gulf' below. He wculdn‘t want to repeat the experiment because the clyiscaa are git _e’d never again have the Km; g fortune. Once in a while some one who has travel- ed tb the very Heliked the happy good will of the eiiilfiien of the slums that he met there. He taught classes of girls and boys ini sioyd and drawing and physical trsinlnlr This was the beginninii °f his 10” Sl»0\'! In one of these classes was little Vit-_ toris Madsiena. She was a ver! HDV e eyes li|rl\t»ed,\w 'ith of animated interest i ined the lessons. as her and thou peat lustrous blue ey°¢.‘ so appesiimrl! UD 1° “lub salt a atrsagaithrill ta his heart. ‘ tg Ii yas , pew sensation that was aroused in ill young millionaire bachelor. H.. per-ansded himself at first _` that lt' wasoaly interest that he uit in gbriirht oapii tilatmade him single our Xitwdl latiliaaa and make her his aaalslati She had a rare Intuition and UIYOW Ml' whole soul into the work. n liiefy Olarlz now found his UIOIIWU pleasure la his settlement wig. The gage Mg Back Bay friends laugh at his ,mg 'urn an greener was his *vouch this philanthropic work Vittoria Mads- _iile men umslthsttt wir masons me #md _ui b_ns»a¢_g_,_at Aga \ , Eilary Clerk was ilrssattraotei by thc brightness. Then her winsome » ` PFW. edge of the _' _' ""' danger line of' ' stomach dia- _i , 1"" _.Em 1 C -1** °i§. I /it o,“i STORY to Win a Bride of of Chivalry. into the higher aocai life which Fate and Fortune had in stare for her. When Eilary Clark had wcoed and won his litfle Italian beauty he proceeded to help her family to rise above their lowly position. - For Daniele Madaiena,Vli.noria’s father, hggor a commercial position. The Maia- lena family moved to No. 68 West Newton street, a locality which is very far from being fashionable, but atill is eminently respectable. Summer he fore last Ellery_ Clark sent bla little sweetheart down to an unpretentious summer resort on Cape Cod. the dwellers ofthe slums.When she came back in ore Fall it was with a new beauty of rich coloring and robust health. Last summer Mr. Clark took his prettv little dances and her mother down rc the fashionable resort of Cohasset. on ins South Shore, where the Clarks have a summer home. Miss Madaiena and her mother stopped at a fins hotel. and bad odors of the slums in midsummrr to the ccol, sweat air of the sesshnre, From dancing to the music of hand organs with the other litlle girls on the hot, dusty aidewalxto gliding to waltz JULY ig =:»-e-sin ~,-... . . i. ,,.,,_ There she lost the salicw complrxion of , What s. change for the little queen of ' the tenements? From the stlling heantt music inaapleudid hotel ballroom ai; it midsummer-nlght's hop or playing golf on the wide green links with other she as fasbionably gowned as any! That was the change in the life of \'it tovia Madnlena that the “coming of thc mlllionaire" to the dingy Florev»t:~ tenement had brought about. fine dresses, to have a devoted, aiiuirirvg lover tlways at her side, who was not race, who presented her to his fashion able friends in his summer home as his aflianced wife-inat was the overwhelm Italian girl's life. `WbaL more could any girl askl Eirly last Fall Ellery Clark made a engagement to Miss Madalenn. They would have been married then but, for Viltoria Madaluna`s youth. She was still onlv eighteen. One more year,pleaded her parents, who were as proud of their daughter, as lnath wealthy parents; for after all human should be nineteen. He was content to » wait if only he could be near her. So when Vittoria Madelena and her mother, came back to Boston last Fall, and Ellrry ` Clark went back to live in his fashio »~ able house on Bay State road, the nioics little \Vest Newton street home of the Madalenas saw more of his presence than his l'et,her`s fashionable house. i r-‘rNai.E- 'rimuivr-: 'rocrr OF AN au'ri'»Mc- did not forget their old friends ln thc- house. I Vittoria'_Madalcns,clad in light, airy, pink and white chiffon, a vnritabre fa|ry,l with ber arms full of flowers and fruiti and ran up the stairs of the tentmsnt. to take these gifts to her friend, Marie » Cns eau. This is the poor little French girl who made the gorgeous silk fiag‘ with her own hands for President Rouse- i veit, but which the President declirrd |o_ accent. cry that wrs echoed all up and down nar- row Florence street. Eiiery Clark, laughing. patting iow- invited his little friends io climb in and takeari-‘e. When the machine started you could hardly make our, what It was for it was a swsrmirmlquirmlng mass of young humanity, sending up a shrill choina of wild delight. _ Away sped the happy p~\°i.y to dark, nclsorne Middlesex street, while another rtip was made by the falryln white to see her friend, poor lame Mary Speed, and cirry fruits and flowers io her. Many a trip like this the lovers marie laat summer tc carry their own joy into the lives nf the tenement rl weilcre. Di you wonder that "The Coming of the Millionaire" seemed like areal fairy story in all the little children and all the lovelorn maids of Bostorfs South End _alumsl The best of it all is that the Prince and Princesa are going to keep right on living their lives with the people of the tene- DOIN. For Eilary Clark and Vit.oria Madalena have ho idea of giving up their work at- the Liaooia House Settlement after th.-y are married. IMI. Clark will he remembered by many in Charlotrooown ea a competitor aloha i beautifully dr.ssed young women, ned; But more than luxury and money and i ashamed of her lowly birth and fereigii i l ingjoy that had come into this poor little i . i formal public announcement of his, t to have her go out. of their home, as are I nature is the some in tenement or palace. g So Ellery Clark consented to waitf anotberycar, till his little sweelhcwol ln0l't»\ on the U.A.A.AL grounds lailwd rv- which noeasioallahadly vp~ai~e"l'Ms ."'t ~--<--»-_ -____ ’-\_.- __... . -X .._-one -- 1. 1 S9 .7.:.'. , ,_ 9.1 /Xiu( V I CUP 0F TEA. IN OLD JAPAN. THB uaeof stimnlantstoapnr up a tired and wom-out nervous sys tem is becoming very common in these days of competition and ex- Haunting business pursuits. The woman, tired out by a day s shzsgng and “igst ready tio dy* finds imm te relief a t cup of tes, as the man seeks his for solace after a hard day'a work. common has the use of tea become that hardly a family is without it, and lome yum we import over roo million 5* 55 .T , ,_ , I ll - eases of women, Dr. Plerce’s Favorite Prescription. It drikea at the anno! the trouble. stops weakenin e, relieves _pelvic congestion and gifiamma- tionan_gvestonemdviorm\h¢ organs. ere is nothing;-vgich iner- feres with the proper ac and bene- ficial effect of a remedy so much la con- stipation, and Dr. Pierce aiae red a suitable medicine to meet ga con- dition. Dr. Pierce’a Pleasant Pelleil are a mild, purely vegetable laxativg pill, and act like magic on an over. oaded, weakened bowe . They are ln- dicsted in ali cases when there in con- gundm Its use is hugely cougined istipation present, and an sure in their the gentler sex, the men preferring i “C1101 _ _ tbbocco and alcoholic stimulants. Tea l _ If Y°“ U* in “Pd 5';‘5¢fm_§» D15 P1900 In itself, unless drunk to excess is ailnvites youto write _him an receive tho hm-mic” bevemggy in fi,” e__ffe¢¢ being i benefit oi`_ his experience free of charge. I alight stimulation of the nervous Eye-|511 °!P¢"l@“‘3@ of f°f'~Y 7°“"5»,°5,?°"‘“ 1’ gg _ns exnssive “SQ howeve,-_ ,s_ , devoted to the cure of woman s 1 is is If Nail the digestive function, causing Your 5¢fViCe» “ml Y°“ can Wfife ill!! mtarrl1,indi estion, biliousness and con- freely and openly, as all communica- ipltion. The craving for stimulants, M0129 “ff held _58Cf°d’}' °°“fld*`=l1¢i°1- however, in eve case, indicates a con- W“lF t°‘d“Y» “UWB Y°‘“’ ff°“bi=. 81111 dltlon of lowereyvitality of the nervous he Wm Pmmpuy “nswef Y°“f1¢it¢f llld oystem, due either to over-work or lack 0 nourishment. Our habits of life are outline a plan of treatment thu! will relieve you. becoming more and more artificial, we ` Backed “P by °V°Y l lhlfd ofa °€“t‘“'Y eat too much, do not get sufficient exer- ‘°f "em‘"k“h1‘f and \1Uif°ml CURB. I else, and overdo in many wuys. Were t record such “S no “her femedy f_0f thi 'B go 1|" Pcrfecuy n,,mm1]i,,e5_ beiuwrlisrfases and weaknesses pecul.:~ to ' women ever attained, the proprietors '\f in thi open sir and practicing regularity 1 in 51 -gun ,_ our systcms wou d Soon ‘ Dr. I‘ierce‘s Favorite Prescription nos ltrikc a ba§ance that would make the t fee' fully W“"'”’J'~'d in °ff¢’i"l! lo PHY ilk of drugs and medicines entire] @5001"]eE3lm0"9Y°{theU"l‘€d Stat95» superguousand uuneCe,5ary_ Dr_R_\z for any case of Leucorrlieu, lfemalo Pierce, the famous specialist in wotuen'ef W°°k”°°3» _ PWIHPSU3- 0' Fnulng 0' diseases, believes that our women do not Wombi Winch 929)' CBUUQ1 C\1l'@< -$11 give sudicient attention to their physical HWY “Pk is B fall' ‘md 11330113516 U13] . ii, ‘U of their means of cure. welfare. He says, Many of the i s and distresaes from which our modern “I am pleased to give my testiiiionyf' women suffer could be avoided by fore- ` W1'll@9_uf5~ Wesify GUY. Of Kerriptvi le, thought and reasonable living, A few t Ontario, "and wish I could find worda moments of each day given to systematic ` strong eiioirgh to iiir. Pierccsrrletl- e g u u y . l tf l.l lll .tt.l¢,l t l f l. they were not altogether selfish. I`nr~y ztniatjyrggiell 'SF n);ri\,~`i`or(i(\' ‘Clues OB* nu ‘muh ' ' ' " - ~ r\\‘ Ti|\'Si£LF. Si\1l115- Of weak women. lit- carefully elimi- Read ull about yourself, your system, 0Il8f0fi-he DOUESC. >l1lU‘i@SY»fi|2hi~-" Ui hated any liarmfiil or injurious suit- the pliysiologiyoi liie,anzrtoniy,hygiene, last August there was the touting of ni. stances, from its coiiipositioii, excluding siuiplc ironic cures, etc., in tlie“Coiumon Buwmobne hom ln the South Emi _.,i,,,,,,,_ alcohol and narcotic drugs, _anti only Sense Mediral Ativiser," alioulr of 1008 and “D dashed R mg md Laurin! mr h, incorporated such drugs as his long ex- pages, Send tri ltr. R.V. Pierce, Iluffulo . ,. ptrlence had proved to be useful in N.Y.,5oorie-ceriisinrrips for cloth-hound 'm“":°f me ‘mm cm I ‘Creme Lemmu I lllieving womnn‘s ills. its success was copy,o.'3r stamps for pnper-coveredbook. i -» - 1 x see: . Give us a call and vre will convince you that every .word of the above is tr rrect tripped lightly flown to the sidewalk *T '_ “rm -- - - -- Z if; It -M..--t i -»-¢s=!§_ O _ " " r"'r‘1 `r r-’°"'(i.,l' -X , - *£122 There was n troup of merry llitlc i _ urchina swarming about the automobilt- as soon as ir. drew up at. the Florence. i gy "It`§i Mr. Clark, it/s Mr. Clark," was thc ; 9 , , ' t beads and dl-trlhuting candies and fruits. ._ fitiiiitii. toioito Holds hrst place. lt is rn:.i;:;::.