THE WALLY EXAMINER CHARLOTTETOWN OCTOBER _ sor eiecaitasmnacinanninnanetiti cst 2 1900., . ere oe Ath Me Whe ME MZ SY : MN ¥ Re ee ea eee fee “evoke gd at Broxt ‘ —_ nate ; ioe FET gc Bn eee dhol ag 0 ee eee ———— NS See See e.e* tee? "hak ° “WW ae an . ° és - Pan gers pm. oe eet. sett CU mt ; ES UIE “i + v v v v Vv. ©; I know my father prepared thea ap hot i h i id P| “aS RnR r ~~ ore ia > voth for college,” said Malvina proudly _ ® | j \ | — im a ° +} -_ . " - */. | MMIC CIMN¢ VTA $e | esau ate sea terse on ' | i . 2: —. i\ j o2 oo « els se) ye a ; a ( disland Mie (LIU) W Ii I\ ©» | V/V \ Se | nee te es : ' a ; ; AU) ' Hl ' ry \' .* herself of the pile of erav ws ee N 2 F . Aw . st e Prince wal 7G! Me! ¢: ioe i= U) . q 4: dents ep I of gray wool the old : ALL JT HE W URLD no caus2 of w orry Ss) coastant, so insistent, sa . be > ib lady worked up into articles of doubt- | Widespread as inferior cooking apparatus , {> > otras SS 4° ful beauty and ndoubte ‘neitiie THAT TOM fF , a IE -95¢ at all Bookstores. a | 4: $99-—-0190—— 000 ¢: nat tha tie ee es WHAT WOMAN can help w.rrying che result of whose skill and care is * i . oe 3% ; ys ju ni t i _ 7 seized her. In off damaged or destreyed by an inferior Range ly tr . % an f A « ' * - f Mey J rr 4 NINE Seeere ba i a Psa a moments Miss Ma vyina would seize the , | i > y 2 : : ~ = - $ g souveair x€ 4: WY WISAIWAIE | tic fl. \ | (| | 4 4: necdie and basten the hour of cries T na cpesanne by your household and vourself—install Buck's “Happy als — ls ‘ V UVC VY wu U a : . ‘ o a ra ye) ite : on ? . . . : i torrie? Se b> > tion : —— —, In your kitchen and if you can’s quis worrying entirely your for te a 0>—_—019e— : a » vite wiil, 2 ¥ ’ fiend | 2 sas ed : : $ ges We Me BM 8 ME Me NG 4. OOS——-O1GO—-900 BA Confident of a flood of familiar rem- blood sua yrs 2 hoids “rns supreme ia many kitchens, Heisa - pM Me SSS SZie we wie we ae Ss Iniscence.: Nhe mcddiail” ‘eaten © n e dyspepsi; like ilk, Banis 6 e wy Ais ay ae AS AY AY » a ” inl nee, she settled resignedly to Im i yspepsia of itke ilk, Sanish them, buy a “Ha 6 £5 ies - — bis a Copyright, 1899, by Jeannette H. Walworth. <q: crocheting. It was her way to fen D lhought.” , y PPT — ym ye TIT WT > ae f wey CA Pey iy : oe : : > { c PS : 2 . : 4a - HARLO PTETUW Pe er errs | {bm | busy. Once fairly launched on the J, rhe manufacturers of the “Happy Thouzht” are doing your culinary worry= — | Ret oars awe ori vests vet teh th A sg ng Ag bg he y.8: backward flowing tide, she could trast {18g for you for all time —take advantage of it. » | s : - : f a ij r } a = r ea ber mother to entertain herself for an They have worried over and have perfected every detail of Range construz ; ' § . sO 4 oe - fonti indefinite period r time j ic + al we dG ° a . d - > ia t) 2 24 (Continued,) “!) think ‘rhomas has been sent for, “| ioe lk = — ‘ : tion, which though nov a. ways apparent on the surface, 1s Most important in n. ist .. 2 3% aw Sec | AN INTRODUCTION moth When I was up to ask about ae ee Horace Matthews | re ults, . } 3 ee : the noleniel vectestiae. lesee told me he § ee ee eee ee Pianned like a i nl ko o watel . ; . wr TOCAL TLM Ki.) ie = crecit bee 2 el yesterday, Jessy told me he | },0+) boys in knickerbockers and roun:!- “iy ' : aa oe fitted like a watch,as durable as th hills, the (uve ishing and wn of Mandeville | 224: abouts coming to Mr. Solliman : appy ‘Lhought” is ever ia ths leadjand there it will remain until perfestion 9 occas — 1 —city by « i With a well authe: “But maybe he won’t get bere in I tienen aha fe att rh —_s meets its match. 4 ; . ‘ i) autnen : ‘ : : 2 tin ane ‘ maties. Ths "§ he Lh fal and Daparvure of PALS ticated and respectably vouched for time. Go back to the window, Malvina. fore you ever saw a li i. a iv : DON'T WORRY ! Vi ; at ee” ; : Something else might ha om”? ae a Gris: ESET TS. S "g & ; shost story, and yet it had one—bhas ~~ on 5 lappen. They were always eiitiaas . a Use Buck's ” ge ! zi and Staqmars. one py “one wei . : » ge tes Miss Malvina’s motber was getting , ; 7 a of aware eee SS DOrs, Happy Thought mere Saal one iss Say. for three } oid and had got deaf. Just now she |... re ee, ee. Warae For salo-by — { Its oidest CiLUIZeENS must join the ame atanail i e e by : a ; was a handsome, high Spirited clean s heir i sthie } a ~~ . ats >» oO Ww 2F DE v cee ‘ : a : TRAINS , cl ir invisible before it becomes a mat " rmchair with 4) conled lad who would have eut off his im on A e Cra b be. aves for the west... 835 am. as le _ oo | E gong arrives from the west.. 959 p m. : Ee jation leaves for the Pe aces seecssnersesnnsee eee E10 Pm, yoo dation jeaves for the rtaeuseessoveeene vescceee eeece © OO PMD. jp tation arrives from the ~ 7 wee she oe Oh pain arrives from the : rr , cssssses cee es secs cereeeee 325 p te. . ro ae Jeave® tur the eat... , arrives from the eas... vopsdatioa ieaves for tha til. . +s eereeeee seereeeee 3 O00 p m. Bieymodation arrives from the egal , eee eeeeeeeee 4 50 p mm. 1] STEAMERS i PRINCESS. ares for Pictou every morning | TE Uteasccescccccce © 0 a) m irrives from Piciou every even- [DZ Bh.sssee veers» eeeee reerereee 8 30 Pp mM. LA GRANDE DUCHESS. we § 05 8 mm. frives from Boston and Halifax every Monday....-.+++++-- | tres for Bostoa and Halitax qrety Wednesday .....+-++e f HALIFAX. Arives from Boston and Halifax entry ThUTSdBy wecesece -seseees Lege for Halifax and Boston erry Friday ... CAMPANA. Arrives from Mon@eal and Que- hec every alternate Friday.... Taaves for Quebec and Montreal the foliowing Monday evening. CITY OF GHENT. Pa krives from Holifax every Thursday aftern000 .......0 .. Me leaves for Halifax every Friday JACQUdS CARTIER. BBisves for O-well Tuesdays, ® Wednesdays, Toursd iys........ Biteves for Crapaud every F'ri- a lvaves for Crapaud every Satar- me dayat.. 12pm, 10am. ‘pm lpm. 3pm **®eeee #8 eee eee ee oe eee %4#2222 222 2] ROA MWANTED 1! f 4 Ayounz min with some Perience at carpenter work to kam the art of pattern miking App'y to Bree Stewart aud Oe. a ae Pounders, Faginesrs, Mer aod Boiler M akere.~ Steam Nav. Co’s Wharf, Ch’town, Puwy Phone 125 sinie's ‘ ' ' “84a. ] wea am 1A CARD k. MACNEILL, M. D. Dractice cf h; : eg of his profession, may be con “a on all branches of general medi F including the speciaities if @ door akove Kindergarten Hall. 8p. m. dy & wkly 3 mos Charters! . have several new schooners seek Ova Scrtia, United States or Wes DENNIS MURPHY, > ker and Commission Merchant ‘0, Box, No. $—dy tf. 9 10a m. l0a m. 3p mw. 2p m. ¢ é Sm i a es & & ——— — ante aving 30 years experience in the : ce and R esidence—Prince Street Ours—9 to 11 a. m. rte 3 and produce charters from Island Ports t 1 ter of pure tradition. To quote from the geography, “Man deville is remarkable chiefly for the ex cellent quality of the glazed tiles and the superior cylinder stoves which it manufactures in large quantities and ships annually to all parts of the Unit- ed States and Great Britain.” Mandeville not set as much store by its ghost as it does by its tiles und stoves, which it advertises with laudable liberality, but should any stranger chance to express his views ou the subject of the finest old man- sion in its suburbs, Broxton Hall, in the hearing of Uncle Bennie Braddock, us tiatf the town calls bim,. he will be apt to hear Something that will ustonish him, coming, as it does, from sich very respectable lips, in an atmos- phere from which one looks for notb- ing but trade and market quotations. Uncle Bennie bas reached the remi- uiscent age, and be always seizes with avidity upon the chance to describe “the most remarkable experience of my life, sir.” if kis listener happens to be a skeptic who has nothing but a veiled sneer for the Broxton ghost, Uncle Bennie will refer bim to “Major Dan Mercer, sir (1 vuess nobody ever cast discredit on a stztement of bis), or Simon, who was cnre taker at the Hall tufus Broxton died. They saw what i saw. and I take it that three more unimaginative men can’t be picked up in all Melton county.” And so, whethery believe itor not, stranger, it will be well to comport yourself respectfully toward the Brox- ton ghost so long as you are in the neighborhood of Major Dan Mercer. The people who live in the handsome old house itself are not such old world aristocrats as to consider a ghost good form in shape of family indorsement. Whrtever they may know or think abeut this elusive fine old family they keep strictly to themselves. Whetber or not the Mandeville ghost story is worth relating or listening to ench reader of the following pages must determine for himself. does Very CHAPTER I. THE SUADOW OF DEATH. When Miss Malvina Spillman, who lived midway between the small town of Mandeville aud the large estate of Broxton Hall, saw Dr. Govan for the second time that day drive rapidly up the avenue of laurel trees that stretcb- ed from the big outer gates to the very doorstep of the Broxton house, she lift- ed up ber voice: “I think Colonel Broxton must be \rorse, mother. Dr. Govan’s gone by again.” “Me, me, my, my!” “That makes twice since breakfast, auc he does not often drive that olé sorrel of his fast enough to lather him. Ile is doing it now, though.” “Twice, Malvina? Me, me! And that peor motherless boy off at school 3 the Lord only knows how many miles! Ea are the only medicine that will cure Dia- betes. Like Bright’s Dis- ease this dis- ease was in- curable until Dodd’s Kidney Pills cured it. Doctors themselves confess that without Dodd's Kidney 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 Pitts are fifty cents a box at all druggists. sprained ankle. To use her own pathos, |} she was nothing like the woman she after Colonel | member of their | i than I do or will miss him worse. uscd to be. Sometimes Miss Malvina could pro- ject a bit of gossip across the rooin without having to leave her sewing machine or ironing board. It depended largely on the state of the atmosphere. As a rule, she had to filter it carefully through the perforated ear trumpet that was swung by a black ribbon about her mother’s neck. The wheel of Miss Malvina’s sewing machine filled the little cottage with its pleasant whir for a few moments of renewed activity. Then something else did happen, and she bustled across the room once more to report it. Her moth- er beld the trumpet in a state of eager readiness. “And Daniel has just gone galloping by on the colonel’s black mare, moth- oe “Which way?’ “Toward town. He'll just kill that mare, and the colonel loves her next best to Tom.” “You say he’s on the black mare Winnie? Why, Broxton never would have let Daniel or any other man get astride that brute if he had bis senses about him.” “Mother” Spillman shook her white head dolorously and added: “Gone after Horace Matthews, | sup- pose, Broxton had better be sending for the minister, if he is but a poor crooked stick, and settling his account with heaven instead of worrying with the lawyers at such a time.” Mrs. Spillman could afford to put her own estimate upon the new preacher. She spoke as ene who had been in au- thority. Mand -ville had but one church, and for years uer husband had filled its pulpit. She knew every foot of the zround between Broxton Hall and the little chureh over which the “crooked stick” now presided, to her austere dis- satisfaction. The window in which her big arm- chair was immovably planted gave her a glimpse of the tiny white steeple in one direction and the wistaria wrap- ped walls of ltroxton Hall in the other. Honeysuckle and clematis vines cinm- bered over ber window sill. She loved the scent of them. Bees hummed about the double petuninas and gay phloxes around her doorsteps. She eould not bear them, but she knew they were there, so she lost nothing. The front of the Spillinan cottage was pierced by one door and two win- dows. Miss Malvina’s sewing machine occupied one of these. Evidently events were pot moving rapidly enough for the older woman. She interrupted the resumed whir of the sewing ma- chine querulously. “I think you might give over tuck- ing a white petticoat when a neigh- bor’s soul is passing, Malvina, and that neighbor Rufus Broxton. It is a sorry day for us.” Miss Malvina looked penitent and put the lid on her machine as softly as if the man had been in the spare room of the little cottage instead of in his own stately four poster a half mile sick away. “I meant no disrespect, mother. No- body thinks more of Colonel Broxton It’s just my way to keep busy.” “sh, ah, we'll miss him, Malvina! You'll miss him, [ll miss him, and all Mandeville will miss him. But what does be want with Horace Matthews at such a time? Oh, if your own dear father was only here now!’ “I guess he wants the lawyer to get Tom’s affairs well in hand. Colonel Proxton is rich, mother, and Tom is young—so young and helpless.” “Qnly 14 years old, poor lad!” “And I suppose the colonel is trying to arrange everything for Tom’s best interests. I guess he never once thought, being so well and strong just a week ago, but what he would be here himself to look after Tom for many a long year yet. Jessy says Mr. Mat- thews and the colonel are just like brothers.” “Motber”’ Spillman jerked her trum- pet away from Miss Malvina’s lips with fierce petulance. “Jessy is a gossiping simpleton. Brothers, indeed! Don’t speak of them in the same breath. I know Horace Matthews. voice, “I know more about Horace Matthews and Rufus Broxton thau Jessy could ever find out if her mother ee Then, with shrill, rising * right hand if he detected it doing a dishonest thing. Matthews was just everything that Rufus wasn’t. I never understood the liking Broxton had for bim.” Malvina put in a word for the ma- ligned. “Mr. Matthews must have been very winning in his young days, motb- er. He’s got such friendly manners and he is so dreadfully good looking even now.” “Oh, there’s no gainsaying his good looks. They came pretty near landing him on the topmost round of his ambi- tion once upon a time. He just missed being Rufus Broxton’s brother-in-law and coming in for half of old Marsden sroxton’s estate. When Lucetta Prox- ton came home from boarding school— my, but she was something to look at! —Horace Matthews did not let the grass grow on the road from Mande- ville to Broxton Hall. (To be Co atined. Eczema on * the Scalp Would ttch and Eurn until the Child Screamed with Agony—A Wonderful Cure Effected by br. Chase’s Ointment. The case recorded here is one of the worst ever brought to the attention of Toronto’s best physicians, «nd when doctors gave Up aj] hope of recovery, Dr. Chase’s Ointment was successful in producing a perfect cure. Mr. James Sectt, 13§ Wright avenue, Toronto, states'--‘‘ My boy, Tom, aged ten, was for nearly three years afflict- ed with a bad form of Eczema of the scalp, wnich WAS yery unsightly and resisted all kinds cf remedies and doc- tor’s treatment. His head was ina terrible scate. We had to keep hiro from school, and at his head would bleed, and the chil] would scream with agony. For two and a’half years we battled with it in vain, but at last found a cure in D., 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’g Ointment is put- ting it very mildly.” Dr. Chase’s Ointment, at all dealers, er Edmanson, Bates & Co., Toronto, - 'Yomatoes for Chow Ubow. Ripe Tomatoes Red Peppers. Smali Cucumbers Canli- flower. White Portuele Onions. NOCICE—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 hot have them then) we have them now. tinses Pickling A fall supply of cerery sugar corn, yellow corn, cabbage, bees, carrots, parsnips, turnips, lettuce, squash pumpkin, green beans, butter beans, large red onions, large si-ver skin onions, etc, etc, at Gay's Market Stalls Valker‘s Corner, Charlottetown, Oct. Ist, 1900. New Watches Fine Value and _ Timekeepers. E. W. TAYLOR. Linseed Oil Stoves and Hardware. iNOW LANDIN= 25 bbls. Lirseid Oil. 50 bbls. Portland Cement. For sale low, SIMON W. CRABBE Stoves and Hardware. Ch’town, Sept. 17th, 1900. Walker’s Corner 2 ee To Those Interested, Tne makers of [Lik HIGHLAND RANGES were unable toship all of our canzes this week but we expect to hav> at larze shipment by next trip of S. S. Halifax from BOSTON and those who have ordered may count on getting them tuen We ask your kind indulgence for the delay. “Avant; for American Ranges.” SENNELL & CHANDLER GE 2: GS THE LUNG AND MKT OF II : Is to get a boot that will wear and fit you, gthen you will have satisfaction. You also want some thing to’suit you in price. You will find;them all at McQUAID’S, | “LOWER QUEEN-STREET Boot and Shoe Store. 4 bs q { 4 2 sions tage