THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTT&TOWN, NOVEMBER 12, 1900. 4 SNAP AUSTRIAN ; i } ’ We've ret ived afca K f the above e ve SUSs : aad . gl mist k ' shippers. and if wedont wrougn & ‘ re fy the buying pt this arnele we atisfy t > : a not the low selling peopl that every one are not Ut ; knows we are. oat i > rn lline ve low Tt wre seling very | . We're bow to ma ‘em go, They re thet st sin town And the very iaiest siyie. Drop in and see them. om . en g : Everything else ing at the lew price for which we are W. P. COLWILL. THE CROCKERYWARE MAN P. E. Islan ’s Great 2st a ckery Store, Sun nyside, ( harlottetown. Dentistry... BY SPECIALISTS Pa'nLess DENTISTRY or by the Berlin Method MODERN DENTISTRY, crown and bridge work. (Both without pain.) ARTIFICIAL TEETH.— We mage all kinds. Teeth extracted without pain BERLIN DENTAL PARLORS — ”y use of electricity | foreign soil. EPPS'S COCOA GRATEFUL COMFORTING Distinguished everywhere for Delicecy of Flavour Superior Quality, and Highly Nutritive Properties. Specially grate- ful and comforting to the nervous and dyspeptic. Sold niy iin }-lb tins, labelled AMES EPPS «& CO., Ltd. Hommonathic Chemists, London, England. BREAKFAST SUPPER EPPS'S GOGOA EXAMINER CALENDAR FOR NOVEMBER. | a THE MOON'S CHANGES Full Moon, 6th, 3h, 12m, p. m. Last Quarter, 13th, 6h, 49m, p.m. New Moon, 21st, 10h, 29m, p. m. . First Quarter, 29th, 9h, 47m, a.m D High Water Sun of| Day of We’k!., lke ee eal M, Morn | Aft’n | Rises.| Se» » | She was devoted te her charge, and so | with an exceedingly great pointed the finger of scorn when she LOVE FINDS A WAY. BY JEANNETTE H. WALWORTH. -_— (COPYRIGHT 1899 BY JEANNETTE H.JWALWORTH.) (CONTINUED.) Now that she had done all in her | power to obey her father’s command | 8raph once you let it go.” she would feel at liberty to recall the | man she loved. Ah, well! That was | just as it should be, but she would | never know what it had cost him to | give ber up a second time. CHAPTER XIX. “AND THE WHOLE WIDE OCEAN BETWEEN us!” At a foreign resort where her shy, untraveled ways subjected ber to un- friendly comment and all of her most cherished domestic traditions were vio- | lently set at naught Miss Malvina nec- essarily experienced the desolate sen- | sations of a cat In a strange garret. Olivia bad a much betier time of it. | She was seen to be beautiful and ssid | to be wealthy, a combination which makes for popularity anywhere aad everywhere. Nice promptly put itself | under her feet. Poor Miss Malvina | was seen to be not beautiful and io ber capacity as Miss Matthews’ compan- | jop prociaimed berself pot weulthy. | She was under Nke’s feet. Never was meeker or more acquiescent chaperon. long as Ollie would avt be sensible and | marry Tom Broxtoy she supposed one | ought to rejoice over the multiplicity | of newer adorers, frum whom the fas- tidious little lady had a chance to se lect a second best. To loyal Miss Mati¢ina any man) would be second best to Tom, bat through all her single hearted devotion | to Ollie’s interests there rap ap under- current of homesickness which it was bard to conceal. She longed for Man- | deville—obscure, dull old Mandeville— yearning. The Mandeville Morning News, an as- piring sheet, at whieb she had often was at home, was her one sglace on Its coming filled ber day with light. Coming {n from an afternoon drive one day, flower laden and smiling. Oliv- la found ber dampening this cherished sneet with copious tears. i"lowers and |; all, she twined affectionate arms about | ca to buy it at any price I could afford her faithful friend's neek. “You are homesick, and I am tortur- Ing the life out of you. Nice is not do- ing you one particle of good. We will | start home tomorrow. I have been! having such a lovely time I have grown | selfish, but we will start right straight | home.” “We will do nothing of the kind, my | dear. Nice has cured my cough entire- | y—that is, almost. I was erying just a few tears, but it was for Tom, poor. | dear Tom!” »¢ Olivia flushed Broxton?” “Yes, I do feel so sorry for him.” Ollie walked over to a distant table | and busied herself putting her flowers in water. “Your tears must flow readily, Mal- vina. Every one says he fs getting on | spleadidly; that he will be a rich man |} before he is 30. And—then—I Lave | made my will. He is to have every: | thing I leave.” Miss Malvina was turning the damp | paper about in search of something. She sniffed scornfully. “You ridiculous child! You ‘leavey i don’t think Tom Broxton cares a eop- | per for money for its own sake. Efe | siid to me once, quite confidentially, of course, that when he had hoped tv | inarry you he had thought the wealth | of Golconda toe slight. But Tom has! bad so wuch trouble in bis short life, | 1nd vow comes this.” “And now comes what?” Olivia wheeled suddenly, showing a very pale face and eyes full of fright. Miss Malvina held out the paper folded in a long strip. _ resentfully. “Tom | SS ee H y y c 1) ¢ £ UTbursday 445 6 3916 52 (4436 | 2\Friday 618i 7 261 £2 ae 4 3 ‘ > Pe] 3 | ‘Saturday 7 54, 8 30: 54 | ~ . 7 {Sunday gor 949) 55 | 32 | 5;Monday 10 204) 56 20 i - 5 j 6 Tuesday 10 54° 10 44) 58 5q—C«*S 7W ednesday 1 40, if IS) 50 as 8 Thursday 12 36, 11 49| 9 1 2 | es ‘ " i 9 Friday eas 3 at 10 Saturday Get £43 5 24 «| USund me a ee ll Sunday I o2' 3 02 7 m9 2 . « } 12 Monday Iso} 3 53) 8 a Tuesday 2 46| 446) 9 on | 14 Wednesday 3 49) 5 41) 10 20 18 Thursday S14) 9 SR 89 19 | : pe 4 } 6 Friday O40 £ 2 £27 Su 17's “ tel 2 tS saturday Ta 5 a ee See ee ) 8 46 > 43) 16 16 | : , Monday 9 35 9 oe 17 15 <V Tuesday 10 18: 9 54 49 444 Zi Wednesday | | 58 10 21, 20 4 22 Thurs lay Il 27 O 49 21 13 23\Frid <4 ned, Gh ee ad ‘Tiday i285 Tan 12 24/Saturday 12 sq) “5 435) 24 $9 : Sunday . oy at 11 7 j 2 } “Onday 2c} 2 395) 26 I “| (Wesday 116 oe a I ¢:| Vednesday 14 359, 29 I | V1 Thuy 4 50 30 3 23 J 10 | Ri Frid a 5 55 lday 4 45 7: ae ye 4° 3 (ee _— ot nde; S use n tide tables. nes McLEOD & BENTLEY {ft} SIFES. SOLICITORS, ETC. D.C M.&” ¢ W.E. Mathies, Offices. Offi Bank Building, Charlott > ATTCENEYS, a ee ; = a McLeod, late of the firm of | WcLe On, ? } , » ; Beatley, late of the firm of n & bent] f° Nova Scotia | etown. | septgd&w3m | A woman’s reproductive organs are in the most in- tense and continuous sym- pathy with her kidneys. Theslightest disorderinthe kidneys b:ings about a corresponding disease in the reproductive organs. Dodd’s Kidney Pills, by re- storing the kidneys to their perfect condition, prevent and cure those fearful dis- orders peculiar to women. Pale young girls, worn-out mothers, suffering wives and women entering upon the Change of Life, your best friend is Dodd’s Kidney Pills eae | known as Broxton Hall, on the out- | skirts of | mediately.” ' ed paper enviously. | on it for myself?” “It is dreadfully hard to find a para- | “Is it about Tom?’ “Yes, or at least it is about”~— “Read it aloud, please.” And Miss Malvina read: “That fine old piece of real estate town, has again changed hands. It is said that Mrs. Westover’s health demands a permanent residence in a warmer climate. Some mystery | Seems to attach to the recent transfer, | and no amount of reportorial enter- prise has enabled us to secure the hame of its owner. Extensive repairs | on the house and grounds are already under way.” “Well,” said Olivia, biting off a rose stem with strong white teeth, “what that all has to do with your bedewing the morning paper with tears bas yet | to be explained.” “Why, Tom, you see, he told me— you know he and I had quite a little talk after you had sent him away in such a hurry that Sunday—that wben he had expected you and Mr. West- | over to live at the old place he had become reconciled to give it up, as he | | certainly never could have lived there by himself, but if time should prove that you and Clarence were not to | buy back the cid place himself.” “And how do you know he is not the | new owver?” “Oh, | don’t think there would be | so much mystery about it if he were Tom isn’t the man to want to do any. thing sensational.” “Was he so very fond of the place?’ “Ollie, you know as well as I do that he loves that old house better than he does anything on earth. Not’—quick- ly seeking to repair any probable hurt ' —“that be blamed your dear papa for letting it ge. 1 do wish 1 knew who this mysterious purchaser is.” “I ean relieve you to that extent,” said Ollie, swooping down upon the, paper and hiding behind it. “I have | bought Broxton Hall.” “You, Olivia?” “At least my business man has for | me. I told him before we left Ameri- | to pay if Mr. Westover would sell.” “Wasn't that a little reckless, dear? it is a beautiful old place undoubted- iy, and | do believe Thomas von’ rather think of it as belonging to you | than anybody in the world.” Ullie’s temples showed pink above | the Mandeville Morning News. “Of | eourse | did not buy it to live in. That would be absurd. 1 bought It for | Tom. I want Tom to live in it with | his wife when he gets one. But now | that it is mine I don't know bow to it to him in my will.” Miss Malvina looked at her gravely. “J am quite sure he would not like to | get it that way, my dear.” “And 1 am sure I should not like him to get it that way, at least not im- She laughed hysterically. Miss Mal- vina’s literalness often gave her cause for mirth. She flung herself into a chair to read that paragraph about Broxton Hall for herself. There was a certain zest in the idea that all Mandeville was trying to guess her secret and a deeper sort of satisfaction in the reflectiou that no one could ever again come be tween Tom and the old place after she should have given it back to him. Dear eld Tom! Some time, somehow, be should come inte his own again. Miss Malviua ghiunced at her centiscat She had but just begun upon the “Local Brevities” woeu Olivia had entered. “Would you mind turning to ‘Deaths’ | and ‘Marriages, dear, and readirg them out? I had just got to them.” Olivia ran glibly through the mortu: | “And now the casualties of the day.” “Where do you find them? Oh, yes, | here! Why’—with a sharp cry she look: | ed over the paper at Miss Malvina— “had you seen it and left me to stumble } “Had I seen what, child?’ i |; and I—I love him! | He was so meek and lowly that I tyr | it better than I do. | would have held good under this fresh | of their apartment. _ anxious to be doing something, answer. | ed It herself. “You? Why"— She moved back from the door, and | Clarence Westover entered, holding a | 'wrinkled with perplexity. | Broxton’s cause with the woman they | : ' had both loved. } give it to him unless | die and leave | |} are not many men like Broxton in the | ary and hymeneal reports. ; en out when the Hver is made healthy and active. | meys, to set the “avon t ret WS Waste time crying, biise Malvina. Help me to pack up. Help me to get ready. We will start home tomorrow. We will go to him. Oh, Tom, Tom! Why did I let you drive me away from you?’ “Olivia! Tom Broxton drive you away from him?” “Yes, he did, he did! 1 asked him— po gy me—and he refused! Yes, he She was wringing her hands tn as agony of tearless distress. “Olivia!” “Oh, please don’t keep repeating my name for all the world like a parrot, Miss Malvina!” “Why, the boy ts perfectly wrapped up in you!’ “He isn’t, be isn’t! He despises me, I have loved him all my life, and—and I did not know it annized over him. Oh, to think of tbe miles of salt water between us and | him! Who knows? Suppose’— She | turned white to the very lips. Miss Malvins, frightened at the storm raised by The Morning News, | mendaciously cast discredit on it and | its methods. “But, my dear Olivia. you are work- ing yourself up into a perfect fever so. unnecessarily. Don't you know the | newspapers never tell the truth? They can’t afford te. They have to spread every sensation out so thin, to make it | cover sO much space, that yor would | ® see right through it if they didn’t color | it up high and smear it all over with | manufactured features. Now, I don't | doubt for a moment that Tom Brox: | ton’s legs have done doubie duty in| that paragraph as well as on that fire | escape.” “He is none the less a hero, a great, brave fellow,” said Ollie, — _ into combativeness under this com fort- | ing view of the case. | adjust your little difference he should : m “Of course he is, and no ene knows Suppose we send a cablegram to ask about him” “I am going straight to him,” said | Ollie, with lofty superiority to all lets | and hindrances. “But if no vessel should be sailing | {mmediately, my dear?” ' “Oh, Miss Malvina, please get to packing our trunks! You are such a creature for pointing out obstacles.” Whether Miss Malvina’s meek spirit outburst of known. injustice will never be Some one knocked at the door | Ollie, feverishly | newspaper in his hand. “Il am awfully glad to find you in. I | am just back from Berlin; found a lot of mail matter waiting for me, this among it.” “Il know—we know,” said Olivia, nod- ding her head slowly. “It’s about Broxton, I mean,” Clar- ence said. “Yes; we have seer it.” Westover’s handsome face was He found himself in rather an awkward predica- ment. He had come to plead Tom “It is an awful pity.” he said, glanc- ing at the paper he still held. “There | world.” (To be Continued.) Every Kind of Backache Yields to Dir. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills, Because They Act Direotly on the Liver as Well as the Kidneys. Pains in the small of the back, over | the kidneys, are usually due to de- rangements of the kidneys, and dis- appear when the kidneys are set right. But there are other kinds of back- ache, by far the greater proportion, that can never be reached by treating the kidneys. Pains in the shoulders, through the centre of the back, and in the sides are caused by a torpid ac- tion of the liver, and can only be driv- To reach the liver, as well as the kid- filtering organs i working order and to cure every kin@ of backache, there is but one me remedy, and that is Dr. Chase’s ney-Liver Pills. It is the only trea@- ment that has this direct and cembineg | ection on both liver and kidneys, @& | A Sample The following is a fair sample of letters being received by that most progressive Canadian Life Assurance Company. Geo. Gooderham, 49 Wellington Street, East. TORONTO, To the North American Life Dec. 28th, 1899 Assurance Company, Toronto. Gent!emen,—I am in receipt of your cheque for #27,381.40, in settle- ment of my 15 year Endowment Policy, No. 2651, issued by you on Dec. 20th, 1884, for $20,000 pee The result is highly satisfactory to me, and furnishes the strongest _ of the careful and excellent management of the North Amertéas até. Je alla avy ai I ersonally, I have been a strong advocate of Endowment Insuranee, having carried over €500.000 on my life. Yours truly, GEO. GOODERHAM. Mr. Geo. Gooderham is one of Toronta’s oldest and wealthiest ejti- zens. He is President of the Bank cf Toronto, Western Qanada a Co., and connected with many other leading financia! institutions. J. K. ROSS. Yukon TRIPLE HEATER !: Wood Z Practically a Small Furnace anc heats as much space as one, Direct or Indirect Draft. Fire travels three times the length of stove before entering CS A {oa te = a tH! b an) e 4 smoke pipe. Cold air is drawn Be 2) from floor or outside, then heated Bk aM and carried to upper or adjotni ras ONT rooms by means of two ait Cy 4 SA pipes. Pitas || i i Yet Fire box is as heavy as ina furs xfs mace thas preventing its burning es ba out. The most powerful heater made in Canada and the great- est fuel saver. Especially adapi- ed for school house heating. <== SS — > Bae OOO ZIRE SIG a A perfect Ventilator. Will retain fire over night. ee Pamphlet free from ovr local agent or our nearest house. THE MeQLARY MFG, CO, LONDON, TORONTO,. ‘AONTREAL, WINNIPEG, VANCOUVER, S. W. CRABBE, Local Agent, Charlottetown. IN ALL TIE WORLD n> «aus? of worry 80 constant, so insistent, so | w despreud as iuf rier cooking apparatus. Wit | AT +t Ov AN CAN help w rrying the result of whose skill and care ie “About Tom? He is hurt, badly hurt. Oh, Miss Malvina, listen! ‘News reach- ed this office late last evening by tele griph that Mr. Thomas Broxton. our | highly esteemed ex-towusman. bag been seriously injured in an accideut to the Electric Light works ir Kansas | ‘the only one that positively fale : |}gienently cures bac ia | caused by liver or kidreys so: ane —st S33 2% oa | 6 @ Benes, fees oS = | aR —— et City, of which be has recently been | ' made general superintendent. The ac- | eount of his accident as we have re | ceived it makes quite a hero of Mr Broxton and shows him to be the gal- lant son of a noble gentleman. It was by endeavoring to save the life of an old, crippled employee of the works, who was engaged on the top floor, that be came near losing his own valuable life.’ ” Olivia flung the paper down with a moan. “And the whole wide ocean be tweer yal My lcye! My love!” Miss Malvina was subbing belpiessiy. Olivia sprang to her feet passionately. JOHN P. BRENNAN oe Ship Brokez, Commission Merchant and | dealer in all kinds ef produce, my large and commod ous premises on Commercial Street heing particularly adapted for handling of Psirice Edward Jsland preducts, Consigaments solicited. Prompt returns, JOHN P. BRENNAN North Sydney, Sept. 25, dy 135 wy. | | } } ' | ; ; ; : | i | i ‘ riur Range. a:maged uf Ud ate yea by nous-hold and yourself—install Buck’s “Happ& DEAL FAIRLY Dy yuan if ought” P.onge in your kiich m and if you can’ quit worrying entirely your Tne worry fiend hoids sway supreme in many kitch-us, He isa Banish them, uy a “Happy vife wilt slood relation of the dyspepsia of like ilk [hought.” The manufa*turers of the “Happy Thought” are doing your culinary worry g for you for a!) time —take advantage cf it They have worried over an! hive perfected every detail ¢f Range construe ion «hich though not a'wa:s apparent on the surface, is a st umportant in results franned like an ensine, drtel lik ajwatch as durable as th- hills, the “Happy thought” is -v-r in the leatjandjthore it will remain until perfection meets its mate DON’T WOKRY Use Burks “Bip y Thougit”’ Rang: ! For sale by Simon W. Crabbe. Walker‘s Corner, Stoves and Hardware. Charlottetown, Oct. ist, 1990, ae, ee " ee —— - Eee eee