HE ~~ ; DAILY CAMIN HR CHARLOTTETOWN, AUGUST 26, | ns 5 99 E aris oh, 5S Reeum ericut ———_ DIAGETE S . Tes ese Sy. 8! eae eet - waot e horse worth $:00, you'd be sifly ions S100 tor his photo only. you mecd DODD'S KIDNSY PILLS you'd be silly to buy an imitation PODO'S ARE SOLD iM BOXES LIKE THIS. TAKE ONLY D-O-D-D°S S484L8464482 They All Are Finding out that we give the best values in Boots and Shoes. See our Job Lots in win- dows and on counters for 3 days. Big reductions to clear. Fall Goods coming in. J. A. BELL The Cheap Boot Store. FSS SST ITI TTS es eS Sar ' Marma lade. We have just received a new kind o1 ORANGE MARMALADG, put dp in gigte, pote, which we ‘are now ‘offeringat the low rate of 2 Pots for 25 cents Aled jhet cpened “a case cf Pinies apple Marmalade which je ofvers fine flavore The Pivesgple avd Ginger Marmalace has al:o giyeu excéllent satisy ‘fattion. s Those are ail new gocds and you ehould try them if you want something nice and tasty. GROCERS S——____ —— + ep: — C } KELLY’S & 60'S. Are always to be depende‘i on.... . Only the best kept in stock. Uur cus.omers are satisfied customers. If you want to be eatiefied with your groceries deal with ue, _ Try the TEA we seli. Special atten- tlon wae given tojte selection. Theeame care is exercieed in buying all other lines. CONES scinintiis IND BE “SATISFIED JAMES KELLY & CO Queen St., near Londo: Heuse Corner. wecd&v ky —— eeeieee. | Am So Giad —— a You Dida’t Forgeta Bar of ROYAL OAK SOAP. We're sure {o want it m our house. Itim- proves the clothes eo much, besides it i8 very pureand one bar will do aa much as 2 bars of filled imported soap. For sale everywhere. 3eware of imitation; i GE LL LOLA iy ‘ SUNNYSIDE” DENTISTE Me 3% M | AP i> ee Office in New Prowse Block, first door to the right up stairs. DR, AYEPS. ‘A LOVER AT LARGE. Therefor® hedidd ho feeling of guilti ness when he suddenly met Kittie yes, Kittie, in a carriage stopping before a “Yow are quite sure this isn’t going to be a nuisance?” house-where she had evidently left one of her party. The searching electric light fell full wpon her face, but there was no time to speak. The carriage drove .aff, and he and Mrs. Millicent walked on. He was not uncomfortable about it till after he got home. Then he began to think how Kittie would de- mand explanations and how impossible it would be to satisfy her. He resolved that. he would see her ,the first thing in the morning, explain it all and get through the little scene as soon as pos- sible. But Kittie was not,in when he called ‘jin ‘the morning, nor was he more suc- cessful when_ he tried, to see her in’ the afternoon. The first rebuff irritated. the second antagonized him. Gerald Hayes was a sweet natured » man, easily led and quickly influenced, but obstinate if one tried to drive him His theart hardened Against’ Kittie for ber absurd misunderstanding and her sillv.ideavof. peni#hing him. He resolved to ask Mrs. Millicent to drive with him-that evening. She went, and he had the;pleasure of passing Kit- tie as she was driving with her mother She didn't ‘see-him, but sat so unnéces- sarily straight and was so elaborately unconscions that Mrs. Millicent claimed »‘**What is the matter’ Don't you. know. Miss Nicholson ?’, “Not tonight.it seems.’’ he answered grimly. ; She ooked nothing more. ‘“‘This has been a delightful drive,’ said he, when he helped her. ont “Won't you go again with me? Would tomorrow be too soon ?”’ She looked at him and laughed. He was so big and yet so boyish. The at, him keenly, bat said frown that had wrinkled his rorehend when they passed Kittie still shadowed his handsome face, and this little trick of using her for a foil was_ such an old one and so, transparent. | ‘‘Not temorrow."’ she answered gen- tly, ‘‘but some time, certainly." “I wish ycu would go tomorrow.’ he said earnestly, his face dark with trouble; *‘I really wish it very much.’ He was forming the desperate design of driving with her every evening and rassing-Kttie every time, Se The man whose home is menaced by midnight marattders isn’t slow tu grasp a weapon to de- fend it. The same manu when threaten- ed by an enemy ten thousand more dangerous, will /calmly go hig way and mak¢ no effort at des fence. (ah most danger- pous of all man- wy kind’g enemies is consumption. There is but one effective weapon with which to coni- bat this grim destroyer. It fs Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. It cures 98 per cent. of all cases of con- sumption, bronchitis, asthma, laryngitis, weak lungs, spitting of blood and throat and nasal troubles. Thousands have testi- fied to their recovery under this remedy after they were given up by the doctors, ana all hope was gone. Many of these have permitted their experiences, names, addresses and photographs to be printed in Dr. Pierce’s Comizon Sense Medical Ad- viser. Any sufferer may write to tiem. The ‘‘Golden Medical Discovery” is the, great blood-maker and fiesh-builder. makes the appetite hearty, the digestion and assimilation perfect, the liver active, the blood pure and rich with the life giving elements of the fodd and the nerves strong and steady. Acting directly on the lungs, it drives out all impurities and diseasé germs. It is also a wonderful medicine for all nervous trowbles. Sold by all deglerg, in medicine. Jno. M. Hite, of Audubon, Audubon Co., Iowa, savs: “ I took a severe cold which settled on my lungs and chest. Several of our best physicians gave up all hopes of my recovery. I would cough and spit blood for hours, I took Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and recovered.” Dr.. Pierce’s: Common Sense Medical Adviser is a book of 2,908 pages and over three hundred illustrations. This book is free. You may have it int all its usefulness, and in strong paper covers, for 31 one-cent stamps, which pays the cost of customs and mailing ov/y, or in, cloth, binding for so stamps.’ “Address, World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. ¥. Veet * pha WP Show on Ca° 1 It 7 } Wr weesc ‘““Not tomorrow,’ she repeated, and left him disconsolate. On the morrow he had other things | to think of, for Kittie wrote. to him at last. It was a very angry, short letter After your outrageous conduct you can hard ly expect me to see you again., Our engage ment, which most fortunately has never been announced, is now ended. | return, but I send with this whatever things I have that might remind me of you. Do not try to see me, for it is useless. With many regrets over my own foolishness, yours, KATHERINE NICHOLSON. To this he answered: My Dear Krrrir—I ¢ametosee youon Mon day withafull explanation of my ‘‘outrageous conduct,’’ but you evidently did not care to hear it. I have done nothing which | can look upon.in any way asa reason for breaking our engagement. lam therefore compelled to be lieve that you wish it broken. Against your | wish I will not appeal. Believe. me, very sin GERALD HAYES. After sending this note he felt very cerely yours, miserable—so miserable, in fact, that it | did not seem to him he could see Mrs. Millicent. He made so many cynical remarks to her in the course of his visit about the faithlessness of wom- en that she had a very good idea what had happened and was _ intensely amused. She sang to him, and he seem- ed to quite enjoy all the melancholy ballads, reveling especially in one with the pleasing refrain, ‘‘When love isa lie and hope is dead.” ‘*You’re feeling down tonight, aren’t yon?’’ she asked after she had finished singing. **Yes,”’ he answered, biting the ends of his mustache and glaring savagely ‘I’ve had rather a blow today.’’ He would have told her alliin a min- ute, but she would have liked him less if he had, and so she headed him off. *‘Do you ever read Browning?’’ she was going to say,’ but the ‘absurdity of the question struck ‘her, and she changed it to “There is a little verse I love. It goes: “Grow old along with mel The best is-yet to be— The: last.of life, for which The first was made. Our times are in his hand Whe saith: ‘A whole I planned; Youth shows but-half. Trast God ‘all, nor be afraid.’ “T think that fits your case ‘The best is yet to bé.’ You've only seen half—hardly that. See it all before*you decide it’s so worthless.” ‘Do you really think one can get over one’s troubles and forget them and —and be happy without the things that one wants?’’ ‘*‘] think you can.”’.she said smil- ingly., *‘l know you can., It isn’t the time now to write ‘and so they lived happy ever, afterward’ at the end of your story. It would: make the story too short, too stupid. But it will be written there yet, never fear.”’ ‘‘l think I shall go away.” he sai gloomily.: ‘I’m feeling rather seedy, and a little change does a fellow such a lot of good:”’ “Oh, don’t go now!” she answered. “I’m expecting Miss Sherlock from Vir- ginia and her cousin to stay a month with me. I’ve rather depended on you to help—me entertain them, They’re nice virls, both of,them. J think you’ll like them.” **Very well.’ hesaid. rather dejected- ly ‘‘I'Jl put it off for the present You've been so good to me-I'd like to help you if | can.’ The ‘nice girls’ didn’t. appeal to bin. in the least. but he went home cheered ‘by Mrs. Millicent’s sympathy and words of enconuragementt. “Oh, you big, bandsome, silly: fel low!’’ she thought when. he. left her “You think you’re so miserable, and you'll go to sleep the aninute your head touches the pillow.’’. But she,:who bad really known trowble, lay. awake half the night thinking of many things. Her guests came after a few days, and they really were nice and very. pretty too’ Gerald saw them daily, and before’the’ month was “over ‘he was madly ins Jove, with Miss Sherlock— that is, he didn’t call, it ‘‘madly’’ to imself.; He feltssure that Kittie had 1 belied his heart in the! niost nnfeeling mahner and that he wonld nevesg feel again as the had felt; toward her. But. after. all,"life went on: He was not especially happy, andthere was a charm- ing, congenial girl who made him hap- pier whenever he met her. Why couldn't he make the sensation permanent n-|) stead of so intermittent? So he reasoned» and so one night. when he and she were alone together, he reached over and, took her hand. She drew itaway with a frightened little manner that staid the words on his lips. : | «T be& Four pardon,’ he satd simply ‘Your rings: are very beantifal.”” She held out her hand to him, the color warm in her cheeks, ‘Yes!’ ghe said with .a. little gasp. “IT do not always-wear them, but this one I ought to—I should’’— She falter- ed and stopped. His face was crimson *‘ You mean” — “Yes, it is my engagement ring.’ She spoke with a_sort of tumultuous energy, as if each Word had gathered itself for a leap- There was a short, awkward silence. “Do you think that's fair?’’ he blurt- ed out at last. ‘IT don’t understand, you.” 4 “Yes, you do. You know what I was, going to say. You stopped me with this. Don’t you think your\confession is a little late?’ ‘How couldkE know? How dared I imagine such things? Do yon think a | | ] Wave no ring to | believe me, truly | i | | | matter of fact most men have been re- i } exist | without consolation, and so he went to ; girl Believes évery man shé meets will fall in love with her unless she wears @ danger signal? I never dreamed—l never suspected—I hope now it isn’t true.” The tears rose in her honest eyes, and thé sight of them gave Gerald the first real pang he had felt. ‘‘Never mind,” he said with a sort of pathetic dignity. ‘‘I dare say it’s my fault. I’m a good deal of a fool.”’ ‘‘And you'll believe,’’ she said. look- ing at him with sorry, shining eyes. ‘I shall believe nothing but good of you.” He raised her hand to his lips and kissed it. A good woman is very apt to exag- gerate the pain she gives ‘a man by re- fusing him. She measures his grief by her capacity to love some one else and finds his loss great and terrible. Asa fused at one time or another. and very few of them have been blighted in the =rocess. (To he Continnes ) DR. GAUTHIER | ENDORSES The statemert that higtiveco. - « Dts GHASE’S his life to .« « « Kidney Liver Pills Dr. J. T. A» Gauthier, of Valleyfield, Que., writes: ‘'I, the undersigned, certify that the contents of this letter, in regard to the cure of Mr. Isadore Major, by the use of Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills, is correct.” Here is Mr. Major's letter: *‘ After 20 years . of suffering from backache and kidney disease 1, owe my life to Dr. A. W. Chase. 1 had tried an endless variety of remedies to no avail, and on the recommendation of a friend began the use of Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills. Two pills that night and two next morning gave great relief, and J continued their use, until now I am completely cured. My friends are surprised and pleased to see me well again, for I spent hundreds of dollars in vain trying to get cured. Before using Dr.’ Chase's; Kid- _ mey-Liver Pills ray back ached so Ll could not put on my shoes and couldn't lift 20 Ibs. My shoulders were sore, 1 hadheadachesanda bad ‘taste in the mouth. These troubles are now entirely = and what I say I am ready to rove. I have told my friends of my wonder- ul cure, and “er have been greatly benefited by using these pills.” Dr, Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills are the great- est kidney cure the world has ever known One pill a dose, esc a box at all dealers, og K.imanson, Bates & Co., Teronta McGILL UNIVERSITY, Montreal Session 1899-1900. Martricutation Examinaticns, prelimir~ ary to the various Courses of Study will te beld as under: *Faculty of Arts (Men and Women) t Facolty of applied Science Fzculty of Medicine Faculev of Law, Tue, Sth Sept, Faculty of Comrarative Medicine and Veterinary science, Sat. 16th Sept -~Thurs. 14th Sept *In the Faenity of Arts (Revised CurrienInm he courses are open also.to PARTIAL/STU bD- ANTS without Matriculation tin the *aeulty of Applied scierce the cours s in Civil, Mechanical. Electrical, and Min- ng Engineering, Chemistry and Architecture are also open to PAKIIAL STUDENTS withou: martriculation. Kxamipa'ion tor FIRST YEAR ENTRANCE FXHIBITWVONS in the Fscalty of Arts. ranging from $90 to £125, will be beld on the 14th Sept emberat Mowreal, Charlotietéwn, st John N. 'B., Halifax, St. John’s, Nfld and other cebtres, The ROYAL VICTORIA COLLEGE, the new | residential college for women, will be ready or occupation in September. The McGin1. NORMAL SOHOOL will re-cpen on Ist September. Particulars of Examinations end copies of Calendar, containing full information as to Conditions of Kntrance, Coursees of Study, kegulations ef Degrees, Kxhibitions and +cholafsbip. Fees, etc, they be «btained on application to: Ww. VAUGHAN Registrar. Cnvrca EDGEEIL 9 ScHoois Windéor N. S. ; ; The Risho> of Nova Scotia,” Chairman Board of Trustees Mis: Lefroy of Cheltenham Ladies’ Coilege England, Psineipal with Nine Resident Experienced Governessés, Bevsekeeper Matren a trained Nurse, a"P reparation for the Udiversities. Micha2zlmas Term begins Sept 13:h 1899 For Calendar and Blank form of Applicat- ons for admission, apply,io DR HIND Secre ary MW Stf Nicest Freshest °* eeaeANDeese a ; BEST. GROGERIES Groceries that will tempt the appetite . Groceries tha! do not. take all, your money to buy. the house will like. Buy and try. Come in and see us, re}? Drisco!: é Hol QUEEN STREET-—— Scat OMIM E ees sf wa goely Groceries that everyone in{ h i nsby, ere ore or or A AP Lae ey 'A small leak 2 Will empty a large bucket. So will a small illness, or irregularity of the system, if neglected, sap all the vitality and energy EAE om out of a strong man, But the:average person over- se Se looks these little ills until they become deeply seated ee a in the system. a ae The daily use of ABBEY’S me EFFERVESCENT 3 SEARS ae a8 s SALT will keep your blood cool and your ‘system in perfect order. Physicians prescribe and endorse it. The Canada Lancet $ “ This deserves every good word which is being said of it. preparation A sample is offered to each physician, and most favorably is it commented upon, There'is no doubt but that the daily usé of Abbey's Effervescent Salt will ‘be ‘a great’ preventive and aid in m warding off attacks of disease.” Sold’ by “all druggists. 60c a bottle,. trial, size 25¢. 4 THE WORLD'S GREATEST COMPAY. The Mutual Life Insurance Co. of New York RICHARD A. [icCURDY, President AS SETS—$277, ANNUAL INCOME—$55,006,629.45 | 517,525.36. . INSURANCE IN FORCE —$971,711,997.7¢ <=> All Canadian. Policies payable iu gold say Before placing your insurance, please call or write for estimates, JOHN MWeEKACHERN. AGENT May 27—Sat. & Mon lmo- A PORE rr — ~— Grearance Sale ance Sale | TB McDONALD & Co’y Commencing 18th Tully and will continues for SO days All our stock of Boots and Shoes, 25 to 50--per cent discount Womens Oxford pacts ipic @ pair WOMENS SLIPPERS lea pair "+ ° , All our stock of men and boys elothing 25 to_350. ent discount Ni hg! dddbrelothing. white & colored shirts, collars, ties hankrchieefs braces 26 percent, discount , . aarp ok rag a 30 pieces print cotton, Grey cotton sheeting, dillow cotton, shirting, ining towelling, towels dress goods---25 per cent discount vad -Print Cotton 3 cents a yard... Nothing 1eserved, all must be cleered w is your (ine ito buy cheap . PTA ge gegen So 9 J. B. MACDONALD & tt2prers IN LOW PRICE. ..... é * gg EER nn ee 0 co