co RENNIN | A ST f " — Ee a wee Tw : > Scans ae * . abet : : ee : nn a tp Sife She Nike SM 34 SU % “a oh ; brary side,” said ee ey oy 3 si He a awa ay GH =r Qt AE ss : 1 Mr. Braddock clyat- 4 gigas ; RY teringly. “I did not want any one te * ~% et “ar it tru le ere W it} i sa a : 2b (TURE Chi < ae ep ; oe : Hout our permission or . ; 7 cnowleage, le ginnoad ; ‘ EU u is . le gianeed toward the 8 ‘ i oki i i p| : iW si i casket. = , § " “Then we must! go arann, . - 1 oak iantan FO aro a by the ‘ 2 et ast ‘a Zi y Inr . 5 A be i : Hid r We a i narior, 1" ik’ ae é p Secu atu wii & * -_—_o- ' ; a i aan i ue* “~~ ‘ . F Ties The older J , 5 { JEANETE H. WALWORTH. ime bi alan 2 } , ti } ¢ s they od ; Le ‘ f startle ad _ a> | tant "$s desk <4 : a 7.4 e. . : ‘ fe , j ] ( ‘ i i « as Copyright, 1899, by Jeann Pia oo ate at, A NY zs a _—s > »¥ J ¢ annette H. VW ai W iT: [Ts A } } } 1 a t} meh the e Th, ws ae > « ~ . ‘ i <2 Sie AT AY CAL Aw AN ‘out 1s ng firure a bsq b15, 435 — , . , * ; . y ~ ee Mmmm Wy Nl war 1 My G e in front of the Tf Pala — : ——e a iD} Hiue it See gee ee ia l di€ . <3 crt ' ' vid i : 4 Study, - @ é Ee the tavle at Wich Tom bad seen his 9 . a j i Thr } Wl iL se ¢] } 5 «CRY N : ‘ ’ sceeined to his : » at he (Continued,) i oe , Pri precees Gama a wr , cs 3 straig ity ay on his agonized home eom- . : Seeare MuLernii Lui hours ef a)! g bs aN 7 | “I must , | ing. It was there he had wrestled with | ?& : must condense into a paracran: ' . ’ ere sinaller door ; “$9 Y TIME.) A oes 7 1 ee cette Ph | the first sharp pangs of his bereave- ‘A smaller door to the study was ; (LOCAL ne ; what f had Boped to Gistit Into your) ment, kneclings‘by the bed and clamor- reached by the circuitous passage of ies young bhrough many years 2 Gaeeeere ert : : \ Irawine roo ie oe oS - 27 ‘ oer, cate He 1 many years of} ing piteously for one word of recogni- | “e Grawins room suit. It yiekled to i ‘no | } mappy an ving intercourse Us : il : = Tom’s impatie . fain . ih ' aud Doparture of Tr 08 IPPs a ne ‘course. Use! tion from its pale and unresponsive | /0™'S "patient touch upoa its knob P ‘ vi r ref ne 1 nisus "ry? Qrvy SHO ’ iv) Urey wher ® ; your wealth. Do not let it misuse you. sleeper. and opened inward—upcn a reom WYAp- and Staxmere, 8 35 | : a for the WeSL..ccee . i ie from the a 9 59 sation leaves for cit aie jeaves for the ; eenreeeerere eeeeere 6 00 anonee* iat i the on arrives from i jal Pa a from the am. p m. OEE IT OO em et ome pm. oe ea? ati00 pm & ™m. seseenee® aeeeeeee® ain arrive a 25 p m. 03 0 m 10 a m. : a for the @aSl..-+- 4 Faas arrives from the east. . Be nistion leaves for the i eee Ot OO the tv OW -i bo ee veeeee p m, Paaistion arrives frou . a bebeosat. { 5¢ ese etecsseeces® STEAMERS PRINCESS. eatn Pictou every morairg meses cence Oe # . s ba from Pictou every even 2 Bevese teres eeeeee eereneeee 8 30 JAGRANDE DUCHESSE. from Boston and Halifax Monday....-.20+----- for Boston aud Halitax Wedneeday ... HALIFAX. ives from Boston and Halifax ry Tonreday Mires for Galifax and Boston mprery Friday ... CAMPANA. Pp m p @. 12 pm. 10 am. eeereeee i ween Ff Oe e teeteeeeee eee ‘pm. Wives from Montreal and Que- every alternate Friday.... efor Quebec aod Montreal! following Monday evening. CITY OF GHENT. ‘ fror. Helifax every Papiursday afternooa ....... .. for Halifsax every Friday JACQU 4S CARTIER. for O-well Tnesdays, tinerdaye, Thursdavs........ for Crapaud every Fri« DEEESSNGaw 6 6666605 oc00s 0 0 8 for Crapaud every Satar- oe 10a m. 3pm 3p m. ™m. n° S PORTE MEER eee FERRY BOATS. Pp borcug” Leaves Ferry Wharf for Maportevery half hour, _ thport”—Rans up Ea-. iver everr Walay, leaving at 430 a m, and 3 ‘ @ local. Runs un West River every 4 nay, leaving at 5.30 am,und 4 p in Pn” —Leaves for Rocky Point daily at 83), 9.30, ll,am;!,2,4,530 pm. Atime, Returniag, leaves Rock: mt 8910 1130 2. m-; 1.30, 3 pa), 6 p. m. | cal tm. Sundavs leave: P Rocky Point at 9a m, 12.45 *2, 4 ee: Returning, eaves Rocky Poia , 0am; 1.15, 5, 5, p @. Ayoun Min with some ex- @ tence at Carpen er work len the art of pattern makiug mB ?p'y to f petite Stewart and Go. ¢ : Pounders, Fagineers, Mesbinis’s and Boiler Makers. nf Steam Nay. Co’s Wharf, J Ch’town, PEI Phone 125 Seweee ans. te A © A RD } MACNEILL, N. D. Bye © 3° Years experience in the 7. fof his profession, may »e con Sm. “all branctes of general medi Uding the speciaities. Sand Residence—Prince Street > a above Kindergarten Hall. THE DAILY EXAMINBR CMARLOTTETOWN OCTOBER 8 to00 g, 90% tT a. m. rtc 3 and P. mn, dy & wkly 3 mos r Remember that riches take flight often in the most urforeseen fashion. I can at this time ho contingency that would reduce you to the estate of ; a poor man: but, should such a catas- trophe befall, grant that your | brains and your bands may prove good substitutes for lands and stocks. Dur- ing your minority your affairs will be menaged by my lifelong friend, Hor- Matthews, in whose business ca- yicity | have great confidence. But no yan should yield blindly to the guid- auce of another. Bear in mind that your responsibilities are your own, to > shouldered, not shirked, to be borne by no one but yourself, “I desire you on the day of your ma: : jority to take the management of your .fairs inte your own haads, subject, .. “rse, to advice from your ex guardian. You will owe it to yourself to obtain a clear insight into the man- agement of affairs during your minori- ty. No honest steward will object to this accounting. As for your guardian, while I trust him implicitly—Il’~— Tom turned the paper over impa- tiently. Surely there must be some- thing more. Not an added syllable! Where had this unfinished letter, so precious and so all important, been found? Who had conveyed it to his hands? Hie had himself searched every draw- er and every compartment of his fa- ther’s desk and found nothing. He had questioned Mr. Matthews witb queru- | lous insistence, only to be assured by him that his father had left nothing | for him personally in writing, and yet here, twisted ruthlessly about the stems of flowers which came bo one knew whence, were his father’s last, most precious utterances of advice and love. He folded the piece of twisted paper | into proper shape and laid it away in| an inner pocket of his waistcoat. The | flowers which he had crushed under | his heels sent up a sickly fragrance. A strong gust of wind set his candle aflare. It guttered and died out sud-— denly, only to add to his sense of shud- dering isolation. He could have cried aloud for human companionship, for the sound of a fellow creature’s voice. He bethought him of the friendly watchers down stairs. On second thoughis he should not | like to face his father’s faithful friends | with white lips and trembling limbs. He would quiet his nerves by spending a few moments in his father’s own recom. Amid its familiar surroundings | he could relight his candle and regain | his lost self control. He passed through the connecting door into the larger room so intimately associated witb his beloved dead. Py the mantelshelf there used to be always a supply of matches. That snine faint, receding radiance puzzled Lim as he drew aside the curtains that separated his own room from his fa- ther’s. Some one must have left a win- dow open on the baleovy. A cold puff ef outside air greeted and chilled him as he stepped over the threshold, but by this time he bad himself well in hand. He found the matches and re- lighted his candle. It was not his fizst visit to his fa- room. He had there i foresee God ace — ——- — ther’s gone SS. ae we) mee) O eRe rr Ww me Seon “ = of Dodd’s iec@wion. The box is imitated, #t, Lnec outside coating and shape of the pills are imitated and the name-~-Dodd’s Pills is The original is safe. ations are Dodd's Imita- Kidney imitated. Imit dangerous. Kidney Pills have a reputation. tors have none or they wouldn't imitate. So they trade on the reputation of Dodd’s Kidney Pills. Do not be deceived. There is only one DODD'S. Dedd’s is the original. Dodd's is the name to be care- ful about — D-O-D-D-S ‘suddenly grown KIDNEY : PILLS i ! . Iie had passed through it sinee when it had looked decorously desolate, with the cold, white, tenantless bed and its bandsome furnishings primly set to 7% His mother’s Bible was open. rights. Gn neither one of those pre- vicus Visits had he observed the con- spicious object that now arrested his attention immediately on cutering the rooni. His mother’s Bible, the one out of which he had read his Sunday's task, an unwilling little rebel, many a weary Sabbath afternoon at his father’s knee, Wes propped upon tke center table un- der the dimly burning radiance of a night taper. It was open. A single blossom of white coswos marked the passage: “Tut not your trust in princes nor in gny son of man.” Hie did not reason about the presence of the Bible. He did not cast a second look at it. Whether he was to brand himself everlastingly as a coward did not cost him one anxious thought. He deseended the long spiral stairs that divided him from human companion- ship with feet that seemed to have old and very tired The distance between him and the liv ing seemed to stretch out intermina- bly. He was at one only with death and mystery. With cowering aspect he crept into ‘ the long parlor where his father lay in lonely state. One look at the noble, enim faee within the casket covered him with a sense of littieness and con fusion. “Father, father! To think that { should know fear in your presence— ou. who had such high scorn for cow irdice and cowards! I am not worth) o be called your son!” A voice came to him fn greeting from the other end of the long room. I! was old Mr. Braddock, who had insist ed upon sitting up with his old friend Ue shuffled toward the young mourner now With a face from which every vestige of color had fied. He nodded nervously toward his three companions, who came in a slow pro- ressionu in his rear. “These gentlemen ard 1 have been going over the premises, Thomas, to see if any doers or windows had been left open. It grew quite chilly sudden- lv.” The old man rubbed his bards nervously about each other. “Ouite so.” the man Dearest bis right ‘ . ~ . v . - « t a , ay . Rufas. elbow echoed. “We distinctly felt a cold puff of air.’ the map on his left added. “Some window open on the veran- da.” Thomas suggested. “We have made a thorough inspec- tion. We find neither door nor window left upbolted. But the house is very large and very dra fty.”’ “The library may have been over- looked.” 7* 7" } "Ty Tom glanced toward the heavy chenille portieres that fell between the parlor and the library. On the other side of them were the folding doors, paneled with ground glass, which cave the soft effectiveness of moonlight when lights burned on the library side. Emboldened by the manifest fears of his companions, he drew the curtains and fell backward with a low cry. Then indignation smothered his fear. “Some one in the library, standing at , my father’s’ desk.” He essayed to slide the glass doors backward into their sockets. They would not yield. “I locked them myself from the li- | Pee eee eee ped in utter darkuess! “Have any of you matches?” he ask ed shayply. Threo matches were responsively struck against a8 many boot heels, and the room was soon well lighted. Seattered in reckless confusion over the open desk were papers that had beey hastily drawn ont from the pl: geonholes fur inspection, by whom and for what purpose were the mysteries that confronted Thomas and_ his friends. | “This pass > ‘ehensi ; et Bremen nsion,” said . ao bri ; ’ tremulous ut- ccrance and protuberant eyes. “The tudy was In perfect order when ] locked that door on this side. Rufus would turn in his coffin at such dis- array. He was so very orderly.” “Some one has been tampering with ny father’s papers for purposes of his own. Will you help me search the house for the miscreant, my friends? I should like just to discover the place of ingress and egress. After we have zeund it we can search the house in- side thoroughly.” (To be Contined. ~ a om —— | Nervous Debility. « Sufforor From Weak Eisod and Ex- hausted Norves Tells of His Cure by \siny Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food. Mr. A. T. P. Lalame, railway agent at Clarenceville, Que., frites:—‘* For {welve years I have been run dowr with nervous debility. I suffered much, and consulted coctors, and used ucdicines in vain. Some months ago J heard of Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food, used two boxes, and my health improved so rapidly that I ordered twelve more, ‘IT can say, frankly, that this treat- tnent has no equal in the medical world. While using Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food l could feel my system being built up until now I am strong and healthy. I cannot recommend it too highly for weak, nervaqus people.” : Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food is a tonic anid restorative of inestimable worth. It makes the blood rich, the nerves strong, increases the weight, and cures all weaknesses and diseases of the nerves and blood. In pill form, 50 cents a box, “t all dealers, or Bates and Co., Toronto. - Tomatoes for Uhow Chow, Ripe Tomatoes Red Peppers: Smali Cucumbers Cauli- flower. White Portuele (inion, NOULCE—As the season is very short for the above it will be wise on your part to secure a full supply now. We donot bcok orders to be filled next month (we may not have them then) we have them now. Pickling ae as i oa 5 ih VARS = bf re See NAY ok a Be tN eg Whar ’ x ts 4 A fall supply of ceiery sugar corn, yellow corn, cabbage, bee:s, carrots, parsnips, turnips, lettuce, squash pumpkin, green beans, butter beans, large red cnions, large silver skin cnions, ete, etc, at Gay's Market Stalls aca Taleo asap a Pigialt SARs: SE BBL Ew SERS SBD Ripe gis. sat aw , ¢ $ : § ere You'll Fin Furniture Bargains But we don’t like tu use the word. So many ad- Vertiserg ug: {t aud don’t}mean it, Websie: says, “a gai iful trinsaction” —that’s show £ meas i® --4 dat hoe : ae We mear i® --4 gainful transedd.ion tor our «customers }c PROS SCO ME: SCOR wre We would like yor to cali an] svtisfy yourself that what we say is true. John Newson o Those _ Intevested, Toe makers of PUBHT LUND RANGES were adie toship all of our ransestuis ws -< vit we expect t» have at large shipment by next wip or s. 5 Huifax from BOSTON and those who have ordere. muy count on getting them then We ask your kind indulgence tur the delay. ; BOGS BHI Swe * a &t@eomt 8 Se 6 / ® ; . a ® ? u d 2 ¢ ? } ’ / t d ; 2 ¢ ? f j “Agents for Americana Baages,” FENNELL & CHANDLER ———— ee a ee eee ew CATTLE FOOD COOKERS...... Are vsed by the most progressive farmers...... 1? YOU KEEP ANY STOCK YOU NEED a Famous Cooker, which cooks quickly with little fuel or trouble. Heavy galvanized boiler, covered, t eae ee 4 estag »} } lec IDE ; + x which holds 50 Imperial gallons, _. 1 &¥ "tte ea y 6 LG bisa | keeps feod pure and is removable for cleaning. Large firebox with broad fixes covering the entire bottom of boiler. Being light and in sections, it can also be used in the bush for sap making. Cheap Saves fuel. Pamphlet free from our local agent, or our nearest house. MeCLARY MFG. GO. MONTREAL \VINNIPEG AND VANCOUVER in price. ile TUKONTY S. W. Crabbe, Local Agent, Charottetown. LONDON ih ll ee [Tue LONGAND SHORT OF Is to get a boet that will wear and fit?you, thir you will have satisfaction. You also want somethir¢ to suit you in price. Ycu will find them all at McQUAID’S, _ LOWER QUEEN STREET Ls 4 er wet Fe") a A Ora Boot and Shoe Store. | owes A. Alans lads dines nrnareremmnntos inserter ye apn eae tatiana tie sen eases tesa ete EG i re area nr ana Sa tae a ” - ¥