—, Citta Ul a. ee ee ee ee nas eee Water Commissioners’ March 3rd, 1898—43 4i 2aw Crowne, mort rea. oable prices. Dr. J, P. Murray DAILY EXAMIN éR, CHARLOTTETOWN, MARSH 10 1898, | ~ beeelesllt se Ses Many of the North American Indians we " nt specimens of phv: sical man 1is was due, largely, to their acti’ it-door lif Nevertheless, they had the w isdom to know that an active life in th pen air alone, would not keep a7 man healthy They had their me dic ine- nm W gathered herbs from field and | fore and brewed Pace ctions to as ssist the natural processes of the various vital organs Mo fern civilized men do not as a nsual thing recognize the same necessity until it is too tate They ignore medicine they are within the grasp of some seri ‘ lisease. The time for a man to be- gin taking medicine is when he begins to f & | ut of sorts If a man is thoroughly wer and heal es not feel that way. I loes feel that way he may be pretty thy he do ire that he is half sick. When he is half sick it does not take long before he is | ““whole-sick Dr Piet ce’s Golden Med- ical iscovery is the best medicine for a man wh ‘Tl he is sick or getting sick. It puts him all right all round. It puts his stomach right to begin with, and that is the most important point. It puts his liver tight, and that ts the second most import- ant point. It purifies his blood and fills it with the life-ziving elements of the food he eats, and that ts the third important - mt. It drives out all disease germs and impurities of every discription. It makes the appetite keen and hearty. It is the greatest blood-maker and flesh-builder. It cures 98 per cent. of all cases of consump- tion, weak lungs, spitting of blood, obsti- nate coughs and kindred ailments. Thou- sands who were given up to die have test:- fied to their recovery under this marvelous medicine. An honest dealer will not urge a substitute for the sake of a little extra profit. He gives you what you ask for. NOTICE. | ATER TAKERS who are in arrears for Water Rates, rte hereby notified, that unless all rates are paid on or before March 15th, 1898, the water will he turned cif without further notice, D, McLEAN, Secretary. Office, THOMAS HOWLETY, M. DB. Graduate ot College of Physicians and Surgeons, Baltimore, Md. Orrice— O’HaAttonran Gero. Str BuILpiNr, Office hours until 10 8. my l—3 p. ms 6.30~— 8.30 p. mh. P. B. Island Rallway Or and after MONDAY, 27th Dec., 180%, prains of this Reilway will run daily, (Suny Pays excepted,} as under. _- erinting in all its branches at the Exaw- IVER office, one of the best equip- ped Job Printing Establishment, on P. E. Island nie Gold, Porcelain and Alamimum teeth without plates) at th Approve and modern appliances used co @ ital operaticas comparstively esa. —— ‘ G? ! i } » BILLIAM. | By 8. R. OROOKETT, (Copyright, 1897, by the Author.} **No, father,’’ said Billiam, with de- Cision, ‘‘Iam not half good enough te make a parson of. You must give the living to Harry. He will make a first rater. He is all the time mousing about among books.’’ Billiam and his father were standing together in the rectory garden, which locked over the beautiful vale of St. John. Helvellyn slept above them, stretched out like a lion with his head | low between his paws. The lake glim- i mered beneath all, dreamy in the light midsummer haze. Bees hummed in the old garden, and the flowers cn which they made themselves drunk reeled and ati | shook with the press of the revelers. 1S The old rector of Applethwaite was dead. This day of midsummer had been his funeral day. An old man full to the | brim of years and dignities, he had lived | all his life, under the wing of his broth- i j the old o | ' | er, the squire, rocted safely in the fam- | fly living, diming every Sunday and | Thursday at the 100 sermons in a rotation as settled and regular as that of the crops. But now rder — changed, and, accord- ing to the eculre’s providential arrange- mevt, the new order was to be—Bil- lic. His real name was William, with something very distinguished after it. Yet nobody thought of calling him any- thing but Billiam — except only the squire, when, as at present, Billiam and he differed in opinion. Then he said, **William Reginald thwaite, will you dare to disobey your | father?’’ And Billiam hung his head, for | he knew that a day was coming when he would. At school he had been called Billiam for the reason that a‘‘ Yorker’’ is called a ‘‘Yorker,’’ because it was obvious that he could be called nothing else. The boy whose Latin verses he did said to him: ‘‘ Now, goen, old Billiam ; hurry up. I want to go ont to the playing fields to smite that young toad Scott- miner for making faces at me and mak- ing me laugh in chapel.’’ So to save time Billiam gave him his own copy of verges and saw the plagiarist pass to the head of the form next day on the strength of Billiam’s iambics. Yet that boy never even thought of thanking the author and origin of his distinction. Why should he? It was ‘‘only old Bil- liam."' Billiam failed also in gaining the love | and respect of his masters to the extent ' which, upon his merits, was his due. For one thing, be was forever bringing all manner of broken down sparrows, maimed rabbits and three legged dogs into the school and, if possible, even into the dormitory. Then smells of di- verse kinds arose and bred quarrelsome Cissension of a very positive kind. The house master came up one night to find Billiam with an open knife in bis hand, Griving fiercely into a throng of boys armed witk cricket bats and wickets, | whereupon he promptly dashed at the od Trains ‘ial Trains I ‘ ward. Read] STATIONS. ward. Read down, ». Ml A M. P.M. A. My (3 10| 6 20\_ Charlottetown .../ 2 3010 OC 8 80) 6 85 ..Royaltvy Junction.| 2 16 9 40 '4 17] 7 12). North Wiltshire. 140 8& |4 81! 7 24'. Hunter River. .. 1 28) 8 4} 5 05; 7 51). . Bradalbane......] } 99, 8 Ci 6 13 7 58}. .Emerald.. ......119 53] 7 58 6 27| 8 OP!. Freetown ...... -112 42| 7 3S 6 47| § 25)... Kensington... 12 24 7 18 6 20) 8 ov} Ar, {Lv.|12 00) 6 48 >. M.\P. M S’Side - ‘A, M 22 50l Ly. \ Ar. 1 J1)..Miscouche ...... 1 37)... Wellington...... 2 19].. Port Hill . cece | 3 341... O’Leary....- wees 3 581. . Bloomfield ...... 4 34). . Alberton... ces. © TA. Pet ccs sees he & } _— ” namaste P. w.| lA. M, 2 30; .Charlottetown ... 1 3¢ 2 5A, ..Royalty Junction Re iC a DOME Vekecaae 9 31 i 10 ie} Me Stewart 2 : a {6 22 -Cardigan..... oes 7 3 1B 45 .. Georgetown eee 71Q P M, ae A. Me Pp. M. A. M. 4 05). , Mt. Stewart ....; 8 55 4 43) .Morell...... oosul ae 5 12) St. Peters ......| 7 48 6 57), Bear River ....<.| 7 08 6 40 . Souris... aecaee 6 20 Py. M. A. M, Pp. M. |) ‘ § 16 . Emerald e4e4e8 6 05) ..Cape Traverse .,| 7 4 ® WM. A MH j 1 Standard Time young desperado and wrested the knife out of his hands. ‘*Do you wish to murder somebody?”’ eried the house master, shaking him. ‘‘Yes,’’ said Billiam stottly, ‘‘if Lowther throws my white mice out cf the window. ”’ No further proceedings were taken, because upon examination Billiam proved to be scored black and blue with the wickets of his adversaries. He was, however, from this time forth givena bedroom upon the ground floor, with a little court in front which looked upon the laundry, and here Billiam, still unrepentant, was allowed to tend his menagerie in peace, provided always that i¢ did not entirely destroy the sani- tution of the school. But when the gov- erning committee came to. inspert the SICK HEAGACHE Positively cured by these ’ Litiie Pills. They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A per- fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsi- ress, Bad Tastein the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. Small Pill. Email Dose. Small Prico. Substitution ae the fraud of the day. ' See you get Carter's, Ask for Carter's, Insist and demand Carter’s Little Liver Pills, pr cluaaptes Lue me Ab Rests loted them past the cntrance of the court | pled OMitLatiaay par wherein dwelt Lilliam, keeping well to | windward of it. Anybody else would have promptly expelled, but Billiam’s father was @ Very important person indeed, and the head master bad known him inti- mately at college. Besides, no one could possibly have expelled Pilliam. The very rufians who whacked him cricket bats would straightway been hav | risen in mutiny. hall and reading his | Setoun Ormi- | By and by Billiam’s father tried him at Oxford, but, though Billiam &t: bis terms, be would have none of it. So when the rectory fell vacant it seemed is to m ake ar- nll that could be done w raugemen te by which Billi iam would su ceed his uncle. ihe Right He Sali Reginald Setoun Ormithwaite, Billiam’s ‘‘pater,’’? saw no difficulty in the ter. He had beeu at Eton and Christ- church with the bishop of Lakeland, and the matter lent itself naturally to this arrangement. Every one felt this to be the final solution of a most difficult problem. Everybody even remotely con- nected with the family was consulted, end all expressed their several delights with relief and alacrity, but in the meantime nothing was said to Billiam, who had a setter with a broken leg upon his mind and so lived mostly abort the kennels and smelled of lini- mcnt. But when his father told the proxi- mate rector that he must begin te pre- pare for the bishop’s examination and go into residence for some months at St. Abbs’ famous theological college (called in clerical circles ‘‘The Back Door’’), Billiam most unexpectedly re- fused point blank to have anything to do with the plan. He would be no par- ton; he was not good enough, he assert- ed. Harry could have it. The Right Honorable Reginald Setoun Ormi- thwaite, ex-cabinet minister and P. © broke into a rage almost as violent as when his party leader proclaimed a new policy without consulting him. He in- formed Billiam (under the designation of William Reginald Setoun) how man > different kinds of fool he was and tole mat- | was the prodigal son and a cisgrace to Ormithwaites of Ormi- of the families, sir.’’ the stock of the thwaite. ‘‘One said his father, ‘‘which have constituted © for 800 years the governing classes of these isli unds. ’’ So it was in this manner that Billiam took the very modest portion of goods | which pertained to him and departed with | him as an ultimatum that if he refused | this last chance to establish himself im life, be need expect no further help or consideration from him. Billiam listened uneasily, and with a deep seated regret obvious upon his downcast face. It was pitiful, he thought privately, to see so dignified and re- spectable a man as his father thus losing control of himself. So Billiam fidgeted, hoping that the painful scene would soon be over so that he might get back again to the lame setter at the kennels. When Billiam’s father had at once concisely and completely expressed his opinions as to Billiam’s sanity, Bil- liam’s ingratitude, Billiam’s disgrace- ful present conduct and unparalleled fa- ture career, and when he bad concluded with a vivid picture of Billiam’s ulti- mate fate (which was obviously not to be drowned) he paused, partly in order to recover his breath and partly to in- vite suggestions from the culprit. Not that he expected Billiam to answer. In- deed, he held it almost an insult for one of his children to attempt to answer one of his questions at such a moment. ‘‘What have you to say to that, sir? What excuse have youtomake? Answer me that, sir. Silence, sir, I will not listen to a single word. You may well stand abashed and silent. Have I brought a son into the world for this— kept you, given yoo an expensive edu- cation only for this?’’ So Billiam kept silence and thought hard of the setter down at the kennels. Those bandages ought to be wet again. It was an hour past the time. He kept changing from one foot to the other upon the gravel walk. ‘*Don’t insult me by jumping abort like a hen on a hot, griddle,’’ cried his father. ‘‘Tell me what you think of do- ing with yourself, for I will no longer support you in idleness and debauch- a_."; **T should like to be a veterinary sur- geon, sir,’’ said Billiam, scraping with his toe. ‘‘Let that gravel alone, will you—a veterinary devil — an Ormithwaite a d——d cow doctor! Get out of my sight, sir, before I strike you with my cane.’ And acecrdingly Billiam went—down to the kennels to visit the setter, wou- dering ali the way whether, us the skin was not broken, he ought to use an cm- brocation or stick to the cold water bandages. And this is briefly why Pilliam found himself in Edinburgh and established in a nest of unfurnished garret rooms which he had discovered by chance at the end of Montgomery street in the Latin quar- ter of the city. Billiam had £130—£100 of which had been given him by his father with the information that it must see him through a year and £30 which his elder brother Herbert, captain in the One Hundred and Tenth hussars, had sent him. ‘*Young fool, Billiam—always was,’’ said Captain Herbert. ‘‘Guess he’s pret- ty tightly off.’”’ And with that he stuffed into the envelope the £80 which he had set apart as a sedative for his tailor. ‘“‘The young blackguard will need the money more than old Moses,’’ said the bussar. Billiam had, to save appearances, compromised on the question of the vet- erinary surgeon. He was to study hard in order to become an ordinary surgeon and physician of humans. He was only to be allowed to come home once a year. He had agreed not to pester his father with requests for more money. In every | way Billiam was made to. feel that he to the far country of Montgomery street, south side, just where that notable thor- oughfare gives upon the greasy gloom of the Pleasance. How Billiam spent his living and vpon whom this history is intended co tell. Day by day the student of medicine scorned delights. Day and night were to him alike laborious, for Billiam, y" i: \ to 'y | Mot | ee — S- en PH ee = %4 o sae —_ >. a ~~ ——~—etaastenee: ae > ee : This Billiam burnished wn daily. all unknown to his father, was also tak- ing classes at the veterinary college upon a most ingenious system of alter- native trnantry. He attended his med- ica] professors upon such days as it was likely that cards would be called for. And in addition to this he procured a certain interim continuity in his studies by ‘‘getting a look at another fellow’s notes. ’’ Billiam’s ‘‘piggery’’ in Montgomery street, as it was called by the few of his comrades who had ever seen its se- crets, was something to wonder at. In- stead of taking a comfortable sitting room and bedroom in a well frequented and sanitary neighborhood Billiam en- tered into the tenancy of an entire suit of rooms upon the garret floor of one of | the high ‘‘lands’’ which are a distinc- tive feature of the old quarter of St. Leonards. Within this tumble down dwelling Billiam found himeelf in possession ot five large rooms, with wide windows and in some instances with skylights also. He was to pay at the modest rate of £8 in the half year for the lot. Bil- liam counted down his first quarter’s rent and went out to order a brass plate. This cost him 80 shillings, and he had to pay separately for the lettering, which said somewhat vaguely: ‘‘Consultation free. Every morning before 9 and every evening after 6.’’ This Billiam burnished up daily with the tail of his dress coat, which he had torn off for the purpose. ‘‘I don’t think I shall need it any more,’’ he said, ‘‘so I may as well use it.’’ So he used it. It did very well, being lined with silk. Thon Billiam double bolted the plate to the door, for he understood the ways of Mentgomery street, and sat down to study the monograph of Herr Dr. Pum- penstock of Vienna upon headaches. Billiam had three chairs to start with —two stiff backed chairs for clients and an easy chair, which in time of need could be leaned up against the wall. It was a deck chair and cost 2s. ll4gd. at a cheap sale of furniture in Nicholson street. Billiam felt that he might go that lezeth in luxury. (To be Continued.) —_ Easy to say, but how shall I do it? Tid sy mon sense way—keep your head cool, your feet warm and your blood rich "Then all your nerves, fre the wmuscles, tissues @> i ‘operly ‘ished oa yin properly nourished. - P § Hood’s Sarsaparilla petite, tones the stomach and gives strength. It is the people’s Spring fects more cures than al! others. Trne Blood CL re & Co., Lowell, Mass. In the only com- and pure by taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla. and organs will be builds up the systsm, creates an ap- Medicine, has a larger sale and ef- Sarsaparilla 7.0 ics Purifier. . re the favorite famil Hood’s Pills meen Price 25c. : 4A. McLEAN, QC. Weveeeveeee yl itil died BARRISTER, &c. Brown: LOCK, CHARLOTTETOWN, * ranueeeedgeceauseunsecccodeseeROes cviveceudscaddsdvedcieettedceiedtittce ce idee LS > HOM Inia and Geuton oe WHOLESOME TEA. : Pure tea, tea that is full of body and = we “a = 5 fragrance, tea that strengthens, that is = the tea which is packed in Tetley’s , Elephant Brand Packets. a Whether you buy the 4oc., 50c., 60¢., 70c. or $1.00 per lb. grades of Tetley’ s Ele- phant Brand Packets, you have the : Sold only in % and 1 Ib. air tight lead packets. AARNE RUBBERS & OVERSHOES ° RIGHT UP TO DATE " veddieeeey ‘ : eevedy 9 rr eT ree RR vi 4 fT) in _-= a, "Tl _— 5. [1 : 2s > es ne (T] @ A ANS 4 in style, quality, fit and popularity are the well known goods of THE CANADIAN RUBBER CO. «-.OF MONTREAL... Standard Never Lowered. ALL PDFALERS KEFP THEM. NOAA SA AA BAAS AARAASARSAAR A WHISKY DELICACY CF RARE QUALITY i A WEE DRAPPIE 0 PATTISONS SCOTCH WHISKY The cream of Highland Whiskies, carefully blended and bot- tled under under the supervision of the proprietors in H. M. Bond- ed Stores, Leith, Scotland. Guaranteed ten years old. shipment of this rare old Whisky, THE RROUGHT TO PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, Is now landing ex S. 8. Roumanian from Glasgow, for the holiday trade. SEND FOR A SAMPLE CASE. As the stock is limited, early orders will be mecessazy to pre- vent disappointment, VERY FINEST EVER = For Sale Bv All Licensed Vendors RUE EN EY & ¥¥¥¥ ¥UVUEEEY ee mee! et D. GORDON. SIXTUS McLELLAN YRS —w~ We are Tailors, some people know us as only Tailors, and some peopie know us atibeon!y Tailors, oa: betust as it may. We waat you to know that we eel! every thing men wear except shoes, or every thing they ought to wear; and thie time of the year we are giving special prices on every winter weight article in the store See Our White and Colored Shirts. Good clean fresh stoek, bought for spot cash. We don’t keep shirts long enough to get soiled, neither do we handle any worn -out samples. a good laundered white shirt for any price from 45¢ ty $2.50,and wads speciaily for a high clase furnishing trade. GORDON & McLELLAN Next door to WoMcKay olen CO CERES ST Fe SESS ES EE TS AAARAAARAARARARAARARA Feshion Leaders, Upper Queen St. coal eae _ _ om re a. anne Faas Meet ea en nm ny iy Clearance Sael Boots & Shoes For 10 days, all our stoek of Boots and Shoes, wil g» regardless of cost. Broken Lots at HALF PRICE, We want toclearout our entire stock, to make room for spring gocds. Come to us for shoe bargains. J.B. MACDONALD &GO., For Bast Bargains in Boots & Shoes, Wee Sm Pt Nec eng eg a Nee oa Henny Te eta dada scot 8 eee I shi a en wo ae ce ne es ae “ 2 ene atin. 9 en - : Sm o b ne enone rar enees . 5 cS cule ‘ cate cine lia enon napetagetcey te ete me ng tee iene at Saree tcc ‘5 sacigunnaatanllagdasntginttistae