~- : wT “> A] Ns ~ = re Ww ‘ Ss Ne “> Prine Edward Island 2 An! : : RB ‘ aoe. ate. ete, AZ, Ale, Ae, APS ‘ at, Alte NIG A 2 2 > - * u . “s ° we Y Me ec © Ax ~ “i ae] ae, es et | ed Fe ‘ * & ¥ Tc screted b 4 & é a ag yp Kk. Istamd A‘ 1} , LOuUCL¢ Th 4 en! ¥ » ana Y . offere OK ge + sping, Cow m . 5 aa ) 4) fond 4 is ~ pine M 5 ‘ - sug mide, . nn ( gi prs ‘ 3 ; ; of locat.ng graiuaces “Oo oo. \ ments P a 7 ; , 2 ; yONDAY, AUG. 20 aoe 8 ee 3 Se j for A, @ta S i ISAAC COXENHAM Priasipal and Proprietos pap ie — Ut. —oo7~—— farm For Sale At Auburn, Lot 36. This farm, the property of the late patrick Tynan, contains 80 acres of vala- gble land, 5) being under cultivation, and thebelance is covered with an excellent th of hardwood aed rails. ‘There are oa the premises besides a comfortable dueling nouse,» large pew baro and ech house, aleoa five thriving young gehard ; whilea never-failing stream of sater flows throagh the centre of the Tuis place is nicely situated in a pros- yrous community, and is also coovenient churches, schools and other practical nquirements, Any person wanting a gmfortable acd attractive bome would do wil w purchase; aod, moreover, it bw the advantage of being ready for oc. cpsncy atany time. The best of terms vil be given. For further perticniars ipply at the office of D C McLeod, Chare ittown, or to Mrs. P F Tynan, \3 North Tsicn Si. Somerville, Mace. wk. 4in, : * stot ee oe om @ — @™| ‘WANTED | — > > i Ayoung man with some ex- perience at carpenter’ work to learn the art of pattern making’ Apply to li | Brace Stewart and Ce. ; Founders, Fngineers, Machinists and Boiler Makers. Steam Nav. Co’s Wharf, Ch’town, P BF Phoae 125 ACARD B. MACNEILL. M. D. aving 30 years experience ia the bractice of his profession, may be con ulted on all branches of general medi ane including the speciaities. eand Residence—Prince Street door above Kindergarten Hall. Hours—g'to_ Ira m. rte 3 and 08 p. m. dy & wkly 3 mos Liberal-Gonservative Canavan tion, _—_-— TA convention of delegites for th: Electoral Dis‘rict of King’s (. will be hold in the Hull at Cardi- Mion Wedjnesday, Get. 17th, at 2 clock, p, m., for. : . wuinating a candidate to fili the meancy vaused by the death of the lamented Oyrus Shaw, Esq. ~=a=s <2 a @~ @] 2 @ aS i ha'rmen of polls will sse that a St of ten delegates be appointed. D.C MORSON, President. J. A. DEWAR, Secretary. Auction Sale. laluable Farm Property a! Black River, Lot 35. Will sel! at Public Auction at the hour of »P- m., on Thursday, the rst day of 1900, on the premises, farm, be- © property owned by the late William g 112 acres of goo land, go lumber fencing and scantling, situate in a ~ Settlement, near musse! mud, and con- ME O'clock OVembe ‘ Black Ri T, next ; ver, Let 35, that valuable Court, containin ts clear, Ritable for balance covered with to churches, schools, etc. Terms rther particulars see hand bills. fasy and made known at sale. JOHN COURT, Executor, Vets 5: w pd. be be av Nw 4 « PICTURESQUE =. NZ seas iY Gy 7 for the purpose of THEDAILY EXAMINBR CHARLOTTETOWN OCTOBER ove Finds A Way TAS seen _ BY JEANNETTE? r bOY., noth- ; t ia. lt been sed. I have made ita rule I told him would have in a man’s In quite sure I am on the ik a aoor u would not advise me to sell the old place, Mr. Matthews. I ight lease it for a ti 1 expect to nake my own home here. I expect to ring my wife here. I have never houghbt of any other place as home.” “Leased property runs to the devil fast enough, Tom. Broxton is a need- lessly large and expensive establish- ment for a solitary young gentleman. “But perhaps I shall not always be solitary, sir. Men marry, you know.” This with a wistful smile and a look that seemed to appeal fér comprehen- sion. But his guardian knew well how to harden his heart in the day of provo- cation. This attachment of the boy to the old homestead had come to him as a disagreeable surprise. He braced himself against the shock of it. “Yes, men do marry; boys, not often ~—sensible ones, that is. Matrimony is a remote factor in your affairs as yet, far more remote and uncertain than the depreciation of real estate in this county and the rapid decay of this property. But we will not agitate that point further at present.” “Thank you, sir,” said Tom grate- fully. He was only too glad not to put himself in fencing posture at once. His guardian resumed blandly. “I have devoted every moment of my rare leisure hours, Thomas, to mapping out a plan of travel for you. In point of fact, it is a resurrected map, one that your dear father and I drew to- gether. You will recognize his mar- ginal notes. We had planned to go over the very ground I want you to take and after a year of travel to lo- cate in some quiet German town for another year of supplemental study and reading. I was looking at the old map only last week. I am sure it would please my dear friend Rufus to have his son carry out our itinerary.” “Why did he not go—you, I mean?” said Tom, politely including the lawyer in his eager desire to at last hear something of his father’s boyish days. “Women got in the way. We both fell in love, I with your dear Aunt Lucetta, your father with your mother. me, oo; — ~~ ” So you see. my boy.” with a benignant smile, “how necessary it is for me to guard against a similar catastrophe in your case. Of course you would like to see a little something of the other side.” “Yes, sir, I suppose so, but”— “Of course you would,” said bis guardian, rising and taking his hat and riding whip from a chair near by. “You would not be half a man if you did not. But all that will keep until tomorrow. You are tired, and so am 1.” He held out his band cordially. ‘Ride over tomorrow to dinner. We cun devote the afternoon to your af- fairs.” And Tom promised that he would. ile followed his guardian to the front ‘our and closed it after him. ‘The iecessity for locking doors was an un- ecognized one im that rural and law biding iocality. lie walked back into the library and jung bimself down cn a sofa between Simon had tole ee Se Benn -invloaws Bloo = isorders are simply kidney disorders, The kidneys filter the blood of all that shouldn’t be there. The blood passes through the kid- neys every three minutes. Ifthe kidneys do their work no impurity or cause of disorder can remain in the circulation longer thanthat time. Therefore if your blood is out of order your kidneys have failed in their work. They are in need of stimulation, strengthening or doctoring. One medicine will do all three, the finest and most imitated blood medicine there ae Naa vpio th 4 enn 1 rigot, Loa’. by Je HQWALWORTH. annette H. Walworth. a lamp in Ss own | 2hOOM, Lie would Irhning i up \ etx ‘ ] pig . lit | iT WAT rv | 1 To } i CHSCs Wut USt DOW ne wa t d Lo ' eck over the whole of hat jolly evening which had ended all too soon for him. The se flowers filled the f that last waltz, had waltzed witb Ollie, He hummed it audibly. Iie was oblivious of time or loss of sleep. nt of dving lhe one he room. strains +) . haunted him. fie was in love, CHAPTER VII. A WARNING UNHEEDED. door of the Spillman cottage stood wide open. “Mother” Spillman sat just inside of it. Her tall figure, crowned with a mass of snowy white hair and the bright figured chintz of her big armchair, made a conspicuous spot of color visible from the public road. She had made Malvina locate her so that she could gmell the mignonette and keep an eye on the front gate. She had never yet brought herself to the point of admitting that ber small establishment could be successfully tmanaged without her personal super- vision. Miss Malvina had stepped up to the Matthews’ to see how Olivia was getting on after the unusual excite- ment and fatigue of the day before. She rather enjoyed “mothering” the pretty thing. She was not to be gone long, and before starting she extracted a promise from her mother that she would not leave the house. She quoted from the manual upon which ber own infant mind had been trained. “I know I can trust you, mother, for you never deceived me in all your life.” Then she had kissed the withered forehead and gone briskly down the front walk, quite unconscious of the remarkable tumult she had stirred be- neath the fresh white kerchief she had folded over her mother’s bosom when assisting her to dress that morning. When she was sure she was quite alone, the old woman developed unsus- pected capacity. She got up and made the tour of her small home experiment- ally, first with her cane and then with- out it. Presently she flung herself back into her chair with a petulant sigh. “She doesn’t know me. My daughter coes not know me. Isham used to say when I got my head turned in one di- rection there was no power on earth that could make me look in another. But I know I’ve got it turned at the right angle. I’m not called on to tell Malvina everything. I know what Mal- vina thinks, I know what they all think —the old woman has gone daft. As like as not, if I was to tell Malvina. she would go to Matthews the first one with apologies for ‘poor mother.’ It won't do. It shan’t be done. I wanted them for Tom, I wanted then for Hen- rietta and Rufus Broxton’s voy, and if he ean’t have them nobody shall. Where did I put them? What did I do vith them? Oh, my poor head! Are you really going to fail me when | have so much to do?” Tears flow sluggishly from the eyes ef old age. The fountain of that re- lief supply dries up quickly under the scorching fires of life’s passionate years. “Mother” Spillman pressed one corner of her white kerchief to her dim eyes. Her withered bosom rose and fell convulsively. She was sobbing, whether because she was deceiving Malvina systematically and purposely as to the condition of her sprained ankle and other matters or because she was not carrying out a cherished plan yery satisfactorily perhaps she scarce- ly knew herself. Lying back in her big chair, she lifted red lidded eyes to the ceiling and frowned. “If I could just leave Malvina entire- ly out of the question and think exclu- sively about him, | could straighten out this snarl] much quicker and easier. Some of these days I'll make it all right with her. Now I’ve got to work for him.” The papers which Jimmy Martin had found in the garden and brought to her bad disappeared again in the most mysterious manner. Either, she re- fiected mournfully, her memory was getting so treacherous that she could not recollect where she had originally hidden them to keep them from falling into Miss Malvina’s hands or else they had been stolen from her. She had three theories touching their disappearance, either of which was sufficient to fill her soul with bitter- ness—Malvina had found them and re- stored them to Horace Matthews with- out ever a word to her about the transaction, Jimmy Martin had been bought by the lawyer at an advance price over the one she had paid him to hold his tongue and had burgla- riously secured the package while she The Pao slept, or she haa Nerseil cureiessiy i- cluded them among some papers she had recently destroyed, “But | know them by heart. I could swear to every word in them if only some one would believe in me. If I'm failing so fast that I don’t know a legal 1 ‘ : ; cocument trom a pudding recipe if ’ 7 Men’s Gloves, Leather 30¢. 50ec. I’m grown such a witleee h, +} eclodhor rm ge% : ee ee bod) that @ iod re ike simmy Martin ean erren i tre i. ’ ++ 9 » 62 2 be little inpor- 2 the work 1 fF my own daueh- 1} os i li 1 OlUIMON Cause with a nv a ~ L1i¢ the sooner [ go r ?° : i h d { yet ! ta ‘ oint | { i i failu ? | ‘ i Ve hum — i i I | ele 1d \ ] ved him L he ‘ nt tly | ’ ha ‘ Ht \ ; ' al I } 'O}y ( ind \ie} ‘ ‘ aah ‘ ‘ i. { | it herself to do it. In tuatter of the iost papers, Malvina could never be ‘ought It in the right light. She ee ay ‘ ee id stoutly stood out for Mat Ws rigbts as Tom’s guardian and carried the documents when found to him. With all the strength of affection un- diluted by diffusion this stern old wo- man had loved the older generation of the Broxtons. Rufus Broxton, his wife and his beautiful sister, Lucetta, bad all Deen objects of her unstinted ad- miration and love. As they had stood by her in the time of her sorrow and suffering, so did she solemnly swear to herself that she would stand by the tast of tho nama (To be Continea. she Was Pale and Languid Too Nervous to Sisep, and Dally Crev. Woaker and Weaker—Dr. Chase's Nerve Food Restored Health and Vigour. Mrs. E. McLaughlin, 95 Parliamen: atreet, Toronto, states:—'* My daughte wus pale, weak, languid, and very nerv.- ous. Her appetite was poor and change able. She could searcely drag hersel: about the house, and her nerves wer: completely unstrung. She could no sleep for more than half an hour at ¢« me without starting up and crying ou: {n excitement. “As she was grewing weaker ane weaker I became alarmed, and obtain- ed a box of Dr. Chase's Nerve Foodé She used this treatment for. severa weeks, and from the first we noticed a decided improvement. Her appetite be came better, she gained in weight, th: colour returnea to her face, and sh« gradually became strong and well. ]} cannot say too much in favour of this wonderful treatment, since it has prov. en such a blessing to my daughter.” yr. Chase’s Nerve Food is a blood- builder and nerve vitalizer of most un- vsval merit. In pill form, 60c. a box at all deniers; or Edmanson, Bates an¢ Co., Toronto. Tomatoes for Chow Chow. Ripe Tomatoes Red Peppers: Smali Cucumbers Canli- flower. 3 White Portucle Pickling (nions, NOTICE—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 book orders to be filled next month (we may not have them th n) we have them now. A fall supply of ceiery sugar corn, yellow corn, cabbage, beets, carrots, parsnips, turnips, lettuce, squash pumpkin, green beans, butter beans, large red onions, large si:ver skin onions, etc, etc, at Here Yow ll Find =~-~-++=: g E 5 oe Gav's Market Stalls >. 66ne2 ©9250 602 o's 16 1900 nee ene Gloves ! Gloves ! Several Hundred Pairs Just Qoened Ae. Men’s Kid Gloves 75c, $1.00 $1.25, Men’s Mocho Gloves, $1 U0. $b.25, $1.50 Men’s Kid Fur Top, $1.25 $1.50. Men’s Dogskin Fur foo 40c, $1.25, Men's Buckskin (special) $2.00. Men’s Sarnac 85c $1.50. Men’s Astrakan driving g'oves $1.50, Also a large line of leather mitte. lined and unlined, from 35e a pair up. S| he y a4: . , . Boy's Gloves ani Mitts in zreat variety rT b c o/ This way tor your gloves at " J. DL MACDONALD = (Q Leaders in low prices, The undersig ned offers for sale taa bargain the following: One 40-Horse Power Engine and Boiler. 14 Driving‘Pulleys with Shaft and Belting. One Rip Saw and bench with‘carriage. One 30 in. Saw. One 24 in."Planer—One set hoisting blocks, One Matching ard Moulding Machine, Fifty-one Moulding Knives, One Band Saw complete. One Buzz Pianer. One Swing Saw complete. One ,Turning Lathe and Shaft - One Vice. Two Emery Wheels—One Jiz Siw. Three Circular Saws and tables. All in first-class order. MATTHEW & MCLEAN Direct Importers of Bulbs, Seeds, Books, etc. ‘Happy Thought. IN ALL THE WORLD no causa of worry so constant, so insistent, so widespread as inferior cooking apparatus. WHAT WOMAN can help worrying che result of whose sxill and care is “Happy damaged or destroyed by an inferior Range. DEAL FAIRLY by your household and yourself—install Buck’s Thought” Pange in your kitchen and if you can’t quit worrying entirely your wife will, blood relation of the Thought.” The worry fiend hoids sway supreme in many kitchens, He is a dyspepsia of like ilk, Banish them, buy a “Happy The manufacturers of the “Happy Thought” are doing your culinary worry- ing for you for all time—take advantage of it. They have worried over ani have perfected every detail of Range construc tion, which though not a!ways apparent on the surface, is most important in resu'ts, Planned like an engine, fitted like a watch, a; durable as the hills, the “Happy ‘Lhought” is ever in the leadjand there it will remain until perfection meets its match. DON’T WORRY! Use Buck's “ Happy Thought” Range ! For sale by Simon w. Crabbe. Walker‘s Oorner, Stoves and Hardware. Charlottetown, Oct. Ist, 1900, aa0oOo But we don’t like tu use the word. SoSmany ad- vertisers use it and don’t meau :t, Webster says, “a gainful transaction”—that’s how we mean it—a gainful transaction for our customers. We would like you to call and satisfy yourself trat what we say ‘is true) ohn Newson we ews OSOS SOSIS 9S AHOHVEOSA a : : »;@OD « seta SOM SSS! SHOE 6Bes BHO F1DOD s f SS sce mes oracles ll? tn oe a ee ee ee gaa ene ese Seg Sat See ape in SRE AES Saliere a SNARE cama one - Se Ne AIS PE ON LE NEE itn, gn an eae y ian someon a SS a Ne eer ges ae <a" Aeon, ot yor SCI: NE SOONER BO nage me mesos RS Se rpg om He 2