en | A a Is the baby too thin? Does he increase too slow- ly in weight? Are you in constant fear he will be ill? Then give him more flesh, Give him more power to resist disease. He certainly needs a fat-forming food. Scott’s Emulsion is just that food. It will make the baby plump; the weight; bring color to the Increase cheeks, and prosperity to the whole body. Thin children ake to it as naturally as they do to their mii': Soc. and $1.00, a’! druggists, SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, Toronta EVENING GLASSES: For Ycu Will be opened on the 16th inst., atthe Charlottetown Busin-s- College and | Writing Academy, where instructions will | be given in Book- Keeping, Business Pract cc, Correspondence, Business Penman- | ebip, Practical Arithmetic, Sborthand and Typewriting. Classes ogen from 7 30 to 930 p. m. | Five sessions per week.- Enter a} any | time but NOW ie the best. : Students may study any branches de~ sired. Individual instructions given by the following teacherr:—J Harry Will iams (Penmanship); Wm Moran, Licensed Teacber of Phonograpby; A C McMillan, (Licensed). 4. B. MILLER, Principal Apply at College for particulars. —_ ——— steetitineettitt PLANT LINE. EXCURSIONS CHARLOTTETOWN TO BOSTON AND RETURN FOR $11.00 Good for 30 Days. Commencing Oct 3:1, the well known §.S. Halifax leaves Charlottetown every Tuesday nt nocn for Boston, via Hawkes- bury and Halifax. From Halifax—Every Wednesday at 11 pm. Passengers ticketed via Pictou on Wednesdays. From Boston every Saturday st noon Tickets for sale at Sietions on P Railway. For tickete, rates on freight an al] information apply H L CHIPMAN, Supt, Halifax. ret Bris Lit, SUAP MAKERS W W CLARKE, Agent -_-— ~et = =] @ 2 A a =e 8 2 oe --A ROYAL TRIO- Sunlight and Lifebuoy’ —SOAPS und = twilet The best laundry soaps made in the world, guaranteed to be absolutely pure. “MONKEY BRAND” which cannot be equalled as a scour— ng aud polishing soap. TRY SOME GZ All are 5e large twin bar —_———_—_— In re Estate ot Heubin Tuplin, of Kensington, deceased oe oe. All persons having any demand upon the ertate of the abcve named deceased, are hereby required io eahibit the seme duly attested, as by low required, at the office of Charles R Smallwood, Solicitor, Charlottetown, within one yearfrom the date of thie advertiemeat. Dated this 2nd day of September, A. D. 89y. | ‘7 vr Ciii wihY iAdAMINER, st ee ee ° “ s \ ' t ‘id ‘ ‘ iuou WHEN THE WILN GOOSE CRIES. it.” | rT Ie , ’ aba '? : . “Don't be disa reeahble The north wind bends the rushes till they kiss | “I'm not.” 7 , the white « ved lal lon i ae wa Parnes You § { nit wi qa iake, s ; | eddie Is Very neef ‘ } 1 ‘ And through the brown tipped cattails, making ; es dia ; ‘ , w, weird music, sighs: aa Le ¢« Nm T) l ting badger steals ak ng the shore where } fei I Pope ‘. hi love > Lig \V »>no us ot all wavelets break, ) RC au And long black shadows swift are creep | “I don’t betieve you.” | “ : 7 when the wild goose cries. | Honor brie} I com! % “ee and sat holt om what “a Phe air fs filled with snowy flakes that fly | é UsaNt : ; . when he was in | ‘ _ the breeze, ae Al is 5 A ka And low hung clouds are scurrying across the always trust him when he made that af gy my & . firmation. The lazy n to some marsh’s §& Itering “Who is sh rushes flees, ee te I] you presently ” And early morn’s chill air is stinging when % the wild goose cries. ad speed The swift winged canvasback and red! ) ? re ; WwW ’ ; T} o nt « n g muskrat t his reed home hunter crouches low within his grass ; liry ; Nor moves nor speaks—scarce breathing—wher the wild g cries. Far out across the distant hills the noble quarry Wir rs, eir carefui flight is markecé by anxious, straining eyes; Hotly coursing blood a tremor to the hunter brings; Steady now! There’s need of coolness, when ‘ the wild goose cries, —Colorado Springs Gazette. + Six Months Was Set For His + ; Trial, but This Was Short- ened a Little. ab oprrioefcnfon joc jcefon fen foc foe ee [en lan foe loe colon oe lee oofoofoe leo loelooie Teddie had sighed six times in five min- utes, so I had to ask him what was the matter. “The fact “T’m in love.” “Again?” “The other times I wasn’t—not really.” | “Teddy Boyd,” I said severely, “I have often told you that you are a silly boy!”’ He is my cousin and not two years old- er than I am, so | can speak plainly to | him. “You’re always down on a fellow.’ “If I’m ‘down’ on you, why do you al- | Ways come to me with your ridiculous | love affairs?” “IT suppose I can smoke a cigarette?” he asked. “I suppose you can. If it is a mild one, it probably won’t hurt you. How many does this make in the last six months?” “Cigarettes?” “Objects of adoration.” “The others weren't. ” er +9 a is, Maisie,” he confessed, , I only fancied— “Indeed you have a short memory. Do you remember what you told me about ! Katty Norrington? She was the first great passion, I believe?’ “Oh, well’— “Her hair was like sunset, wasn’t it? I call it red. Her eyes’— “I’m going!” he announced savagely. “Very well.” I composed myself on the sofa. “Goodby!” He went out, slam- ming the door. “Teddie!” I called. ing rather sulky. “Would you mind giving me the book off the piano before you go?” He brought it ungraciously. “There’s a good boy.” He made for the door again. ‘‘And—Teddie!” “Well?” he growled. “Iindly close the door gently. are such things as nerves.” “I'd like to—shake you!” he said sayv- agely. “You daren’t.””. He did—not very hard. “You horrid, spiteful boy!’ I cried in- dignantly. “You aggravate a fellow so,’’ he ex- plained. I turned my face away and pretended to be angry. “Please go,” 1 said loftily. He didn’t. “The truth is,” he avowed, “it is very serious this time.”” He sat down aga‘n. He did look more solenin than usual. He returned, look- There | <—* - Some people in the world persist in clinging to old methods. There are men who still use a forked stick in place of a modern plow. There are also men, who, when they are troubled with a disordered | able. stomach or liver, resort to the old-fashioned violent remedies that rack and rend the whol: body, and while they give temporary relief in the long run do the entire system a great amount of harm. Modern science has discovered remedies infinitely superior to these old-fashioned drugs, that do their work by promoting the matural processes of excretion and secre- tion and gently correcting all circulatory disturbz.nces. When a man feels generally out of sorts, when he loses sleep at night, when he gets up headachey and with a bad taste in his mouth in the morning, when he, feels dull and lethargic all day, when his” appetite is poor and his food distresses; him, when work comes hard and recreation may not believe it, is a pretty sick man. He is on the road to consumption, nervous prostration, malaria, or some serious blood disease. In cases of this description a man should resort at once to Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. It is the best medicine for a weak stomach, impaired digestion and disordered liver. It is the great blood- maker and purifier, flesh-builder and nerve tonic. It cures 98 per cent, of all cases of consumption, bronchitis, lingering coughs and kindred ailments. Thousands have testified to its marvelous merits. It is a modem, scientific medicine that aids without goading nature, and that has stood the test for thirty years. Medicine dealers JAMES TUPUIN, R R FITZGERALD, 8 W BODD, Executore. sell it. | Dr. Pierce’s Pellets cure constipation. is an impossibility, that man, though he’, “What is she like? he Deautiful, or course ? “T cal! her awfully pretty.” “No doubt. Dark or fai: ?” 60 TK) vs ood ” Ahvé . aus you. "Pail or short ?’’ “Oh—about medium.” ‘Moderation is excellent in all things,” { agreed. color are her eyes? “Well—er—I don’t know what color you'd call them—hazel or brown or—what color do you call yours?” “I call them brown. You told me they were a few but” — “I didn’t mean it,’”’ he hastened to dis- claim. “They are very charming eyes reaily, hers—and yours.” “T am delighted to meet with your ap- proval. I hope she has also a pretty mouth like mine.” “If you refer to what I said last Christ- mas ?”’ “When you were old enough to know better,” I remarked severely. It was in connection with the mistletoe. He in- sinuated that my mouth was large. I did not agree with him. “I was only joking, of course,” he ex- plained. “I don’t like a woman’s mouth to be too small.” “She has not a rosebud mouth, then?” “Oh—er—medium, you know. I don’t dissect her. Taking her altogether, she’s the prettiest girl I’ve ever seen.” “So,” I said, “were the others.” “The others,” he vowed, “were not worth mentioning in comparison with her. This time I’m in earnest, Maisie~ dreadfully in earnest.’”’ “I—I'm rather sorry, Teddie,” 1 con- fessed somewhat woefully. “It’s very selfish of me, but you’ve made yoursel* so useful lately’— “Have | really? I’m awfully glad. I was afraid perhaps I’d been rather a nui- sance, coming here so much.” “Of course you have?” “Then how—I don’t see”’— he began, “You area silly boy!” I said. He is. We were silent for a few minutes, Then I thought I’d been rather disagree- So, 1 smiled pleasantly. “You are a good boy all the same,” I said. ‘‘Now tell me her name.” He caught hold of my wrists so sud- [am “medium” myself. “\W hat ”° ‘nondescript’ weeks ago, denly that I jumped. “Do you mean to say that you don't know?’ he blurted out. “Don’t I come to see you two or three times a day? Don’t I do every: thing you tell me to? Don’t I’— “Oh, Teddie,” 1 cried, “How can you pe so foolish! I’ve a great mind to be very angry.” “Angry, Maisie!” “What business have you to speak te me like this when you don’t know your own mind for five minutes? The other girls”— “They Maisie.” “You thought so then.” “No, { didn’t. Why, I often told you that I should never get a sweetheart h&lf so nice as my ‘little sister.’ Now didn’t I?’ I nodded slowly. ‘Only it never oc- curred to me that I was in love with y u.” “It doesn’t occur to me that I am in fove with you.” “Oh, Maisie, try!” “You are too changeable, afraid.”’ “Tl month.” “A year?’ He looked very miserable. “If you won't let me off with less. You won't flirt with other fellows, will you, Maisie?”. “T never flirt,” I stated, with surprise. “Oh, look here’— “Well, nothing to speak of,” I said has- tily. “And if I choose, why shouldn’t 1?” “Becanse—you know!” He looked at me as if he was really in earnest. I think 1 rather hoped that he was upon the whole. “Won’t you promise?” he plead- ed. “Don’t you like me a little bit?” “1 like you a great deal, Teddie. No, no! You mustn’t—l won't have it, Teddie —I mean it!” 1 pushed him away and stood up. “But if you like me’— “As a big brother’— “Nothing more?” He put his great hand on my shoulder and locked dowp at me. He is rather good looking. “I’m afraid, Teddie,” I said, “we've been brother and sister so long. Besides, you'd get tired of me ina fortnight.” “You are not the sort of girl to let a fellow get tired of you.” “Possibly,” 1 said, “I might prefer not to have to keep a lover by my own exer- tions.” He was silent for a long time. He looked so miserable that I was quite sorry for him. “Don’t you think it possible for a fel- low to have been in love with a gir) swhom he met constantly without know- ing it?” he’ asked. ah “Ve-es,” 1 admitted. “I suppose It 1s. But—Teddie!” I laid my hand on his arm. “Yes, Maisie?” “It is also possible for him to fancy that he is in love with her when he isn’t.” “I’m as sure as’’— “You were about the other girls!” He hung his head. “Dear old boy, you've been the best of fellows to me always; but don’t you think you ought to go away for a time and see if you do not change your mind, before you speak to me like this? Wouldn’t it be fairer to me?” “I'll go to Uncle Jack’s tonight,” he said, impulsively. ‘“He’s been expecting me for a long time. And I'll stay as long as you like.” I smiled a little. “Six months?’ He pulled his mus tache. “It’s an age, but”— He waited for me weren’t half as nice as you, I shook my head. I should be laughed—‘“‘a wait a week’’—I Ee CHARLOTTETOWN, OCTOB?R 24 18 +y peers oe to offer a reauction, DUT 1 did not. “TT go." “Thank you, Teddie.” I gave him my hand to shake, and he kissed it—the silly fellow, “I shan’t come back till the six months are up,” he vowed, “unless you send for me,” “I am not likely to do that,” I said “You'll let me write to you?” “I can’t prevent you.” “Do you want to?’ IL laughed. “No.” He laughed too. “You'll write back?” “Well—once a week.” “And won’t flirt with any one?” “I shan’t promise any such thing,” I eald determinedly. I didn’t then, but in the evening before he went he seemed SO anxious that I had to promise some- thing of the sort. Also he persuaded me to kiss him just once—it was as a cousin. | impressed upon him. Next day he wrote to me. It was very nice letter and a very long one. shouldn’t have thought could writ like it. He inclosed some verses. | should believe that he was in earnest when he broke ovt in poetry, he said. This was the “poetry?” IN LOVE. Since Maisie kissed me all the earth Has seemed a-flood with laughter; The sun and moon run mad with mirth The stars go twinkling after. we C2 he The wee birds’ eyes are opened wide, > . Because they saw her do it; The flowers smile a sly aside, “In love, of course; we knew it!’® fhe merry wind comes whispering, The humming bees all yellow, And song birds sing and church bells ring, “Oh, lucky, lucky fellow!” Dear Maisie smiles and blushes, thoug> She said ’twas as a cousin; {f cousins kiss their cousins so, Next time I'll take a dozen. > } No words to say have I today, } I’m thinking, thinking, thinking; Love’s rosy wine last night was mine, And mem’ry still is drinking. ‘ The moon, the earth, the stars and sua Are full of life and laughter; They know, when love’s first kiss is won, A thousand follow after. his is what I wrote back: My Dear Teddie: You are wrong in saying that you cannot write a nice letter. You are wrong in supposing that your verses are ‘‘poetry.”’ You are wrong about the sun, and the moon, and the rest of the things. You are wrong in supposing that it was a» anything but a cousin. You are wrong in thinking that I blush. You are dreadfully wrong about the thousand You are probably wrong about being in earnest. You are wrong in supposing that I shall let you come back before the time. You are wrong in saying that you don’t believe that 1 care for you a bit. At the bottom of your conceited mind you believe that I adore you. You are wrong in that. Take care of your old self and be a good boy. Your affectionate cousin, MAIsiE. P. S.—You are in saying that no one misses you. I’m sure auntie does. You ought to come home every week to see your mother. Of course you must not come near me. wrong The ridiculous fellow returned the next day and came straight to me.—Madam. Cause of Stage Fright. An expert has written to explain that stage fright really comes from a disor- dered stomach. He argues from this fact that persons meditating public ap- pearance should be careful of their diet nod adhere to regular habits. en The Danger of PILES Too frequently overlooked, Dr. Chase’s Ointment a Prompt and Positive Cure. The suffering caused by the intense itching and burning sensations of piles is only one of the horrors of this disease, for there is always great danger of piles developing into fistula, one of the most disgusting diseases imaginable, Even the great danger and expense of an operation are preferable to running the risk of contracting this most loathsome of diseases. But there is no necessity for a surgical opera- tion for piles. Dr. Chase’s Ointinent is guaranteed to cure any case of piles, no matter of how long standing, or how aggravated the case may be, so long as piles have not become fistula, It is only by rare chance that internal treat- ment will cure piles. But it matters not from what cause they arise, Dr. Chase's Ointment will at once stop the itching and burning, and soun effect a perfect cure. You can use Dr. Chase’s Ointment with fullest assurance that what has cured scores of thousands of cases of piles will cure you, For sale by all dealers, or kdmanson, Bates & Co., Toronts. THE QUESTION IS OFTEN ASKED, HOW JS THE ASCENDENCY OF ROYAL OAK SOAP accounted for? The answer is simple enough, viz:— Be- cause there is none equal to it tor intrinsic merits, firm ness, purity, combined with great lasting and cleansing pro- perties Send for premium list. J, D. LAPTHORN & OO, om pe : = OSE CARD. Cait W. F. H. GARVELL, B. A. BARRISTER-AT-LAW * ae Bank of Nova Scotia Building 8 . rr} CHARLOTTETOWN. TH tt Telephone No 170 Lc fe z t Po Money to Loan. SMa | — Se Because Mre Housewile sed to Wort } Because the grocery mon cy did not go far} enough on Saiurday night NOW SHE DOES NOT WORRY _ Because she gets so much for the same tmoney} and such good groceries at Meee oo wee QUEEN STREET T fe 3 4. » key re Beiter, more beautiful and more economical That’s why our lietallic Ceilings and Walls ere being used by pro; {fsive jp cople all over the country You can choose from :{ sgns suitable for any room of any |, mild- ing, with Borders, mouldin 4\4 ete. to match—they are easily applied —easily cleaned—and strictly fire proof and sanitary, giving per- manent beauty, points no other style cf finish can cfler. eel Prices are moderate—if you'd like an estim- ate mail us an outline showing the shape and and measurements of your walls and ceilings. METALLIC ROOFING CO. Limited Manuracturers, TORONTO. —— TROUBLED WITH BAD—— . Pile IF $0 CALL AT ——a s> D. A- BRUCE'S And you will be cured, Cousultation free. Victoria Row, Opposite Post Office a ee ————$—$—$$$—$—S_§— — is JFonveceenea FOUR INTERESTING ~2« e RHINGS The Transvaal War The Big Bazaar The Yacht Race The Highland Range Wejcan tell you all abcut the last, | PENNELL axo CHANDLER Great rush at P MON No More War Swords will be beaten into plovgh shares later on; bui ck. armers do not need to wait till the “ Peace! Conference” ic over, before buying their plough +hares, as they can do so at orce, by calling at tre Masonic Temple Store, where the share, or other p'ough extras can be had for Jess money, and setter than any imported. Prove this at once, by trying mr hae sean ee > ce. A. PEACLEAN MANOFACTURER Of ALL KINDS OF DAIRY & FARM MACHINERY, Esdale Foundry and mechinery Depot. Office,Masanic Temple, Charlottetown, P, EK. SP eNOS een aot ee pene: a chctibenapentontetcniadediastbn ale et ss Wk