“Kove Finds A Wa THEDAILY_EXAMINBR CHARLOTTETOWN OCTOBER 1; 1990 H. WALWORTH. ‘ v7 aol : Q { } a Copyright, 1 99, by Jeannette H. VW alworth. ee ee Then he stag lintel to keep sered aid held fast by the himself from falling. Bending over the dead man’s study table was a tall, shadowy form in White. The sound of seattering loose ae * © ¥ NG . " \ a ' ‘A i] wai pe gna val (stati — . mS Oe 3 M5 BY JEANNE T | sot all Book “aN c ag at > av sted < | i ei. LL, tS Ap imetrare' anil i“ | ab rsere" a" . teas i Ns : fet ourisls. we i 3 id RN NEG Se: ey © } year os Ac av ASP AS Ae A i i , og guortsT0W | —_——__ : LOAU Wes : p AgaRLUt | ~~ ane A ' ay 3 r ; al he | Continued,) ; ad ¢ saad : | - iy a oo. = wr ' *T)0 ne house. be made A wey rm \I kK) ) : remote corner of the LOCAL A L) . i biic ot . 9 iid HL knew he shoul j in } i. ‘ A rand his wife liv wou'd Bani Departure of Traivs; .. and Steamers. a paves for the West..-vve 8 35 am.! ieee from the og 950 p m. . r the an — ‘ * 410 pm. a. ¢ the e anda 600 p m. goinion arrives from "™{10 55 am. Pid peameowonnes . th Bein ere ene 225 pmo. Coammecces*®? 7 05 . es for the @ast...-+ es from the es 9 10am. ; 3 for the poetics eee on ccovsevee 3 00 P Ms ie aemeeccceosrr® ee has! ives from the iC - oT; bee socetioes p mo. a PRINCESS. yery morniog —.... peece so #'90 a| m vm Pictou every even- ri _... bo ig weccsvese © OU DP WBe ZA 1, GRANDE DUCHESSE. from Boston and Halifax \d Mondav....-- seseseee 12D mM. a ie Boston and Halifax aay Wednesday ee g HALIFAX. oF eis from Boston and Halifax } : . ever Thursday pectereee S8e888008 ‘ p m- ‘ava for Halitax and Boston weg Friday... seeereeeee see lpm. CAMPANA. rireefrom Montreal and Que- bec every alternate Friday.... Mares for Quebec and Montreal 7 ‘xe following Monday evening. CITY OF GHENT. es from Halifax every Thursday aftern000 .......00 .. Maes for Halifax every Friday 10a m. WE yangUas CARTIER. i for Orwell Tuezdays, im "elnesdavs, Tbursdays....... ,pm ma tor Crapaud every F'r:- i iletietk no ocee steeec® 3p Tal. ave for Crapaud every Satar- MEIEaiads wensscreccesccce 2D We FERRY BOATS. dilstorough”~—Leayes Ferry Wharf for thport every half hour. ditport”—Runs up Eas. utiver everv Theslay, lesving at 4.30 a m, and 3 Pmlocal. Kuns up West River every a leaving at 5.30 am,aeni 4pm Biin”—Leaves for Rocky Point daily at 1,8.30, 9.30, 11, am ; 1, 2, 4,5 30. pm, heal time, Returniog, leaves Rocky Point a 8,9, 30, 1130 a. m.; 1.30, 3, 430.6 p.m. local time. Sundavs leaves M Rocky Point at 9a m, 12.45,82, 4 P@. Returning, leaves Rocky , Point ® 10am; 1.15, 3, 5, p m. a a cl WANTED | meni) d ced Ayoung man with some ex- y Perence at Carpenter workx to em the art of pittern making Apply to Tress Stewart and Co. und a, ai i Pounders, Rogineers, Machinists : fod Boiler Makerea. Steam Nav. Co’s Wharf, Ch’'town, PEF Phone 125 S22. oe oe J ee ACARD a . E . tice of his profession, may be con ne on all branches of genera! medi neluding the speciaities. Pid g “B 0or akove Kindergarten Hall. Ou 8pm, dy & wkly 3 mos } ‘ en eee a G @ , MACNEILL, M. D., aving 30 years experience in the Ce and Residence—Prince Street T—9 to’ 11 a. m. 1 te 3 and a HUrections foronpnenineg ne the rooms nnd elip Chat must do for toe e : vy way of keeping his prol o Olin ik . harassed, unhappy; irever befell, the shadows thr? . we wded thiek and fas: ‘ own resolute head should nor nfotd make Olivin banpy wars the law of his life, the muainspring ot bis every action, bis one earthly de s, t care taker and his wife bhnad ‘tosed their cottage for the pight and preparing to retire when pis ek startled them. He heard them CW e bolt with reluctant caution to nuswer his summons, "What Not ubed thus early, St mo 7 just abed, sir, but since the ~ » gone Jess and me are jus as willl: as oot to lock fp eart and shut things out. It be awful tom some al unsome here now. Mr \! $4 unless things brigtiten | » \ » Mr. fom gets through sclpool i doubt if Jess and me cun bold un at this Ainl thep Mr. AMiatthews fold Simon row ! was iz to break the gloom spell by a gnrden party on his dangb ters 2nd Simon espoused bis enuuse cindiv Broxton Hall used to be y house. back the oid oe ¢? ree t Porticver f ; ' Al bab be my iO sPlLaliiag : SOMICUICSS, & Mr. Matthews } opening the bouse, clipping the cedars, ete. When he turned away, be heard . the old mar promptly bolt the door weanin, and as the wooden sbuiters were of solid boards the little cottage | immediately offered but a dark, square bulk for observation. He returned as be bad come. Making the circuit of the | house from rear to front, by the side er which Colonel Broxton’s study was located, involuntarily he glauced up- | ward at the closed shutters, then stirt- ed and stood still, wondering. A faint light. so faint that it might have been a phosphorescent glimmer, shone through the slats of the dark green shutters. Whatever else his shortcomings, physical cowardice was hot among them. Some one was in the Broxton house and in the colonel’s study. To go back He would uot come. upon nls own address and his ownb nerve. Stealing voiselessly to the front of the house, the lawyer mounted the low front and tried the front handle softly. It was locked. With a strong grip he next seized one of the shutters of the long French windows that opened from the parlor to the ve- steps door randa floor. It yielded readily. So did the sas Hie slipped his shoes from his fect and sped with swift noiselesstess cross the ball. The study was at the - of the house. It connected with the room in the parlor suit by the doors azed with dead rlazed i ground giass. Through the dim glass of these doors the pale phosphorescent gleam came stendily. He would eatch the thief red handed. His hands were planted firm- ly on the silver doorknobs. He sent the sliding doors gliding noiselessly in their grooves with a resolute touch. a BRIGHT’S {JISEASE is the deadliest and most painful malady to which mankind is subject. Dodd’s Kidney Pills will cure any case of Bright’s Disease. They have never failed in one singlecase. They are the only remedy that ever has cured it, and they are the only remedy that can. There are imitations of Dodd's Kidney Pills—pill, box and name—but imita- tions are dangerous. The original and only genuine cure for Bright’s Disease is DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS Dodd's Kidney Pills are fifty cents a box at all druggists. | for Simon would be useless. | He must depend | paper fell on his ears with a ghostly rustle. He saw a restless hand three times distinctly. In a sighing whisper he heard the words, “Lost, lost, lost!” all this in a second of time. The night wind swept through the open front window. The pale light was suddenly extinguished. The house lay in utter darkness. <A faint, slow movement, like the rustle of garments, came near- er to the terror palsied man, passed by him, died away entirely. Hiow long he staid there be never could have told, nor how he ever grop- ed his way back to the spot where he had left his shoes and from there to his horse. Once in the saddle, with the cold night air fanning his cheeks, his cour- age came back and witu it a flood of self contempt. “Bah! Am [ in my dotage? he cried angrily. ‘Tomorrow I will investigate this ghostly trickery and run the trick- ster to earth.” But he slept very little that night, nor did he run that ghostly “trickster” to earth on the morrow nor the next day nor any day thereafter. CHAPTER V. PREPARING FOR THE FETE. Mandeville confessedly never saw its like, never expected to see its like again. There were those in that censerva- tive village who flatly maintained that such magnificence was entirely out of place. They were sure history never | recorded a greater ado made over the gave his orders about ; coronation of royalty or the installa- tion of presidents. After all, Mandeville was only Man- deville, and she in whose honor the world had just been turned upside | down was nobody but little Ollie Mat- | thews, who had grown up among them with no particular claim to uni- versal homage, a nice enough girl, pretty, amiable, social, and all that, but “such doings over her coming of age was just nothing short of nonsensical.” Mandeville possessed, among its an- tiquities, those who remembered the very day when Horace Matthews first put foot in Mandeville, the only son of a poor widow music teacher whom Ru- fus Broxton’s father befriended as he always befriended the needy ones of the earth. The antiquities shook their hoary heads and groaned iuscrutably, “And look at him now!” Such a “coming out party” had never been dreamed of in the wildest fancies of the most imaginative Mandevillian. “Coming out party” had sense and sound of its own. It meant what it sounded like. “Fete champetre” was a combination of the alien and the in- comprelensible. One language was more than sufiicient for al} of Mande- ville’s philological necessities. it frowned down all others. 2ut there was vo disposition to frown down the glittering fact that from fu- uvereal gloom to dazzling hilarity the old Broxton place had passed without the saving grace of an entr’acte—such a painting of fences, and trimming of long neglected shrubbery, and string- ing of lanterns, and planting of pallid statuary that rather made some of the oldest ladies blink with amazement, and grouping of tubbed exotics, and waxing of floors for giddy feet, and eartlonds of crockery and gi anda musie in blue breeches with lown their legs, and—and— oh e was absolutely breathless with excitement. There were those who said it was a good thing for the iSs, band of town, because it gave “jobs” to so many idlers. Miss Greentield, whose dressmaking had been found good enough for Mrs. Colonel Broxton and for this very Miss Matthews’ mother, didn’t see where the good of the town was beitig consulted when nobody this side of New York could make a good enough dress for the coming out heir- ess. That was what they called her, “the heiress,” and Lawyer Matthews’ reckless expenditure of money on the coming fete warranted any amount of wildness in the matter of nomencla- ture and conjecture. Miss Malvina had been retained as general superintendent of the whole magnificent business. She was to act as Miss Matthews’ chaperon on the oe- casion. She had been privileged to se- lect the very sample the gown had been made from, all of which invested her with an importance she could never | otherwise have achieved. most popular resort in the neighbor- hood. The few who had been bidden ‘and the many who only expected to en- | joy the fete through the medium of their ears al! found urgent eall to the cottage, The Spillman cottage became the | << ee Ne y: te eee i Soren Ces ee eee ee So “Mother” Spillman’s cottage was yi tually, on the Broxton grounds. It hud originally been built for the por- : : te ters todas se to Broxton Hall by a leh eo Snerliehma a wealthy Englishman, who, having in- ed largely in some tile factories on this side, fancied he should like to live in ek { proximity to them. It was a fancy that died in its early if tI ll that ; ed j Oo the ‘ ( py l ‘ yh nel bi X- Bs ler he same Ce "| Mosushman returned to tl vy where porters and porters’ lode a genteel necessity, and | Ley ( Seq] up ham Spillman was asp lla) “nal 2? ° cailed to preach and to seach in the : ier) s] yl) : : ae | ° neighborhood of Mandeville. the por- Fa lars s his wre ’ ter’s lodge lad been donated by Lom's rrancdfatrher Parr ¢ aie ie ie é : » zrandfather for a parsonage, When the Rev. Isham died, full of years and honor, it was decided that bis venera- ble widow should live on in the pretty cottage and call it hers. The womankind of the Broxton fam- ily and of the Spillman had always been the best of friends, and now that there Was ho wWomankind left in the Broxton family Miss Malvina and her mother felt a hovering sort of interest in the lonely boy tant family in the county. {it was nat- ural that Miss Malvina should have a hand in things connected with Broxton Ha!1. ) ’s. Spillman held that nothing short of Tom’s own marriage would have warranted such “a turning upside down of things,” adding indignantly, “I suppose all Mrs. Broxton’s silver and china will be used just like it was their own.” Miss Malvina sounded a placating note. “Oh, that’s all right, mother. Ollie wrote to Tom that she wanted to have her birthday celebration on his grounds, and he wrote back he wuu‘d be only too glad to have her chase the shadows out of the old house, to use everything as freely as if it was her own.” ; (To be Contined. <_ en Trouble in The Stomach Which Doctors Failed to Remove, Cured by Less Than Two Boxes of Or, Chase's Kidney-Liver Pilis. The experience of Mr. Blackwell is tr to that of many sufferers with chronic indigestion. Stomach medicines will seldom really cure indigesti:ea. The kidneys and liver must be set right, stilt and the bowels made regular ane active. Mr. Joseph Blackwell, Holmesville, Cnt., says :-—‘‘'I cerived more benefit irom the use ef Dr. Chase’s Kidney- Liver Pills then from any other medi- cine I ever took, and can highly re- commend tnaem for stomach troubles, I was in a terrible state and could hardly work at my trade. I tried most every kind of medicine and doctors, until I was tired doctoring, and be- fore I used one box of Dr. Chase’s Kid- ney-Liver Pills I could see that they were helping me, and after taking a box and a half, found that I was cured.” Nearly every family on the continent has used Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills or heard of the remarkable cures they have effected. One pill @ dose, 25c ® box, at all dealers, or Bde manson, Bates and Co., Toronto Tomatoes for Uhow Chow, Ripe Tomatoes Red Peppers. Smali Cucumbers Cauli- flower. White Portucle (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 beok orders to be filled next month (we may not have them then) we have them now. Pickling 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 sl.ver skin oaions, etc, etc, at ‘Gay's Market Stalls representative of ! what had once been the most impor- | OVES ! Several Hundred Pairs Just Goened t i i , se | Men 8 Gloves, Leather 30c. 5c. 75c. | Men’s Kid Gloves 75c, $1.00 $1.25. Men’s Mocho Gloves, $1 00, $1.25, $1.50, Men’s Kid Fur Top, $1.25 $1.50. Men’s Dogskin Fur fop 90c, $1.25. Men's Buckskin (sp2cial) $2.00. Men’s Sarnae 85e $1,50. _ Men’s Astrakan driving g'oves $1.50, Also a large line of leather mitts, lined and unlined, from 35c a pair up. Boy’s Gloves and Mitts in great variety This way tor your gioves at J.B. MACDONALD = C0 Leaders in low prices. ToThose Interested, Tne makers of THEHIGHLAND RANGES were unible to ship all of our canges this week but we expect to hav> at large shipment by next trip of 8S. 8S. Halifax from BOSTON and those who have ordered may count on getting them ther We ask your kind indulgence for the delay. “Agents for Amecican Ranges.” FENNELL & CHANDLER | ] SEL Se DRE ES THE LONG: ANI MNT UF | Is to get a boot that will wear and fitfyou, then you will have sati:faciion. You also want something to suit you in price. Ycu will find them all at McQUAID'’S, LOWER QUEEN STREET E b b F - Boot and Shoe Store. ie WR ee eka The undersig ned offers fur sale taa bargain the follo wing: One 40-Horse Power Engine and;Boiler. 14 Driving*Pulleys with Shaft and§Belting. One Rip Saw and bench with carr‘age. One 30 in. Saw. One 24 in. Planer—One set hoisting blocks, One Matching and Moulding Machine, Fifty-one Moulding Knives, One Band Saw cemplete. One Buzz Pianer. One Swing Saw compiete. One, Turning Lathe and{Shaft—OnejViee. Two Emery Wheels—One Jig Saw Three Circular Saws and tables. AJl in first-class order. MATTHEW & MGLEAN ee — a ee RON ge OF es epg earner Pa Ee a pereeea Sg reagents ET Oe enna ara Fes 5 AMMEN se cmt - EL NN SE TEE RELA 8,