| 3 ; , , J . ; x $ ] , $ 8 , . a e * & ¥ $ . . $ = f ’ a # 2 8 ° * s on “~“PBSOsB*2OBe 1942064 BS 8088 THE Seen th ee @-<cnesscansteubonssetinnnasceecaceeth 8 ere vey) coer rraewere rere ry Ce rwe DODD’S KIDNEY PILLS, the only positive, never-failing cure, ov earth, for all Kidney diseases, Take Ne Other. Get the Genu'ne. Refuse Imitations. There's Only One Dodd’a NOT SELLING BUT GIVING AWAY CHEAP....... A lot of odd lines in men’s, misses and boys’ BOOTS and SHOES that I bought right for cash. Y Th Ee 2 AE Me ? The prices will surprise you when you come in and see them. These goods, I got them at a bar- gain, that is the straight tip. r THOMAS McQUAID, Lower Queen St. Boot & Shoe Store. | j 7 | ! 7 ADVICE AECUT A pice. When ordering a packrge Pepper, Ginger, Alispice, Cin nainep or Cream of Tartar from your grocer you can al- wys fee] sure of securing the cee Os vr wrt @@ B25 46572 best quality by asking for :: : Aiott’s OHO 2877 £ HOKE GEOG | KELLY'S & 60'S, + GROCERIES Are always to be dependeti OD cece i Only the vest kept in stock. Our ct if yor want to be satisfied with groceric® deal with us. Try t}e TEA we sel!. Special atten- tion was given toits eelection. Theseame care is exercised in buying al! other lines. AND BE SA SATISFIED JAMES KELLY &CO Queen S:., near London House Corner. iomere are satisfied customers. your wed&v k Marmalade. We have just received a new kind on ORANGS MARMALADE, put up io glass pots, which we are now offering at the low rate of 2 Pots for 25 cents Also juet op>ned a case of Pime- apple Marmalade which is of very fine flavor. The Pineapple and Ginger Marmalsie has aleo given excellent satis- faction. Those are sil new goods and you shouldtry them if you want something Bice and \asty. BEER AQUFT ROCERS > + Th . t | certain att l l 1 ! i 3 L not< i o ' can a own ecord R \ And O] n \ ry CC a> ) i j | ‘ l ? ‘ ! and of my Cesire to s in him j ‘‘T hope for his happiness, too,’’ said Olwen, with averted cres oT . +-— 1+ ,hen excuse m ou CAKe a strange way of advancing it, said Laura, with evident warmth. ‘But I must not speak of that. The reason I came to you today was that I knew a with whom I believe , a : once acquainted, Mr. Lionel person—a man-— you were Borrodaile. A fiush crept into Olwen’s pale cheeks. ‘‘Mr. Harding has told youa great deal,’’ she said. ‘‘T think he has told me everything,’’ said Mrs. Vandeleur quickly. ‘‘It would have been useless to tell me half, you see. And then I bethought myself of Lionel Borrodaile as I knew him, and I felt that I should like to tell yon a lit- tle about him.’’ Olwen looked full into her visitor’s eyes. ‘*You knew him? You liked him’? You were a friend of his? But how could you be a friend of his if you are Maurice Harding’s friend?’’ ‘‘Because Maurice Harding was as good a friend to him as he has been to me. You do not know how he cared for that boy in his youth, watched over “You will wonder why I have come,” said Mrs. Vandeleur. him, devoted himself to him in every way. Thereason why he interfered in a liment—you know what I mean—was because he had received an entirely mistaken idea of the young lady in question. And Lionel was very easy to convince—in fact, he owned ‘to mea month or two after his return from Devonshire that he was ‘uncom- = _ — his is the picture of a man who ig healthy, clear- headed, success- % o eae >, ful and impartial me Lord Herschell, . the Ex-Lord % Chancellor of England. You ~*~. may be very sure ~e “* his blood is put ‘tT 7 il . Seog us eg" “The man who ~ wm 6 ‘ ° f suffers from iim- ~ pure blood isn’t a Plikely to achieve . eminence in any é, walk of life. You cy im cannot putiip im- pure blood into the brain, and ex- pect the brain to be active and keen. If you feed the brain cells on impure blood, you are sure to have weak, sluggish brain cells. If you pump bad blood into the lungs, you will have weak lungs Pump bad blood into the liver, and the result is torpidity of the liver Feed the heart on impure blood, and the consequence is a weak heart Nourish the skin with impure blood, and the result is all manner of unsightly skin qaiseases. The best of all known blood purifiers is Pr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. It makes the appetite hearty, the digestion -rfect, the liver active and fills the arteries with the rich, red blood of health. It is the great blood-maker and flesh-builder. It cures all forms of eruptive skin diseases. It cures 98 per cent. o all cases of con- sumption. It cures bronchitis, weak lungs spitting of blood, obstinate coughs and kindred ailments. It gives vigor and health to the muscles and activity to the brain. Thousands have testified to the benefits derived from the use of this wonderful medicine. All medicine @tores sell it. i ti s. Ella Howell, of Derby, Perry Co., Ind., wae hae the year of 1 I was taken with stomach trouble — nervous . There was a coldness in my stomach and a weight which seemed like a rock. Everything that 2 ate gave me great pain; I had 2 ring dows sensation; was swelled across my stomach, hada ridge around my right side, and in a short time I was bloated. I was treated by three of out best physicians but got no relief. \ could not walk across the room without ass tance. I took Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis- covery and one bottle of the ‘ Pleasant Pellets. I began to improve very fast after the use of few bottles. It cured me and thank God my cure is permaneat,”’ I was so weak J © D.uiLY to pay it, that was ) | Miss Ds | dignity.”’ 9 a : a ¢ 7 °y aay 5 ee $ * ~ S ety & Dy _&p he : ) yy tw © . é a8 2 "> Se ~*~. e.) CY . J ’ " Kl 4 y ~~ JZ i a a | S ¢ ; wane | ; Yat - £ (STHOR | , n wa nis ey Y t out of the ave. The gir ; i i lo r< i h Vy 7 7 ior e me il | qu té bis own Words. The color started, hot and crimson, in Olwen’s cheeks. She had always in- iced in the fancy that Lionel had sorrowed for her asshe for him. It was a shock to find that she had been mis- talren. Mrs. Vandeleur went on softly and relentlessly. “He came to see me when I was ia Florence, and—my dear, I must. tell you—he made love tome. He wasa most ardent lover—for atime. I need not recapitulate his vows. He swore that he had loved no one but me, that his affection for the little schoolmistrese in the Devonshire village had been all assumed and that he had never meant So marry her—do you understand? He threw aspersions on your character which were worse than those which Mr. Harding spoke of in his letter. He boasted of his conquest over you’’— “Oh, stop, stop!’’ cried Olwen wild- ly. ‘‘I cannot bear tlsis!’’ ‘‘T would not say it if it were not the truth and entirely for your own good,”’ said Mrs. Vandelvur firmly. ‘‘I laughed at the boy, but did my best to be friend- ly to him for his guardian’s sake, but at last I discovered him in a foolish and disgraceful liaison with an Italian mil- liner, and then I was obliged to give him up. I heard worse tales. of him aft- erward. Then he began to drink and to gamble, and finaily Maurice Harding came out to nurse him in his last ill- ness—galloping consumption, brought on by his own excesses. My dear, he was a worthless, dishonorable scoun- drel, from whom you happily escaped, and you should thank Maurice Harding from the bottom of your heart for his caution, insteed of trying to punish him for a mistake which he has since so bitterly repented of.’’ Olwen was crying and she did not at- tempt to hide her tears. ‘‘Is he very | i11?’’ she asked at leneth, and Mrs. Van- del r augured well from the question. ‘Yes, very; sadly weak and in want | of a woman’s tenderness. ’’ It was not that I loved Lionel,’’ said are, rather feebly, ‘*but I resent- ed his treatment of me and its cause.’’ “Tf yon did not love Lionel,’’ said Mrs. Vandeleur with a sudden inspira- | tion, ‘‘what hinders you from loving a better man ?’’ ‘‘Nothing,’’ Olwen. ‘Only—I thought that I ought to stand upon my And she smiled through her core—I wanted 29 sala tears. ‘‘It was an old ou had better come back to Tondon with me,’’ said Laura prompt- 7 s And Olwen came. - * ~ 2 e 7 . But when Maurice Harding called for his answer at Mrs. Vandeleur’s protty little house in Mayfair he found Olwen waiting for him and Laura nowhere to be seen. And when Olwen asked him to forgive her for her harshness what could he do but take herin his arms and vow that he loved her the better for her valor and her pride? But, meanwhile, in the dark up stairs nother woman stood alone, pressing the tears from out her eyes as she told herself that she was glad—g¢lad—glad that Maurice should be happy away from her ond that the ‘‘old score’? had indeed been paid. It had been revenge on Olwen’s part; it was gratitude on hers. coat x A Story of George Eliot. Speaking of George Eliot, Mrs. Por- ser, in her “‘Annals,’’ says: ‘‘On one occasion, when we were calling on her shat summer, she said she was very anxious abont the safety of the manu- script of ‘Deronda’ and wanted to have it back, but dared not trust it to the postofiice. ‘‘My father said he could not bring it himself next day, but could send it by a trusty messenger, the footman. At this she quailed. ‘Oh, he might stop at a public house and forget it.’ We assured her such a lapse had never been known to occur. ‘Then might he not, if he were the sort of high minded Bayard we described, be very likely to stop and help at a fire?’ “This was a contingency we had never contemplated, and finally, after gome laughter, we promised her that some member of the family should place the manuscript in her hands, and, as & matter of fact, I think my mother drove over with it to her the next morning.”’ A Good Word For Jack Frost. Jack Frost indeed seems to have been more outrageously alandered than Lord Byron. The health seeker’s truest friend has for centuries been denounced asa harbinger of death. The most effective specific for the’ cure of pulmonary dis- orders has beén mistaken for their cause. Frost is nature’s panacea for half a hundred different diseases, and the motto of the glass saniterium should and — \ we bo “a . ae = a ~ a“ ~— — + » }stiv JULY 9. be diiswered as toNows, ‘*“xes, frost long continued, will at last effect tne destruction of all organic life, but will destroy disease germs long before it be- gins to affect the health or even the comfort of ahuman being.’’—-Dr. F. L. Oswald in North American Review. Sir Evelyn Wood's “Papa.” Sir Evelyn Wood entertained the Savage club with some ve ry diverting experiences of some of their brethren in , Ashanti Some of the incidents are | quite irresistible: cxmaimmnatpetcmamnmniaes + gimiammnne When he was serving with the chair- man, Mr. G. A. Hentz, many years ago in the Ashanti expedition, he had a very good ‘“‘papa,’’ a black man, who served him for 5 shillings a day and ’ i | who brought 22 sons of his own body begotten. All of these sons were be- tween 21 and 28 years of age. The father wes the finest of the lot. In every fight he put himself at the front, and after six months’ campaign he (Sir E. Wood), as he was returning to England, offered him any mortal present he liked. Hesent to the army and navy stores and ordered a 20 guinea umbrel- la, which it would take two men to carry, and between every steel rib was a covering of silk more hide than the other, and when the present arrived at Cape Coast castle the garri- a son was paraded, the troops presented arms, end tney marched past the pres- Put that was not the only present, for the warrior, clad in was too modest a man to ark for an umbrella, the presentation of which in that country was a grest honor. Asked what could be sent to him from Eng- land, he chose a tall black hat, and he (Sir Evelyn Wood) sent him one at 23 shillings.—-London Naval and Military Record. . - (To be Continued ) DR. GAUTHIER EHDORSES The statement that fir. Major owes DR CHASE'S ‘ o Kidney Liver Pills Dr. J. T. A. Gauthier, of Valleyfield, Que., writes: ‘I, the undersigned, certify that the contents of this letter, in regard to the cure cf Mt. Isadore Major, by the use of Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills, is correct.” Here is Mr. Major's letter: *‘ After 20 years of suffering from backache and kidney disease I owe my life to Dr. A. W. Chase. I had tried an endless variety of remedies to no avail, and on the recommendation of a friend began the use of Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills. Two pills that night and two next morning gave great relief, and I continued their use until now lam completely cured. My friends are surprised and pleased to see me well again, for I spent hundreds of dollars in vain trying to get cured. Before using Dr. Chase's Kid- ney-Liver Pills my back ached so I could not put on my shoes and coulcn't lift g0 Ibs, My shoulders were sore, I had headachesanda bad taste in the mouth. These troubles are now entirely gone and what I say I am ready to prove. i have told my friends of my wonder- ful cure, 254 many have been greatly benefited by using these pilis,” Dr. Chase's Kidiey-Liver Pills are the great- est kidney cure the world has ever known. One pill a dose, 25c. a box at all dealers, os Bimanson, Bates & Co., Toronto, a& &vrip oF linen, —_— Coated = : rarer zarcend ee Ge i Prices Righ HASZARD & MOORE SUNNYSIDE The Nicest Freshest BEST GROCERIES Groceries that will tempt the appetite. Groceries thet do not take all your money to buy. Groceries that everyone in the house will like. Buy and try. Come in and see us, Driscoll & Hornsby QUEEN STREET—— THE For Sale by Haberdashers & Dry Goods Houses everywhere re reer eneeentsamempaee i Offer ‘Buildnig Oh kG All Canadi Groceries, ¢ Crockery eand —— Retail at Wholesale Prices— Ae TT AS ' ETS—$2 (4, a Glassware = / eet, we wes EN 0, RMN ee EUS SNS lo) RS oe Rea Six piece Glass Table Sets ee m selling at 26c, regular price Ly SS 25 cents. : 100 Flower Pots from le up 1000 Teapots from 10c‘up. 1000 Jugs very low erry Sets, 7 pieces, 21c P. MONAGHAN QUEEN STREET THE WORLD'S GREATEST GOMPAY. The Mutua! RICHARD A. [IicCURDY, President Life Insurance Co. of New York 517,325 36. $55,006,629.4 5 INSURANCE IN FORGE —$971,711,997.7 an Policies payable iu goldasyy7 Before placing your insurance. please call or write for JOHN ieHACHERN, AGENT estimates. May 27—Sat & Mon lmo- Te Seaside RUSTICO BEACH, P. E. ISLAND JOHN NEUSOS & CO., Proprietors Surface aud Still Water Bathing. SUMMER RESORT — > eee Govered Ball Alley oe eee *eCROQUET AND T'ENNIS GrouND Coech will leave Charlottetown for ithe above Hotel every Taezday, Thursday end al viday evening, cailing for guests, Returring Monday, Wednesday aad Fr day morning Trains leave Ch’town for Humer River at 7 40am,a1d130 and5 10pm. ime? merside to Hunter Kiver at 6 55,8 35a m, and 7 35 p m. Trains rup on Eastern time, which is an bour slower than local time. Addrees a}| correspondence to JOHN HEWSON & C9, Charlottetown, P. E. |. Berger’s Waiker’s Corner KILL THE BUG —BY US.NG—— A Cyclone Insect Destroyer bar lee od a + — Sia. English Paris Green. ——FOR SALE—— WHOLESALE & RETAIL Simon W. Crabbe STOVES & HARDWARE Se ae eatin