= * ‘paw nee al & wn — * Bee Bee Bes Be ® * * PAKS Ne wha shee a VHE DAILY mAAMINEK CHAKRLUT'TE'TUWN, DECEMBER 12, 1899 = se — ae Pre we Ww Fr ee OORT, THE GARTH. ‘ , Doctors now avree thar oe . With jathering years the carth has not growr =!!!) ed and yeoddted: thy consumption is curable, tame, deat roe: em ee i : Im man's firm clasp a mere imprisoned ball, You st fer \ cy in - , " > , T ] m | hree ft rS. f taken to- Though conquering feet have trodden nearly all ment v to oT baad ' ad And even the uncharted has received a name; } _ Hh 0 had ail tay uot ey gether, wiiicure nearly CVEry | There still loom heights deserving of man’s aim; readyist to existing circtim : ¥ 4 Forbidding isles still lie beyond his thrall; Miu f of fancy will be the death case in the first stages; the The silent pelar doors heed not his call, us * day, father says g : of im e day, father says majority of cases more ad- vanced; anda few of those far advanced, ; The first 1s, fresh air; the se- cond, proper food; the third, Scott’s Emulsion of cod-liver oil with hypophosphites. To be cured, you must not lose in weighr, and, if thin, you must gain, equals Scott’s Emulsion to keep you in good flesh, f goc. and $1.00, all druggists. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chenists Toronta, A Useful Christmas Present for your wife would be one of our high grade sewing machines.—Si.e would ap- preciate it. would menn less labor Don’t think it would be “just the thing.” Let re onste : . you ou prices. If you don’t want asewing ma- chine,drop in and sae onr large stock of musical inst raments— the best iv the city. MILLER BRO». QUEEN STREET, Coxno.iy’s Britpine 2 * Cy € + c a s OF S086 C0C8 J 6O8CC8O% eace W hite’s Caramels and Snowflake C hacolates <= Can be had at any of the following firsy class store T. J. Morris D. L. Hooper W. Pickard & Co, W. A, Hutcheson W. F. Carter Stewart & Gates Sanderson «& Co. J.D. McLeod & Co R. Hi. Uason, ee eid NH W * o lH | w We have just received our stock of Griffin Skelly’s California Seeded Xaisins. They are much superior to any other brand <n the market. The seeds are all taken out of the raisins by a machine. lkaving the pulp all ready for use, thus saving a Ict of time preparing for baking We have also the Vv lencia Raisins, aceded the same way. They come ehaper than the Califcrnias. Sultana Raisins, Cieaned Currants, Cocking Figs, Candied Peels, we., ail fresh and good for Xvias baking. Seen & GOFF GROCERS ————~« @teeenne Nothing | OX OFOKHOCKOROEO 20° OO600808 896 8900 000698050 982008080080 = ici ne nt ii a neil ate ——-_ And inmost trapic wilds ne scarce dare claim. Yet, when at fast the globe is mastered quite, And prying man hae left no inc: unscanned, He still must pause before earth’s mo. js of might That lift the sea and toss the desert sand, That set the dread volcano’s torch alight And send strange tremors through the startle¢ land. —Mieredith Nicholson tm New York Sun KOROHFOXOKOXOXOXOKHOHKOXHOXOXOX THE LATE MR. KNAPP Mw We 4 STORY WHICH GOES TO SHOW THAT YOU CAN'T ALWAYS TELL WHAT PEOPLE MEAN BY WHAT THEY SAY. KHOHROKOKOKOXKOXOHKOXOXHOXOXOXOH You see, she was such a queer little thing that we couldn't help taking her to our hearts at once. But there, that’s just the way with me. It always seems to me as if everybedy ought to know the people I know, without any partic- alar explanation. Well, it was just this way: summer that mother and I wanted paper the sitting room, theugh father would have given mother his head if she had asked for count. It was money we needed, and of that he had none. Then after much to it. hends didn’t hard thinking vised ¢ i , : d thinking I devised a plan, and.) ang sy pastened to nod in reply. OX OX OXOXOXHOXO That | though it was a great shock to father | and mother at first, I carried and the upshot of it was that we ad vertised for a summer boarder spare room. Unless you have done the Same thing at awful in your life you can never for a moment imagine, O reader, the awful! mixture of hope and fear that held place in our hearts until we received a neatly writ- for our some crisis the day. ‘ petting ten, briefly worded note signed | “Phoebe Knapp.” Mother was taken with it at once. and as she deligirts in all things miser- able because she can make them fee! better, she was especially captivated by the closing sentence, which ran, “Having recently met with a bereave- ment, the rest aud quiet you offer will be a great boon to me.” > “Widow, likely,” said father as we read this note adeud in his presence for | the fifth time. “Miss or Mrs., Katie?’ asked mother. although we both knew the signature by heart—“Yours sincerely, Phoebe IKXnapp.” “I’m sure I den’t know. I can’t read between the lines,” I answered, rather flippantly, 1 fear. This unknown was beginning to take an sort of weird possession of me. It uncanny that’ everything id turn upon the movements of a stranger whom we had never seen, and ‘rever I turned 1 could not help see- ing a silent figure in a long crape veil lifting its hand and commanding me to do this or that, upon which I was al- ready engaged. However, we were all ready for her at last, and when father came from the station and deposited upon the front piazza a tiny litthe woman of about 50 years of age, with big, fright- ened gray eyes, aud delicate, sensitive features, a creature that would have looked small alongside a robust child of 10, the contrast between this little object and che commanding figure of seemed shou my imagination was so great that I aimost nad 2 fit of hysterics on the ei etesectrertees tected rerecrceennretaipaeree = 2 There is a world of romance in the picture .of a young girl reading her sweetheart’s love-let- ters. Ina multitude of cases, if her future could also be pict- /—?7 ured, the picture " would contain a world of pathos. To the healthy, robust woman, marriage means happiness, the supreme joy of motherhood and the promise of a ii. long, healthy life << of helpfulness “eae = with the man of her choice. To the woman who suffers frem disease or weakness of the delicate and important or- gans concerned in wifehood and mother- hood. wedlock means suffering and mater- nity death. Dr. R. V. Pierce is an eminent and skillful specialist, for thirty years chief consulting physician to the Invalids’ Hote and Surgical Institute, of Buffalo, a. S. During that time, with the assistance of a staff of able physicians, he has prescribed for thousands of women. The institute of which he is the head is one of the greatest in the world. He is a regularly graduated physician and has practiced right in one place for thirty years. The esteem in which eee 2 he is held by his neighbors is shown by the fact that they chose him for their represert- ative in the National Congress. The regard in which he is held by those whom he has treated is shown by the thousands of letters rinted in Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Med- ical Adviser, telling of the benefits derived from his treatment. Dr. Pierce is the discoverer of a wonder- fal medicine for women, known as Doctor Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. It cures all weakness and disease of the feminine or- gans. It allays inflammation, heals ulcera- tion and soothes pain. It tones the rerves. Taken during the interesting period, it banishes the usual discomforts and makes baby’s advent easy and almost painless. Thousands of women have testified to its marvelous merits. An honest druggist won't advise a substitute. The profit side of life is health. The bal- ance is written in the rich, red, pure blood of health. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets cure constipation and make the blood rich and pure. They never gripe. By druggists. I caught mother on the stair a mo ment as they were coming down and breatoed softly into her ear, “Miss or Mrs. ?”" “I don’t know. I couldn’t find out,” answered mother in that awful! Whisper of hers that sends me nearly Into fits whenever she tries it. boarder did not seem to notice. | made a venture on a bold stroke. call her Mrs. Knapp, and then she can stage tut our | “I shall , correct me if she doesn’t like it. I've always heard that ic gives a aged married woman much greater offense to be called 'Miss’ than it does to address a single sister as ‘Mrs.,’ so here goes.”’ “I hope you had a pleasant trip down, M-m,”’ 1 said pleasantly, allowing my voice to die away on the last syllabies as { found my courage oozing out at the tip of my tongue. 1 couldn't say Mrs. Knapp after all, to save me. I noticed with much amusement that father and mother avoided the pitfall as successfully as 1 did, during that first meal,.and we all went out on’ the piazza after supper to enjoy the sunset. livre our guest set our minds at rest. “How James would have enjoyed this!” > dy erself. Moth er nodded so vigorous- triumphantly behind her back notice it We “st iie ly and that | was afraid she would widow. watch the > went terribly now. She was a to sit beside me and sun, even in the city.” on softly. “It y lonely without him. Gh, if 1 could only have brought bim out into such a peaceful place as this, he might be alive now! ‘That last hot spell was so hard an him. 1 thought perhaps he had a t but I could not tell.” Mother's eyes filled with sympathetic tenrs, and-as she laid her hand gent) over that of Mrs. Knapp she inquired knew loved seems eisne roke, tenderly, “How long is it since he died é iswered the widow. wit) sntl that L had in the world, and tohave ' so lonely ever siuce But. please, Mrs. gbou: Curtis, | cannot talk it quite yet.” ‘Neverth@ess, she did “talk about it" co0d deal in the days that fob iowed. with the effect that I, who was ike girl at that time, pe susceptible to first impres: imbibed an impression ef the r. eccentricities that was-not altogether complimentary te the departed gentleman. “oor dear!” said she one day. “He so hard to speak. If he only could have told his wants!” We never asked y questions. We just let her talk that this was the kindest ; I inferred from this last re- mark that her husband had been af- fected by paralysis, particularly as she had said on anesher occasion: “I used to sit at my wimmlow, and James sat at his, I sewing, he looking out of the window at what was going on in the street. He seemed perfectly happy as long as I was there. But then we can never tell. I often wish. now that I had done more for him or could have learned better what he wanted.” “What did the physicians say or do?” asked. “They said it was the breaking up of the system by old age. I never felt that they quite understood the case.” Poor little thing! Married to an aged paralytic aud yet regretting his death as the breaking up of the one tie on earth! What desolatioun—what utter desolation her case seenied to me! I was moved to take her in my arms and weep with her, which was a great dea) for me. Not only was the late Mr. Knapp old and imbecile and paralytic, but he hae other traits which must have rendere¢é him highly objectionable as a daily companion. “Just about this time every afternoon I always gave James a bowl of cream with fresh sponge cake in it. He would not touch it unless it was in a certain bow] nor unless it was fresh from the baker’s. And yet they tried to per- suade me that he didn’t know any- thing!” ror his other Knapp pessessed pleasant temper. “And, oh, Mrs. Curtis!” she wailed, “after. the poor dear was dead and gone, they wouldn’t let me bury him in the faanily lot.” rem which I infer- red that the dear departed had come of a family of unpieasant tempers. Such heathenish doings I never heard tell of. Surely, however they felt toward him’ during his life, nothing but a fiend would deny him the family resting place after he was dead! But I forgot my interest in Mrs, Knapp and ner affairs by reason of some of my own. I had a delightful letter from Tom Dixon, saying he would be with ys for a week. Now Tom was a favorite cousin of mine, and I spent a good deal of time fur- nishing up my little belongings so that I might look my very best when he came. And then, I was putting finish- ing touches to Tom’s room, too, unti} the minute he arrived, so that I really «au no time to talk vo Mrs. Knapp or rite \ ¢* euliariy siens, xf late Mr. WKnapp’s tr } -_ which I inferred that, added te peculiarities, the late Mr. an extremely ut- middle exclaimed she softly, as if half | CURE Ul SR, ey AES Bale 0 RAE MS: eA EP ee to listen to her *T she wished to talk to ule, Dear old Tom' How good it was to see him that day with his blithe ways and “bonny brown hair!’ We talked and talked till supper was called, and thep we still talked all the way to the dining room door,and yet we found time to say nothing about any one but ourselves As we seated ourselves at the table ! suw Mrs. Knapp’s vacant place (for she was a little late) and realized that J had not mentioned her presence in our household. “Why, we have a boarder, Tom,” 1 began, in answer to his look of inquiry at the empty péace. Just as I spoke she glided in. “Why, who on earth would have thought of finding you here?” and he shook her hand in a grasp so hearty that I could see it was painful to her. She colored faintly and said a little unsteadily, “This is indeed a surprise, Mr. Dixon,” and 1 read between the lines that the surprise was not an ?@l- together agreeable one. But Tom didn’t seem te notice thing (most men are dumb about suclY things, you know), so Il kept my eyes and ears open and waited for develop- ments. At last they came and in a most startling manner. So I hear poor Jim is gone at last?” said Tom, turning to Mrs. Knapp as he buttered his seventh biscuit (Tom al- ways was rather a greedy youth and enjoyed most heartily the good things of this life, mother’s cooking among them). “Oh, Mr. Dixon, how can you speak ef him in that way!” exclaimed the widow. hurrying from the room in a fit ef sobbing. ans Tom stared, “Well, U'li be darned! What under the sun is the matter with the woman anyway?’ he exclaimed. “You ought to ie ashamed of your- self,” replied I severely. “No wonder the poor woman is shocked to hear ' you speak of her husband in that way a after he’s dead and gone.” Tom stared again. And then he broke into such spasms of laughter that Il thought he had suddenly lost his mind. I had heard of such things, but, 1 had fortunately been spared the sight of them so fa, “Her hudband!” he exclaimed, when he could ¢atch his breath, as he wiped the tears from his eyes. “Her hus- tand! She hadn’t any husband. She never was married. Jim was her old black eat!’ And then he went off again into spasms. No wonder the hard hearted relatives bad objected to having all that was mortal of “the late Mr. Knapp” laid in the family lot! Mother and I looked at each other and said nothing. What was there to say? But we thought things. 1 don’t know whether they were tke same things or not, but we certainly thought things.—Chicago Times-Herald. £3 EAK AND.... PUNY. CHILDREN Become Strong and Healthy by using Dr. A. W. Chase’s Nerve Food. Children are frequently left weak and sickly es an after result of measles, scarlet fever, etc., and in this state are easy prey to nervous disorders, rickets, spinal disease, or consump- tion, diseases which do not affect robust, healthy children. The blood is weak and watery and the nerves fmproperly nourished. Feed the blood and nerves with Dr. A. W. Chase’s Nerve Food, and the pale, pinched faces will soon become rosy and plump, and tiredness and weakness will give way to strength and animation. Mr. E. W. Day, 62 Close Avenue, Toronto, writes: ‘‘My eldest daughter, aged eight, be- came very much run down. Her fretful, ner- vous, sleepless condition greatly alarmed her parents. She was taken from school, and in spite of the best nursing, the thin, weakened, bloodless face grew painfully worse. Fortun- ately we used Dr. Chase's Nerve Food. An improvement became apparent in a few dzys, it continued, and in a few weeks she returned to school built up anew, and greatly to our joy fully restored to health.” Dr. A. W. Chase's Nerve Food, soc. a box, at all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co, Toronto, At Gay’s Stalls For 22rmas Hubbard Squaeh......... cescerseereree age Ib Cape Cod Cranberries.............. 95 qt Island Cranberries...... boy ane de 8c qt Celery per Bunch......-. sitincenteee* ae " 00. B BOmeReGscesee. sce. ss 25c " 0D Bg ho oe des eeeece $5.00 t" MMM enti Sac ine <6 soveee $2 OV ert oe et ee ee 25¢ % OD Tie Reh iis ak bi. weed vs 45c " OP Tee Wiis. tose shod eee $1.00 " DE BL... dukes. orendsonsaier $2.45 MISCELLANEOUS —Lettuce, Parsley Brussel Sprouts, Beete, Carrots, Parsnips Cabbage, Tarnips, Beans, (for baking) Heney in Comb, Cocoanuts, Savory, Sage, Lemons, &c. J. J, GAY & SON Charlottetown, P EI Telephone 180..... i Py , ainter ! , Fair wages for honest wore. BUT don’t blathe thea painter ifthe paint does not wearwell. Heis not .chemist and cannot he sureof tue quality of materials he bura, He is not. a machine end cannot mix paint as uceti- rately as our Steam millsand hich-grace machinery. Paint-making requires sctentifie knowlcdgennda costly plant. 1t reaches perfection in tue wori.s where we make tf JE ale _ eG oS SHERWIiS-UVILLIAMS | PAINTS fa > =the best that can possibly be made. Tell ar painter to use them. 1n order ©2595 my) tu protect the purchaser everywhere they are sold in cans ready to put Po @@ righton, and made so they can be puton right. A booklet on painting free. a9 THE SHERWIN-WILLIAMS CO.. ¢ PAINT AllD COLOR MAKERS, S) ei, > Canadian Dept., 21 St Antoine St., Montreal. For Sale by S W Crabbe Important Auction Sale I am instructed to sell by Public Auction, at the Court House, iv Chariottciows, on’ Wednerday, December 20th, 1899, at 12 o’clock, noon, that large four story brick building on Grafton Street, now occupied by F. Perkins & Co., as a dry goods stor. —— EE This building was erected in 1896,and is one ofthe largest and most attractioe store buildings in the city; it is centrally located, being immediately opposits the Post Office; and on the street which most persons trom the northern and eastern eer tions of she country now ase when driving into market, and which those from the souihern districts will use, after the bridge over the Hillsborough River is built. This is one of the rare chances to secure property in the very centre of the busts ness pari of the city. Terms: Ten per cent at sale; ba’ance«. -ziivery of deed within ten dave. R. BEARISTC, Ch’tewn, Nev. 28, 1899— Auctioneer. prensa eas Our Large Stock of winter Overcoatine and Suitines... IS NOW COMPLETE AWAITING YOUR INSPECTION JOHN MLEOD & CO —s) TORTOISE HEATE _ aw Tortoise Heaters —— FROM $7.59 UP Simon W. Craktes _ STOVES & HARDWARE Was ker’s Corner —_ NEW PIANOS wal ORGANS saciplinad et saenhle FLETCHER'S PIANO WAREROUMS OPERA HOUSE BUILDING on FAT:F OR:-A PRINCE 7 Of all Wine W2rs1a9 Shidshy. Wkolesale from the distiller, A. G.Taousow & Ud, Giass)