EY ¥ THE DAiY HXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, AUGUST 5, 1889 7 JOHN J. A’BEOKET. . Let him have a mother’s love and a home even if the home is an elephant.’ Their teacher told them that the rising up of the dead was called the resurrec LADIES’ FINE re en : ne = Seen a : semen 2 ECA A a i 6uONT TY “7 te “woes t anne r), wis b Ts. (rarity s ) mormng all Tight when the tline comes | nn aed | MOEA BOY.” | secre pote heatwave tutoned toit] forte calles a AAA AD ARAM AAAAR LRAAAL ON our uar wit > =? respectfully. It said this time: ‘‘Tale Sea Boy said that he would, and, of him in. The ocean rolled him to you. | course, having promised to, he did. | | THE BEST Its always tmitated. Dodd's Kidney Piils, sold only in boxes like this, are widely imitated, tecause they are the best Kideey cure. Take none D-O-D-D-S P EI Commercial College | } ; | Re-opens Tuesday, 15th Aug inst | Gur Business Course comprises all the branches of a thorough Business ‘Training, and equals the very best. Our Shorthand and Typewriting courses cannot be excelled. Text-B beaming « ooks, the latest and best, ate 1899 arein use here. Our terms are a:ways satisfactory to our students. Send card for pros ectus this date P.O Ch town imo dy 242 Aug 11899 wed sat wky 0X Prin. & Prop. KELLY'S & CO’S. ~ GROCERIES Are aiways to be dependet on.... pest kept in stock. Our cus omers are satisfied customers. If you groceries Tew the TEA we seli. Special atter- tian wae civen toite selection. Therame care is exercised in buying al! other lines. Only th want to be satisfied with eal with us. your AND BE “SSATISFIED JAMES KELLY &€0 oear London Heuse Corner. Queen Bt wedd&v ky Marmalade. | | 1. OXENHAM | | We have just received a new kind o1 IRANGE MARMALADE, put up io glass pote, which we are now offering at the Pw rate « 2 Pots for 25 cents Also just opened a cese cf Pimes| apple Marmalade ch is of very | f fave The P eappie ara Ginger } Marmalad: has alo given excellent satis- faction. Those are sil new gocds and you should try them if you want something | pice and ta:ty. GROCERS The Nicest Freshest eenaer\Nieses BEST GROCERIES Groceries that will cempt the appetite, Groceries that do not take all your money to buy. Groceries that everyone jin house will like. uy and try. Come in and ~ see us, Driscol) & Hornsby QUEEN STREET - ea [Copy by the Au Once upon a time (not half as long ago as that phrase makes it sound) a small boy lived in an elephant. Even an infant elephant is large enough to hold a colony of small boys. The fact that his small boy lived in the elephant is proof enough that he had not been eat- en up by him. This elephant was liter ally the biggest elephant on earth. He stood on the seashore for 15 years look ing at the Atlantic ocean. He had never stirred a foot since he took his majestic pose a flat sandy land. He was so near the shore that in very violent win- ter storms the irritated sea came swoop ing through the air and flung itself in wet, salt spray right on his benign old face. But he was blinder than a bat. The reason of this? Why, the ele- phant was of wood and plaster and bad a skin of tin, painted mouse color. He was a summer hotel, this elephant was, and as he cost his owner nothing for his ‘‘feed’’ you would suppose he was an inexpensive apimal. Don’t think it. He cost over $50,000 and was a bad speculation. People could see him without paying anything, and when you were inside of him there was no knowing that he was an elephant at ail. So they just stood outside and looked at the great, still thing, and langhed and jingled their change in their pockets. It didn’t cost them a cent to do this. But naturally the own er of the elephant didn’t take in any money from this admiration of the monster, who was fully 75 feet high and 100 feet long. Asa result, he let the animal go for a nominal price for a seaside hotel. The lady who scrubbed the floors in the hotel and toiled in other humbk ways to keep it sweet and clean took up residence in the poor deserted elephant. She had two young children, 3 and 6 years old respectively, Tommy and Eily. Tommy was the elder. Although shx« had these two children to bring up and no husband to help her do it. she adopt- ed ‘‘Sea Boy,’’ and that brings in th: small boy who lived in an elephan mentioned in the beginning of this story. It seems strange that a scrubbing widow lady who had two small mouth: to feed should want to feed a third one when it meant so much more pain for her tired back. But she had a heart One winter night there was a terrib! storm, and a small schooner was driv: on to the long, sandy point which ran out intothe seafor a great distanc: under the water. The sailors were all saved except one short, thickset man, who was washed ashore dead. An i cold, bright faced boy about 1¢ years old washed in alive, but enough to put in a wash boiler on Mon day morning Th boy’s father, and ke had no other kin So they were going to send him to the place where poor orphans go who have on was short mian was the nobody to care for them (what the name of it was I don’t know, but that e " - woman who bends her back ove 1 sew ing machi or | many hours ¢ 1} Gay nee t strong “Ss healthy in every way, or sh is | ting death When her work comes | 1ak her nervous, fretful and lespondent, and she has ‘stitches in the i pains in the back or abdomen, and es, she may be certain that some- g lically wrong 4 local doctor, with a limited field of ob- vation d experience, will probably say that the fault is in the stomach, liver or Beart. erally is wrong. The fault is pri n the delicate and important organs that really constitute womanhood, They are weak or diseased. If such is the se, only a doctor of known reputation and wide experience should be consulted. A tter to Dr. R. V. Pierce, for thirty years sulting physician to the Invalids’ H l and Surgical Institute, at Buffalo, N. Y., will secure the free advice of prob- ibly the most eminent specialist in these aiseases in the world. D1 Pi rcee’s Favor- ite Prescription has been used with success by tens of thousands of invalid women. Over 90,000 havé acknowledged its merits over their signatures. It promptly cures all weakness and disease of the organs dis- tinctly feminine. All medicine dealers I have been a great sufferer from female dis- eases,’’ writes Mrs. C. C. Clark, of New Rome Flovd Co., Ga. I was confined to my bed three and not able to sit in my chair but very Tet T h } vears little. I got one of your pamphlets and read it and sent and got three bottles of Dr. Pierce’s Fa- vorite Prescription. I took tue medicine and re- ceived so much benefit from those three bottles that I was induced to take more. I therefore sent and got nine bottles. I took them and they completely cured me.” Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant iousness and constipation. They never gripe. Pellets cure bil- One a dose. on SUNNYSIDE” DENTISTRY SESE SE Office in New Prowse Block, first door to the right’ up stairs. OR. AYEPS: So Mrs. Garrity did what her heart told her to, and the ocean waif as one of her own. He took to the ele- phant as a duck does to water. He was & keen witted lad and as industrious as an ant. He blacked shoes, sold papers and picked up odd jobs. In a little while Mrs. Garrity found that in place of the Sea Boy being a burden and an expense he helped to lighten the money strain on her. He not only paid for his own keep, but he helped support the two small Garritys, and Mrs. Garrity’s back was no more strained than it had been before. Somebody started calling this adopt- ed boy of hers the ‘‘Sea Boy,’’ to dis- tinguish him from the others, and final- ly everybody called him ‘‘Sea Boy,”’ till it came to be his name. Sea Boy got to love the dear old ele- phant in whose right shoulder he slept with little Tommy Garrity. There was a big window in it. The elephant had windows on both of his sides and on his becam« chest, as if he had broken out with them as children do with arash. In the summer the sea air blew in to cool them, and they could hear the water break with a soft booming on the shore and then rattle over the pebbles as it was sucked back again. broad water would be covered with a violet pall, with lights afar off which looked like goiden pins that held it in place. Orelse there would be a lustrous sheen on it, anda great corduroy road of silver braid led off to the horizon and went into the sky there, so the children thought. And after the two youngsters were sound asleep the moon would sometimes peep in through the window and light up their smaii round faces lying upturned on the pillow and seem to say, ‘‘Bless ’em.”’ They were a happy group, the ele- phant, who had lost his owner; Mrs. Garrity, who had lost Mr. Garrity: Sea Boy, who had lost everything. and the two small Garritys, who had never lost anything that they knew of. But their turn came. Sea Boy hadn't been with the Garritys more than a year and a half when Mrs. Garrity woke up one night with a pain in her heart, gave a deep groan and called, *‘Sea Boy!”’ Lie woke up at once and hurried into her small room. She was suffering so she couldn’t speak. She knew what it meant and was trying her best to tell Sea Boy to look after the children. But she couldn’t get the words out, and as Sea Boy helped her to sit up, that sbe might breathe easier, her heart gave a jump as if it was trying to leap cut of ber body and she sank back—dead. There was no need to tell Sea Boy to look after the children. He thougbt of anything else body said that they had better be sent to their uncle in Brooklyn, and, if he wouldn’t take them, why, to an orphan asylum, the way Sea Boy kicked against y such arrangement was bi They all wanted to ] in the grin the sea air and and the ‘‘Mother’n me take care ov ot surprise that $ At night the had no When same- vutiful. stay on in thei 1 old elephant and hav: the beach to play on an to wade in. nik’n with an ai rome beautiful oc run the place ‘em,’’ he said, this wasn 't to them all as it was to him. Everybody did think so when Sea Boy said it. He was looked on with even more respect by the community after he became a family man. He made more money too. Shoe blacking ‘‘looked up,’’ and it was a common thing for a man to give him a nickel when he bought a paper and say, ‘‘Keep the change, Sea Boy.’ Vhen the children found their moth: er was to be put ina hole in the ground, they were visibly distressed. It did not seem anything like the comfortable home in the elephant. There were ne windows in the earth cell and no air, and to put her in and then shovel three feet of dirt on her seemed an unsympa thetic proceeding. They gazed with dis- trust at the men with the spades. Sea Boy didn’t know whether he should pro test or not. He looked at the priest, who looked at him and at the little hoy and girl snuggling timidly up to his side, and when Sea Boy noticed what a sweet smile came on the priest’s face and that his eyes filled with water (they all loved the water, so that it was a bond of confidence between them, that brim- ming tear in the priest’s eye), why, the boy father of the motherless felt it was all right. ‘‘Children,’’ said the ‘“‘vour mother is asleep, and this earth isn’t going to trouble her. She will sleep there awhile, and then God will say, ‘Get up, my child,’ and she and all the people here said ‘Good night’ to God before they fell into this long sleep, and will come out of their warm, quiet graves perfectly well and sound and will go te heaven. We will fall asleep like that some time, and we will all wake up together rested and be happy. For God is going to wake us all up at the same time.’’ ‘‘Won’t she have any pains in her back then?’’ asked Sea Boy. The earth looked cold and damp. ‘‘No. She will never have any pain again,’’ said the priest warmly. ‘‘And, Sea Boy, you must come to catechism, and bring the children, so that they may learn what they have to do in or- der to say that ‘good night’ to God all right. Then they will hear his ‘good as opvl1ous priest gently, tion, and that the Son of God had died and risen again to show people that it was all right, and that since he could raise himself from the dead of course he could raise the rest of dead man- kind. This was a long time ago and away off across the ocean. But it was ina country on the seashore. This was a happy touch in deference to the love of the sea that Sea Boy and the youthful Garritys cherished, and helped to im- press the fact more vividly on the chil- dren’s mind. The teacher told them that every year thisday was celebrated, and that the day was called Easter Sun- day. Sothe young ones had another great day to add to Christmas and the Fourth of July, the last named being celebrated with immense gayety and cheerful racket at the seashore resort where the elephant stood. (To be Continued.) —--—_» _- CP.R ENGINEER'S STATEMENT Ben Rafferty of Winnipeg Division Says Dodd's Kidney Pills are O K. Winyirec, Man., July 31.—Probably the most enthusiastic man in Menitoba in regard to Dodd’s Kidney Pille is Ben Raf- fertyof the C. P. R. He is one of the drivers on \he big trans-continental read and the jarring of the engine and long hours combined to bring on Kidney di- sease from which Mr. Refferty eutfered for twenty years. He was cured by Dodd’s Kidney Pills. His case is so weil known throughout Canada thata Toronto man wrote to Mr. Rafferty recently asking jute cure ip bim if be could recommend Dodd’s Kid- Winnipeg, May Dear Sir,—I received your note of ves-~ terday. I will recommend Dodd’s Kidney Pills at any time to any pereon with plea- B. Rarrerry. _ use the kidney cure ’ ’ ’ Dr. A. W. K d L p | Dr. A.W: Kidney-Liver Pills It’s asimple matter to test the kidneys. You three questions you can determine whether or not your kidneys are deranged. First: ‘* Have you backache, or weak, lame back ?” or a too frequent desire to urinate ?” Third: ‘‘ Are there deposits like brick dust in the urine after it has stood for twenty-four hours ?” cured by a few boxes of Dr. Chase’s Kidney- Liver Pills, a preparation which has made Dr. Chase famous throughout the world for his wonderful cures of diseases of the kidneys. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills with perfect confid- ence that what has proved an abs¢ so many thousands of cases will not fail you. So long as the cells of the kidneys are not of Bright's dfSetse, Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills will give them new vigor and strength and maxe them strong, healthy and active. One l 2sc. a box, at all dealers, or Pills. Mr. Refferty wrote in reply. sure. TheyareO. K. Yourstruly,¢ , world’s need not consult a doctor. By asking yourself Second: ‘‘ Do you have difficulty in urinating In its earlier stages kidney disease is readily If you have kidney disease you can take Dr, completely wasted away, es in the last stages Sill a dose Edmazson, Bates & Co., Toronto. + cdUiOclS, nea smacks Prices Right HASZARD & MOORE SUNNYSIDE Wexzv CO0oDsS tC —* Belt Buckles Waist Sets Neck Clasps G. H. TAYLOR STINNVSTNE eecereeeeeeeee BALBRIGGAN UNDER VESTS SLEEVES CUR iWENTY riVi UNS, SHORT LADIES FINE WHITE MERINO UNDER VESTS SHORT SLEEVES es Va LONDON HOUSE ESSE SES BEES EE ITS SS SEES _ Artificial Teeth on Metal Plates A dentist who knows his business, and one that ha? any regard for his patients will always advise them tobave a metal plate. Pror. Me.vitte B. Broker, Instructor Boston Deota! College, Boston Mass In view of the vast amount ofinjury done to the mouths of wear-~ ers of rubber or vulcanite plates, bythe retention of undue heat, owing to the non conductibility of rubber, and as aluminum 1s now 0 cheaply produced, and maicing as it does a rigid, light, cleanly, un-~ objectionable plate thee seems no reason why any person should wear a rubber or vulcan'te plate. Not only this, but better results in fit and adhesion are < ‘tained in difficult *‘aset, than in the uee of rubber. L.P.E ‘se: D. D.S. Chicag “1 Dental School — The above quotations are from bundreas oy eminent dentisis whose close observation in many years experience in plate work has learned them the manv advantages of metal over rubber. Many persons who are compelled to wear artificial teeth on @ plate find that the ordinary plate causes heating of the mouth, bad taste, shr.nkage of the gume, etc., finally causing the plate to get 100*e, sometimes sore lips, sore mouths and sore threats, asd caused directly from the wearing of an ordinary plate, We recommend:a metal plate either of Gold, Platinum, Aluminum, toe Or fh SaNU wi ae 7 ‘a 4 . . os I: isa conductor of heat and cold,it is non: irritating, and ie thin U4 er, lighter, and stronger than any other plate. =) We have testimonials from persons for whom we have made - metel plates—vot one would wearan ordinary plate again. You 6 can have your impression taken, and a meta! plate made same day, os fully guaranteed because we make them ourselves, aud know all “ie about the material used. Cail and see Specimens of oar work. @ Every piece of work done by ns must give entire satisfaction tothe §p¥® @ patient, else we wiil not allow itto leave our office. hp 4\~<@ See our artificial teeth without plates. “iN 2 oe . 0 @ Pp oe, [> * ~Gp582 of ' . - Nv ‘ , mon x By Ze CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. I. oS : h& ore srbye SY axby> 21d» 2s 2B DM o@-- by & ee ee - =a S , a = st ISU UA SA oo KILL THE BUG — BY US.NG—— A Cyclone Insect Destroyer si II ne Berger’s English Paris Green. FOR SALE—— WHOLESALE & RETAIL Simon W. Crabbe STOVES & HARDWARE Warker’s Corner Important Notice Lancashire Fire Insurance Co. Victoria-Montreal Fire Insurance Co. he above Companies are not connected with the P. E, Island Board of Fire Underwriters, and are not bound by the tariff rates. Iam, therefore, prepared to effect insurance a substantially reduced rates J. J. JOHMNSTOR, ~Agent, Charlott2town, P, E. Island ne 4 —2aw tt T. J. HARRIS ane —— a athal