..~ MTE In loti and white s anmrnshe coconut: iccsntsaooued- Wh! 4°" some l 1 How is i sells th ladies’ s W up-llid bl! I W" Does it ad plwul Got grass Mixed Lawn Grill- Tha Deiioeator for June, la geeks, Buttirick pattalhl MW will lasbionsheats given 41 eases 73,' the iargds that have made of s D0 good Paton We hs_v`¢ , at 'ere styles, 31%’ 3, $4 a better but made..--Prow sole agents. 2 Iron and brass beds:-We received one cal' of thevery lates and designs' ,direct from th manufacturers in Canada and the very lowest prices. and inspect these goods and see selves that we are the cheapest buy your beds-ati; less than i prices..-Jas Paton It Co, \ that we carry carpets and are recognised as Headquaréers for Carpets.- exclusive designs does not ph ii from adoring the best values- est bargains to be found at Jas. Paton & Oo. 13 Msttingslfresh from China an ‘I and on account ol the war it naps years before' these peaied. Mattings we will alw in fact, nowadays they casino without; but the prices _ are ex_ Come and see them.-Jae. Paso , Carter’s Seeds Gro i . A ` Hug!|es'8peoiBc Remedy. ffor e £i‘eatAnoaia\a~f daily from cough-Easy to give, horses tak ly and ea'rsl~|l'lhw days. -~ ofthe highsstpraiae received leading _.horsemen and iarme merlt.=Priee ° 25° package...- nngnas, Apex-.heeariee Han. Swifts Fertilizers.-Our: of the above has just - arri Ground- ‘Bone, Bone Fe Potato Manure and Animal Best on the market at prices.-A Horne & Co. White‘s chocolates are done u and half pound boxes and s andwcperpound. Try shox. Flour and Feed.-We have in ` d8i i ne stock the » following bran n Roses. Lil! Queen, Phoe Crescent Fionr,Cornmeai,B Shorts all of which we are at lowest Hor ._ 3' °`:- Give the children Whlte’B kisseetoeat. They are pure a hurt them. ' §i1o='l>l‘v will sr é riiicr' ssc: ' ur to The llumohq i as -*-ii.-.a____ Bowabl W ln” test serve`tlie'bes't dh Blll the finest v Hur _.fri - hifi? one ans.” |»'.'¢e7I '!XA'W~`lli |\ ye FGRMER W :sucrose Rev.. ' out ~ a ...A- T Edward (IilViilD:'l5l_ l pub- ns e American is sn intere ating Andrew J Sweetser, of Lynn, hus- ilJ0 to Angus McDonald, gun proceedings to have the will His prin s for the mono ` woinan's instead o _ minister, is that the foundation of the fortune-something over $85,090-was taken rrom him without ni ....ea' 'E <1 hilneos ¢ ‘o¥`.::%:i:°:g.::° alerted In Ja l 'Fii`.,'hIrs. Doige ,wned one of the blggsst Winter hotolsl the Winds . Shay,” known ths,gr iatest hdtel wailman/ia* tue }iboal.;:-y. ‘starting with the moderate cspitsi which ber first husband says was his she saw it an 'IIS 'fit immense fortune, nearlv iI""!iiii‘lIllifdiii!"'ieft“"it‘ iiniiifer fv`hUni`ilie h\d` h`~frli Mr, pure use and gms iso vihqraries H. Sw'edt'aer, gf S§.ittie,` Washgbfavs secured Jn1ige,John Wood of Huron, S. D., is pro: miueut jurist in the Nirthwesi, to pro- secute his suit. The amount involved makes a hitter contest probable. 4 f _Wiliiilfllilil ,ii|liiE or sri: nuns lyl' 'ltutioura After the oat Awful Suffering _ , Ivor Experienced. EIGHT DOCTORS I . ' , :.. ____ and Many Reaieaies Pane.: . to do a Cent's Worth ‘ 1; I er owe. * . “About ave years ago I was troubled with sore hands, so sore that when I wenia pst mm in vm: nl.. pu.. mmm very nearly set me crazy, the skin would “peel oi! and the dash would get hard and break. There would be blood ilow- ing from at least fifty places on each hand. _Words could never tell thc sur- fering I endured for three years. I tried everything that I was told to use for fully three years, but could get no relief. I tried at least eight dilferenif doctors, but none of them seemed to do me any good, as my hands were as had when got through doctorlng as when I iirst began. I also tried many reme- dies, but nbneof them ever did me one cent's worth of good. I was discour- aged and hesrt~sore. I would reel so bad morning; wheul get up, to think I hsdlto go work an stand the pain for ten hours, and I often felt like giv~ ing up my position. Before I started to work mornings I would have to wrap every Anger up separately. so as to try and keep them soft and *hen wear gloves over the rags to keep ‘ the rease from getting on my work. . .at nf ht I would have _to wear gloves Hui 1.. rm. r in n.w....r1°v°» 1 as time ,mr meh gocesicnn. the greatest of' all great skin cures. After doctoring for three years, and spending much money, a small box of Cnticnra Ointment ended all my ander- ings. It's been two years since I used ~ any and I doa’t know what sore hands are now, ani@ever lost a day's work ~ ‘ “ ..:i;.....%'§".*' .ft .. "U 1, a|aaa:L\ae&I»1nE$l:o\c¢oldsm ` vssrsnoiv ro-morrow. ` _ In _cum M " ,W . _f . 0’ " I Equipment. § IISIII iddwtf. Taken a' Greet Minister in ox r Abbia`Lowell was born in th nd er! e house It s ing on ovorioo aimosl , c s is all of tweniv yeass oldeathan looks it, with its huge windows h§h and small, thresholds over oflmwell have some and corner pasta ,int out into ev WCIU world granite "likely, soomed theg_p,__ali.\V_ swhrsare` ` iwms wsaura. A young man, alittle buyer Ban- gor, named Andrew J. Sweetser, was a frequent caller at the homestead. He was \nore'ot~the'Zoutside world than the neighbors’ boys. He -proposed. She accepted sud they were married. That was in 1860. Young Sweetser was of an 'adventurous disposition. He iradbeen to California around the Horn in‘4D; he had travelled all over the settled part of the country; he had ‘bought and sold cattle. The Civil War 'broke oui. With his brotlirrA1noe young Bweetssr followed the Northern army as a sutler. His means in eased ra di When the ooniiiot her,’ were well~to-do. He and his wife went West and entered the hotel business. Success crowned Sweetser'e efforts as a landlord-that is, success as it was measured forty years asc, when $10,030 was bigger than a million is to-day. He had a successful hotel in Washington and two in Yankton, S D. ln 1870 he and his wife made their home in llanirton. The Northern Railroad was being built in the seventies, and he started following its course, establishing hotels and adding to his compezeuce. Enters here the thread of the second romanoe,thut of Mrs Sweetser and Horace O Dodge. Dodge was a boarder at the Merchants’ Hotel in Yankton, conducted by Sweetser. He was younR.R°oi looking. Mrs Sweetser was much alone. That Dodge had a wife and two children living did not interfere with 'their plans. They sloped. _ ~ At the heme of his two nleces, at 174 Broadway, in Lynn, Mr Sweetser told the story yesterday. ~ “Abbie is dead," he said, "and I don‘t want to say much _against her. I was trying tc- learn where the Great North- western was going to make its terminus when sheweut sway with Dodge. When [got back to Ysnkton I found she had gone`with two carloads of furniture and over $85,000. I was so hurt and 1 had so much pride that I dldn'c try to find her, or even get her to restore my money. “One day I heard that she had .gone to Jacksonville with Dodge and had bought a hotel with' my $85.000, or part of it. I wrote herjnst once. She didn't send me any answer. After awhile I got a divorce. Then l heard that she married Dodge. I don’t'know whether he ever got a divorce from his wife nr not. ‘ “In 1883 I was married again, to Miss Pauline Waldron, in Eaton Rapids, Mich. My wife is on a visit to California ‘ just Pow.. 1 DODGE RUBBID BIB WIFE. “Abbie had one share of punishment for running off with Dodgo,"_ said Mr. Sweet- ser. “Ha and she were in-f Boston about ten years ago. She was riuh then,aud neo with nee a mchei eenrsinins $80,000 in cash and bonds and some valuable diamonds. They were walking aioag Washington street, and he was carrying the bag._ In the crowd she turnadto aeaktohim and found- she was alms. e hinted and was taken into"the Adams House to recover. When shswas siirighe she’ told her |tA>ry,but Dodge wafnoae. Bbs never sawhlm nor; the mm _' serene siemens. .¢ai....i~we ii' nm. he retnrasdvtonie rcsmer ‘oved to , . sland, when hewas horn. in when he was eleven vhsre la waass Illollh the Fill Blli sewaeia ceilm ana aecevd All filo Ivanov Ina . ‘ g`° . . y , . 'NB cr nl y- came to an end in '65, both he and Amos- ,, . A I N9* ;.°_°¥ll*"‘_‘¥*"s_‘*""‘~ ~ , i oon$"Pr|n¢c»- -- '- " ‘l 'VN 'll' 1' ‘rr -qi _, ' a l ‘~ J- ‘ ’1»¢i 4. aw, ,.,».. .M ,JV ,,. el.. .~;' 1 ' i< ~.¢,,g»,, _ _,i _ ,-.galgaarn -’.'iilse_.¥sckseeviila_slli.r°li_rvs . NF' . - ' Miss Anni of Boston, daughter his-melt tlvilrnrsarrias ia a|¢.iea1ti\a,\-ri . P°"P"~ lived .ssmyrh at in in smory. Sha reooliaoted her own roman- ready neipiii-.'Es salary wss“sn`-increased thashs couil ailoadtsr support. s,wifa *Hd "lW...°¢°M_l\|~ The parsonsgs; was properly ntted for a bridal hcmé. ` He 'nn came North in IN7, married iles Holnbd and took her to Jaekbonvilie 'to share his lot. - = . » - ~' _ In the big Jacksonville deaths .ppm-ai; was burned. Mrs. Dodge name to the rescue, and contributed largely to the erection ofa new one. Until two years atothiugs' eontinnedin an even tenor. Then Hr. McDonald was oifsred the pg. torato ofthe Csnlllksitloual Church at Bar Haybo gills. Hoilked his associations in Florida, but the enervatiog climbts 'af the South is never homelike to him' whose childhood was spent amid the rigors of lilac, and he elected to accept. ' _ cuuuas ron. own xmv ann. lo March, Abbie Lo well Sweester Dodse went down to the portal of death. ' Sie sent for the Rev. Mr. McDonald. I-le hurried to Jacksonville, prepared ler mlidfor death, prayed for her soel as her breath fiioirered out and ofilciated at 'her funeral. Then he returned to B r Harborand resumel his parish dotieey ‘ The will of Mrs. Dodge was probatenh after the” usual decent lapse. The , yfpiig' minister gasped when apprised o ‘ its contents. She left $5,000 for n monument over ber remains. Her sister who ,fwas Mrs. Ladd, afterwards Mrs Haleyfwa. llvfn $3.000. Her other sister rica`vsd $80 e week during her life. ' Her b o her Asaph got nothing-Bueksport Usnere' people soy probably because he dldn’t need it, for Asaph, boo had been“lo e handed." There was 33,00.) for her nephew, Simon ;L\'|d. Of Brewer, Me., to be used in trust for his cbildren’s eduratlon. Ani three or four other nephews and neices received j :weis or moncy, mslring ~the total of all her bequests except t» the ` Rev. Mr. M:D Jnald, about $25,001 Allrthe 'rest of the estate, all the money, ailfthe bmds, sllithc land and the bio; lfoeel were left to Mr. McDonald, and by the terms. of the testament he becamesole execu‘or. H: is now in Florida getting familiar with his new estate -his if Mr. Sweetser should be unsuccessful ' in getting the will set aside. , “Wilt when set thine eve on that wh'c"i is not? For riches certainly make them~ solves wings; thev fly away, as un eagle to ward heaven." _ 1' Orlnwosus. V Our sole knowledge f the ` ge on other worlds :ad hov¥;ei?a.r,. e bpeopie there differ from onrf inha tents, can only be guessed ll? n with animal nature on‘ his sphere of ours. More imporhsnt to us is a knowledge of. ourselyes. ‘Know Tavares" was an old Greek How to tdke one of one'a own my is notso simple as some Hink- ihe, nman niam ima wonderful thi and watciriiig. \ It lh d ` the Amgrlgaxr peeps: hgeretoirnlree bodies anal t sn other iaDr.l.V I? the Auth _ rue . 1. orc the - 'aa su. f easru Aavi.-ef g Hs z If is not t e` quantity of the food ea nwhich produces strength and health _ (for somgipeople can keep strong oss a-V meagre eta, hnt it is how much Uaorbed an assimilated by the bio and rrried to nourish every organ of' the Mdy. t is, therefore, vitally necessary for-,the body that the stomach be in a h th amia. Ifdisease ofthe stomach, orw ta called 'stomach trouble," Erevents proper zrtritiondthentthet heart, lnageysnd dueys o no ge proper -th are not fed on rich red blood, and in se- "-°~» °-2.:-..a= un er- .sz ° .-.-. ' ions on sk n, pale lice, ess b, red,ia uid fee ings, or, a ilaaarvesngfbelng fed on para becogemsisrved, :dug a n u ,m lribloed disease; of es and study DN 'tile from the extract: 1: ' d died about ilvs years ago.” “ ' , _ iamiesi ces ».. »~ “"”'°P“."-\°““ 'i .,......’ l'.'i‘l‘l,... a.. Na ‘ of tha healthy eisaren from her great hosteiry a hm-ml sgaailch - nice 00 .tzel g.hlsed,uw¢1isee'i!li:rian:eea is unearth, , hmm . u g. ' ' _"1shhhieQ. lo H schooi,thaRav. Angus lf. Ido- ,hu _ - 3-1’}~‘*') mm ;- Baan ue; " f 3' » , 1 i. ' ~;-. - Children __ ` .llowgaols thing ‘ro. see cheat that way. But if .they'!e not-' the chances are they- need T V ' ‘ V V ..PARK's‘ i>e|tl=Ec1‘ BMULSIQN ~ fl ~.i._-.|.'.".IQ(_l¥.C.iE}'_ is easily .ir - f, .V _ Y 1 'en me rx'il.iti§-' ‘vn.‘tfr.e~' 'gui rec.. l"'“ F letters siiovo had Jenoaorageilibii ating ' _ ces. Is' her the young ciergyrsiadieend s. 1 vs. ,., l. .'I`f;'_¢_ _'.\,_ff§<.>'.i'=`\’=f€°_'f' enefrv ies 'f°.°d. ¢°¢_=o’¢, ¢°u'n¢ ao- much as the- amount 'v¥“_*"'=_*°i‘f=.f we M ,:e'.`.¢ii‘,_¢ff'<.,."f; " 1 sr digostedi and it is likahip 1~i:e§enu»s¢.¢.ip¢.e.,, in -~-~-~-~cAvvrNrcr:N'rzr:r.s. ce. Photographers. \”' » ,-,cf Q _", A, Q5; 15,4 I /c 4 _ -v.-.,_..' » _ 1 YV. SASICWIII, C._hg§,m0ved to the Office lately occupied by Mr. '~."».-'r I nlPQ,i2qsA|.E~._ ____ . __ raid e.?.{ai'“f.'ll.’|¢ 'fe 1'4". °`°'l;?;'¢ '”i.1.'fi°,"’ ` also bans, shed and aampl¢‘;.`o`orn, ooiivaaianlljf _ I =\;s:;%I;p&caitel\. R. Station. rar pan.¢n~ _Oliver Rattenbury, Desgrjsay ursieean P E 1 'r”uaE'eE` °"‘.’“' l‘Bm1dmg'°ver Huthdnmg swre’ ° ’ _,' '_ ' 7 " “‘ V Entrance from Queen-Sit-.\ ~ " s d m w . sv 4 wk; 5_1.-_gr-r-as;-gi .L_-= I g F *_ 'The out-of-the-ordinary ' 7 .§“f= ¥”“‘@ 1%” 99.<.‘,.f°_i2=%~°°r. l _.rec-Tail ,'i.i..s°m.......a;i§=ff¢'éf1y.». ' ¢rf=¢f<=d by afhsfv-` _i .gi I - . "l»‘l_-.}‘ ;._'§’ ~ Fit-Reform originated I “T-wr °'1,_f~'/:‘.h . . . " :;;§_1,§~ this idea--just as Fit-Re form was the originator in ,L1 :gil Canada of tailor-made clothes, ready to wear. $1: to $30. ‘ I l _ Fires-some PROWSE BROS., CHARLOTTETOWN __-__-~._ ._ . .. _ ...,v__.._..-_._-_-._____.--.. ..._e.__.__.- . i EVERY POUfND OP WO0L You leave with us you will get ' f HIGHEST PRICES FOR. In exehange w¢’ll give you-Tweed, Clothing, Yarns, Stock- inette, etc., AT LOWB$T PRICES. ;_` rzememiier-WB WANT wooL. Humphrey Clothing Store, 7 Opera House Building. Ch‘t0wu. P. E. I. Phone 63. A , ‘l Winfield Scott, Manager. i le- m as 1. ' 'ww' Lza ‘ai 11 » . iliraclive Wnnlens ` -Fon- l Spring and Summar sin thezpast so now we " ir Shéwiiigsdutel of the new~ estlcreations in suitings and l trouseriugs that are put oufthe 'market » If you favor us with ur ..prder you can depend on §Et- tin a graceful cornforth le ang well Hnisherl garment at _ a moderate cost " _ _ Merchant Tailor, _ ~- Mme 310.1.; “ltr ..» ,_ t. ,rift eg si The inns soc. i` ' , ' _ _..»f., ef - f._.._ -~¢.r.e.a- el..-