MARCH 9,1912 --csu_i..~.-....~.- me 'rua cnaatorrnrowu ouaamliu mu as mr- race 'runnin . ,f _ *-'- '° - ._ ' r . Y - . _ ._. _,_ , _ _ _ REPOBT rived from the clergyman with that '°“‘1.- .L THE ouEEN's coulml ounrnuu ‘ Wheleeele end Retail PM , ~ HALIF/4x_ Merch 7-No ice report _‘Ulf 'Ill DWG" 'UM perfectly well .Wm .ie began to see through hor little l ___._----- scheme. Having urrivod at the Cunt- mings home. he went through the usual formalities of a professional call and , us own health was breaking down ‘rom overwork and he was about to It Was Diagnosed by Many ; Doctors. but Gorroctlll by Only 0no _ y .___ ny r. A. Muonrl . co-9,,-|N¢ by” -Aun;;ri;s,s.11;. Press Asso- It was Sunday morning. The State ‘meg Presbyterian church of Berke- iey was crowded to heir the drst ser- mon of the new minister. the Rev. charles Fordham. Miss Dorothy Cum- mgpgs, daughter of Deacon Cummings -the deacon was one of the pillars of the church-sat in her fathers pew spellbonnd by the minister's elo- qnence. 'rho following Tuesday evening Miss cnmmmgs appeared at the _weekly 9"," meeting. surprising those who for years had been regular Lu their at- tendauce. 'on Thur-edgy the minister dined at me home of Deacon Cummings, and lisa Dorothy during the evening found gp opportunity to say to him that she he been deeply impressed by his Sun- day sermon and would like to converse with him on the subject of the dis- course. Mr. Fordham signified his will- mgpees to further enlighten ber, sug- gesting that she call at the church .whenever she chose. _ Miss Cummings did not appear at the church on the 'second Sunday ot new clergyman's administration. g.inquirles conceming her her mother nnnounced that she _was iudisposed. Urs. Cummings bore a message to the some effect from her daughter to Mr. Fordham and asked if' be could 'End It convenient to call during the week, since she was not well enough to go out. She desired a conference. Now, the Rev. Mr. Fordham was a young bachelor, but old enough to un- derstand the care that must be observ- ed by a clergyman. He told Mrs. Cum- _ V' "“1 . Q . .wtf L ll _J 4 If l; Jldrl ‘ll gf* re \`~` ~_¢_‘;.` .-i‘,5; Iwi-3|-,'> 4 . ` _` \ 4- __ `_ u “" ° 1 ! 5;; “ 2. 1 ua;'?, si' :* - -... , -` IIKID TBI PATIENT L GBILT IAN! QUBTIONB. mills! be had laid down a' rule for his luldance which he preferred not on Ill! arcount to break through. This rule was that he would not make any but formal visits to the women of his ifillliirogation and all spiritual instruc- tion must be administered at the church. He did not explain why he had made this rule. Be simply stated the fact. A few weeks later the Cummings flmlly physician, Dr. ilidinghnm Trent. was called in to see Dorothy. He look- ed at her tongue, felt her pulse and stuck rl little glass thermometer in her mouth. Then he took out the prescrip- tion blnnk with which doctors invari- lllll’ end a call, especially a first cali, lad wrote a prescription. This done. he left l:ier,»,ltating that the trouble WHS not serious. As soon as he'had gone Dorothy threw his prescription into the ure. _ A Week passed, and Miss Cummings. Will no better, her father called up DF- '1`reat_by telephone and was in- formed that he had gone to Bmith’s ‘NK store. Mr. Cummings phoned the °l,°cto\'_ time and iuurea mm to can on D~°f°l\\¥. since she was no better, and I! (hor father) was worried about her. *FR |i_lVlll8 forgotten what medicine 5° had recommended the girl and not Vllmllk it to appear that the case was not constantly on his mind. asked UNUI. who sold the Osmmlngsss all their drugs, to look up the prescrip- °°“ lllil tall him-.what he had ordered. Smith discovered that no prescription ffilm the doctor to any of the Cum- mlllli family had been recently filled. On his way to visit thepstient the °'°°°°’ V" 'NUMB by the Rev. Mr. Fordham to inquire about Miss Qum- 'llllll Bs wished to know whether D°"°llI! was very sick and gave con- umlilll! ss a rssson her request that 5° WWII cnll _tesdminister spiritual °¢vico.--"his refusal. eeeeroing ui are NN. stating farther that it she were N ilsmr no would not :mum to ge io her at once. Tl” ‘wwf promised the clergyman _Wi If Dorothy should become aan- ltfmlv nl he would notify inm ana lluvson. Bstonths way hedlo some in departing informed the family that :ive up his practice for at lust s year. de would, however. write out a state- ;uent of Dorothy's case. so far as he ind observed il. which might be of ervice to any physician who should :ext treat her. Sitting down in the lbrary. he wrote: ‘ My diaillosls of this ease is that there s n cordial affection. There are frequent ieart flutterlngs. followed by depression, :ut since the heart is effected by nervous ~ondltions i do not fear organic trouble. i rather infer mental influences. How- ever, since I may be mistaken in this di- iznosis i would recommend watching the iction of the liver, the kidneys, the spleen ind other organs. Dorothy kept ber room and refused icrself to visitors. Dr. Archibald =\vain-Chichester, whose practice was imoug the ultra fashionable set, ne__xt ook up ber case. read Dr. Treats iingnosls-or, rather, scanned it con- aemptuously-aslred the patient a grant nnny questions, gave especial direc- lons as to her diet, wrote the cus- 'umury prescription-or, rather, pre- lcriptioas. for there were three of them -und departed, promising to return -gain in a week. Since M_rs. Cum- ulngs was now much troubled about _ icr dnughter's condition Dorothy did nt dare to burn up her prescriptions, lut when the medicines came she daily lourcd u small portion of each in n link. Since she thwarted her physi- .-lan's intention in her behalf it is not -cmnrkable that she gained no benefit But. on the other hand, if she gained io benefit she suffered no injury. Now, Dorothy in her feminine way .vns a far' better diagnostician than any lf ber physicians. Though she had .net the Rev. Charles Fordham but n /ew times, she had noticed in his eye lhnt peculiar spark of love which lashes nt times between two persons if opposite sex, as well as felt it in fer own heart. During his ilrst ser- non she had kept her gaze fixed upon lim and had several times noticed his momentarily concentrated upon her. During her illness-or, rather, her se- ~iuslon-he had made repented inqui- ries of bei' family as to her condition ind had manifested the usual solici- rutle of 11 pastor for one of his con- rregntion. He even expressed a re- :ret that the rule he had made with ~e-ference to refrnining from private -'isits to the women ofhis church had irevented his giving the sick girl the .ieueiit of s lritual comfort Ii Div! to buy in this Province. _Mrs. J. I. Wdod, Sherwood, wana visitor to Charlottetown yesterday. J. J. Mclnnis, Earuscllfie, was a- HIODK tba visitors to Charlottetown yesterday, . Miss Mary E. Sherry returned yes- terday to her home in Fernwood si- ter sponding the winter in charlotte town. Any person paying their electric light bill before Merch ‘ 11 will re ceive the discount and thus save money. In Feivonse 'to an enquiry yester- day, the lecture in the Charlottetown Y. M. C. A. on thcprevious evening was not lgiven. , Any young racy stenographer, de slrlng a position as general office helper,`should write G.A.C., care oi Guardian, Charlottetown, at once. Mrs. Ellen Murphy, Charlottetown, was a Dhwonger west yesterday af- ternoon to visit ber daughter Mrs. James Sherry, Fdrnwood. ` Mrs. J. G. Kelly, Charlottetown, left Yesterday to visit her sister ai F0l'l1W00d bcfore leaving to join hcl husband in-Calgary. Miss Freda Haszard, Charlottet- OWH. who has been in Halifax for She past year, iarrived home yester- sy. The Gharlottetownl Arena will rc deem all refund checks issued at last n1ght's game any time tonight al the box office after 7,30 F. L. Orr, Nelson, B. C.; L. Wood, ,Mt. Herbert; -C. L. Grant, Charlott- etown; J. L. Trenlholm, St. John and T. C. Savage, Montreal; registered at the Queen Hotel, Charlottetown, be- itween 10 o'clock last night and 10 o'clock the previous night. All should go to the Forester bask- et social at Bonshaw on Wednesday evening, the 13th, as a good time may be expected. Admission will be 15c. Ladies with baskets free. If 'thc “ight is stormy it will be held on Friday evening. - ' Miss Margaret Verjeker, the celebrat- fd English contralto bas- arrived in Charlottetown and on Thursday next, lbiarch; 14, will gflve one of her _delightful songs recltals which all lmusic .lovers..shou1d. not fail to at: .tend. Miss Verker will be assisted by ‘Proi. Watkis, as accompanist. p . The statement seemed to have a bad -ffect when Mrs. Cummings repeated lt to the patient, for the next day Dor- lthy admitted to her mother that one if the causes of ber ailment was a ielf conviction of her own sinful con- iition. When Mrs. Cummings repeat- -d this to the clergyman he threw his 'ule to the winds and iifdrmed tbe"" -_:ood lady that he would visit the in- valid whenever she desired to see him. ‘ The next Monday afternoon, Monday being the clergymnn’s visiting day. he rang the bell at the Cummingses ind was ushered into an upstairs liv- ing room where Dorothy, whose pal- lor had been caused partly by confine- ment nnd partly by face powder skill- fully applied, was half reclining on a .ounge. She was dressed in a becom- ing kimono-like gown and partly cov- ered by a silken spread with colors 'o correspond with the gown. She was n very pretty girl and never looked prettier than now, at the same time enlisting the sympathy of an invalid. _- How far the young clergyman stuck to the subject of that he had come to talk about is not known to any one except him and Dorothy. When he departed the girl seemed to have been more benefited than by all the drugs she was supposed to have taken. Mr. Fordham. having broken his rule once. found it much easier to break it a sec- ond time. after which it was far easier to break than adhere to it. it was shortly before these visits began that Dr. Effingham Treat, meet- ing Mr. Cummings. asked after his daughter. Mr. Cummings said that be had had four physicians and gave Dr. Trent n summary of their opinions as lo what was the matter with Dorothy. Dr. Swain-Chichester thought the pa~ :lent was threatened with melnncholia. The next practitioner attributed ber illness to her liver, the next to the nerves. the next to a nonassimilation uf food. There was one point on which they all agreed-that the pa- tient gave no response whatever to the medicines they prescribed. This was not remarkable since she had taken none of them. Dr. Treat listen- ed to these diagnoses, looked wise and said nothing. The visits of the Rev. Mr. Fordham ro M-iss Dorothy Cummings were con- tinued with excellent results. Her physicians were discharged, what re mained of her drum! Will d98¢\'0¥¢0. lm! it was not long before she was driving out for an airing. Then sho was seen frequently in company with the clergy- man, and members of the congrega- tion began to talk of an engagement it was whispered among some of the unmarried ladies who had themselves had designs on the reverend gentle- mnn that Dorothy Cummings was mek- Ing s dead set for him. ‘ They were all of them behind the times. At one of the earlier visits hir. Fordham had made on Miss Cummings he had proposed to har and been sc- cepted. Since their engagement and Doi-otny's recovery they were simol! having s. courtship for the world, qw more especially the congregation' "i he state Street Presbyterian church, ,_ _ for Brenkfsst or Lunch.. l , he taken at _an Mme- either t _, ._ When this outside intimacy had con tinned long enough to satisfy appear- ances nie snsarsmeat was announced. Mom-1 Amrinirvan 'rnoors 'rr-in Mexican Bonham. William Gordon, son of D. and Mrs. _Gordon, Charlottetown, arrived home yesterday on the special train from |Georgetown. His many friends will lregret _to learn that he is ill, having ltnken sick in Penang, a British ls- llnnd in the Straits of Malacca. He ‘ was in ‘a hospital there for some time ,where he remained a while before ‘coming home. :Rexall “93" Hair Tonic and 'sham- poo Paste are a perfect combination for curinlg heir troubles. They are del- ightful to use and give astonishing re- sults. Our customers who have used them are delighted. ‘Call and ask about tb`o‘ln The MacKinnon Drug. Co Cor. Gt. Geo. & Kts , \ tlrtf. “There is no risk in ii dealer sell- ing Mayflower OIL. Every gallon is guaranteed by the manufacturers. The,I.mperlal Oil Co., Lt_d. 3-7d1m. Waulisnnns' v`1c'ro»nY _ MAKES QUEBEC - , HOCKEY., CHAMPIONS. , ,___ _ MONTRUAL, March 6--By defeat- illg Ottawa 5 to 2 tonight the Wau- derers gave, the championship oi the |Natl0nnl Hockey Association to Quo- |bec.. Had Ottawa won, the Ottawa 'and Quebec teams would have been tied. The game was fast and some- what rough, three men being put off ~the ice for major fouls. Darragb of Ottawa. was laid out in a mlxup with Ross, the Wanderer star, and had tu lretire. Ross , was put. out of the game. BORN. FRASER-In Charlottetown, Mar. .8, 1912, to J. Frank 'Fraser and Mrs. Fraser, n son. BHELFOON-'-In Charlottetowil, Fell. 26, 1912, to J. A. and Mrs. Shel- Ioon, a daughter. . DIED. ‘ MONAGHAN-In this city, on March 8th, Ann Jane Monaghan, wife of Hugh Monaghan, aged 71 years. Funeral will leave the late resi- dence, Grafton Street, tomorrow, Sunday, at 2.45 to St. Dunstsn's Cnt.hedral;' thence to Il. C. Ceme- tery. HIGH POSITIONS FOR ? w. K. vaupiaanli/r,Jn. Now Yonit, Mares s-w. K. van- rlerbllt, Jr., who is now thirty-four years old, was today elected vice- president of the New York Central and JI-ludson River _and the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Rail- rond Companies. at meetings of the directors of the two corporations. .Welle-N-cts Energy for _ Al day -- .= ` ‘Il`."*f..°.’_*..s..'.. wi". ' WA)l\‘HING‘i‘()N,` Mércli ` 6-`-Tha' acl-' mnisletration, it was learned today.ls planning to send more troops to the Motives border. i- ._ C.,Ltd',ClJ l C ,'_' - ._ ' . Zalsrisiniéss trip ess? ot eww” ‘B on ‘ F I r r r In I Lin ns `iiud"thcn‘ "'proceeded"'to 'New“’Y1Jrlr Geo. Moran, oi the Rogers Hard- There were no cases before the ne will visit iriends and relatives. The Basket Ball match between thc Second Abbles and the Hillsboro Consolidated School at the Charlott- etown Y. M. C. A., last night was won by the former by the score of Zi to 28. The match between the Prince St. girls anid the Consolidated girls, was the best game played be- tween these two teams this season, the Prince St. ;Glrls winning the game 'by the score of 8 to 6, The great evaugellstics meetings now going on in -_Bradalbaue are ex- ceedingly well attended and much interest is taken in them. 'l`liere‘has been some _additions and many more are looked for. The meetings will lic conducted by the great evangelist W. H. Harding, for gthe remainder of the week. No one should fail to bcar him as he has an earnest message from the word oi God. The funeral of the late Paul Mc- Cormack, Charlottetown, which was held yesterday morning at. 8.45 was it very impressive and solemn sight, The remains _ol the father were conveyed to the Cathedral by a span of black horses. and those of the son' by n span of whitc horses. Services wcrc conducted by Rev. Pius Macdonald. After the ceremony the long process- ‘ion weuded its way -to the Roman Catholic Cemetery, whore side by side, father and son were laid to rest. The funeral of the son was uu- der the fauspices of the Order of Owls, recently organized in Charlottetown. and the pall bearers were selected from the 0rder` as follows:-Wm_. (l. Hogg, Isaac Jenkins, R. B. Innls_ J. ‘Austin Traiuor, Conn. W. 'W. Walker and Chas. J. Mitchell. The pall bear- ers for the father were H. IJ. Murphy, Thomas Butler, James Doyle, and Andrew Murphy, John S. Macdonald. George Morrison. T. Gordon Payne, St, John; James B. Keenan, St. John; C. W. Piers, Toronto; W. B. Artiiur, Montreal-; J. C. Watson, Montreal; Henry Thompson, Ottawa; T. McCoukey, Halifax; _B. J. Stevens, Halifax; W. H. Patterson, Montreal; Gco. D. Ellis, Montreal.; T. G. Clark, Sum- nerside; D. R. Morrison, Summer-' side; 5A. N. Elliot, Toronto; W. D. Twedell, Toronto; H. A. F`0Sl€\"- que; A. G. Watson, Montreal; W. 1*. _M_cNeill, Summerside; Arthur Boute, Summerslde; Neil Duirant, Summer- si-de; J. Tamlyn, Summerslde; Levi Siliiphant., Summerside; W. C. lvl. Askhurst, Halifax; Mrs. Roy Siliiphant, Summerside; bliss Gertrude McElroy, Calgary; Ray Silliphant, Summcrsi-dc; Earl Grady, Summerside; E. L'. Dewar, Summerslde; D. B. McDonald. N- Bedeque; F. C. Murphy, Summersidc; W. E. Cameron, Charlott`et.own; Stanley Perry, Summersidc; Miss ‘ A. Metherell, Summerside; Miss L. I-Iowatt, R. J, McMurdo, L. M. Mc- Neill, E. ¢McQuarrle, Garson Arbiug, W. Duncan, E. McLellan, B. Mclnnis, J.`I-Iorton, J. A. Gaudet, A. A. Mcliellanl, -A. Andrew, W. B. Laugh- lin, Geo. Small, J. -Steel, Summer- side; H. B. McDonald, Charlottetown; Geo. Hlbbitt, Georgetown and P. K. Stanley, Sourls registered at thc Victoria Hotel, Charlottetown -bc- tweeri 10.15 last 'night and 10.15 thc revious night. ::Patcnt Medicines no store in tlic province keeps a, better or fresher ns- sortmsnt of Patent Medicines our great aim ls_to hand out our goods t the makers hands The next. tlmc p c _ C ‘ug ° urn Lowest p ricel. "MAYFLOWER Oil has :undo c I mers where all other brmids have failed. The Imperial Oil Co. l.t. _ $7.25. 0nly live leii 'l`l_1esc dressers arc A I. in cvcry respect 'l`|icy are bcnuii- fully finished in royalozik-»---lia\'c large oval licvcl plate mirror ~ one wide drawer and iwo liali' vliiltli rlrnsvt-rs. ],r.cks ou :ill drawers. Solid liraespulls. l{eg\ilnrI1_;.25. apt-cial nt. . _ .$7.25 Another notable rircsscr lulrgniu is our oflciing of a liuc of $10.50 dressers at . . . . . . . . _ _ . . . . . . . . . . . . .. ._ . _ 5890 S W' d D' I - ee in ow isp ay- - in as good norliiltioh as when they _ _Y _ _ \ " ' ll ' ` k /` Consists of 1 nent brass iriniuicrl iron bul cu: iuelctl white ri ure zznuntain Benson. for nest emu. _ . ,, _ _ ,,‘ __ _ _ , ,__ ' _,I _ . ,, ‘__ lf ,l ' ' 1_23,m_ smiitary _llcultli llluttrcss, ri _igiuimiiiccd llcrculcs spring. lliis wcck s ____t___ special price .... ... . .... ‘flu "::.c"t.l‘:“.i°;:f;;.l;1:n; Th- - - . dr fr.. .;:; is desirable bed ouiili $9.85 3-'ld1m. _ . i 125tablcts, 10 cents; Iii; tablets, 25 ccnts; SU tnblrta, :ill cents. llcmcui- ber, you can obtain them only ut our store-The Roxall Store. The McKin- non Drug (io. time il Lu.. or (erful (` ure, Mrs. Ed.-Lloyd, Weak and Worn and .Wrnckcd with l'nln lfounil Relief and Cure in Dody