-'i '¢ an _ ir _ _-._ . -pil' »_’ , _ P -il .--, !"~. fl- `: ~ , Fil., lffl. . ' ` 'a e iii I I W l ,- f f l aff ai.-'1~_+»_ .5 w~' ;f=¢f - »-~ _“___ _ ,_ “~W‘~'_“¢“ '_~__ ' .' _ ,- _ ,_ _ i__, _ :mm- W W . _ '.'~"- 3,15.: , -2 , ' iv, lib it ‘ l *Fl-A ' i _ 1 , ,_ ,_ ,4 _ _ i-1 `-'-` ~ 1,.: gn llyia-gil: _ Fiji ,gi ‘ 1 l -I » "THB l¢N|'li'.l‘ N155 “.*~v\ Dolioiouc 7 ¢ GENUINE WORCESTERSHIRZ SAUBE _ Umporled Absolutely! I snvn "\Aow¢R¢§\ Q 1 . ` * _Veterinary Surgeon ®. Dcntisf iilrzulunlo ()nt-'rio Vetcrinnr,\' Collelrz Loniloii. Uiiiindai und Detroit. \ eterinnry llontul t`oll<‘l!e, Detroii. _Mich L'. r. A. illlici-_--.‘\{cl.ui'en Building. lately occup- eil in' llr l"r:iser,) phone 14, residence i\lo|ii:u:ul- lieu-l.l hone 4. _ ' il ti lli.i svetinily :ind l)|:.i-'nies ul nj je ' = , l~veryll|i||;: i\vi~iu||_i\|i;:j to the \'i~ti-rinury uii»l \-.-l ilvlitnl |»i‘ol--.~i~'|o|\. hlolilngue. P li. l. l~llli ull' li mins. ii..ii1f.§.’..., nn. .~...f.... -or 'run-_ bummer School of Science will he lueld ut l\`rcderi<:t0n, N. B., .luly l;£i_h to Aug. 2nd. iiuiii-si-.< in Natural Sciences, Eng- lish i.iL»-_rature, Aixriculturc-School_ llzirilr-nin;_', etc., will he given. Hizlioliiimliilis in vnlue froni $10 to $150 ¢::u~_h :irc ollercil for competition. l-'our of those will be couliued to l’.` IE. l. 'l`:-:\¢~lii'l‘s. l ln-np U cnrll lor cnlenrlnr to _ J. li. Seaman, , (.3 llnylicld street, "liurlnt_tetowr., Hecrntury. 4 i\‘iliu»'ll. """“_“__._ ___ _____. Farm For Sale Jq.»;|.-i-.\::(il` _sfooil f:i|'|n l:unl lnrlwvcii Vnio-i '-nil l’.i'.u‘l ____ l ____ 6-7drtf.: |`\7AN'I‘l‘lD, reliable men with sell-1 ' ling ability and some know-i ledge of the fruit business or nursery 1 sl.oi:k, to represent us in Prince Ed-l wuril Island as local and generali agents. We are growing a special list ol v.~n-ieties to meet our Mari-l time Province trade. Liberal induce-l incnts and permanent position for the SALE. 125 BUGS Of 1_H¥l_d all right men. Stone & Wellington, Tor- onto, Ont. 5-1‘Jd1mo. l be - 1 uolnocns wnurco 1 `rc\€`Ecii`t`iEi§§`ii`erienCed teacher WV New Glasgow. Apply to Mrs. l". I-I. Parker, proprletoress, Box 228, New Gliisguw, N. B. 5-20d1mpd. _¥\/'OMEN WANTED, to take orders! I. .in annre time. No experience nec- _ ussnry. Our lines especially used byl inul_licrs und girls. Apply Dept. A.,! 1li~iti_sl|-Unniirliiin industrial Company, 228 Albert St., tlttuvvn. _W____v 6-"7idrti`_. x`,'AN’l‘lBank_Hof Canada. 6-12d3ipd r1.jOST, on Elm Ave., a fountain ` pen. Finder please leave at 128 Elin Ave. 6-10d3ipd. _ F , , MISCELLANEOUS §‘§\l‘oTICE-Tii'e`iiEr_n.?id "feed `in"ii'1 § i of the undersigned will be closed E. Crosby, Bonshaw. 6-12dr1w1. _ 7 F' - __ ' n TEACHER WANTED it ' r for principal at Georgetown School, male preferred. Apply to T. E. Morrisey, Se~c'y Trustees. W 6-8d6i. ‘X/YANTED, a teacher for Gable 1. gl-lend West school. Protestant preferred. Supp. voted. Alex And- erson, Secretary of 'I‘rustees._ 6-1d1m. _ ___________ __ _ _T91-‘ET VIJO LET, summer cottages, at ‘ _ Rocky Point, "Warren Farm." Inquire of John Newson, oflice or 177 o»=f<;~_S¢-___°_ _ ______m_6_;f>_<_1;w- TO LET, house,1136 Great George 1 Street. Modern improvements., Rent moderate. Apply to J. H. B511. 6-1 tf. _ . mer months. Enquire at this oflice. 5-9sf1H_ I ,Fon s/ina 1MMaoiA1u~;i.v _` your city debenture-4 Apply Messrs. McLean & D0", to '$51'-n'i"_"”” bv L.0.A June V 4 Y _ _ *_ - ' .. ~ <..._- -_ - ...u *'l0lV'l50'(.'llltECA'l`A'|l|l||';~ it ` it I it in cxpsfsmfe shpiuin soil 1"llBH.S‘\l‘l'i_C _ 'Trove Ilia Scciel Wu Revealed |>¥~ 1 _n Vision I ~ ~ 1 »f»» _ ly CLARISSA NAC!!! Copyright, 1310, by American Pun . Association rfrr . '.'~ Jarvis journeyed from the little. rall- rond station in u brightly painted stage drawn by two iron gray horses. He was the only passenger for the beach. :ind he shook about in the huge vehi- cle like the proverbial pea in u burrel. .\t the entrance to a narrow sandy liiiie shaded by wind blown cedars, under which the marsh grass struggled sparsely, the stage stopped. ` "All outl" sang the driver lnstlly. "Goln‘ to the beach, ye said?" He peered down at Jarvis with heady bluck eyes beneath thatches of white eyebrows. . “\`es; Edgewater cottage. Straight‘ uhcud?" Jarvis asked the question while he threw his luggage to tho ;;ronud and paid his fare. “l'Idgc\vuter cottage? '.l‘hat’ll bc the Rowe place, last cottage on the left. So long!" Jiirvis turned to the left and walked slowly down to the beach, his head haired to the fresh breeze, his lungs gratefully inhaling the invigorating suit air. '.l‘he last cottage proved to be a ruth- er large structure placed`not fur be- yond high water mark. Its shingles were weather beaten to a silver gray. und the many windows tightly shut- tered looked like closed eyes in ii sud face. It seemed desolate enough com- pared _to the other cozy houses along the beach, but Jarvis decided after u busty examination that when he got out some porch furniture and opened up the shutters the cottage he had hired would be tit enough for his pur- poses. i The rusty key he had obtained from the agent creaked in the lock and the door swung open, admitting him to large, comfortably furnished rooms. His first duty was to throw wide the shutters and raise the window snslies to the fresh air. Except for a layer oi' dust over everything the house was in exquisite order of arrangement. He decided to sleep in the wire lnclosed balcony, und as he had arranged by letter for his meals to be sent lu from the hotel on the long point beyond there was little for him to do save to arrange a col: in the balcony and un- pack his paiutlng things. At sunset a steam launch from the hotel discharged n boy with a basket containing his dinner. Jarvis discussed the excellent meal on the veranda, his nrt.ist’s eye lingering on the wide sweep of green ami blue decked yvitli white that dlled the foreground. Here were color und life enough tn limn any number offcanvases. Jarvis was glad .he had decided to close his studio and run away from all his friends, and the chance that brought him to Beachside had been decided by the childish method of closing his eyes and running his finger along the mup of New Jersey while he counted ten. Then he had opened his eyes and found Beachside, most lnconspicuons of small watering places, under his linger. Now he was here. Be smoked a thoughtful cigar while the sunset tlnts faded in opal and sil- ver and then a uniform slate gray set- tied over the water. The cigar consumed, Jarvis felt for another one in vain. His cigar case wns empty; also he had forgotten his tobacco pouch. He lingered his pipe wlstfully and rummaged his traps for tobacco of some sort. In sheer des- peration he carried his tallow candle (there was no kerosene ln the cottage) from room to room in an aimless search for nicotine. At last he whistled joyously. On a small stand in one corner of the living room he found a smoking set of ham-_ mered brass. The huge tobacco jur contained u few pinches of the desired weed. and he crammed it intofhls pipe gratefully. Now he closed the door und locked it and went up to his balcony. I-Ie throw himself down on the cot and smoked contentedly, dreumlly. Overhead was the shine of gentle stars, and on the beach the waves broke softly, musl- cally. He went to sleep. Jarvis was awakened by n crushing volley of thunder, followed by a vlvld tinsh of lightning. He sat up and gazed open ,mouthed at the strange scene depicted before his eyes. There wus all the wild fury of n hurricane bursting. about--his--curse Huge waves pounded on the beach. breaking ln blinding spray that drench- ed his face. Some durk shape loomed out of the blackness, coming nearer. He discerned the outlines of 1_1 large white steamer. saw dark forms tosscil against her whiteness, heard the blure ot her distress signals, saw her careon on the shonls and become engulfed in the sea. Still the waves broke on the bench, and in their tossing they flung u dark form on the white sand beneath the balcony. Jarvis tried to rise, but\his limbs seemed paralyzed. He endeavored to. utter ii sound, but his lips were dumb. He could only sit there on his couch wildly conscious of tragedy heaped on tragedy, powstlis to help. Another wwvo rose high crested. curved downward and greedily snatch- ed the lull dukform from the sands. di-ew it outhitothossrsbosomsnll kept lt. _ . _L “Much obliged. Goodby!" 3 l* a°Fr1lii'il2’..1wh'°-D‘1°7 so A ' _nano me bcu'h.»-miv_§on»elou» um me si- lent form-hid behind. s H lost in the ¢lllklll» Then the csmee¢aln,allll~#01D~ suckilll uP sand »it._6ver and about the dark obioet until lt .-was entire!! hld~ den_{m»m,Yk\!. th W _ chldonnels el rm vanished as if it hid never boon. (list- head uie stars lhdne neatly. and ills waves softly quiet beach. Jarvis found his motive power as if magiesllyrestomd. iWlth a leap he was off the cot and dashing down 010 stairs to tlmeand. Clhere _he st0°d dumfcunded. . 'ro the much onus seeekinsed IM the sand was warm and dry. His groping lingers confirmed that fact. The tide was rising, and almost to its verge the sand sholvedlno trace 0! dainpness. The sen. stretched a level expanse, broken heronlld there by Gim- pling wavelets. “ru he hanged if I know what tv make of it," muttered Jarvis dazedly. “I couldn't have been dreamln8. HB5 yei:"- He looked at his watch. “lt'! certainly up to me or the tobacco l’ve been smoking! Nino o’clock when I turned ln, and now lt's 9:30. Even in these swift tlmas they don’t turn storms on and on st that sail!" Chagrlned, he walked over to the place under his balcony where the waves had tossed the dead man for B brief instant before they reclaimed him. Jarvis had watched it -with his 'own eyes, and he had seen the follow- ing waves heap sand about a small, dark object the man had left behind. There should be ei little sand mound here-and there wssl, - The painter was too excited to re- turn to his bed; therefore he went into the cottage, found an old fashioned lantern, in which he stick a candle end, took up a coa.l.shove1 and went hack to the beach. Here by the candle’s dim light he grimly dug into the shallow heap of sand. It was a :fool’s business, he told himself 'ns he delved downward to where the sand .was soaking wet and the water oozed up into little wells and impeded his labor. Al: last came rays and shreds of something that might have been an oil- skln coat, and afterward, deeply em- bedded in the sand, Jarvis found a small water soaked box bound with Jarvis hastened to the cottage and with hammer and. chisel pounded away at the little box llntil its rotted sides fell inward and the iron bands ci-umhled to rusty flakes. Pltinil indeed was the little treasure contained ln the tlnychest-a snl1or’s keepsakes. Bits of coral and pretty shells and stones, ll; _womim’s lovely face smiling from I tarnished frame, a baby’s ilrst photograph, the mother’s loving inscription penned on the back; a few letters, intimately tender, from wife to husband; aa-.copy of s. will, s few months’ .wages tied ln little oil- skln sacks, the ownefs name on the inside of a memorandum book-James Petrel, master of the freighter Sea Nymph-that was all. So the man who had been thrown on the beach as revealed to Jarvis in the vision-for such the painter believed his strange adventuredio be-must have been the captain of l;he__1il fated vessel. On the morrow he :would inquire con- cemtug the wreck-'oil the Eea Nymph and try to End thswelatives of James Pel.1'Gl. ' .~ nlg.. _ After that Jn"vik‘*lihnbled into bed and went to sleep, .xvonderlng why he of all men had heennchusen to bring to light the _long buried box. He dreamed about the curly, headed baby, whose ¢\1HI‘mi11S Smile pursued him through his dreams. ,_ "yes," said the oldest _cottager when Jarvis suaniedly made inquiries con- cerning wrecks on the coast. “It was as far back as -1885 that the Sea Nymph went ashoremd here. She goi: on the shoals, but tha seas were riding so high she didn’i: stick. Back she went, and they simply swallowed her up, so the-story. goes. Bits of cargo heated ashore long afterward-one or two bodies of seamen. That was all. Divers never found trace of` her. Ii: was the womt storm ever known on the coast. After that they built the breakwater and the lighthouse. At that time there was~an old ilshermarrs hut on the spot where your cottage now stands. Tradition has li: that the old man lured thosbeamer to her ruin. If he did it was small prodl: to him, for the storm washed his hut into the sen,'snd he went ,with lt. The man who owns your cotfqe once found a copper canister dlled _wlth choice smoking tobacco buried ln the sand near by. It pleased hlmto resurrect it and smoke lt. Heiqult using lt aftf er awhile because, he claimed, it gave him the nightmare-Bald the Sea Nymph went ashore overynlght in his dreams. If theres any ot it left you better not smoke ll;” added the oldest aottager- whlmslcally. “Ifs all sono," iepueamirvis, with 1 cryptic smile. -~ And this is the treasure that Jarvis found. When he had traced the wld- ow of the luckless Captain Petrel lhe found her prosperonslyinarrled to one of the shlp’s owners, ,while the curly headed baby with the charming smile had grown to boths-lovellest girl Jar- vis had ever mst. 'As a consequence Doris Petrol becamostiie artist’s wife. 'ln addition, the mlnory of the vi- sion thsi:~l1ad come to.hlm'tb.st night clung so persistently, ln his mind that he transferred the ltormy scene to canvas with every detail of mt wild night of thunder and lightning, hurri- cane winds am mnmiiibui waves, the ghostllhs vans! nhuddstiag to her vn- tery grave, the package half obliterated by the no-is un-ni! una Jarvis' tlblhlrl, mul. :uno-ii ,. _ .__ _._ ..._-..-.. .-. ~.¢.» -1~~---~- iii 1 iii; ' Es; iss; small dark oldictarhoso outlin were iron bands. This was treasure trove. f l 1 ' ` i>ri¢~_1_-, iisiiim, gee be l bi _ ui 2' ._ li ui' ug iii ini lil 2| il i ' . ff, ui-so i _ ' 4' ' V _ si~:..r*fs~ SALE ` Mail 0rders_Ac_eompe.nio\'l By Check Rescged In The Onderkecewed. CHEAP VEXCURSIONS FRO ALL PUINTS. A y _ ` The "W_or|,d'a @G.r-mariners! _M~us'¥i°\| `s',““'l"“-i'9#0- l l i 1 l l l l l ll »|00. DPERA 75c, moo, ~1=5`o, '2.o`h. T9 AUM- _ _ .l ii I ii iii We li il’ ii it E WHAT* ll! I 5 l I l ll l ‘I li ii l El il li _=' _hs-_ sn flu. " . ‘rms salem wiiqsiinimime-sinims mwr rurunittsgrrnsiloni -»-.-...~..=..- -...nf ~ 6 -qfma _ _zi,-...ilu snr; az vvouiiia' some ai unease -¥°»‘1 i E in A R ‘V -ny o'.'r.'ro muraiuaaoa me nm. unsound' ' _ ‘ l i i )_\\ 1 - ~- wrt? " -vu -f" I a _ _ ge¢;_,iimi1~s _s"Sn=AeSsusefl°N° I l-i-i--»-ci _A mi _nr ~|||lilenl._aeou£li ailments, minding _ ==,‘,=',;.,,,';‘:,l'.¢‘;f',,,..' i i"T'hei.r Own, Special Orchestra- ~ W 'a l \ . During Coronation Week there will bc displayed in our store the » largest and most complete exhibit of liigli-quality pianos that has ever been sliowu in this Province. __ Seventeen different styles will be exhibited, showing' favorite . _ cimniioil wen; W I Weil Show llie Largesi ` oi Pianos liver Ex by any Prwiucial J A l models of eight Canadian factories. Tile pianos are placed side by side and the price of each inarked in plain figures to enable you to judge i czicli instrument and compare quality with price. ' We are confident that our terms are more reasonable and showing _ of pianos better than any other Island dealer can show and this display , will prove to you the honesty of such a clnini. Call in and judge these ’ _ i pianos for yourself-you don t have to buy. l lf you are tliiiiking of buying a piano we can save money for you- ‘ . ‘ and give you zi boiler piano. _ ’ I A _ ' |25 Kent Street Charlottetown s