\ .s 2% W“ Mz oS AE c"> # Ao metrase Ts and ‘ xi NES 7 gommerc The atient! m < av: ; i tive bast os of ved jeepiD Zs Penmans2')s Business gritind, etc. are t ged practica ig gives to local. hasness 0S! 7288 tii by Commer 150 YONOAY. AUG. 20:0 inst, at B. Sead for pro ISAAC OXENAAM, Principal aad Proprieto peor? eo — * sorough aod ores Methods, manner. ions. ' , ' BB.» - i. eNkahe Colleve »? ' 38 rallied 1 thie 4 ya Lay. yA Cor a'** , * Shorth augot Spec Ne os @ras.ure Ne vy tert . : p spectus, fF. ration for Llegre Book- repon lence, In tne id | > & } an >the advan Arithmetic »! j, Ty pe- 10st direc & atlentior - ia good n Op?ne 939 0. Box 242 on 8 --- Wuite’s Caramels and Snowfl Checolates ~<r~ Can be had at any following firs: class ake T. J. Morris p». L. Hooper W. Pickard & Co, W. A. Hutcheson W. F. Carter Stewart @ Gates Sanderson & Cv. J.D. McLeod & R. H. Yason, ie rt +e ee @ co me @+*a Q ; @ | a eT WaNTED ‘ y Ayoanz min with sone ex- ¢ perience at carpen’er work to f learn th: art of pittern making App'y to ‘ Bruce Stewart and Ce. ¢ Founders, Fogineera, Machinists and Boiler Makere. Steam Nav. Co’s Ch’town, PE J Phone 125 / ' ‘ f ; | A CARD BR. MACNEILL, M. D. Having 30 years exverieace in the Dractice of his profession, may be con talted on all branches of geaeral medi cine including the sp2ciaizies. Office and Residence —Prince Street td door above Kincer sircen Hall. Hours—9 to, 11 a. im. rtc 3 and dy & wkly 3 mos ‘0 8 p. m. Senn NWOTICE iny Person or Persons Guilty of al Infraction of the Following City By-Law, a V Map. XV. Clause 2 N “ittdown bark, lop or otherv 8 planted under the aut y-Law, or any t now plat ’ ing upon any stre shall cur d the boxes, suppor arc und any su *h ‘ “fall be of said h ; Gl sum of sixteen ; Ca Oct 13, 1900. Nrosecita- Pros Alte By-Law and *t or square in wn, : 2 * vureaac OF O ts or other aj ree,” na subject 1 dollars wit) \. 3. moe Cc Wharf, under thie ore rs e >> te _> “en * —- % Ss <, iZieg person shall se injure any ity of this ed and grow- the said city, herwise injure vendages to or ¢ penal c'ause ya penalty of costs, OLSON, ty Surveyor. Zins eod. —_—_—. SUNNYSIDE DENTSTRY, Offce in New Prowse Block fitst door to the right up stairs, Telephone connection. DR. AYERS DS THE,DAILV EXAMINER Love FindsA Wa LL BY JEANNETTE H. WALWORTH. Continued,) riitiies UUs tena aseaas, rs “= a «Pare ight loyally (he flung the words at her lake me an Dare. inet ae angrily with help frem the trumpet), “trusted him utterly and a] were ? childhood I aiways. They ike brothers. From my earliest have had Mr. Matthews held up to me as an exemplar, a man of probity and good judgement. You must not slander my guardian in my presence, ‘Mother’ Spillman. I can’t allow it. “I see, I see! He has bewitched you as he bewitched your father you and his sister before him. If one should come back from the dead to Warn you, it would no good, no good, Thomas.” Excuse me if 1 seem rude.” before co & poor assumption of ease. The flow- ers wrapped about his father's letter, the marked passage in his father’s Bi- ble, the dimly descried figure bending over his father’s desk, all rushed into his mind clamoring for recognition as celestial messengers whom he had treated with scant courtesy. He took refuge in levity. “Oh, come now, ‘Mother’ Spillman! am sure I should never dare to treat om with disrespect. But a mere mor- ta? ja quite another thing. It would vot be an easy task for any one in the Sesn to convince me that my guardian Was other than the high toned gentle- man and clear headed business man my father’s selection of him as a friend and my guardian proves him. I think I can safely intrust my affairs to him until I am ready to take the heim myself.” At which the cld woman's famed out fiercely. Tom had risen from tke hassock while speaking. It was time for him to go on to the Mat- thews’. ‘Mother’ Spillman too, confronting him majestically. She stretched out one palsied band impe- riously. “Don’t of Horace Matthews and Rufus Brexton in the same breath, it least not in my presence. Den't cou- ple thoughts of them in your pure young soul. It is desecration. I am Wasting my breath. My words are falling on deaf But the time may come when you wilfask in bitter- uess of spirit why no one warned you against Horace Matthews. It = shall uot be ob my conscience that I was too vrenat a cowzrd to du it. I tell you, Thomas Broxton”’— “Mother!” Miss Maly stood in the doorway regarding ber mother angrily. The loud tones of the quavering old voice had carried beyoud the front gate. The im- precation that was ready to be hurled at the lawyer’s bead sunk into a plain- tive whine. “They are all body's for him. ready to revile thews.” ‘Tom stood looking from one to the other of his two old friends with pity- rose, speak ears. ins sauce against me. Every- Even my own child is me for Horace Mat- og eres. Rumor had informed him hat “Mother” Spillman was “getting ueer.” but be bad no idea that the -reck of her mind had progressed so ar. ‘iiss Malvina touched her own fore- end significantly. Tom nedded his oinprehension. He took up his hat. inivina followed to the gate. “Tom. dear, of course you will for- et every word she said against Mr. ettheys. IL didn’t bear her, but 1 mania. It's vothing but a } ean't fanev what ever - ‘ . mw Let —_ —- TT One of the most danger- ous and repulsive forms of Kidney Disease is ROPSY for which Dodd's Kidney Pills are the only certain cure. In Dropsy the kid- nevs are actually dammed up, and the water, which should be expelled in the form of urine, flows back . and lodges in the cells of the flesh and puffs out the skin. Remove the filth which plugs up the drain. Restore the Kidneys to health. There is only one Kidney Medicine Dopp’s KIDNEY PILLS —— Tom recoiled with a nervous laugh, | | jan. I have great respect for spooks and | wrath / ' — i Tiis day was proving distinctly di: SE annette H. Walworth. has given her poor, feeble brain such a twist in that direction. Ss gon ‘ranky—I can’t deny it—poor dear! Ev erybody knows Mr. Matthews is just ve icion of any sort, ‘Tom.’ Tom said “Of course,” with a twinge oi Self reproach for having even listen ed to anything to the contrary, and rod ‘ "tr weit} Soe Pa — Pan : Proce away Wwita his big henrt ius full of commiseration for the mother and daughter as it was empty of the sus picion the old wo into it. sy his« } ye +} ban had tried to poul CHAPTER VIII. AN ACCIDENT. Fixing a coldly rebuking eye upon the moody young face opposite him, Vly i To ‘ ; : ry *)) wh Te Matthews tapped the } OPE y table impatiently with a paper cutter. “T am afraid, Thomas. giving me your undivided And Tom, blushing guiltily, was afraid was not. He tried to make amends by staring stolik are not attention.” vou i] suid he e . . iv at the }outon euard map of Europe which lay sprent the table between bh The ivory paper more resumed its peregrinations. and his ears even if his heart had gone astray. sy planting on table and firmly clamping his jaws between both hands he secured the attention of those useful organs and put them en- tirely at his guardian's service. But his heart and brains were another mat- ter. Both played truant and absolutely refused to be drawn into consideration of this propose] tour of foreign parts. iin and cutter once He could command his eyes his elbows the 3 p- pointing, but be need not advertise that fact to all the world. With dull ears he beard his guardian's voice. “Now, when your dear father and I projected this identical tour our inten- tion was to go directly to Paris’’—the paper cutter halted directly ever the black spot standing for that fascinat- ing metropolis—“and from there’— With rebellion in his heart Tom was summing up his grievances. Olivia had not emerged promptly on his ar- rival. Ber long delay had the eifect of making him feel crudely premature and not eagerly welcome. All the sparkle had been blown off the day by her tarrying. Her father excused her on the score of a headache, superin- duced by loss of rest. When she did appear, however, cool and fresh in her crisp, pretty house gown, with shining eves and red ripe lips. it was impossi- ble to accept that fiction of a headache. “We planned to remain in Paris six weeks on our first visit. confining our- selves principally to the art galleries aud the places of historic interest. You see that was or would have been just after the days of the commune.” Tom's ears reported his guardian’s words, and when Olivia did come his heart complained. He had gone for- ward eagerly to meet her. almost ar- dently. She must have read all his adoring thoughts in his burning eyes and flushing cheeks, His telltale cheeks had gone tlaming hot at sight of her. She had smiled at him as indulgently as if he had been a young spaniel Misk- ing at her heels, and for the brief spac* ef time lapsing between his coming and the summons to dinner she had patronized him so openly that she had successfully imposed upon him an un- comfortable sense of extreme juvenil- ity. He gnawed his budding mustache in impotent rage. “Poor, dear Rufus!’ his guardian droned. “He bad the making of a fine artist in him. Doubtless that six weeks in aris would have been most prolit- ably spent by us. From Paris we meant to go by easy stages’’—here the paper cutter ambled erratically over the map, descriptive of the easy stages —‘yuntil we reached Florence — Iler- ence, the home of classic art, the scene of immortal Savonarola’s unap- preciated efforts and martyrdom.” What a finished young lady the pret- ty little thing had blossomed into on the strength of a debut! He had tried to talk to her of the future, giving it a tinge of common interest—hers, his, theirs. She had persisted in question- ing him, with a matronly air of supe- rior age, about his studies and his wardrobe and his physical conditien. Hie had alluded to his guardian’s wish that he should travel and intimated that half a dozen words from her ad- verse to the project would settle his mind permanently. No power on earth could make him put the sea between her and him if she would bid him stay. Instead she had wrinkled her pretty brows sagely and said: “Yes; papa and I talked all that over before you came home, Tom, dear. It is really the right thing for you to do. A man is so crude, so incomplete, you know, until he has seen something of the world, until he bas measured himself by oth- : CHARLOTTETOWN OCTOBER r standards. Now, there is Mr. West- ver” 1om stared at the map of Europe th bot cheeks. Reason convicted in of having acted very like a fool t that juncture. “Father or son?" he asked bluntly. son, Of course, “Ollie had answered weet] “He is ouly three years older in you, Tom. dear, but he is so pol- uted. so broad, entirely to tinvel, you see it | perfections,” Tom had 1p) With the rudeness of an un- raveled « ev, “IT like bim i 1mensely,” Ollie had re- ied, with arched eyebrows and en} Which had made Tom n the summons to the dining ile had followed his lofty young eek silence, pee ered if she would pin a nap- t his neck and cut up his food 1@ WAS assuming such vast- superior firs he was prepared for Lin\ eversthing. He was ready everybody. Wis loveiy vision ng behind a bank of dark. Ci ClOUCA, Glivia looked at him furtively once yr twice d ng the rather constrained meal. She wished her father bad not thought it necessary to warn ber izninst Tom’s “povish foolishness.” It had made everything so difficult, so awkward, and it was “spoiling the poor dear’s holiday.” But “papa had said” he would. be seriously angered he allowed Tom to pay her any sort of loverlike attentions. And the awk*-ard dinner had dragged its slow length from soup to and Ollie had not followed the 1en into the library, as Tom had fond- y hoped she would. < if s SO coffee, I 1 (To be Continea., Weak, Sickly Children Are Restored to Health and Vigour by Using Br. Chaso’s lierve Food. Many children are pale, weak, and bloodless from their birth. Many others have their blood and nerves exhaust- ed, and their systems broken down by the ravages cf disease, ur as the rae sult of over-study at school, Dr, Chase’s Nerve Food is the ideal treatment for children, It supplies the very elements which are lacking in the pate, weak, and nervous. It restores the eclour ard richness to the blood, invigorates the nerves, and builds up exhausting and debilitating effects of measies, scariet tever, and such ail- nents, it is of incalculable worth. Mrs. St2pnen Dempsey, Albury, P. 5, rounty, Ont., writes:—** My little grand- daughter, nine vears old, was very pale and weak, and had no appetite. Shs had a tired, wornout appearance, and was delicate and sickly. I got some of Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food for her, and it has helped her very much. She is gaining considerably in weight and looks real healthy.” Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food, 50¢ a box, at all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates and Company, Tcronto, Tomatoes for Chow Chow, Ripe Tomatoes Red Peppers. Smali Cucumbers Cauli- flower. White Portucle (Inions, NOTLCE—As the season is very short for the above it will be wi- on your part to secure a full supply now. We do not book orders to be filled next month (we may not have them then) we have them now. Pickling A fall supply of cerery sugar corn, yellow corn, cabbage, bees, carrots, parsnips, turnips, lettuce, squash pumpkin, green beans, butter beans, large red onions, large Si.ver skin onions, etc, etc, at cahegnecmnnig_enigeain, Tite 1 AON a. eR, af SM 19 1900 Gloves ! Gloves Several Hundred Pairs Just Ouened = 'Men’s Gloves, Leather 30e, 5c, 75e. Men’s Kid Gloves 75c, $1.00 $1.25. Men’s Mocho Gloves, $1 00. $1.24, $1.50, Men’s Kid Fur Top, $1.25 $1.50. Men’s Dogskin Fur top #0c. $1.25. Men’s Buckskin (*pecial) $2.00. Men’s Sarnac 85c $1,50. Men’s Astrakan driving gloves $1.50. Also a large line of leather mitts, lined aud unlined, from 35e a pair up. Boy’s Gloves ani Mitts in great variety ihis way tor your gioves at be J. BL MACDONALD = CQ Leaders in low prices. neste é a i | ; . i The undersig ned offers fur sale taa bargain the following: One 40-Horse Power Engine and Boiler. 14. Driving’Pulleys with Shaft and Belting. One Rip Saw and bench with'carr‘age. cee ae ek aac Rina — One 36 in. Saw. se One 24 in. Planer—One set hvuisting blocks, ae One Matching acd Moulding Machine, a eee inte 7 pe Fifty-one Moulding Knives, 4 One Band Saw complete. 4 i One Buzz Pianer. if One Swing Saw complete. One Turning Latbe and Shaft—One Vice. Two Emery Wheels—One Jig Saw. ee 2 the system. As a restorative after the | Three Circular Sawa and tables. AJL in first-class order. MATTHEW & MCLEAN © SO a BP MELE BT as « r: - Sx se Direct Importers of Bulbs, Seeds, Rooke, ete. ; eer o- + memtnsimar + neat ert mm i} f 4 =. “ Happy Thought. ah | IN ALL THE WORLD no caus? of worry so constant, so insistent, so | widespread as inferior cooking apparatus. ‘i WHAT WOMAN can help worrying che result of whose skill and care is Jamaged or destreyed by an inferior Range. DEAL FAIRLY by your household and yourself—install Buck’s ‘ Tcought” P.wnge in your kitchen and if you can’t quit worrying entirely your wife will, The worry fiend hoids sway supreme in many kitchens, He isa blood relation of the dyspepsia of like ilk, Banish them, buy a “Happy Thought.” The manufacturers of the “Happy Thought” are doing your culinary worry~ ing for you for ail time—take advantage of it. They have worried Over and have perfected every detail of Range construc tion. “hich though not a!ways apparent on the surface, is most important im resu ts, Piauned like an enzine, fitted like a watch, as durable as th? hills, the “Happy ‘Lhoughs” is ever ia the leadjsad there it will remain uatil perfection : meets 1t8 matcn DON’T WORRY! Use Buck's “ Happy Thougut” Rang: ! For sale by Simon w. Crabbe. Stovesand Hardware. “= we a » SEE are verenmengetie Se aan oll ez 1 Pama Walker‘s Corner, Charlottetown, Oct. Ist, 1900. wee o Those Interested, | Tne makers of PHEHIGHLAND RANGES were unable toship all of our ranges this week bit we expect to have ar large shipment by next trip ot S. S. Halifax fron BOSTON and those who have ordered may count on getting them ther? We ask your kind indulgerc2 for the delay. ‘ “Avents for American, Raages.” pe ee ee ee ee ee eee eee Oren mamma RN a MM ee ae —_ - IPav's Market Stalls| & NNELL &CHANDLER