THE DAILY EXA MINER, CHARLOTTETOWN. DECEMRER 20 T9900, a BrOUp wi AUUrF GU ; didn’t even take the trouble to lene vn" a ar en ~ arm i 9 _ e out of sight. They just walked of tw Set fo Ry E > oo AA ke es ‘ . A mm Fan é... ir three rods from the ro; d and s: i 4 \ a Gt ‘ y J * ad a ana si Py Ye SA | 4own on their bunkers and Icvlke:) at NS v el heey Bi Wen | me and yawned. It made moa ho; EZ rR | : yawnhed. it made me hot to st acen hi i, Ve oo N BY their infernal impudence, and I ma roel kia €: ; oi ‘ Roe ae a . : } = . »i 7m F 4 ’ ; : dive as if I were ZOlIbZ to get thes jlie § i ‘ i: BR yh ps es Pe ' out from under the seat. I thougpt sm Ei cid fay rps eyo aii p i i — PT AIN ory ary —= renyy. m I or . ee : 5" en ; widi« 5 & \ r% % s is Shon “ €; i vA , (oi i VRLE re KING, U. >. A, | would scare them away. Well, ma: i: Us ke 5° cao ee + olds i you wouldn’t believe it, but those cuss FS iii; Z Fi Have it in the House Cro : i AUTHOR OF “Toe a ' aa ; ed coyotes never moved, T! le ae Oe (2 Oz I PI on, roup j) “AULEON OF “THE COLONEL’S DAUGHTER,” “FROM THE | er moved, They just sar | p31)" OZM a | bitty, tiv MM “ up tuere and actually grinned. They | (3/° QL wis Cer Ww <a CoO ug h Ss 2 a ~ ing -“ ” * aP ies iti, San Dg ea ON _— m & a i said just as plain as if they had used | | | 2 Asia DPE HEN BR TS ” > ‘ ‘ Ae: 6 am ‘ } ' * - # - Swett. 0 ge t - ‘ : the words: ‘Oh, you needn't try torun | oo |) 4) em yh {wi Cramps y 7 ts lcs = } 2 1. B. LIPPINCOTT Co. any bluff on us! We are strictly on to slo be 4 Lf Hii t Hi i Vy Chole a o + ’ ’ . ® . en g P lA | foea ) “4 ys i our job. How they knew ] hadn't i; | ” hind Ps t weir Me hase So i i a P eds ‘ : > | ci. a Nbc gd Ate j Y See, he c Se a sneha that gun I don’t know, but I have had | | , , Re Se BS Ae r VY fe * Chills ¢ ie ig . ; : 5 «& é j J . ‘a ~ i : i l i * of Gray's goiug iu great respect for the sense of a coyote |}. all. a \ UG sha Yea ass : bn } ‘ noite lens ; i ’ , : } ee Sys Daan, : [ ; : guition little looked for but disapp inted damsel, and \o | ¢vé6r gince.’’—Kansas City Journal. N ——_ "i Ea WS HAG Colic. 1 } a nen} © ne . Ps oy, y Dir oo a * i 1S bab vst Bi) ! : : 21sDmon Wel lie y | GOUHE, said he toaserious faced, beau oY cman SMe Sao A. ya i Jeet? WEA ES ia : at ORE : i tiful eved young woman with wh s i : 2 Naame noe, Sa . - Zz i & seen than Lunemouth and the trio with | ee ee: ee oe ww mee OO \ Sto:vof S be» msons ho yne ves : . . ‘ "Ag liy °o al — » gande 17) : wit | L ea a . > 2 A peed “we ( a wonderful! » freshened us. him, for no other reason than that for $ poe a. age ng the sands out tO} j purgeon, | tad’ WF § oak co hime Fad : . —— ee on sy time weir lives h | Py + NOT AURUST evening a the seasoaore, **yno “ es y ead his whote tite fa body wn | | @ time their lives had been in mortal | August evening at the gensbore, no} age Dropped on Sugar. zx; il s e with health and Cleaniivess peril and they ba ‘enjoyed the unlooked | ‘OUKT 2 sHould HAVe gone Ahad deen re- rhere is a revival in T ondon of | ee Te die “= “ tithe oy . cent a te a. 2 ley — + owe i fused a0atY bu f a atte Baie ¥9 < Au ‘ | os : «ae = * ° fter his tur wilh t bert lor luxury € suuare fig hi xul- fUsea apaloD but for just one thing. Or] ‘ s lat Jay ‘hay ! - Vil ; : : . Pe after his tu 1¢ © Albex es an ight. That exul hon atk aa dj delbegges te ares . st 1 es of the late Rev. Charles H. 2 Will cure many common ailments which may occur in every family. 4 tution over, they bad had time to thank | ‘ woes Was shat, pray! asker | Spurgeon the eminent Baptist! -3y It is strictly a fami] ; ITERN ’ > . 4 9 ~ i ‘ oem ay | Miss Leroy, a quiver about ber lips de- Pe ee ae e 2APTISt | oye s* Sirictly a famtly remedy. For INTERNAL as much as EX- y#*. a F S W Ik ; | the American ‘‘Tommies’’ to whose Ss Leroy, a quiver about ber lips Ge- | divine. That his sens of humor] %, TERNAL ving i g tami = * daring they owed it that tl t | spite her nonchalance of manner, for he | was y ll d | ae - ae — use. Originated in 1810 by-an old Family Physician. & aring tuey Owe at they were not | “ BUNA Os i iT, aS Well deve a ; a B : e ae : io - . : ‘ Soa ) | massacred in their beds. Both troopers | had been her shadaw since he came bf, eveloped is shown by the “ay Could a remedy have existed for nearly a century, except for the jad , se 6Mhec 9? ack hing oe i | Set fact that its virtue and excellence have w wee ee an I + were wounded, the little fellow profane- [his,’’ said he, taking from an in- ee B.” : “ eihana d exceilence have won the public favor toa &A ot : ly voluble, the tall one strangely si- | 2° pocket a worn little glove of un- lec ip as Mr. ie said Mr.{| %3 arkable degree? You can safely trust what time has indorsed. % +7 oar ' i st . ’ . . Tore » ss "ce Os : : Sete This soap is made entirely witr dressed kid. |} Opurgeon; he was a big man in| - wegetable fats, has a taiui but ew- |; quisite fragrance, : ; udisunsurpass | ed as & nursery anc tollet soap f | Beware of {mit ations. ALBERT TOILET SOAP CO., Mfrs. MONTREAL. . e \ —— SS a ew — “Imitationisthe Sincerest Form of Flattery” eee ee The best proof that MINARD’S LINIMENT has extraordinary merits,and | is in goed repute with the) public, is that IT IS EXTEN- | SIVELY IMITATED. The! imitations resemble the gen- | uine article in appearance only. They lack the general | excellence of the Genuine. | This notice is necessary, as injur- | ious and dangerous imitations, li- | able to produce chronic inflamma- | tion of the skin are oftensubstitut- | edfor MINARD’S DINIMENT by | Dealers, because they pay a large | profit. They all Sell on the Merits and Advertising of MINARD’S. One in particular claiming to be | made by a proprietor oi | MINARD’S IMENT, which} simply is a lie. . a INSISTjLU vu. HAVING Tormea lOrTrmel > bdha EIMINARD’SIULINIMEN Tag MADE C. C. RICHARDS & CO., wWYarmouth N.S.0O | ‘I Have the FinestiLine of CG. B. Chocolates Sa Ever shown in the city, ® ranging in price } | | From 25c.to $2 Per Box. Callin and see3them. Just the thinc« for ' A CHRISTMAS PRESENT. | I have a few | CHRISTMAS GLOBES AN] TRADE REVIEWS left. If you wantJone call early. R. H. MASON’S NEWSTSTAND. | Cee FOR $6.50 -«e LOU GET Ol barrel best Fan ily Flour. C® pounds 23: Teg, ~ » 10 pounds Granulated Sugar. S77j | 3 © gations best American Oil.) 5 4! 6 bars Oak Leaf ¢ oap. oii | , 2$pounds Raisins “3 = . 1 pound Currant: ey “3 ae ee rn a carn ” ALLIFOR=$6,50, oak a SANDERSON & CO. Grocers. Victoria Row. | lent. Over this latter bent the younger | of the first two Englishmen. ‘**You are not much hurt, I hope, my | good fellow? You’re— Good Ged! You —Gray? | vowl bsard you were dead!’ A faint smile fiitted about the beard- | ed face, and the prostrate soldier winced as he answered, ‘‘And you, Rokeby, I heard you were married.”’ Even when Mainwaring came it was useless to resume trooper relations, for he found Hunter installed in the best cot the tourists owned, the Kid, too, in clover despite the pain of his wound. Tee doctor said Hunter's burt would | not soon beal, and Lord Lunemouth vowed that both were hia guests until they could be safely moved and rather plainly intimated to the major that he considered one particular private as least of more account than the battalion commander, which was subversive of good order and military discipline. Thea of course Mainwaring had to hear the truth, already known to Ray and rumored throughout the sorrels, that their swell comrade was even an older friend of these swelis from abroad. ‘‘Then where in thunder was it I met you before?’’ growled Mainwaring in | distinct sense of personal injury as he | Jooked down into the placidiy smiling face of the wounded trooper,“and Blake nearly exploded with delight over the cool response: ‘*At the armory of my old regiment, | when the major was on recruiting serv- ice in New York city. I bad the bonor of being on the reception committee the night of our ball.’’ **Good God!’’ said Mainwaring, ‘‘and yet you look just like a fellow that de- serted from the dragoons!’’ * - . ~ * * s No, Hunter dida’s rise to a commis sion. There was talk about it, but he had acquired other views. He is said to have remarked that the ‘‘N. G. N. 4 would suffice in the future.’ His wounds proved painful. An honorable discharge was asked for and granted, and there was a big time at the agency when be and the Kid bade goodby t: their comrades and were taker back Ransom in an ambulance, the Kid ‘‘ric) | beyond the dreams of avarice’’ with th: | largesse of Lancaster, and Gray parte: with only after his promise to spend ; month at the ancestral seat that ver: | year. Later Hunter went east. The Blak« and Rays heard from him frequently for several weeks. He was once mor: under his uncle’s roof, once more i: daily company with the bereaved wit ower, now restored to partial healt. ' and unexpected fortune since the tragiv | death of his wife, but when the hope of the house of Lancaster went back to England, Lunemouth’s lung in surpris- wg working order, Gray, who might have gone, deciined. The Langdons were still abroad somewhere, and Amy wore no coronet. It haci somehow dawn- ed on Rokeby that that coronet was an indispensable adjunct to the engage- ment, and the glorious climate of Cali- fornia had played havoc with Amy’s ex- pectations. There was some society talix W oman’s Weakness A woman’s reproductive organs are in the most in- tense and continuous sym- athy with her kidneys. heslightest disorderinthe kidneys brings about % corresponding disease in the reproductive organs. Dodd’s Kidney Pills, by re- storing the kidneys to their perfect condition, prevent and cure those fearful dis- orders peculiar to women. Pale young girls, worn-out mothers, suffering wives and women entering upon the Change of Life, your best friend is Dodd’s Kidney “It was dropped by my bedside when I lay in hospital at Ran- som. I have been looking, longing, for the hand that lost it ever since.’’ THE END. German Agriculture and Industry. The old simple life isdoomed. Prices and wages fallin the country as they rise in the centers of industrialism. Ger- many grows richer, but German agri- culturists grow poorer. ‘‘ Wealth ac- cumulates and men decay.’’ The coun- try, from a variety of causes, will prob- ably take longer in thg killing than it has done with us. The landiord farmer saves one man’s profit which British agriculture is called on to find; so long as he rema‘gis the land is at least un- burdened by rent. The laborer boarder cuts off one source of outgoing. So long as he remains it is at least cheaper to feed ten mouths from one dish than from ten. The political influence of agriculture may bolster up prices awhile. But de- population must come in the end. It is arriving already. The nobility wiil not be content forever toremain poorer than their social inferiors. As yet there are probably find even a ‘‘von’’ small com- brilliant of European capitals, and the officers of its garrison will be increas- ingly loath to say goodby to its ameni- ties. The more they incline to let their land and live on rent the less rent,there can be to live on. At the other end of the scale the la- borer will become less docile as the emissaries of social democracy hawk their pamphlets from but to but. He will strike out for a life of more risk and more freedom and enjoyment—the English Flat Fish. Nowhere are these delicate and justly prized fish to be had in such quantities or in such uniform and constant supply. Soles, turbot and brill are in season in every month in the year; they never go out of condition, and the supply never 4 fails. Of the inferior kinds, we men- tion plaice and fiounders elsewhere, bu’ i it should be remembered that in th: sa uouths of February, March and Apri! hey are out of season and absolute!: vorthless. Among the ‘‘ prime” flat fish fashion or change of taste bas recent], rearranged the order of precedence— and of price. Formerly turbot, by gen eral consent, held first place. Turbot and lobster sauce was so much a neces sary part of a dinner party that special ‘‘turbot plates’’ were made to hold the fine fish which, according to custom appeared on the table. The splendid and very large plate: made in China in the end of the las: century as part of dinner sets for th: English market were destined for this purpose, though now sold as costly bric a-brac. Sole was much less expensive, and brill was a cheap fish. Now sole i: the dearest of all fish except salmon anc trout, averaging from 1s. 6d. to 2a pei pound, while brill bas so risen in pop ularity that there is seldom a diiferenc: of a penny per pound between the pric: of this fish and that of turbot. Anothe: flat fish much prized for years in ‘np: north of England is gradually findin: its way into the London fish shops. Thi is halibut, the largest of the flat fish They have been caught weighing @ much as 820 pounds, and 60 pounds i: a@ common size.—Cornhill Magazine. The Coy Coyote. ‘‘Speaking about smart animals,’ on record as saying that there is no ani- for smoothness. When I first went ou’ to western Kansas, I had an ambition to kill enough coyotes to make a lap robe to send back to my friends in the east I tramped all over that country with a gun, but I never could get nearer than within a mile of a coyote. I used to drive out in my buggy and hide the gun under the seat, but it didn’t make any difference. Not a coyote ever got near enough so that he could have been } reached with anything short of a long } range cannon. One day I started out in ’ a hurry and forgot my gun. I badn't | Pills 2 gone mile trom town until E ran on to few great fortunes, though many small | ones, in the world of German industry, but when they come the nobility will | pensation for the prohibition to share | them. Berlin is already one of the most | iife of the factory, the trades union, and the beershop.—Blackwood's Magazine. | For all kinds of fiat fish London is | the very finest market in the world. | said the real estate man, ‘‘I want to g0 | mal that can hold a candle to the coyote |his way, and seemed very anxious }to make me his friend. He was ;very hospitable and generous. | | Was friendly and agreeable with him. Then he began to call me &. harles.’ I looked at him. I did | not mind it much, but had he been | my father or brother he could have | scarcely done more. I thought I | WO wu ict win see how it lookeu, oI called him ‘John.’ He did not see | my purpose, and so went on calling }m: ‘Charley.’ Then I called him ‘Jack.’ That cured him, and hk oa gh x £,.* Send for our Book on INFLAMMATION, mailed free. Sold by all Druggists 3 “ut up in Two Sizea, Price 25-and 50 cts. L S. JOHNSON & CO., Boston, Mass. FARIA IIS RRR EM i 'd-opped it. But I could see he ha ; li tle of the sense of propriety,’’ ee “ia Severe Pains in Back and Hips. Mr. James Clark, Consecon, Prince | Edward County, Ont., states :—‘‘Eleven years ago I was taken with pains in | my back, settling in my hips and ex- | tending up my spine. The pain was very severe, and at times almost unen- durable, and many days I was not able to do an hour’s work. Though I had | consulted many first-class physicians and tried several advertised medicines, I could get no relief. | “At this time my father-in-law told | me to try Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver | Pills, and said he knew they would cure me. I secured one box and great was my surprise when I begah to feel | better. I continued their use until I |} had taken about four boxes, which made me a sound man. I have recom- mended them to a number of my friends | : and have never met with one case where they did not meet with good suceess. My daughter, Mrs. Chas. Phil- lips, has also been cured of a severe stomach trouble by the use of these pills.’ One pill a dose. 25 cents a box, at all dealers’, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Toronto, Ont. Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills. EPPSS COCOA GRATEFUL COMFORTING Distinguished everywhere for Delicacy of Flavour Superior Quality, and Highly Nutritive Properties. Specially grate- ful and comforting to the nervous and dyspeptic. Sold only in }-lb. tins, labelled JAMES EPPS & CO., Ltd. Homeopathic Chemists, SUIT CASES HAND BAGS | TELESCOPE CASES NeW Stock Just to Hand. i T. J. HARRIS, London House. A London, England. BREAKFAST SU PPR EPPS'S COCOA. Prince Edward Island Railway. CHRISTMAS AND NEW YEAR HOLIDAYS. Excursion return tickets at one way first class fare will be issued | Dec. 21st, 1900, to Jan. ist, 1901, in- clusive, toand from all stations good o return until Jan. 4th, 1901, and | ‘or students during school vacation, | Dec 18th to 31st, inclusive, good to | ceturn until Jan 31st, 1901. Tickets | not good for going journey after No stop over during late of issue. | journey. G. A. SHARP, Supt. | | Railway Offices, Ch’town, Dec. 15th, 1900. i17 eod&wli | JOHN P. BRENN AN | Ship Broker, Commission Merchant and | dealer in all kinds of produce, my large and | commod‘ous premises on Commercial Street being particularly adapted for handling ol | Prince Edward Island products, Consignments solicited. t returns. Prompt reit!is- JOHN P. BRENNAN, | | North Sydney, Sept. 25, dy 135 wy. E NEVER SOLD ITS SUPERIOR FOR $i0.00 That is what we wish to state about our READY-TO-PUT-ON OVERCOAT. its made from all wool fine blue beaver cloth, lined with an excellent quality Italian or farmers satin, silk stitched, velvet colli, good workmanship. We have for the past 30 years handled millions of samples of cloth and think we knowa good deal about quality, and we can confidently say we have not see a_ better coat for $10.00 than we are offering. We will be pieased to have you examine these coats. MORRIS BLOCK D. A BRUCE CHARLOTTETOWN MERCHANT TAILO!:. * GIFTS FOR GIVER: Very pretty little silver and gun metal watches. Hunt’ case gold and silver watches. Also open face, handsomaly graved or plain, $10.00 to $50.00. children, 25c up to $50.00. Many new designs, some with bi: day stones. Gentlemen’s rings. Stick pins 12c up to $12.00. stxck of ladies’ chains and bracelets, pretty crystal and o: Brooches, Studs, Thimbles, Lockets, Charms. Good quality } Napkin Rings, 20c up to $2.00. Solid Silver Napkin Rings, Spc.) and Forks, Pearl handle, Butter knives Tic, 90c, $1.00. < quality plated Butter knives, 65c up. Magnificent stock of 5’ Plated ware, Gold Head canes, Eye glasses and Spectacles, ( and Gilt Clock, Musical Alarms, Silver Mounted Seals, Vu Knives, Brushes, Combs and Manicure pieces. Also ditto in :«ts Liberal discounts until the close of this century en all guy except those marked net. Orders by mail promptly attended to. a tings for ladies, misses mee en E. W. TAYLOR, Optician CAMERON BLOCK Ce ayy Mil 0 cache 2 tap ees, 4 ee ae ge - ~ i: nig eM 4 ei SE a a stern AP gg 0 i an ne “ oS) awh . ‘ ” ata om “ RIE 0 A, ME ci eg OE OLE LL MELE OL NN NN: NEN my Tia RE AT. CBN ini CRE —s ors Sg eee iat 6 BS EAS OME hy. ot oo ED Sa APRS be eS on . DP ey eR Gea FE SE the oP om CTE aes oo wag. anpmneis Penne ME ae Se oe FP AGE AE ls E eS att iain