> Js Pers, Pitaj ew the rt of New . L ” iouy A sk ler i ee THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWS, NOVEMBER 14 i SNAP AUSTRIAN CHINA TEA SETTS } w pric Ww. P. COLWILL, ww THE CROCKERYWARE MAN, it: y Store, §Su Dentistry... BY SPECIALISTS Paixpess DENTISTRY by use of electricity a by the Berlin Method. MopeRN DENTISTRY, crow! work. {Both without pain AgtiFiciaL TeetH.—We make all kinds. Teeth extracted without att bridge | BERLIN DENTAL PARLORS EPPSS GOGOA GRATEFUL COMFORTING Distinguished everywhere for Delicacy of Flavour Superior Quality, and Highly Nutritive Properties. Specially grate- ful and comforting to the nervousand dyspeptic. Sold 4 52 only in }-lb tins, iabelled JAMES EPPS & CO, Ltd. Homcaopathic Chemists, London, England. BREAKFAST SUPPER EPPS'S GOGOA THE EXAMINER CALENDAR FOR NOVEMBER MOON'S OHANGES Full Moon, 6th, 3h, 12m p. m. Last Quarter, 13th, 6h, 49m, p.m. New Moon, 21st, 10h, 29m, p. m. Pirst Quarter, 29th, 9h, 47m, a.m D| Hich Water Sun eiDayotWe'k = Mj |Morn ' Aft’n | cises.| Sets Thursday 445 6 396 riday | 618 4 36 3Saturday | 754 8 30 gounday 9 OI 9 19 quonday 19 00 10 04 yuesday |} 10 54 10 44 reanesday iI 46 11 18 ursda It rs WFriday | ms 13 o2 53, 8 46 9 4 36 33 33 32 ava" 3Y Our -& Ww iv ’ oo i) WVaaMiuwuUiviYi ~ tw ws ov “UI GS =O mR yIs OF’ ty Z UW & ww NNW N WN bd \Iiwne = = © +_ > » > m= WN 0 ° > SY Me ie tal I ntaatatinian 4 > © pe ~ ~— oO w& _— = -— vi Om OO Of NuUne O NRW NAO & Ww = Ww N= Ooo = we hursd Friday rr : Saturday 12 Sunday ee Monday “i Tuesday I ~ pest © — + NNN NN -_ _— Nw u > ~ “ mt Os ® Ov & Ww \ Own N ND WW N ie Qo Wednesday , hursday fh riday ‘ > N= = N ty »© Ss Se eo o0O00 = = wm Owo Ge ~ YU Yi & Ow wn > www © © 4 tt ‘ "me is used in tide tables. > a Go ~ Standard en McLEOD & BENTLEY Titbisnirs. AVICEREYE, | SOLICITORS, ETC. | D.C. McLe . i | J od, late of the firm of —- 4 McLeod. : 4. Bentley, late of the firm.of| Mathieson’ Beatie of the firm “"] ses; Bank of: Nova Scetia} Building » Charlettetown. | | sepigd&w 3m | you dearly.” ‘| geated in its farthest corner. | bed with broken legs and things, and Rheumatism. EF a NDS A WAY. ene BY JEANNETTE H. WALWORTH. —— (COPYRIGHT 1899 BY JEANNETTE H.JWALWORTH.) (CON CL “Blubbering about? word and honor! Yes, I did Say poor, but I wasn’t talking about myself. Ol—she—would never let me lack for anything. She is as gocd as an own daughter to me.” “She?” “M-mh!” “Il suppose ‘she?’” Well, upon my | you mean Olivia by “Thank goodness, at last!’ She looked at him radiantly and pock- eted her big handkerchief with a tri- umphant flourish. Tom looked per- plexed in bis turn. “Thank goodness for what?’ “You will bear me witness, Tom, you did it—I didn’t.” “I'll bear you witness to anything,” said Tom, witb a great laugh, “if you'll only be a little more lucid.” “Ollie said I wasn’t on any terms to bring her name into the conversation unless you mentioned it first, and I be- | gan to think you never would do it.” A cloud settled on Tom’s bright face. “But why—why should we not men- tion her name? Does she Suppose that lam going through life with bayonet Set to run amuck of any man or wo- man who mentions Clarence West- over’s wife in my presence? 1 have accepted the inevitable.” “Oh, my! Weil, I just cu. t care— I just must—I am dying to—I'm going to”’~— While Miss Malvina held this spas- modie colloguy with conscience in audible jerks Tom watched her anx- jously. Was “Mother” Spillman’s “queerness” going to descend upon her | daughter? “Tom, dear, if anything pleasanter than the ‘inevitable’ should be offered | for your acceptance, would you em- brace it?” He knitted his brows comically. “Mow very mysterious you are, Miss Vinie!”’ “Wouldn’t you—don’t you know Ol lie is not Clarence Westover’s wife? Don’t you know she’s just been daft ever since she heard you were burt?” | He turned very pale, but seated bim- self by her side before making any sort of reply. He had perfect control of himself when he answered: “No; | bad net beard anything. You see, | have been very much cut off from my old acquaintances out here. | Where—is—she, then? You said yo" | did not leave her on the other side of | the water.” “She's down stairs.” “Down stairs?” He bounded to his | feet, then stopped irresolutely. Miss Malvina laughed fretfully and | gave him a little shove. “Mercy on me! What bet-veen yor | and Olivia 1 feel as if 1 was trying } to work two mechanical toys with ali their machinery out of order. It’s a jerk forward and a jerk backward. . Please go down stairs, Tom, and have | ft all out with Ollie one way or the other. Take my word for it, she loves And there were no more backward | | jerks on bis part to complain of. When | he entered the dark, stuffy parlor, he | i could searcely discern the slim figure | He still | limped slightly from his accident, but | his progress was reasonably rapid. | “Ol.via!” He stretched out his} hands eagerly. “My little friend! Why | thought you were on the other side | | of the ocean!” Her bands were fn his, and she was) looking up at him with a light in her} eyes that fairly illuminated the ob- security for him. “And I thought you were in a sick- I expected to kneel down by your bed- | side and whisper all sorts of contrite and comforting things into your poor — ee Me OM is Uric Acid in the blood. Unhealthy kidneys are the cause of the acid being there. If the kidreys acted as they should they would strain the Uric Acid out of the system and rheuma- tism wouldn't occur. Rheu- matism is a Kidney Dis- ease. Dodd's Kidney Pills have made a great part of their reputation curing Rheumatism. So get at the cause of those fearful shooting pains and stiff, aching joints. There is but one sure way— Dodd's. Kidney Pils Ne UED.) ears, and nere JVE are ovreng aac wen and bigger than ever!” “Il am very sorry,” said Tom meekly, and then they both laughed. Still hold- ing her hands in his, he drew her to a sofa by a window. “So am I,” said Ollie, catching her breath as one does when about to take a daring plunge, “for it makes it hard- er for me to say what I have come all the way back from Nice to say. perhaps you don’t want me to say any: thing at all.” “The very sound of your dear voice brings healing with it, Olivia.” “Then—then—oh, Tom, it’s perfectly horrid of you to make me say it! But I deserve some sort of punishment. Did you think I asked you to take me—just because I was sorry for you? Did not you know I—I ian. you loved you? No. You poor dear, how could you when I only found it out myself that day after you got up and went from me without once looking back? You see, Tom, you treated me too well at first. me, Tom, it will all come right at last I said ‘No’ to you once when I did not know my own mind, and you said ‘No’ to me when you wanted to punish me for being such a frivolous weather cock. I did a silly thing, Tom, and you did—a--cruel one. But all the world knows, Tom, that two negatives make an affirmative—that is, dear, where they really and truly love each other. If you love me, Tom”’— “If I love you? Ollie, my own little Olivia, at last! “Olivial” eagerly. grown dim in my faithful heart. are the one thing in life that I have louged for with a longing unappers- able and unutterable. All things else | have said 1 would have. You alone were the unattainable throngh force of will. You | é ‘ ae | commod'‘ou< premises on Ctmmercial Street } But attitude i Cape | | ; 190@, CANADIANS AT = CAPE TOWN. | Receive a Grateful Welcome in South Africa’s Metropolis. | | The Cape Times of October Ist is ito hand giving an account of the arrival in Cape Town on Sunday Sept. 30th, of the Cunadians who jreturned home by the Idaho. The jcitizens of Cape Town gave the | Canadians a very warm welcome on |their return from the front, which would have been better had not their train arrived two hours late. The Canadians, though they had en- dured many hardships, looked well and were much bronzed. Their torn and tattered clothing bore eloquent testimony of their deeds and perils and hardships. The Times says that ‘they were considerably moved--- /some almost to the point of tears--- by the enthusiastic and generous of the miltitude, who showed considerable liberality in the dispensation of many little com- forts and luxuries.’”’ The mayor of Town, Mr. T. J. O'Reilly, made an excellent speech of welcome and appreciation to the Canadians. After the proceedings }at the station the men went to the love you’) On Monday morning, know, Tom, I’ve always! bade adieu to South Africa. But—but—if you love | | | you’ know, | Your image has neve! | docks and embarked on the Idaho. Oct. Ist, they She Was Pale and Languid Too Nervous to Sleep, and Dally Crow Weaker and Weaker—Dr. Chase's Nerve Food Restored Health and Vigour. Mrs. E. McLaughlin, 95 Parliament street, Toronto, states:—* My daughter was pale, weak, languid, and very nery- ous. Her appetite was poor and change- able. She could searcely drag herself ‘about the heuse, and her nerves were completely unstrung. She could not sleep for more than half an hour at a time without starting up and crying out in excitement. “As she was growing weaker and | weaker I became alarmed, and obtain- ed a box of Dr. Chase's Nerve Food. She used this treatment for several] weeks, and from the first we noticed a decided improvement. Her appetite be- | came better, she gained in weight, the colour returned ta her face, and she gradually became strong and well. I cannot say too much in favour of this ' wonderful treatment, since it has prov- . | He stretched out his handa | The supreme good of my life | had to come to me as a free gift from | this beloved little hand.” And a golden silence fell between them. When Clarence Westover, then winter- ing in Florida with his handsome Clementine, read in the Mandeville pa- pers that Thomas Broxton and Olivia Matthews had been quietly married at the home of the bride and immediately removed to their future residence, Broxton Hall, he laughed and rolled the paper up to mail to Jeanne. On its margin be wrote: It was Tom, and not me, she cared for a!) along, only it took her 2 phenomenally long time to make the discovery. Love has found the way to taake good all losses to splendid Tom Broxton. THE END. The Continuous Shows, The funniest farce ever written could pot be done at vaudeville houses if it had any of the earmarks of the thing in vogue at many of.our first class the aters. Said a lady to me: “They (the vaudeville theaters) are the only theaters in New York where I should feel absolutely safe in taking a young girl without making prelimi nary inquiries. Though they may of- fend the taste, they never offend one’s sense of decency.” The vaudeville theaters may be said to have establish- ed the commercial value of decency. This is their cornerstone. They were conceived with the object of catering to ladies and children, and, strange to say, a large, if not the larger, part of their audiences is always men.— “Vaudeville Theater,” by Edwin Mii- ton Royle, in Scribner’s. Horse Weighed 3,000 Pounds, The weight of the heaviest borse ever known was 8,000 pounds, This Clydesdale horse was exhibited in New York {a 1889. It was 20% hands high, and, although only 5 years old, meas ured 45 inches round the stifie or knee joint, 95 inches girth, 34% inches round the hip and 11 feet 4 inches in length. _It was of perfect proportions, with a | bead 36 inches in length. —— en such a blessing to my daughter.” Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food is a blood- f\'| puilder and nerve vitalizer of most un- | Vsaal merit. In pill form, 50c. a box, at all dealers; or Edmanson, Bates and Co., Toronto. JOHN P. BRENNAN Ship Broker, Commission Merchant and dealer in all Kinds of p oduce, my lage and ‘eing particularly adapted for handling ef Péinte Edward IJsiand preducts, Consigaments solicited. Prompt returns. JOHN P. BRENNAN, North Sydney, Sept. 25, dy 135 wy. Every Purchase of Five Bars Gilt Edge ..50ap Entitles you to one NEEDLE CASE Ask your grocer about it. Nice premiums besides. Wholesale by McKinnon & McNevin ovember Now is the time To Plant... BULBS And Read the November Magazines A full steck of each on hand. Haszard & Moore Sunnyside. A Sample ——— TT Ae ae The following is a fair Sample of letters progressive Canadian Life. | being received by that mest ssurance Company. Geo. Gooderham, 49 Wellington Street. East. ORONTO Te the North American Life ae Assurance Company, Toronto. Gent!emen,—I am in receipt of your ment of my 15 year Endowment P 20th, 1884, for $20,000. The result is highly satisfactory to me. proof of the careful and excellent man Life. Personaliy, I have been a strong adyoc having carried over $500.000 on my life. Yours truly, GEO, GOODERHAM. _ cheque for $27,381.40, in seftle- olicy, No. 2651, issued by you on Cc. and furnishes the str st agement of the North Am n ate of Endowment Insuramce, Mr. Geo. Gooderham is one of Toronto’s oldest zens. He is President of the Bank of Toronto. Co., and connected with many other leading fin a9P1... and wealthiest citi- Western Canada Bean ancial institutions. J. K. ROSS. The undersigned offers fur sale at a bargain the following : One 40-Horse Power Ergin» and Boiler. 14 Driving Pullevs with Shaft and Belting. One Rip Saw and beach with carr‘age. One 36 in. Saw. One 24 in. Planer—One set hoisting blocks, One Matching and Moulding Machine, Fifty-one Moulding Knives. One Band Saw somplete. One Buvz Pianer. One Swine Saw complete. One Turning Lati.e and Shaft—One Vice. ‘wo Emery Wheels—Que Jig Saw. Three Cucular Saws and tables. _ All in first-e!ass order. MATTHEW & MCLEAN ~~ Decrease the Coal Bill and Increase Your Comfort by using a Famous Baseburner Three sizes without Oven. sizes with oven, double beater. Two Hvery stove a One third more heating surface than any other. Fire passes through three flues, while other stoves have only to. ond thussecur ing cne third r ~at from the sanie fuel. Parlor sioves draw the cold air off the floor. Removable firepot ; flat or dup- lex grates; removable nickel jackets. The oven bakes perfectly. You run no risk, we guarantee them. The handsomest Baseburnerz in Canada Pamphiet free from our local agent or our nearest house. LONDON, TORONTO, MONTREAL, WINNIPEG AND VANCOUVER. "THE MeCLARY MFC, Co. S. W. CRABBE, Local Agent, Charlottetown, City Hardware Store BUILDERS’, FARMERS’ MECHANICS’ ..HARDWARE.. 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