\ Milk Cans the slopping over of milk cans ore guislance- Shadow aN vi Wr ~ ‘ ~ mr’ i OD G S I) KIDNEY 2 PILLS <7 AY » he RANA | ¢ 7 “ - want a horse worth $100. you'd be ally — iv. if you LS te pay $100 for his photo ont) Sted DODD's KIDNEY PIL you'd be silly to buy ena imitation, poDd's ARE SOLD 1M BOXES LIKE THIS. AAS : T ONLY O-D-D“S D-O-D-I ox eens GS OS Oo DS & urine | The greatest remedy ‘for sore and inflamed eyes, is meeting with wonderful success, It affords almost in- stant relief and in many c¢nses complet- ely cures, 50c Bottle G, F, HUTCHESON ¢ Jeweler and Optician =>? & @ ees. e et e241 «= = © | = os ~~ mem eee oe Zee @ &@ @ @ 6669 . oa ~~ ese =O © Ss £. Oo SD — RS ES = = 000 Improved By the introduction of machinery, we have overcome the trouble complained of in Ail orders fo» NON-$L')PP- ING MILK CANS | filled promptly, wholesale or retail, SL A McLEAN, Masenic Temple, Charlottetown The Big Maritime Fair Nova Scotia Provincial Exhibition SEPTEMBER 23rd to 30th, 1899 S1iCC— (fered in Prizes Increased prizes in Cattle, Sheep, Poul- try, Agricultural Predncte, Flowers and Fieh. Improvev Faci.ities ix Every DaPaRTMENT. pear” Write for Prize | ist. Four Day’s Racing—Big Pur- ses—ftor Trotting & Pacing SPECIAL ATI RACTIONS surpassing the splendid programm<¢s of previous years The world’s Greatest Artists in Marvel- ous Feate of Dexterity and Side Splitting Specialties. Concluding every cvenirg witha real’stic Teteniaiion of british Suldiers in Actua! fartaie, ; \o “Lord Robert's War With the Afghans piers, esto Kanda) ar.” end “ile Storming of Peiwar Kota}.” « noted Atghan “trenghold, produced with over two bundied British Sailors and Seldiers from the wérrisen, a rumber of Whem acivally tock yartip the Afgtan War Fireworks Galore. Vagnificent Display very KF vening, cririze List and all. nformation apply to J,“E. WOOD, 5- ddw Man. and Secy NOTICE: ae Ti THE TALK STICK murmur to the talk sick and inquired with candid direct hess ~si Tey CUlMUNt wet **Have you in there?’ got something good to eat ; e The boy instead of « for reply opened his mout “Where ve “To school, you going?’ b and stared n going?’’ pnrsned Minty ‘ replied the boy ‘I’m going with you,” decided Min ty. “Do you want me to go?’ “IT don't care."’ said the boy ‘Yon may go along in place of my dog. He cripples so | wouldn't bring him Heli run along a little limp just t **] don't piece and then he'll aggrevate me ' lunp.”’ said Minty, scram t biing out of the cart bed and hastening to show her superiority to the dog ‘But you can’t walk as fast ean,"’ claimed the boy. making toe marks in the dust “Then you ought to wait for me If you'll give me something out of your pail, I'l) let you have my talk stick.’ “Talk sneered the “That's an old red nubbin. I got plenty of them to home. "’ “I'mso hungry,” said Minty plain- tively. And as they patted along in company she lifted the talk stick and comforted herself once more with it *‘Apples, and good toast, and candy, and bread and butter. and beans and strawbays. And the little girl's papa and mamma _ said, ‘Mrs. Seventeen, have you been todinner?’ ‘No, indeed. said Mrs. Seventeen. ‘I have not any each kind.’ ’ The boy cautiously lifted his pail cover and revealed his lonch—dclicious white bread, cookies and pie and appies Minty regarded it coaxingly “IT wish [ hada little piece,” she. ‘‘An apple and some cake and bread. ”’ **‘But what'd I have for afternoon re- cess?'’ demanded the boy ‘*You can get some more.” the stray child argued. ‘But 1 never any more. e as : A rapid ail an 04 stick! hoy nent Fala can get ‘I'd give you a cooky.” relented the boy. growing more ashamed of her com pany the longer he enjoyed it, ‘if you wouldn't tag me clear toschool. [don't want the boys laughing at me Yon ought to rnn home to yourmother The teacher won't let you come to nohow because you're too little.’ Minty’s face put on drooping enrves and her short nose expressed much for Jornness ‘‘How old are yon?’ “I gness I'm 40 plied. **Il won't tag you if you give me a cooky.” But the boy withdrew his hand snd denly from the pail and said ‘‘There comes Mary Jane.’ “What Mary Jane?’’ inguired Minty It was indeed Mare Jane There can be but few Mary Janes like her Self € school years old.’ she re satisfied and high in manner she spurt ed the ground in shoes which were laced up the front with leather thongs Sepa rated from the shoes by a mere strip of white cotton stocking were. lengthy knickerbocker pantalets deep with scarlet edging Mary Jane's dress was a figured lawn as to waist and sleeves and a scant white muslin as to skirt. it was belted tightly around the top of her stomach. and below it appeared a span of straightened skirt. also deep with scarlet edging. She was further adorned by astring of beads and a tiny tucked cap which scarcely covered her cropped hair There is implanted in every man a love of iife strong enough to make him tremble and kneel before death when he thoroughly rec- ognizes its ap- proach. The trouble with men is that they do not ree- ognize death unless it comes in some violent Sy or rapid form. t Consumption # kills more men re than wars, fam- ines, plagues f. 7> and accidents, we ht but its approach ss insidious, and men do not realize that they are inits clutch. While consumption is a germ disease, the bacilli will not in- vade sound and healthy iungs. ‘The lungs must first be in a diseased condition. First a man feels a little out of sorts. Probably he is overworked and has given too little time to eating, sleeping and rest- ing. His appetite falls off. His digestion gets out of order and his blood does not receive the proper amount of life-giving nutriment. The liver becomes torpid and the bleod is filled with impurities. These are pumped into every organ of the body, building up unhealthy, half-dead tissues. The most harm is done at the weakest spot, and most frequently that spot is in the lungs. A slight cold leads to inflamma- tion, the bacilli invade the lungs and we have a case of consumption. Ninety-eight per cent. of all cases of consumption are cured by Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It is the great lood-maker and flesh-builder. )It restores the lost appetite, makes the digestion per- fect. invigorates the liver, purifies the biood. builds new and healthy flesh and The board of Fire VW arden*, Souris, vail €ontract the building of 4 tanks as per | Hecificatiors tobe seen at the office of the! Tétery; also the sink! og of 4 welle. Tend- | t to be in ty Sept 1th, marked tenders *?tanks, wells. Gocd «ccurity required € CCARLTON, JR., | Souris, Aug 31, 1899 hecy-Treas Grives out all impurities and disease germs. It cures weak lungs, spitting of blood, obsti- nate coughs and kindred ailments, No hon- est druggist will recommend a substitute. Mrs. Ursula Dunham, of Sistersville, Tyler Co., W. Va., writes: “I had a pain in my side all the time, had but little appetite and grew very thin. The ‘Golden Medical Discovery’ promptly cured the pain, restored my appetite and iv- creased my weight,” ‘*Whera ’ E DLalLY EXAMINER: pening his pail | ; i i { j ‘ ’ fi mou ice ! ik il * { | it st % sil i i f Minty fuvir lat Pan Li ss } i i) ti ! [ 28 sch Iw ! " e ‘ Unt ) ! e. th} ; i iL t @ Wai i ui i iftte - ‘ t i young on . i 3 j | ig t! Aiin \ qu rea co ue! ! ; thi uK t Bt le Was hy the person df Murv Jone Whether she j vead i Moar sticking together In her pocket or was to return bome for ber dinner Minty instinctively knew the boy was stil) her best friend Mary dane did not deign to give the boy a reply. bat spoke out vain glorio sly to Minty “S°m dressed up, and you ain't.’ “Il haven't had some nice clothes on for a long time,"’ admitted Minty after surveying the favored being who con- descended to pass within three yards of her She raised the talk stick and held it out to conjnre comfort even from these circumstances. ‘I'm dressed up,’’ said Mary Jane as she stepped out to promanation. ‘1 like this cap. I like to wear it at school. It prouds me. I feel like I was a king’s wiferd. You are not dressed up, Mrs. Seventeen, and you look so ugly it tireds me.” “* “nt.” Seventeen, ‘my legs are drenched with heavenly dew and the song birds take me up to look at the sky. I couldn't tell about the man the lightning rod struck, and it split him from top to bottom. “I'll escuse you,’ said the man, and there was a pumple on his nose because he kneeled his head so hard when he had table prayers.’.”’ The boy and Mary Jane, walking one on each side of Minty. eyed her in si- lent amazement. while unbiased by any audience she murmured her rap- tures and built up her visions at the top of the talk stick *“*You ate so much good food you made fat to you.’ said Mrs Seventeen, ‘but don't sit on my prayer | said my prayer on that chuir, and if you sit on it you will break it.’ ”’ “Today's Friday.” pnt forth Mary Jane, vaguely affronted. *‘and we speak pieces. ”’ ‘‘And tomorrow's Sadderday,” the boy jerked from himself in the act of skipping a stone. ‘**‘They ought to call it Gladderday, though, ‘cause there ain't no school. ’”’ ‘*l know-my piece all by heart,’’ said Mary Jane. ‘*Bet you don’t,”” challenged her foe. She cast a look of superiority upon bim and silenced him by letting it all out at him without pause or intonation as she walked rapidly ahead, her voice growing dimmer until the words quite faded und failed ‘‘] meta little cottage girl she was 8 years old she said her hair was thick with many a curl which clustered round her head she had rustic wood air’’— ‘*Yonder’s the railroad,”’ said the boy to Minty, feeling that his injuries says Mrs. had now culminated. ‘‘Are yon going to tag me furder than that?” “I don’t know.” responded Minty doubtfully. “If you do, I won't give you a bite.” “Then I won't,’’ promised Minty eagerly. He waited until they reached the rails, and there portioned out his lunch, buying his freedom with a generous hand. Mary Jane was just entering the schoolhouse as he wagged his head to- ward it. ‘‘Don’t you come down there when you've eat this upand hang round after me, neither,’’ he stipulated. “I won't,’ pledged Minty earnestly. “J don’t care anything more about you now I’ve got your dinner.” So she began to eat, and the boy took to his heels. **Goodby ! mouth full ‘‘He won't say goodby.’ her to be left alone again even chance playmate without one parting word She sat cn a tie between the rails be canse the boy had told her she must not cross the railroad and spread her feast apon the lapof her dirty Hubbard gown Bread and butter, cakes and ap- ples. each in tarn passed the portal of Miuty’s mouth She smiled up at the sky She fed some crumbs to ants build- ing their sand palxce by her foot. and finally she held the talk stick out. say- ing to it “You must not follow me If you come to my schoolhouse. I will drive you back over the railroad. You are too little. Nobody wants you But itisa lovely day and comf't'le in the sun, and the water is a langhing joy to me “There was a boy found a bee, and he picked it up and was so glad. ‘Now I will have some sport,’ said the boy be- cause he learned that in his reading book. ‘Oh, how I wish it would sting. said the boy, ‘for I never had a bee sting me, and sport is such a happy thing! So the bee stung him, and the boy let loose and said: ‘Ob! ‘« “If that is sport.’ said the boy. and called Minty. with her It grieved by a he cried. ‘I do not want any more, for | But Mrs. Sev- ; it is not a bapvy thing.’ eels sald “Do hut cry luisblew tu Llie nusic go tingle, tingle. tingle Tingle, tingle, in the rails beside her still went the thrilling music “it was_a grand pi-organ. went roar, and it roar.’ Roxr, roar, indeed i pecamea loud rushing it went; ther and the shri am whistl head over her k was poised be shriek—suriek of a st« Minty turned her shoulder The talk stic ween ber thumb and finger, and bei | tl nor it moved as the train | swept toward her. Her face was waxen vita fright, and her blue eyes stood ivr er sue ward in their rims The train stopped with such a jar at some passengers were th 1 to the floor, Men dropped off the st . : _ rT") ’ ; ran forward. There the engin | . s* : . ’ | iremen were standing beside the tr: ie of them holding the child. and t} ther telling how he srabb »] her tp ot ‘ .% ; Dent t ¢ ‘ ne pllot the breath of an instantteiore it reached her } ‘ * Some tears were running down kh cheeks, but she was silent until a ven tieluan standing among the arviving wagers exclaimed “Why. Minty!’ ‘*Papa!l”’ she cried in a suarill scream right against the face of the gentleman who enddled her—dirty Hubbard gown and all—like a little baby as close as he could told her Word went back that a child had been picked off track, a lost child: in fact. a child that had been kidnaped, and its father was on the very train going in search of it The ladies in all couches were anxious to see and to do something for this little girl They crowded eronund her where she sat on her father’s lap and made her tidy, brought her dainty comforts and kissed her So Minty sailed away in the train to continned happy communion with Mra. Seventeen by means of finer talk sticks than the small red ear of corn The small red ear lay on the railroad after that train had passed over it. a worthless thing to be pecked by birds and shied by one home returning school- boy at another. It was no longer a little girl's talk stick on which to hang her lonesome fancies. But had her father known about it he would have picked it upand carried it away in his breast pocket. through the train +e the the RS NE AS een SS (To be Continued) — aS (creamed on WITH.. From the Terrible Ago Ny Itching, Burning Tortures of ... Eczema on the Scalp Some of the cures effected by Dr. Chase's Ointment are more like miracles than anything else. The case recorded here was one of the worst ever brought tothe attention of Toronto's best physicians, and when doctors gave up all hope of recovery Dr. Chase's Ointment was successful in producing a perfect cure. Mr. James Scott, 136 Wright Ave., Toronto, states: ‘‘My boy Tom, aged ten, was for nearly three years afflicted with a bad form of Eczema of the scalp, which was very unsightly and resisted all kincs of remedies and doctor's treatment. His head was in a terrible state. We had to keep him from school, and at times his head would bieed, and the child would scream with agony. For two and a half years we battled with it in vain, but at last found a cure in Dr. Chase's Ointment. About five boxes were used. ‘The original sores dried up, leaving ‘the skin in its normal con‘lition. To say it is a pleasure to testify to the wonderful merits of Dr. Chase’s Ointment is putting it very mildly.” Dr. Chase’s Ointment, ‘at all dealers, or KEiimanson, Bates & Co . Toronta MORTGAGE SALE To be ecld by public onection, at the Court House in Charlottetown, on Wed- verday,tbe Ilth day of October, A D, 1809, at the hour of twelve o’clock, noon, all that tract, piece or parcel of ‘and, sit- uate lying and being on Township number ‘orty-five, in King’s County, Prince Ed- ward Island, bounded and described as tcllows, that is to say: On the west by land owned by John and James McPhee, on the porth by land owned by the Rev. Dovald Francis McDonald, on the east by land in possession cf Fredrick McAulay, and ov tne south by jand in possession of Fredrick Morrow and the sh re of Morris Povd, containing by estimation an area of oo* hundred and thirty acies. The above sale is to take \ lace by vir ius of a power of ssle, contaiged in an In- denture of Mortgage, bearin dave the ninth ~sy cf lecember, A DD, 1885, aod mede hetween Net! McDonald and Joseph N McDonaid, both ot Morris Pond, Town~ ship pumber tortesfiv’, ia Kiag’s Consty, Prin.e E ward Island, ‘armere, aod Christ ina McDonald, wife of -he suid Nel Me~ Dovsld, aud Ro-a McDonald, wife of the said Joseph N McDonald, of the one part and the undersigned of the other part, default having been made in the payment of principal money snd interest. For further particulars apply at the offee of McLeod, Morson & McQuarrie, Solicitors, Ch’town. Dated the 5th day of Sertember, A } D, 1899. NEIL McLEOD, WALTER AO MORSON, Sept 7—w4i Mortgagees NOTICE. Tre Fire Wardens of Souris cffer for erle Debentures tothe amt. of $2090, for | 15 years :t 4% interest. Also want to buy @ Fire Haod Engine. C. C. CARLTON, JR., Scc’y -Tre children. ot its good effect upoa their chileren.”’ Castoria is fo CHARLOTTETOWN, SEPTEMBER 8, 1899 a ee SS Tae new PRs BEE Ton What is Ue ne eae Mane Phd a SOO 4" niants ’ walk subs LG harmless Soothing and Syrups. ft Morphine nor other Its guarantee is . SAY wR’ “ 284 eee a Ws SNS < SS WOO SAAS \. > and Children. for Castor Oil, Paregor__, coutains Narcotic substanee. It thirty years’ QO QQ Qa 7" NS A RY ED BW Ree es Pied . u Cast “S a» SOP nefther Opium, is Pleasant. Millions of use by Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays Feverish- ness. relieves Flatulency. Teething Troubles, Castoria cures Diarrhea and Wind Colic. Castoria cures Constipation and Castoria assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach end Bowels of Infants and Children, giving healthy and natura sleep. 2anacea—The Mother’s Friend. . i Castoria. | “Castoria is an excellent medicine for Dr. G. C. Oscoon, Lowed, Afass. Castoria is the Children’s Castoria. **Castoria Is sc well adapted to children Mothers have repeatediy told mej} that I recommend it as superior to any pre | scription known to me.’ H. A. ARCHER, M. D. Brooklyn, N. ¥ THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OF APPEARS CN EVERY WRAPPER. THE CINTS 1F COMPANY 77 MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK OFTV. ar ER Ry oe led ET Le oe leamship Service fh N 4 Tarr a yee. at BC. ¢ peed tele ha lt) it) ee ee at | 22> *] fa pin a saa hs aS S45 oY TO LIVERPOOL, G. B. The Elder Dempster & Co’s Steamship LAX E HURON, 4040 tons, having cold storage acco uo tation ani decks proper- ly fitted fer carrying live stock, is intended to sa’! from Char- lottetown for Liverpool, direct, on or about the (5th October; also on or about the 18th November. The Lake Huron has splendid accomudation for a lizu:e4 number of cabin passengers, at very mode:ate rates. _For rates of freight and other particulars appl ; to N. RATTENBURY Cl’town, August, 26th, 1899 Corsete. Special Elack, Short. ——— AGENT A New Line Usually Sold for $1.25, Our price SOc T. J. Harris Lonpon House Soe Bie Meee ee oe en a eee ae —s Ee Ee EELS a 7 ar eet eee neers eect er eis eae ee eee a