= | ——————————————— ‘ | |-Are you Building ? Why not use our Hingck Faced Stone Steel Siding, Galvanized or Painted. It makes 8 wonderfully durable and economical covering for new buildings, orfor improving old ones. Givesa most handsome effect — is very easy to apply — offers fire soot protection — and can’t be penetrated by dampacsa. By deciding im its favor you's get the best results, at least expense, Write us it you're interester we'll send full talormation. — Pa ie a Can be had at any following first class T. J. Morris D. L, Hooper W. Plekard & Co. W. A. Hutcheson W. F. Carter Stewart & Gates Sanderson & Co. J.D. McLeod & R. H. Wason, Suitable for Wedding fifts now in Stock: in Silverware we have Tea Sets, Butte Dials tle Dishes, Combination Sugar bow iXpoon Holders. Syrep Jugs, Crea ¢Sugers, Berry Spoons, Soup Ladk thes, Celery Stands, Fruit a Bons, Knives, Forks and Spoons. la Chinaware :—Cup, Saucer and Place *, Sugar Bowls, Cheese Dishes, Ber ts, Butter Diehes. | 0 Glassware :—Lemonade Sets ss Gold, Berry Sets, Butte jes es. We have a nice |i 00d s y . 180 @0 axeortment of Wedgewo ‘weware A big line of Watch vocks and Jewelry. ! . e tf a ) * We are se. ling cheaper than any ctber re Ip the city, Jury & Co Ch’ town OR SALE inn yside eee “Nowlan ds” eT . a ngy ate residence of Ma oun McLeod. (). C., in Chay PUleiow : oe “town Royalty, containir | The ] Fenty and cT eg, Apply to D.C. McLEOD, three town, J une dy tf ae 19th, 1900, Island. . r waite rate of 8 iors tos 900 Cash ore oe of Soave: a x = quarte!s Solicitor, &e. Vidend Notice chants Bank of P. E. Wine HARLOTTTTOWN. M 3 3 dead ar prey given that a half’ ome ly the phe cent. per anum te K of th s bank has been ¢e- : 2 Banking house on and thooks will be closed f tr the 3rd July next, both ave { (Ladies or Gents’) FREE, GOLD WATCH (Ladies’ or Gents’) FREE, ’ 4 . 7 7 7 — ry. sry 7 y THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, JULY 5, _ 1900 y P \, \ o>, ty L\y \y {A ¢ . 3 ' MMT YY YY in, tor ner greeting hid given mim | 98 BYOLLS aan ~ ’ padhemenatmnahmntamaae ; ® ill, O eT sreeuny al ’ re i om 1 4 mee” ‘ust the slich encol which TUNA, yy J iJ a . ; y “3 = liana *\ was all he needed; and i» ; a r to f il * AT oe Ke. : of so “ or th: a : . 3{) " PIA NU FRuE gy ges & eo 2 Bet 7\i nore urgently than ever, a | t E e me ~Y ae a Pt it B...<0i] a f ¥ 4 Pow. inst time now he poured out the old ~ , sea stcery of what he called his unconquer- ti arcercere able and un hangeable love. He never | 30 evyessed what pain he gave her, and she BY a ee ee eT REFS SAR Re ENE ah on @ ; \ fr” i ix he will ; Craven, by one or s of his fraudulent med, more placidly; )} . a I could not env- | ‘¢ I tried, the deceits which he | tised Many families, whose | s even you could remember, Miss | en, are involved in ruin by him, hey do not know it yet. He has led money he had to invest, and ken people in by sham mortgages. He again and again suppressed certain i effected the sale of property previously mortgaged. More than one pcor dupe has let him have every pound she invest or place on mortgage, and the deeds have represent- ed nothing but One poor widow thinks she has bought, through him. the house she lives in, while it real- ly belongs to a wealthy buikder in Kin- bury—for Mr. Haughton suppressed one set of deeds and supplied another. He has overarawn his banking account, and borrowed money which is due. No, there can be no help for him, although his eredit in Kinbury and the neighbor hood is so good that the crash may not occur just yet; may not, I say, unless I take the matter in my own hands. My ds, al possessed, to forgeries. first move is to inform you, Miss Cra- ven, that he is hiding now at the ‘An- chorite,’ in Thames street, and if h: ye any wish yourself to be the one to bring him to justice—” Honor rose, her cheeks and lips white with anger. “You forget to whom you are speak- she said, her tones as quiet as usual, though her manner was unmis- takable. Mr. Slimp made an the ground he had lost by you ing, effort to regain this one too ago, he daring step. Cunningly, long had discovered both the one passion of his master’s life and the indifference with which it had been treated by his ward: and, judging by his own contemp- tible feelings, he had imagimed that Hicnor might rejoice over an opportun- ity of repaying her old guardian for the persecution she had _ suffered at his hands. tut this feeling could only last one minute, and he knew that it had been injurious to his cause. Still, he eould regain his ground, he fancied; and it was an unctuous satisfaction to him. to lengthen his confidence against his erstwhile master. There too, the novelty of truth in so many of these cheering disclosures of fraud and du- plicity. But he hurried now over the information, as if he feared its being still more summarily cut short. He micht well fear. Honor had heard the one thing she wished to hear, and now no heed was paid to any further word. “That inn in Thames street is a capi- tal place to abroad from, under fogzy circumstances,” Mr. Slimp resum- “ond we can manage, if was, get ed, with spirit; you really wish me to undertake it.” “T will think of what you tell me,” said Honor, coldly, though she was actually trembling in her fear of this man in his treachery; “I will see you again.” The fear, so proudly battied with, took the form in Mr. Slimp’s eyes of 4 new courage, and he gazed in servile admiration on the girl’s beautiful, easy now that she seemed to under- stand him at “In the meantime, pray fix upon your own price’—the word was uttered in the refinement of scorn, and Hon- or’s eyes swept over the narrow figure of the little traitor before her- “for se- creey, and I will purchase it from you— quite figure, last. very if the terms suit me.” Miss Craven, a thousand pounds is worth speaking of; therefore, you would not, I hope think “To you, searcely a thousund pounds—” “Ty effect my purpose,” said Honor, uietly, while she raised her clear eyes to his crafty face, Ix would be too little. A Victim of Piles | fully rye’ viryé “one thousand Make your Biceding and Protruding Piies—Cured by Dr. Chase’s Ointment. In vain did Mrs, Jas. Brown, of Hin- tonburgh, near Ottawa, search for a cure for piles. In Europe and America she tried every remedy available, but it remained for Dr. Chase’s Ointment to effect a cure. Mrs. Brown writes:—‘‘*I have been a constant sufferer from nearly every form of piles for the last twenty years, and during that time both here and in the Old Country have tried most every remedy. “I am only doing justice to Dr. Chase’s Ointment when I say that I believe it to be the best remedy ob- tainable for bleeding and protruding piles. I strongly recommend Dr, Chase’s Ointment to mothers, or indeed to any person suffering from thas dread torment—piles.” Physicians and druggists reconmend Dr. Chase’s Ointment as the one pre- paration that will never fail to cure piles. It is guatanteed to positively, cure piles, whether ttching, bleed J.M. DAVISON = | or protruding. 60 cents a box, at dealers, or Edmanapn, Bates en4 Ca, Toronto. MARY CECIL HAY A i fx For 20 Years—A Constant Sufferer From [{ ; KX x 4 > - » be o* Motto,” ‘‘ Nora’s Love ys a 4 . 4 rts T ”» * iQ PiomMe, 30K IX IX y A “4 Re a ee iS eo wy | BARR RR RE! f se ; . ; rd now to be confidential even most ex s sul s ms not 80 # 1 him, M { ven,’ he beg tone f whi she could hay lated him wher he st i “the old and well-established ] and business Wy i uld have be saved, and his present difficulties never made public; but that last move did fail, and he himself had no power of getting out of his present scrape He felt certain of the identity of Mr. Westl igh murdered eleven so very Keith, of man who Myddelton, of Abbotsmoor, that, even with only the very slight and pre sumptive evidence which he was able to amass during almost two years of seurch and inquiry, he went in person to inform Mr. Keith that the whole proof was in his own hands, and that he would at once give him over to the law as the condemned and escaped criminal, Gabriel Myddelton, unless he chose to buy his immunity—you under- stand, Miss Craven? That move, as I said, most signally failed; for—a humili- ating fact which we first learned in thig interview—the innocence of Gabriel Myddelton is now legally established; and I myself saw the documents prov- ing it. I came up to town on purpose, and read them all at the Home Office,” _ “His innocence!” 12) sii taaaibcnaiaiiiaail Honor had no idea that the two words had passed her lips, and after their ut- terance her silence was intense. “And more than that,” resumed Bick- erton Slimp, with an air of jaunty en- couragement, “I do not, and never did, believe in the identity of Gabriel Myd- delton with Mr. Keith, ef Westleigh— who, by the way, seems dying rapidly. Of course I have helped—for my own purposes—in fastening the suspicion up- on him, but I never saw our way clear- ly to a grain of tangible proof; and I always felt that if he had been the man whom, for eleven years, Lawyer Haugh- ton has been trying to hunt down, he could never have had such doubts about him, or shown such hesitation and un- certainty in the case. He is not one to be delayed by scruples, and I always understood his one reason for not cap- turing his man, and the solution of those days and weeks and months of coubt which he underwent. If he'd had cause to feel sure in his own mind, the capture would have been sharp work. As for me, I doubted all along if this could be Gabriel Myddelton, and now I'l! take my Oath it is not.” Honor’s appalling wildly un- Towers, with the Squire years ago, The ears dis- words all entered almost heart wes there utter] with « elear and tinctness,. and her benting; yet s! moved unt 1in- he departed, with an pressive reiteration cf his intemiren to he at her service next day at that hour. ut the silence and the stillness lef her when he left her. She moved soft- and restlessly about the great *1 lent reom, repeating to herself thes words which seemed to mean so much. **N ot guilty! Gabriel's Not Gabriel—not Gabriel! Dying! And Gabriel innocent!’ Gradually her brain grew and she lest the sense of these ated words, while only that lately form- jnnoecnce confused, reiteT- ed reselution of hers held sway. She must see Lawrence; she must sce her eld guardian to-night, for fear it might be too late. Then there came over the girl a f el ing of loneliness and dread most unusu al to her. She listened and longed for the sound of Phoebe’s return, while stil’ she tried, with all her’ strength, to row off this new and miserable fore- \oding, which had fallen upon he with sueh a terrible weight, and nnder +) she could not even hope. What brougin! weight upon her? Was i or—for whom? Had whit What was it? had this crushing fesy for Lawrence, it fallen upon her when she heard of her trdian’s crimes, or of Gabriel's i rocence, or of that interview which 67 (iabriel’s cousins hed had with the laid so foul a charge the if possible, the action 1 on whom h¢ » battled with feeling, strivin msect is. thal, ols tisnel it sht dispel it “Tt could not be,” she whispered to herself, “that a felon’s fate sh yuuld he mid -y guardian’s now, as it was—it c , } e2acn strangling net be.” she moaned, theught as it forced its way to her lips, “that there should be a fatal ending to the illness of one who has been wrongly judged. It cannot be! Oh! if Phoebe would but come, and speak to me of other things!’ The house seemed so large and silent, and she so solitary, that when at last Captain Trent came into the library un- announced, she greeted him with un- feigned gladness which filled his heart with an exquisite delight as unexpected as it was delusive. “Honor,” he cried, his joy overmaster- ing him, “are you really glad to see me--are you really?” “So glad!’ she answered, speaking low in the gravity of her own engrossed thoughts. “Pheobe is away.” | did not blame him by one thought; be cause she saw that, as deeply is was | porsible for him to feel, he felt this. Softly and kindly she answet ad him him often, but she | . how much more earnest he was} now than he had ever been before, and . Sa\ only one thing which she j could say could prevent this old scene I | ted. It would be well for Liervey. Once let him feel that this | li f his vy helpless, and he would . . aia tly submit, and live his new life ] } still more earnestly; once feel that he must take his first love from his heart, ani he would seek another love to take its place. No fear that Hervey’s heart would break in solitary suffering. And for herself? Well, it would be best for Hervey, and she could trust him now. Ske laid her right hand gen- tly upon his, and looked up imto his face with a glance so earnest and so true— so sorry for him, and so sorry for her- self—that he felt instinctively that whatever words she uttered would be uttered solemnly from her heart, and must be sacred between them for ever- more. (To be continued.) mitations of Dodd's Kidney Pills are legion. The box is imitated, the outside coating and shape of the pills are imitated and the name—Dodd’s Kidney Pills is imitated. Imitations are dangerous. The original is safe. Dodd's Kidney Pills have a reputation, Imita- tors have none or they wouldn't imitate. So they trade on the reputation of Dodd’s Kidney Pills. Do not be deceived. There is only one DODD’S. Dodd's is the original. Dodd's is the name te be care- ful about— D-O-D-D°S KIDNEY PILLS DOMINION ATLANTIC RAILWAY: and Steamship lines to Boston via Yarmouth. The Popular Fast line be- tween Nova scotia and Boston via Windsor Junction and Halifax EXPRESS TRAIN® leave HWalifax daily (excep! Sunday) at 635 a. m., for Digby and Yarmouth. making connection Wednesdays and Satu? Gays at Yarmouth for Boston, THE ROYAL MAIL STEAMSHIP “PRINCE GSORGK" 2400 Gress Tonnage. 7000 Horse Power, the fastest and finest steamer plying between the Maratime Provinces and Boston, Leave Yarmouth Wednesday and Saturdays fer Boston. on arrival of Express Train from Halifax’ Returning leaves Boston ‘luesday and Fri- day at 4p.m° Passeners arriving in Halifax next day 5 30 m., by Express ‘isaip. Fcr all information, guide book, folders, ete which will be cent free, writeto F. H. Arm- strong, general passenger Agent Kentville, hes P. GIFKINS: Gen. Manager] Kentville, N. S., May 26th, 1900. / | DENTISTRY BY SPECIALISTS. PAINLESS DENTISTRY by use of ELECTRICITY or by the BERLIN METHOD. MODERN DENTISTRY Crown and Bridge Work (Teeth with- out Plates). ARTIFICIAL TEETH—We make all kinde. Teeth Extracted Without Paina. Berlin Dental Parlors. CHARLOTTETOWN. In Souvenir Goods we havea large assei1tment of Buckels, Brooches, Pins, Tea and Coffee Spoons. Jeweler & Optician, The last few words could not damp Sunnyside, Queen Square. 7 GH TAYLOR 30) “SEWING MACHING FREE, TRIP tothe PARIS EXHIBITION af 1900. ALL EXPENSES PAID, VALUE 30 OQuineas, FREE WoMAN’S WORLD we } In order to increase the circulation of the have made arrangements whereby any subscribes may gain a ladies’ bicycle, vaiue 30 guineas, a gentleman’s bicycle, value 30 guineas, a 7-octave walnut piano 30 guineas, a gold watch, ladies’ or gentleman's, value 30 without any fuineas, cost beyond the subscription money. This system is not intended for the idler —to receive something for nothing—but for those who are willing to use a little cleverness, in their spare time, for which they receive handsome Carriage paid to your door. If you want any of the articles named above you can procure them by be coming a subscriber to the Woman’s WorLD. This makes you eligible to par- ticipate in our method of procuring the articles named free of cost to you. Every subscriber to the Woman’s Wor Lp is entitled to one of these prizes. according to conditions we send. Subscription for one year Post free, 5s. tod Send addressed envelope with stamp (of any country will do) for copy of paper, and full instructions, how to proceed, also say which prize you select. prizes. Address.— % THE “WOMAN’S WORLD,” BRENTFORD, LONDON, W., ENGLAND. eee 5 meena eae Semenaenner a att A AT NI ATI TE FIT FOR A PRINCE EEE The Gem Freezer Read the Prices. 1 Quart $1.25 er 1.50 -. 1.75 ees 2.20 Retrigerators at cost. We guarantee our prices the lowest. DODD & ROGERS 9OBSISSGES 7 In buying your boots here, Th’ , ives are very modest, the style correct, the quality. perfect. This season’s styles are quick sellers That’s because they’ve caught the fancy on oil popular prices at McQUAID’S, LOWER QUEEN STREER aE «§ OSCAIGOUOTE CREAN FREEZERS For One Week. 2 quart $1.75 — S225 o:* $2.50 q FENNELL& CHANDLER fi ! a é pe a eS mc So ee no eens ter eS