i AE Peel : SEUSQUREUOUUEGRGUGHE Renee: wach S2EE2 ’ Be. 7 eee, , ied iM l . — a me - | ; . my In oilver ' ' ' : N iy Is so tra ly * levoted . *“y 7 ling gifts jas silvor, §. It ae x6 once the beautiful! : (erry 1) and useful aad fur- ee Lore, possesses always an ln ali vaius of its own. It vutlast either recipient or er, and at the last is inevit- emories ~ ‘ly valued for the un Our stock is c ymplete in inex- pensive silver gifts. W. W. Wellner UAURQEOUOREENGEOR OVENS ORA AGENCE REA NCCUANREHRAAEAEREAOER SEEDS NNENRECERNORSDDERSEODEGUNUEDOUEEUESECURaSaaNEES | ~ \ ‘Its all Plain Sailing With (ur Goods are Right | (ur Prices are Right Those Who Daal With _ ~m It lies with you, reader, togive us a chance to prove the sbove asertion. We are receiviog new goods daily. See our Uovered Chip Market Baskets from 10c up. Choice Creamery Putter juet received, Try our Urange Pekoe Tea at 28¢ per ib. It will please you. We also sell Haszard’s genuine BRAHMIN TEA. A big stock of other Teas on band, from 20c per |b up. ek, Salmon, ani ae full all at the delivery o Telephoae canael elc., Also 10 a Lobsters, Ciames, line of general groceries, lowest’ possible prices. Fre: goods to ali parts of the city commynication. R. F. Maddigan & Uo LOWES QUEEN sT.:\EET.” —_—s Abont the 20th of April at Crowlands, Charlottetown, a good plain cook. Also a house-parlor maid. Good wages to competent persons. References required. Apply by leiter to MR&. BAYFIELD, Hillsdale House, dy & «kly Aunapolis. Nova Scotia, ee Baked Beans ete a pound can of baked beans in tomato sauce for LO cents is what we offer. Cheaper than buying beans and cooking them. Try atin, 10e SANDERSON & C0 Victoria Row Grocers. - es, — _ WANTED. ee ; ‘ . ‘ : : ; AT MASON’S STORE You can get the latest Canadian aud American newepapers received by mail each night. {Drop in if you want a paper or magazine or book toresd. Fruit, Confectionery, Tobacco, Cigars etc. wheoa you’re passing this way. R. H. Mason ees 62000 @wR)OGw @ +o sae] @a@%On28 OGG as * Oe SGGDRGURGRRRGRGI0E9 —eeteeneeeaee eee. ae, sence ‘et. atte | me | with an idea of stern retaliation, “what OO wm are SS Ra rHE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, APRIL 45, 1900. ee POON SSE ee “> 1 y WY Ww WY & wS WwW wey wy WY YD & >» tw » y vs ni . ; s\y WY VN ws YW \/S! NY oY YY Va mantelpiece, watching the face of the MWW. wd irl beside him; and it seemed as if, Pp : > <a | when she answered the question, his i Ke fize grew more intent and even stern. “~e ‘ “Only one gentleman—Mr. Keith. He wet A é 13 staying at the Royal Hotel in Kin- “ny m # Surry now; he has been visiting Sir > VVVVVe K€ | Philip Somerson at the Castle. I do “ i . know whether he stays for the : BY Y ~ H Y KS | shooting or because he likes the neigh- >) MARY CECIL HA S | pcrhoodh' 200 wen Sader * aw | you know him, Law- — or : ¢ y ’ ao rence ¢ sys] Author 6f.* The Arundel M ” «Nora's : S | a , A i | he At una 4 otto, N ra Lov = ‘*Ac much, returned Mr. Haugh! yn, . . ki t | cule we : re i QS i apparently making an effort to speak 2 se cs ani 4 . rt , ““ : Test, Back to the Old Home, Etc. 1 ¢ sily, as T ds any other idle young SI << | j }] rw who comes to stay in the town " } +} “oft ; ~ eee ree See en | for a time, professedly for the Abbots- 4a, FN . FX Ss 1 A f~. gx ~ an sm ? \ f \ ,' ae g ‘ : ai S = xh “Sh “aN IX K IX av “aN fn ae lam IX IX a “aN R ‘ | ishing, or shooting, or what not —that is all.” “y <hontla have thor —— 014 to use your Own words. | “sy ut al iii ’ , : n 7 na tl igh : : knows? Phoebe makes no | Wul say good-nicht now Law- enough to know a true gentleman woaen poe ae . ; nce.” Vou ret . ; > as med tt » | her infatuation for Lawrence ee : , fe) ae ni ok, . makes no secret of his | _ He put down the empty cup and then ] ‘ r ¢g ry v. oo 4 ; ren ly | es ’ : : 5 Te ok her offi red h ind, “Cood-night - fe : Th shai? | to her, so why should I? ] achtnits + en" “s ees eee 7 Tet ae » no sec®et of your indifferen: 7 0ed; “how you hasten to utter it! Ts og , h; if] and he certainly makes Nothing t _ do or Say ever tempts Ways he asked. his tone pepe et his infatuation for you, s» | 2°","° linger with me. My beautiful harsh, either in anger or self-consclo.s- iq 12” . r child, My favorite, if you. would only PENS. : . consent to learn one lessor . i ie ek Mae 9 : ‘ sson from : most ungenerous,” gs; oI Because you are to marry her, you uid Hon Phoebe-” krow.”’ “Do not say ‘you know,’ Honor; it is ummecessary and inelegant, and I do not know, though you do, it would seem.” “Of course I do; everybody knows it.” “Of course I could win her if I chose,” mused Hervey, complacently, “if that is what you mean by every- body knowing I am to do so.” Honor’s laugh rang fresh and clear on the night air, and naurally it rous- ed Captain Hervey’s languid wrath. ‘It is most childish to laugh at no- thing, as you do, Honor.” “Only yesterday you told me it was childish laugh at everything. You are inconsistent, Hervey, if you guide in opposite directions.” “If Mr. Keith wins Theodora and her fortune,” remarked Hervey, presently, to will Lawrence Haughton do? Because everybody knows, as you say,that Law- rence is to marry a rich wife if he mar- ries at all.” No answer, so he put the question di- rect. “Do you think Haughton will marry a rich wife?’ “T hope he will.” “Why? “Because she answered, with a tichtening of her lips, “he won't be at ill happy if he does—men never’ are who marry for money—nor will she. It is you who are laughing at nothing now, Hervey.” “Your notions of the world seem to be gleaned from novels. Why do you not wish he would marry a penniless wife, just to spite Jane?’ “Because—Jane would break the heart of the perniless wife.”’ “Honor!” “Yes, I'm re. “Why, you have tears in your voice! Are yj S 1p] at’ the Larches*’ “IT was not thinkiwe of myself,’ re- turned Hener ily “Don't griev | .” said Her- vey, ima tol of relief, “she doesn't feel these things. Wt is far harder for you, Ik love of thi man J han to her to be th n I I 8 vea— lierves, } speak #0?” cried ;Icnor, passionately. “You know othing I t this-—abont Phoebe or bout me. I will not allow you to talk so to me of my'cousin, or of myself. Do not ever again preted you can teach me how to be a gentlewoman, for you do not know yourself how “to be a gentleman. Go back! I’m quite sefe: I would rather not have you.” “My dear Honor,” he began, in his most plausible tones, “you should try not to be so hasty. Why should I not ass George Francis . Fn, Train, the fa- ue = mous sage of . — Madison ~ oem =-:f, , \)» Square, who 4:i— has for thirty Pp) years de- clined the companion- ship of any one but children, says, “I am a child my- seif”’ If a man will live rightly and take proper care of his health dur- ing youth and maturity he may live to a green old age, and still be able to say with absolute truth, “‘I am a child myself.’ Youth is not a matter of years. Happiness is not a question of experiences. Youth is happiness and health is youth. The healthy person, young or old, will be a happy per- son. It is asimple matter to get the body into a healthy condition and then to keep it there. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis- covery is the greatest of health makers and health savers. Itis the great blood-maker and fiesh-builder. It makes the appetite keen, the digestion an] assimilation per- fect, the liver active, the blood pure, the muse¢les strong, the brain clear, the nerves steady and every vital organ in the body healthy and vigorous. It makes firm, healthy flesh, but does not make corpulent people more corpulent. It does not make flabby flesh like cod liver oil. It purifies the biood and drives out the poisons of malaria and rheumatism. It is the best remedy for blood and skin diseases. It cures 98 per cent. of all cases of consump- tion. Grateful patients, who had been given up to die, have permitted their experi- ences, names, addresses and photographs to be reproduced in Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser. The sufferer who wishes to investigate may write to any of these. The ‘Golden Medical Discovery’ is sold by all medicine dealers, and only unscrupulous dealers will try to induce a customer to take some worthless substitute for the sake of a few pennies added profit. Send 31 one-cent stamps to cover cost of mailing and customs ¢n/y, for a copy of Dr. Pierce’s 1008- page ‘‘Common Sense ; and then she maintained for the rest of their walk. Larches was a sombre, red brick Louse, standing a littie way from ‘the road, and separated from it by half dezen yards of brick wall between two whit at either end of the eurv- ed drive which passed the front dow At this door Honor stood in the dark- ness, wondering rather anxiously would let her ine Hervey had left her o¢ the gate: but.theuch she didn't knw it, he was lingering there, waiting t9 see her safely in the He bad not long to wait: the door was opencd prompily to her summons, and he saw her enter the lighted hall. “It was Haughton himself who her in,” muttered Cuptain Trent as he walked away. , “She will be vexed if no one else has waited up for her; and certainly it cannot be by Phoebe’s »wn choice that she has left Haughton to do it alone.” He hastened on now, “whistling 4s he went, for want of thought,” and by Yo? hee gates who house. > s@a thig time Honor and Mr. Haughton had entered the warm and lighted drawilg-room. “very one gone to bed!’ she ex- claimed, a note of keen vexation in her tone. “Why did not Phoebe sit up for me? She promnsed she would, and I @m as early as Jane bade me be.” “T told Phoebe to go to bed,” return- ed Mr. Haughton, gently taking off the seft white shawl which Honor had worn under her dark cloak. I chose to wait for you, and I did not need any cne to keep me company.” Honor glanced at him for a moment as he stood in the full light, and then she quietly pushed away the chair he bad drawn up to the fire for her. Honor’s guardian was a man of for- ty. a little above the middle height, Eut so broadly built that he looked e- low it. His hair was thickly streaked with gray, and his moustache—gmiy. toomwis heavy and coarse; his face, habitually shrewd and callous, and his cyes habitually keen and restless; for any other expression which might be upon his face to-night, or at other times when he was alone with Honor. Was not its customary one. He was a powerful man, both physically and mea- tilly; a man who seemed to have his passions and his words completely un der his control, and who, if he had not, might be, perhaps, a dangerous man to thwart or anger. His clients spoke of him as a safe and _ self-concentrated lawyer, as hard to understand as to bend; a clever fellow, whose _ soft, white fingers could’ unravel, in that constant silence of his, the most intri- erte knot in law. But ¢here was ene in- mate of his house who knew him in two characters, and who put no trust wi cc er. have coffee ready for you, Hon- or,’ said Mr- Haughton, taking the cof- fee-pot from the*fire and carrying it te the table where stood one solitary eup; “I know it will refresh you after your walk.” “Thank you,” said Honor; but her voice, for all its gentleness, was utter- ly indifferent, and Lawrence Haughton toticed this. “Have you had a pleasant evening?” he asked, rather nervously pursuing his unwonted and womanish task. “A little better than usual,” she said, ,quietly; “but I am very sleepy, Law- rence. May I go to bed?” “Just wait nutil you have drunk this coffee, dear. I made it myself on pur- pose for you, and I have kept it hot, and fancied you would enjoy ‘j.” He had comhe up to her then, with the cup in his hand, and she could not turn away. She took it with a little laugh, fresh and sweet. “You look odd at that task, La-w- rence. Why did you attempt it?’ “Because it was for you,” he said, with a subdued eagerness in his tone- “There is no task I would not attempt for you, Honor.” “Y hope there is,’ she answered, very gently; “amd please let Phoebe keep her promise next time, and sit up for me, Lawrence.” “Any one but me,” he said, a dark flush rising in his face; “yet my ouly pleasure through this day has been the articipation of these minutes, when I should have you here to talk to me aud look at me, as you rarely do when you have others to see or speak to.” There was silence between them tren, while he tried to school his tones to easy indifference such as hers, and while she wondered childishly whether ‘< 9 her guardian’s culinary achievement was known to his sister, whose one strong idea was that it was he who ought to be waited on by all the house hold. Ad: Medical Adviser,’’ in paper covers. dress Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buifalo, N. ¥. “Who was at Deergrove to-night, Honor?” “I am too old to learn,” said Hon rT’, defying the pain which such ‘words al- ways gave her, in spite of their fre- quency. “Oh, Lawrence, I wish you were as sleepy as I am! You would hurry me off, and I should be so grate- ful to von afterwane” (To be continued.) DR. A. W. CHASE’S REMEDIES. Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills, for diseases of the Kidneys, Liver, Bladder and Bowels. One pill a dose; asc. a box. Dr. Chase's Catarrh Cure, for Cold in the Head, Catarrh, Dropping in the Throat, and Hay Fever. 25c. a box, blower free. Dr. Chase’s Oint- ment for Eczema, Salt Rheum, Piles and all itching skin diseases. 6c cents a box. Dr. VERS Rs Wee Nerve Food, gc Ws dae eh exhausted, worn- out. nerves and thin, apt watery, diseased coal wt/Z blood. suc. alarge "ie Dr. Chase’s Liver Cure, for diseases of the Liver, Jaundice and Biliousness. 5o0c. a bottle. Dr. Chase’s Syrup of Linseed and Turpen- tine, a positive cure for Croup, Asthma, Bron- chitis and all Coughs and Co'ds. esc. a large bottle. At all dealers, Chase's for —— Se ee e * 9OS*O 9408 SSOOOSES WOOD IOOE > } Khaki Note. Call in to-night and get some of the new note ; paper. All the rage now, 3 Khaki Note. > CHAS J. MITCHELL : BooKsELLER and STATIONER Queen Street. Opp. Prowse’s...... 4 0B OH OOOO COGS 3666 UHH FOO Nutters Ale —AND— Gream Porter The product of the Silver SpringBre w- ery of Sherbrook, P. Q., far excel ail a preparations on the Canadian mar- et. Over 300 earloads were delivered at the pcincipal trade centres of the Dominion in 1889 and today Nutsers agencies so dot the Dominion of Canada that when it is noon at oue, it is evening at anotLer. The Silver Spring goods are chiefly ree- 3 commended for their ABSOLUTE Purity Ooanosieurs recommend and physicians prescribe them. For sale by A: MACDONALD, So'e Agent for P. E. I. D. C. McLEOD BARRISTER, ATTORNEY, SOL1 CITOR, ETC. eod & To ast ast ati ait vig ast Johnson’s Anodyne Liniment. maintained its high standard and Now Is The Time CHEAP sarriages. Call and see them. EOQOD © 6S 8S 9D 90G039303 03-0 ea oe fluns. almost full length of store selecting goods. her department” at greater extent than Johnson’s Anodyne Liniment. Send for our Book on INFLAMMATION, mailed free. Put up in Two Sizes, Price 25 and 50 cts. 2 IIIA IRI RII IOI TR EIA TOIT IA IA IOI FE JOHNSONSANODYNELINIMENT has been used and indorsed s ‘. 1810, torelieve or cure every foria of Pain and Inflammation:!s Safe. ONS jpyne LINIMENT is strictly a family remedy for ‘Internal as much as External use cure Colds, Croup, Coughs, Catarrh Cramps and Colic it acts promptly. ~ ae #6 ORIGINATED BY AN OLD FAMILY PHYSICIAN. 38 38¢ Sold by all Druggists. I. 8S. JOHNSON & CO., Boston, Mass. => }6o4F ©2£>59]48 D4 To Give Baby An Airing and of course you,will want a BABY CARRIAGE We have good Carriages We have COMFORTABLE carriages - we have We are always glad to show goods. John Newson BOW DOGS OVOBVWAHASS © OVODOMF ©°OO6 5M O5O7O4HOE Ome EO “Have you an eye for the Beautiful” If so you will derive unlimited pleasure by inspecting our Millinery Department now replet2 with spring’s latest produc- There is not a medicine in use which possesses the confidence of the public to a os “nt than J. For almost a century it has ie stood upon its intrinsic merit, while generations after generations have used it WM, The best evidence of its virtue is the fact that in the state where it originated the se sale is steadily increasing. You can safely trust what time has indorsed. 3 I, S. Jounson, Esq.—Fifty years ago this month, your father, Dr. Johnson, left me some - I have sold it ever since. I can most truly say that it has ie popularit from that time to the present. aa JOHN B. RAND, North Waterford, Maine, January, 1891. ine Le “SOS OD OS OD OD O'R OS SOD BID OSD OG OD This department which is comparatively new; extends It is fitted up second to none on P, E. I. being newly tinted, carpeted, is very light some and contaius large bevel mirror, every advantage is afforded in One glance at its soft dainty materials, their exquisite shacings and the arrangement of such, sufficiently assures that capability prevails throughout. Our trimmed hats and bonnets are (not copied millinery) but creations of natures highest gift ORIGINAL ARTISTIC TALENT the result of which cannot be obtained in any copy and can only be accomplished by our milliner MISS BIRCH whofbesides being an acknowledged artist in her line has an immense range of Tips, Chiffons, Laces, Buckles, etc,, to svleet from and will meet the requirements of all in point of price. “Customers both old and new will receive every attention in MATTHEW & MCLEANS Souris, P. EK. I. all delighted. Lawrence was standing against the Or ricg—Bank of Nova Scotia Buildi ng, Charlottetown. dy 3 mos wkly 1 year. c c IC-DIBFE and KY¥P- oy RU RA ct Seetia, Office Merchant's Bank ef fax Be sure and visit§the leading studie. Cr. Ek. COO, ‘Queen and Grafton Sts. Ch’town a -o- eee SSSR Rees SESEREN LTTE... sate Fine Photography wie | all the Latest Designs Our Carbon portraits are unriveled. Our eustomers «re