| He ran a mile, i and so would many a young lady, rather than take a bath without the ‘‘ Albert ’ Baby’s Own Soap. It leaves the skin wonderfully soft ard | fresh, and its faint fragrance is extreme- Vy y pleasing. Beware of imitations. ALBERT TOILET SOAP CO., MONTREAL. Mfrs, | W hite’s Caramels and Snowflake Chocolates <-~- Can be had at any following firs, class T. J. Morris D. L, Hooper W. Pickard & Co, W. A. Hutcheson W. F. Carter Stewart & Gates Sanderson & Co J.D. McLeod & R. H. Uason, No Flies on our Bey’s ét the Front! Keep them away fiom. the folks athome. Order sereen ore do».rs and widows now. A. Duchemin & Co P. BE. I. Door and Sasb Factory. a gilt Edge The unequalled in famous Laundry Soap cleansing pro- perties, harmless to the fines For sale }y all leading Groceries. MCKINNON & MoNRYIN WHOLESALE AGENTS. say 19, dai. In Souvenir Goods we havea large assortment of Buckels, brooches, Pins, Tea and Coffee Spoons. cH TAYLOR Jeweler & Optician, Supnyside, Queen Square. FOR SALE OR That nicely situated*resid- ence, with out buildings, on the Malpeque Road, one mile from Post ‘office, with 9 or 32 acres of land, as desired, fabric. a 4 THE DAILY EXAMINER, CARHLOTTETON JUNE 79, 1900 ‘ VY ww SS wS WB we | ¢om, as if his life depenaea upon speed, ok ~ _f Ww uf wf VW Ww “To the great Western station,” he <4 ( said, in his quick, clear tones. “A sov- ws - j ere'gn if you do in within fifteen min- ED AT LAST | an 4 He K BY MARY CECIL HAY <4 of * the nde! Motto,” ‘‘ Nora’s Love i ) lest,” “Back to the Old Home,” Ete. S | >| | AIRE ER RR RE SER R RR RE ‘But I have promised it shall be writ- d I will keep the oath my father me swear, as I have kept the oath he wrung from me three years ago. The task of writing bis con- | fession has been hard and sore, but to write my own will be far harder. My father looks upon his bodily suf®rings as his punishment; but no punishment which could be given me on earth could relieve me from the load of guilt which has been secretly and slowly killing me sinee IT met that ene glance of Gabriel Myddelton’s, while the judge pronounc- ed. upon him the sentence of death. My father slmost seems to feel that ke is pardoned for his share in this vile deed; I wish I dared te hope that when I stand upon that awful threshold of the door of death, I might feel that I, too, am pardened. The weight of guilt has borne me down and isolated me among my fellow-creatures, and it will weigh me down and isolate me to the end. “I have very little to add to my fa- thet’s confession. What I told at the trial about Mr. Myddelton’s assuming a disguise at our cottage was trite in every particular. What I did not tell. was his confession to us, so honestly given, and which my father hag related. Hfe threw ‘himself upon our mercy, and we betrayed him, and swore away his lire, ‘That thought stings me, even now, with a pain worse than death! “Tt was an unmatural and unencour- eged thought of mine, but I should have said, up to the day of that trial, that I would have laid down my life for Ga- brie] Myddelton. Then I proved its falseness by haying his life waste in- stead, and my fear of my father’s thrests and anger, and my submission to his command of obedience, are no ex- cusxe for me. “ft heard the sentence of death passed upon him. Through three heavy days end wakeful nights, I pictured him witbin those walls, a convicted felon, and I thought my life had burned itself out in the passion of that anguish, and that my doom was sealed as certiinly ag his. “T had a lover then who was warden in the Kinbury jail, and though I had never listened to him before, I listened now, for one plan and resolution had filled my mind. If he would save Ga- briel Myddelton’s life—so I told him— I would be his wife when he chose. Ah! surely that was the least that I could de for the man whose name we had blighted, and whose life we had lied away. “We helped each other, and unti! the last moment came, no other thought was allowed to either of ug It was no new thing to me to lie awWhke at night and think of Gabriel Myddelton, but it was new to him, though I was proud to feel that no sense of either fear or honor would turn him from my will. “The day and the hour came et last and though my face was white as death that morning when I rose, I felt more nearly happy than I had felt since that night when Gabriel Myddelton’s confi- dence in us had been so vilely abused. “My husband—he was my husband on the following day—hired fer me a large, low dog-cart, closed at the back, and a fieet ‘but very quiet-looking pony. Is this cart J] drove myself alone into Kim bury, and, calling a boy who stood in the yard of the jail (a boy brought there by my husband for this especial purpose, thongh he looked to be only idling there), gave the pony into his charge. He stood steadily at its head, his back to the door and to the vehicle, and I passed in with the order my husband had obtained for me, and was admitted by himself into the condemned cell. What could be feared from me, when it was so well known that I had done most of all to bring the crimimal to that cell? “I wore two shawls and two dresses exactly the same, one concealed below tha ether and nnder my skirt I had se Nervous Debility. A Sufferer From Weak Blood and Ex- hausted Kerves Tells of His Cure by Using Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food. Mr. A. T. P. Lalame, railway agent at Clarenceville, Que., writes:—‘‘ For twelve years I have been run down with nervous debility: I suffered much, and consulted doctors, and used medicines in valn.. Some months agol heard of Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food, used two boxes, and my iealth improved so rapidly that I ordered twelve more. “J can say, zrankly, that this treat- ment has no equal in the medical world. While using Dr. Chase’ Nerve Food I could feel my system being built up, until now I am strong and healthy. I cannot recommend it too highly for weak, nervous people.” Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food is a tonic and restorative of inestimable worth. It makes the blood rich, the nerves. strong, increases the weight, and cures all weaknesses and diseases of the nerves and blood. In pill form, 80 cents . ars 7 Lom St. Paul's and cured a po! t, vell and gloves, pie cisely the same s those I wore my- seit, “My husband had been for days cle- acting his part, and his feliow-offi- ciuls now knew him to be thoroughly imbued with ton’s murderer, and a staunch belief in the justice ef his sen- So it was that no breath of suspicion attached to either of us, and permission was readily granted me. to see Gabriel Myddelton, on the:plea that I had lived near him all my life, and w® had been children’ together “By skilful means, my husband at- tracted the turnkeys as far as possible from the passage to the cell, though of course they stayed where jthey could see me walk back to the dog-cart,; I passed’ | out and then passed back again into” the cell. “ ‘Forgotten something.’ muttered my husband, turni carelessly away, wala at any rate I’m’ glad she is going. Poor lass! How bitterly she cries] Well,’ he was lord of the manor, you see,’ on which she has lived all her life.’ “It was as I seemed to pass from thé: cell, that my husband, by a great effort; kept the attention of the men engrossed by describing and illustrating very ela- borately the breaking of the window through which the murderer had passed into Abbotsmoor. Then, after a few tmirutes, a sudden recollection struck him, and he turned sharply round. “‘Of course you are watching,’ said, suspiciously, to one of the men. “ ‘Of course,’ was the answer, though the man’s eyes could not have done dou- ble duty. ‘I’ve seen her pass backward and forward two or three times, but she is back to the cell now, and you had bet- ter go, for her time is up.’ “They watched my husband pass into the cell, and then led me out, crying still. They watched him help me to my seat in the dog-cart, and give me the reins, and asked me if I feared to go alone. They all spoke kindly to me, and stood to watde me drive away— alone—as I had core. “And so the tale was told next day, by others who had seen me. I had driv- en away alone, as I had come. How were they to know that Gabriel Myd- delton, dressed exactly as I had been, lay hidden in the back of the low, old- fashioned vehicle? That in that going to and fro, between the dog-cart and the eell, there had been one time when my husband’s energies were put to their severest test, while a female figure, (weeping bitterly) had passed out and slipped into that waiting cavity. It was just one minute afterward th®t my hus- band fetched me, and helped me to my seut “IT had a fresh disguise in the gig, and in that Gabriel Myddelton parted with iven him as frr as a disgust for old Myddel demonstratively tence, he me, when I hed dr ! dared to ventme on tlie high-:oad to Liverpool. “Not until late at night was the -*ij sonper missed, and then he My husband knew a man in L've whe earned his livelihcod by helping these who strove to get abroad in se- eret, and he hed been prepared = and bribed. So we heard from him of Ga- hbriel Mydde!ton’s departure for Ameri- ca. Sinee then no tidings have reach- ed me, and now I know that they never will. TI feel that after my death it will be too late for this cofession to benefit any one, yet I dare not make it known hefore, “This is the declaration which I have sworn to make, and to enclose with that which my father has dictated to me in this, hig mortal, illness, and which he has charged me to make public when I feel my own death drawing near. J mnst, he says, confirm its truth upon cath, and leave it with a trusty persen. “My husband is dead, my father dy- ing; my little one seems following them. What trusty person can be near me at the end? Sol have a feeling that some day Y shall destroy these papers with my own hand. But I bave wr'tten the whole truth, as my Father in Heaven is my witness, and this is my signatnre. “MARGARET TERRIT. “Stened this fifth day of December, one thousand eight hundred and sixty- four.” wes afer ry] CHAPTER XXXYV. Yor a few minutes after Royden had finished reading, he sat like one in a dream; then he slowly rose, and folded the two papers, placing them carefully in the breast pocket of the coat which he rad worn all night over his evening dress. ‘Then buttoning it, to guard as sufely as he could the precious: docu- ments, he went softly into the farther room, and, looking down for the last time upon the dead face, gave one back- werd glance along the marred life whose secreta had now been disclosed te hing A step in the outer room,aroused hira; gently jaying the sheet baek over the worn, calm face, he went out to meet women who was now ‘at liberty to _his place. A few tes they til ed-there; apd Rbyden waited, oe if | his time were of little val But when all had been said, and left the gloomy house, he glanced at the dis! , utes.” | | Out of the hubbub of the city, the man took the quiet unfrequented streets; the horse sped on with its in- | evitably insteady perseverance, and } Royden was in time for the 2.40 train | to Langham Junction. All through the journey he sat quite still in his corner of the ¢a ringe, his thoughts intensely busy, e his heart | was full of gratitude and rejoicing. “To see her face when I show het | these,’ he murmured to himself; “to j think of the truth lying here at last in | my hand!’ So he was thinking—picturing the brightening of one pale face at the tid- ings which he bore—when the train stopped at Langham Junction, and he stepped hastily down upon the _ plat- form, “Where for, sir?” “On to Westleigh by the 6.30.” Just in his cool, natural tones, Royden answered the question; yet, as he did so, he glunced across to where the West- leigh trains were wont to start with an intense anxiety. “The Westleigh train left half an hour ago, gir.” (To be continued. ) EEE oo = —_ in etree etaeeemeieneteemmanineenemeeae en ONS LNA ONAN I 5 ease was in- Pills = peter Hoole until that without Dodd's poner Pilis they are i 5 against Dia- je Dodd's Kidney | ImMations—box, peeoer odor Dodd's. so piney Eis Pills awe the first medicine ‘Kidney =.=] ’s y ease this dis- : Siemseivc confess ‘that ever cured Dieter, is Dodd's Kidne ein Dodd's Kidney tle aes are fifty cents a box at ail druggists. JUNE MAGAZINES AT ar Mt SUNNYSIDE. 2 Dividerd Notice Merchants Bank of P. E. Island. ARLOTTTTOWN, May 31, 1900 Notice is eect given tbat a half yearly dividend at the rate of 8 per cent. per anum on the capital stock of this bank has been de- clared, payable at its Banking house on and after July 3rd, 1900. The transfer books will be closed from the — to the 2rd July next, both days in- cilusi ve. By order of Board. J.M. DAVISON, Cashier. uneg 1910 2aw iw. Hay For Sale. About. 25 tons of pressed hay. Apply to the office or to S. R. Jenkins. Upton North River. 2aw 2wks DR- GORDON ALLEY __.) PHEBICIAN:& SURGEON (Greduate MoGill, University) and | Ome H Dorchester Stree aad 7 to 8, p.m. a. m., 1 to 3 Evesaps enention te seuaii seth. hailed ee bat lt WH h RAAAAAAAAAAAB A AAAS 1 e money. Island wheats. We have a large selection of clovera, vetches, peas, White Russian, Menitoby hard and Spring Tooth Harrows and all kinds of farm implements. W. GRANT & CO; LePaze’s Old Stand, Queen Street, ; RFE NESE EEE VY re FIT FOR A PRINCE Cos RAAABRAAB AA ARRAS AAR AAAI 1000 SEED TIME -200 > Buy your seed at Le Page's o!d stand and save timothy, WARY Clothing, Do Boots. Is to Your Interest To see our men's and boy’s Our sales are larger in clothing Than for years, The reason, we are selling good fitting well-made suits for about 20 per obint lower than current ourseelf justice. ou Can save enough on a suit of clothes to buy a Hat anda pair ices. J. MACDONALD & CD Where Worth and Low Prices Meet: encom neem ena samattn eh n popular prices at McQUAIDS, . LOWER QUEEN STREER —— ome ~~ some prices :— 40 “ 9 90 “ 50 $1.50 iT 7 46 “ % Large Lamps “ “c Lemonade Sets Glass “ bs ‘e China Berry Sets «“ “ ce “ “ very modest, the style correct, the quality. perfect. This season’s styles are quick s eHers That’s because they’ve caught the fancy on $3.00 Tea Sets now $1.95 per 75 cent Glass Table Sets now 50 cents 25 20 50 30 1, Sess Also lot of odd crockery’ selling at’ Half Price » Ps MONAGELAN, tne tun aw Th 4 flows ‘are —— i] Ww S . : td Teeth Trt In buying your boots here. ‘> rus _ ee ~ Great Sale of Crockery, Glassware and Groceries, Big Discounts for 30 Daya. All our present stock will be closed out} at big reductions—below « | ae lglg a. mas set “e ‘ , « '