Ue SME Mb Die OH Ns | ses Nes aE ICIS aS AS aS S 4 € PICTURESQUE ince Edward Island °¢ 25¢ at all Bookstores. 2k j > > “ Ao ‘}hustrated book on P. KE. K interesting Souvenir & He Whe He hy Me MMe 2. “So RIGHTED AT 1 >» £ ewaike diesel _—QHARLOTTETOWN - IME TABLE (LOCAL TIME.) rival and Departure of Trains and Steamers. el TRAINS s lenves for the west...... 8 35 am. » prrives from the west.. 9 50 p m. dation leaves for, the « *eteee teeRooenn re + + 4i0 p nm. odati for the Accomodation leaves ei ieeeentorvoccorenceone tone 600 pm. odation arrives from the See peeeeeeee teeeeeeee oneal 55 a m. jocomodation arrives from the Bxpres B pres Accome Teal. were WEB vcccreeee cee cece & & COSSSCCCS 2 25 re ™m. Express leaves for the east...... 7 05 « m. Bxpreee arrives from the east.. 9 106 m, Aocomedation leaves tor the Gill oceccccccccserces edngcesce 8.08 P BD. Accomodation arrives from the eaat eoeeerseeeree res 6 08 seeeece 4 50 P Tm PRINCESS. [aves for Pictou every morning i cncctsebetes ee Bim Arrives from Pictou every even- ig Bi...see eee .8 30 p m. LA GRANDE DUCHESSE. Arrives from Bostou and Halifax every Mondav............-- 12 p m. Leaves for Bowton and Halifax every Wednesday ..... .... 10am. HALIFAX. Arrives from Boston and Halifax every Thursday +000 ccscsceee «=f Pp Ml. Leaves for Halifax and Boston every Friday .... ccccoccee. lpm. CAMPANA. Arrives from Muntreal and Que- bec every alternate Friday... . Leaves for Quebec and Montreal! the following Monday evening. CITY OF GHENT. Arrives from Halifax every Thareday afternoou ........ ace Leaves for Halifax every Friday 100 m. JACQUES CARTIER. Leaves for Orwell Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thuradays........ 3p m. leaves for Crapaud every Fri- Piskcadssssscthecetetess . > Wh Leaves for Crapaud every Satur- DE Viidvccs toinbdichinaine > wh FERRY BOATS. “Hillsborough” -—Leaves Ferry Wharf tor South port every half hour. “Eifin”—Leaves for Rocky Point daily at 3, 8,9, llLam; 1, 2,4, 6.30, pm, localtime. Sundays at9a m, 12.45, 4,3,4pm. Returning 1.15, 2.30, 3.15 tod 5 p m. “Southport” —Runs up East River every Tuesday, leaving at 5.30 @ m, sod 3 milocal. Runs up West River every ave leaving at 5.36 am, ond 4pm eal, HOTEL ACCOMMODATION. Por the benefit of touriste and others "tpublich the following list of hotels» and tdiog houses in Charlottetown and thewhere :— ge eslotterowa—Hotel Davies, (ueen Motel, Revere Hotel, Eureka Bouse, veran House, Railway House, Lepage Suse, Duncan House, Finlay House, MoFadyer House. Sammerside— Clifton House, Russ %tsl, Campbell Hotel. Perry House. ~~giteaa View Hotel, Frederick se, Treeadie— AGadi Hotel. Rustico—Sen Side Hotel. Staohope—Clitf House, Mutch House. Brack lew Point—Shaw Houee. » Aldertoa—Sesforth House, Albion <trrace, Malpeque-~Hodgaon House, North ore House, Pownal-- Florida Hotel, Dominion Ouse, Vernon River Bridge—Finlay House. torgetown—Aitken House, Tapper Souse, Acadia Honse. mee, ereree—Lansdowne Hote!. igbish— McKe Ho: 1 Bow, Railway Hotel, ee ae ens — p . — Clarke’s Hotel, Conmer= yot8ets—Mecdonald House. tn House, are Hotel; Man- smpton—-Pleasant View House Port Hili—Port Hil) House, ides, there are ; b ’ & good many private crore rousbout the province where Sccommodation ata reasonable ties may be obtained. Further in/orme The noe upon applical on at % aw ee AST. By Mary Cecil Hay. (Concluded. ) _—— “I am afraid [ shall,” he said, looking down upon her with untold love and “And if Gabriel does accept it, IT am quite sure that, in his gratitude and his new earnestness, he will con- tinve all you have begun, Ah! his sum- mons already. How soon it has come! And—and it will be so selfish to fetch yuu back to me while I am such a—” “When you interrupted, laying her fingers on his lips, “I shall be ready, Roy. Good-bye.” “Am! this parting is not sad!” he said, his thoughts for a moment on another “ Go which she had ut- tered long “Your mine pride come,” she resting d-bre” ago, love is now—tmine forever. Oh! my sunbeam, good-bye.” CHAPTER XLIV. t Sneh a wedding it was! Miss Trent ‘tossed aside the papers when they reached her in Baden-Baden, and, with much sarcastic embellishment, told an English gentleman that night at table d’hote, that Mr. Keith, of Westleigh Towers. had outwitted the less diplomatic candidates for old Myd- delton’s money. “On the 30th inst., at Statton, by the Rey. Walter Romer, Honor Craven to Royden Keith, of Westleigh Towers.” This was the simple announcement which had been sent to the leading pa- pers; but it had not prevented the para- graphs being longer and more glowing elsewhere. The wedding ceremony spun itself through am entire page of each of the rival Kinbury papers, and the dresses amd the jewels and the guests were dissected im whole columns of various journals devoted to rank and fashion. Honor's dres@a was as elaborately de- seribed as if it had lent the bride her beauty, instead of having borrowed its own from hers—as a bride’s should. “charming. galaxy of bridesmaids” had a hundred lines to themselves, over every one of which the chief bridesmaid lruched heartily afterward: even while the tears stood thickly on her pleasant Dutch face. The “erowd of fashion- able guests” were named separately, ami admired en masse. The village de corations had a minute description, and the gifts were valued at a fabulous sum. And—as igs the rule prescribed on such occasions-—fewest words of all were bestowed upon the bridegroom, the Kinbury weeklies only touching up on his recent illness, and the London dailies alluding casually to the proba- bility of his leaving his mark upon the tilr es. Sir Philip and Lady Somerson return- ed from abroad on purpose to have The their favorite married from Somerson Castle; and it was in consequence of their determination that Honor could not carry out her anxious proposal for a quiet They seut with wedding. filled their beautiful country “crowd of fashionable guests” which the papers delighted to cata- logue. They supported the “charming caluxy of bridesmaids” by a noble pha- lanx of young manhood. They employ- ed] the whole village in bearing flow- ers to and fro for the decorations of the church, and park, and village street; und yet they never fancied they had dcne enough to make this wedding~dlay a festival. And at Statton Rectory, both Mr. and Mrs. Romer laughed heartily over Hon- or’s impossible desire for a quiet wed- ding. Itoyden had come the day before to stay with them, and from early morn- ine the village had been filled by West- leigh people, who had travelled here to see the marriage of their master. In spite of the five hundred walking-sticks, which had always rankled in Sir Phil- ip’s breast, he threw the park open all afternoon to these men who cheered #0 heartily when Honor passed among them in her youth and beauty, and these women, who so warmly prayed, “(od bless him,” when Royden led her threugh the crowd. Earnestly Gabriel Myddelton echoed the prayer, as he and Alice walked from the church slowly, step by step, in the long line of guests, while the joyous notes af the organ ram- eurging jiiitations of Dedd’s Kidney Pitts 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- ters 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 to be care ful about— D-O-D-D"s KIDNEY PILLS through the porch and followed them. “Ay, God bless them both,” murmur- ed the rector, as the bells clashed out across the autumn landscape, and there | exme into his mind a few words of one of those poets whose verses were but fechly linked about the memory of his old college days: “*Naught but love ean answer love, And render bliss secure.’ No, it certainly had not been a quiet Wedding, and Pierce was not the only one who smiled at the notion, when the excitement was at its ebb, and the tra- velling carriege rolled down the avenue of Somerson Park, followed by count- less and curious missiles. Pierce sat beside the youmg Italian courier, look- ing down upon the four gray horses and the searlet postilions, but still he had an ever ready word or glance for the who sat together in the roomy seat behind him; one of these being Marie Verrien, proud to feel that she was as much Honor’s maid as wes the pleasant girl who lavished iwe women constant care amd kindness upon her, and never allowed her to reelize the fact that her employment merely an agreeable sinecure. This sojourn abroad, which Was to restore to Royden his old strength, was also to give the finishing touch to the benefit which Marie had Cerived from that life of ease and hap- piness which she had spent in Honor’s home. wis CHAPTER XLV. They are the Westleigh bells which are now having it all their own with the summer and tell ng their tale to the wind and waves,wh'ch, in their turn, laugh over it among the rocks and leaves. ‘'wo months have passed since, from the tower of Statton church, rang ont the tidings of their marriage, and Io den and Honor are on their way hore to receive this greeting. It breaks wp on them brightly and musically as t ey drive into sight of the high towers abov the sea, but Honor turns and hidts hr fuee apon her husband’s shoulder t!en, she gees that where he was found four months ego, earried home as dead was echoes, been use treacherous bxy ane AM The watehers see the earringe now, and a signal-gun is fired out acres f° ¢ ‘Then, even more merrily siU!. th ills peal out; and presently a. Land which Royden himself organized lon neo, among the “mill-hands.*’ rvcre>es toimesct them. Now rises tle chee ing o° hundreds of voices, 2rd in 2 e - mt the horses are gone: an’. to the miusie of the cornets and the + bells—nll harmonized = by alty vd summer gledness- pol i t ‘ i ’ uptr free - wh ‘ + ‘ ‘ Peon ; i] ov; { y h sertence with a Cceaf they notice how the ery n of his wife brings a wendrous lixht into his eyes, beyond that perman- ent Eeht of his happiness which dwells ti ere now. Aral cther friends have gathered with- in thre Lowers to welcome Royden and Licner: friends whom we shall look up- on to-day for the last time. Phere are Sir Philip and Lady Som- erson, ¢ rdial as of cld. Th re is Mrs. Roemer, bent. as of old, on making 2 favorite of Honor; and Mr. Romer re- enling with a smile of self-congatula- tion, how, from the first, he had ac- knowledged Rorden Keith worthy of a herrty and profund respect. There is Sir Edward Graham, besming as if he had never looked on anguish such as that which he had witnessed in this spot just three months ago. There is Dr. Franklin, uncharacteristically hope- ful. There is the old Vicar of West- leigh, confidentially asserting that there has never been such a scene as this in the village since he came to live here, fifty years ago. There is his young curate, in whose wake comes a grave little lad who, for months now, has not only eagerly devoured the lessons that he gives (the payment for which dou- bles the young curate’s salary), but has been with him ever im his walks and in his work. The boy’s face flushes and brightens into perfect beauty when Roy- den,laying a gentle hand upon his shoul- der, tells Honor, “This is Margaret Ter- rit’s child,” and Honor stoops and kisses him. There are Phoebe and Miss Hender- son, come together from the Kensing- ton mansion, where Phoebe is preparing for her wedding, in a state of happiness unusually calm and quiet: while Her- vey makes ready that London house where she will enjoy her drives and dresses—as well as better things—and be thoroughly happy in her kindly, sim- ple and prosaic way. There is Hervey, reading a new translation of his old code of etiquette; the tones which used to be so slow and faultless stirred and breken tow, as he thanks Honor for that gift of Deergrove,which she bought for him and Phoebe when Mrs. Trent saw it best to leave the old neighbor- hovd-—not that Hervey values the little estate for its memories so much as for ts proximity to Honor’s home; and be- exuse it is such a relief to him to feel that he need not live only in London all the year round; even though his new employment is easy and pleasant to him. There is Gabriel Myddelton, inexpressi- bly happy as 4 well-employed country squire; proud to hear the congratula- tions which are given him on the man- ner he is carrying out—in earnest zeal— the work Honor began at Abbotsmoor; and using wisely and kindly the half ef old Myddelton’s money, which was’ all his cousin could succeed in winning him to accept. There ig Alice, weil and strong again, because no secret presses on her now, and her husband's mame ie loved and respected. Bo those belonging to the old life ase all here, gave four. Mrs. Trent aad THE DAILY EXAMINER CHARLOTTETOWN? JULY, 17 7 tgco. forgiving (as those ‘often are to whom the wiong is due; and Lawrence Haugh- ton’s sister is on her way to join him in Melbourne. At his first invitation— honestly though curtly given—Jane left the house in which she had grown to middle-age; sold the household goods which for years she had guarded so jealousiy, and sailed to a new, strange world for the sake of this brother to whom—through good or evil—she had all her life clung faithfully. Hard and ecld she had ever been, but still there ran through the flint this one pure veis ef gold. The sileace of the autumn night has setiled down upon the Towers. Alone at last, Honor lingers at the window in her dressing-room;the curtains drawn back, and the October moonlight fall- ing softly upom her, as she stands there, still amd lovely, in her simple dress. “Sweet, do you feel that this ig really home?” fioyden hag come up to her so quietly that his words seem only a part of that long, happy thought. “Our home, Roy; where your love will make me happy beyond words; and where I will try—” “And fail,” he interrupts, kissing her tenderly, as slse nestles within his arms; “you have made me happy for all time. You need never try again.” She does not turn her eyes from the moonlit sea, but they are filled with a deer and full content. How can even she herself help feeling the difference her love has made in his life, always so full of generous deeds and noble pur- poses, but new so full of happiness be- sices?” “What a welcome they have given us,” she whispers, presently. “It fill- ed my heart with deepest gratitude to see how you have made your people love you: and I know how it is, Roy. In your daily life and hourly intercourse with others—I mean in little things as well as great, by trifies which so many of us do not think of—you have won 4 love which only such a life as yours can win, my husband, and which -iever ean be otherwise than warm and true.” “Honor,” he says, lifting her face, that he may read his happiness within her eyes, “do you know that Gabriel— and not Gabriel alone—has been speak- ing to me in just such words of you? My darling, are you satisfied with all you hear of Abbotsmoor, and the work- ing of your plans and projects?” “Far more than satisfied.” “And you will let me help you here, ian your own share of the work?’ “Royden, as if I could ever think of anything good which you have not thought of long before.’ “Do you remember the first day we spent at Abbotsmoor, Honor, when it was deserted,aad the shadow of a great crime lay upon it? Do you remember how we talked of that old superstition of a curse hanging over the miser’s wealth, while neither you nor I could guess in whose hands would lie the task of scattering it?” “Or whose would lift that shadow of crime from the old name.” “The task ig not finished, is it? It will only finish with our lives. But can we not feel to-night, mine own dear wife, that at last there rests a blessing only upon old Myddelton’s money, and that day by day, through all our grate- ful lives, the blessing may grow and brighten?” She laughs a happy little laugh, and lifts her arms and clasps them softly round his neck. “Oh, Royden, who, in all the world, has greater cause to try to make others happy than I, who am so happy and so blest?’ THE END. A Family Medicine Of Unusual Merit, Known and Praised the World Over, Is Dr. Chase’s Kidney- Liver Pills. Having a direct and combined action on both the kidneys and liver, Dr, Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills are the most valuable as a family medicine, and positively cure constipation ani all forms of stomach trouble. Mr. John White, 72 First avenue, Ot- tawa, writes:—‘‘I usei Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills for deranged liver and pains in the back, with excellent results. “My wife usel them for stomach trouble, and pains about the heart, and is entirely cured. They are invaluable as a family medicine.” Scores of hundreds of families would mot think of being without Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills in the house. They are purely vegetable in composition and remarkably prompt and effective in action. One pill a dose, 25 cents a box, at all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates and Co., Toronto. — A CARD and the Pricgs. I Quart $1.25 2 66 33 y 4 o6 Retrigerators at cost. 1.50 1.75 2.20 We guarantee our%prices the lowest. DODD& ROGERS Is our great cleaning month our prices during this mont) will be very low. We had a big June trade, we want to make July even better. If you want a good suit of clothes at asmull price see us, we'll do better for you than you caa do elsewhere. In white and colored shirts, underclothing, coellare, and gloves, we can do best. You should see our job lot of white and colored shirts for 50c, worth from 90c to $1.50. Boots & Shoes at lowest prices. B. MACDONALD & C0, Where Worth and Low Prices{Meet. : NEW 6 Beautiful Enamelld Belt and neck clasps, broaches, cuff links, nat pins, scart pins, coffee “nd tea spoons. ! We have them witb British, Canadian, "Scotch, Irish*and Frenzh coats of arms. Also flag and maple leaf pins from 10c. and 15c. up. We have sold a number of wedding rings, lately, but]‘as we are MAKERS of rings can quickly supply; any style of ring required. New gold spectacles and eyeglasses. EW "Tayvylo OPrricran Oamerou Bloc.” Charlettetow SS straw fat Ena IN 15 TINTS. Try a can, only 10 cents. SIMON W. CRABSBE. Apri: 11th 1900. Walker’s Sorne April 2nd 1900, a — CITY HARDWARE STORE. : --F'or-- Builders, Farmers, Mechanics, HARDWARE—— Paints, oils, glass, carpenters tools, ali cheap R. MACNEILL, M. D., Having 30 years experience in the | practice of his profession, may be con- | sulted on'all branches of general medi- cine including the specialties. i Office dnd Residenct— Prince Street . third door above Kindergarten Hall. eel RB, NORTON & CO.LIMITBD FOR CASH. The celebrated Norton, Machine Oil. TERMS CASH.