Be 25 ets. ~ 4 . Boston, Masa NEW HATS | NEW HATS New Gaps New Caps iNSO* : & } = JPENING TO-DAY & Cases Newest Styles in Men’s and Boys’ Hats & Caps J0 Mk —k U “=e @ = @ es & tee @ 2 @e Wa Couldn't do Poor Work if We Wanted to—we Don’t Koow How We Learned Our Business the Other Way. Bruce Stewart and Co'y. “THE MODERN” Founders Engineers & Machinists Steam Nav. Co'y’s Wharf Ch’town, PEI Phone | 25 ee eee @ O22 oO @ OS OOOO OR 7 OO] OD . ; ; 4 FISH FISH FISH Fish etories as a rule are not believed, but in ‘his case we are not the anglers, 80 you can rely on thisone. We are angl- ing for your trade and the tempting bait we offer you is good stock combined with the lowest possible prices consistant with quality aod the present high state of the Fish market. We have in stock some prime Codfish by the lb aod quintel, a/so Boneless Hake and Codfish by the lb and box. The Herring market i poorly enpplied; but we can supply them by the doz, backet and half bbl. Also in stock, can~ ned Salmon, Lobsters, Clams, etc., aod @ full line of general groceries, all at the lowest possible prices. Free delivery of goods to all parte of the city. Telephone Communication. RE Maddigan & Co LOWER QUEEN STREET. Gree LL, Redeem The Time : Deswr | Now is your t/me to purch- ase a nice Oak or Walnut Clock, as we are selling them lat a big discount, at the Mod- ern Jewelery and Fancy Goods Store, Sunnyside, ) Jury & Co A beautiful Calendar given free with every clock: ; ' FHE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, MARCH 23, 1908 wey cried, pite u Ly. **l— 1 ao » ‘c LO ite ttt is AAIRIRIOIONIA AISI etonidchinidehtaninkay | derstand.” , K CARA we bi dite a haiglnaaininin ig” © ‘If you would know, « y Nn AT ne Sa c . oe oe x =) warnings and hints have gly 4 (M\ ID) I;\ Nyt | @ (| (NVI [T)) r« ) me that it would be wise to get rid of | | ; pie i] \ 1} PEP fey Pe * heen als oe } i rey Pe UT VG ' ~ } | i} \ I] i rm + you as 800R @s8 po ie, aeciared } it 3 ify i byl } | } \ > > 4 * . ki . U t WY U UU u LLY Lbs [L () LW \Y if \\ zs : woman, biuntly. ‘‘You shall hav tS . oe Y Y rt ar 4c oe a Tt Ty . rr os i supper, and stay over night, hl 4 mx 2 IR, a eo oh ae ot ah ; ee “7 LAURA JEAN LIBBEY we TTT ? | wouldn’t turn anybody from my door ) ° Tah bh Oe ; ee y Author of “When Lovely Maiden Sto: ps to Folly,” “A Broken #444 | in a storm like this; but to-morrow I r > b Betrothal,”” “Parted by Fate,” “Parted at aaa ) men have my room,’’ = i KKK the Altar,” etc., etc. tH A OD liorabel reached for her bonnet and i } KK Sada s : shawl at once, turning a face so pale ea a“ - xt » \ ) ‘ . A ii a € a : V . F , LH RE POR RRR Ree i EEO IEICE ACO Ie eo A and strange upon Mrs, Price that the EK KERR ERNE EIR IRE IR ELINA IELIN LILLE ICN < Lacapr vast hay Nate ce \ |FAC-SIMILE FEMALE ERIE LASALLE I LAI IIRL IAAL ALARA ST woman never forgot it while her life = = SS a { ) \OMUVHAEAOO AG) MOMAOQOOOAGKE)E@ | lasted. ae ~ C DO DO ISIS IIS | 1 will po now.”’ she said, ‘“Icould ANegetable Preparation for As- SIGNATURE SYNOPSIS. I’m sure the foreman will take on | 20¢ eat a mouthful in your house; similating the Food and Reg ula - ; OF- ""Florabel was a dependent of her step- nak ie nish hand. The pay is good, too— food would choke me. Better face the § ting the Stomachs and Bowets of 3 father, Squire Pemberton. Hie daughtere| 3) a” | storm than remain under this roof | Rapa Pt hate Florabel, and when the Squire cour dollars & ween. Walle you are another hour.’’ 7 | | INFANTS .* f HILDREN dies, order her out of the old home. Max learning. But if you are smart, you ‘Oh, moti . ! surely y ron’t let y . Forrester a rich young man marries her | C@2 pick it up inno time. After you ee eS te nd | igesti t 13 . lear s ‘ vente her go out into the storm?’’ pleaded Promotes Digestion Cheerful- } 5 "o and introdaces her into his family the | le&rn, you can go on piece work. i : : } . cishene of witeh. At ; 11 | : pe | Fanny Price. ‘‘She is so slender, so , 11 ness and Rest.Contains neither members of which disapprove of his mar at pays big. Why, you could : 4 } ~ : al, ringe, as they wanted him to marry Mise | earinng in a month’s time as much as | fT@sile; she is not warmly clad, and | m,Morphine nor Miner: IS ON THE Clavering, an heiress. CHAPTER X1V--(Contiaued:) Florabel turned and ieft him, It was a relief to Florabel to hand in her resignation, even though she was to face the horror of finding an- other position that day. This she found no easy matter; but when at last she did secure a position, at the end of the first week she found herself summarily discharged. With every position she obtained this was invariably the case. She was promptly discharged by the end of the first week, ofttimes before, and each proprietor declined to furnish one word of explanation, further than the fact they could make use of her servy- ices no longer. ‘‘Heaven help me! what shall I do?’’ moaned Florabel, wringing her hands. ‘‘Every place seems closed against me. It would almost seem that some unknown foe was hunting me down.’’ Then, like a flash, the words of Charles Whitney came back to her. He could prevent her from obtaining employment elsewhere if he chose. Surely this must be his work. Even the boarding places refused to keep her the second week. ‘*There is no room for me on earth, she would sob ont, wildly, to herself, 7) ‘g the recy of her own room. rhe world has narrowed down te a grave. Oh, if 1 could but follow poor baby! if Il knew where its little grave vas, 1 would go there, part the long grass as I knelt upon it, whispering: lam comin , baby. Open the gates vith your little hands for 'n her rtter desolation, one morn- ng, she met a group of merry young just entering a straw hat factory. One of them cailed to her: losing your hat and gioves,’’ she said. ‘‘And there is your pocketbook, too. If you carry it about so carelessly in your jacket you will be sure to lose it.’’ ‘*There is not one cent in it,so could not matter much,’’ sighed Florabel, with a little sob. ‘*Are you looking for work?’’ asked the young girl, curiously. ‘*Yes,’’ said Florabel, with quiver- ing lips. ‘‘Suppose you come right up stairs pili id 6417 1ou are with me. We're overrun with work. —_—_——————_—_—_—— EE ee A skillea navigator ~- knows that his chart, ___¥! compass and —— sextant will guide him with unerring certainty across ten thou- sand miles of tempest- driven ocean straight to one little speck of an island on the almost boundless waters. With the same unfaltering as- surance a skilled and sci- entific physician seeks for some undiscovered remedy in the wide ocean of materia medica. He knows that when the nature of a disease is once thoroughly under- stood he has located the latitude and longitude of the remedy ; and its ultimate discovery is only a matter of time. It was in this way that Dr. R. V. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y., was guided to his world-famous ‘‘Goiden Medical Discovery” for the cure of consumption. He realized that consumption is a consti- tutional malady, deep-seated in the blood. He sought and found this marvelous consti- tutional remedy which renovates and en- riches the vital current with nutritious life- giving elements ; healing wasted tissues, restoring digestive and assimilative power, and building up healthy flesh and genuine enduring vigor. In all those debilitating diseases which are caused by imperfect nutrition; this ex- ‘raordinary ‘‘Discovery’’ is the most per- fect alterative remedy and strength-builder known to medical science. It is not a mere temporary stimulous like various malt ‘‘extracts.” Its good effects are permanent. ; : Where costiveness is among the prevail- ing symptoms, Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pel- lets should be used im conjunction with the ** Discovery.”’ “Dr. Pierce, I am one of your most grateful tients,” writes Mrs. Annie M. Norman, of uinunk, Wayne Co., Pa. “I have taken ‘Golden Medical Discovery,’ also ‘ Fevorite Pre- scription ' and ‘Pellets’ with wonderful results. I am, as many of my friends tell me, Ifke the dead brought to life. The doctors said I had consumption and death was only a matter of time. hat was six years ago. I conciudeg fo try your medicine. I continued until I had t ‘ nine bottles of ‘ Discovery’ and several bo}tles of ‘Pellets.’ I got well and have dome @ great deal of hard work since.” dastardly | seven or eight dollars a week.’’ Florabel followed her guide into the work room and, through the infiu- ence of her new friend, was engaged. ‘‘A lovely girl,’’? thought the fore- man; ‘‘with am uncommon face, like that of poor Anne Boleyn, the hapless young queen. There is a tragedy in -_"" He could see the innate refinement of the lady in her every action. As he stepped down to the street on the shoulder. ‘Why, Whifney, is this indeed you?’’. he exclaimed, extending his ‘I thought I saw you from the office window, watching our girls as they came in this morning from across the street. A pretty lot of girls, hand. ton,’’ he declared, emphatically. ‘‘I was watching for you. I want to have a word with you. Let’s walk down the street.’’ Half an hour later they parted. ‘*Who would have thought it?’’ muttered the young foreman to him- self. ‘*‘The girl has the face of a saint. As the stands, of course Miss Dean will have to go. She would per- and that would case vert the other girls, not do at all.’’ Meanwhile home with Fanny Price. Mrs. Price very willingly took Flor- abel in, for, like every one else she liked Florabel at first sight. ‘*It is not every girl in the empor- ium that I like my daughter to asso- ciate with,’’ she said. ‘‘There seems something so refined and ladylike about you that I should choose you for her companion above all others.’’ ‘‘Thank you for those kind words, Mrs. Price,’’ said Florabel, gratefully. ‘*You shall never rue your trust in me.’”’ That same evening a handsome stranger called at the house, request- ing to see Mrs. Price privately and alone. The name on the card read: ‘*Charles Whitney.’’ ‘*Oh, mother!’’ cried Fanny, admitted him, fiying in a flutter to Mrs. Price’s room, ‘‘the handsomest young man I ever saw is down in the parlor, and wishes to see you. If he wants to come here to board, do take him. Oh, he’s so very polite. He took off his hat and bowed to me as though I had been some great lady.’’ ‘‘No doubt he is some book agent cr peddler,’’ declared Mrs. Price. ‘‘They are the ones that know how to make those bows. I’ve read all about ’em.”’ ‘*Indeed, he is not an agent or any- thing of the sort,’’ declared Fanny. ‘*You can see that at a glance for Frorabel was walking her new found friend, who yourself. Ugh! what a cold, snowy night! I’ll have the walk from here to the gate very carefully swept while you are in the parlor.’’ Half an hour later the handsome young man took his leave. ‘*Ha! my pretty Florabel,’’ he mut- tered, twisting the ends of his curling mustache, and fastening his fur muffler closer about is throat, ‘‘you will be glad to come to my arms yet, accepting my offer of marriage. ‘All is fair in love and war.’ ’”’ Meanwhile Mrs. Price fairly flew up to her daughter’s room, where Florabel was sitting before the sea- coal fire. ‘‘You must leave here, Miss Dean!’’ she broke out, abruptly and vehement- ly. ‘‘I know you; I’ve heard all about you. I wouldn’t have you un- der my roof, associating with my Fanny, for the whole world. I’d turn you out to-night only it’s storming. We are poor people, but I’d have you understand we are respectable. Hush, Fanny! Not a word from you. I know what I’m talking about, so does Miss Dean here. Don’t interfere.’’ Florabel had risen to her feet white as death itself. CHAPTER XXVI. A long, bitter sob fell from Flora- bel’s lips; she clutched her little trembling hands tightly over her heart. ‘*Will you tell me what it is that you have heard, Mrs. Price?’’ she | Minard’s Liniment Cures Diphtheria. that afternoon, some one touched him | and as nice girls as there are in Bos- | she looks so ill.’’ ‘*Will you hold your tongue?’’ de- manded her mother, sharply. ‘‘If Miss Dean chooses to go to-night, I’m sure I shall by nc means try to pre- vent her. You have not a word to say in the matter, Fanny. The girl, moved by a sudden im- pulse, turned and held out her hand to Florabel. ‘‘No matter what they may say agains® you, I shall not believe it,’’ she declared. ‘Thank you,’’ sobbed Florabel; ‘*those words bring me great comfort. I shall always remember you for them. Passing from the room, Florabel walked quickly down the stairs and out into the snow-blinded streets. A clock from an adjacent belfry tolled the hour of nine. (To A MIDNIGHT ALARM, — be continued.) There is no Cause for Alarm when That Croupy Cough is Heard it you Have Griffiths’ Menthol Lini- ment Handy. It Relieves Croup in One Minute, you Can Always de- pend Upon It, Mrs. Gilkroy, 353 Johnston-street, Kingston says: My Kittle boy,aged 3, has been subject to croup during the winter seasons since his birth. We have had doctors’ medicine and all other croup remedies for him, but no- thing ever gave him such quick reiief as Grif- fith’s Menthol Liniment, it always seems <0 touch the spot at once. I have always found it superior to any other remedy for Croups and Colds. I believe a bottle should be kept in every home where there are children. All druggists, 25 and 75 cents. A Tearing Cold which grips your throat and chest, and a hacking cough which feels like a dry burning of the tissues, will receive in- stantaneous relief by a dose of AMSON'S eeesaM Tt acts as a soothing demul- cent on your parched and irritated membrane. It mever fails to check the most severe cough, and, pro- perly used, it will permanently cure the most obstinate one. 25 cts. AT ALL DRUGGISTS. At MASON’S STORE ¢ You can get the latest Canadian ? and American ne#vepapers received @ & by mail each night. ¢ 4 Drop in if you want”a paper or magazine or book toread. Fruit, 8 Confectionery, Tobacco, Cigere etc. ‘ when you’re passing this wey. REMOVAL E. H. BEER —HAS REMOVED HIS— Insurance Offir * ese cscs Mark Wright & Co’s * 1972)) 2° NORTH SIDE QUEEN S( JARE All Kinds of Insurauwe. —————— Nore.—I am prepared to place all classes of FIRE [NSURANCE at rates which defy competition. You can save money by calling on me E. H. BEER, General Insurance Agent. Feb 12, | OT NARCOTIC. t) Jeune af Old Dir SAMUEL ELTCHER n Seed ~ foe bond WRAPPER OF EVERY BOTTLE OF CASTORIA Oastoria is put up in one-size bottles only. It is not sold in bulk. Don't allow anyons to sell you anything else om the plea or promise that it is “just as good” and “will answer every pur pose.” 42> See that you get O-A-8-T-0-R-l-& is on Tho fao- simile wrap yer, Aperfect Remedy for Consti toe Stomach, Diarrhdes, Worms Convulsions ,Feverish- rl mess and LOSS. OF SLEEP. | Fac Simile Signature of NEW YORK. 7a} months old BS eo —35Ce NIs'} 4 % ieee : | | EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. Prices OAFOR)D T WEEDS For SO Days aWe offer to those who have not tested the wearing qualities of the CKLEBRATED OXFORD it WEED and those who have an opportunity to purchase their shoice of 75 patterns at the following big reductions, 32 cents will buy 40 cent quality 52 cents will buy 65 cent quulity 60 cents will buy 75 cent quality 70 cents will buy 85.cent quality _ 80 cents will buy $1.00 $1.00 quality Ladies’-all wool Oxford Suiting, 54 inches wide, regular price $1.50, for $1.20. Many lines have a large percentage of Australian Wovl. We consider them the best or the market for the price. DA. BRUCE, AGEXT OXFORD MANUFACTURING €0 Rs OE AAAI TAREE NA ARI nM — oo Fine Photography iI | ali the Latest Design® Our Carbon portraits are unriveled. Our customers «re all delighted. Be sure and visit the leading studio. CG. H,. COOK a e ; ay }Queen and Grafton Sts, Ch’town. cece sees Se oe a ase nshinn, Saiilitnas dnt inaiiacmeao ese ~—e 9)