iry es : ee =o > @e* ©@® © * OO FAR “2 OS => = mee — se THE DAIL‘ EXAMINER, CHARLOITETOWN JULY 13, 1900 ee - . he Examiner e __ FOR JULY —— Calendar eeee Sun Rises.| Sets. {20 7 48 21 48 21 48 22 47 23 47 24 46 25 46 °6 45 27 45 26 44 28 43 29 43 30 42 31 41 32 40 33; 3 34 38 35 37 36 36 37 35 38 3 39 33 40 32 41 31 42 30 43 28 45 27 6 0 47 26 48 24 450 722 yOON’S CHANGE: eiurst Quarts r. Ach Pull Moon, 12th st Quarter, | 3th en Moon, 20th i High ; Water yjpar ot We’ Vern | Aft'n ‘ae Dal Tag 6 11 IST 135, 1 50 Ihe sy ly %6 i yeanesda) 2 rs 3 16 = 3s ‘ 59 eer | 5m oie ¢Sanday : > : 3 §Monda? o 5 : = tuesday 38 i edness | 923, 9 52 parsday 10 56, 11 4 Ueeday 1) 17, 11 45 ieomsmey | 1251) 018 $Sundsy 0 . o Monday | l a 35 tuesday | 2 6 g Wednesday 230 3 8 ja Thursday 3 51 4 18 pSacerdsy 6 | mSoncsy 7 54 8 22 raMendsy g 5/918 ys Tuesday 9 3610 2 1$ Wednesday 10 16 10 41 Randsy 10 40 11 0 Miday li 14 11 36 Sateraay =««sAL-«9S, 1 47 %$ Sunday 00 O2l! 3] Tuesday 13 12 White’s Caramels and jnowflake Chocolates <= Can be had at any following first class T. J. Morris b. L. Hooper W. Pickard & ore Co, W. A. Hutcheson W. F. Carter Stewart & Gates Sanderson & Co. J.D. MeLeod & R. H, Wason, OUR HAMMOGK TRADE I$ BOOMING HOT JULY Is coming: swing up 4 Ham- mock and be happy. YouSave Money by Buying Your HAMMOCK FROW 1 P. $.—Our stock is large and all new. eee, Aundreds of Beautiful Articles Suitable for; Wedding _ Gifls nowgn Stock" la Silverware we have Tea Sets, Butter shes, Celery Stands, Pickle Dishes, Combination Sugar bowls ttd Bpoon Holders 8 , Syru a! meet. Berry oh Jugs, Crearo Soup Ladies, ns, Knives, Forks and Spoons. tter Dishes, Sete, hte, Bu In petal and Gold, Berry maware:-——Omp, Saucer and |’late t Bowls, Cheese Dishes, Berry Glaseware:—Lemonade Sete in Sets, Butter » We have a nice linc of Sov venir also an axe ortment tod Blueware tod Jewelry. of Wedge wood A big line of Watches, tgrrar: call and you will save money ie the ci J Sunny side ae cheaper than any other y. Ch’town ee ee — ee —owe ee LAS By Mary Cecil Hay. (Continued.) GE) AL bid | a A “I knew what the men meant, and I crept from the store, and tried to rouse my failing energies to think out this thought. and face my possibility of SUCCESS I was successful, Honor; not Lecnuse these men were right in theig¢ ruiidom assertion, and not because I acted my own part well, but because on heaven was 6° merciful as to who had helped and be- me before. thet day x me to one friended “It was my last chance, and of course I was willing to stake upon it the little even dared the possi- bility of being traced, for—if it failed— what was my freedom worth? “In return for my watch and ring, I obtained a suit of clothes in which I might begin my new search ag a gen- tlemun. It never entered my head to doubt its being worth what I paid for it, and I was truly grateful to the man who equipped me. When he asked me to accept a shilling for my dinner, and, following me to the door, said kindly that he should be very glad to hear of my luck, I felt~in my. new-born hope— that I could hardly thank him enough. “If Alice told you of our first meeting, Honor, you know the rest of my story. From the office ef a rich stock-broker, to whom that very day I applied for an engagement, I was sept on to his private residence. It was the house in which Alice lived as. governess, and Reyden Keith was visiting there that very day. The master of the house heard all I had to say, but told me de- cisively then that he could engage no I possessed. I ties. He told me afterward that he said it chiefly to get rid of me, thinking me sickly and unpleasantly persistent. Somehow, just then Mr. Keith seemed @ take the arrangement of the matter avietly into his own hands, and I was engaged. Ah! what a night of grati- tude and hope that was, and with what joy 1 walked two miles next morning at daybreak to tell the tailor of my suc- CeSs- “When I had been in that office only year, Honor, I had won my ¢m- ployer’s confidence, and the money was repaid to Royden Keith which he had acyanced for me. Two years afterward Alice and I were married, and for a wedding gift my employer gave me the in his business which it had been Soon one shure my ambition some day to buy. afterward he died. and when news came to me three weeks ago that I might come home, I was able to sell the business to my junior partner, and bring home an income sufficient for my wants. “Honor, you see that it is not only my liberty I owe to Royden Keith. but all that I possess, and—even my life, I think.” Ilonor’s eyes were covered with her hend: Hervey had walked away again to the window, and there was utter silenee in the room when Gabriel's voice cevsed, But suddenly Honor rose, her whole form trembling, for her listen- ing ears had cavght the physicians’ sieps. They all three came quietly into the room, two gentlemen with white hair and’ grave, thoughtful eyes. and one with young but careworn features, and which leci- au uneonquerable nervousness, yet betrayed no want of skill or sion. Thig was Dr. Franklin, of West- leich, and in a moment he recognized Honor, whom he had often met at Statton Rectory. When he had spoken to her, and was about to return to the sick-room with Gabriel, one ef the old- er physicians came forward, making his shrewd guess with promptness. “Miss Honor Craven,” he he felt that in such a scene as this there was no need for form, “I cenid hardly be a London man and not know you by sight and name Will you pardon my biuntness if I ask you one ques- tion?” She offered him her hand with a frint little smile, and while he spoke he hept it in his own. “Our patient, in his delirium, calls one name persistently, not consciously, nor with amy knowledge that he ealls it, but still at any moment it might be that he knew her. It ig Honor. Is she here?” ra CBs The yirl’s answer was a very whisk aaid, as if man for a post of trust without securi- W oman’s 4 Weakness A ~oman’s reproductive organs are in the most in- tense and continuous sym- thy with her kidney. The slightest disorderinthe kidneys brings about a corresponding disease in the reproductive organs. Dodd’s Kidney Pills, by re- storing the kidneys to their ect condition, prevent and cure those fearful dis- orders peculiar to women. Pale young girls, worn-out mothers, suffering wives and women entering upon the Change of Life, your best friend is Dodd’s Kidney ury & (so | Pills | | a per. but the old physician neara it. “I see. And are you prepared to wit ness his acute and restless suffering? Should you be afraid to see the fre- quent changes of strife and exhaustion? Think well before you speak, for your presence must either do great good or eecrious harm.” “You will be unwise to permit it, Sir Edward,” put in the other London phy- sician,. “It is not a post for ker. It not a sight for one who has never seen life hanging by a thread.” “TI have great confidence,” rejoined Sir Edward, with a sign for his silence, “in a naturally fine and unimpaired com stitution. If he can only have a little sleep—” “It I may go,” said Honor, raising her eyes to Sir Edward, who read their bravery and patience through their yearning,“I will do exactly what you bid me. I can be very still and silent, and I am very wakeful. I am used to sick- ness; I am used, even, to—death. Please to feel how steady mg hand is.” It was not Hervey only who tumed away his eyes, as if the pathos of her low words hurt him., “Can you rest first?’ Sir Edward asked, presently. “It would fit you @ Little better for your watch.” “The only rest that I con know,” she ssid, “will be to watch him.” “That is well,’ put in the strange physician, im a tone of relief, as, for the first time, he removed his critical gaze from her face: “it will be well, Gra- ham: let Miss Craven go. For her it is kivder to consent than to pretend to spare her; and for him—we shall see.” “Thank you,” she said, with touching simplicity. “I will do exactly as you bid me. Hervey,’ she added, laying both of her hands upon her cousin’s, “vou will tell them the doctors let me stay? Give them my love and—take care of them. Good-bye.” “Tl think,” remarked Sir Edward, aside to his friend, “that we shall not regret this step.” With Honor's parting words, and Ga- briel's message to his wife, and Miss Henderson's tearful assurance that he would not let Miss Craven over-fatigue herself, and Sir Edward Graham's re mark that Honor’s presence was his strongest source of hope for his pa tient, Hervey left Westleigh Wowers that evening. “TI cannot wait to see you after you have been—to him, Honor,” he said; “if it is as Dr. Franklin and Gabriel fear, I dare not.” So he went, as Honor followed Sir Edward Graham to Royden’s chamber. CHAPTER XLIL Phoebe Owen had had an invitation for that night, which, a little time be- fore, it would have cost her a bitter pang to refuse; yet she hovered kindly and eheerfully now about Alice Myd- delton, and entertained her pleasantly with desultory chat, which, though it might not be of a deep or original char- acter, was yet varied withal, and suffi- ciently enlivening to make these waiting hours pass easily for Alice. Vet Phoebe was all the time listen- ing anxiously for the sound cf wheels, or the visitors’ bell, or the sharp, double rap of a telegraph messenger. And wien at last a cab stopped, and a familiar step ascended the stairs, it was Phoebe who spang first to her feet, and it was Phoebe’s eager voice which uttered the first greeting and question. “Oh, Hervey, we are so giad to sec vev! Where is Honor? How is Mr. Keith?’ “No better,’ he her hand. “No better!” she echoed, mournfully. answered, zs he took “Oh, Alice, think of that, after our long waiting.” Rut Alice had hiddem-her face, aml wis erying bitterly; so Phoebe’s ener- gies were immediately devoted to sooth ing and cheering her; and Hervey (to- tully at a loss himself) felt little inclina- tion to treat her exeitement with his old languid contempt. ‘l’o his’ great relief, dinner was soon apnounced, and Phoebe turned to him with a simple, but to him rather comi- eal, assumption of the matronly hostess. “Will you take Mrs. Myddelton, Her- vey, and I wiil follow?’ Of course he offered her his other nim. but she refused it, with a remem- branee of his old prejudice. and walked demurely behind them, with no anxicty nbeut a cover not being laid for Her- yey, 80 long as any One of Honor’s serv- arits knew that he was im the house. To each one of the little party the presence of the servants during the next hour was a relief. The restraint and the necessity for trivial subjects of con- yersation, were a preparation for what there was to tell and to hear, pause of rest between the old suspense and the new certainty. Hervey did his best to make the meal a pleasant one; and Phoebe, at the head of the table, did her best to take Hon- or’s place; while the ease of both her guests, and the active courtesy of one, proved that she had to a certain ex- tent succeeded. Yet could they not shuke off the vagye shadow of fear whieh brooded over them? “May I come?” inquired Hervey, 2s Phoebe and Alice passed him at the door. “I have no wish to stay—if I sball not intrude.” They nodded with a smile, and he f<llowed them to the drawing-room, for he wags in reality anxious to get their questions all answered, and his mess- and a aces delivered. “Its Gabriel no hope, Captain rept?’ inquired Alice, without intro- +'on, as she steod beside the win- «, her hands locked before her. “It jis a very hopeless household just ‘+t present,” he answered, sadly; “brt valid I must tell you that Si tiéarard Graham has great confidfesce in Mr. Keith's fine and unimpaired con- stiirtion, and thinks if he can sleep it ‘ Y. mor may be all right. I fear the other doc- tors do not with him: but still Honor told me to tell you that; and— and she to remind you that the issue is in kinder Hands than any of ours, and that it—it is a life worth agree asked me praying for,” continued Hervey brok- enly. “Had Honor seen him?” agked Phoebe, presently. “Not before I Jeft. I would not wait to eee her afterward, if I could have done so, because Miss Henderson told me that if she lov— if she felt for him, the sight of his suffering would be like death to her. I’m sure it seemed to have had almost that effect upon your husband, Mrs. Myddelton. Now may I try to give you his long message?” “Phoebe!” cried Alice, as Phoebe moved toward the door at these words, “please do not go. My husband’s is no secret message.” Phoebe stopped and turned, blushing as she met Hervey’s gaze, for it betray- ed both his appreeiation of her thonght- fuluvese and his pleasure at her return to the group. The message wae soon given; and chen, in softened voices, as they !inger- ed together, they talked still of Roy- den. but after the subject had been hbreken by the entrance of the servants with coffee, they each avoided—-perhaps in thoughtfulness for the others—a re currence to It. “biervey,” said Phoebe, very much up- preciating her novel position of the most useful and important member of the: party, “were you not surprised when you heard that Lawrence Haughton had gone abroad?’ “Not 60 much surprised as I was when I called for my letters a few hours ago, to find that Theo and her mother go abroad to-merrow. My aunt sends me the information in time for me to call—i¢ I choose.” (Te be cont nued.) SS Itching Piles A Fearfully Bad Case—Much Pain and Aoute Misery From the Terrible Itching —Cured by Dr. Chase's Ointment. It is doubtful if any remedy ever re- ceived so much grateful, unsolicited testimony as Dr. Chase’s Ointment. The reason is not far to seek, for it is the only preparation known to man which never fails to cure piles. Mr. F. G. Harding, a retired farm- er, living at Nilestown, Middlesex county, Ont., writes as follows:—“I have been troubled with bleeding and itching piles for four or five years, and suffered intense agony at times. I had tried almost everything, but could get nothing that would give relief. On hearing of Dr. Chase’s Ointment I pro- cured a box, and it only required part of it to completely cure me. I am re- commending it to all afflicted as I was.” Such incontrovertible evidence from responsible persons cannot, for a2 mo- ment, be doubted. A few applications of Dr. Chase’s Ointment will convince the most skeptical of its wonderful healing and soothing influence. A box or two will positively cure the most se- vere case of piles; 60 cents a box, at all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Toronto. 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’ kinds. Teeth Extracted Without Paia. Berlin Dental Parlors, CHARLOTTETOWN. —— SUNNYSIDE DENTSTRY, Office in New Prowse Block first door to the right up stairs. Telephone connection. DR. AYERS Merchants Bank of Prinee Rdward Island, Collections made on the most rea sonable terms and promptly remitted for. Deposits received and interest allow: ed at best current rates. TO BE LET. That well-known bus.ness stand, form-~ erly known as the Centra) Hotel, contain- ing 22 rooms, with large stable ituated near the market, on street. Rent moderate. S Apply to very, T CAMPBELL ee The ae PS Cem Freezer Read the Prices. 1,.Qu art - 1.25 z ” 1.50 _ 1.75 re 2.20 Retrigerators at cost © We guarantee our prices the lowest. DODD & ROGERS SUIS sc 3 Is our great cleaning month our prices during this month ® = willbejvery low. - | i a) 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 can do elsewhere. In white and colored shirts, underclothing, collars, 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. [ | a9 JB. MACDONALD & Where Worth and Low Prices Meet: This Lnlerest You? UT a Ai0 List & You Can Buy all for $2.38. 2 pair Hose Flannelette shirt Unlaundered Shirt, best in Canada Colored shirts stiff bosom $1.25 and 1.50 quality Necktie 38 to 55 quality Suspenders (mens) Umbrella Men’s and Boys’ Caps Straw Hats 4uc to $1.10 quality Better quality for better price. l/c 48c 50¢ 20¢ 13¢ 40¢ What we advartise we give. IN 15 TINTS. Apri: 1ith 1900. Walker’s Gorne Builders, Farmers, Mechanics, {FORECASH. _ D. A. BRUCE straw Hat Enamel oa sTMtoi W. CRABBE. cil HARDWARE STORE. eae TERMS(CASH. “RB. NORTON & CO.LIMITBD Parse BP fg eS a eee me of: Og a aE ali ag ~ fe fe mo iad