— peer cnmammmamecesacummeamcmmanne a NIG RTI . . | A Tearing Cold | | which grips your throat and | chest, and a hacking cough which feels like a dry burning | j of the tissues, will receive in- stantaneous relief by a dose of | | SONS ' AM qANic oa Br AoA" : It acts as a soothing demu)- cent 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 DROGEISTS. | on The Soorca Waiskr chosen by the Red Cross Society,|Lon- don, for use by the invalided troops and hospitals in South Africa, is the famous WHITE HORSE CELLAK” brand of MacKie & Co,, Distillers, Lim- ited, Islay and Giasgow, one vf the oldest firma in the trade. §n intimation of this, Messrs VMacKie, with usual generous. | ity, presented 200 cases free | i charge, and shipped them ay first steamer to the Cape. One of the family is a vol~' anteer in the Imperial Yeo- maury, and on his way now to the Cape. It is heped that he may give a good aceount of himee|f. TB ABOVE MENTIONED BRAND 13 FOR SALE AT | 7” JOHN McKEN NA’ Queen Street, e lielief of Ladysmith The book “fhe Relief of Lady- smith and How it was Celebrated in Charlottetown” wil! be on sele in the city bookstores this (Saturday) evening. It is a souveneir of that historic and memorable event which should be in the hands of all. See it at the Bookstores, PRICE IO CENTS. WANT ECUS To come in and iook over our groceries. Our stock is fine and fresh and guaranteed to be ati sfactory. We keep every hi ng iam our line that is neces: sary. ; HOUSEKEEPING The prices—well, that is wuat we want you to see when you are leeking at our goods. Their lowness will surprise you. ORISCGLL and LORNSBY QUEEN STREET YOR cee Ant POR SALE OR TO LET. “Watermere,” the house of the Hon. George W. Howlan. Porsession given the first of May next. : D. C. McLEOD. Ch’to wn, Merch Sist, 100.: tf. & ‘e YY Y iG WY YY > rR YY Y ad. : i Author of Test, Pe » WV HTED AT LAST B22Q2G2Be BY MARY CECIL HAY : ihe Arundel Motto,” ‘Back to the Old Home,” THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, APRIL 18, 19060. YUVVVVYVVVY It whs oiily one of Me ur ocen- pants of the room who, that evening Was conscious of this vague se1 something wanting. If it had been pos- sible for the others to feel it, the void could not have existed. A group of four. sitting at ease, very little of the air of expectancy usu- el to the waiting minutes before dinner. The reclined im a wide easy- chair beside one of the bay windows. She was a large, languid woman, ele- gantly dressed, but possessing in her handsome face that great want which ali her house held. She had _ three claims to individuality, and three only --a fine figure, a great ambition, end an overweening pride in her ealy child. And Mrs- Trent was performing her ewn peculiar mission es she sat smil ing upon her daughter and her guests, end bringing in, at every opportunity, G@ainty allusiong to ber titled acquaint auces. In the oormer of a small couch mear her reclined heg daughter Thee dora, leaging forward gracefully from the cushions, while her long akirts of green satin Iny in rich folds upon the white rug. Her hair, of pale brown, was dressed high upon her head, as was the fashion of that year, and a butter- fly of gold and emeralds ghone with al- most dazzling lustre among the plaita ebove her temple. Her features were clearly cut and regular, like her mo- ther’s, and her eyes were of the same light blue, but her lips were still more haughty im their curves, and even a lit: tle colder in their rest. A handeome woman undeniably was Theodora Trent, yet in her faultlems features that guest, to whom her face is turned so often, sees that ome vague deficiency which is with hostess about him always in this house. Upon the rug, with his elbow on the chimney-piece, and the fingers of one hand toyiag with his silky, pale mous- tache and whiskers, lennged Captain Hervey Trent, mephew eof his hostees and the husband selected for her only | dtwghter—not simply because he was ge sure to imherit old Myddelten’s meney, but because be was in every Way suitable for a son-in-law. Hend- weme and elegant. he graced society, and weuld add te her daughter's pepu larity: easy and indolent, he would not be likely to rebel against the will of a nrother-in-law- Decidedly Captain Trent was Aa handsome man. Vhere never was hesrd a dissentient voice when that fact was aseerted, while no one Was more thoroughly aware of the truth thaw Captain Hervey Trent himself. Me was twenty-five—his cousin Thee- dera’s age exactly—anrd the regular features and blue whica characterized the Trents; he steod five feet ten in his and measured the approved number ef inches across ihe shoulders, and, beyond all this, ke possessed equally the pewer, and the time, and the inclination to dress to the very perfection of what he termed “geod form.” He was a mar with a musi- cal, passionless voice, and white, list- less hands, able to bear with no un- handsome grace the burdem of himself and the boredom which surrounded him, and to go through life as a gentleman boasted eyes boots, “You can’t de- pend on women, they get ill too often.” That was the explanation of a business man, who, contrary to the prevailing custom, empleye male ste- tf every nographers and type-writers. | at ania would take the right care of am distinctly maiden] self, this complaint would never be heard. The woman whe suffers from weakmess and disease of the delicate feminine organs is unfitted for her duties, either in the house or in the office. Young unmarried women, ¢5 ecially, do not like to confide their troybles ef this nature to their home doctor, They shudder at the thought of the examinations and local applications to which they may have to submit. These are entirely unnecessary. and all letters addressed to Dr. R. V. Piefce, Buffalo, N. Y., are held in the most sacred confidence. Dr. Pierce has been for thirty years chief consulting physician to the in- valids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute, at Buffalo, N. Y., one of the greatest medical institutions in the world. His neighbors made him congressman and he was a per- sonal friend of the martyr-president. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription cures all weakness and disease of the delicate and important organs of femininity, upon which depend a young woman’s health. Honest druggists don’t substitute. “TI have recommended your * Favorite Prescrip- tion’ to a great many Of my friends, and e has not been a single lady who used it, but cured by it. It is the best medicine for females I have ever taken. I tried four doctors and they did me no good. They said I was bou d to die ;"’ thus writes Mrs. C. C. Clark, of New Kome, Floyd County, Georgia. A bad business head and a bad working body are the results of biliousness and con- stipation. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets are a sute cure for these ailments. They regu- late and invigorate the stomack, liver and bowels. One a laxative, two a mild cathar- tic. They never gripe. At medicine stores. ARAAEARERER RR RRRRR | ‘ PO, NT ’ Tae ‘‘Nora’s Love |© ; om Ete. ~s ae iS i RY, should who rightly understands fhe @x- igencies of “good form,” and ean ut- terly ignore so vulgar an abstract idea as emotion: A great contrast to her nephew, ws the one guest whom Mrs. Trent enter- tained this evening—so great a contrast } to them all, indeed, that not for years were they to comprehend the unreached heights and unsounded depths of a na- ture such as his. Nineteen women out ef twenty would unhesitatingly have pro- nounced Oaptain Hervey Trent the hindsomer man of the two; not one woman out of twenty could have Ia- vished on Hervey Trent one tithe of the thought and curlosity and admira- ticn which were woa from them—some times even against their will—by Roy- den Keith. We have seen him before in the even- ing dusk at Abbotsmoor. Theodora Trent had seen him ‘before, but his face was still a riddle to her, as it had been from the first, and as it was atill to be. It wag a grave face when at rest, with its strange mixture of power and patience—a face full of deep and eon- centrated thought, but with never 4 shade of gloom wpon it, or trivial fret- fulness; a face that could be only brave and fearless, whether shadowed by that depth of thought. or brightened by the rare smile which Theodora tried t» pro- yoke. Its skin was so browned by the sun, the moustache and the short hair were so thick and dark, the lashes so long, and the tecth so white, that many took Royder Keith fora native of South ecru Spain or Italy, But that idea van- tshed after the first few moments, and most especially when he spoke. Thougir puzzled a Kttle now and ther by the trace of foreign travel, no one ceuld help being struck by what was esser tinlly English ip him; the straightfor- ward glance ef his eyes, clear-judging and far-seeing, and the voice, which, whether ringing to anger, falling te quiet irony, or softening te pathos, was, despite an accent or an idiem, picker np unconsciously in foreign lands; mest thoreughly English. Ile was sitting opposite Mrs. Treant, his elbow om a table near the coneh on whieh she sat- She looked up frem him to Captain Trent, and down te him agains Even her wunobservant eyes were puzzled by the difference im the attitvees ef the two young mem: and she trined for the last time frem her term. ard the slew mo- tien «f his hands, to the tali, well-knit ficure whieh, though full of strength and ectivity, was yet capable ef an ease ond stiliness almest remarkable. “And ean you really mean, Mr. Keith,” she said, dropping her fingers on a cabinet pertrait of herself which jay upon the table beside her. “that you have never been photographed be c.J@5 eatisin’s leamne “Why ‘before’?” asked Royden, ex- tending his hand for the picture. “After all, I am rather giad,’’ she mused, smilingly; “because now your first photograph will be taken with as.” “How will that happen, Miss Trent?’ “I will tell you,” she answered, watch- inc his face as he examined the por- trait. “On the day of our picnic at Abbotsmoor, a little French photo- grapher, who lives in Statton, is to be tlere with his camera and take us all, with the old mansion for a background. Now you see why I am glad that will be pour first portrait.” “Hardly.” Mr. Keith said this quiet- ly. he bent over the picture, and Theodora looked in vain for a smile. “Interesting scene,” remarked Cap- tein Hervey, raising his blue eyes slow ly from the rug; “Lady Lawrenee re- Guires the picture, I beHeve; at any rate, she has proposed it through her lawyer. The dramatis personagq are to be old Myddelton’s relations, and the scene his ruinous estate. An elegant group and ebeerful surroundings—eh, Mr- Keith?’ “T do not know all old Mr. Myddel- ten’s relations.” “You know the chief of them, Mr. Keith,” Theodora answered, unconsci- ous of the vanity of her words. and of the smile which accompanied them; “and you shall see them on Thursday at Abbotsmoor. You will not be. too proud to be photographed among them, will you?’ ‘Without being one of the family. ought I to be included in the picture?” There was an intonation that baf- fled Theodora, and she looked up wun- easily. “Gertainly; I shall insist.” She said this with her sweetest smile, and a certain manner which many young ladies of the present age affect -—a gracious condescension and self- assertion which, fh the last century, it would have taken a middle-aged ma- tron of the highest society to make bearable, but which now is chosen and assumed by many who,while they speak with open contempt of their fast or un f«rmed sisters, fail te see where they themselves have overstepped the lily- bordered path of fresh and simple gir! hood. “One other member of old Myddel ten’s family you will see here to-night, Mr. Keith.” remarked Mrs. Trent, in 2 ture which seemed to entreat his leni- is | ency for the person ‘of whom she spoke; “she is a niece of mine and cou- sin of my daughter's; though she be Jongs to quite the other side of the bhouse”’—on that “quite’ Mrs. Trent laid a deliberate emphasis. “We like to ask her here occasionally to show her a little society. She is a grown-up girl now, and rot unpresentable; so I do all I can for her, and allow Mer as close an intercourse with my daughter as my daughter chooses to admit-” “Poor little Honor,” added “my nee? daughter,” with a laugh of particular complaisance. “She ig a thorough Cra- ven, as was——’” “A thorough coward?” Royden ed, when she so abruptly paused. “Oh, Mr. Keith,” laughed Theodora, pleasantly, “you whst I mean. At least, you do not know, of course. Why sheuld you be expected to know anything about old Myddelton’s fami- ly? 3ut this is how it is. Old Mr. had ask- know Myddelton, you must understand, one brother and one sister, both a good deal younger than himself. The bro- ther married a Miss Graven—quite a pertionless girl—and the eister married very well. She did not agree with her brother as a young girl, and wert out with a friend to India, where she mar- rtd Sir Hervey Lawrence, a very rich old baronet of an excellent family. This nn pleased her brother immense y.” “Fiad neither brother nor sister any ee dren ?’.. , (Te be ceniinned.) A Disease Peculiar to Railroad Men, RAILROAD... Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills. Did it ever eccur to you that most railroad men die of kidney disease? Such is the fact, however, and the disease is known among railroaders as ‘‘ railroad kidney.” The first and most marked symptom isa weak, Jame and aching back. Yeu may think at first that you are only tired; but es this trouble in- sreases day by dey, kidney disease, with all its terrors, is fast claiming you as a victim. Mr. Geo. Cummings, for ever 20 years en- eer @a the Grand Trunk renning between ‘oronte and Allandale, says: ‘‘ The constant futy with my work gave me po in gay back, racking my kidneys. I tried several remedies anti] | was recommended by my fre- maa, Mr. Dave C , te wy Dr. 's Kidney-Liver Pills. boxes heve com- cured me and I feel to-day a better man ever. I reeommend them to all niy De. nay abe pd Pills, one pill a oe a bos, dealers, Ecenansea, Suir; @ Ca, Terente " IMITATION IS THE SINCEREST FORM OF FLATTERY.” The best proof that MINARD’'S LINIMENT has extraordinary merits, and is in good repute with the public, is, that iT IS EXTENSIVE Y IMITAT- ED. The imitations resemble the enuine article in appearanee ealy. hey lack the generai excellence of Genuine This notice is necessary, as irjurious and ds »gerous imitations, called WHIv® LIN! ue «T, &c., liable to produce chronic infiam mation of the skin, are often snhstituted &T MINARD’ LINIMENT by Dealers, beeawse they pay a larger profit. They all Sell on the Merits and Advertising of MIWARD’S. One im particular claiming to be made by a former proprietor of MINARD’s Lavimuet, which simply is a lie. INSIST UPON HAVING MIWABD'S LINIMENT MADE BY C. C. RICHARDS & CO., Yarmouth, N.S&.. —— IE" You want THE LATEST in note and letter paper and stationery of every des- eriptio, magazines and fashionbooks, we have them, Agent for the celebrated Perry Pictures. CHAS J. MITCHELL; BooksEsLer and STaTIONER Queen Street. Prowse’s...... is the only internal remedy for Catarrh that is GUARANTEED FREE FROM COCAINE AND ALL OTHER OPIATES It 16 an entirely vegetable compound It IS absolutely harmless. It IS a certain permanent cure. It IS not a mere temporary relief. It IS not a cost!v long treatment. Itis not A FAKE but a tried honest remedy that has brought benefit to thousands of your felluw- countrymen. Send 10c for a sample to The Indian Catarrh Cure Co., 146 St. James St., Montreal JOHN HISLOP & CO., Props. ——————SS a i ARASPAARAARAMAASAAARARAA 1900 SEED TIME :000 % Buy your seed at Le Page's old stand and save money. We have a large selection of clovers, timothy, vetches, peas, White Russian, Manitobi hard and i Island wheats. Spring Tooth Harrows and all kinds of farm implements. W. CRANT & CO LePaze’s Old Stand, Queen Street, PEPER EEE REE EEE EY OE o THE ~~ Ocean Accident & Guarantee Corporation, Ltd | OF LONDON. a | Snecial Travelling Accident & Sickness Coupon Policy. a — EE ax FESS SEES SEES AAAARAAARARBSA: ¥¥ - a aa WANTED. About the 20th of April at Crowlsnds, Charlottetown, @ good plain cook. Alse a house-parlor maid. Good wages to comgptent perseas. References required. Apply by leiter te MBS. BAYFIELD, Hillsdale House, dy & ekly Avnarpolie, Nova 8cclis. j f' The above policy has just been issued by the greatest and most progressive a Accident Company in the world to-day. et The policy is issued by the agent in Charlottetown at a moment's notice and. a enclosed in a substantial pocket book. ae The indeminities are as follows:— ist B Death caused by accident in passenger Railway conveyance $1500.00, if ; Temporary Disablement caused by accident in Railway conveyance, . $10.00 per week. | Temporary Disablement caused by Smallpox, Varioloid Diphtheria, Meas- My les, Asiatic, Cholera, Erysipilas, Appendicitis, Diabetes, Peritonitis, Pleurisy, Pneumonia, Meningitis or Tetanus, $10.00 per week. PRICE OF POLICY—$3.00 per annum. AMES J. JOHNSTON, Stamper Block, ‘ OHARLOTTRTOWN AGENT ‘h all Win Merchants Wholesale from the distiller, A. G. Tacursow & Oo, Glasgow Sree Si ae enn eer maser ie ke Sr pee crn -