; } ane ‘ed Your Cough ? | ADASISON’S BALSAM ! No cough can stay alter being i.” . : af - treated with it. It simply | tre ‘athes it out of existence, so0u thing harsh or im- || ' ONS i) There is ne | perative about DAMS fAnic i jt heals the sore parts, tones up the irritated air passages | ad strengthens the bronchial || , | and streng : bes — thus stopping the | sources of the cough. } OT ithe 250. | ee bo — 4 White’s _ | Carameis - | and §jnowflake Chocolates <-~ (an be had at any following firsi class T. J. Morris DB. L, Hooper W Dlekard & Co. Wes & tenes W. A. Hutcheson W. F. Carter Stewart & Gates Sanderson & Co. J.D. McLeod & R. H. Uason, ore OUR HAMMOCK TRADE [3 BOOMING HOT JULY Is coming: swing up 4 Ham- mock and be happy. a a OR OS Se ae -_ louSave Money by Buying Your | HAMMOCK | FROM aS = = of P. §.—Our stock islarge and all new. i Atmdreds of Beautifut}Arti cles Suitable for; Wedding Gifls nowjin Stock: ln Silverware we heve Tea Seta, Butter enes, Celery Stands, Fruit Dishes, oat Dishes, Combination Sugar bowls ad Spoon Holders, Syrup Jugs, Cream a Sugars, Berry Spoons, Soup Ladles, I #, Knives, Forks and Spoons. a Chinaware :—Cup, Saucer and Plate 7 Sugar Bowls, Cheese Dishes, Berry ‘a, Butter Dishes, & Glaseware:—Lemonade Sets in yaland Gold, Berry Sets, butter oe We have a nice linc of Souvenir me ne au axeortment of Wedgewood lueware. A big line of Watches, 5 and Jewelry. ive us a call and you will gave :ooney ot we are sell ih the “a cheaper than any otber Suryi& So Ch’town RB AISAM ‘ange i at Mrs. ps Kent oh Chariottetow a, from evening to lueeday a mi. every | i i WHITE AT LAST By Mary Cecil Hay. (Continued.) “The physicians are in consultation,” she said, “and only the nurse in at- manceof course with Mr. Myddel- Pierce sent Londom to Sir Ed- 1 Graham yesterday, and he is here lay, too, and brought another phy- nm with him Pierce Says Mr. Keith knew Sir Edward very well, and en visited him in London. Dr. Frank- of Westleigh, has been here ever since the first alarm. But they all say the same thing,” sobbed Miss Hender- son, again forgetting her determina- tion, “that there is imminent danger in these restless attacks of fever alternat- ng with such death-like exhaustion, I, through all those three or four weeks befere the fever agserted itself, was ; haunted by a fear of what was coming. He said it was weariness—headache: he said sometimes that it was nothing. But I knew he could not look so unless— something else was near.” It was just at this moment that the roum-door was opened, and Honor, turn- ing her eyes to see, started to her fect witha cry which sounded almost glad. “Gabriel!” He, too, had recognized her in that moment, and the cousins met with both hands extended, while for that moment there was a smile om each of their faces. “Honor,” said Gebtiel, very quietly; “of course I kmew you, Honor.” She told him how she had longed to see him, and how glad shé was that he had come home, though—” “Yes,” he said, finishing the sentence for her, eadly. “Though it was so good to come home, this has turned the plea- sure into pain.” ‘Then he tried to change his tone again and tell het ne =" i ng tary a moment from what Roya. ~- ten of her, and how he thanked her for wer trust in his innocence,of which Roy- den had told him, too. But her thoughts would scarcely follow these words, and ‘ he knew it. “I am to await the physicians here,” he said, only glancing at his wife's let- ter, when Hervey gave it to him, but putting it carefully into his pocket- book. “She is well,” said Honor, gently, only so very anxious. “She knows,” he said, “that we are enly watching here to see him—die.” “God is so good!” breathed Honor, softly. “Mr. Myddelton,” put in Miss Hen- derson, with a little sternness in her tone, “you always fear the worst-—the very worst.” “How ean I help fearing, Gubriel, betraying the timidity which had been fatal to him yearg «go, ‘when I think what he has been to me and to my wife, and how powerless I questioned So am now to help or give him ease?” “Is he always unconscious?” aeked Hervey. “Always: as far as we can judge. He sometimes seems to wake to a little quickened imtelligence, but it is only to fali back into the old vague or fevered wandering. Miss Henderson right; I do fear the very worst. All my nerv- Is onsapess and mistrust came back to me in the presence of this anguish. Yet I kad fancied that these long twelve yeurs, and his help, and his example, had made me stronger and more trust- ful. Hoenor, has Alice told you what he has been to us?” “To her,” said Honor, ev effort to her. “She said you me more~—some day.”’ ry word an would teil “Let me tell you now, while we can do nothing but wait here. There may come a time when I dare not speak of it: when it will break my heart to re- eal), in words, his prompt, unquestioning trust in my immocence of that crime which havished me: his patient efforts to clear my name, and make it possible for me to come home; hig manlike for- beurance when suspicion rested basely even on himself; his true, earnest help, throvgh these twelve years; and, above all, that simple, generous kindness of his, which was the cause, at last—as nething else on earth could have been—- of my innocence being proved. Honor, I can only tell you now the story of our first meeting, but even that will tell you mneh I dare not speak of. You huve herrd of my. escape from prison. and One of the most danger- ous and repulsive forms of Kidney Disease is ROPSY for which Dodd's Kidney Pills are the only certain cure. In) Dropsy the Kid- neys are actu dammed and the water, which skéuid be expelled in the form of urine, flows back. and lodges in the cells of the flesh aad puffs out the skin. - Remove the filth which plugs up the drain. Restore tee Kidne to health. There is ae oa | Kidney Medicine DopD’s KIDNEY PILLS TRE DAILS the runmiof (which was true) thaf I sail- ed from England to America in an emi- grant My st taken for me the vesse] erage passage was by man whom Territ employed to see me on board, and then ! I had just five shillings im my pocket, which I slipped into his hand in grati- tude when we parted. Neither my watch nor my ring could I venture to sell, because the Myddelton crest upop them might have led to my capture. I had left them in Margaret Territ’s care on the night I had changed my coat at her cottage, but she had given them back to me on my e@scape from jail. She had offered me money—all she had— but that, of course, I would not touch. ven in America, and even to keep my- self from destitution, I felt I never should dare to part with my watch and ring, such a terror of detection was upon me ever. “That was a miserable voyage, even beyond the misery of dwelling on the injustice which had forced me to the flight. Of course, I naturally shrank from all companionship with those about me, but I knew I should equally have done so if they had been of my own grade, What fellowship had I now with any man on \earth? The poor wretches around me, huddling together in poverty and uncleanliness, had more companionship with one another than I had with any one under that wide stretch sky, which was all I cared to look upon; for could I regret, the shore I left behind, or build one hope upon the shore I was to reach? I know now how different it might have been, even in that voyage; but it was, ag I have said, atime of-acute and morbid suffering to me. “One gentleman among the cabin passengers often spoke to me when I Was on deck, often spoke, indeed, to many of us. Of all the state-room pass- eugers, he wag the only one who could spare one of those idle hours on beard for such as I, op who had a cheery word to give us in oue seeming roughness, or hopelessness, or squalor. As good to me rf gave me as was the Old Country’s shores r, because sometimes -=j sunset were those hours he first glimpse of the week «5° bett niPpt es. Si the would talk of another shore which was more surely home. “When we landed at Levi Point, and I stood alone on shore among the lug- gage—-scarcely one article of which be- longed to myself—hopeless and epiritless and weighed down with that sense of ut- ter loneliness which I knew must be my doom forever, this gentle man came up to me. His first-class ticket wag for Beston, he said, and as he was not go- ing so far, he would like me to take if, because he knew the third-class emi- grant trains were often a week upon the Toad. For one minute I morbidly re- sented his cognizance of my poverty, but in the next I humbly and gratefully accepted his gift, knowing I could no® have provided myself even with dry bread through that week of traveliing. “When we stopped at Richmond, he sought again, and in spite of and sullen humor and talked with me us with an equal (yet as no one had talked to me before), while we walked back to the station at night- “a in time, = went, i. uc me out my workman’s dress } 1} 4 —TOO me ine, ever fall. Lh third-class train was just coming in when we reached the stat-on, nd 1 remember well how, for a few minutes he stood back, and, rather sad- ly and intently, watched th as they crowded out upon the platform. passengers Then he left me, and, moving quietly and easily among those poor tired crea- trres, he seemed to give help or encour agement to all—God bless him! I be- lieve it is matural to him to do so. Hon- * J remember once, when he had man- aged to get tea for a forlorn little crowd (men who, like myself, and had ot a penny in their pockets, and women td children who had not tasted food ‘y-four hours,because—like my- self, t had not thought to store for after use any of their last meals on board), 1 saw them actually crying over him, and touching him with a reverence which, in that time aud place, was ter- pathetic. Could I be ashamed if fer twel oomthey ribly I. too, were so foolish? “He left the cars at the last station before Beston, and when he took my hend and bade me godspeed, I could not answer him a single word, because I felt that our paths of life could nev- r be crossed again. But I was to meet hir once more in a week's time. Can { ever forget that first week in Bos- ton? Every day was worse to me, I think, than those I had passed in the condemned cell, under sentence of death. Every hour of daylight I spent in my pursuit of work, toiling about every street of the great city, and calling in at eyery Office and eyery store. I had mo need of gnide or directory, for I would eall everywhere; I would not miss a single door until i either found em- ployment or fell by the wayside. “Those were days of literal starva- tion, Honor; and when the darkness stopped me in my search, I could only creep into a police-cell, and, with a tim of water for my supper, lay myself down upon a board and try to sleep so; while other men lay near me, poor and homeless as. myself. “Sometimes, with a faint chance of success, I was gent from one store to another at a distance, but always— after the vain effort—I came back to the same and went on from door to door, never missing one, and often tempted, instead of my vain reqnest for work, te cry Jor a And often I was hurried back into the etreaat with hun- gr lv IT had been watching the dollars eb: tging hands in the stores. “Sometimes I met with men ese weak “| poor as myself, who had come fram the Ola Country with a store of en- “vy and money, too, but had sunk un- ‘| they were what I saw them, deep in poverty and gloom. And sometimes I saw men rich and prosperous, and was spot, monthful of foed, suspicion, becanse so } | told that matte Brigit, Aid Hoalin und Vigour Re« EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN JULY 12, had worked they their way up, without the aid of « ipital or friends. “Sometimes I met with one of those who had sailed with me, and ke would tell me, perhaps, of his bitter home- sickness, wondering that I did not own to that; wondering, above all, why I should hurry past the post-office, where my Own countrymen, in crowds, waited eagerly for news of home. It is a sad tale to tell you, Honor, at this sad time, but it will soon be over now. “A week of this ceaseless work went past, and | was gaunt and _ hollow- cheeked; ill with almost constant ague, and having the appearance, as I knew quite well, of being only half-witted, in my nervous attempts to conceal the fact I was almost Larefoot. At last, one day, came a change of thought and plan which saved me. “I was standing just within the door of a printer’s office, waiting for an Op- portunity of asking whether they would engage me on what terms they chose, and leaning against the packets of pa- per, ill, foot-sore and famished, when a sound, which had seemed to me the surging of waters about my head, grew first into raised, distinct tones, then into phrases which I could follow. “Two men were comparing their early struggles for a livelihood, and recalling hew one turning point had brought therm each success at last. In my weak- ness, and with that surging pain in my head, I could not follow the words quite distinetly; yet. this one thing I under- stood—my only chance of obtaining em- ployment was to seek-it-as a gentleman (whet a mockery 1t was to recall my old life now! and as if employment were ] value to me. 1900 i ieteeeeneetinead Sy Ce gg a PEE of little (To be continued.) A Gloomy Future stored by the Use ef Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food. Headache, backache, sleeplessness, despondency, and irregularities are the result of an exhausted condition of the body and nervous system. No treatment was ever e6o efficacious in restoring health, strength, vigour, and vitality as Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food, the great blood buiider. Mrs. J. M. Bradley, 100 Jane,street, Ottawa, states:—’* For several years [I have been gradually running down in health. I became nervous and weak, and worried greatly over my future. “‘Hearing of Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food and the wonderful results it has ac- complished in others, I obtained a box and began using it as directed. I be- gan to improve immediately, and am now restored to full health and vigour. “Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food is an ex- cellent remedy, and I can recommend it to all who are weak, nervous, or run down in health.” > Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food, the world’s greatest blood builder and nerve re storative, 50 cents a box, at all dealerg er Edmanson Bates and Co., Toronta, 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 Witbout 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 Prince Rdward Island, Collections .made on the» most rea sonable terms and promptly remitted for. Deposits received and interest allow- ed at best current sates. TO BE LET. That well-known bus.ness stand, form-~ erly known ag-the Central Hotel, coatain- ing 22 rooms, with large stable and situated near the market, on Rich Street. Rent moderate. A to ely T CAMPBELL The Gem Freezer 2 2) Read the Prices. I Quart $1.25 ee 1.50 me * 1.75 A Retrigerators at cost 2.20 We guarantee our prices the lowest. DODD & ROGERS SUie £ ~ Is our greati cleaning month our prices during this month wa Will bejvery low. ‘ We had a big June trade, we want io make J uly even better. iIf you want & good suit of clothes at a small price see us, we'll do better for you than you caa do elsewhere.: In white and colored shirts, underclothing, collar. gloves, we can do best. You should see our job lot of wf — and colored shirts for 50c, worth from 9%¢ to $1.50. Styl ~~ Boots & Shoes at lowest (risas > JB. MACDONALD & C0: Where Worth and Low Prices Meet. THs Waterest Yon I Bal Gall List aud Se 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 l/c 486 50e Necktie 35 to 55 quality 20¢ Suspenders (mens) 13¢ Umbrella Men’s and Boys’ Caps Straw Hats 40c to $1.10 quality Better quality for better price. 40¢ 18c 25¢ What we advartise we give. D. A. BRUCE straw Hat 15 TINTS. Try a can, only 16 cents. SIMON W. CRABBE. Apri: lith 1900. Walker's Gorne TL rcRRt, ey — —~.. CITY HARDWARE STORE. .-H'or-- Builders, Farmers, Mechanics, HARDWARE—— Paints, oils, glass, carpenters tools, all cheap _ §FOR CASH. The celebrated Norton Machine Oil. TERMS{CASH. R B, NORTON & COLIMITRD o ~ + Paes ile Boe el f - A eB rn Mn ee TR I es ine EA tea Pie it Rind Le ohS-, Pied... ae ee a aay wie a a “ vy 4 ee ean Lines Sag « si ln ae ee er f : eo ae een '