2 RY mare THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, oe JUNE 28, 1900 . 1 Wy wy Vy wv u, \ \ ay \ \ , . 3 ive suite ed s ar lav fell upon } a - nen Oe rns mete ondilien 4) wf af Ww ew | me n the mi is, I know, but a just tm " just | | 7, I it “pj ro, 2 Pr we o~ - {RS : = ee * i a FOR A PRINCE | y bh « ee ' \B a 7 “4 | ry presence | ' Sn iu . 4 re i? j N Maw f : ‘ : : > Riri cD G | ot my Godt 4 : x i il i 4 A fr td 4 d confirmed, hi pl | A | , 4 ° : ae 1G ny 4 Margaret, diz * “ ‘I QUVTVUTe Pal e hands I} i , oo BY MARY CECI! ) BENJAMIN TERRIT.” | 2 BY MARY CECIL HAY ke! | | ’ ; LO7* = ] ] g | na fo1 a ? . } ha I 4 +] , , +e - ” AT ; te J lr aroun | Author of he Arundel Motto,” ‘‘ Nora’s Love {| pr sclaeinege ¥ Se ee : | } ; r < f , hat ag ¥ ch ~ : A est, Dack to the Oid Home,” Etc. ba sae are ee ria SS u/ & | f : @ } 1 scre t i \W were | wy 3 ak jae Paint at Wi . change | i eh “ey ~ 7 ~ ~ oe ee the intene vray ity eyes, he j aN I AN IX ix IX IX IX IX ~~ & ix fx ix Ix fi z uned rward again in the silence, and fiyky t f read th slic: tneieuannn \ s shining herald the dayj§ Lig a eB n than he west, | B I g from t! Possibly these words will never be Ye a ' ' ‘ y s » danced, § tal I dt ' res lat ad by any eyes save my own, for I | s— ; His bab > hi ) | sched jasted at Honor Cra. siege we . eli cnly write them because my father ex- bila -oe 5 Ss ip ball last night, had not all risen, | y fror ny 1 I may a an oath from me that I should a RASA S aA . ; the ‘ hirl of carriages h d be- ( vhate Hea Sto ] in the ray co 80, and leave them to be made publie * ef iil b ‘ Se Sees . 5 TIAR ua n wha Ver in he way. : t * , ber + sg agen ee es } run, and the critical crowd at Burling. They v arly people at Abbot i my death. With whom can I x AMARA : AAAAAP Ne : nol ttl a dy w . ; acy ‘ Cart) FOPIO « A DDOTS- ay sian ‘, os ‘ a ‘ shine with health and etalon . House W at already le hogy ed with | moor, and I knew that by ten o'clock if ‘es os vt ate ee ee x 1900 SE . after his tub with the “ Albert” dainty sprinkling of uncritical beauty | the house was elways silent and dark- he elthe fai allye, 1s too far away to = bcH 2900 “te ; | and fashion, ered for the night. I knew the low gic hae: — of ee oy te contes- 4. ‘* Baby’s Own { Not a few among this crovd !ooked | window of the old squire’s business- | jyopp ere ee ae public to- | gp 2 . anxiously for a friend they missed last | rnom—the corner window opening on the a. am young and strong, and Bu our see | . ahi : ! ; t corn ins ( CLI OF lay ate t4 ii ee at Cc : 2 ; S n ght; hot a few (later on that day) to bit of level lane between the shrubbery +h vom years oe death to visit me. = ae y d Le Page s old stand and Save ** ; oap. ' look in vain among the faces ind fig- | and the house—and that window I easi- ty Sale" one. a 8g pn a tard _ + J° * ires il > ark ( >» TLOS - r opene rj , 7 ‘ : =“ : — ’ ease abrie - ° s ited dened i r os ae thn ' - rn ly P n d Ww “p me own —_ I . ton? yddel Pd We have a large selection of clovers, timothy, te vy Ais wee a5 45 Glse 4 = he , member that rather enjoyed the work, © . ° i vegetable fats, has @ faint but ex. explicable. Guesses were hazirded, va- | for I had not much cause to do any- (To be continued.) x vetches, ton. White Russian, Menitobr hard and ty ; mag fragrance, an (is unsurpass- ried and even wide apart enough, yet | thing but hate old Squire Myddelton,|~ |. oO a Island wheats. a [ as 4 nursery and toilet soap none fell near the truth; for who could | and I did hate him heartily. I doubt if * } Beware of imitat! ons. guess that one of the idols of this} there was a man, woman, or child on = - . * ALBERT TOILET SOAP 00 Mu Lendon season, watched for, waited for, his estate who did anything else; for x Spring Too th Harrows oy ffs. longed for, sat in am attic in this aty | what had he ever been to us to make us 4 i MONTREAL. i theroughfare, deaf to all sounds, and | feel otherwise toward him? ei ® blind to all sights around him, his grave “I had but little trouble in forcing = and all kinds of farm implements. + o —e eyes following, with a terrible earnest- my entrance into the room; very little 7 , ness, the badly written words upon the in opening the secretary where the will i ] . Whi ; puper over which his head was bent? lay; but just at the moment when I e = VY : ‘ ite 8 He had unfolded both the papers, and grasped the packet and turned to effect = 7 ‘ Ca ramels apres hems lay pare the payyee pate my escape from the house, the inner ws) * while his mind grasped premptly, wor door of the room was o ; > ; > 1X as opened, and there for word, the one to which was affix- | was the squire, advancing toward me z LePage e Old Stand, Queen Street, . and SJnowflake Chacolates <m- Can be had at any following firs: class Tt. J. Morris 0. L. Hooper W. Pickard & Co, W. A. Hutcheson W. F. Carter Stewart & Gates Sanderson & Co. J.D. MeLeod & KR. H. Wason, ore No Pli¢s on lr Bey’s at the Front! Keep them away from the folks athome. Order windows now. A, Duchemin & Go P. KE. I. Door and Sach Factorv. screen doors and dilt Edge The famous Laundry Soap unequalled in cleansing pro- perties, armless to the fines fabric. For sale by all leading Groceries. McKINNON & McNEVIN WHOLESALE AGENTS. say 19, d4i. # In Souvenir & Goods we havea large asso tment of Buckels, Brooches, Pins, Tea and Coffee Spoons. GH TA'VLOR Jeweler & Optician, Sunnyside, Queen Square. FOR SALE OR or TORE That nicely situatedZresid- ence, with out buildings, on the Malpeque Road, one mile from Post office, with 9 or 32 acres of land, as desired, Apply to J-T.PEARDON, } el the man’s uncertain signature. And these were the words it bore: “I, the undersigned, Benjamin Territ, miner, living in Abbotsmoor, and being dangerously ill, yet, nevertheless, pos- sessing all my intellectual faculties, and finding that I am soon about ito appear before the judgment-seat of God, wish to uppease the remorse of my consci- ence, and to do an act of justice, by re- tracting all I said upon oath against Ga- briel Myddelton, in my deposition made t dint to his being the mur- er of his uncle, Squire Gabriel Myd- of Abbotsmoor. I declare before that that deposition was not true, that I retract it with all my soul, re God and before justice, and im- plore the Sovereign Judge,in Hig mercy, to accept this retraction as being the whole truth. “This, as well as the following c%n- fession, is written by another hand, va t of my inability te write, from received in the mine; but it by me in my cottage at Ab- on this fifth day of Decem- thousand eight hundred and ry, as accoun accidents is signed botsmoor, ber, sixty-four. “On the seventh day of March, one thousand eight hundred and sixty-one, young Mr. Myddelton told me of the quarrel he had had with his uncle, and his uncle had made a will which disinherited him. He often came to my cottage, partly because he could nev- er bear solitude, and my company was as pleasant, perhaps, as that of any of the farmers or cottagers upon the dis- and partly because I encour- could turn to one how mal estate; aged him, hoping that I account interest he took in my daughter Margaret. She was a hand- some girl, far above other girls on the estate, and to the Manor there never cume a young girl-face at all. If Ga- briel Myddeltom would marry Margaret, I thought,I would even promise to leave the neighborhood, for I knew the young squire (easy-going as he might be) would a miner as his be free to go 1 the not care to acknowledge father-in-law. I should to what world I chose, and [ would tuke care that Margaret’s husband pro- vided me with the money I should need. And if I grew tired of @hat life abroad, I could still come back and have a farm here: for I knew young Gabriel Myd- delten could be easily intimidated. “But on that day I speak of, he brought an appalling tale. He had quarrelled with his uncle, had been dis- inherited, and had left Abbotsmoor for- ever. He told all this more to Mar- garet than to myself, and the girl sat beside the window where he stood, and looked as if something had turned her te stone. Put I sat behind and ate my Itching Piles A Fearfully Bad Case—Much Pain and Acute Misery From the Terrible Itching —Cured by Dr. Chase’s Ointment. It is doubtful if any remedy ever ree 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, Middiesex 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 a@ 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, a8 all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co. Toronto. with a candle in his hand. I acted on my first impulse—what else could I do, in the surprise of the moment? I acted on my first impulse, as I have done all through my life. I dashed the cardle from his hand, and then—in the dense darkness, when I felt he could not recognize me—-I struck him one deadly blow from my hammer; and, knowing it would do its work on the weak, gray head, I left him there upon the floor and escaped from the window, with the will in my possession. [ fled across the lawn, but in the shrubbery beyond I paused to secure the parch- ment upon my person. ‘Then came an instant’s horrible shock. The old man, whom I had left for dead, had pursued me! He came up to me running, and I could see the crimson streaks upon his face, and the thirst for vengeance in his failing eyes—a fearless old man, in all his meanness. I stood a moment facing him; then, with one well-aimed blew, he lay dead upon the grass, and there was ng stain of blood upon my hands or clothes. “I left him lying there, of course, and, hurrying through the wood, reached my own cottage an hour afterward, from quite an opposite direction. “(iabriel Myddelton could better tell the rest. as his counsel told it for him at his trial, when my words and Mar- garet’s, and the facts which others add- ed, made the tale of no avail. He had returned from Kinbury that night to ask his uncle’s pardon. He had taken his way through the wood, intending to gnin admission to the squire’s room through the very window I had opened, that the servants might not know of his return at all, i¢ his unele did not for give him. Tn the wood he had found his uncle lying, and, astonished and alaria at what he thought must be a sud Gen illness, he had raised the old man’s head in his arms. What he saw I need not tell, though I am dictating this con jession as fully as possible, for a re l.ef to my burdened conscience. “A horrible fear seized young Gabriel Myddelion that the suspicion of this foul deed would fall upon himself. He saw even then the chain of evidence ‘igainst him, which really brought him at last to the cell of a doomed criminal. “Timid as he was by nature, there was but one course he could decide up- on. He fled from that spot in the wood as ifihis uncle’s fate awaited him there; ap he never stopped in his flight until he reached my cottage, and found pro- tection and help—as he famied, He washed the blood from his hands, burn- ed bis stained wristbands, and changed the eoat on which the old man’s head hud fallen and left its traces. “Margaret told all this at the trial, and I stood by, and I knew the words would hang him. But he himself had oncther explanation of the tale to give, and now I swear that his was the truth; und ours, though im many respects true to the letter, held a lie in every word. “I helped him that night, simply that I might know where he lurked; for, from the first, I had determined that suspicion must rest upon him. All my plins were frustrated by this unneces- sury and inconvenient murder, and per sonal safety now was my own motive in every action. In my first fear I bad begun to destroy the will, but now I theught of a fiendishly skilful plan. The fragments of the will which disinherit- ed him should be found in his poss¢s- sien, and he should be overtaken in his endeavor to escape. This, with what my daughter and I could tell, would fix the crime upon him; and not for a mo ment did the betrayal of his confidence weigh with me, beside my terror lest my own guilt should be discovered. “The rest all followed as I had plan ned and foreseen. What I have told ts known only to myself and my daughter, aud I have heard her solemn oath that she will add her confession to mife. After I had sworn to Gabriel Myddel- ton’s guilt—yes, from the very first—I ed grew a changed and miserable man; and this excruciating daily death which i If have Backache yor have Disease. If you negiect Backache it will develop into agers F worse-—-Bright's Dis- ease ee. apes There is na use rubbing and doctoring your back. Cure the kidneys “There ts only one kidney medicine but it cures Backache every timo Dodd’s Kidney Pills JUNE MAGAZINES Al SUNNYSIDE. 2 Dividerd Notice Merchants Bank of P. E. Island. SHARLOTTTTOWN, May 31, 1900 Notice is hereby given that a half yearly dividend at the rate of 8 per cent. per anum on the capital stock of this bank has been de- clared, payable at ita Banking house on and after July 3rd, 1900. ; The transfer books will be closed from the 18th June to the 3rd July next, both days in- —. ¢ Board order of Board. . J.M. DAVISON, Cashier. uneg :1900 2aw iw. Hay For Sale. SESS ESSE SEES PS EE Cy ———— Is to Your Interes To see our Clothing, Our sales are larger in clothing Than for years, —— men's and boy’s ee ae _ The reason, we are selling good fitting well-made suits for about 20 per cent lower than current prices. Do yourseelfjustice. | You can save enough on a suit | i ; of clothes to buy a Hat anda pair Boots. JB. MACDONALD & C0 Where Worth and Low Prices Meet: i In buying your boots here, Th very modest, the style correct, the quality, Me , «loves are perfect. This season’s styles are quick s eHers That’s because they’ve caught the fancy on popular prices at McQUAID’S, LOWER QUEEN STREER * GORGES co Great Sale of Crockery, “Blassware ond Groceries, Big Discounts for 30 Days. About 25 tons of pressed hay. Apply to the office or to S. R. Jenkins. Upton North River. 2aw 2wks DR. GORDON ALLEY PHYSICIAN: & SURGEON (Graduate, McGill University) Office and Residence— Dorchester Stree Office Houre—2 to 10, a. m., 1 to 3 and 7 to 8, p. m. Prompt attention tc cctriry wrt. some prices :— All our present stock will be closed out} at big reductions—below w ; $3.00 Tea Sets now $),95 per set 75 cent Glass Table Seta now 50 cents 40 “ “ “ sc“ 86k 25 “ ; 94 “ “ “cc “c “ 26 o 8 90 « Large Lamps “ 50“ | 50 “ “ “ “ 30 $1.50 Lemonade Sets “ 90 * 1,50 China Berry Sets “ 1,20 50 ‘ Glass ‘6 “ “ 35 7; 30 «Cs “ Tt “ &“ 90 («tl Also a lot of odd crockery selling at Half Price.* P. MONAGHAN, Upper Quem sires