—_ me - ARSON Pius #ill cure Biliousne ss, Constipation, all Liver come fr s. They ex)el impurities from the blood, D ate women fi:.d sure relief from using them To Cure Sick Headache remove impurities from the stomach and : " i¢ ‘is. Put wy 483 Vials. Thirty ina bottle; I ended by many physicians . vere, as t est Liver Pillmade. Sixty- four} el < sent free by mail. Soid by all D - 4 se;t post-paid for 25 cents in stamps. I. 8S. JogNson & Co., Boston, Mass. — namin cmntainactiaiasneimmmumaamanaas ; é ‘ ‘ ( ; , f ( ' f ( ( We Couldn't do Poor Work if We Wanted to—wa Don’t Kaow How We Learned Vur Business the Other Way. Bruce Stewart and Co's. “TEBE MODERN” Founders Engineers & Machinists Steam Nav. Co’y’s Wharf Ch'town, PET *hone 125 . | a2 @® a @@ @& @ @@ >» @ @ @& =~ ~~. oa ee @ = @e ee 22S @ @SO OS = ee 2 8 DS ee ee ee ee Ne ——— ee Special Notice. Having purchased from Mr. F. J Hornsby the stock and good will of his Book and Stationery Busines in the Morris Block, we will continue the business in its various branches, sell- ing at lowest prices for cash only. Miss B. Hornsby , who has managed the business in the past, will be in chatge of the store, and will be pleased to attend to all old customers and many new ones. A choice new stock of Wall Papers will be at once put on sale, and all de- partments of the business will be kept well stocked. A well supplied news stand will be a special feature of the business. The store will be known as ‘The Bazaar Pookstore.” ida! Ullal Successors to F. J. dORNSBY. MORRIS BLOCK.... Ch’town, March 15, 1900. wor ens ee re + + ee oe = - Don’t Neglect Your Watch If you allow your watch to run too long without cleaning, or with damag ed parts it may be worn so badly as to distroy its usefulness asa timepiece; better have it examined by your Watch Doctor and if in need of re— pairs he will advise you accordingly and perhaps save your watch. WE BOASI on our repair depart- ment turning oat first-class work only. WE GUARANTE ALL OUR WORK; if you have not given us atrial it will pay you to do so and we will be pleased to see you at Grrat GEORGE STREET. W.N. Tanton Jeweler Sian or THE Bia WATCH. tye N E:ARTH F'o1 sale at Maple Grove Farm--Barred Plymouth Rock Fowl—6 Cockerels and 25 Hens, WILLIAM CLARK, NORTH WILTSMARE OO A OE OE pan } | = ®t ae > ~ & Py *sS Re | arms ‘ 2 . * Peto ae YMVKOXMMOY GVO G)/IXO)GVO) GOMMLOMONG) COME FAR IR RI PAI AAD IR AIHA TL ARR RE BPA A tet PRIN PRION tk THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, MARCH 30, r900. EAE IE REN IPT PE IS he Bn 7 ©)53 ay rr RRR WK ai RH HT I OK ROOK Kv ah ee KK KK KKK “ ; 4 * ; a* “ er e.\\** f ' mY fy _— 44 ek IC}! (MID I\/D[Cl] 2@ (CiD #9 Ge 4): Eee Lu Li LD) oo ( of Z PK ee dee HH He ioe ae xxkxxxxxx By LAURA JEAN LIBBEY eteatitee y hee ee He (OY Kx «ex Author of “When Lovely Maiden Stoops to Folly,” “A Broken #844 *°7 KAM KK : ie - : : a 3 te et " HA Betrothal,” “Parted by Fate,” “Parted at ee ) LS KERR EK a CO) ee ee 4 the Altar,’’ etc., etc. or oe ( » f ERK KK HOt +) EEL EEE EELS LLL LEIS SEES SIE SLES SESS SLES LSE SESE SES Se Dee Hee \ERERAE YEE AIEEEIKILIIIIIILIEII IES LIEIIIIIII ALL IER IISA S EIS EXEKAIIEIIIE ILI IIEILIIIIIIIL IFES SEIS IEEE IR YOO G6 GE AG GCrOAGvOCO~CTExGO)Ce Oo - VL GOCOCOOO DOOD QOOQQO©OGGE SYNOPSIS. MF lorabel was a dependent of her step- tather, Squire Pemberton. His daughtere hate Fiorabel, and when the Squire dies, order her out of the old home. Max Forrester a rich young man marries her and introduces her into his family the members of which disapprove of his mar~ riage, as they wanted him to marry Mies Claveriog, an heiress, CHAPTER XIX--(Continued.) «Ui child Ys the link which will draw Max and Florabel together at last, she muttered; but for this child, Max might love her. His heart was bound up in this child. Long hours Inez sat there, with only her thoughts fer companions, and there was danger in that. If this child died the tie would be dissolved which would one day draw him toward Florabel. Her heart beat strangely at the thought. Her terrible folly first commenced in not putting the thought from her. There was danger in ruminating over it—a peril so horrible that she should have shrunk from it. Slowly the clock on the mantel ticked the hours away. It wanted five minutes now to the time she must give the child the life-giving cordial. The doctor’s words recurred to her with a strange thrill: ‘‘The little one’s danger is so great that if these drops I leave you should fail to be given her exactly on the stroke of the midnight hour, her young life would pay the forfeit ere the day dawned.’”’ It wanted five minutes to that hour now. Inez reached out for the phial. Something seemed to cluteh at the nerveless fingers, holding them spell- bound, and the same still, small voice whispered more boldly because she had listene€é to it: ‘Why should you save your rival’s child? She stands between you and the hopes of a lifetime. You have but to sit still and motionless in your chair, with your hands clasped to- gether in your lap while the moments drag themselves by, and all will be over. Why should you save Florabel’s child? The clock on the mantel was on the stroke of twelve now. With slow, measured chimes it tolled the mid- night hour. Inez Clavering grasped the phial with her white, death-cold hands, and slowly poured out the life-giving drops. Then, with a face pallid as marble, she approached the couch. ‘‘Can you give up love, life, hope and happiness—doom yourself to a loveless life, then?’’ asked the tempt- ing voice in ber goul. ‘‘Remember, —— . — —— ——. The soldier who dies on the battle- field with the ar- row of a savage enemy stinging in his vitals suffers horrible, untold agonies. Even the story of his sufferings as told by his surviving comrades. causes the hearer to shudder with pity and horror. There are tens of thousands slowly dying every day with the arrow 0: some insidious dis- ease poisoning their Vitals, and no one stops to pity or to alleviate. Where death comes to one man on the battle-field it comes to tens of thousands in their homes, through the agency of man’s most relentless enemy — consumption. There is a widespread idea for which ignor- ant physicians are responsible, that con- sumption is an incurable disease. Thisisa mistake. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis- covery cures 98 per cent. of all cases. It is the great blood-maker and flesh-huilder. It gives zest to the appetite, makes the diges- tion and assimilation perfect, renders the liver active, makes the blood pure and fills it with life-giving elements of the food, and acts directly on the lungs, driving out all impurities and disease germs. Thousands who had been given up by doctors and lost all hape, are to-day healthy and robust as the result of the use of this great medicine, It is the discovery of an eminent and skill- ful physician, Dr. R. V. Pierce, for thirty years chief consulting physician to the In- valids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute at Buf- falo, N.Y. In writing to Dr. Pierce for advice the sufferer consults a physician whom his townspeople honored by making him their representative in congress but whose love for his profession caused him to resign that position that he might give his whole time to the sick and afflicted. He will person- ally answer all letters from sufferers with- out charge. His ‘‘Golden Medical Discow ery ’’ is sold by all good medicine dealers. Stomach and liver troubles with sluggish action of the bowels are cured by Doctor Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. GIRLS WANTED.—To learn the millinery. Apply to Miss McKachern at Jas, Paton & o's. ' did not turn her head, — this child keeps the face and memory of Florabel ever in his heart. Inez had listened too long. The terrible force ef the mightiest tempta- tion that ever sued for mastery over @ human heart overcame her. No, no! she would not stretch out her hand to save this child—with lost Florabel’s face. With a cry of remorse pitiful in its struggling despair, Inez dashed the spoon and its contents from her. The hour and the moment had come and gone. She threw up her hands with a wild, yet hushed cry, and sank down by the couch of the child whose doom she had decided, in a dead faint. The swoon lasted long hours. The gray dawn was struggling through the clouds in the eastern sky when she opened her terrified eyes. She sprang to her feet with a hoarse ery. Was it some terrible dream that clutched so terribly at her heart? Her eyes encountered the spoon ly- ing upon the carpet, then the face of the child, lying so still and white against the pillow. How ghastly the little face looked in the gray, uncertain light of the early morning. She recoiled with a gasp of terror as she gazed. ‘‘T am terrified at what I have done,’’ she breathed, in an awful whisper. When the doctcr came and stood be- side that couch, what would that ghastly, grayish face tell him? Would they discover the cause of death? that the drops had not been given? What could she say in her own defence? That sleep had overcome her, and the hours flew by unheeded? Sleep! How could she say that she had dared to sleep when a human life was intrusted to her? How the terrible moments passed she never knew. She heard the tread of feet in the corridor without. It was Max’s step. Would he read guilt in her face? she wondered. The dour opened quietly, but Inez although she knew Mac was standing on the thresh- ole, motiouless. She could feel the magnetism of his eyes burning into her very soul. XXXI. ‘‘Miss Clavering! Inez!’’ The name rang out like a clarion through the room; but Inez did not turn her head. She cowered upon her knees, burying her face in the bed clothes. Max Forrester entered the room, came up to her, laying a heavy hand on her shoulder. ‘*Look up into my face, Miss Clav- ering,’’ he said; ‘‘I have something to say to you.’’ Very slowly she raised her eyes to his face—those dark, stormy, slumb- rous eyes—that held in them sucha world of terror. ‘*T did not mean to do it, Max,’’ she murmured, with a bitter sob; ‘‘but I was terribly tempted. I thought she came between you and me, and Ef hat- ed her. She is dead—dead !—and I— Tie”? ‘‘Listen to what I have to say, Inez Clavering,’’ said Max, sternly. ‘‘Get up from your knees and listen. Heaven has saved you from steeping your soul with an awful crime. A few words explain the situation: Having been strongly impressed by the physician as to how necessary it was that the medicine should be given the child just at midnight, and believing you worn out with watching, I came to take your place and see to it myself. The door was ajar, I heard the strange words: ‘Shall I give the medicine or shall I not?’ Those were the words that held me spellbound, rooted to the spot. I saw you dash the phial that held the life-giving drops upon the carpet. It was no wonder you fell to the floor in a dead- ly swoon. I wonder Heaven did not strike you dead! I stepped quickly forward, recovered the phial, and gave the little one the drops; other- CHAPTER wise her death would have lain at your door, Inez Clavering.’’ ‘*Do you hate me now, Max?’’ she murmured, creeping Nearer to him, and placing a little white, trembling hand on hisarm. ‘‘Tell me, do you hate me now?’’ He shrank back from her touch as though there was contamination in it. The look of abhorrence in his eyes assured her as no words could have done. ‘‘Max! Max! you will kill me,’’ eS sD SP SS Se ee ee she cried. ‘‘Say one word of forgive- ness, for Irepented even at the mo- ment I flung the phial from me. I would have stooped and recovered it again had I not fainted. It was all for your sake, Max, all for love and jealousy of you,’’ she wailed; ‘‘and you are the iirst to condemn me.’’ ‘It is not necessary to prolong this scene, Inez,’’ he said. ‘‘Go, now; leave the child to me.’’ She held out her hand, wistfully, pleadingly towards him: but he turned away, affecting not to see it. ‘I am going to say good-bye, Max,’’ she said. ‘‘Do you think I could live | under the same roof with you like this? No; it would kill me.’’ ‘*Perhaps it is better for you to go away, Inez,’’ he answered, ‘‘best for both you and me.”’ She turned away abruptly, and with- out another word quitted the room. How long he sat by little Flora's | couch, dozing the night hours away, { he never knew. Despite the greatest efforts to keep awake sleep weighed down his eyelids, and he dropped cff into a dreamless slumber. The pink and gold of the early morning sunhine stealing in through the half-closed blinds awakened him. He gave a eudden start, reaching | forth his hand toward the curly head en the pillow. ‘’Flora, little Flora, you must take your medicine again,’’ hesaid. ‘‘Ar you feeling any better?’’ There was no answer. ee ate Suddenlv he became aware of the fact the child was not there. The little bed was empty. And in that moment a note pinned to the pillow carght his eye. In an instant he 7] : > 1A? had torn it open ener Max, it with your e& ran — ‘‘In accordance mmand, lam goin not alone. The child goes with me. ‘*Now, listen, Max. The love can turn to thoughts of revenge when spurned and sli d, —_ "" Wwarimesi has been by you. ‘*You can never trace our where- abouts. AJi efforts to find us will be futile. Knowing this, I herewith make my startling revelation to you, that your heart may know one little purt of the to-ture_y,ne is endurir,.’’ (To be continued.) HARM OF BEAUTY Not in the Features so much as in the Grace and Vitality of a Healthy Body--Dr. A. W. Chase’s Nerveand Blood Pills make Women Beautiful. There's a certain charm of beauty in the graceful, elastic movement and clear com- piexion of a healthy woman in which the fea- tures do not play an important part. The pale, sallow complexion and dull leaden color of the skin, dark circles under the eyes, headaches, pains in the back and sides, dull eyes, weakness, nervousness, despondency and low spirits are symptoms of weak, watery blood and improperly-nourished nerves. No woman can be beautiful until the blood is enriched and the nerves strengthened. Dr, A. W. Chase’s Nerve Food is a food for the blood and nerves. Dr. A. W. Chase’s Nerve Food restores the and strength to a run-down system, Note your weight before using them, and the increase week by week as the brightness re- turns to the eyes, the color to the cheeks and the form rounds out with firm, healthy flesh, oa ———e result of rich, pure and a nervous system. Puae cut and facsimile signature of Dr. A. W. Chase on every box of the genuine. i a box, all dealers, or Fdmanson, Bates & Co.. Teronta The Handicap your Cough! Don’t wait a few days to see if it will ‘‘ wear off’; itis much more likely to become dangerous and it will undoubtedly be much more difficult to cure. The longer you permit it to prey upon the delicate membranes of your throat, bron- chial tubes and chest, the more you render yourself susceptible to other attacks and to chronic pneumonia or consumption. mson's potanic ough Balsam is an infailible remedy: for mcre than 30 years it has been curing the worst cases and it will surely cure you. 25 CENTS AT ALL DRUGGISTS. — D. C. McLEOD BARRISTER, ATTORNEY, SOLI OITOR, ETC. Orrice—Bank of Nova Building, Charlottetown. . dy 3 mos wkly 1 year. Scotia be a { SEE @ THAT THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE ANVegetable Preparation for As . similating the Food and Re -) ding the Stomachs and Bowe —Or— |_INFANTS “CHILDREN || Promotes Digestion Cheerfut- PA dh, ness and Rest.Contains neither : aoe; orphine nor Mmeral. NARCOTIC. IS ON THE WRAPPER OF EVERY BOTTLE OF ICASTORIA Oastoria is put up in one-size bottles only. 8 is not sold in bulk. Don't allow anyone to sell you anything else on the plea or promise that it is “just as good” and “will answer every pose.” 48 Sce that yéu get O-A-8-T-0-B-I-& Tho fac- simile {s on fll 58 Aperfect Remedy for Consti don sour Stomach Diatrtdes, 1) Worms Convulsions Feverish- | ness and LOSS.OF SLEEP. - Fac Sumile Signature of Ceti flilekav, E wae ORK. UT ee he ir t ah Doses —35C1 eo ——_—— -— fi EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. ' } i] i YR; Ts To Give Persons in the Country au Chance Or SPECTACLE SALE Is Continued Till Saturday, March 31st SPECTACLES, Steel or Nickled Frames, fitted with ‘rst quality Lenses case included, 75c to $1.50. Best Gold Filled Frames with Solid Gold ends, warranted 10 years and fitted with first quality L>nses; price complete $2.50. NOTE.—We do not keep common Gold Filled Frames. Cheap Solid Gold Frames of a poor quality not kept in stock, as a good Gold Filled Frame is in every way preferable, but for 10 days we will give 25 per cent off all our good Solid Gold Spectacles and Eye Glasses. Anyone whose eyes we have examined and fitted with glasses in the last 12 months can have another examination made if they wish and the leases ex- changed free—unless a special lenses has to be made to order. By arrangement, anyone can have their eyes examined evenings but we con- sider daylight the best time. You may have time for part payment if you wish. EW. Taylor OPTicrian Cameron Blocx, Charlottetown. ———— a XT LL ON HAND TATE AS TES aS aS 2 “37°0f¢.\ finest overcoatings and suiting: in Seotch we of E. .2ian: rman manufacture—at very line prices to the ba ance ef .ne season. Allnew “resh goods this season. JOUN MLEOD & (0 Serge LT ie kan aa aa 4 = Fine Photography i |, ali the Latest Designs Our Carbon portraits are unriveled. Our customers 1re all delighted. Be sure and visit the leading studio. G. HoH. COOK F Queen and Grafton Sts, Ch’town. em ans pee OY RRNA ene eee