THE DAILS EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN JULY 19, 1900 ee b sie we tie ie oe Ss ale mane is hes baie "te eee ee $$ ——- , . ye ae ae i ae Te eS 7. TOF OM Oris Ot Ors One Ooe Oooh Give to me this one word J crave in t name | WE TWAIN TOGETHER. i) ae a ’ o f inn nt w an who } y held the | fh... dhab tin Fe ar PICTURESQUE & © THE THREE LETTERS $/Sssar ec] cceaieaees ay els i ; | nd not in vain! Jonny H. Norror r ,e ope in t ether; . es ouch of lips and clasp of hands, . ae il | | Rigid and white as death, she threw | _* : Prince Edward Islan : > — j An ustrats i book on P. EF IK | or ’ nteresting sou VveD! mM Island, 82 4} > ' riste for tourist f Me Wir ile Sie Me es he = URNA Me ww AVA a ZN 2 % Ved Mees av AS TP APS TF Ge > é St ee a= CHARLOTTETOWN | TIME TABI + 4 (Li ICAL TIM K..) } . ao + Dorothy Sargent, Being In Doubt, Oh OO O40 0-1-0 | the letter on the burning coals and | watched the flames devour the paper till a Left the Choice of a Hus- there was nothing left but a gray mass oO band to Chance, that trembled and fel) to pieces as a@ 4: iniiaini whiff of wind blew across the grate. °. » —_— Opening the second letter, she read: 7 BY LOUISE OLARK. oO Dearest—For the years I have known and loved - At Ate ~ . . ts OO Ore Oofec Te Orf Oh Or Or Oxf OohO you I have never till now dared to teli you of my ] Who oS ont = You were rich; I was poor S e on me that Old John Sargent’s dauchte~. He | | ; \ i not died when she was a child, you know, | know an } - more Cham and left his entire fortune to her.” ; a Why ist t she married ?”’ } kr what I ha j scientific } } : . w l, but you do not know what I ha accom say she has burie ‘r hear 5 “7 i d her heart in I 1 has through you and that for you agri, he You remember, alone I have succeeded {harne was thrown from his horse I dare now offer to you the heart and life which hve i's > and broke his neck will go on and on working for you, spurred by be blow. She is a stun- t) rlorious knowledge that you have said, ‘‘] . e i ; isnt she? No use trying to , Billy. Settle down and calm May I come to you and take you in my arms AT. ans ; ; : @ fF and hold you close to the heart that beats for you } I if. . r Says she never had Fl : e ? ae ? a ; > & = ’ ent about her. But now I have told you of my love makes me jrrival and Departure of Trains, ; and Steamers. —_— } TRAINS xpress leaves for the west..... . 835 am. Express arrives from the west.. 950 pm. Accomodation leaves for the BESbacrces ss +e teeseetecccecess see 410 p m. Accomodation leaves for the tenth nscooce cdupetin erecreseesseeees 6 OO Pp m. Acoomodation arrives from the epbticedtlecce scentpbcceqesescoccese<E OO & BK Acoomodation arrives from the Tiiiinmecoeeeee see cccccscce 2 20) PD MD. Bxpress leaves for the east...... 7 05 a m. Bxpress arrives from the east.. 9 10 a m. Accomodation leaves for the Gall. cccccccccccccccetpanaessecs OD BD BBs Accomodation arrives from the iM edbecoceste cee seseeeeee 450 p m PRINCESS. Leaves for Pictou every morning soa a’ m isl meutmcengesesee ett Arrives from Pictou every even IDG Bhenrscecorersccres cvvesceee SM) P Mm. LA GRANDE DUCHESSE. Arrives from Bostoo and Halifax i Pi ..66cneceneees 12 p m. Leaves for Boston aud Halifax every Wedueeday ..... veow : AO HALIFAX. Arrives from Boston and Halifax every Thursday ........ ce teccsecee §=6f PM [eavee for Halifax and Boston SY SUNG cccp cocmccccscee |= OM, CAMPANA. Arrives from Montreal and Que- bec every alternate Friday.... Leaves for Quebec and Montreal the following Monday evening. CITY OF GHENT. Arrives from MHelifax every Thureday afternooa ......00 .. leaves for Halifax every Friday 10a m. JACQUES CARTIER. Leaves for Orwell Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdaye........ 3 p m. Leaves for Crapaud every Fri- Mac eters oéecctiessotnce+ p i. Leaves for Crapaud every Satur- eocedovesere ° p m. FEXRY BOATS. "Hilleborough”—Leaves Ferry Wharf for Southport every half hour. “Eifio”—Leaves for Rocky Point daily at 6.30, 8,9, il,am; 1, 2,4, 6.20, pm, local time. Sundays at9a m, 12.45, 4,3,4pm. Returning 1.15, 2.30, 3.15 §od 0 pm. “Southport”—Ruus up East Rive: every Tuesday, leaving at 5.30 am, and 3 Pmiocal. Runs up Weet River every Friday, leaving at 5.30 « m, and 4pm HOTEL ACCOMMODATION. For (he benefit of tourists and others "eDublish the following list of hotels and bogrding houses in Charlottetown and sleewhere :-— Charlottetown—Hotel Davies, Queen el, Revere Hotel, Eureka House, ee Houee, Railway Houee, Lepage Suse, Duncan House, Finlay House. McFadyen House. Sum merside~— Clifton House, Ros Sel, Campbell Hotel, Perry House. ‘ouris—Sea View Hotel, Oces Roase, ies : “Tacadie—Acadia Hotel. ustico—Sea Side Hotel. Stanhope—Cliff House, Mutch House. Brack lew Point—Shaw House. Alberton~ Seaforth House, Terrace. Malpeque—Hodgson Shore House, * Ownal-~ Florida Ouse, Vernon River Bridge—Finlay House. Bo ettown—Aitken House, Tapper Ouse, Acadia House. a Treverse— Lansdowne Hotel. gpieh — McKenna House, Bellevue Mel, Railway Hotel. : €n#ington— > ' = dial Bout on—Olarke’s Hotel, Commer Mon ett —Mecdonald House. pict Stewart—Clarke’s Hotel; Man- House. Hampton —Pleasant View House. ort Hill—Port Hil) House, ; tides, there are @ good many private “ees throughout the province where Tan let accommodation ata reasonable Albion North House, Hotel, Dominion foe a be obtained. Further informe- Tr & a application at oe , polite that one can’t catch hold of a ems to have lost all interest in anytbing. Oh, no, not a mean, stingy streak in her nature! She is very gen- ‘ erous with her money, but gives as though she did not care a straw what she was giving the dust to—unnatural. very. Il am afraid of her myself, but she is a , thorbughbred; never saw her do or look a thing out of the way.” “By Jove! I think the girl has a heart within her, and if | were going to be in town this winter I would try and reach it. She walks like a queen. What is she doing here?’ “Going to the cemetery, They say she comes here at all hours of the day, but there is never a flower on Charlie's grave. She makes no outside show. Give mea match.”’ “Does she live alone?” “No—a houseful of servants and @ cousin or something as a companion. She used to go slumming, but I heard she got mixed up in a row one night and was hustied off to the station house before the policeman found out who she was. Then the whole force went down on their knees, and she was sent home, so they say, in the Black Maria. Anyway, she gets some one else to slum nowadays, and she pays the bills.”’ “Is she a bluestocking?” “Certainly not. She is nothing but what a man would want his wife, mother or sister to be, with a couple of millions thrown in. She takes a box by the season at the Savoy and turns it over tou the young folks, like a dear that she is; but, by Jove, she would give you the same kind of a nod if she met you as she would her cook, and there would be no more heart or soul in her greeting than in a dish of uncooked mushrooms. I hate to have a Woman so independent and so straw for a good foundation for criti- cism. I wish you were going to be here, Billy. If any one could move her, you could. But she is a stunner and no mis- take. Here comes Ned in his trap— { e too. Good luck. We'll ride home. l Ned! Room for two? Thanks.” ‘Today Dorothy Sargent entered the si- lent city of the dead with more than sadness in her sweet face, and as she reached the grave that held all that was mortal of the one man she had ever loved she pressed her face against the | marble cross and in her anguish cried “Telp me, dearest!” Suddenly, as’though the load were lift- ed from her heart and her prayer an- swered, she sprang from the ground and } urried home. Going at once to her room, she took from her desk three letters. Bowing her head upon her hands, she whispered: “Whatever is is: right. My love will guide me. I will be satisfied.’ A messenger had brought to her the first letter from the National club. She drew it from the envelope and reread the lines she knew she would have to an- swer: Before you opened the envelope which holds this letter, Dorothy Sargent, you knew who was he writer, and you knew what he had to tell you. By breaking the seal you have proved you are willing once again to listen te me. I have returned to my native land after an exile of ten weary years. God knows I did my best to give my wife the love she craved, and he knows I did my best to make her happy and was as true as steel to her, but in his wisdom, which I dare not question, he gave her pure mind the power of seeing beyond what I gave her, and the dear child returned to her Maker broken hearted, leaving me and four motherless children to you, my one love, my one thought and my dearest wish. Would that you were poor that I might give to you what you could not otherwise have! Nothing but pity for Marion’s children, for my children, can tempt you to ccme to me now. Come! I will make you love me, I will, and you must know it. No man ever gave to a woman a purer love than ™ Lumbage is Rheumatism of the back. The cause is Uric Acid in the blood. If the kid- neys did their work there would be no Urie Acid and no Lumbago. Make the kidneys do their work. The sure, positive and only cure for Lumbago ia Dodd’s idney ills heppy. That you will bid me come is the prayer of thine, SYLVESTER NEWCOMB. As the poor girl finished reading this letter she threw it, as she had done the other, in the fire. As she watched it burn, she said aloud: “I could be happy with him. His pre -ession would be more to him than he imagines, and he might not see I cannot love aS he does.”’ And she read the third letter: My Dear Dorothy—You were a little girl wher. I saw you first. I loved you then because your beautiful eyes were so like those God had given to the woman I was soon to marry. You know of the short year of happiness which was granted me, and you know what a long, weary life I have led since my wife died. You, dear, have been and are the one woman in this world to whom I can offer myself and what is left of my life and heart. Thou art not my first love. I loved before we met, But the vision of that summer dream Is pleasant to me yet. Thou art my last love, I will not say my best; My heart has shed its outer leaves To give t all the rest I do love you, not with the boyhood passion you may crave, but with the true and honest love of a man old enough to be your fat For years [ have loved y¢ tell yeu, ] want s t h ay nger man mig give y u 8 y ls wes a 3 j I not t vill be ale } | AS i Send me « 4 mise t r mT “Tle asks i ble to li } re » him ] u W t i te i ) s she s e, and while watehiug t ri she said: “TI can’t marry them ail,’ Taking a sheet of paper in her hand and smoothing it gently, as though giving it a little blessing, she dipped her pen in the ink, and, with a shudder, as though it were with her own blood she were writing, she wrote the one word: qc me! Folding the paper, she put it in an en- velope and sealed it. She then drew another sheet from the case before her and wrote upon it: My Dear, Dear Friend—I love you too well te give myself to you, and myself is all 1 have to gi God grant you may find a woman w rthy of ur honest | e prayer of Dorotry Sa N In closing this letter in an envelope and sealing it, she gave a sigh of relief and took another sheet of paper, on which she wrote: No woman living ever grieved more in saying to a devoted suitor than does ) r sincere ang friend, DoroTHY SakGENT. And she sealed this as she had the thers and went to the library, leaving three of her answers on her desk. Touching the bell in the hall as she passed through, the butler answered her eall, “James, tell Poole to bring me the three letters on my desk. She may stamp them first.” Her maid brought her the letters. Stepping to the table, she bowed her 1ead and whispered: “God help me to direct these aright.” On one she wrote, “John H. Norton, I3sq., National Club.” On the second, “Professor Newcomb, Cambridge.” On the third, “Hon. Thomas Sewell, Hotel Cecil.” “Give these to Jamtiegto post. I am not at home if any one calls this evening and will dine alone,”- Down a Mountain on an Avalanche. “We wer prospecting on a mountain in Vancoéuver,”’ said a Seattle (Wash.) man. “It was in the spring of ‘the year, and the earth was soft and wet. When about half way up the side of the moun- tain, without the slightest warning an area about 100 feet square seemed to break loose from the rest and darted with lightning speed down the mountainside. The avalanche seemed te be about five er six feet deep and carried with it trees, rocks and bowlders. Fortunately, myself and companions were close to the upper portion of the sliding land and thus escaped being struck. The ride down the mountain side on that avalanche was the most capid and perilous one I ever want to experience. I rode astride the trunk of a fallem tree, and my friends were clinging tenaciously to its branches. We covered a distance of about a mile in, I should say, about half a minute, al- though none of us held stop watches. The avalanche came to a stop near the foot of the mountain in a small valley, and, strange to say, none of us was hurt, save one fellow, who was struck on the leg by a bowlder after we had come te a stop. Talk about rapid traasit—that ridge beat anything I ever experienced @ heard of.” We twain together. Sometimes the hope, sometimes the fear, The song, the sigh, the smile, the tear, But evermore your love, my dear, And we twain together! Over seas of sad unrest We twain together; One’s head on the other’s breast— We twain together. Breathing one sweet or bitter breath, The light of life, the dark of death, Until the green sod covereth We twain together! —F. L. Stauton in Atlanta Constitution. —xe, Same Thing. At a woman’s euchre party the other day one of the fair players stopped the game with this query: “What do they call a little black cat in England?’ A number of the members had been in England, but they all had to give it up. The riddle maker smiled sweetly as she trumped her partner’s ace in true traditional style. “Can't guess? Why, ‘kitty, kitty’— just the same as anywhere else.”—New York Mail and Express. Food Piants, A wonderful reserve fund for the hu- man appetite is to be found in the veg- etable diet of the Klamath Indians. A novel variety of food, forming a menu unknown to the civilized, is offered in the pulp of the great yellow water lily, which is converted into a farinaceous food; in the weed known as goosefoot, which bears a black seed that is ground up for loaves and cakes, and in the ar- rowhead, which in the fall develops a starchy white tuber at the end of the roots, Not a Bribe. “You say,” pursued the chairman of the legislative investigating commit- tee, “that he resorted to no bribery whatever during the campaign, so far as you know?” “Yes, sir,” replied the witness; “that is what I said.” “Did he not circulate several boxes of cigars?” “Yes, sir, but them cigars wasn’t bribes. Here’s one of ’em. You can try it.”—Chicago Tribune. A Victim of Piles For 20 Yeare—A Constant Sufferer From Bleeding and Protruding Piles—Cured by Dr. Chase’s Ointment. In vain did Mrs. Jas. Brown, of Hin- tonburgh, near Ottawa, search for @ cure for piles. In Europe and America she tried every remedy available, but it remained for Dr. Chase’s Ointment to effect a cure. Mrs. Brown writes:—‘I have been @ constant sufferer from nearly every form of piles for the last twenty years, and during that time both here and in the Old Country have tried most every remedy. “I am only doing justice to Dr. Chase’s Ointment when I say that I believe it to be the best remedy ob- tainable for bleeding and protruding piles. I strongly recommend Dr. Chase’s Ointment t# mothers, or indeed to any person suffering from that dread torment—piles.” Physicians and druggists recommend Dr. Chase’s Ointment as the one pre- paration that will never fail to cure piles. It is guacanteed to positively cure piles, whether itching, bleeding, or protruding. 60 cents a box, at al} dealers, or Edmanson, Bates and Ce, Toronto. —_——— ee A CARD R. MACNEILL, M. D., Having 30 years experience in the practice of his profession, may be con- sulted on all branches of general medi- cine including the specialties. Office and Residence—Prince Street ‘hird door above Kindergarten Hall. Hours—g to 11 a. m. 1 tc 3 and 7 to 8 p. m. dy & wkly 3 mos, Prince Edward \sland— Illustrated is the title of an interesting little book on Prince Edward Island profusely illustrated with iilustrations from photo- graphs. For sale at all bookstores 25c. Sent on receipt of price to any address by writing the pub- lishers. The Examiner Pub, Co, Charlottetown. TO BE LET. That well-known bua.nees stand, form- erly known as the Centra) Hotel, contain< and the Prices. I Quart $1.25 2 + 1.50 eS. +4 1.75 4 .* 2.20 Retrigerators at cost. We guarantee ourspricesithe lowe». DO DD& ROGERS will gloves, we can We have Frenzh coats o ring required. New gold April 2nd 1900, eet ae JULY Is our great cleaning month our prices during this month be very low. We had a big June trade, we want to make July even better. If you want a good suit of clothes at asmiull price see us, we'll do better for you than you caa do elsewhere. In white and colored shirts, underclothing, collars, and You should see our job lot of white and colored shirts for 50c, worth from 9(0c to $1.50. Boots & Shoes at lowest prices. J. MACDONALD & C0, Where Worth and Low*Prices]Meet: do best. Beautiful Enamelld Belt and neck clasps, broaches, cuff links, nat pins, sear pins, coffee and tea spoons. them with British, Canadian, “Scotch, Irish"and farms. Also flag and maple leaf pins from 10c. and 15c. up. We have sold a number of w spectacles and eyeglasses, EW Tay lo OPTICIAN Oamero. Block.” Charlottetow ee straw Hat Enamel! IN 15 TINTS. Try acan, only 16 cents. SIMON W. CRAEBSE. Apri: 11th 1900. Walker’s Sorne ee ing 22 rooms, with large stable and yard, eituated near the market, on Rich Street. Rent moderate. Apply to T CAMPBELL edding rings lately, but’’as we are MAKERS of rings can quickly supply; any style of —— CITY HARDWARE STORE. --H'or-- Builders, Farmers, Mechanics, —HARDWARE—~— Paints, oils, glass, carpenters tools, all cheap FOR CASH. The celelated Norton Mac hine Qil. TERMS CASH. ' BB, NORTON & COLIMITED pa " Vs _ aie... % goomy ~< Am oe « GM EE: Rly Haat 1 ee 5 pio age : inte Sal * * Dee ee ~ - * oat ian Bt ed ee ane i i lh ea pie thie 7" FORE, TS, Ope 2 Pegg Fs va = eee e rest ete - itt iittala twin ican as SPER eee A ate : a * 4 * | -