2 ett Cape Nome Gold Fields, TOURIST SLEEPER : HURSD Y¥ \ NI “ rte FARM LANDS \N DIAN NORTH VESP, HARDWOOD aod BITIER i ors and Sinehn, writ to J. HEATH, D ta A £:. John, N. B eee eee Geen || © AT MASON’S STORE You can get tne Isies' Canadian aod American ne vepapers received ® by mail each night. > Drop ia if you want eo a | / *e<s ese & paper or ¥ sar orbeok tor-al. Fruit, ; * Confectionery, Tobacco, Jigere ei. ‘ @ ‘W@een you're passing thin we: PR. H. Masen ~eG 32060602 @= TENDERS! FOR— indian River Chureh Teoders are asked for the construction and completion of St. Mary's Church, up to the 5th Mareh, next, to be addeased to undersigned and marked ‘Tender for Indian River Catholic Charch.” Pians and specifications can be seen on Monday, 5th February, pvext, at the Bistop'’s Palace and at the « 6Ge ROR BEE A Na mcr REGARDING | fice of Me W. | 4 ) . * THE DAILY EX.MINER, OV) iaka QE\VMA (NG Way @ WOME) nARLOTTETOWN, MARCH 5 1L9@@. heart will burn with hatred of her.’’ Picking up the morning paper she read one day of a young wife seeking the divor S ‘ourt, to her from her husband. It was an a beautiful woman had them, a ham is up, a art ‘ TrOTY = pevween broken wife’s he broke ms ' she had left him. FRR OI ROR CR RRR RR RRR I IRR RR IRI RAIA aT OO IOI ORR IIIT TR RAE RAR A ROR ARR ROEM ) ex » IP) A TAYrnN aE 1 AVNARem, ms \\4 ‘ton 1 }} ie 7 hs | OA Ataahy % fa TD P iL] I OY LWW iL ot : AT A . SDT 1 a ; By LAURA JEAN LIBBEY yiettte#4 9 Auth “ ' ' . 4 3b hb - Author of “When Lovely Maiden Stoops to Folly,” “A Broken 44% c eK x Betrothal,”’ “Parted by Fate.” “Parted at Itaad ie ie ae ee i de de the Altar,” etc., etc. eee tT : KKK aad RK SORIOEIEIREEEIO SADDDAD ADI ADDR ADDR : 10) c * KK tt RRR H HK KER HARRAH RR SH HSK KH HSK HS HSIN RH , KK FE RRR RE RE EI AOI IGOR 7 “= SZ SZ WF ) ‘YNOPSB, . She will win my love trom 7 E wieka, Gébbaiiiek or her sng en I shall die. ‘ a Pemberion. His daughters 1A be', and when the Squire ‘ TET , , CHAPTER VIII. ; er ter oa of the old home. Max = : Fort ia ) voung man merries her With a pertinacity truly wonderful “ofaces her into his family the —if it had not been so pitiful—Inez non ' © 1th disapprove of his mar~ | Clavering, the spoiled beauty, per ’ Vv at) ed him to marry Mies > Et 1V--(Contioued.) in-law and Inez, who were already seated at the table, the expected guest having failed to put in an appearance. Was it only her fancy, or did she hear a suppressed titter among the servants as she took her place at the table? There was amazement depicted up- on old Mrs. Forrester’s face; intense amusement on Inez Clavering’s. Florabel flushed a deep, burning red. It suddenly flashed across her that she had made a terrible mistake in choosing the pink satin dress. For a moment there was an awk- ward pause. Mrs. Forrester was look- ing at the gorgeous toilet with a black frown. ‘*You are evidently expecting visi- tors,’’ she said, coldly. ‘‘I am afraid you will be disappointed. We dine alone.’’ A moment later the and Max came in. Florabel raised her eyes, and read the same startled wonder when he saw her, door opened‘ on his face | that his mother and Inez had exhibit- C. Herris, Architect, Ch’! own, for ten lay*; afterwards thev can | sen at the | Parochial House, Sammeraile. A certi- | fied bank cheque of $59.00 will te required to atcompanoy ach tender, be returned if accepted, and forfeited if t accept, if cailed upon ihe undersigned does not wh ch will to accept the lowest or any ‘ender. D. J. GILLIS, P. P. indian River, P. EB. I., Jan 314t‘1900. Herald. = ————a a— © . eS Se = THE EXAMINER COUPON. PORTFOLIO OF Glimpses of Seuth Africa In Peace and In War. CU Cout this coupen tnd bring r ser it with 10c in silcer te the Portfalis Department ef “The Hx- smmer,’ and get par —_ 2 “Glimpses of South Africa Peac Wer. @ +e eo ee @ A OBT FB SRB8 Wanis, Lost Foune, && FILOST.—A gentlemans Astrakan fader please leave at this office WANTEU—a good steady bry, sge abvul Afteen or sixteen, who undtrecands taking @are of horses acd cattle, also general work &bout a house. Country boy pre erred. Apply at ExAMINER OTice. 52tr eee2 444030 @ @ 2° 8444 2 and in ee @ ©4286 64 O@.*'‘S4 G24 2 =e £4 glove FOUND—A ladies umbrella, Stick. Apply at this office. old mounted WANTED.—several dining rvom giris are wanted atthe Sydney Hotel, ~ydaey, ©. B Wages no object. Apply to # |.eRo! willis Sydney Hotel. tf SAFE FOR SALE.—A large office safe Apply at the city Hardware Stere. R, B. XN gor & Co, Lid. ANTED—By an experienced laundress— Wasning todo at her home Apply to Miss MeLean, Fitzroy Street, near V\ Toe St. eb 16, 4i HAT FOUNV.—On Prinee Sireeton Wed a night. Apply at 1m! EXAMINER ce. WANTED.—$200 per day sur, gentiemen Or ladies; special work; positive permanent; Téllable Arm, with best referenc®*; UOrecessary. address, S. Fry, Fiele Manager, Hamilton, Ont. a — LO3T.—On Tuesday night bear the BI 8 , Kent Street a fur mink. Finder will e@sc leave at this office .-~% 3ins. AGENTS —Prospectuses of War in South Afriea by Castell Hopkins anc Murat Had- Ww and authentic Life of Moody Dr. bar Chapman, Vice-Pres!:lent oody M@itnte are ready. Both sent for 25 cents. er8ons who never soldbooks niaking money 8t.—BRADL EY-GARRETSON( 0. LIMITED Brantford. ; LOST—In this city on the evening otf the = inst,adark green wallet with a sum of oney. Finder will be suitably rewarded by ‘earing it at this office, a FARM FOR SALE. 62 acres io a high state of cultivation = house and barn, only 34 miles from ar isttetown . PROWSE BROS. experience | j tender be not | nderer fail to | bind binsecl? | | | ed. She grew awkward and confused and nervous. Then the luncheon be- gan. Max noticed her pitiful and did his best, by kindly words and smiles, to put ease ; but knew, poor child, he was comparing her to Inez Clavering, who had, after her ride, donned a cool, plain muslin dress with a simple rose at her belt. His mother was dressed, as usual, in a robe of rich dark severely plain. No wonder, when he saw Inez Clav- ering’s sharp, black eyes scrutinizing Florabel, he felt his flush with annoyance, and he half wished Flora- bel understood’ better the manners, habits and customs of the class of people with whom, for the future, she had to live. He could see what a trying ordeal the luncheon was to his young wife. From the depths of his heart he thanked Heaven that the family was alone. “If any of my friends here, I should have been My wife would have been the laugh and the talk of every club in town.”’ ‘‘You made a little mistake, my darling, about wearing satin and diamonds to-day, did you not?’’ Max asked, when they were alone. His young wife looked up at him with tears in her eyes. ‘‘Oh. Max, I was so ashamed and so distressed,’’ she cried. *‘ What must they have thought of me; but you told me a recherche toilet, and thought you—you would think I look- ed best dressed as I was.’’ ‘‘Recherche does not always mean full dress, nor yet fine,’’ he replied. ‘It means what Miss Clavering’s dress was—distinguished, graceful, and so contrived to lovk beautiful without attracting attention.’’ ‘‘When shall I ever learn to be a fine lady?’’ she cried out: in despair. confusion, : She her at silk, face had been disgraced. ‘‘Tam so unhappy here. You must take me away. You must, Max, in- deed. ’’ ‘‘Nonsense. You ought to be con- t tented here, darling,’’ ne declared, briskly. ‘‘There is so much enjoy- ment to be found here. Now, if you were more like Inez—’’ Like a flash Florabel had wheeled around and fled precipitately from the room. Max Forrester looked after her in puzzled wonder. “What a beautiful, willfal fury my Florabel is developing into,’’ he told himself with a smile. ‘*Tf she has really set her heart up- on going away, of course, go it is,”’ he mused. ‘‘I shall not be able to get my business into shape much before a” fortnight, though, to take her. I wonder what is coming over Florabel of late. I am beginning to believe the old adage that a man can never understand a woman.”’ in her dressing room beyond, Flora- bel was pacing the floor with quick, nervous tread, her little hands pressed tightly over her heart. “5 can see how it will end,’” she muttered, piteously. ‘‘He is tiring little sisted steadily in her purpose of out shining the timid little bride who had won handsome Max Forrester, heir to the Forrester millions. Out of pure revenge upon Florabel, she made herself most attractive to him, and exercised all her powers 0! fascination when in his company. She directed against him the whole arti! lery of her charms, yet so adroitly he never once realized it. Although never very strong at re- ing the advances of a peautiful {lirt, handsome Max never dreamed of a flirtation with brilliant, piquant Inez Clavering, his mother’s guest. C1 Ene WAr- ; society to that of He met her smiles with smiles, rep artee with repartee. In justice t him it must be said, he behaved in the same manner to her when Flora- bel was present as when she wa | He was rather amused that this beautiful, dark-eyed girl seeimed to iac@avle young fellows who sotgai it pleased his vanity SO eace lv: } | : . 12 . s+ eo ob ~ d there 18S nothing in this work hay rail » - an? than raising a man’s 1 : ] + 1 . + . iiv. Iwhis heart, he cared noth He thought her bril! ne admired } & COM l:ments. but he was not ihe 7+} legay , +} tha ? in his } CATT twas hs carl ny? } Lora a eS NE bel’s; at the same time, if a pre ty girl adm? nim, ld he be so un vallant as io treat her eoldly becaust of that prerere} % Certainly not. Almost insensibly he drifted into a sort of half sentimental kind of flirta- tion, and Florabel, watching them, uttered no word—her pride kept her from that,—but there was danger in her brooding. Had the little known how it was to end, she would have drawn back in horror from the abyss toward which she was drifting. In the days that flew swift winged past them, Florabel found her power of self command rapidly waning. How she watched them when they and when she saw her poor child-bride vere together ; handsome young husband linger by the beauty’s side, her heart would ' beat so fiercely she nearly went mad | with the pain of it. ‘*T must not think of her,’’ Flora- | bel cried out to herself, one day; but ' her own heart answered: ‘‘Would to ; Heaven I could not! Her face, with its false, alluring, fatal beauty and winning smile, is before me night and day. Not think of her! Heaven help me! T believe when I am dead my a ne sane <> A mother and her baby can have lots ef fun together if they both are well and strony and hearty. Health makes them good. natured and happy; but all the delights of motherhood are lost if the mother is weak and ailing. Mothers of young children are subject to a heavy draft upon their physical resources and their health ought to be specially for: c fied, both before and after the baby is borin The most remarkable strength-sustainer for women is Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescrip- tion. It imparts health and endurance di- rectly to the organs, appendages and nerve- centers concerned in maternity. It makes motherhood perfectly safe and nearly pain- less. It protects the mother from relapse; makes her capable and cheerful; insures paar oe 0 ge cn for the baby; and completely reinforces the vitalit alee and child. diet iae: It is the only scientific medicine devised by an educated experienced physician for the express purpose of strengthening and healing woman's special organism. The reasons why it is the most perfect and successful remedy of its kind in the world are more fully exp/ained in one chap- ter of Dr. Pierce’s great thousand-page illus- trated book, ‘‘The People’s Common Sense Medical Adviser,’ which will be sent free, paper-bound for 31 one-cent stamps to nay the cosi of customs and mailing only. Or handsomely cloth-bound for 50 stamps. Mrs. F. B. Cannings, of No. 4320 Humphrey St. St. Louis, Mo., es: “I am now a happy mother of @ fine, health baby girl. I feel that our ‘Favorite Prescription’ and little ‘ Pellets’ Lave done me more than anything I have ever taken. Three months previous to my con- finement I began using your medicine. ? took three bottles of the ‘Prescription.’ Conse- ences were I was only in labor forty-five min- utes. With my first ~— I suff 18 hours, then had to lose him. eonly lived 12 hours. For two years I suffered untold agony, and had two miscarriages. The ‘Favorite Prescription’ | saved both my child and rayself,”’ ‘‘T could not leave Max,™ she mut- tered, with a dry, hard sob. ‘‘My ] curse is, that I love him so well could not live without bim.’”’ Day by day the iron of jealousy en- tered deeper and deeper into the soul of the poor little bride, and one’ or two events happened which fanned it into a fatal flame. There had been a grand wedding in the neighborhood, and, as is quite customary in some places, each lady present received a portion of the bride cake as a souvenir of the happy event. ‘*What a pity it is, Florabel, that your days of romance are over,’’ said Inez, with a little, low laugh, as they parted for the night. ‘‘I intend to dream over mine,’’ she added, ‘‘and if there is any truth in that quaint old superstitious belief, I shall be- hold in that mystic land of dreams my hero, my future husband. I will tell you in the morning whose face I see, providing I am not destined to be an old maid and see no one at all.’’ ‘*Why shouldn’t I dream over mine, too?’’ thought Florabel. ‘‘At eight- een the romance and love of one’s life should be just beginning—not ended. ’’ That night the curly golden head rested above the mystical souvenir, yut Florabel did not see the face she had expected to see in her dreams. Instead, she saw a black, yawning abyss, upon whose very brink she stood. The sun had scarcely peeyed into the eastern windows ere Inez Ciaver- iug came hurriedly into Florabel’s beudoir (To he continued.) No Cure for... Bright’s Disease in its advanced stages—The Rea- son Why-—Danger Prevented by the Timely Use of Dr. A. W. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills. To understand Bright s Disease 1s to know that in its advanced stages it 1s past the reach ef human aid. The cells of the kidneys undergo a wasting change, which leaves them dead so far as performing their functions is concerned. Just think of having the kidneys dead. Think of-the poisons left ia the system when these organs could no longer perform their duties as filters of the blood. It would be difficult to conceive of anything more dreadful, and yet this is the goal to which ——— of neglected kiduey disease must lead. en the back aches, when urinating is difficult or too frequent, when there are de- posits in the urine after standing for 24 hours, there is no time to !ose in procuring Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills. It is not claimed that they will cure Bright's Disease in its last ey are an abso- lute cure for kidney disease, and so long as the kidneys are not entirely wasted away they will give new strength and vigor and enable them to resume their duties of filtering the blood. Dr. Chase's Ree Pills will stop backache and headache in short order by re- moving the cause, and will positively prevent Bright's Disease. One pill a dose, 25¢. a box. At all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co, Toroate. \Ve have just received a lot o ‘B ahmiu” Tea from Horaee Haszard 13). (Wholesale Agent) who has “e ide d to go out of the retail business. We will handle this Puro India Tea in ly future and our price is 25 cents per pound. 1 «i Tea has made a name for *+<elf y ts peculiar flavor and quality d to none, and is well known ail both town and co. nt). ROS ave SEER & QUFP Queen & KiogSquare Grocers. War Pictures War Pictures Call at our office and see a seric# of most interesting pictures connected with South Africa and the war, These pictures are issued in weekly parts price ten cents each part. If you're interested call and see; they’re weil worth the money. Only a limited number received each week. The complete series will make a valu- able book when bound. Explanatary reading matter ac- companies each picture. The Examiner Pub. Co. © THAT THE a | FAC-SIMILE. SIGNATURE a Tar Avegetatile Preparation for As - | simiiating the Food and Reg ula - ling the Stomachs and Bowels of INFANTS “CHILDREN Promotes Digestion, Cheerful- ness and Rest.Contains neither m,Morphine nor Mineral. PDY Ltd OT NARCOTIC. IS ON THE fs | | verso Ii WRAPPER Pianphin Sad OF EVERY Rodale lis ~ BOTTLE OF' CASTORIA Castoria is put up in one-size bottles only. It ‘Nlsrhore Sade £ m Seed ~ Geet, lis not sold in bulk. Don’t allow anyone to sell Aperfect Remedy for Constipa- |[ Fn othe Stomach, Diarrhoea, you anything else on the plea or promises that it is “just as good” and “will answer every pur- ~A. Worms Convulsions, Feverish- pose,” 4a~ See that you get O-A-8-T-0-B-I ness and LOSS.OF SLEEP. mi imile {s on eee LA 7 6 E e Wray ee ee eee ¥ac Simile S:¢gnature of NEW YORK. FoGas ests reads old. 3h DoseEs —3501 NTS EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. SS | & ‘yet. DP Ont Photography ae |), aii the Latest Designs Our customers are Our Carbon portraits are unriveled. all delighted Be sure and visit the leading studio. Cr. Et. COO, Queen and Grafton Sts. Ch’town. { Slaughter Prices ——Still Continue wee AT THE Great Fire Sale Ard Until Everything is Sold The rush since the sae opered has been tremendous and we have been unable to wait on half the oe who thronged our store, and everyone is delighted with the bargains they get If you have not visited us, COME now and get your share of the snaps from 25 to 50 p. cy on everything. Boots and Shoes, Gents’ Furnishings, (weeds and Flannels, Hats and Caps Cuffs, Neckwear, Blankets, Ready-made Clothing, Rubbers and Overshoes, Underclething, Shirts, Collars, Trunks, Valises aud Wraps. Everything Must Go, and Go at Once. Come and share the bargains at the Great Fire Sale. Will be ogen till 8 every evening. R.H. Ramsay % Co 7 ates '