(OVERNOR OF Josiah Crout sends an Open Letter to the Proprietors of INES SELERY GOnIP! —_———— nme a CS een SS SS ae ~~ ae an . ee he present Governor of the Green in State, thengh born in Can- bas lived in Vermont since he was mmold. lis course at the St. ry Academy was interrupted in lbyhis enlisting in Co. I Ist. Ver- tevalry. He was mustered in as Hlieutenant. promoted to captain lowing vear, and in 1864 made ofthe 26th New York cavalry. jorGrout participated in 17 en- ments, and was badly wounded in lish with the celebrated couteder. itder Mosby. bihe close of the war he entered the : od Senator in 1892. Celery Compound for the good Which he to-day erjoys. He ex bis conviction of the value of Mat remedy in the following few 4 #€ Vermont, Executive Depart- r July 5, 1897. Mie & Rich arpson Co , AM Can. Soc. C. E. ve College of C.vit Kogineeriag ~*'¥eruity, Ning Engineer for General Wor, ‘e Hydraulic, Sanitary 2nzineer- ritge De-igning. fa Charlouerown anit St Joho — tres, ondenis address to ltow 1, fe atrateineapenteammencinastintae wWU0D CEMETERY CO — -——- Mrmnal meeting of the Gherwood YCompany will tehed in the of the Y.M.C.A. Building, on Bayt? the 6th dav of April, ®clock, on. m., for the eleci on and tach other business as fore the meeting. 5 HENRY SMITH, Secretary. \ Way AN from the use of Pain’s Celery Compound successful treatment of the liver, I hereby indorse the preparation as a | reliable remedy that claims made for 1. It is a pleasare also to indorse the proprietors of it as one of Montreal's largest houses whose ation 1s above reproach JOSIAH GROUT. Life is too-short to waste one day of it sick abed, grumpy or ailing Indigestion, nervou-ness aud rheuma tism make one o'd before take the heart ney and beart disease, as well as hous diseases. Every one knows that che hea rt does the work of x pamp. From the life till death it never ceases blood into the artertres aud eve ry heart. duced therc folhows a grad aal teebleness, the beurt beats irreyn- i larty, tere ix x lose of lipuscalar torce, the limba | support, appetiie fails ‘comes unattairable. } ward @ heartier »noetite, sounder sleen, ficmer pulse, -hows j vigoratiog effee of Pein «’s Celery Coin- pound upon the nerve and sleep he- home anda tice of his brother, Gen. Greut, | very One owes it to #48 admitted to the bar. His serviee | his family, to fis friends, to his success Vermont fevislature embrveed | and happiness to get Mrs 1872, °4 "83 "86 and “88. Hel so Meakerofthe House for three | profound in strung and stay Worn-out nerea bring on more \ health and disease than al! other causes Ia their improveri-hed Provress toward heal th is steady and uniform when : pound is «mpleyed. + sweats—that sure imdic ation of growing nod of wasting deseasns— there is a noticeab le freedone from these nervous twitehing s of the mé-cles avd numbness in the lim b: eucsors of psrslyats and prinful chores. so common amoung overw orked, wortid peaple who are about to with some form nervous debility. Grout is deeply indebted to! put together. condition they fige-tion and The main factor in eradicating neuralgia rh+amatisn, pervourmes, beadeches and sleeplessness from the sysient consists in’making the nerves #ronger. Celery Compound js the nerve invigor- EMEN :.Havirg realized a benefit | nutrition plays the prineipal part in the e. MARY R. LORDLY C. p | ses seaman Wouldn't s2llit for $40 if he couldnt get an- other one. This is what a well known geutleman in the city says about his Pighland Range that has been in use for about 20 years. FENNEL & CHANDLER SN Be SEA SNE Se SEN SE TESS ESE RSIS a ARN I TO aS We sell them. THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, APF L 5. 1598 2 [Copyright, 1893, by John Alexander Steuart.} (Covotinued.) ’“ Your words are brave to come from so white a face,” he laughed. “ You look as if you had just seen your grand- father’s ghost.” “Get ready,” I said, biting my lip in my impatience, so that I tasted the salt blood. “Well!” he cried. “I declare I have never seen a better performance at a circus, though I must say it seems an odd taste to want two thrashings in ene day.” “ Get ready,” I repeated, “‘ for fear I kill you before you have a chance of defending yourself.’’ He stripped leisurely, taking time to fold each article daintily as he took it off, and to keep my purpose hot his tongue was busy with sarcastic com- pliments to my valour. At length he bowed elaborately, saying he was ready to receive any attention I cared to bestow ‘wpon him. The words had scarcely left his lips when he was reel- ing from the attack. But it was not a fight such as we used to have. It was a furious onset and a feeble de- fence. d can liken it to nothing but | The words had searccly icft his ims when he was recling from the attack, a crm struggling impofently in the claws of an infuriated tiger. He was stupefied and windless before the smile of disdain had time to leave his face. I was not conscious of his resistance. I did not feel his blows. I thought we had not well begun when he was an inert heap on the ground, and his friends’ were calling for mercy. I turn- ed from him to them, for my fury was still in raging flood. “ WHP ant™-ene of sou oF all of you together take his place ?” I asked. 2yt the challenge was not accepted, for no n:an cared to fight a demon, and so crying out upon caitiffs and cow- ards who could jeer, but had no heart for hattle, I re-dressed and went back to my rooms. With the passage indoors there came a switt and miraculous change. I had not been absent ten minutes, yet I re- turned to amother world, a world of convulsion and frightful upheaval. My father’s letter lay on the table, and beside it the ‘unfinished reply. Glanc- ing at them, my eye caught the words of supplication, the appexl for aid L sank into a chair 2nd buried my face in my hands. “And this is how I help,” I cried, with a choking sob. “This is my loy- alty to them I love. God forgive me !” And my anger went out in a passion of tears, and only remorse and a sense of folly remained. Having shattered my prorperts and Gisregarded my father’s advice as far es it was possible, I felt there was nothing to Se done but to go to him as quickly as might he and seek his pardon. Tt was not an agreeable nor indecd a promising mission, for, though my father was one of the most affec- tionate of amen, he was hasty tem- pered and at times narrow and arbi- trary. I was thwarting him in his dearest wish, and he would not easily forgive me, but go to him [ must, were it only to hear his sentence of banish- ment. Sol set ehbout packing at once, resolved to giart by fhe first coach on the morrew. CHAPTER fi. A PERSONAGE OF VAST IMPORT- ANC I ee I slept ill thet night. ‘The demons that attend the villow of the wretcred were hard at their work of torture. and on the morrow I rose with a mingled feeling of soreness and be- Wilderment. My boedilv injuries in- ceed now caused little inconvenience, but such was the dire confusion of my mind that I could not at once recall the precise causes of the tur- moil—the thunderbolt of the tetter, the Frovecation, the felly, the impendine ruin. The effort, when successful, did mot tend to raise the spirits. A Clear perception of the situation was simply a passing from the vague horrors of a nightmare to the cer- tainties of an obdurate fortune. But necessity has always 2 sti:aulant, and to certain stubborn natures calamity is its tonic. I was braced for what was in front, if not with Christian fortitude to bear my wrongs end hard- ships, at least with a desperate de- fiance, a determination, deen as the wounds im my soul, to retaliate with all my might upon my enemies. There might be no hope of victory, but there was a wicked satisfaction in pro- longing the conflict and rendering evil for evil even to the bitter end! In the raw atmosphere of the dawn, how- ever, my resolution could not keep me from shivering. My impatience to be off brought me te the noint at which I was to take the coach a good hour too early. That time, for the want of better employ- ment, I spent pacing to end fro on the pavement of Princes street, chew- ing the cud of very sour refiections, ers eee cance Abcut me stablemen shouted and swore, horses clattered into place, and fussy passengers made a commotion for no reason whatever, as fussy pas- sengers have a way of doing. At another time I should have been amus- ed, but just then babel and the tongues ten times confounded could not have diyerted my dismal and rankling thoughts. The morning broke brilliant and keen—caller, as they say in Scotland —with the wind coming briskly off the firth and the level sun striking with a dazzling radiance on dewy roof and tower and spire. At that hour the scene was one of transcendent beauty. Misery itself, which is egotistical and jaundiced, could not look without a thrill of exaltation on the romantic city flushing in liquid brightness, as if she had just arisen, dripping from a bath in the sea, and glowing, nay, blazing, with a thousand colours that made ner pinnacles points of fire and turned her ramparts and buttresses to eral and amethyst. Every moment there were fresh en- chantments, magical effects of gold ard rose and gauzy silver, so that Edinburgh, clustering about her hills and precipices, and broken into irides- cent peaks and fantastic pictured masses, seemed a poet’s cream, a city of fairyland. Yet already, in obedi- ence to the condition cf her existence, she was bending her neck to the prosaic yoke of a sordid routine. Her citizens were coming forth to their daily toil with the marks of struggle on their brows. A little while lonrer and the sun would look down on men and women striving with each other for a pittance to keep life in. By an easy rroccss I made their case my own, The castle alone seemed independent! end wunsubduable, lifted completely above the trivial and vexatious af- fairs of life. The sentinel’s§ steel gleamed on the hattlements with stir- ring and quickening suggestions of its own. I thought of the glory of carry- ing arniw, experiencing in imagination something of the shock of battle and the rapture of victory. Why should I not join the ranks of these who gay- jy sought renown with banner andj; What more natrral to the! ° music hand of a Highlander than the hilt of a sword? But as [ asked myself the question the trumpet blareld out its alien — ~— ne AS fame —~ ai snort of contempt. fiuis air toa ae vas perfectly well aware that when I tood his two legs supported the! pink of creation, When I entered, he did me the hon- our of staring hard at me, but almost immediately he brought the tips of his fingers superciliously together and turned his eyes toe the ceiling in a man- ner which said plainly he regretted demeaning himself with an utterly in- significant and casual stranger, and that he would ceriainly not do it again. As he was delivering himself silently but impressively of these sentiments and resolutions the landlord bustied into the room with a bow! of steaming. fragrant tocdy, a glass and a ladle, ail of which he set down with becoming ceremony on a small table specially placed at the right hand of the great man. The great man thereupon took his eyes from the ceiling and his ¢iv- quent finger-tips apart and condescend- ed to give a grunt of approval. Thus encouraged the landlord became ad- venturous, (To be Continued.) 7 2p FRIENDS PREVAILED A Nervous Toronte Woman Walked the Fioor During the Night for Hours at a Time—She Makes a Statement. TCRONTO, ONT.—“I was troubled with nervousness. It was impossible for me to keep still andif the spells came over me during the night I had to get up and walk the floor for hours at a time My blood was very poor and I was subject to bilious attacks, My feet would swell and I was not able todo my own house- work. I treated with two of the best physicians here but only received relief for a time. I became discouraged. One day a friend called and advised me to try Hood’s Sarsaparilla. I laughed at thead- vice but I was prevailed upon and pro- cured one bottle. Before I used it all I began to feel better. Itook several bot- tiles and also several boxes of Hood’s Pills. Now I can eat and drink heartily and sleep soundly. Hood’s Sarsaparilla has entirely cured meand also strengthened meso that I now do all my own work. I cheerfully recommend Hood’s Sarsapa- rilla to all sufferers from nervousness, weakness or general debility.” Mrs. H. F. Parm, Degrassi Street. I Tis: Hood’s Pills Sty operates "so conte. — Italian Ware House. Beal’s Corner Sor. Grafton and Ct, Geo. Sts | North side Queen Sqaarre suinmons to mount, and so instead of! gettin into warlike accoutrements | and putting my fortune to the arbitra- ment of blocdy strokes, as my Lord Stanley has it, 1 took my seat on the cvach as meek as any Quaker. We relled off with regal pomp, our flourish of trumpets and the festive style of our eduipage collecting a group of gazers at even the early hour of 6. But they did not long feast their eyes | on our splendour, for our steeds being fresh, and the charioteer fond of dis- piaving. we were soon out of the echo- ing streets and bowling merrily along the highway. The exhilaraticn was‘ immediate and exquisite There is something in freedom and rapid mo-! ticn and vivid surshine and the jovial companionship of irreverent coach- men and trumpeters and the admira- tion of blushing rustic maidens and mettlesome horses, gay with polished trappings and flying ribbons, that even the unfortunate and hypochondriac eannor resist. My spirits, chill and leaden as they were at starting, were | sevon in a glow, whichthey retained mcre or less until we drew up amid shouts of welcome at the Hound and Stag in Perth, where we were to pass the night. The Hound and Stag was a cozy old inn, with low black ceilings, yellow sanded ffeors, a cheerful display of kegs, copper kettles, crystals and oth- er utensils of good cheer, and an ap- petizing fragrance diffused by savory pans and bubbling, hissing ovens. It Was a place which the hungry guest entered with expectations and left with regret ani pleasant recollections. The traveiler can find ne such hospitable |! refuges now. We have palace hotels and great gilied dining-rooms and for- mality and grandeur and invisible land- lords and supercilicus waiters who cri- ticise yorr manners and expect exor- bitant tips fur doing it, but no com- fort like that of the Hound and Stag. That evening the entertainment was So princely that iong ere the supper WAs over half mv fellow travellers | were uprearionsly hilarious, and the host took no offence, Being in po mood for revelry, I stole Gut through the town and down by the ereen, leafy banks of the Tay. When I returned, some of the company had prudently gone to ved. others, less miwdful of appearances, were snoring serenely in their chairs in every var- iety of posture that the incontinent human frame can assume, and one or two, whom I took to be kirk elders on furiough, were discussing the doc- trine of predestination and ternal punishment in a perfectly amiable and fatuous manner over weli-plenished tumblers of toddy. But the chief thing to be noted 1 hat during my absence anotrer gues had arrived. That he was a man of consequence was evident, no less from his own Icfty and impericus mien than from the servilg attentions of mine host. He was booted and = spurred, as though he had just alighted from the sadcle. A siiver-mounted riding- whip and a pair of riding gloves lay be- side him on a table, and he wore the loose brown velvet coat affected by ! the better class of horsemen, High about his neck was a huge stiff collar, that held his head defiantly in the air and kept his ears rigorously at atten- | TO LET. gills ané portly waist proclaimed that | tion. An imposing bunch of seals dangied from his fob, and his rosy when h? was at home he knew how to dine. Yiis head was baid on the crown, and a ragged wart marred the sym- metry of his nose, which, however, Was flung in the air with a sempitern- Jules Robin | ; ‘Medicinal Brandy eee JOY & DAVIES. Wholesale Wine Merchants. j i ; Good Value for $1.00 Yes we cunsidcr those Chocolate and | Dongola *patent tip shoes, extra good value at $1.00 a pair. ; WE KNOW ereis no better value to be had, you il thin g so to, after seeing them, All si zes— 24 to 7, a R. KE. Jost Stamper’s Corner. ' We are not eoing ta move But we are selling Crockery just as cheap as we were. Special discounts on ull Oro-kery China and Glass now in stock, to make-room for sprirg importations, Also:—Fisst class Photographs made in all the leading styles, at the old stand, 0. LEWIS Exactly opposite the Nort, Side of Market House. Guartow S.aew....-.... _ Rooms in rear end of store, formerly ;ccenped by R. Bearisto, suitable for an (tive, possession at once. 77 W. D. McKAY ee ee er nes ee — = at Dose em connate, commen reaper Seperate ee sesame eis Sm a IRE PEO ea ot ed vee, eatepemcetaas ate aCe! OS LA Ie NL A parties see e 2 I Feo ee a