a THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, FFBRUARY 17, 1898 Watch Makes a very acceptable and use- ful Xmas present. We are showing a nice assortment of reliable time keepers at fn (ERY t ub, We will be pleased to have you call and examine our Waiches be forepurchasing,as we may Save you We Guarantee Every Watch. W. N. TANTON JEWELER Gt. Geo. Ss a Extensive Sale of Dry Goods and General Merchandise ———ne am The undersigned having taken posses- under a Bill of Sale, trom the McKay Woolen Company to them of el! the tweede, ready made clothing goods and al general merchandise of the said Company eoptained in ita store ou the corner o Queen and Grafton Streets, in Charlotte- town, and in the mill of the said company on the Malpeque Road, hereby give to tice that they will receive sealed tenders for the purchase of the whole of the said goods and merchandize, up to Monday, tweaty-eighth day of February, instaat,at the hour of two o'clock, p- ™. Lists of stock to be tendered for can be seen on application to Mr. Daniel Gordon, at the store of Messra. Gordon & McLel- lan, Queen Street. The goods can be ex- amined any day on application to Mr. Gordon. Tenders marked “McKay Woolen Co. | Tender,” can be addressed and handed in or mailed to Mr. Daniel Gordon, Char- lottetown. On the acceptance of any tender, cash will be for the full awvount tendered required, Lhe undersigned do not bind themeelves te accept the highest or any tender. JAMES A. LEAMAN, ROBERT 4. KDWARDS By W.S. Stewart, their Solicitor. Ch’town, Feb 14— | CHARLOTTETOWN Business College ae ANP ams Writing Academy Let the searchlight of practice illuminate the dark piaces of Theory. THOROUGHLY Progressive Practica! a Institution, in which young men and women are not only taught Book keepivg (in alliis applicationsto commerce) both by single and double entry, but are trained how todo business, oy actual business transact- ions. The students act as buyers, sellers, traders, bankers, book-keepers and account- ants, in actual business operations, ard the eurrency issued by the (oliege Bank and the mdse issued fromthe Emporium, are used in bopa fide business transactions, just the same asin mereantile and banking 1» ouses. Book-keeping in itself may be learned at home, but a knowledge of how to transact business, cannot be thas acquired. That our course system of training is eminently pract- ical write for testimonials trom business men, and from siudents who are now hold- ing lucrative and responsible positions. SUBJECTS: Book-keeping by single and do tble entry {theoretica! and practical,) Actual Business Practice, Business Penmanship, Business Correspondence, Commercial Arithmetic, Commercial Law, Raiiroading, Steampoat- ing, Banking, (actual practice iu the College Bank,) Typewriting, Shorthand and Naviga- Non, FACULTY: L. B Miller, Principal, Teacher of Book- keeping, Arithmetic, Business Practice Business Correspondence, ‘ltypevriting ard Navigation, J. W. Coulson, (Vice Principal,) Teacher of Railroading, Steambvoating, ranking, Ac- counting and Actual Business Practice. J. Harry Williams, Teacher of Busines Penmanship. wm, Mvuran (licensed), Teacher of Short- hand. George S. Inman FE Donald & Inman) L Law. for circulars and {ull information, write or apply to q,. (Law Firm Me- ‘Lurer on Commercial L. B. MILLER; Principal, All interested are cordially invited to call atthe cotlege and inspect our system of training, and work iu general. SUGAR. 350 bbls Granulated. 300 bhis Bright Barbadoes. bbls Refired Bright. N. RATTENBURY. Jan. 25 98—eod 4wks—pat. LEGAL CARD _ WARBURTON & McKINNON Barristers, Attorney’s, Notarys Public. Com missioners for State of Massachusetts ac., & C, OFFICES". Camero 1 Block, Charlot‘ etow Brennan Building, Summerside 1 Keur oireet, Georgetown, i. B. WarBURTON, B, A., D, C. c. ). A. McKINNonN, ie ay ee 2h’town Doe, 1,1897— law& wim Hur nao j } SOPRICHT . 1897. o THE AUTHOR __ ; i . (Contin»ed. ) of terror and tried to dissuade her. strenuously that ust go. At last, grown premature- grew prematurely wise because he saw that Laurel was in CHAV-TER VL When Craymer left her, on the day before the ladies came to the rancheira, Laurel went with him to the edge of the little cleared spot from which she could watch him all the way down the hill and into the trail that led through bunch grass across the arm of the great desert. Few birds are found in this desolate region, but one was calling to its mate from a near tree and the cry throbbed passionately through all the air. She ! watched until he had waved a last adien | and ridden swiftly into the encircling shadows. Then she turned her eyes up- ’ | ward. Thesky wascloudless save a few fleecy lines that stretched out toward | ker beloved mountain. She reached ort her arms and a look of trust like a di- | vine radiance came upon her face. ‘*Take keer o’ him,’’ she said. *‘Keep both on us—him ‘n me.”’ She had not been prepared for this new experience. No girl friend had made her a confidant; no book had come in her way which gave the mod- ern keen analysis of a maiden’s heart when first it feels the emotion of love. If such a one had fallen into ber hands, it would not have enlightened her. She could not read the simplest words, The few rude folk in her home had never coupled her name with that of any of the swarthy hunters who, at intervals of many weeks, had climbed the moun- tain path. How desolate she had been without knowing it! The child came seeking her. It put up its arms and cried piteously. She clasped it to her heart and turned to as- cend the path. The next morning she said to her heart, ‘‘He beant comin today.’’ But as the time came when she used to hear his step, she stole to the spot under the blasted pine whence she could see out over the level waste beyond. ‘‘He beant thar,’’ she said, but she smiled over at the mountain and up at the soft, bright sky. The next morning it was the same, and the next, and so on for many days. Longing gains strength by delay. The days could not come fast enough. She looked eagerly across the lowlands, for her heart had gone that way, and her She could watch him all the wey down the hilt. eyes must of necessity follow. yet no shadow touched her, She went about in her life of toil and privation while ber heart was filled with a sacred quiet. Once could not pity ber even when knowing the untruth in the object of her thought. It was not possible. trust as she did was to walk the borders of limitless bliss. It could hardly occur to ber to question. Every morning and every evening she smiled as she sent a greeting over to old Mount Hood and up toward the high, serene sky. The weeks dragged by. A new, strange tremor possessed her heart. A pathetic, farreaching look went out from her eyes. The good night to the clouds and to the mountain began to hose its joyous ring. One morning she went much earlier | to the cleared space and waited longer. Even then the sigh that she gave was But 7s | | | | } | | ' i j } { j } \ To | ‘ } j ‘ j i } ‘ ‘ i ' | 1 | not for herself. Something was holding | him; he could not come. It did not en- ter her thought that he might not come even if the something had broken its grasp. Her nature was one of trust. All this waiting did not help her to learn one letter of doubt. ‘He be sick,’’ she asserted with sad conviction. ‘Th’ long heat, it be allers bringin fevers.’’ Then she stretched out her hands, and, though she did not know that bending the knee meant anything, she knelt. Her eyes covered themselves with a mist of tears and re- fused to see even her beloved mountain. The next day passed without his com- ing. Her thoughts grew somber. Her bright manner intermitted. In the late afternoon che called the youth to her. **I be goin t’ see him,’’ she said. { He was filled with ap undefined sense | She only insisted the more ehe u ly old already, he trouble. EZc went to the grandfather gud wheedled him into letting them take the beasts and go for a long ride ovcr the cld desert trail. ° TAP omy They roda swiftly into the ‘‘scaboy desert,’’ with its alternations of clayey and sandy soil. On through the gray sagebrush and the greasewood—bypo- crite of another and better shrub. The rocky hollows were dry aud empty as if winter snows had never melted in them t r thousands of cattle which the herder turns in winter upon t rt to crop the bunch grass that } — } . 4} j ntl vs LOT a y BI l m i The gray and dismal ride was in har- mony with the thonghts of both. Laurel was impelled by a new feeling in which no thought of herself stirred, and which to a terrible certainty that some ed her beloved, to serve as drink f: 1@ des grew in unknown evil encompass holding him in thrall. When they reached McAlvord’s fer- tile land, they rode more slowly until they came upon astream. Here they dis- mounted, and the youth staid to water the beasts and to tether them behind a clump of bushes, where they could browse the juicy grass upon the borders of the stream. Laurel went swiftly forward along the shaded drive. The sun was gone, but the afterglow spread its radiance a a { over the earth. As she neared the ranch- | iera the sound of happy voices greeted her. She stopped suddenly as if deter- red from her purpose, bent her head and peered between the branches of a thick shrub. So fair a vision of life had never be- fore greeted her eyes, nor had it enter- ed her happiest dreams. She caught her breath as she looked at the long veran- da, gay with fringed hammocks and great lounging chairs and dainty wil- low rockers. Bright rugs were strewn over the floor. Easkets of flowers de- pended from the outer reof line. Long ,ines swung slowly in the evening air. {uman forms were the jewels in this enchantiug scene—strong men and graceful women. Her switt glance found the one she sought. ‘‘Th’ tall un’’ was not there to Givert her attention. She read with anxious eyes, but saw no line of care or illness upen the gay features she had jgarned so well. He was the center of the group and leaned lazily back in a great armchair, look- ing up with a smile into the faco of a girl who stood Leside him and who wore 1 aus soitand white as the one worn by the snow mountain. Ti nod to assent to something this cone asked of him, fer she went through a doorway, upon either side of which hung fleecy curtains, and re- turned with a etrange something in her band—something that she held out tc hina end that he tcok with another sitile into her face and a few words which Laurei could not hear, they were so low. see toved strange instrument his fingers across it, drew she bad come to ly with the The one carele: and, moving forth a tender sound. such as had never before been heard gs the unseen listen- er. It was not like a bird’s voice, nor a choir of birds. It was not like the sigh- ing of the wind through the firs. It was better and sweeter, for it seemed the spirit of each blending and interchang- ing and softened until fitted to minister to that fair company. He began to sing some words in an mknown tongue which thrilled her through and through. Something that. because of the look upon the face of that other girl, Laurel knew he was singing to ber outof all that happy group. And this wasa girl young like her- self, tall and slight, with proudly car- ried head, but fair imstead of. dark— heavenly fair, with hair that gleamed like ‘‘a bit o’ wheatfield when th’ san be shinin,*’ poor Laurel said to herself. She had never before seen any one with golden hair. Thatof the child was flaxen, but dun of color like the fog that sometimes lay dank and cold about the mountains in winter, while this was gloriously warm like the sunlight and strayed over the fair forehead in little waving lines. There must be something to make a heart stand still at the first sight of a face crowned so shiningly. One may love the dusky masses better, but he is gure to be arrested at sight of the other. If the English really received the com- pliment of which they are so proud when, in the slave market of ancient Rome, the good St. Gregory was so stir- red at sight of a fair northman as to call him ‘‘not Angle, but an angel,’’ then what must have thrilled the innocent being whose heart was 80 in sympashy with all beayty, whether of earth pr sky? ~ —s. ‘Ihe locks andthe Gress cf this girl were like those from another world than Lazrel’s—a world to which the heart out in the shadow must own that he, too, belonged. Herself was the alien one. As she looked and as she listened to the tender music she began to under- | stand. The afterglow died suddenly. Tinted lights shone out from an inner fair scene. One by one the others went within, but those two remained. The music ceased. He laid the instrument upon the rug beside him and held out his hands, The bright one arose and sat ®bon the broad arm of his chair and laid herarm about his neck. He lifted her other hand to his lips. His head was against her shoulder. His words were low, but Lau- rel’s heart interpreted the tone. Her in- nocent soul was stung. A elty shortened her breath. God be mer- ciful to a young heart when it leatns its first lesson in the untruth of life! She sank upon her knees and with a faint cry would have failen but that the youth caught her about the waist and dragged her along the turf beside the drive, so that their footsteps made no sound. He untethered the horses and lifted Laurel upon her own. They were soon in the edge of the desert, where he drev | freer breath. But when her beast pans- ed, unheeded by her, to browse a bit of | chemise wood he dismounted and pull- ed it hastily forward. Then he tied the two tethering ropes together and led the animal upon which the young girl sat in almost utter unconsciousness. The desert solitude upon one hand and the deep, mysterious mountain sol- caped from this evil thing. Dizzy and panting though she was, it still lay up- on her heart. She opened her mouth and gave a prolonged cry. Again and again the piteous wail rang ort antil she grew hoarse and could no longer cry. But,the evil would not be driven away. It clutched at her fiercely. All her thoughts grew cramped into one sad, mad thought that reached as high as the sky and that laid hold of the silence below. This straixwas too much for even her vigorous organism. A gurgle came in her throat, and a stream of warm blood rushed through her lips. She saw it with unstartled eyes. She was going to die, then, as the deer died that came panting into the mountain path with blood on its delicate lips. Everything faded from her sight. ‘The light went out. Was it like this to the pretty deer? After a time the light came back. A little later she could lift her head and | look about her. She was not dead, then, like the deer. It was not so well with ber as that. Nothing was left to her but to go back into her old, poor life, older and poorer than ever since she knew | that it was so. Nothing but to goon bearing the common fretting of the meager days without faltering. A thou- sand pitiful noes were wrung from her soul. Such silly demands as were made upon her! Such foolish, fitful, peevish words as her poor ears had often to hear! Her spirit shrank from the dreary out- look. The dusk came on. The outline of trees and rocks grew sharper at the summit and became an indistinct mass below. But she was not afraid. She had often shivered at imagined hearing of the bears’ slow tread and the steal- thy spring of the panther. But they had no terror for one in her mood. Death in any form would be easier tonight than the life which stretched so blankly be- yond. She must go back. They surely would be calling her. She arose and began the descent, but her knees were weak and her feet slipped. It was a difficult thing when one was strong and well, but since she had almost died how strength- less she was and how short her breath. She clutched at the branches as she went, and she who had hardly known fatigue must new rest often. There was no danger of losing the way, for as she came into cach clear spot she looked for the snow mountain and guided her steps as the mariner looks at bis star aud makes sure of his watery path. ‘*‘Laurel!’’ shoe heard. ‘‘Laurel!’’ It was the youth. He was seeking her. She who had called gayly morn- ing and evening to the clouds and to the mouniin could hardly find voice to let him know where to find her. He came at last, and when he tock her hands they were so cold that they chilled him. Leaning upon his shoul- der, she reached the hut and sank upon her bed and laid the whole night through without even trying to lift her head. (To be Cortivued.) A Great Host Of people testify that Hood’s Sarsapa- Pilla has done them untold good. It has purified the blood of millions. It con- quers scrofula, cures salt rheum, over- comes dyspepsia, rheumatism and ca- tatrh. It builds up the system, relieves that tired feeling, gives vigor and vitality. Hood’s *% parilla Is the Best—in fact the One True Blood Purifier, Hood's Pills 3.550 Baresnoniite _Ladiee shoes from Tic pair ap. Special discouat on all lines of shoes, —R. K. Jost. sense of cru- | | | FROM INDIA AND CEYLON... “qqsiS TEAS Ply,» For Guests If you want a really fine, full flavored, rich “‘ bodied ’’ tea, to offer your guests, or for the family circle, get * (e Elephant Brand—of course the more expensive grades are best —but all are good pure tea, and whether you get the 4oc., soc., Goc., 70C’ Ol $I. per lb. grades any of them are BEST OF TEA VALUES old ct above prices by all good grocers, in 14 &: 1 Ib. cir tight lead packets. Leg Always Pure, Always Frese". ” 4 } i ; d Try Empire Blend—it will a good cup of Tea? please you. Forsale by T. J. MORRIS The celebrated P. D. Corsets are abso tely without rivals, avd occupy the FIRST rv- SITION in the world’s corset trade, P. D. Corsets are tailor cut and band finished, and only the very best materials are used in manufacturing the nonpareil goods. Thee have been awarded 10 Gold Medals, and received again the Highest Prizes iv Brussels 1£97, which shows the merits of these corsets. To be obtained st all leading Dry Good Stores, from $1 to $30. per pair. 4 Fe res ere ore x3 Aes ae EES Se WE nae a Remnant Sale Remuants of Cvercoatings Remnants of Trouserings Remnants of Suitings Remnant of Vestings Remnants of Ulsterings Everythin in the shape of winter goods at cost. Now is the time to secure the best goods in the city below bargain prices. JOHN MACLEOD &CO MERCHANT TAILORS. —————S ea HOCKEY and Genuine Acme Club at 20 per cent. off. Hockey Sticks at same discount. SIMON VW CRABBE STOVES & EARDWARE Walker s Corner ’ ee ANNE AE OGRE ese tc ABE I