THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, DECEMBER 7, 1898 .4 Gee SeSeSeSeSeSr SeSeSeseseseseseseseseseses ese se se Ses eSeSesr Sy ru oeaton’s Bargain. SeSeseseseseseseses SYNOPSIS. Mrs Winingtoo, Lady Mary Hay, Leslie Beston and Jack Maxwe!] are members of Jondoa’s emart s8oeiely set, Beaton is ° . awe heiug poof Mre W y's Often e. reso! ves ‘ wer at xdvertisment tbat } promis t him: a rich wife. Lady low whon featon admires, ! aod Max well were los eres before ¢ rmarred. Beatoo, with company wit! Matt introduced the heires Edith Vivian—by the latter’s | Mary is 44 Mre W to ar 18 guard . CHAPTER IIL. r RELEAGL (Continued, ) ERED. nuisance being kept he re week week.” said Jack Mait land to himself as he walked slowly up | Regent Street one bright a fternoon, whe: all the world se crowding to shop | “T+ is «an ™ < i eT Lie ¢ Q d disp themselves in the | g ghfar« he shop wincows lent with every luxury that | ild buy or human ingenuity d » pavement thronzed with y, well-dressed and pedes: | ims. “There's no sight of its kind like ill-dressed oa mused Jack, “but I a every day, un ‘ | i I Wor to do. y for mx to be away } g There is not much | a y few days’ fishing ‘ h that n ainnsement : quiet | which is more th in be said of some here.” | So thinking Maitland approached Oxford € ng to call on a New Zea- ' lat ilntance low settled in Ty- burnia. Suddenly a look of surprised attention re i the careless glance with which hy | var.el t! is h ey Ss ra ad by a lit e in Wi roof anda bi TI er \ one of a group gazing into a window full of the I nd ry tions in the shape of bonnets, wreaths and caps, and was ir too much absorbed in contem- plation to notice Maithand, who had im- ie tely recognized Edith Vivian. Hle was quite startled to see her in t d thors } e, Coun- t d to him un: ] to 1 e alone in on f } yu London streets, and he ened give her t protection of his companio1 Dp. “Mi Vivian, y I hope you remem- ] t! I was luced by—’ Oo , } vith r brig] eee e and ; , ag n h fi r over hre chi “Il am vt glad to see you. l was just beginning to fear I had take» a Ww g turn, that round place is rather puzzling and you will show me the be:t Wa) k Regent’s Park.” “7 lt be n ha py to assist you i How is dr y Wary. it that you are a ee ed Jac Maitland, gravely. oa M is ve unwell; she has t g lfully for some day@ from ne » I walked down to ‘ 7 te go f't1 } } new pers t l <Img 1 > . a, ft I ! ind I hay my way, I am afraid 5 j eal . ih, fait f 1 to ibout alow " *\\ rhere is nothing to fear, I t very little money, and no one ever vith me,” et poms — oe enn a SiGK HEADAGHE Positively cured by these Little Pills, They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, indigestion and To Hearty Eating. A per: fect rem: ly for Di-zin 2, Drowsi- ness, Bad Taste in t!¢ Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORF7D LIVER, They Regulate the Bowel. Purely Vegetable. Small Pill, Small Dose. Small Prico. Substitution the fraud Uf the day, \ = ~~, is, Nau See you get Carter's, Ask for Carter's, Insist and demand Carter's Little Liver Piflg — —_-—- —_—_ BY MRS. ALEXANDER, | | Le ci, £ GO HOT NKE LO see you bY your- self. Will you walk or drive?” “I would rather walk, if you will wal! with me. als ] get so little walking. Mm very wear t ; and T arisome to <t all day in # : . es § ay in fw house,” ’ “Very well, let 0s walk.” returned and t unconscious natural manner, Maitland, amused uched by hey OF ane uy Pose , On ase aan : Jou DAVE SCS Chougn of te the shops? Indeed I have not. I never dream- ed that clothes could be so dclightful that ] should want to buy things so niuch,” she said, laughing; “but I do n> want to look at them any more just now, if that is what you mean. |] have been tvo long away from Mrs. Miles.” “Very well, let us make for Camden Town at once. I think you lived in Camden Town. al] that way?’ “Oh, it is not far; I used to walk miles du the country.” Little more \ said till Maitland had viloted her across Oxford Street, and they had reached the comparative quiet of Langham Place. Maitland noticed the smooth, elastic step of his companion, the and of her said you Can you walk ese grace movements; they indicated, he thought( syn metry of | form; while her sil Which was not from lack of intelligence, but from th absence of any effort to speak unless she had something to say, had a soothing ef fect. “I suppose you ride when yov are at home?’ began Maitland, who was cu i- ous to learn something of her past. “Not now. When I had my fathe; ; . . . w “ of With me we had a dear old white pony, to espouse her cause! ond I used often to ride on him, some- times without a saddle; his back was quite broad and comfortable. 3ut one day, afterward, you know” (he under- steod that she meant after her fate death. “Mr. Dargan « dowt saw poor old Bob feeding in the little field near the cottage. Then he said he was no use, and sold him, and let the field fo strangers, so we have only the gerden and orchard now.” “I dare say you were sorry for the pony.” “Sorry! I was sorry. It made me hate Mr Darzgan,” en} hati ally. “Indeed, I shall never Jike him: I have told him S04 but I am almost inclined to f rood, kind Mil it know Miley.” him for sending my live with me. I do 1 without wh become of me i | | cination for him. i | disposition toward the lonely little heiress, The athletic wotnatri wo man of the day. he past twenty years has seen wonderful pro- gress in this re- spect 7 is Lic That tkis tendency will re- sult in a more ro bust womanhood, better able to bear the burdens and duties and pleas- ures of life, there can be no ques- tion. But this result will be ac- complished by the building up of those women already in rea- sonably robust heajth, and the killing off of their weaker sisters. Athletics will make a naturally strong woman stronger ‘nd healthier ; they will make a naturally + sickly woman weaker:and more ana ‘f indulged in to excess, may fatally itally. e an who suffers from weakness au. is ’ the delicate and important or- sais t’-ctly feminine, cannot hope to reco. J neral health through ath- letics, si is she remains locally weak. \ woman ring in this way is unfitted to bear the strain of athletics just as much as she is wafitied to bear the duties and burdens of wifehood and motherhood. There is a sure, safe, speedy and perma- nent cure for all disorders of this descrip- tion. It is Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescrip- tion. It acts directly on the organs con- cerned in wifehood and maternity, making them strong and healthy and vigorous, It soothes pain, allays inflammation, heals ulceration and tones the nerves. It fits a woman to indulge in, and be benefited by, ni] All good tmedicine stores sell it. Your valuable ‘Favorite Prescription’ cured me of female weakness and a catarrhal dis- charge from the lining membrane of the special parts,’ writes Mrs. T. H. Parker, of Brooklyn, Jackson Co., Mich. “Iam now perfectly well.’ Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure consti- pation. Constipation is the cause of many Cut | 1d you cure the O: ll gentle laxa- tive, ro a mild cathartic. Druggista | sell the. ani ti iz is ‘‘just as good," a anil ompassion and tendtrn toward hfs c young companion, and yet he could do nothing to help or save her! his initer- | ference would be worse than useless. If he could induce Jean, Mrs. Winington But could he? He thoroughly distrusted that charm'ng personage, although she still had fas- At any rate, he would call on her and endeavor to find her real All this passed through his brain rapidly, and he said aloud, “Mr. Dargan vow ” appears a very potent person. “He is,” said Miss Vivian, with a lit- tle sigh; “I cannot get any money except by his consent. I do not know what he will think of all Mrs. Winington talks of buying for me.” | Have “T have no doubt Mrs. manage him if any n. More desultory but friendly sympathe- Winington wil one Ci tic talk brought them to the door of Miss Vivian’s temporary abode. “Willi you come in?’ she said; and j would | Maitland, with an odd feeling that he in some way trespassing, followed a — that is a pet name for Mrs. | pee into a small sitting-room of a most Miles!’ Miss Vivian gave al tle nod of ‘Sodging-house” ofder, only saved fiem ee rather alarming to | &/ vulgarity by its neatness and the ab- young lady confess that she hat ny |, y aia wehitaee Same ee ee ; oo VeTS wailed peanutinedg and pel } Oak ° _ ray ae ‘ lat. “If you will sit down for a | Is it? Well, I did hat Mi Dargean, | moment I will see how Mrs. Miles is.”’ and I hated the doctor at Littlemere; | She pointed to a chair and left the roozn, | cannot or could not help it. I believe L} «what an abode for an _ heiress!” mado! id rr i , : thought Jack Maitland, glancing round | “Has time tamed it or have y bly (i in 1 furniture and narrow space. a ” . , ‘l don’t su se she has the faintest | ture / ‘ ced Maitland, OO KIDZ C ) “ | dea of her own possessions, She ought | With a smile at the sweet, thoughtful | \, pe informed. I am half inclined to | face beside him. tell her myself. I earnestly hope they | M s Vin laughed a low, pleasant, will tie up her money strictly when she happy laugh, “I am afraid not; I gr marries Beaton; for I suppose she must | stronger and did not need the di r, and -—she can hardly escape.” He took up a { is I and bright oe | hook, it was White’s ‘“Selborne;”’ he i to enjoy I forgot Mr. Dargan. Now he tcok up another, “Old Mortality.” “Not | is 2 © let learn drawing, and I | urbe the newest literature,” said Mait- | ees Sree ee | {und to himself, with a staile. He looked | There was a pause. Maitland though nside the cover and found a coat of vith growing interest and sincere co! rms and crest. with the name “Richard | " S wae 20 ' ©! Vix ian,” printed under it. “A volume | : - om the mily library, I suppose,” At this point in his meditations Mass | to life. Still Beaton « id be N y s Vivian rer ntered. She had removed her | cirating, and she might believe \- | hat. and Maitland observed how much best of men, nor have her faith ¢ better and more distinguished she look- ed all the days of her hfe i without it. Her head was small and : poised, and her hair, though pale in | me, pr you i . color, was abundant, while the gent'e } “ | ' 5 wh sure of her manner and movements | sodgings? | gave her dignity. . b' gladly. I a ene, Ore | “IT must not ask you to stay,” she said, little now, but I am to go tudio | «7 find Mrs, Miles so unwell I must at- om sened _< st 1] ~s i to her: and the dressmaker sent by neti A gs to get Mr. D | Mirs. Wintngton is waiting for me.” sent.” | “Then I will not trespass any longer; “Who have promised ?” I hope to have another opportunity of “Mr. Be Lon ] i hi 3 ois fer, 1) ee ine our drav 7 og.” know that he br | I sister to “Te widen know Mrs. Winington, I may me’ Was it rood of pb? Ay } .” she,” “T hope I shall; you are very good to miration beaming over her face—‘oh, sho} , ve wuked all this way with me. Good mere ino is lovely! she is like a beautiful gracious | pv. queen, and so kind te me, a ant « ry girl, She has asked me tv stay with her while I am studying, an: 1 says she will do all tha me. Is it not w 14 “Ah!” ejaculated Maitland, “you mean Mrs. Winington. She is certainly chirm- t is necessary for yr cle } ful? ing. When do you go to stay with her?” “J am not quite sure. I should have gone on Sionday, but Mrs. Miles was i, and I could not jeave her; indeed that | is the only drawback. I do not like her being alone by herself in the cottage-- she will fret; but she says she does not mind. I think Mr. Dargan has told her she must not.” So Mrs. Winington was not letting the grass grow under her feet in the prosecu- tion of her brother's plan. How woull it all end for the guileless child, who was probably looked upon by both as at mere incumbrance to her own wealth? What would be the result of Mrs. Win- ington’s training? what of association with Leslie Beaton? How much of her fearless candor, her outspoken ‘truthful- ness, would be left after three or four yeats of life under‘their guidance? Mait- land was ‘conscious. pf almost fatherly | kindly smile. | pressed it. and tell me, what is you name? I d not heed Mr. Tilly when he introdac- ed you “My name is Maitland.” “TI think I did not notice your name, because I was taken up with the sort of likeness I saw about your eyes to my father’s. Good-bye.” She held out her hand with a grave, Maitland took and lightly “If I can ever do anything for you,” he exclaimed with a sudden impulse, “pray remember that I am at your set vice.” Then, half-ashamed of his speech, he made a rapid retreat. “Every one is very good to me,” was Edith Vivian’s reflection, as she hurried away to the grand-lwoking dressmaker. of whom she was a little afraid, and sub- mitted to the process of “trying on,’ hav- ing been previously measured under Mrs. Winington’s eye. Faithful, however, to her suffering friend, she begged leave to show herself to Mrs. Miles before she took off the garment. “Is is not pretty?” she exclaimed, diraw- ‘pg up the blind, that Mrs. Miles might sem her-clearly, ‘“Dhe skirt is to be trim oa ae OSes > When Buying Clothing Don t wae ae Important That we are the only firm in this City that retails clothing at wholesale prices, which means that we retail our goods fully 25 per cent cheaper than others, Competitors may talk as they like, never mind, come to us tor your Ready-to-Wear Clotaing, our prices always the lowest. r Have You Seen...... Our special Shorey’s Ulsters at $6.50, wind proof ana water- proof, and guaranteed. Have You Seen.... Our special $4.75 Ulst +, noth- ing like it in town. Have You Seen.... Our specia! heavy, all wool Suit for men at $5.00 Have You Seen.... Our special, all wool, extra heavy Suits for men $6.0C and $6.50. Have You Seen.... Our special extra heavy Suit for men, our own make, war- ranted inevery way at $8. You Seen.... Our single nd double breas!- ed Overcoats fer men, from | $5 00 up; one line at $13.50, selling at $9.00. Biggest snap on earth. eeee eeee Dee sooo Have You Seen.... Our special girl reefers, former price $3.75, now $1.50, sizes from 22 to 26. Have You Feen.... Our ladie-Jeckets, only 30 left to be sold at your (wa price. Have You Seen.... Special*heavy Pants for men, all wool, (but the buttons) at $2.00, ourown make. Canad. ian heavy pants (@ $1.70 | Have You Seen.... Our Children’s Clothing, home | made, extra heavy and strong | former pvice $4.75, now $3 00 | Have vou Seen.... don’t ree Our Clothing. If not, miss this opportunity. show —no trouble to show ou goods ee en ee ne 0 — med with a quantity of the same lace, | : and bows of brown satin ribbon: they e look lovely against the tussore silk. This , oO I J Uy ¥ na¢ eS is called a simple mos ge dress! Ht} a LO . 1a ( ‘ e to wear “Ol ? r i , Be ngs = too fin . i ar, I wonder | With Hot Water what Mr, Dargan will say! Re ee ae acta aed $ Combination if desired. : Mis. Miles, with a sigh so deep it was | — -« -OUR.. almost a grean, and would certainly have : aitracted Edith’s attention had she not Famous lorida been hurrying back to the dressmaker, 7 “You seem worse than you were this for Coal morning, dear Miley,” she said, return- | @ ing presently in her everyday dress; “and | with steel dome, tow steel radiator and @ you look as if you had been crying.” | three Steel flues, (insures quick heat “Well. y shai Gente: tien Danek. See without Ganger of cracking), is cons- pate seg pai ape ek gant wig ard tructed on the principle of a baseburner rid bad, and I am that weak—” Here the stove, and is as easily regulated as ene. — ee broke down. The distance the heat has to travel compels I will get you some beef-tea and a its utmost radiation, and.consequently inaures glass of wine and then I will try this | great heating power with ecouomy of fuel. z wonderful stuff. It is a whitish stick, | Exceptionally heavy fire pot fitted with and it is to be rubbed on your brow till | : . either flat or duplex grate. Large ash pit, 3 the pain goes, and Edith went swiftly f Wee {i PF DAMPERS CAN BE REGOLATED and silently to and fro, procuring the | i : Jae es OOMS ABOVE remedies she had suggested, and Mrs. bam ) ee ons FROM ROOK . Miles grew more composed. ~ pa HiT We hold highest testimonials J < } DHE ne “Whatever will I do without yon, Sh 9 in mY a from users. 3 Edith ?—the sight of you does me good.” ¢ : . 19 “I will not leave you till you are quite ' ee th ds a — C well and strong.” f a3. ge oe THE McCLARY MFG, Q, “Ay, but you must, my lamb. 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