ee We Tf life ia worth ; ; : \ having it is worth ng care of. tak A . Recklessness does ‘ , not pay, either in A_< our work or Ms —Aj/ our pleasure, r OTS When people Shy 5 read of a young "aan who has been killed hile perferm- yw sore reck- *ss fc — a ybowran or at vine other haz- / rdous_ sport, ‘hy 1ecir sympathy a 1, * mixed with a urprise that human being ¥/ should thus care- y risk life. “here are thou. sands of men who are reckless 1¢ their lives while they ‘ t every-day avoca- they do not take SI nt time from business« or labor to eat or t ire f their health. O throws out danger signals, to y pay no heed They suffer fy b ¢ or nervous cisorders, from 8) ime lrowsiness, cold c flushing if heat, shortness of 1 blotches on the skin, loss of ap- I uncomfortable sensations in the a h foe mom le ‘ o wf sleep, lassi t trembling sensations. These are t! lvance symptoms of serious and fatal maladies All disorders of this nature are cured by Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It restores the lost appetite, gives sound and ing sleep, makes the digestion per- fect, the liver active It purifies the blood makes it rich with the life-giving ele. : ments of the food It is the great blood- maker and flesh-bui'der. It makes the body active and the brain keen. It is the best of nerve tonics. Thousands have testified to its merits. No honest dealer will urge “pon you a substitute for the little extra profit it may afford The man or woman who neglects consti- pation 1s gathering in the system a store of disorders that will culminate in some serious and fatal malady Dr. Pierce possgbl y -’s Pleasant Pellets are a safe, sure, speedy and sunt Pette cure for constipa- tion. One little ‘ Pellet’’ is a gentle laxa- , and two a mild cathartic - — ee HUMAN SACHIFICES On the Altar of Diabetes, Saved by Vodd's Kidney Pills, Only. Fiardly a family in the country is free from Diabetes. sreat thirst, fa ight, numbness in the thighs, b| ng gums, swollen ankles, ema- cial 1 Nervousness, pale or turbid , loss of sexual po\vrer, decaying teeth, pains in the loins or small of re all positive signs that Diabetes is in the systen iio you know how it ends? In Deatx. A premature, b orrible, agon- WZ pitiful death. The victim has no Pp » no ease in hfe. His days are filled with tortures. His nights are waking dreams of agony. He longs to uic, yet fears the terrors of his end. He iies, a bloated, fetid, repulsive mass of corruption. That is the only end of unchecked Diaberes., Uodd’s Kidney Pills will cure it. They drive it out of the system thoroughly, create new, clean blood, rebuild the diseased zidneys, and restore robust health EPPS'S COCOA GRATEFUL COMFORTING Distinguished everywhere for Delicacy of Flavour, Supe- rior Quality, and Nutritive Properties. Specielly grate- ful and comforting to the nervous and dyspeptic: Sold only in }-lb. tins, labelled JAMES EPPS & Uo., Ltd., Homceopathic Chemists, London, Englend. BREAKFAST SUPPER EPPSS COCOA ————— en — AUCTION SALE OFFER -- PROPERTY: BRICK BUILDING— West upper Queen Si, being par No. 29, in the 3rd bundred in Charlottetown, fronting on Queen St, and extending alle] lines about 99 feet,, right of way, 9 feet side, t side of of Town Lot of Town Lots, 37 feet 1 inch back by par- together with nerth thereof [em instructed by Mrs Mary Ann Utter, surviving trustee of the late James Ort cell thie valuable property at ises, oun Tues ‘mber inst, at r, to public auction, on the pren day, the 15th day of Nov 12 o’clock noon. Terms—15 per cent down delivery of deeds. For tort apply to Mr. A. A. MeL Ch’iown sod balance on ner particulars an, Solicitor, E. H. NORTON, Auctioneer. 246 d2aw—dypat ee © AIN TING. Miss M.H.Chishol m has reopened her stadio in Morris Block and will have lessons in Oil, China, Water color, and Tapestry P inting from | October Ist 1898 to June Ist 1899. 2662 déw weeks, | like everyone to do as they please here.” | THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, OCTOBER 31 1898 Ce RS me - we ee ee SO ee Vv * KS ~ RK 2 BERK RIE RRR EC ER RK RR RR RRR RI Woman == Woman § xwekeneek SY, BY MRS. MARY E. HOLMES- Awthor of “A Woman's Love,” “ The Wife’s Secret,” “A Heartless Woman,” “Her Fatal Sin,” “A Wife's Peril,” “A Desperate Woman.” ° 9, % * MK x eX RR Mex % eee we _ A 7 c x c 5 0» > ) S% ‘ (Continued, ) ; lis oe Roy fiushed, and Lady Darrel! looked | ing ; uncomfortable. “The countess; or as I call her play- fully, my Lady Alice, always Lreakfasts in her own room. swered Valerie, Count Jura bowed. “What are our plans for to-day, my lord?’ continued Valerie easily to the earl, “I thought a ride to the old Abbey,” said Roy. “Radine, you would like that?’ “Very much,” agreed Lord Radine. “And you, Jura?’ “Lt regret I have important letters to write; you will pardon me?” , “Oh, of course,” said Roy quickly; “I “Why not ask your wife to join us!” proposed Valerie, The earl looked pained. The very sight of Alice seemed to him torture. recalled the agony he had endured, and the fact that he was separated from Valerie for ever. “If you will ask her, I dare say she will come,” he replied. Valerie rose with a laugh. “I shall be ready in ten minutes, and my Lady Alice Count Jura held the door open for her, and she swept out; she mounted the Stairs, and turned into the corridor that led to Alice’s room. “Get on your habit and dress quickly; your husband desires you will ride with us this morning!” Alice rose from her books. “IT will be ready,” she answered. Valerie bit her lip. Again this girl . | ” aiso, foiled her. She thought te have triumphed over her ignorance in this case, “Can you ride?” she asked insolently. roe, Alice quietty. “You are a paragon of perfection fn- deed,” sneered the other woman as she withdrew, Alice gazed after her sadly. She pitied Valerie now from her heurt, and thought she knew what made her so bitter. The interview in the grounds had answered She prefers it,” an- | shown Alice that Valerie had a trouble that was indeed very heavy, especially to a nature so proud as hers, She called Davis and put on her habit, Ever since she could remember Alice had ridden, the only difference being that she had sat her steed without a saddle,, and unencumbered by a long skirt, and now she was checked by so- ciety garments and ways. She took her gauntlets and whip, and gathering her habit in hand, opened the door. To her astonishement, in the corridor she came upon Count Jura walking slowly up it. He turned with an exclamation as he perceived her, and Alice thought she saw him put a paper hastily into his pocket. “I crave pardon, miladi; I mistake my way. Is this not the corridor to the guests’ wing?’ “No, you are quite wrong; this leads only to my apertments.” Alice spoke coldly, indeed she felt an- noyed. “T am indeed distressed, countess,” he observed courteously, “but I will take my departure at once.” He bowed again and turned towards a door which led into another chamber. ured by these la Pr; is sAaD eo Ma w~ pee e+ pe <j 7 =O me > ej = © They also relieve Disirces from Dyspepsia, indicestion and Too Hearty Eating. “A pere fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsl- ness, Bad Tastcin the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulaiec the Bowcls. Purcly Veretable. Small Pili. Small Dose, Smeal! Prico. Substitution the fraud uf the day.) See you get Carter's; Ask for Carter’s, Insist and demand Carter’s Little Liver Piflg “Still you are wrone,” sia “ATice, smii- g and pointing with her whip.. “Go straight along, and you will reach the big staircase, then you will soon find {| your way. That door leads to the empty part of the Castle—the ‘treasure rooms,’ as the servants call them. Yes, now you are right.” “Au revoir, miladi!’ Count Jura strode down the corridor. “Treasure, rooms!” he repeated to himself. “Paul was right, and yet among all the treasures of the castle she is to me the rarest.” Alice mad bh T Way slowly down the staircase to the central hall. She felt excited and almost happy. She always had that » flutter at her heart | when near her husband. ° Valerie, looki like a goddess in her perfectly-cut habit, was standing in the doorway, beyond which the horses were waiting. \ an’s f Tm was heside her, and Alice noticed with a cold, sickening sensation how low he was whispering and how eager was his look. She came slowly up to them, and caught a few words: “When I think of it, Valerie, I am nearly mad to khow what I have lost. My life is a misery to me, tied as I am to a * ig Valerie heard Alice’s footsteps, and she drew her havd away from his. “It is getting late, ve had better start,” she said quietly, giving him a lcok full of sympathy, and glancing another of triumph at Alice as she hur- riedly went down the steps. Lord Radine now joined them. “May I pr* you up, countess?” asked eagerly. He was a young man, and Alice’s fair loveliness had won his warmest admira- tion. “If you please,” she answered slowly. She was still hearing her husband’s voice, passion-laden, breathing his love and misery into Valerie’s ear. The earl assisted Valerie to mount, and then the four rode slowly away. “We don’t want grooms, Roy,” said Valerie authoritatively. So the earl waved the attendants back, LordRadine glanced every now and then at his companion’s face. “Who was it said Darrell bad married a farm-girl?’ he mused. “What a cruel scandal! This woman is peerless. Ooun- tess,” he said aloud, “are you in any way connected with the Arnolds—you know who I mean; they are a very old family—the head is always called the Master of Arnold?’ Alice had blushed, but now she was pale, “T have no aristocratic connections, Lord Radine,” she answered quietly; “IT am only a farmer's niece.” “But you have their face. The Ar nolds are a strangely lovely fimily— forgive me for paying you so gauche a compliment; but you are fairer than was the Lady Enid Arnold, whose portrait hangs in my mother’s room, and who he | died years ago, and she was supposed to ‘ have been the greatest beauty of her ow | time.” “I have no family,” repeated Alice. “I was only a farm girl, You will have heard how I came to—to—to marry the earl: before then I was neglected, ill- used, and miserable. I even taught myself—at least, the village schoolmas- ter helped me for some time, but he died two years ago, and then [ had no one to assist. me.” “I do not care what you were,” cried Lord Radine, feryvently.reaching for her small hand and carrying it to his lips; “but to me you are the embodiment of everrthing that is perfection.” Valerie turned at this instant, and the earl, looking back, also saw the young man’s act of eourtesy and admiration. “My Lady Alice progresses,” remark- ed Valerie with a sneer. “Roy, you must look after your wife.” Lord Darrell did not answer, he un- consciously tightened his Lold on his reins, and his brows met in a frown. Something in the sight he had just seen vexed him strangely, and for the first time since his return he beheld Alice’s beauty in all its power. Valerie saw the frown, and her heart leaped. “He is angry with her,” she said to herself. - She checked her horse and the earl did so also. “What is ickly. arr forget the exact path,” said V2.l- erie, “and Roy knows absolutely no- thing about it.” “I ‘will go’ and enquire,” said the earl iedly. nine Darrell, let me,” and Lord Ra- dine rode rapidly down the path to the Pani whose cheeks were still flushed from modesty at Lord Radine’s out- spoken admiration, reined in her horse a few paces away. Valerie chatted on, taking no notice of the young countess; but, strange to say, the earl was watching his wife with a feeling akin to xmazement and admira- tion. How well she g'den .and -.beautiful asked Lord Radine 1?” ! How hair? sat her horse was her BARGAIN CORNER, We have open,and more to arrive, a good assortment of Clothing. We are after your ‘rade this fall; we ought to have it—it good goods and low prices are any inducement. Fo want of space wecan only quote afew lines—men’sS & D Breasted Suits, our own make cloth, well made and finished for $9.00 Men’s S & D breasted Suits for $12.00, made from our famous double and twisted goods, warranted to outwear anything in the imported line. This cloth is known from P E |! to Alaska—the only goods made that will stand the wear and tear ofthe Klondike, - Our sgent in Dawson is taking orders for spring shipment. This speaks well of our cloth. Men’s extra heavy suits, imported for $5.00, $6.00 and $8 00 per suit, extra value. Men’s 8S & D searted ferge Suits, all prices, one line for $11.50, worth $15.00 of any man’s money. If vour boy gets caught Youths’ Suits our Prices are Suits for boys, our own cloth, the only thiug that will stand, going over a fence some one will have to lift bim off, no tear t» our cloth. own cloth, former price $8.25, now $5.00, A full range of gents’ furnishings. right, Inspection Invited. —— HEAVY STEEL PLATE Range... Coal or Wood. More than 100 styles and sizes for FAMILY, HOTEL and Restaurant use, Are constructed in the most substan- tial manner and after the most approved patterns, ARE STRICTLY UP TO DATE IN EVERY PARTICULAR. VOU Aerts age fh What dark, long lashes framed her eres! Last night he could see nothing but | Valerie, the woman he loved; now his whole attention was turned on the wo | man he had married. Alice was unconscious of his gaze, and when he moved his horse near to he, , and rectified some fault in her reins, she woke from her dreams with a start, and turned pale and cold. Valerie noticed Roy’s changed expres- sion, and jealousy burned in her breast. “Come, Roy, Lord Radine is waving to us,” she exclaimed, and, he moving to her side, they put their horses to the | trot down the lane. Alice felt a choking wensation in her throat. Without another thought, she wheeled her horse round and cantesed — wildly in the opposite direction. 1 She had lost all control of her fec!- ings; sobs burst from her lips. The poor young wife was utterly, ter- | ribly unhappy. She knew. not what to do or where CAN one and bottom in $50 00 to go, but she felt that something must nF 4 BUY caw past of Conadia fer . a. : end the torture she was enduring, or | = ' Equal in Weight, Durability end Efficiency she must die, Stie cantered on, unheeding and plung- ed in her thoughts till the trembling of her horse caused her to think of him, and as she came to a sort of thicket, she loosened her rein and let him stand. X% to any in Canada or U. S. The McClary Mfg. Co., {2:o3ieiisimninta' ea VANCOUVER If your lecal dealer cannot supply, write our nearest house, : a Se a >< OYSTERS We have had long experience in handling Prince Edward Ysland’s famoes Oysters, and solicit your consignments. We have facilities second to none for handiing same wm John Caldwell & Co,, Produce Commercial Merchante, Imperters an@ Dealers in Foreign and Domestic Fruits. References Bank of Toronto 171;to 175 McGill Street Montrea! and Commission agencies. Correspondence Solicited. Cable addresses Fruitcald. 107 3mo dy&wk fo tobeal for the money J.RartRAY ©. MontREAL. Sanderson & Co. i ewthis season ; MADE to WIN Apples Wanted. I will receive apples suitable for the English market to pack on Owners account from Monday the 3let inst, until the de- parture of the steamer Lake Winnipeg, or I will pay good prices in cash for small lots of Ribstons, Spys, Russets. King Tompkins, Ben Davies and Baldwins They must be No. 1. in quality and free {rora all spots and bruises. They must not be carried in bags. D. FERGUSON, 990060046 60000060 = estore full, regular action of the bowels, do not irri- tate or inflame, but leave all the delicate digestive or- canism in perfect condition. Try them. 2 cents. Vrenared only by CG. lL. Haed & Co. Lowell, Maae - ERN— (| REFORM RAZOR BEST IN THE MARKET. ' ) THE SHAVERS’ IDEAL | BALANCED HANDLES. FAULTLESS GRINDING. Our Prices ARE ALWAYS RIGHT LOOK! We offer this lot viz:— 1 bbl best Family Flour 5 lbs of 28e Tea 10 lb of granulated Sugar 4 gals best Kero, Oil 9 bars Oak Leaf Soap FOR ¥6.70 E2@ Figure up and see if the | price is not right. We claim it is. me. They are great sellers; the waythey are made makes them sell: all solid leather, full of style and beauty, unsurpassed for ‘the money. Dongola Buttoned Oxfords Box Calf Boots These shoes are built on the most progressive lines and gems for the price, Weeks & Warren —Kent S’, Ch’town Oct 2298, 247. j anal