a ie wut M3 er ‘ Lioiia vill i iuilid, TOURIST SLEEPER ‘ Pr } . : 5 . i) FARM LANDS IN TH! 1N D(tAN NORTH V EST, for 2°" ree MIL [LARD Voop . BrrreR FAU 1 ‘ > Proso ctors and ii, D r Rise | O1 4 tf St. John, N. B. a id “aa 0 ~~” o = ® > " Sar MASON’S STORE ! You can get tne tstest Canadian aod American ne #spapers received #@ by mailesch night. Drop in if you want ‘a paper or azine or book tor-al. Fruit, 9 Hofectionery, Tobacco, Cizers etc. @ when you’re passing this way. (R. H. Mason TENDERS! indian River Chueeh, Teadera are askel for the construction go? completion of Si. Mary’: Charch, up ja the 19ch Mareh, next.to be addessed to >> 420448 tome & ee ee re as . ee oe ee pe ee see - 7 ag a anes SEE ether oowteac rien wesc seventies se set TH AL EXaVINER, unaR 0 T 3 AN. 4AKOH 6. LoVe eT INN PENII Ye ARE IT aut :4aBaTe wm aA on — PLA Ns TF a. ait NSPE” Fe ee samt | ‘ ad tototote Wao NS y yy »is mine,’’ she murmured, pite- FORO OR OR RII IORI Bok ete usly, raisi r eyes sunlit ; CMa APO ett th totcictk ously, raising her eyes to the sunlit ia i FOO III III FORA RTA IAI IASI) eS a 1. rr > kien Sky. Why should she try to take KK \\ Tr } . *4'“7 him from me? He is mine!’’ NO ac ID [) IC t) \) Wey & + x os 3 ya err tae if 1D) } } x +} ‘ rin xx L \U) \' +x CHAPTER IX. x & » . ) , ie . » be de de ede de YD + % The memory of that kiss was a ike tl Vv D3 2RGE He et 3b 2h vb x} oh 2 ee pe a ; y : cone eK Dy LAURA JEAN LIBBE aeee a 4 burning pain to Florabel. It tortured NK Auth 6 eclas . . ‘ x 3 14 3+ j Ler iow was she mr 3+ renee Author of “When Lovely Maiden Stoops to Folly,” “A Broken >#¢:¢.$%¢ ) Ww r of he us she a : ar it? KKK Betrothal,”” “Part ; Bete ® « Ie | Vas his love so light thet a few | Et eEE etrothal, Parted by Fate Parted at +ONeES | ances from & pair of dark. brilliant KE Ae a the Altar,” etc., etc. elke he be bel ©) IN ; , See Y : be Se bebe be area eyes, and a few smiles from rosy lips, by Ae Ae be re 7 : * Pa ERS KSI EEE EREDAR AB OD bE) | could take his heart from her? eek kuekee eee PMLA EEK HR BBA IG. HH | When she returne » hnnne ‘ede 1] KK Ee ae Kk FHP A ERIE OO HEP CHC ‘ HK HM eB . hie : she re vari d to the house she \ . . | found Max reading the morning paper - ~ se * . . %& dS = \ Ay 7 “ : , PIS SS S SSIS a IIPS in her boudoir, 8 NOPSH. ard upon the lilies of the She made up her mind that Miss | Florabel was “a dependent of } carpet, crying out she knew Clavering should never know hew aUeci as. ue Mie of ier step~< a 4 } ar: ba creas » | i . fath ‘r, Squire P sw tote His “ot rhe e : ; ~ } a ee I itterly jealous she was. She should igus dey Hit irom ner not triumph over her. She would hate Fiorabel, and when the S uire dies, order her out of the old home. Max Forrester a rich young man marries her and introduces her into his family the members of which disapprove of his mar~ Tiage, as they wanted him to marry Mice Clavering, an heiress. ; CHAPTER!1V--(Contiaued.) ‘OR! I never was so provoked in all my life!’’ she burst out, breath- lessly, with girl-like abandon. ‘‘I shall never believe in signs again! I dreamed of some one, certainly. You never could guess who it was, so I might as well tell you, and you will enjoy the joke with me. It was no less a personage than Mr. Max For- rester.’’ For a single instant a deathlike sil- ence ensued. Florabel regained her composure by a great effort. She never remembered what reply she made to Inez. **Wasn’t it provoking to think I only saw Mr. Forrester?’’ laughed Inez. ‘‘I shall never believe in peep- ing into the veiled mysteries again.’’ she usiersigaed and marked Tender She glanced up quickly at Florabel, for[idian River Catholic Coarch.” but the beautiful young face had been Pian+ aod sperifisations can be seen on | hurriedly turned toward the window. - I.” i. ee — . . . . Moada7, 5 febraary, next, at the | Florabel was white with terror. Every Bano 4.472 a7 a ; se of Mr W. | word Miss Clavering had [Ae 4 z df re 9 Ari ites ih? " ‘ : ’ oe ; a C. es shites', Ch'towo, for ten | struck into her heart like a dagger’s days; afterwards thev can beseen atthe} ,, Davo» si 2 Sey ne a LOTUST. ‘ Hi » Summer: A certi- | 9 . | Sou.v0 wri be : v : . +} } t sy bequtire ) atcOmp—azy eich tender. | ' a ¥ ' ’ irae I 2nder be po ie r Wa : aceectei, and forfeited if teaderer fail to | ing jealousy. accept, if called up>a Pae andersigned does not bind himeclf tu actec( the lowest or any tender. D. J. GILLIS, P. P. iidian River, P. BE. L., Jan 3114/1900. Herald. = SHS Ct ot 8 SF * O48 O68 i THE EXAMINER COUPON. PORTFOLIO OF Glimpses of South éfrica In Peace and In War. ee cur put TH “wpa wad bring eee oe es @ @. =a * ~~ <. ee oe ee. rr it with l0e ain rer to the Pp ; Department of ee Ex- miner,’ and get pat No. ; Glimpses of South Africa Peace re a ’ ‘War , 88 «ee @ QD ovo’ 2822886 cmap Wants, Lost Found, &e GIRLS WANTED —To learn the millinerr. | diply to Misa McKachern a’ Ja3. Paton « | o's. ——_ Fi(sT.~A gentlemans Astrakan (ayer viea leave at this office glove xy, 89ge about stands taking general work ‘ferred. 4pply o2uf gold mounted WANTE )—« good steady | fifteen or sixteen, who und careof horses acd cattle, als adeut a nouse. Country boy p! et ExXawiner oO fice. FOUND—A ladies umbrella, Stick. Apply at this office. room +giris are eydaey, © B. LeRoi wits. t WANT#D.—S3everal dining Wanted atthe Sydmey Hotel, Wages no object. Apply to Sydney Hotel. SAFE FOR SAUE.—A large office safe. Apply at the city Hardware Stere. R, B. Norton & Co, Ltd. WANTED—By an experienced laundress— Wasningtodoat her home. Apply to Miss MeLean, Fitzroy Strest, near vapeu St. eb 16, 4i HAT FOUND.—On Prinee Streeton Wed a night. Apply at Tue EXAMINER WANTED.— $2.00 per day sure, gentlemen ladies; special work; position vermanest; *elishle firm, with best reference+; experience ba ry. addres, S. M. Fry, Field er, Hamilton, Ont. ae 03? —~On Tuesday night near the BI 8 a l, Kent Street a fur mink. Finder will Mie leave at this office sz 3ins. te AGENTS —Prospectuses of War in South Aftiea by Castell Hopkins and Murat Hed- Wi and authentic Life of Moody Dr. t (bur Chapman, Vice-President oody Pauitate areready. Both sent for 25 cents. mus who never sol dbooke gy nd Brane pe aDL EY-GARRETSONCO. MITED tford. tet os ei fO8T—In this city on the evening ot tae nst,adark green wallet with a sum of lence’, Pinder wili be suitably rewarded by — ink it at this office, LOST..4 sum of money—bank notes. Fold- *done fold, with rubber bani, Reward for Apply at EXAMINE ® office, a i py ANTED.—At once one or two stenogra- ‘o take dictation in the evening either eagtorthand or on typewrite:. Appl oh | | shone upon her from the blue sky, the BOTS 2884454 = = 15449480 4 |} ‘**Aren’t we going out for a drive?’’ ‘asked Florabel, faintly, anxious to change the unpleasant conversation. Miss Clavering yawned. ‘I’m not half awake so early in the morning. If you will excuse me and go by yourself I shall be delighted. I feel wonderfully inclined to take my so don’t be surprised to in my gown upon your return.’’ ease today, still , and slippers | find me dressing ‘*I think I shall be obliged to go by myself, then,’’ said Florabel ; ‘‘for when Max went down town this morning he remarked that he would not retarn before noon.’’ A little later Florabel was bowling al } sreen trees wiuved above her: school children gazed admiringly at the pretty, golden-haired young lady in the natty phaeton, as she passed them by ; but Florabel never saw them. Her heart was full of but one thought: ‘*‘Will Heaven take my lIcve from me and give him to her?’’ Her morning drive wearied her, and she determined to return home again at once, even though she had been out but half an hour. She would go quietly u» to her bou- doir, and have time to thin‘ re- move the traces of the tears that bad gathered in her eyes. Inez Clavering would not intrude upon her there, be- lieving she would not return from her drive for several hours, and Max bad said he would not be home before noon. As she ascended the steps she was surprised to hear Miss Clavering’s voice singing, in the di- rection of the paflor. ‘‘She must have changd her mind pretty quickly about changing her morning dress and coming down to the parlor,’’ thought Florabel with a smile. Suddenly the sound of Miss Claver- ing’s rich, musical laughter floated out to her, mingled with a rich, mas- culine voice she knew but too well. Florabel cuite still in the marble vestibule, her hands pressed tightly over her heart, her face white “a7 1 Allg broad stone stood as death, and listened. It flashed over her distorted mind how Max had urged her to go and take a ride, declaring she was grow- ivy Was this a pre-concerted ~~ pale. plan between him and Miss Clavering , to get her out of the way? The pain of death, passing from this world to eternity, could never be bitterer than the torturing pain that burned the poor child bride’s heart as she stood there. ; She opened the door with her latch key, and silently closed it. Many a woman would have crept up to the door and listened to what they were saying. Not so Florabel. She would have shrunk in horror from the bare idea. She burried down the corridor and up to her own room, throwing herself ——w ped into the parlor, attracted there by Miss Clavering’s singing. ft was only natural they should practice the new music, he had | nt the day before, over to- And perhaps it was only natural, wien Max adn d the great ch es ngly offer him the sweete ; { hij © 1] | throng heart of Flor had come down, and was | to enter the par! It smote her with the } ath; her face pale to the lips; she looked like one whose heart had suddenly been tran fixed with a sharp sword. She gazed with bated breath upon nt occ the . (hat so Many innoc in this life have all igue about them. fair which appeared } ye COiO! sO mon | in Florabel’s eyes bh: came about in this way: rabel had scarcely quitted her om ere Miss Clavering regretted not aving accompanied her; the park renld be so full of equipages; and, ‘Ying quickly to her own apartments, onned one of her prettiest costumes lew out to the steps; but Flora had driven away a moment befor the parlor, threw of’ her hat and gloves, and, for of better amusement, sat down at piano to try the latest song Max For- rester had brought her. O cTywe rd MT ‘returned to want the As for Max, his business arrange- ments being concluded early in the r, he had come home, think: ht be in time to drive Flora! out. ‘Finding her gone, he had the scene, the memory of which never left her while her life lasted. The long, with adornings of pale gold and creamery white; the lovely girl seated the piano, toying with the crimson roses at her belt, and Max—her Max— bending over her with a look on his face that made her heart throb with jealous pain. Inez his face with those wondrous, dark Southern eyes, and a smile on her crimson lips. It was more than human nature could bear. She turned and fled through the long corridor out into the rose garden. Over the brightness of the summer day a cloud had fallen; a funeral pall lay over the gold of the laburnum, and the purple of the lilacs; a dark mist hid the buddng roses and the lily leaves. What was this fiery, hor- rihle nain that made her heart ._ bleed? = ———— dim parlor its rich at was the bitterest looking up into A man may stand under the running slip- noose of death and not realize it. Diseases, fa- tal to both body and brain, like nervous pros- tration and exhaustion, creep upon a man slow- iy. A man overworks. Then he neglects his meals, and pays no attention to his di- gestion. His liver gets sluggish. His ap- petite falls off. The blood is improper|y nourished and becomes impure. The brain | and nerve tissues do not receive proper nu. | triment and are befogged with the poisons in the blood. The man cannot sleep or eat Then comes nervous prostration, and ex- haustion. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Die- covery makes the appetite hearty, the di- gestion perfect, the liver active, the blood ure, the brain clear and the nerves steady. it makes pure blood and healthy flesh, mus- cle, brain and nerve tissue. It cures nery- ous diseases. No honest dealer will urge an inferior substitute for the little extra profit there is in it: “ About fourteen years ago,’’ writes C. P. Wil. liams, Esq., of Perrows. Campbell Co., Va., ‘1 had a severe attack of sickness. [I me very despondent about my situation. I thought I was going to starve todeath. I could not rest at might and could not describe my feelings. I egiployed three or four doctors and they pronounced my disease to be Nervous Prostration. I was weak- ened down almost to a skeleton. and every bod thought I was going to die. I procured two bot- tles of Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery and they made a perfect cureof me. My system built up rapidly. From a living skeleton i be- came robust and nr I am 67 years of age and am enjoying good ealth.”” A wife should be a good nurse and | something of a doctor. Send thirty-one one-cent stamps, to cover customs an mailing on/y, to World’s Dispensary Med- ical Association, No, 663 Main Street, Buf- falo, N. Y., for a paper-covered ° Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Medical’ Ad- | viser. Cloth binding, 50 stamps. One| thousand and eight pages, over three hun- | dred illustrations, some of them in colors, | | The best doctor-book extant. meet her with a smile on her lips, though the bittetness of death lay in her heart. ‘What! Back so soon?’’ exclaimed Max, as she advanced towards him. ‘‘Why, I did not expect you to return before noon.’’ ‘*T suppose not,’’ replied Florabel. And she could not hide the sarcasm that crept into her voice. ‘*Yeon shonid have staved ont longer,’’ declared Max. ‘‘The morn- ing air has flushed those cheeks, and lent a wonderful brightness to those hazel eyes. I shall insist upon your driving out for an hour or two every morning after this.’’ How little he dreamed that it was suppressed emotion that flushed those cheeks and gleamed from her eyes. A strange, angry smile curved Flor- abel’s crimson lips, and the unnatural sparkle deepened into a lurid flame in her hazel eyes. The angry retort sprang to her lips: ‘‘No doubt you would like to have me away that you might make love to Miss Clavering.”’ But she checked the words just in time. Prudence restrained her. (To be continued.) ERK AND.... PUNY CHILDREN Become Strong and Healthy by using Dr. A. W. Chase’s Nerve Food. Children are frequently left weak and sickly as an after result of measles, scarlet fever, etc., and in this state are easy prey to nervous disorders, rickets, spinal disease, or consump- tion, diseases which do not affect robust, healthy children. The blood is weak and watery and the nerves improperly nourished. Feed the blood and merves with Dr. A. W. Chase’s Nerve Food, and the pale, pinched faces will soon become rosy and plump, and tiredness and weakness will give way to strength and animation. Mr. E. W. Day, 62 Close Avenue, Toronto, writes: ‘‘My eldest daughter, aged eight, be- came very much run down. Her fretful, ner- vous, sleepless condition greatly alarmed her parents. She was taken from school, and in spite of the best nursing, the thin, weakened, bloodless face grew painfully worse. Fortun- ately we used Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food, An improvement became apparent in a few days, it continued, and in a few weeks she returned to school built up anew, and greatly to our joy fully restored to health.” Dr. A. W. Chase's Nerve Food, soc. a box, at all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co, Toronto, Com T \e have just received a lot o ‘B ahmin” Tea from Horace Haszard {s;..(Wholesale Agent) who has “e: ided to go out of the retail business. We will handle this Pure India Tea in ‘h future and our price is 25 oenis per pound, 1 oui Fea has male a name for 3*««!f y ts pecutar flavor and quality | aso d to none, and is well known ais ave both town and co:rtry. Seen & GUFF Queen & KingSquare Grocers. War Pictures _ War Pictures Call at our office and see a series 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 cali and see; they’re well 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, I a eee The Examiner Pub. Go. ' t ‘JP TT te in Beets BOVRIL is infinitely more nourishing than Extract of Meat or Home Made Beef et, Pt Tea. For INVALIDS and E SN CONVALESCENTS, it is | [fj l a Alas! my poor Brother absolutely needful. od — gm me eS laughter Prices ——Still Continue wer" AT THE “= Great Fire Sale Ard Until Hverything is Sold The rush since the sa.e opered has been tremendous an we have been unable to wait on half the people who thronge our store, and everyone is delighted with the bargains they ge@ If you have not visited us, COME Now and get your share of the snaps from 20 to 50 p. c, on everything. Ready-made Clothing, Boots and Shoes, Gents’ Furnishings, Rubbers and Overshoes, {weeds and Flannels, Hats and Caps Underclething, Shirts, Collars, Cuffs, Neckwear, Blankets, Trunks, Valises a:d Wraps. Everything Must Go, and Go at Once. Come and share the bargains at the Great Fire Sale. Wiil be open till 8 every evening. BR. EL. Ramsay Co ~ cae CORSETS Se su SY: * Sages ae Forty pairs Black and Colored one dollar obs: goods tcMnight s Fifty Cents We : a « Gt T.3.Herris, — LONLON HOUSE 4 Sebamed tetrad THE WORLD'S GREATEST COMPANY The Mutual Life Insurance Co. of New York RICHARD A. [icCURDY, President ASSETS—$277,517,325.36. ANNUAL INCOME—$55,006,629.48 INSURANCE iN FORCE—$971,711,997.79 Wes All Canadian Policies payable iu gold<apgy Before placing your insurance please call or write fo stimates. JOHNIMcEACHERN. AGENT 27—Sat & Mon lmo~ dae Stoke ae te ° ve e ° ut