} ‘ J $a THR DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, NOVEVBER 16, 1900 —7_—7—V" a — Toward n pa Cana of Montre en bh an tent stated that ; Tart’, 2 warks, wl {cr ry litical a pe tne a conservat . roft the or iett ' then ruse tO } ? ¢ n Bergeron. came to 3 i later, wh organ been resunl in line W qonr : ong . ed Debats. ' We pari “ual 5 * ur friencs va Auger. W ; tea ahe ; es age { awa I 7 22 yy? Let us 0 ne ide wise, moderate, af raid to approv the past we Nav have raised it, and a high head. rejected SEs offer was mace ed, that one OF A , t is not through. It 1s nc ment was, OU th Mr little more SO. e of the su nit ign a statement gn had been made, a nished, inciudin Ch -ontroversy aie! a ide en Les | y¥ try } I showing ‘ } } xed and suc known what the pay KD T ; a L art ; Th Ss prudent, legitimate rights. In e bD THT ‘Commenting on Mr, Wilson’s stater ent dealers Asscciation cc ooo votes for Montreal Gazette says cnly one good turn re “The Lanrier governm electorial machine an the ministers, must, In have contributed well votes towards the liquor cess in the plebiscite the Appr veeks ‘was a sharp © . siatement, but it i i \ week a rAtiat . ial is the tast ] 1 aud freer let us tk government, The Progress f an Idea. } n can ured in a Fren™ Les Deba ts icted much at paper yn seen by Mr, of public week the "ect of that by rer » $50 per eey ry Sry Y turn ng lbebats had been id the propriet- vat he had = in- arte, junior, le said that the ib en accept- payment fur ‘traitor ittle articles on reek became a Sarce had ‘ssfully carried lions ~ Webdats Is now Patrie, only ; utte~. transform patriotism Br -presentalives whic. mi} LITIOLs, ict us De ey but let us not be read. but ; : iCud, ul today we keep a Lawrence A at the Liquor ntributed 200 the that this was aying another. nt through its | theeffons of this province yn tO 200,000 lection. hs seas = £28532 Nothing on E a iitge: ae rth will do it like Sheridan’s Powder. Thousands of successful over the country owe Poultry-Keepers all no small portion of their euccess to the practice of mixing with the mash tood given to their poultr uantity of SHERIDAN’S “very day, a small ONDITION POWDER. thas been used and indorsed by Poultry-Raisers over thirty years,and for all kinds of poultry. If you can’t paper tree. et the Powder send to us. ack, 25 cts.; five, $1. ix €ans,exp. paid, $5. Samy LS. JOHNSON & Large One two-lb. can, $1.20. e copy best Poultry CO., Boston, Mass. THE EXAMINER FOR NOVEMBER. _——— MOON'S CHA YGES a . af dealers suc Wait until— emer Ray’s Rrecruit SCTE oc Sev CAPTAIN CHARLES KING, ’U. S. A. AUTHOR OF “THE COLONEL’S DAUGHER.” Se et SO EAS LS THE “FROM RANKS,” ETC. copyriaut, 1898, BY J. B. LIPPINCOTT CO. ] ses eee toh hands of laughing children and their “To Mr. Darcy Hunter Gray: ““My Dear Boy—As foreshadowed fn my last, the concern bas gone to smash, and your prospects with it. When its affairs are settled, the firm of Hunter, Bloom & Co. will have enough to pay its funeral expenses, and that’s about all. What I have left is my wife’s, who will, I trust, be able to support me un- til certain life insurance policies become dme, out of which she can reimburse herself, through my dying, for the cost of my living. I’m too old to try again, b90 sad to care much, except for you. ‘‘Your father was my dear friend, your mother my beloved sister. When he died, I promised him I would bea father to you. When she died, her last words were a plea that | should be good to her boy I accepted both trusts, Darcy, and betrayed both. ‘They died poor I wasrich. They would have had you learn to carve your cwn career, and | loved you so that from your bright, brave boyhood you | were spoiled and indulged as my own son I gave you the bestI had. I balked you in only one desire, that of going to West Point. Harvard, London, Paris, Berlin, Vienna, Rome and the Riviera were your educators. I planned to make you a railway magnate when you hadn’t learned the first principles of the busi- ness. I’ve accustomed you to every lux- ury—to a life of careless ease, to bea dawdler and a dilettante—isn’t that what you call it? I counted on leaving you rich, and I leave you ruined. The self reproach, the misery which over- comes me as | write these words no words can tell you. ‘*I know what you would write and gay. You were always generous; but, Darcy, don't write, don’t come, just yet. Wait until you get—the next news. **However, let us get down to busi- mess. Of course you and Mrs. Hunter will pot be apt to see much of each oth- er She will mourn me less than yon, and you more than I deserve. The very little nest egg your mother set aside for | you is intact. With accrued interest it amounts to some $11,720. You have no debts to speak of, have you? I’ve paid all you ever told me about—twice, I think—and you were always frank and truthful That little sum, with what you have to your credit in the Chemical and over there with you, represents the sum total of your fortune needed it before, and so | never happen- | ed to mention it to you. ‘But despite your defects in bringing | /up, for which 1am responsible, you’re _ not much worse off than if you’d gone CALENDAR. into the army (I kaope you’ve outlived that lunacy, as you did the other one for—you know) and can now make a strike for yourself. You have the best of bealth, the best of looks—for you strongly resemble your uncle as he was at your age—the best of education for any purpose that isn't absolutely useful, aud there is nothing that | know of to prevent your marrying a fortune, asI did, and living happy ever after—as I white capped bonnes. The flashing oars of many a skiff dreve through the spar- kling waters, sending snowy little surges breaking from the sharp, white prows. Fairy yachts and swift paddle wheel steamers clove the mirror surface farther from the shore and tossed the creamy foam along their billowing wake. the shadow of the mountains, two white winged barks seemed wooing the fal- tering breeze, for not a leaf was stirring in the deep green foliage that shaded the patb along the sea wall. Towering bigh aloft, dazzling in the sunshine, the snow seamed, snow capped crags blinded the eye with their radiance as they peered down into their own reflec- tions in the somber depths at their shadowy base. Away to the eastward, lovely little towns and villages lay at the foot of the vine clad slopes of the northern shore, while here and therea venerable ruin—castle, convent or for- tzess—stood sentineled in bold relief on some projecting height or nestled under the shoulder of some rocky cliff close to the water's edge. the public place the carrousels, throng- ed with children, old and young, were spinning madly to the reedy melo- dief of some donkey driven organ. Waltz, galop and military march rioted | in loud rivalry and a group of Italian singers, smiling indomitably, caroled ‘*Funicali Funicuia’’ in nimble opposi- tion toa Tyrolean band quacking like noisy ducks in the pavilion at the wa- ters edge. The bell buttoned page of | the Beau Rivage was stil! darting about, You never | | impatient of further distributing letters just brought in by the grinning facteur, ever a-scent for | tips, and, having still three or four on- | delivered missives, halted in front of | the American. ‘*Pardon, m'‘sieu’, Langdon’ — ‘Up at the billiard rooms, probably, ” was the brusque answer, as Mr. Gray but—ees Mees | turned hastily away to hide the suspi- cious moisture in his eyes. ‘*But no. 1 ’avye been there. I ‘ave letters for ber, and for M’sicun’ Sm— — The gloom in the tall American’s face deepened perceptibly. ‘“‘Over yonder, possibly,’’ he answer- ed, with a sidewise nod of the head to- ward a little arbor ‘‘far from the mad- ding crowd” atthe eastward edge of the pretty grounds, then turned away, inquiry. Some | men were chatting eagerly at the foun- tain as he passed. One of them, English unmistakably, hailed him joviually. ‘*Time you were ready, Gray. You’re going to Chillon, of course.’’ And with a true Briton’s deep disdain of foreign names he spoke it-as it was spelled. ‘*No,’’ was the answer, ‘‘I’m going to cool off.”’ ‘*Been getting a redhot letter, as you Yankees say, I suppose, ’’ the island- er went on, impervious to satire. ‘*That’s abuut the size of it,’’ an- swered Gray, without halting. Two of the men looked after him with no little Half | way over to the Savoy shore, deep in | Near at band in | quitted during the previons winter, and all because Amy Langdon was r flirting Sega ’ ree tone, and gaged to far engag: denied hin, As pretty 44... as ever roae - tral park was Amy, and as du “ borsewoman, and it was Gray’s auuu rable riding and universally acknowl. edged prospects that made him for the time 80 acceptable a parti. He could manage a horse far better than he could | & woman, however, and Miss Langdon | kept him at her side when in saddle and subject to call at all other times. But she had, not unkindly, laughed off his protestations and dissected his offers, | “It’s absurd, Darcy. You haven’tacent | _ In the world that doesn’t come from your uncle, and who knows what his wife will do with his fortune, or he himself, for that matter? As for me, I’m a beg- gar with social aspirations. Come, be sensible, and I’ll like you better. Bea | soldier, Darcy, and face the facts. That’s | the one thing you’re cut out for.” | ‘You're hard hearted, Amy,’’ he had answered. ‘‘No; only hard headed. I’m soft | hearted enough to like you too well to spoil both our lives, ”’ Gray believed himself much in love when she went abroad in November, and took it much to heart that she should | be so constantly attended by Fred | Smythe, who had no atom of sense in | bis head, but no end of dollars in his pocket But when a lordling, a youn- | ger son of an older house than ever dwelt | in Gotham, an honorable, between whom and the title and estates was a lord with only-one lung and that fast going, had opposed his sighs to those | of Smythe, and there came rumors that | Locksley Hall was to be enacted over | gain with an American Amy in the foreground, Marcy Gray believed it | | time to rush for the Riviera, and a wor- vied old uncie most unwillingly let him go. Hunter loved that boy, his sister’s | son, as the apple of his eye. There | | wasn’t anything he wouldn’t have given | him but the means of earning his own | living. All that he proposed to settle | | magnificently. But the bottom began to drop out of the market in mid-January | and left him stranded high and dry by | the middle cf May. Two million dol- | | jars, said Wall street, had ‘‘gone where | the woodbine twineth.” | | | Over beyond the hurly burly of the public place, crewded with townsfolk ind children, the roadway wound along ‘ihe water’s edge. Gray strode rapidly 'westward, his head bowed, his hands ‘thrust deep in his trousers pockets. He ‘missed his usual companions, a heavy ‘stick and a nimble fox terrier, but both ‘had been left with the portier as inap- propriate to a voyage to Chillon. They were to have started, a merry party it | promised to be, by the early boat from |Geneva, and he could see her now cleav- ‘ing the limpid waters around the head- | land of Morges. It was time to warn his companions that he could not go. One girl, at least, might miss him, and she should be accorded opportunity to name ‘some other escort, Amy—‘‘Amy, shal- low hearted.’’ She had disappeared with that brainless ass half an hour ‘ago, possibly to console him for the fact ‘that he was not one of the dozen bid- Zen by Mme. la Comtesse to be of the | ‘party to voyage with her to the famous | ‘castle, breakfast with her aboard La | France and dine en fete at Montreux. ‘Vane, the Briton, was one, and small ‘comfort did he afford Smythe by bid- ‘ding him jolly up and perhaps madame ‘would let him in for postprandial cof- 'fee at Montroo. Gray bad never been able to stomach Smythe. He called him an insupporta- | ble cad, but when at a turn in the path | Was still _ Solus atthe Hotel Terminus. He paused | at the portico and yazed in at the scene _y’know, wished to speak with you di- | for you.”’ eterna! | We huts BOULL were su ping cofi ut the « American aud English gi escorts were dancing in the ith their salon. Gray in *‘knickers’’ and had dined of mirth, luxury and enjoyment wherein he had been so thoroughly at home and contrasted unflinchingly the scene with that which he had planned for his fa- ture. Now it was necessary for him to get to his room to write, and he hoped to reach it unobserved, but the Hon Rokeby had received his instructions and nabbed him. ‘**Eoh, I say, Gray—Miss Langdon, rectly you came in.’’ ‘*Yes,’’ was the languid answer. “And where is she now?’’ **In their salon, I fancy. She said she was too tired to dress for dinner. Had @ beastly day, y’know.”’ Gray nodded, slowly ascended the winding stairway and tapped at the | door in the west corridor. ** *Trez,’’ answered a boyish voice, | and Darcy was exuberantly welcomed | “Look here, old man,” | By & 10-year-old Langdon. ‘‘The mater | and sis are having a row in the gal- lery,’’ said he radiantly. ‘*Old Smythe’s | | been pestering her. Go out there. They | | don’t mind you, you know, and | can’t | get away from here until they've finish- ed.’’ But further confidences were ended by the sudden entrance of Miss Langdon | herself. She had evidently been watch- ing for Gray's return. Outstretched to him in eager greeting were Amy’s long, slender white hands; uplifted to his in anxious inquiry were a pair of the soft- est, lovelieste gs. The voice in which she spoke was soft, almost tremulous. | “What is it, Darcy?’ The hand sidled into his, and Miss Langdon walked toa sofa whither she would have drawn him, but despite tbe | band, which, notwithstanding, be re- leased, he remained on his feet and con- tisely answered : ‘‘What you expected.”’ ‘“‘From Mr. Hunter? @orald, go down and play with Ralph until wother sends ‘‘Ralph isn’t there,’’ was the petao- lant answer. ‘“‘Then go and play. Go anyhow.” Then she turned for answer. ‘‘From Mr. Hunter?’’ ‘Von °’ ‘*And it’s true?” “*Yes, every cent.” Then the hands would be no longer | knows we I will guarantes that my Rheumatiem Cure will relieve lum bago, sciatica and al matic pains in two or three houra, and cure in a few MUONYON, At ell droggista, 25c. a vial. eae to Health and med} cal advice free. , 1505 Arch et., Phita. oNAP AUSTRIAN CHINA TEA SETTS We've received a “cask of the above through mistake of shippers. and if we dont satisfy the buying public in this ariele we | are not the low selling people that every one are. They're selling very low, We're bonud to make ’em go, They’re the nicest ones in town And the very latest style. Drop in and see then. Everysth nz the else selling at low price | for which we are sv noted. W. P. COLWILL, THE CROCKERY WARE MAN, P. E. Islan t's Great st Cruckery Store, Sum nyside, Charlottetown, EPPSS GOCOA GRATEFUL COMFORTING Distinguished everywhere for Delicacy of Flavour Superior Quality, and Highly Nutritive Properties. Specially grate- ful and comforting to the nervous and dyspeptic. Sold only in 3-lb tins, labelled JAMES EPPS & CO., Ltd. Homeopathic Chemists, London, England. BREAKFAST SUPPER EPPSS COCOA November Now is the time —1) “~¢ FulllMoon. 6th. 3h. 12 concern in their eyes. Others hailed he came suddenly upon the combina- . , ; i ca " 13 : om, P. m. didn t ‘ | him as he passed them by. Gray was |tion of brainless ass and insupportable | denied. Both went impulsively out, | To Plant... nt 4 Quarter, 13th. 6h, 49m, p.m. Don't underrate the extent of my | P y y Ib seized his with no timid grasp and | ; New Moon, 2Ist, 10h, 29m. p. m. .| eollapse—Bloom got away with what | evidently popular. A woman in billow- |cad squatted on a stone, elbows on “he ae | . 7 ; ,p p e y i Is d ken i frew bim impetuously down beside First Quarter, 29th. 9h. 47m. a.m | Wall street left—or of my love. Thank | ing laces and a parasol chair smiled | knees, his fuzzy jowls deep sunken in at | a - God, | have no son of m pirate Thank | largely upon him aa he raised his straw | bis bands, his eyes on the faraway line her. Then to bis amaze be caw the fair | ‘ ae ‘High Water! Sun God. “ve only you to shal to and say, | hat and bade him pause, but prevailed of the Savoy shore, the intruder relent- | face stn ee _ a Mj rin | Afi’n Rises.| Sets. | ‘Forgive the blind, miscalculating, but ' not. Two younger women, in trim ed. Here wae woe perhaps as deep as en tudiabmeiadi sleek ee — | And Read the ; —< files | utterly humbled old fellow that’ ’’— | walking attire, nodded coquettishly and aera this case misery loved not | tion. “Ob, you poor, dear boy—oh, j Thursday 445! 6 305 52 4 26 Fat bere the eyes of the man seated | said it was the very day for the trip company, and Smythe was surly. No, | Darcy, Daroy, I never—I never knew | November | ‘| Friday 618 7 ys! 53 | 2. | there by the dancing waters in the glad | Then, too, he answered only vaguely, pany, . thing Gray could do | ‘how much I cared for you till now,” | ue 5/Saturday 7 54\- 8 301 S54 | A April sunshine grew so blind with tears | and with a faraway look in his deep | there wasn't any 8B y be almost sobbed. “Gerald. if you | 2 4l3 a+ ae eee | bl b d to the tel h |for him, thanks. He was feeling seedy, | she = some See, 3 Ie | agazines Sunday 901) gigi 55 | 2 that be could read no more. | Diue eyes be passed on e@ telegrap hat | don’t leave this room instantly, I’ll”’ iM | = d of k | that was all. It was plain to see tha 1 t 16 : onday 10 00; 10 04 56 | 36 Unt on the blue, translucent waves Office, and the group smoking me ; | Fuuesday 10 54 10 44 58 | 29 the white swans were paddling to and | broke up. the interview with Miss Langdon had (To be Continued.) | A full stock of each on hand. Wednesday | 11 46, 11 18| 59 | 98 tro. dipping for bread tossed by the lav-| ‘‘Something’s amiss with Gray,” said | left him sore at heart. Gray stood an- gyhursday 12 36 11 49) 7 I 27 aor me one of the party, a New Yorker. ‘“‘I’ll other moment eee ee care —- | oo Friday i 2 3 25 CA absolutely no reason why he sbou 9° sei Aa ae eo H d & M : jeaturday O22} 213) 5 24 ““] don’t see what there was in the | the fellow a good turn. Smythe hated Weak Sick] : asZar Oore a coe I 02) 3 22) z | 23 aize of the letter to upset him,” said | him and -plainly showed. it, but Gray J y | i edey : ssl ; 4 9 en i the Englishman, unconscious of slang | bad ignored his spleen, er — a | Sunnyside. ednesday| 3 ye 5 41, 10 = that was not Britannia ware. ‘‘Gray’s | humoredly tolerated ae . 8s ae “6 Child ren | ursday 5 14| 6 33) 12 19 | a good sort though. Could a fellow do | a man to forgive another's = a: | a 16)Friday 6 gol 7201 13 | is | anything, d'you suppose?” but Gray bad suffered too mac fan, Goutaned, tn Masi aan i Saturday | 7 49) 803] 14 oo But the pursuer was slow. Seeing | Miss Langdon’s caprice not to en the mi ee Vigour by | Sunday 8 46 8 431 16 16 him coming and divining his object, symptoms when so patent as they were Using Dr. Chaso’s Nerve Food. ” a oy ponday 1 9 35, 9 21 17 a Mr. Gray slipped out of the side door, jim Smythe Ill fortune makes some wany children are pale, weak, and ii Od eesday | 10 18) 9 54 19 14 | dived through the shrubbery that bor- | natures magnapimous—rare natures— bloodless from their birth. Many others a 2 Wednesday | 10 58| 19 21] 20 Ate ‘ — - ; co d Gray turned again. have their blood and nerves exhaust- Thursday IF 37 10 46) 21 3 i} 2 een dered a winding driveway to the west hh - b id man” (‘‘old chap” | ¢d, and their systems broken down by Friday 12 37) ay 12 2.) Uric Acid left in the blood and took himself off through the crowd- Look here, 0 . “ig | | the ravages of disease, or as the re- . ’ oa Saturday | 12 el at 45 — ais by disordered kidneys ed place. He had need to be alone—to bad uot then come into vogue), > sult of over-study at school. Children’s Class and Private S'Sunda : 4 1 acl oc me | ¥ h face his changed fortunes fair and can’t do aaything for you, you can for Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food is the ideal Lessons. 26 Monday i 22 ae 22 a2 oa lodges Es. ‘ ‘* Ba square me. I was to have gone with that party, treatment for —- It supplies the 27 Tuesda ae os 3 06! 28 which branches irom the . ciel old and up to the | you know, to Chillon this morning. | very elements which are lacking in the G . Chile wi oats 2 Wednesday sal 3 59) 29 os | eye over the forehead, and aatide mail Sen America & had | Yonder comes the boat now. Go to x goad nervous, . aoa aie nai arta Thursday 3 23| 4 56) 3° 10 | Scrossithe check to the never known a care since boyish days, | madame for mo, like a good fellow, and | invigorates the nerves, and builds up | Saturday, Nov. 10, from 3 to 5 p.m. Friday | 5 554 31 |4 9 side of the nose. The less it was some momentary heart tell her I've just received ill tidings | the system. As a restorative after the Pitents 7 onntet at oe te , AM | ‘ . an home. I’ve got to go to Geneva | exhausting and debilitating effects of slp evs amy : war, 4 ees j Cause 1S the Same as in all pang when Amy Langdon proved un- from i ca Fog I ad ired méasien, ecariet fever. and auch all society dances taught Skirt dan aw s _ : : : dies ‘ ° w , , mis my we aces Standard time is used in tide tables. | Rheemation— disordered kind. In a dawdling, amateurish way oy, Semen Tannen Tell a ldoeaia ments, it is of incalculable worth. ing, the Highland Fling, Sailor's Kidneys. The cureis like- }}| he had read the daily papers and signed | © but I can’t go |. Mrs. Stephen Dempsay, Albury, P. E. | Harnpipe, Spanish Dances, etc., tea | wise the same— some letters and reports laid before him | I’m awfully sorry, du if she | eoUnty, Ont. writes:—" My little grand- | etc also taught. by an attentive clerk in the office of the She’!l ask - in my place—see - ee ae ae vg wee Seer oe <n angemeats for lessons may be 4 | doesn’ ae ppetite. ® 7 ae MCEACHEN & McCABE, | Dodd’s awe ane Some a adh caetame minute be was breast- | had a tired, wornout appearance, and | made at any hour from 2 p. m. to 10 ‘risters-at-L. ’ | of which his unole was 4 heavy stock- the heights to Lausanne, while | W%* Gelicate and sickly. I got some! p. m., on application at the hall, at-Law ctc, McDonald’s Bleck, | d minent director. The | ing the eigh of Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food for her, and ae ; ; ai treet Chats @ ts ° holder and pro to Beau Rivage é er’s Buil , Queen street. arlotte Street, thing he had ever undertak- Smythe was speeding it has helped her very much. She is o's f : Sydn ey mest serious thing ck city It was late that evening whem he re- | gaining considerably in weight and Any person wishing to form 4 Mes * ee ea was his membership in a ose hb | turned from a solemn day with the | icoks real healthy.” priyate class may arrange their S AX Howses in aad about Syd ey. ‘ie ; t, wherein be had served throug bankers, the consul and certain trades- | Dr. Chase's Nerve Food, 50c @ bor, st | choice of evenings. and sald, and moacys i 4 ee the ranks and really earned a commis folk whoap prospects, temporal and | Sl! dealers, or Edmaanson, Bates and £ ae at SROF, notice, ag cliem is many fe 4&wa avocations he had Pinca ores