ig aie Ba SMe 64244 4 6464484604086 oo" ~“SOeee7eee 100606460 6 KELLY'S & C0’S. THE DAILY EXAMINER CHAKLOTYTETOWN, AUGUST 4, 1899 oe - em H os io maugneene ee ea ~~ since i saw you last?’ Charles asked. } Lhe ¢t Cinnenbh We i wv rm a, % FIVE YEARS after making several efforts to break the | wonldn’t it, fet! " asked En ce, | t silence. | y si i Substance-Shadow “DODDS , KIDNEY “PILLS <7) Stussy / SOSA R 7 a “a ai at B you wart a horse worth $100, you'd be silly te pay Si00 for his photo only. If you acei DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS you'd be silly to buy an i imitation. i 0000'S ARE — e | LIKE THIS, D-O-D-D“S ADVICE AECUT Spice. When onlering a packrge Pepper, Ginger, Allspice, Cin naraon or Cream of Tartar from your grocer you can al- ways feel sure of securing the best quality by asking for : Mott's “BEG VONGD SF GOCE O4EBE -SoO4O3836 2 O47 @ 8 &- @*s ©OS? Are always to be depended on.... groceri¢ tig wa ware ~~ GROCERIES i Only the vest kept in stock, Our c If you ®.omers are. satisfied customers. want to be satisfied with deal with us, your Try the TEA we seli. Special atten- given toite selection. Therame s exercised in buying all other lines, | AND BE SSATISFIED } | Eo. i csiniiades | | ii JAMES KELLY &(00 $+., near London House Corner. Marmalade. We bave just received a new kind o ORANGE MARMALADE, put up in glass EEE pote, which we are now offering at the Ary rate of 2 Pots for 25 cents Also jnet openes 1 a case <« ’ Pine- apple Marmalade which is of very fine flavor. The Pineappie atd Ginger Marmalade has also given excellent satis- factior Those are «tl new gocds and you should try them if you want something nice and tasty. ip) rie fe) BEERS +R OU a ts The Nicest Freshest e2aane2ANDQEe® ST GROCERIES C roceries ET Me the appetite, that will ( roceries tha do not take all your money to buy .empt Groceries that ev sryone ID the hoase will like. Duy and try. Comein and see us, Driscoll & Hornsby QOF Fy QUEEN STREET—— >Y OPIE CHAPTER III. Five years dé but th dreary READ not elapse every day, ipse every five years. Along and waiting hearts, if they be anxious and waiting, but anxiety has been known to wear away, and what was once painful wait- ing sometimes becomes a condition of easy endurance. Charles returned. He bad seen much of the world and had collected a few dollars. ‘So you have a lover at home, ¥ eli time of anxious 9)? eh } @ miner had said to him. ‘Yes, a sort of lover,’’ he replied. “A good enongh conntry girl, easily surprised and somewhat verdant. I used to think a great deal of her, but I was a boy, you know.’”’ ‘Your old iover will soon be home, won't he, Ermance?’’ a young lady asked of the girl whose head resembled a patch of jute. “I suppose so, but why do you refer to him as my lover?’’ ‘“‘Why, I thought that you were en- gaged !’’ ‘‘Oh we were in a childish sort of way, but I have put that all aside. Fa- ther had more sense than both of us.’’ Charles did not rush over to the colo- nel’s immediately after returning. Er- mance, when she heard that he had re- turned, went away on a visit. The young man felt ashamed of himself. He knew not what excuse to make, but one day grasping all the courage within reach, he went over to the colonel’s, wondering as he went how he could have been so foolish years ago. ‘‘Why, my dear sir,’’ exclaimed the colonel, ‘‘] am glad to see yon. Yon’ve got enough beard to disguise an or- dinary man, but you are not ordinary. Little above fair to middlin, as the cot- ton men say.”’ “Tl am glad to see you again, colonel. How’s your rheumatism ?’’ “It got well immediately after that garden scene.’”’ ‘‘Foolish children,’’ replied Charles. ‘*Well, I should say so,’’ replied the colonel. ‘*How is, er—Miss Harleyman ?’’ ‘Quite well, I believe. to Ralston’s a few days ago. j She went over I sent the buggy after her this morning. I hear her now. Yes, my rhenmatism is all right. First rate, for—-Ermance, here a minate. Do you know this gentleman ‘ “I think so,’’ replied the young lady, advancing without embarrassment and extending her hand. ‘‘How is your health, Mr. Wexall?’’ ‘*Never better, thank you.’’ ‘*Well,’’ said the colonel, ‘‘yon mnst excuse me, as I have business out on the farm. rmance, our friend must stay to dinner.’’ An awkward silence followed. Charles | knew not what to say ror how to say it; | Ermance was embarrassed because she knew not how to express the nothing | which she had to say. ‘‘Have you been at homeall the time or Happy, healthy child- 4. hood! Every childless : rey" woman feels a tugging at her heart - strings &) when she sees = Sj another woman’s ¢ iy _ happy, healthy ww rollicking baby. Motherhood is wWo- , man’s supremest a> \t, duty and her su- “1 \? premest happi- o => ness, Hven if e& childhood she a shows how deeply timent is Mm implanted in her oy ee t when she plays with her Ad ab) rt re | ia = dolls. There are ¢ pu Sore , ie oo of . at ae 7 otherwise appy eter owas wives in this ate Nd * -° world who only ” lack the thrilling f a first-born’s fingers to comple te the bh ppiness wife may be the mother of happy, ldren who will. Thousands of » had lived years of cheerless, 4 th is sent s wedded life, or whose babies have i m weak and sickly, soon to die, are now happy mothers of healthy Idre id bless Dr. Pierce’s Favorite scription for the wonders it has accom ! t This great medicine acts ‘ i y on the delicate and im- nt organs that bear the burden of ma- t It makes them strong, healthy, . us and elastic. It allays inflam- on, heals ulceration, and tones and It banishes the xpectant months and mS ¢ > nerves. forts of the « il lvent easy and alm st pain- less It insures a healthy child and an ample ipply of n ishment. Honest dealers will not offer worthless substitutes for Ke ¢ tl led hi annot say enough in praise of Dr. Pierce's Fave e Pre i is it has undoubtedly nave ny life vyrites Mrs. Florence Hunter, of Corley. Logan C Arl “I miscarried four ti Id get no medicine to do me any good ne se ral bottles of Dr. Pier« s Fa- wo! Prescript I > my husband a pres- ent of a fine git Free! Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Med- ical Adviser. For paper-covered copy send 31 one-cent stamps, fa cover customs and stailing only. Cloth-bound 5ostamps. Ad- dress Dr. R V. Pierce, Buffalo, N.Y. Awhole u.edical library in one 10o0-page volume. " SUNNYSIDE” DENTISTRY Meee in New Prowse Block, up C fice first door to the right stairs. DR. AYEPS ~ ‘‘Oh, no; seminary. ‘“Enjoye d yourself pretty well, I sup pose ?’ ‘*Very much. I soon became interest- ed in my siudies.’’ Another em mance—I that’’— “Of gether. ’ “So we were, and foolish too, doubtless. ’’ ‘“*Yes,’’ she replied, without hesita- tion. ‘‘Father was wiser than we The situation was no longer awk ward. “I thonght I loved you, Ermance.”’ “‘And I thought that I loved you.’’ “Childish fancy. You don’t know what a heavy weight you have lifted from my mind. I don’t love you.’’ **Charles,’’ she replied, ler eyes shin- ing with fervent light, ‘‘you make me happy. I have long regretted our en- gagement, and to know that a perfect understanding is painless to you thrills I spent three years at a barraasing silence. ‘‘Er suppose I may call you by We were course. children to- children, me. Let us be friends. Here’s father. ’’ “*Ah, hah!’’ said the old gentleman. ‘‘Found that some one else had attend ed to my business. Are you folks still enraced?’’ ‘‘No,’’ replied Charles. ‘‘We are friends, but not lovers.’’ “Ah, hah!’ said the old man, ‘‘snp- i i had allowed you tomarry? Don’: you see that a man sometimes has more se} than a boy? Now ron and © e friends. If you had married you would now in a?! be enemies. Well, Charles you need fee] no hesitancy in remaining to dinner. We generally have some- thing lying around, and you may come over and eat when you feel like it. Why, Ermance, I never caw you so happy.”’ + ’ rs ago, ’ i eis Gawvuity CHAPTER IV. Neighborly visits were kept up be- tween the Harleymans and Wexalls. Charles and Ermance rarely referred to their childish freak of affection, and when they did so it was merely to con- gratulate themselves. ‘‘How many marriages result in disaster,’’ said Charles, one evening as he and Ermance walked in the garden. ‘‘Five years ago [ thought that your father was the cruelest of men; now I think he is one of the wisest.’’ “‘Yes, he is undoubtedly a man of fine sense.’ “Did he ever say anything, during my absence, to dissuade you from our purpose ?”’ ‘*No; he always spoke in a way di- rectly opposite. Often, at night, when I went into the library to attend upon his wants—an office which none but I could discharge, he would stroke my hair while I sat on the footstool and tell me of the duties of a wife--how I should always leve yan and how neble you were. He never made fun of me, and at first, when I used to sit alone, and—and—weep, he would come to me and tell me how I was loved, and how happy I should be for having won a heart so—so—unchangeabie.’”’ ‘““Ermance, this t where we stood five years age.’’ ‘““Yes. How chill the air is.’’ **T think there will be frost tonight,’’ “By the way, ing back to the mines. se strong and become strangely at- is the spo he replied. fx tend, I am go I long to meet th fellows. I have tached to them.’’ ‘‘When are you going? ‘*Tomorrow.’’ ‘*Then I know there will be frost to- night.’’ He caught her in his arms. The yel- low hair fell over his shoulder. ‘‘Angel, I cannot help loving you. I have strug- gled, but in vain. Let us goto your father.’’ Simipie ? CHAPTER V. ‘‘Come in,’’ said the old gentleman, looking up from a mass of paper. ‘‘I tell you, Charles, to make anything out of this cotton business requires .close figuring. I ought to have made $12,000 last year, but I didn’t—young man, let me tell you that I didn’t.’’ **‘How much did you make?’ “Only $11,800, Charles. Bad crop year. Sit down, both of you. You re- mind me of pictures hung in front of a museum. ”’ ‘‘Colonel, I have decided to go back to the mines.’’ **Yes, well, of course. When a man once forms a liking for that kind of life, it is almost impossible to break him of it. Yes, of course.’’ GY ji ta “Come tn,” said the old gentleman. “But if he were to remain away fivg my Gear ; EINES | gener eenem hiss f iy at Chari £ “Well, dog my cats, I don replied the old gentleman, his ¢ hair. eh? shoving back “It would seem so, though, Well, blow me up! five vears proposition into your head, ot ‘*‘Nothing, that’’— ‘‘Look here, only I thought that— is that the way friends todo? Put their arms around each other? Well, dog my cats, if she hasn’t got her jute patch all over his face! Let me get out of here before I have rheumatism so bad I can’t hobble. ”’ ‘‘Wait, colonel. We are engaged again. It was impossible for us not to | love’ * ie ‘*We couldn’t help it, father.’’ *“‘And,’’ continued Charles, ‘‘we have iecided to marry at once.’’ ‘Of course,’’ said the old gentleman, Wiping his eyes. ‘‘Of course. Bad cot- ton year, Charles—of course—well, dog my cats!’’ C P.R ENGINEER'S STATEMENT Ben Rafferty of Winnipeg Division Says Dodd's Kidney Pills areO K. WinyipeG, Man., July 31 —Probably the most entbusiastic man in Menitoba in regard to Dodd’s Kidney Pille is Ben Raf- fertyof the C. P. R. He is one of the drivers on the big irans-continentsl road and the jatriug ofthe engioe and long hours combined to bring on Kidney di- sease from which Mr. Rafferty euffered for twenty years. He was cured by Dodd’s Kidnzy Pills. His case is so weil known througbout Canada thata Toronto man wrote to Mr. Rafferty recently asking him if he could recernmend Vodd’s Kid- Pills. Mr. Rafferty wrote in reply. Winnipeg, May 30th, 99 Dear Sir,—I received your note of ves~ terday. I will recommend Dodd’s Kidney Pills at any time to any pereon with plea- sure. TheyareO. K. Yourstruly, B. Rarrerry. — = = eS a a ae aw VIOLENT HEADACHES Accompanied by Indigestion and Constipation cured by Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills From Bath, Ont., comes the particulars of @ remarkable cure effected by Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills. Mr. Jos. Gardiner was for fM@y years the victim of indigestion, con- stipation, and violent headaches. Nothing seemed to have the desired effect until he be- an tne use of Dr. Chases’s Kidney-Liver Bits, and they effected a complete cure. Mr. writes ; been troubled for over forty years with indigestion and constipation, would go for two weeks atatime, At intervals I would be taken with violent headaches. I sy ent dollars and dollars in vain, and was finally ad- vised te use Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pi lls, and must say that they are the only remedy that gave me permanent relief. I would not be without them for anything, ’ Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills, one pill a dose. 25c.abox. Atal] dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Toronto. Gardiner ‘*T have Sex ae ee — | Geo Prices Right HASZARD & MOORE SUNNYSIDE GOODS IN a. Belt Buckles Waist Sets Neck Clasps G. H. TAYLOR STJNNVSTNW ’'t know,’’ What pnt the | for | _What is SSS Soli. ~~ ~~ s | ZT and Children. Cast % ‘te for Castor Oil, Paregor_, — cop Syrups. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years’ use by Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays Feverish- Castoria cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. Castoria Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. Castoria assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels of Infants and Children, giving healthy and naturai sleep. astoria is the Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. Castoria is for niants harmless subs and Svothing hess. relieves Castoria. Castoria. ‘*Castoria is an excellent medicine for) ‘*Castoria Is so well adapted to children children. Mothers have repeatedly told me that I recommend it as superior to any pre- of its good effect upon their children.” scription known to me.”’ Dr. G. C. Oscoon, Lowell, Mass. H. A. ARCHER, M. D. Brooklyn, N. THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OF ¢ é ¢ APPEARS ON EVERY WRAPPER. THE CINT# JF COMPANY T7 MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK cerry. REP ee HILL THE BUG ! —BY USinqg—— A Cyclone Insect Destroyer ieenatinss AI te ae Berger’s English Paris Green. ———- fOR SAL VMHOLESALE & RETAIL Simon W. Crabbe ST« IVES & HA R DW A RE | Warker’s Corner Groceries, ¢ Crockery » and » Glassware ———Retail at Wholesale Prices———— ~~ : 2 te ies cig 8 Thi: : a Six piece Glass Table Set iy 4,6 ie mane §6selling at 26c, regular price yy iY Bix Sigs! x i by, KS 25 cents, v PRS EG OO” | ~My is = 100 Flower Pots from lie uy ast a Pe 1000 Teapots from 10c "up. ‘Sie ae co 1000 Jugs very low ait For Os $ . wre a erry Sets, 7 pieces, 2h¢ 4 P. MONAGHAN Offer Buiidnig QUEEN STREET Lancashire Fire Insurance Uo. Victoria-Montreal Fire Insurance Co. The above Companies are not connected with the P. E. Island Board of Fire Underwriters, and are not bound by the tariff rates. I am, therefore, prepared to effect insurance.a substantially reduced rates 5. 5. FOUNSTON, pagent, Charlottztown, P, E. Island ne 4 —2aw tt