: 4 sya oi ee rt a 2 CNC CTE CREE Fe eS OTR eseneenn ce an ens . : : 4 40o) happses OL Dita ty wenden ee ADVENT OUTTA U TENCE RTO sure and excitement, with ite tou ‘a ot = = komme life, that leave their lasting im +: RISE AN] FALL = press upor esta «dese art, although Tom, | « : = with man-like blindness, never sees one 2 =: of them. Over. with ma, with the thou- 2 i THE MUSTACHE = sand amd one anxieties attendant on the : > grand event in her daughter's life, hid ¢ tek = den away under her Cear old smiling = ~ face. down, away down, under the te : ny NORERT J. BURDETTE. = glistening eyes, deep in the loving h-ari = x wna. hurrving here and fluttering there, % ppn ene neny Sa NRADR NAD RSNRR AEA RAARAAATRAARARE ALYY tom the int nse excitement of somethin 1s teey Sit Gna stamd there, looking at sfrangely made up of happiness and h other, the dings old counting-room’ grief, of apprehension and _hope; ma, heavy shadows lurking in with her sudden disappearances and ‘ re corner, with @ts time-worn, heavy flushed reappearances, indici ating stru ¢g- furnishings. with the scanty dash = giles and triamphs in the turbulent world inlicht breaking in through the down stairs: ma, with the new-fangled ndow, leoks like an old Rubers belt, with the dinner-plate buckles, fast- rt: the bewinning and the finish- ened on wrong side foremost, and the fa race; the old man, nearly ready flowers dangling down the wrong side of lay s armor off, glad to be near- her head, te Sophie's intense horror and vy and wfely through with the race pantomimic telegraphr; ma, flying here i the fieht that Tom, in all his imex- and there, seeing that every thing is go- ind with all the rash enthusi- neeic of a young man, is just to run and fight, or fight m and vetting ready and run, you never can tell which until he {s through with it. And the old man, looking at Tom, and through him, and vast him, feels his oid heart throb al most as quickly as does that of the young man before him. For looking down a lorg vista of happy, eventful ears, bordered with roseate hopes and right dreams and anticinations, he sees radiant with smiles and blushes; he feels a soft own with its timid under a tender face kindled sith hand drop into his pressure; he sees the vision open, the glittering summer stars, ‘down mossy hillsides. where the restless breezes, sigh- ing through the rustling leaves, whisper- ed their tender secrets to the noisy Katydids; strolling along ‘the winding paths, deep in the bending wild grass, down fe the star-lit aisles of the dim old woods; loitering where the meadow vrook sparkles over the white pebbles or murmers around the great flat stepping- stones; lingering on the rustic fout- bridge, while he gazes into eyes eloquent and tender in their silent loye-light; up throngh the long pathway of years, flecked and checkered with sunshine and cloud. with storm and calm, throuth yearemf struggle, trial, sorrow, disap- | pointment, out at last into the granl, glorious, crowning beauty and benisva of bard-won and well-deserved succe:s, until he sees now thie second Laura, re-imaging her mother as she was in the dear old days. And mh rouses from his dream with a start, and he tells Tom he’. ‘‘Talk it over with Mrs. Tret. and see him again in the nrerning.’’ fe they are duly and formallyver- gaged; and the very first thing they do, they make the very sensible, though very uncemmon, resolution to so theemselves that no ome will ever suspect it. And they succeed admirably. No cne ever does suspect it. They come :into church in time to hear ithe benediction-- every time they come together. They shun ali other peeple.when church is dis- missed, and are seem to go home the longest way. At picnies they are misced not more than fifty :times a day, .and are discovered sitting wnder a tree, hold- ing each other’s hands, gazing into each otber’s eyes and saying—nothing. When he throws her shawl over her shoulders, he.mever looks at what he is doing, ‘het looks straight into her starry -#pes, threws the shaw! right over her natural curis, and drags them out by the hair pins. If, at sociable or festival, they are left alone in a dressimgs room a secend anda half, Laura emerges with her rafGe standing around hike a railroad accident; and Tom has«enough comph ¥ ion on his shoulder to go around a yeurg ladies’ seminary. When they drive our they 4it in a buggy with a seat eightees inches wide, and there ix two feet of un- occupied room at either.end of it. Long years afterwards, when they drive, a streetecar isn't too wide for them; and when they walk, you ould drive four loads. ef hay between them. And yet, as carefoily as they guard their precious little secret. and as cau- tious and circumspect as they are iz their walk and behavior, it gets talked around that they are engaged. People are 80 prying and suspicions. And so the months .af ment ran on; never befere, or since, time flies so swiftly. Unless, it may be, some time when Tom has an acceptance in bank.to meet in twodays, that he can’t lift one end of—and the wedding their envage- day dawng, fates, and the wedding is over. Over. with its little circle of de- ; 7) ome ba’ oe SICK AEADAGHE Positively enred by these Little Pills. They tivo relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, Indizestion and Too Wrarty Ezting. <A per- fect remeuy for Dizziness, Nausea, Dr wsi- ness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels, Punely Vegetable Small Pill, Small Doce. Small Price. Substitution the fraud of the day. See you gct Carter's, sk for Cartex’s, Insist and demand conduct | rhe DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN , JANUARY 11, 1898 ~ ing rigut, from kitchen to dressing-rooms; looking after everything amd ‘everybody, with her hands and heart jest as full as they will hold, and more woices calling ‘‘ma’’ ifrom every room in the house, that rou would think one hundred mas could.answer. But she answers them all, and she sees after everything, and just in the nick of time prevents Mr. Tret from going downstairs and attend- ing ‘the ceremony in a Joud-figured dress- ing-gown and ere an slippers; ma, who, with quivering Ap and glistening eyes, hes to be cheerful, amid-lively, and smil- imz; because if, as she thinks of the dearest and best of ler flock going away from her fold, to give her life and her happiness into another's keepirg, she zives away for one moment, a dozen re- mproachful voices cry ‘out, ‘‘Oh-h, ma!’ ‘How it all comes back to Laura, like the tender shadows of a dream, long years after the dear, dear face, furrowed with marks of patient suffering and loving care, rests under the snow and the daisies; when the mother Jove that glis- tened in the tender eyes has closed in darkness on the dear old home; nerveless hands, «crossed in dreamless sleep upon the pulseless breast, can never again touch the children’s heads with caressing gestures; how the sweet vision comes to Laura as it shone on her wed- | ding morn, rising in tenderer beauty through the blinding tears her own ex- cess of happiness‘valls up, as the rain- bow spans the cloud only through the migling of the galden sunshine and the falling rain. And pa, dear did shabbby pa, whose clothes will not fit him as they fit other men; who always dresses just a year and a half behind the style; pa, wandering up and down through the house, as though he were lost in his own home, | pacing through the hall like a sentinel, ' blundering aimieesly and listlessly rooms where he has no business, and being repelled therefrom by a choras of piercing shrieks and hysterical giggling; pa, getting off his well worn jokes with an assumption of merriment that seems positively real; ma, who creeps away by himself once im «a while and leans his face against the ~window, and sighs, in direct violation of all strict household regulations, right against the glass, as he thinks of the little girl going awar to-day from the home whose love and tenderness and patience she knows so well. Only yesterday, it seems to him, the little baby girl, bringing the first music of baby prattle into his home, then a little girl in short dresses, with school. girl troubles and school-girl pleasures; then an older girl, out of schoo] and inte society, but a little girl to pa still. And then—-. But somehow,this isas faras pa can get, for he sees, in the flight of this, the first, the following flight of the other fledglings; and he thinks how silent and desolate the old mest will be when they have all mated and flown away. He thinks, when their flight shall have made other homes bright and cheery and sparkling, with music and prattle and laughter, how it will leave the old home hushed and quiet and still. How in the long, lonesome afternoons, mother will sit by the empty cradle that rocked them all, murmuring the sweet old cradle songs that brooded over all their sieep, until the rising tears check the swaying cradle and choke the song—and back over river and mountain and prairie that roll and stretch and rise between the old home and the new wnes, comes back the prattle of her little ones, the rippling music of their laughter, the tender ca- dences of their songe until the hushed ald home is haunted.by memories of its ehildren—gray and .old they may be, with other children clustering about their knees, but to dhe dear old home they are ‘‘the children’’ still. And dream- ing thus, when pa fer a moment finds his little girl alone—h’s little girl who ie going away out of .the home whose lave she knows,in‘tc a heme whose tender- ness and patience are all untried—he holés her in his arins amd whispers the most fervent blessing that ever throbbed from a father’s heart; agd Laura's wed- ding day would be incomplete and un- feelir.a without her tears. So is the pat- tern of our life made up.of smiles and tears, shadows and sunshine. ‘om sees none ef the background pictmres of the wedding day. He sees mume.of its real, heartfelt earnestness. He saes only the bright, sunny tints amd happy figures that the tearful, shaded hackground throws owt in golden relief; laut never stops to think that, without fhe sha- dows, the elouds, andthe somber tints of the background the picture would be flat, pale azel lusterless. And then the presents. The a«sort- ment of braekets, serviceable, ornamental and—cheap. The French clock, that never went, that does not go, that never will go. The nine potato mashers. The eight mustard ¢«poons. The three cigar stands. Eleven match safes; assorted patterns. A dozen tidies, charity fair style, bine deg on a yellow background, barking ata green boy climbing a red fence after seal brown apples. The two churns, old pattern, straight handle and dashex, and they have as much thought of keeping .# cow as they have of keeping a section of artillery. Five things they didn’t know the names of, and never could find amy body who could tell what they were for. A nickle-plated cork- screw, that Tom, in 4 fine burst of in- cignation \ throws out of the window, Carter's Little Liver Pills. which Laiga-says is iust Mike ber own and the , . bringing things up to it, helps him out into } o . n own a of cold and ruins the Knees of his bi t trousers grass hunt- Which is pulsive Tom, co to work and Llisppusdire avUu a impulsive Tom catches his d rawling around en for that same also just like her own im Lhen the young peopl In tne Vv corkscrew. buy e-y-e-r-y thing they need, the day they go to housekeeping. Everything. Just as well, Tom says, to get every it delivered right as to spend five ix or thing at once and have up to the house or s ten or twenty years in stocking up house ; his father did. Laura thinks so too, and she wonders that ‘Tom should know so much more than his father. This worries ‘tom himself, when he and he never rightly under- unvil he is forty-five or thinks of it, stands how it is, fifty vears old and has a Tom of his own to direct and advise him. ‘So they make out a Jist, and revise it, and rewrite it, until they have everything down, com- plete, and it isn’t until supper is ready the first day that they discover there isn'ta knife, a ferk, or a plate ora spoon in the new house. ‘The first day the washerwoman comes, and the water are all ready, it isn’t a washtub is hot, and the clothes is discovered that there nearer than the grocery. Further along in the day the discovery is made that while Tom has bought a clothes i that wiil reach to the north and then has to be coiled two in the back yard there clothes pin in the settlement. In the course of a week or two ‘Tom slowly awakens to the realization of the fact that he has only begun to get. If he should live two thousand years, which he rarely does, and possibly may not, he would think, just before he died of something they wanted the worst way for five canturies, and had either been too poor fo get, or Tom had always for- gotten to bring up. So long as he lives, Tom goes on bringing home things that they need-—~—absolute, simple necessities, that were never so much as hinted at in that exhaustive list. And old Time comes along, and knowing that the man in the new house will never get through up a aii or and cemes around and brings things too. Bring # gray hair now and then, to stick im Tom’s mustache, which has grown ‘too big to be ornamental, and too wayward and unmanageable to be com- fortable. He brings litule cares and little troubles and little trials and little butcher bills, amd little grocer’s bills, and little tailor bills, and nice large millinery bills, that pluck at Tom’s mustache and ‘stroke it the wrong way and make it leok more and more as pa’s did the first time Tom saw it. He brings, by and by, tke prints of baby fingers and pats them.around on the dainty wall paper. Briagss sometimes a voiceless messenger that Jays its icy finger on the baby lips, andihushes their dainty prattie, and ix the baptism of its first sorrow, the dark- ened home has its tenderest tie to the upper fold. Brings by and by the tracks of a:boy’s muddy boots, and. scatters them all up and down the clean porch. brimgs a messenger one day, to take the younger Tom away to college. And Ghe quiet the boy leaves behind him is so much harder to endure than his ractet, that old Tom is tempted to keep a brass band.in the house until the boy comes hack. But old Time brings him home at last, and it does make life seem terrible real.and earnest to Tom, and hew the eldJiaugh rings ort and ripples all over L.wara’s face, when they see old Tam’s first.mustache budding and straggling intovife on young Tom’s face. Still old Time comes round, brieging each.year whiter frosts to scatter on the whitening :nustache,and brighter gleams ef silver to glint the brown of Lavra's huir. Bringing the blessing of peaceful old age .and a lovelocked home to erown the noble. earnest. real human lives, bristling with human fauits, marred with human mistakes, searred and seamed and rifted with human troutiles, and crowned with the compassion. that only perfection can ggnd upon imperfec- tion. Comes, with happr memories of the past, and quiet confidemee for the future. Comes, with the changing sesnes ef dxy and night; with winter’s sterm A womar 1¢ aith. mot be too careful of her Hee oa ippiness as maid, wife and mother is Gependent upon it. E very wo- man should realize that her general health jepends upon ‘her health in a womanly way. When a woman complains of being slug- gish, ‘rvous and despondent the attributes these symptoms to heart trouble, or disorders of the liver. Ile is not right eice in ten times. When a woman feels this way she is usu- ally suffering from weakness or disease of the organs distinetly feminine. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Preserigtion is the best of all lnown remedies fr suffering women. It acts directly on the delicate and important organs that bear the burdens of maternity. it makes them strong, healthy and vigor- ous. Thousands of wemen who were weak, nervous, fretful ard unhappy wives are to- day happy, healthy, helpful and robust as the result of the use of this marvelous rem- edy. Itis the discovery of an eminent and skillful physician, Dr. R. V. Pierce, for thirty years chief consulting physician to the Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y. During those years, with the assistance of a staff of able physicians, he has prescribed for many thousands of ailing women. He will gladly, without charge, answer letters from suffering wo- men. The ‘‘ Favorite Prescription ’’ "5 for sale by all good medicine dealers and noth- ing else is ‘just as good.”’ Sister Eliza L. de Falcon, of Corpus Christi, Nueces Co., Tex.. writes: ‘ This is to tell you that 1 have been iil for twenty-one vears and was a cured by your medicines, ‘Golden Med- ical Discovery’ and ‘ Favorite Prescription.’ I di ZZzY, & average doctor « was complete y cured after taking this medicine. | ‘Lime passes on, calm; comes, with the the backward dreams until one day, the eye of old reaper rests upon ol Tom, standing right in the swarth amid the golden corn. The sweep of the noise- less scythe that never turns its edze, old Tom steps out of s way and the cycle of a life and summer's sunny peace and of age; the relentless comes, young Tom’s is complete. Afghan Stamps, One of the torments af the postage stamp collectors is the ameer of Afghan istan. Old issues of Afghan stamps are rare and costly, and new issues are con- tinually being made. In vain the philat- elists try to put a stop to it, and even the last international postal congress in Washington dealt with it. The ameer’s new ideas in postage stamps are put for- ward solely with a view to filling his purse by selling them to collectors. His latest order is that each province and each principal city in his dominion shall have different stamps, in different co:- ors, and, furthermore, that every post- master shall peel the stamps from all the letters that come to his office and ind ’ pole a back, isn’t a| | { send them to the postal headquarters at Kabul, Thence they are sold in India and find their way into the hands of collectors.—New York Trib:ine. — $2 Ge ee DOES IT PAY TO TIPPLE, Yon know itdon’t. Then why do you do it? I know why. It requires too much self-deaialtoqnit. The Dixon Cure, which is taken privately, is purely vegetable, is pleasant to the taste, and will care you of «|| desire for injuor in two or three days, eo that you ‘would pay five cents for a barre] of beer or whiskey. You can eat heartily aud sleep soundly fram the start, and be better in every way, in both health aod pocket, and without interfering with bus- iness duties. Writein confidence for par ticulars. Mr. A. Hutton Dixon, No. 40 Park Avenue, Montreal. 3 Catarrh Hay} Fever Permanent] por inhalatkon—A mi -y ered 10 ae Trial Pree send Bbc. for express on outfit Dr. Ray’s Successful Remedy Co., 24 Mansing | Avente Dr.Ray’s Anti-Constipation PWis always cure. NTO Landon. Eng. Melbourne, Avs. ae a Coughs and colds need not be endured; they can be cured, and that quickly. Many mixtures are tem- porary in effect, but Scott’s Emulsion ef Cod-liver Oil with Hypephosphites is a permanent remedy. The oi feeds the blood and warms the body; the hypophosphites tone up the nerves; the glycerine soothes the inflamed throat and lungs. The combination cures. This may prevent serious lung troubles. soc. and $1.00; all druggists. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, Toronto. PROMPTLY SECURED: | GET RiCiH QUICKLY. Write to-day fora | free copy of our big Book on Patents. We have extensive experience in the intricate patent = sof 50 foreign conntries, Send sketch. model hoto for free advice. MARION & MA- E ON, Experts, Temnle Building, Montreal. WORPGAGH SALE, To Xe sold by Public Auction, atthe Court H- use,in sum merside.on Saturday, the 2204 day of January,A 1),:s598, at the bour of tweive o’eicek, noon, uoder a power of sale contsin- edina merges datedthe twenty-first dav of -eptermbe:, A. 2. Issé,and made between cyrus Wequeantt acd veter Meqneault and Charlotte Meqneault, wife of ssia Peter Me- i @f J. Edward qnesult. of ine one part, and J. Edward W yalt, of the otber part, Alland singular that tract of land situate on Lot 4, Prince Coanty, prenee Edward Is- land. bounded as follow-:—Commeneing on the shore of Bede que Buy,in the seuth-est angle of land of i: haddey Arvenauit; thence alovg the same northeasterty seventy-two chatinsand fifty links, or to the southern boundary of land formeriv owned by Janiel Arsenault. «nd land owned by Paul Perr ; thence easte’ iy along the same seven chains and one link, to iana of Louis Perry; thence southwest riy alorg the same sev+.ty two ehains and tifty lingsto the shere, thence following the same w2sterly to the place: f commencement, containing fifty acres of land, more ur l¢ss for further particulars aprly at the office WwW vatt, Summerside, lated this 8 aday of December, A D,_ 1897, J.EDWARD WYATT, Mertgagee dec6—cd4i—1 LEGAL CARD. ‘Mathieson & Bentley a ee Barristers, Solicitors, Etc OFFICES— Cameron Block, Charlottetown Main Street, Georgetown. MONEY TO LOAN J. A. 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For sale by a!i authorized vendors, and wholesale by © For Sale By All Licensed Vendors & cuvnernenenernn er ohn Pere ee t Stocktakine Sale. Before stocktaking we offer the balance of our stock or men’s ulsters and overcoats, at clearance prices. Ifyou want one, you will get a snap— at the pric? you can buy here for now. A lot of boys and youths U!sters, at about half price.$5.57 for $2 95, and so on. BOOTS, BOOTS, this way tor Boots. Ifyou want your boots at lowest prices, come this way, J.B. Macdonald&Co - repaired, nickeled or enameled, for spring. thoroughly renewed, reat» ENAMELING We use the highest grade Enamel (black or colors) thew meney can buy in New York, and dase it on in a manner tha® as others charge for ordinary paint, See sample at shop. W P. DOULL, Kent Strep: 200 Bicycles Wanted. To be stored (free of charge) for the winter, and cleane¥' the most fastidiovs cannot criticize, and the cort is the same. ee ee emeGOn CON ccc oa ch vk ke oe weeks + Sab Web aye t) osname ee NNN 55 66 SK co 4 ke neice cdn Cees. Os cl ee OY CAPS No 1 Natzral Otter Caps, No 1 Mink Caps No 1 Beaver Caps No 1 Persian Lamb Caps ‘outh Sea Seal Caps Cloth and Knitted Caps Persian Lamb Collar. Beaver Collar, Astrakan Colles Nuiria Col'a We have also an attractive line of Neckwear Underwear Our all cool $8.00 Frieze Ulster,our own make. 18 a bewate- We don’t se}] the aboue goods for less than they cost ns, but aoe would be Ssurprized were you to know how near th rey and woolam, D. A. BRUCE As