emt me ncn ae Goins to ( Re=-Decorate ? Why not joy the practical ad offered by ov loin? antag EE rans NE a They are both handsome and econo- mical—outlast any other style of interior finish—are fire proof ap| sanitary—can be applied over plaster if necessary—and are made in 4 vast number of artistic designs which will sui any, room any building. Write us—we'd like youto know all about them. If you want an estimate send W@uiline showing the shape and measurements of your ce’ lings and walls. Metallic Roofing Co. Limited TORONTO. Base oe, a Rea att W hite’s Caramels and Snowflake Chacolates << Can be had at any following firs: class or: TV. J. Morris ». L. Hooper W. Pickard & Co. W. A, Hatecheson W. F. Carter Stewart & Gates Sanderson & Co J.D. MeLeod & . H. Wason, _— —— ena Hondreds of Beautifut Articles Suitable for Wedding Gifts now in Stock: in Silverware we have Tea Sets, Butter Dishes, Celery Stands, Fruit Dishes, Pickle Disher, Combination Sugar bow!s and “poon Holders. Syrup Jugs, Crean acd Sug-re, Berry Spoons, Seup Ladies, Boo Bons, Knives Fork«and Spoon. In Chinaware:—Cup, Saucer and Place Sete, Sugar Bowls, Cheene Dishes, Berry Sets, Butter Diebes, In Glassware :—Lemonade Sets in Crystal and Gold, Berry Sete, Butte: Dishes. We havea nice lice of Souveuir Goods, also an a-tortment of Wedgewood and Blueware A big line of Watches, Clocks and Jewelry. Give us a call and you will save mone for we are se ling cheaper than ay otuer store io the city. Jury & Co Sunnyside Ch’'town Dividend Notice Merchants Bank of P.E Islan d. CHARLOTTTTOWN, “ay 31, 1900 Notice is hereby given tnat a half yearly dividend at the rate of 8 per cent. per anum on the capital stock of this ban& has been de- clared, perable at its Banking house on and after July 2rd, 1900. The transfer books will be closed from the 18th June to the 3rd July next, both days in- clusive By order of Board. J.M. DAVISON. Cashier. cneg 002aw iw, FOR SALE “Newlands” a ee ee The late residence. of Mal- colm McLeod, Q. C., in Char= lottetown Royalty, containing twenty and three quarters acres. Apply to D, C. McLEOD, Solicitor, &c. Ch’town, June 19th, 1900, dy tf ; r 2 ~~ - ay 4 . ‘he a" ; Py AN ; N ids Sr) few ; d ! for Wi \ i 5 1 Keith stood in hesitation for » or three seconds. The road rom s station to Westleigh w twenty miles, and the station—built ouly the junction. of the linés—was so far from the town that he would not be able to get a conveyance of any kind, ‘rue, it was possible to reach the ‘Tow- ers more readily by taking a bridle-path, which he had daringly taken once be- fore, even though for several miles it ran between the sea and the cliffs, and Whs covered at high water. But then to walk this distance was impossible, with the tide upon the flow; and he had‘no horse here. Yet now. he had dreamed of Alice's vlad reeeption-of him, and her untold gratitude and joy at the tidings he bore, the tidings he had sought so long, and, having found at last, had hastened to bring to her himself! Must he give up when he had come so far, No; not even in such a could Royden turn back from his earnest purpose “There is a farm he said to himself, as he stood recalling an old house ly- ine a mile or so along the cliff way, “where I can get a horse. On the high- roud I may have to walk ten miles be- fore I can obtain one. I will manage it man’s power.” even Low, and seemed so near her? ease as this if it is within and, London train had northward, Royden rode from the old farm where he had promptly bought a horse, which its mas- It was within this man’s power; an hour passed on its way after the ter had never hoped to sell so profit- ably. The animal young and strong, and fresh from its stable; and Rovden had mounted with a pleasant sense of its power and will to carry him flectly along the dangerous shore. The master of the farm, as well as his old father, urged Mr. Keith not to atiempt the ride. The tide was treach erous. they said, and the distance the bay much greater than Brut Rovden, shaking the men by the hand in his quiet, cordial way, told them a great anxiety to was across it seemed. he had no fear, only get to Westieizh Towers that night, and much confidence in his new horse. “T know the way well,” he added, in his pleasant, earnést voice, “and it is a grend June evening.” stood watching: him from He understood a good Two men the farm gate. horse when he saw one, there was no doubt about that, and they had guess- ed at once that he must be Mr. Keith. He was just what they had fancied the Westleigh Towers. said the elder .man, watching Sauvire of ‘iut.” as they turned away after Royden out of sight, “it is q@ dangerous feat he tries to-night.” Royden knew this well. It was not in ignorance that he started on that ride. But the horse that he had bought was fresh and fleet, and the ftood-tide two hours’ distant vet. Sitting straight and firm in his saddle, his fingers tight vpon the rein, Royden galloped along the narrow and uneven path, while the passengers he met looked «fter the horse and rider wonderingly. On and on, while the sun slowly near- ed the water. On and on until it set, and Royden breathed a sigh of relief, for the path had reached the shore at last. He paused one moment and gave n look around him—first over the fad- ing seas; then up the dark, percipitous cliffs: then higher still, beyond the fad- ing sunset streaks. When that mo- ment’s pause was over, leaning forward in his saddle, he pressed his knees his horse’s flanks, and dashed treacherous road beside the aginst along that trencherous sea. Once or twice the young horse falt- ered in his pace; and once or twice he ate? ool would eve fallen but for Poor Quality. of Blood A Frequent Cause of Consumption, Heart Failure and Other Constitutional Dis- eases—-Dr. Chase’s Herve Food as a Bicod Builder. . The heart, the lungs, the stomach, the liver, the kidneys, and bowels can- not perform their tunctions and repair wasted tissue when supp/ied with blood that 1 deficient in nutritive Qualifies, and s@oner or later the wéaké@st organ succumbs to the attacks of disease The cen of thin, Watery blood are paleness uf the lips, sunwpand eye- lids, shortness of breath, w7#kWiess of heart action, and languid, despondent feelings. These symptents are usually accompanied by nerviusneéss, sleepless- ness, and general weakness of the body. It is positively useless to doctor the symptoms, and injurious to use opiates or stimulants. Cure can be brought about gradually and certainly by) the use of Dr. Ghase’s Nerve Food, which containgim-condensed pill form all the elements ‘Required for strengthening and revi the blood. Asa blood builder and nerve restorative, Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food is of inestimable ‘yelue. In pill form, 50 cents a bo all deal og HDdmanson, Bater Sorieae™ iY EXSMINER, CARHLOTTETON JUNE 30, 1900 a ian = : nas +. te YY \ | se here upon his d t 7 4 - . Zw NI NS Oe 1 motionless, as he | FIT FOR A PRINCE }y cs a t } Pas fy j i 4 | 7 / AST ime. 0 i : \ Ul cae :.J I 4 oe K te . and r & or « a La : 1 up Eh te, < | t ! a . 'y i ) ! th pros ( iL HAY Ks } « : it - ~ ‘ f % , , ly of I ble { ! d 1er 4 . ; A , VriOllO, Nora’s Love Se | lips. s A i A tr me oe i 1 ee White and till the brave face lay; — e ‘ iG Hi lie, Ete. _ nery less and ] Ww é Css yas the str g Y J Ke tall form; yet still the wet, stiff fingers a , iliac i : of the right hand held their firm grip a fas os IX IX Ix IX — *& { upon that packet, safely borne threugh ° ng hand upon the all. ee bi he made his way bravely ‘ mMmMpD www oo — m CHAPTER XXXVI. —_—=_=_== a Llp “KS. 1 fellow. on!” Three weeks had passed since Royden "I ith enuresscs, now Ww ith stro] eS, Ix ¢ ith rose from that long and death- ARAABKRSAASHAAASAFARASAALHR Royvyden urge him, while the t'de J like swoon, and neglecting his sore need rose. That bay was reached of \ flanger, at the flowing tide, he had told Lady Somerson Iftonor, as they stood at the window ng down upon the «pot. Ah, it so near home! It almost felt like ng reached home, to have reached ‘s well known spot, on which. the windows of the Towers looked. Bue it } ide was rising, and a mist gliding north wird from the sen, and. slowly shroud- iug horse and rider in its chilling, dark- ening embrace. But for an instant, just before it renched them, Royden strained his eyes to see the farther limits of the bay, end=—ah! yes, the waters lay seething there, falling back a little and glisten- ing for a moment, then darkly lifting themselves in their power, and swaying broad and deep across the only way which lay before this solitary horse man, Royden’s hand fell gently on the horse’s foaming neck, and for a moment his eyes fell, too, resting from that gaze which had pierced the gathering darkness. “There is no passage before us. If we ean find no possible way inland, this , hour means death for you and me— meor fellow!” Urging him on, now by cheering words, and now by sharp, swift cuts, Royden rode to and fro within the arms ot the bay, searching among the rocks for a possible way of egress; but the cliffs rose precipitous from the beach, and Royden saw that any hope of pass- ing them was in vain, while the sound of the waters nearing the horse’s hur- rying feet, grew literally deafening in its horrible portent. rave and efforts did the young horse make, as Royden led him biuckward and forward in his vain and futile search; but the pace grew slower iuto a walk at last; while the tide rose and rose. So swiftly the waters rushed in at last, sweeping over that wide crescent, hidden in the mist, that in one second, as it seemed, horse and rider stood surrounded in the flood-tide. ‘Then the frightened animal started wildly on its own career, galloping back- ward and forward, to left and right, Without aim or motive: racing to and fro in the very madness of his panic, tried to escape the grasp of the hungry waters; racing to and fro until ut last, quite suddenly, he stopped in gallop, stood trembling ior a moment, With his eyes wild and stra n- cd, while the waves broke under his rnised head, then, with a ery thut was almost human in its anguish, he thre his head. back, and Royden knew t2: lie alone lived in that rush of ris‘ng w: ters, and that his only chance of safety strenuous as he his wild W ut 1 - Wiis to cling to his dead comp2haen. At first the effort to keep his seat ¢1.- ‘ossed all his. energies, but gradualiy that tension relaxed, while now he held one hatd upon the breast of his cout, svarding that lately won paper in its crip. Dreamily, with a consciousness of utier helplessness which was almost a relief from his restless, feverish cxer- tion, he floated on the surface of the Je; recalling brokenly, as one soni dream, how one men, yeas 2go, carrying an infant in his arms, had been drowned within this buy; languidly wondering over the *a- act spot, and morbidly trying to ima- Then there care into his mind—-still seftly and vaguel,;—the sicry of a wreck upon this coast, and, lovking out to sea, he tried to guess the spot where the ship had foumdered, snd wished that he could float far out to seo, nad fall just there. One minute he was piercing the misty darkness with his eyes, and calculecting hew long it might be possible for h'm }@ live, und in the next he bent his head paxainst the beating spray, with a faint lips, and dipping h.s water, laid it upon his brow and lips. Sut, through fingers never once relaxed in upon tnose papers he had so far im safety—so far! Just before. the .awn. of the merLing, a group of fishermen passed along the silent, dewey park to the locked door of Westleigh Towers. They were men to whom this beautifal pork had been lent as holiday ground; they were memswho had _tearned to loye the master who had treated them as Brothers, and not serfs: and so 10 ‘heek was dry when they trod noiseless- ly under the whispering leaves, bearing him among?them, stil! with his fingers tightly closed upon the papers he had borne .so far. oot Gently and regretfully these men @s- turbed the sleeping household, and, sith hands that. were,delicate then, if they hud never been so before, they laid him in one of his own beautiful rooms. And when a girlish figure erept in and stood beside him, appealimg mutely and vtear- fully for tidings, they whispered in hushed and broken tones, that, sailing | past the bay as the tide went down, imes recalls a gihe the seene. wuile upon his hind into the burning aie ‘his eir clasp June slowly was two miles across ‘the bay; and the! ’ | going journey after date of issue. of rest, returned to London only two days after he had been brought home unconscious. But the tasks which had taken him to town were all completed now. and he had come home to wait. For three weeks he had fought with hfs terrible suffering and weariness, when one day the slow afternoon train, pass- ing through Westleigh, deposited at the sleepy little station two passengers, who had amore engrossed and business-like air than the generality of people who halted at that rural spot. "They gave their tickets to the solitary’ porter with- out a glance toward him, and they walk- ed from the station: togethermwithout # glonce’ beyond: the few yards of .dusty lane which lay before them. One was a man.of middle age, broadly built and well dressed, but having! the air of on who did not to fully comprehend the aim he had in view, or~’*the way in which, that.aim should be. pursued. The other was 2 small and .wiry. person,with ginger-colored hair and complexion, and he decidedly did possess the air of knowing whither he was bound, and og what mission bent » we continued.) = = a \» One of the most danger- ous and repulsive forms of Kidney Disease is ROPSY for which Dodd’s Kidney Pills are the only certain cure. In Dropsy the Kid- neys are actually dammed “fo and the water, which should be expelled in the form of urine, flows back " and jodges in the cells of the flesh and puffs out the skin. Remove the filth which plugs up the drain. Restore tke Kidneys to health. There is only one Kidney Medicine Dopp’s KIDNEY PILLS ———! DOMINION ATLANTIC RAILWAY: and Steamship lines to Boston via Yarmouth. The Popular Fast line be. tween Nova Scotia and Boston via Windsor Juncticn and Halifax EXPRESS TRAIN® leave Walifax daily (excep! Sunda)) at 635a. m., for Digby and Yermouth, meking con: ection Wednesdays and Satu’ days at Yarmouth for Boston, THE ROYAL MAIL STEAMSHIP “PRINCE GEORGE” 2460 Gress Tonnage. 7000 Rcrse Power, the fastost and finest steamer plying between the Maratime Provinces and Sach, Leave Yarmouth Wednesday and Saturdays for HKoston,. on arrival of Express ‘Train from Halifax’ Returning Jeaves Boston ‘iuesday and Fri- day at 4p.m° Passeners arriving in Halifax next day 5 30 p. m., by Express ‘izaip. : For all information, guide book, folders, etc which will be sert free, writeto F. H. Arm- strong, general passenger Agent Kentville. s J .s& P. GIFKINS; Gen. Manager] Kentville, N. S., May 26th, 1900. Prince Edward Island Rail- Way. Si ieee oe “eh & D EXCURSION jes TICK ETS<at one single first claés fare will be issued from and to all Stations, June 29th, 30th and July 2ed,good to rewrn up ie aod on July 4th 900. AThLGs Tickets are not good for passage en ey » isco SEED TIME -200 3 Buv vour seed at Le Page's o!d stand and save MOlLi¢ y ° We have a large selection of clovers, timothy, vetches, peas, White Russian, Manitoby hard and Island wheats. Spring Tooth Harrows and all kinds of farm implements. YW. GRANT & CO LePaze’s Old Stand, Queen Street, FESS SF FSF SS FSS FEE SS SYS ey Is to Your Interest To see our mens and boy’s Clothing, Our sales are larger in clothing Than for years, A. The reason, We are selling good fitting well-made suits for about 20 per cent lower than current prices. Do yourseelf justice. You can save enough on a suit of clothes to buy a Hat anda pair Boots. JB. MACDONALD & GO Where Worth and Low Prices Meet. Ck Tene HOOUOIy In buying your boots here. Th PUES FE Fu o AAARAAAAAARARAARRSA ¥UFL # a ee eer —_— , sloes are very modest, the style correct, the quality. % ae perfect. This season’s styles are quick s ellers That’s because they’ve caught the fancy on popular prices at McQUAID’S, Seeeocesoou * oS ws — — — . Great Sale of Crockery, Glassware end Groceries, Big Discounts for 30 Days. Ail our present stock will be closed out} at big reductions—below v . some prices :— $3.00 Tea Sets now $1),95 per set 75 cent Glass Table Sets now 50 cents - 40 “ ec “a ‘ec “ 95 “ec 94 “ 6 “Oe 96 = 90 “ LargeLamps “ 50 * 50 * se “ 6 30 * On Morday the train for Sourie and Georgetown will notleave Charlotsetown until 4.45 p. m. Standard time, and the train for Suwerside will not leave Chars lottetown until 6 o’cleck p. m. etendard, time. oreo G. A. SHARP. Superintendent. Charlottetown, June 23rd, 1999, $1.50 Lemonade Sets “ 90 * 1.50 China Berry Sets “ 30 “* “ “ it} 20 ‘t Alsofa lot of odd crockery’ selling at Halt Price 50 “ Glass “ “ “ 35 | “ “e ° | P. MONAGHAN, Upper tueen Stree LOWER QUEEN 8STREER @&