~ "hot : 7 . ‘ vy AAA . 4UMU/L Eastlake Shingles Galvanized or Painted. They look well and last well—are Fire, Ligutning and Rust proof -~and are quicker laid than others, be- cause of their pates:t telesevpic side lock, Be sure of enduring protection by getting genuine Fastlakes, they never ; fali. meh! Write us for tall information. Metallic Roofing Co. Limited TORONTO, Ch'town Sewerape System, Sealed Tenders addressed to the under signed will be received ai this office until noon ou Monday, April 23rd 1900 for furnishing certain materials aod per- forming the work recessury for construc- tion of a portion of the Charlottetown Sewerage System, accord ng to conditions, specifications and plan to be seen. at this office and also at the office of the En- gineers Mr. F. C. Cotfio, 53 State St., Bo:ton, Mass. Proposals mst beoo form eupplied from thie office, and each tender must be ac- companied by a certified cheque for $500, payable to the order of the Commissioners of Sewers and WaterSupply. Thischeck will be forfeited if the party decline the contract or fail to comp!ete the work con- tracted for, but will be returoed in case of non acceptance of tende:. The Commissioners do not bind them- selves to accept the lowest or any tender. HENRY SMITH, Chairman. Office of Commissioners of Sewers an Water Supply. City Hall, Cha: lottetowa, P. E. I. March 27, 1900- 2awt REMOVAL E. H. BEER ~HAS REMOVED HI3~ Insurance Offic > —, fark Wright & Jo’s Showrooms NORTH SIDE QU ZEN 8' i All Kinds of Insurauve. ene repared to place all NSURANCE at rates You can save Norzs—I am classes of FIRE which defy competition. mouey by cu'ling on spe E. H. BEER, General Insurance Agent, Feb 12. CH'TOWN BOARD OF TRADE Quarterly Meeting, The General Quarterly Meeting of this corporation will be beld at their room, McKachern’« Building Queen St. on Wed nesday evening, 11th of April at 8 o’clock. W. W. CLARKE, Secretary. Ch’town, April 61h, 1900. td. Wants, Lost Found, &t . as se ieineaiplane WANTKED.--At gfe a emart bey to attend in an office, Ap at EXAMINER office. TO LET.—A three story dwelling house on Prince Street, Modem improvements can be Wellner, put in if required. Apply te W. W. dy 6 ins. EGGS FOR HATCHING. — Silver-laced W yandottes from pure bred stock. Male bird tock second » ize et Halifax. Apply to David W. Brown, Little York. l aw 4 ins, LOST.—Between Railway Depot and Mar- ket.a pigskin purre containing a large sum of money. Finder will be rewerded by re- turping it to Hotel Davies, Charlottetown. Sins. FOR SALE.—Y: sirable residence, pleas- antly situated at 'he head of Prince Street. Heated by hot water, eleetrie lighting, large out stables, etc, e'c. intendipg purchasers can inspect the remises every Thursday afternoon. Fully Mrs. Unsworth. rticulars on application to 3 wks tues & sat, ' i THE DAILYZEXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, APRIL 10, 1900, ? x | tt tew . x - . * ~ ao xu x KK RRR RK KERMA KKK KER KRM KK & wR LeRawaaR ARRAS } ook ay > cx F|N wc a. geen 0 eZ EI ADADENI@ 1 AIEM #o x ices LUJIAY AMID | \ HW 1 LY as x iy | } i 1 a7 : rm \ | } ti \ | ~~ HRI HR J Y Aeeteteee . - KKK By LAU RA JEAN LIBBEY wees aa y - ; . s ; 4 y porte Author of “When Lovely Maiden Stoops to Folly,” “A Broken $2 ¢ 704 y FE KKH Betrothal,” “Parted by Fate,” “Parted at soda j ( rere the Altar,” etc., etc. Tae 3 f ¥E KKK RAH FE OE EERE RE EERE EEE LEE EEE ELE IEE REREAD HEE NE NE A a tS ot d CERI EERIE ERE IIILI IIIS KKKKEKKKR KARI RAEK LH BEEK NS KII III LL IIIIII IIS SII IIL IIL HH TF VGN AYN = VENA, SYNOPSIs. "*Florabel was a dependent of her atep~ tatner, Squire Pemberton. His daughters hate Florabel, aod when the Squire dies, order her out of the old home. Max Forrester a rich young man marries her and introduces her into his family th: members of which disapprove of his mar~ Tiage, as they wanted him to marry Mie» Clavering, an heiress, CHAPTER XXXV--(Contiuued.) No, no,’’ said Florabel, gently; *“*we will go to her room, dear. She must not be awakened; there will be a to-morrow, and many a happy to- morrow for us.”’ Together they went to the child’s room; and once there all Florabel’s fortitude forsook her as she gazed at the lovely, childish face, with its floating, golden hair lying against the snowy pillow. Her child—her very own—the little child she had believed so long to be lying in its little daisy-studded grave on the sloping hill side! No wonder she flung herself on her knees, weeping for jov as she had never wept in all her life before. But loving arms twined themselves about her. ‘*Nay, nay, my darling,’’ said Max, softly ; ‘‘this is an occasion for smiles, not my Florabel. the old provreb—‘All’s well that ends well.’ ’’ tears, Remember CHAPTER XXXIX. ‘Shere was a hurried summons to the sick room, and, with arms entwined, they hastily followed the where poor Inez was fighting back the dark shadows of death. A pitiful light broke over the death- white face as she saw them. They advanced quickly and knelt by the couch. ‘*You both—forgive—’’ she gasped. ‘*Yes, as we hope to be forgiven, Inez,’’ murmured Florabel, solemnly. ‘‘The past is past, my poor girl.’’ ‘*You will have a happy future,’’ sobbed Inez, ‘‘and ’midst all your pleasures now do uot forget me-—pray to room for a soul in dire distress. My life has gone all wrong,’’ she wailed. ‘‘I am not sorry to go and end it all. Listen to my iast prayer, Florabel. It is this: That when the dark shad- ows are closing in around me, my eyes shall rest upon the face I have loved best in life.’’ And here she held out her hands piteously toward Max. It was Florabel who took his tremb- ling hand and placed the little, death- cold hand in it. ‘*Be kind to her, Max,’’ she whis- pered. ‘‘See, she is dying, and she has loved you with a love surpassing mis love of a woman-—with a love Every woman whc hopes and expects to be a mother should know that if she is in a state of unnatural weakness or disease at the time the baby is born, this unhealthy condition will be transmitted to the baby and will just as surely and remorse. lessly destroy its future health and happiness as a locomotive engine would crush out its tender little life if it were playing on the track. This is the great law of heredity which never gets off the track for anybody. The prospective mother who is sustained through the period of anticipation “y the strengthening health-giving aid of Doctor Pierce’s Favorite Prescription, will find all the dangers of motherhood completely over- come and a large portion of its pain and discomforts banished. This wonderful re- storative ‘‘ Prescription ” gives health to the special organs and nerve-centers. It makes the mother capable and cheerful; protects her against relapse and imparts increased constitutional vigor to the child. It cures all weaknesses and diseases of the female organism, It is the only medicine scientifically prepared for this express pur- pose by a skillful physician and expert in this class of difficulties. Over ninety thou- saad women have written letters telling what this extraordinary remedy has done for them. Some of these letters are printed in one chapter of Dr. Pierce’s great thou- sand-page illustrated book the ‘‘ People’s Common Sense Medical Adviser’? which will be sent free on receipt of 31 one-cent stamps, to pay the cost of customs and matl- ing only. Address World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y. For a handsome cloth-bound copy send 50 Ss in W. Robinson, of Springhill, Nova Scotia writes: “I was confined and I was only sick about thirtv minutes in all, I can truthfully say that your ‘Favorite Preseviption’ worked wonders in my case, Tam going around doing my own work and before I had to keep a girl til) JI was able te do my work."’ | \) ew Ge Da FYB OQKBOQ which was her doédm. She gave her young life that yours might be spar- ea,’”° Max always liked to remember that he bent over and pressed his lips to the cold forehead on which the damp dew of death was fast gathering. A glory like a halo lit up the white face. She had loved him so well-—- so well—and she was leaving him for- ever, to meet never again on earth— never again. ‘Would that I could cry out with a voice of warning to young girls that would reach the four corners of the earth. I would warn them against the utter folly of loving one who never will return their love—whose heart is given to another. I would warn them to take an example of my unhappy life and its pitiful ending to not try to take vengeance against their successful rival, for it is written ‘Vengeance is mine, saith the Lord.’ I have sinned, but I have suffered, Heaven alone knows how much. The fear, the suspense that the hand of fate would undo all that I plotted kept me in a fever of terror as hor- rible to endure as the pangs of death itself. Lam glad it is all over, and the wasted life of Inez Clavering is drawing nearer each moment to the end. Ah me! it has been such a mis- spent life! How sadly I wasted the bearty and talents God gave me!”’ Suddenly she grasped the hands that held her own still closer. ‘*‘You will stay until the dark water, which is creeping nearer and nearer, engulfs me, Max,’’ she whis- pered. And then they knew that her mind was wandering. Still, the great, dark, burning eyes, so terrible in their in- tense gaze, never for an instant left his face; and so she died as she had prayed to die—looking upon the face she had loved best on earth. Two days later, when the sun was shining and the laburnum blossoms j nodding in the breeze, they laid to rest all that was mortal of beautiful, hapless Inez Clavering. Max and Florabel, with little Flo, who was delighted to have found both her real mamma and her own papé, soon set sail for home, dear old Amer- ica, on the other side of the blue Atlantic. Arthur, Florabel’s erring brother, who had in the dark past caused her so much woe, was delighted when he received a cablegram from Max (with whom he had been in communica- tion), informing him he had found Florabel at last, and was coming home. Straightway he carried the cable- gram to old Mrs. Forrester. ‘‘We must give them a royal wel- come home,’’ she said; and the proud old lady thanked God her handsome son was re-united at last with the young irl she had hated so profound- ly wheu he had first brought her there a timid, childish little bride. Heaven chose wisely when Max’s heart went out to Florabel instead of the beautiful, faulty Inez. And the truth of the old adage came home to her: ‘‘Whenu parents inter- fere in the judicious love affairs of their children, the day comes when they will rue it.”’ Mrs. Forrester had been surprised, one day, by a visit from Squire Pem- berton’s daughters—Evelyn and Maud. ‘*We have come to atone as ‘best we can for a letter we once wrote you in regard to Florabel,’’ said Mand, flush- ing with shame and speaking with an effort. ‘‘After all these years, I must humbly own, in all truth, that it was written in malice, and with the hope of injuring her in your esteem; for we all know from what a little seed dislike, aye, even hatred that lasts a lifetime, is sown. ‘‘Once again, not so very long ago, we injured her; but, with the pa- tience of an angel, she forgave us, and, while the sting was yet upon her, the opportunity came to her to crush It transpired that all our wealth was in reality Florabel’s. Then, indeed, the true nobility of her life shone out in all its grandeur. She refused to take from us that which we had enjoyed, beliey:ng it to be ours so long, and would take but a modest third. She has heaped coals of fire on our guilty heads; and now with our latest breath we.shall bless her. We shall never forget her kind- ness—never.’’ No one spoke of Florabel save with warmest praise; and it made Mrs. Forrester’s heart feel young us. | again to hear it. a Max’s father had from the i*.s Qo the las t +27 > “ strana 1 4 {t maintained unshaken faith in Florabel LOT Wi rd tle Flo, who, nf . ‘ : Max bad written them, was ‘‘a hear romping child who now, alike the use of crutch or stick, was tlump erd rosy as they coul Wish. ’”’ Great were the preparations mad the Forrester county seat, an again, as on that other home coming, | guests were gathered to receive them At last the carriage which was to the city to meet the ste er was sighted, and Mrs. Forrester’s heart beat high as she heard the welcom news. With what delight and affection she received them, and how proud she was of lovely Florabel, as she led her down among the assembled guests! She had gone through fiery ordeals She had known every depth of human woe; but the bright hazel eyes show- ed no signs of the burning tears they had shed. The lovely face was not furrowed by lines of care. She was the same Florabel as of old—a trifle graver, perhaps, but all the sweeter aud more womanly for that gravity. Five years have passed since that memorable night of Max and Flora- bel’s home coming. There have been great changes. Max’s father and mother have long since passed away, and Max and Florabel live now at Forrester Villa. Two lovely children gambol on the lawn—Flora, a pert, saucy miss of nearly ten years now, the idol of her father and mother; and a little dark eyed sister. If you should ask her her name, she would turn her dark, velvety eyes upon you, and, tossing back her raven ringlets, answer: **Papa calls me Little Sunshine, but mamma valls me ‘Inez.’ I am named after the dark-eyed lady whose por- trait hangs in the picture gallery.’’ It is, indeed, a happy household, and Florabel often roguishly de- clares, although she now is six- and-twenty, Max is mcre her lover than in those old days when she was sweet sixteen, and when he, the heir of the Forrester millions, wooed her under the guise of a gardener, and she wedded him for love and not for gold. There is little to add, dear reader, when our heroine and her handsome husband are re-united and happy at last. Those who know them smile and call them ‘‘married lovers,’’ for Max fairly worships his beautiful wife and adores their children. There is not one cloud now in sweet Florabel’s sky. The sun that shines above her is not more golden than the brfght future which lies before her, for there is always contentment and joy where love rules sepreme. Han‘- some Max never ceases blessing the day when he became a husband, and all through the years that come and go he will still be Beautiful Flor-, abel’s Lover. THE END. DR. A. W. CHASE’S REMEDIES. Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills, for diseases of the Kidneys, Liver, Bladder and Bowels. One pill a dose; 25c, a box, Dr. Chase's Catarrh Cure, for Cold in the Head, Catarrh, Dropping in the Throat, and Hay Fever. 25c. a box, blower free. Dr. Chase’s Dint- ment for Eczema, Salt Rheum, Piles and all itching skin diseases. 6c cents a box. De. Chases Nerve Food, for exhausted, worn- out nerves and thin, Aton 3a watery, diseased ag wt (2 blood, svc. alarge ~ box Dr. Chase’s Liver Cure, for diseases of the Liver, Jaundice and Biliousness. oc. a botte. Dr. Chase’s Syrup of Linseed and Turpen- tine, a positive cure for Croup, Asthma, Bron- chitis and all Coughs and Colds. 25c. « large bottle. At all dealers. IF You want THE LATEST in note and letter paper and stationery of every des- criptions magazines and fashion books, we have them, Agent for the celebrated Perry Pictures. CHAS J. MITCHELL; BooxseLLEeR and STATIONER Queen Street. Prowee’s...... meee” qgiscained |} y, | Special Travelling Accident & Sickness Cou “4 SAM cata i : ; | | Accident Company in the world to-day. it | Temporary Disablemen | ~~ Tie “=> ‘Ocean Accident « Guarantee U orp OF LONDON. ara Vs non Policy. The above policy has just been issued | rhe policy is issued by the agent in Charlottetown at a moment’s notice and ; enclosed in a substantial pocket book. The indeminities are as follows:— Death caused by in‘ passenger Railway conveyance $1500.00. accident t caused by accident in Railway conveyance, | $10.00 per week. ; Temporary Disablement caused by Smallpox, Varicloid Diphtheria, Meas- les, Asiatic, Cholera, Erysipilas, Appendicitis, Diabetes, Peritonitis, Pleurisy, Pneumonia, Meningitis or Tetanus, $10.00 per week. PRICE OF POLICY— $3.00 per annum. JAMES J. JOHNSTON, Stamper Block, CERARLOTTETOWN AGENT oots and ubbers all styles and _ sizes fall and winter wear possible prices, at McecQUAID’S, LOWER QUEEN STREER Boot and Shoe Store. suitable for the tor lowest TLL ON HAND SRE TN as as aS 2 “yy of ove finest overcratings aad suitiags ia Sootech we of KE. *!:2alaa]). rman manufactare—at very fine prices to the ba sace ef une season. Allncw fcesh goods this season. JOHN MLEOD & CO AA AAA AA 1000 SEED TIME :coo Buy your seed at Le Page's o'd stand and save money. We have a large selection of clovers, timothy, vetches, peas, White Russian, Manitobi hard and [ Island wheats. Spring Tooth Harrows and all kinds of farm implements. W. GRANT & CO LePaze’s Old Stand, Queen Street, SFSFS SSS SS SEE SE EF SEY v e¥ ¥ HAARARARAAAASARR FSFE yY FSS S FSS ES ¥¥ ———— TORTOISE HEATERS en Island Crown $17.50 Sampson Cook, No, 8 $13.50 This price %for 2 weeks “WT. Crabbe STOVES & HAPDWAR Tortoise Heaters —— Simon W atker’s Corner (fall WineiMerchants Ks Wholesale fromthe Jiistiller, A. . Tacupsow & Co, Glasgow PE ONAN HE coms r ' ft > _ ion, L' } vy the greatest and most progics-it¢ eee : eo sé oe cee am ’ ~ eee + ear . . in aeaereetn sdteeiiemmmaiiieees iat dated sot naan aan ED i pase if eo * pnt deed u Sais RE ees Sens RARE TC