ww 4 tw 42a Gta SSE Sa eS TSC T awe o Ea G's on ~RSSe2s7OSF § 34632 4S 8B888 SUAS aa eee ———— py THE DAILY EXAXUNER, CHARLOTTETOWN, JULY 27, 1893 Substance Shadow @ you want a horse worth $100, you'd be silly te pay $100 for his photo only. HH you need DOD'S KIDNEY PILLS you'd be silly to buy an imitation. DODD'S ARE SOLD IM BOXES LIKE THIS. TAKE ONLY D-O-D-D-S NOT SELLING BUT GIVING AWAY GHEAP....... A lot of odd lines in men’s, misses’ } ' ’ fell hopelessly in love with ¥ m the ér t moment he saw yon, and what I cannet understand is that von q . : Y 2 . ‘ , ; . + ++ ; »>1lail IN 1OVE Oo x ¢ in ed you did. I watched you, and I know the sign ‘You must have been mistaken. ] was lusing myself; that was all. Very Ww xr indeed Yoa wv quite too far in your amusement, my Gear. I am afraid other people will ca it a flirtation—carried, I must say, tc the very verge of impropriety. I never should have allowed him to be so much with youif he had not spoken to me and told me how he admired you, and | of course I thought that you recipro- cated his feeling.”’ **] do not know why you should have thought so.”’ and boys’ BOO cs and SHOES that I | bought right for cash. ‘ e will surprise you when you come in and see them. These goods, I got them at a bar gain, that is tl f ’ : straight tip. THOMAS 4 Lower Queen St. soot & Shoe Store. say en) ce 268 © & 24660460686 ADVICE AECUT spice. When orderme a packrge Pepper, Ginger, Alispice, Cin namon or Cream of Tartar from your grocer you can al- ways feel sure of securing the best qualitv by asking for: : : Mott’s -@ @24640686 4°77 @2 SG] SSS CO OR*e ee i ee KELLY’S & 60'S. ~~ GROCERIES Are always to be depende‘i on.... Oaly the best kept in stock. Our cus.omers are satisfied customers. If you want to be satisfied with your groceries deal with us. Try the TEA we seli. Special atten- tion was given to its selection. Thesame is exercised in buying al! other lines. ( OE aay AND BE “SATISFIED JAMES KELLY &€0 Queen St., near London House Corner. care wecdév ky Marmalade. We have just received a new kind o1 ORANGE MARMALADE, put up in glase pots, which we are now Offering at the OW rate of 2 Pots for 25 cents Also juet opened s case of Pime- apple Marmatade which is of very fine flavor. The Piseapple and Ginger Marmalade bas alto given excellent satis- faction. Those are si] new goods and you should try them if you want something Rice and tasty. Séen AQ0FE GROCERS McQUAID, | The prices | P S| ‘*‘Becamse you showed every sign of it, my dear. And if you were notin earnest you have behaved very badly, Olwen, and I should never have thought that you were so cold hearted.’’ **Yon don’t know me, it seems, Lady Diana.”’ ‘‘No, I suppose not. I am very much disappointed. I had quite set my heart upon this marriage. And how people will talk! Come, Olwen, are you stre that it isn’t a lovers’ quarrel? Shall I write to him to come back again ?’’ ‘‘Certainly not. I wish neither to see nor to hear of Mr. Harding again.’’ ‘*Yet you’re fond of him?’ “I am not—lI hate him." ‘I'll leave you to sleep on it,’’ said Lady Diana, rising and gathering up her skirts. ‘‘It’s my belief that, whether you know it or not, you’re in love w the man. If not, you’ve behaved a inably and must expect to hear yourself called a flirt and a jilt and other ugh: names. Good night, my dear. Ili tek graph to Harding whenever you like.’ Olwen turned away with a gestar anger, but when Lady Diana kai < she threw herself on the bed face ward and cried her heart out—a: ing herself at intervals that she knew noi why. Was it possible loved H after all? If so, her case was hard she had sent him away from her \ words of and anger, and he v not the >for her love a se ond time. sne scorn oT ? . man to sue CHAPTER IIL Everybody said that Mrs. Vandeleur was a fiirt—so mnch of a flirt that ca ful mothers warned their daug | against making friends with | metaphorically drew their skirts when she went by. She was an aud: cious, brazen faced, hard hearted lictle woman—according to the report 0: these austere matrons—atrociously pret ty and bewilderingly smart in repartee She was a widow and certainly showed no disposition to marry again. Indeed it was rumored that she wonld lose her money if she did, the late Mr. Vande- What a man / attains to seems aI for a little time to be the high- est rung in the ~ /ladder, and dur- ' 1 | ing that brief pe- /_j#{/ riod he may be /j} content, but when } he discovers that } there are other rungs, still higher up, ambition gives // birth to discontent, and he begins once more to climb Te imb is reaify man’s chief end. It isn’t in fy attainment, but in / / work, that man finds his real happiness, conse- quently it is not strange py that we find men working / until they break down when there is mo real mecessity for it. If men only knew it, they could work to almost any extent on through middle life and into old age, if they would only take a little common sense care of their health. The trouble is that they do not take thie lit. tle stitches here ang there that are neces- gary to préserve health. They pay no at- tention to the signs of on-coming ill-health. A little biliousness, a little indigestion, a little loss of sleep and appetite, a little mervousness, a little leadache, a little shakiness in the morning, and a little dull- ness all day, a little this anda little that— ail these little things they neglect. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery makes the appetite keen, digestion and assimila- tion perfect, the liver active, the blood pure and the nerves steady. It is the great lood-maker and flesh-builder. I- is the great liver invigorator and nerve tonic. It fts a man to work and work and work. Medicine dealers sell it and have nothing else ‘just as good.”’ ae ‘*T was a sufferer five or six years from indi- gestion.” writes, BF. iso from sore stomach “a, ie . | i eee Saas. I then used Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and ‘Pleasant Pel- lets.. which in a few days gave me permanent relief.” : A man or woman who neglects constipa- tion suffers from slow poisoning. Doctor Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets cure constipa- tion. One little ‘‘ Pellet’ is a gentle laxa- tive. and two a mild cathartic. All medi- cine dealers sell them. ur . | ota ee ee A A SED atid qe oe A: Pn RO ee eee leur having beeh something dra | vor N\ONA MAA 1899, BY TRE AUTHOR. ee mudgeon, advanced in years and given to fits of insane jealousy, but if Mrs Vandeleur could not marry she amus herself all the more by flirting with all the men she met. She was over 30, brt did not look it, and she had the dan gerous gift of a most extraordinary at- tractiveness, of which her beauty formed only a part. There was this to be tee said in her fa- she kept the friends she made Men lost their heads about her now and then. but she never lost hers, and when their pericd of madness was over they settled down with a pleasant kind of friendliness which she really liked bet- ter than their lovemaking. Women said that Laura Vandeleur could never bear to see a man escape altogether from her hands. But then somehow or other women did not like Laura Van- deleur. She looked very pretty as she sat by the fire in her drawing room one after- noon in November. She had just come back to town and found her rooms in- tolerable without fragrant wood fires and great bowls of roses and violets. The weather was gray and cold. No- body knew that she was in London, and she thought herself safe from visitors. It was with some vexation that she heard the servant announce a caller. She was, as always, beautifully dressed. There was no need for her to wish her- self differently attired, but she was read- ing a novel, and she disliked putting it down. The little pucker on her forehead vanished, however, as the visitor enter- ed the room and was succeeded by the most brilliant of smiles. ‘‘Maurice! Canit be you?’’ She held out her little white hands in greeting. ‘‘How dear of you! Why, I have not seen you for months!”’ He pressed her hands and murmured something inaudible. She was shocked by his appearance. He was pale and had dark marks round his eyes, and she noticed that the veins stood out upon his hands as if he had grown thin. ‘‘Have you been ill?’’ she asked abruptly, but there was tenderness: in her face. **‘A touch of .jungle fever; that was all,’’ Harding said, sitting down list- lessly in the chair that she indicated, very near her own. ‘‘I am subject to it now and then. It always pulls me down for a few days.”’ “It does indeed, if this is how you look after it,’’ said Laura to herself, but she simply rang for tea and began to busy herself with the silver bells of her toy terrier, just for all the world as if she had no interest in Maurice Hard- ing at all Until she had given hima up of tea she scarcely took any obvi- ous notice of him, but all the while she was thinking of him and wondering what ailed the man whofor many years had been so stanch a friend to her. Only a friend, alas! She did not think that he could ever be anything more. He meanwhile luxuriated in the warmth of the room, the comfort of the chair in which he sat. He was not a sybarite by nature, but he was ill and sad and felt vaguely soothed and con- soled by his surroundings. His eye roved from the flowers at his elbow to the graceful little, figure in the arm- chair. The light of the fire just caught the gold of her hair till it shone like a glory around her head; the jewels at her neck and wrists and on her white fingers sparkled with many colored lights. Harding was in some ways an unsophisticated man. It did not occur to him that Mrs. Vandeleur’s pose was assumed for effect or that the soft rose and white of her complexion was less due to nature than to art. He looked at her so fixedly, so admiringly, that Laura at last turned almost nervous be- neath the gaze, and in order to break the silenceasked him what he was look- ing at. ‘‘At you,’’ he answered at once. ‘I was thinking how beautiful you are. You will pardon the freedom of an old friend, I hope. And how different —from some women!’’ “Different?’’ said Laura, with a smile. ‘*“You know how to be a true friend; you do not pretend and mislead—what am I saying? You must not mind what I say, Laura. I am not well This touch of fever’’— “Ig it all fever?’’ she asked gently, bending toward him. ‘‘Is there not al- s0 some grief, some anxiety’’— ‘*You have heard ?’’ he said suddenly. “‘T have heard nothing. I only guess. Some one has wronged you, deceived you’’— “It was my own fault,’”’ Harding answered bitterly. ‘‘I injured her in days gone by, and she has never forgiv- en me. She refused me, three weeks ago, and gloried in the pain she made me suffer.’’ ‘‘Then she must be a brute,” said Mrs. Vandelemr. Her hands tightened their grasp em ons another and a light loved Cauie INO her Ves. of her, Maurice. She must be a hard hearted woman. Can you not content yourself with your true frit a Harding was silent for a moment or two, then uttered a sortof groan which - . na made Mrs. Vandeleur wince as she heard it. ‘‘I loved her,’’ he said from under the hand with which his eyes were covered. ‘‘Are you the first person who has in vain?’’ said Laura in a steely voice. ‘‘Be aman, Maurice; brace y | Seif a little. Don’t spend your stren } in mourning for a girl who has thrown you over, especially when it is only for the sake of a revenge.’”’ ‘‘But she was right. her.”’ Mrs. Vandeleur tightened her lips for a moment. Then her whole face re- laxed, and she said in a voice of ex- quisite tenderness: ‘*Tall me allabout it. you poor boy!”’ I don’t blame i (To be Continued ) r. A.W. CHASE Triumphs over the Worst Forms of KIDNEY... DISEASE The wonderful success of Dr. Chase's Kid- ney-Liver Pills adds to the fame of the great doctor whose name is familiar in almost every home as the author of the world famous Recipe Book. Scores and thousands of grateful men and women have been rescued from the miseries and dangers of kidney disease by this greatest of all kidney cures. Mr. D. C. Simmons, Mabee, Ont., writes: **My kidneys and back were so bad I was unable to work or sleep. My urine had sedi- ment like brick dust, I was compelled to get up four or five times during the night. I saw Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills advertised and concluded to give them atrial. I have only used one box and am completely cured. I was a great sufferer for 18 years, but my kidneys do not bother me now. I enjoy good rest and sleep and consider Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills a boon to suffering humanity.” Dr. Chase's Kidnev-Liver Pills, one pill a dose, 25c. a box, at all dealers, or Edmanson, Rates & Co., Toronto, ~— FMORKS, aaMvUckS eu Prices Rig h SUNNYSIDE The Nicest Freshest SeeerNDeeoe BEST GROCERIES the appetite. Groceries thet do not take all your money to buy. Groceries that everyone in the house will like. Buy and try. Come in and see us, Driscoll & Hornsby QUEEN STREET——- WANTED. At Dufferin Mines, Nova Scotia, a number of miners, who can handle machine drills; also engineers and a number of mine laborers. Highest wages and steady employ- ment to competent men. No others need apply. Apply to the Manager at the Mines. 172—dlwk on you are weil rid HASZARD & MOORE: Groceries that will tempt Groceries, » Crockery » and » Glassware sind at Wholesale Prices———— “Ltda it / g b | = 2S NE is ‘ Six piece Glass Table Set Dame A POS selling at 26c, regular price Lah Five 25 cents, “/ iw @. wrk PAS : ‘ — . = 1) Flawer Pots fron 5 a 3 ee 100 Flower Pots from le up f 7 - yA rr n oe aw ie 1000 Teapots from 10c‘up. BiG VALVE 5 wt , () f) 1°¢s ye > w A. tpK og «7 1000 Jugs very lo ote erry Sets, 7 pieces, 2le 4 P. MONAGHAN QUEEN STREET — 7 Offer ‘Fuildnig SUMMER RESORT Geaside : Hotel RUSTICO BEACH, P. E. ISLAND JOHN NEWSON & CO., Proprietors Surface and Still Water Bathing. Covered Ball Alley oe eee-CROQUET AND 'l'enNIS GROUND Coach will leave Charlottetown for the above Hotel every Tuesday, Thursday and at urday evening, cailing for guests, Returring Monday, Wednesday and Friday morning Trains leave Ch’town for Humer River at 7 40a m,3nd1 30 and 310 pm. merside to Hunter Kiver at 6 55,8 35a m, and 7 35 p m. Trains run on Eastern time, which is an hour slower than local time. Address a]! correspondence to JOHN NEWSON & C9, Charlottetown, P.E I. eee ee Mdsummer frearance Sale ——— at J BMcDONALD & Coy Commencing 18th July | and will continue for SO days All our stock of Boots and Shoes, 25 to 0 per ceat discount Womens Oxford boots 50c a pair WOMENS SLIPP:!RS 106 a pair All our stock of men and boys 20 to 50 per cent discdunt Meas underclothing, ishirts, collars, ties 26 percent discount 50 p'eces print cotton, Grey cotton sheeting, dillow cotton, shirting, ining towelling, towels dress goods ---25 per cent discount Print Cotton 3 cents a yard Nothing reserved, all must be cleared now is your time to buy cheap seat J.B.MACDONALD & CO LEADERS IN LOW PRICE....... ——IN ALL KINDS OF—— FURNITURE ————-AT OUR Sume white & eolured hankerchiefs braces S43% eS BIG DISCOUNT SALE It will be money in yonr pocket to trade with us. JOHN NEWSON stm Se Mn LAs Ta ROSA A a NR Mt a ¥ j y 4 ai ‘ : ' # / ' q { ' #