ONLY HOPH UNG Ruth . Vict fe ow avi cCasc 1% ys . Pre a e ¢ ‘ : j ldis. Pe ’ , . os rT 5 1 ¢ ‘N 1 oO} " } S : ' . ' ” v : : : Mm Ty \ ‘ ls Day if ' < ' . Ba : 7 Ra Ss Ge a0 \\ i 7 r ‘ ' ‘ I bs neo i I cf : 9 ; iS oO K tc ? Yy Seem : ] \ ed rse < oa! eh, fnz yO cars vs pPs's COGOA GRATEFU! COMFORTING Distinewished everywhere for Delicacy of Fiavour, Supe- rior Quality, and Nutritive Properties. Specially grate- ful and comforting to the nervous and dyspeptic. Sold only im }-lb. tins, labelled JAMES EIPS & Co,, Ltd., Homeopathic Chemists, Lendon, Englanc. BREAKFAST SUPPER EPPS'S COCOA QLMODODAD SOS HOE ODOSD oo e908 OOo o> 2=]et,8 mantfacturers of portable Vapor Baths. We are ihe original Webave, during the last ‘en years supplied thousands of our Baths to physicians, hospitals, sanitar ums, etc. and we are now, for the first time, ad- vertising them direct to tbe general public. BUYING A otioiirame IN VAPOR BATH 40% Ifa man er does not show you os O° S Os &—s =. © = 6 =. © =. COS & <> ~~. © =. OS & i act fatrame without the covering you may take itfor grante: 'hat his “Steel fram sa wire hoop (that rests Oa ; » bathe ‘ at is covered wi'h proper ma ul, Insist on seeing a semple of m al before ordering, Ve raake MI wT overing mate rial nd pript t wit t handsome “all over” pattern gara Falls. » with a thermomet "* ’ i+ : ; ; ul ro pling v enough r attach- math that will be of ‘2° © ee, 6262 66°3.03 03 ie to) meet hive is tf ; io urn and satisfac- GeL OT tbat you «an rt oney icikK if me » of materi ul and in- eresti! et that will tell you all ack owledged i furkish, Hot Air, Vapor, =ulphur or Medicated me, de, Purifles systero, strength : : y. Cores Colds tim, Neuralgia, szatarippe, Malaria, Eczema, Catarrh. Female I!ls Blood, Skin. N« d Kidcnev Trou- bles Bea . are an rve al fles (« Mpiexio Price ot Niagara Baths, $5.00 The Kirg-Jones Co., Toronto DEPARTME me, 8 AGENTS WANTEI 4 @<e @*. “oe =]¢ =e =] o> © 9° = 6$O°2 o> * ¢ r i y 8@96~<2 6<2 2026 2 dDO SD JAMES KELLY Wholecale Comeiseior Dealer , all kinds of FRESH FISH. Ells and Smelts, Specialties, XO. 8 LONG WHARF So BOSTON MASS Write for stencils and part culare. SOLICcI1 eee Have Just Completed My few Oyster Place. tll and wwe the brilliant display of Otful oyeters on and off the ehell. “PrOyster king ie standing in the wr _ . “dow, Bee him, and then you will eat Yiters, John P. Joy, VICTORTA CAFE ee Tat George Street 2]eonho 0262680909529 ——— | oe eee LK TS, ; be ti i ERO Sai ie ash R ROMO. ts THE DAILY MXAMINER, CHARLUTTETOWN, FEBRUARY 17, 1859 OCOOOOOOSSOoOO fy By LAURA JEAN LIBBEY ti Author of *‘Partec at the Altar,” “Levely Maiden,” @4 > 1 0 a ai a ” on ~ ss: **Florabel’s Lover,” ‘‘Ione,” Etc, Etc. < (i. EN ¢ Glare) pment © gett, 5 pate PAR, 5 repay «5 Gomera)... GRR.» Guaiapath, G “agape ? moe = - oO -- “% eS Oe eed, Tae a ‘2 OSs) ty AS + ee emo '4 SSS = CHAPTER “ will ‘tat XVII Continued him ‘far away from here le ‘ ; she told herse ‘so far away hat Mark and Nella Sefton can never find him, te write him of the heavy eu that was predicted to upon my head on my eighteenth birthday. And h shall ne know, lwe will be happy Yes, my great ve will win ! from him in time, and earth can ld m greater heaven for me than that In that fortnight of bustle and « fusion passed, Ruledge Chi ca i of Ve . He } \ he ayo 1 him whenever w ‘ i! was TU! ikful fo ] ) mm those dark, dreary hours h have resisted finding consolation her, and breathing to her how lo y and desolate he was, had she been » ir At the end of the fortnight Verlie id good-bye to them, and started for home She came suddenly, wnexpectedly, and unheraldec upon Mark and Nella, they sat before the roaring wood fire one chilly spring eveni They hear the grating of the little boa Tow hed the sand. for noe Aline did not continuous wash of the wares « Some Oo! floor; .a . e4 ‘ 1c wlided like A gnost across the slender form slipped down on her knees before them: and a piteoys, sad, young voice breathed out sobbingely, as two great, blue-bells of eyes, swim- ming with tears, were raised to her mother’s face: “Mother! father! your Verlie has come back to you!” Both sprang to their feet with joyous cries, but almost in the same breath they called for Uldene. “Bring the lass in, Nella!” cried the cherry old light-house keeper. “No doubt she is outside of the door, waiting to play some prank upon us, bless her pretty, roguish face! Come in, Uldene, lass!’ he roared, thumping his eane, while Nella flew to do his bidding, But Verlie called her back. “She is not there, mother,” she said gently. “Uldene will never come to us again. ‘She is a great lady now. Did you not receive the letter which she said she wrote to you, tellipng you that she has married Senator :Chester’s son, Rut- ledge?’ +A ”. “Married!” sshrieked Nella Sefton, springing to her feet in the wildest agita- tion, while Mark grew pale as death. “My God! have I ‘heard aright, child? Did you say Uldene—had—married?” “Yes, mamma,” said Verlie, her blue eyes in wonder to her mother’s frightened face. “I said she had mar- ried Rutledge Chester.” weit Nik cide raising CHAPTER XIX, 7 ze “SHE HAS WRECKED MY LIFE.”’ the over The startling announcement of marriage of beautiful Uldene, whose head such an apalling, mysterio .s shadow hung, filled the old light-house ud Keeper and his wife with the greatest dismay and terror. They could not pardon their want forethought this fatally lovely, ill-starred young g1°! who had left I keeping, to visit at the m< themse] of in allowing been so strangely in ignifcent hom of the Chesters, where she would be brought in contact with the haughty handsome son. ' Long and earnestly Mark Sefton and Nelia talked the matter over. sittime AS ~ - ait $6 , <5<2 ‘ = ’ » ao WwW y y % “ae 4 ’ - Z “4 6 | bees a. is . as a bear fools around atrap. A man doesn’t like to own up that he is ill. He savs ‘‘O, it amounts to nothing. I shall all right to-morrow.’’ But he isn’t all right to-morrow; nor the next day. Pretty soon the trap snaps to; and he has : fastened on him. serious disease .| Many men fool with sickness just | some | The only sensible course is to keep away from the trap, and not allow sickness to get any hold on you. It is a frightful mistake to trifle with indigestion and bilious troub- les in the belief that they will cure them- selves. Onthe contrary they drag the whole system down with them. / “When the appetite and digestion are !r- regular it shows that the machinery of the body is out of order and is not doing its proper work; the blood-circulation 1s poorly supplied and is being gradually debased by bilious poisons. — tathe “The pro er alterative for this condition 1s Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It acts directly upon the digestive functions and the liver; and enables the blood-mak- ing glands to supply an abundance of pure blood, rich with the nutritious vital ele- ments which build up healthy flesh and during strength. : "he all Tepes crishail and run-down condi- tions the f Discovery’? is far better than malt ‘‘extracts’”’ or nauseating ae sions.’’ It creates) genuine permanen strength. It does not make flabby fat but solid muscle. It is a perfect tonic for cor- ulent people. . A aad accom of its properties and mar- velous effects in many so-called ‘‘ hopeless cases, verified by the oe. own sig- natures, is given in Dr. Pierce’s thousand- page illustrated book, “ The People’s Com- mon Sense Medical Adviser.’’ This splendid volume will be sent free on re- ceipt of 31 one-cent stamps to pay cost of customs and mailing only. Address, Dr. RV. Pierce, 663 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y. For a cloth-bound cepy send 50 a “ ing suffered for several years with indi- ection. writes Samuel Walker, mt of Parkes- urg, Chester County, Pa.. “I conc uded to try our valuable ‘Golden Medical Discovery.’ | Ai- ter taking five bottles i was entirely cured. I also suffered from bladcer trouble, which was also cured by the ‘Discovery.’ I feel like a new uw © their cheerful wood fire 16ne after Ver ic had retired to rest. It was evident that Mrs. Chester had not divulged the fafal story, that dark ned Uldene’s life so pitifully, to het n, or that marriage would never have vecn solemnized—nah, never! It would have parted them-—torn them asunder as npletely as though one of them lay im the grave. i‘he question they discussed so ear y was, should ‘they reveal all t« ene or not? Why destroy the bright f her ¢ iy voung life by warning {f the doom ther dying mother had thus break the ] irt of er of a fated race? , no, they could not—they would Warnings were of little avail now the marriage had taken place, they were ther for weal or woe while ed. It would be kinder not to veal it to Uldene, It was past midnight when the light-house keep er’s wife took up her candle to seck her ’ good it seemed to the fond have her darling child be- old home-ré once again. A Was passing Verlie’s rootn she da moment, Was it a sobbing cry or a moan that fell upon her start- ¢ She pushed the door open softly id «¢ rtered. Che moon’s rays,-*clear and bright, through the uncurtained window, bathi the pretty little chamber under ves in a flood of silvery light. It threw a tender, subdued glow upen the slender figure lying upon the couch. The lovely curls were tossed about the white pillow like a glistening veil of gold, and the little white hands were whed tightly together. As Mrs. Sefton bent over her, the girl’s lips parted in a quivering sigh, and murmured, pathetically: “Oh, mother, mother! I am so weary Cie she of life now: the’ future is all dark. I loved Rutledge ‘‘hester so. Life is a living death to me without his love. Ul dene, with her fatally beautiful face czme between us. Oh! there was a time when he leved me best. I knew it. I felt it in my heart. God pity me! Uldene has wrecked my Y life! ‘The words trailed off in a piteous sob, and the sleeper tessed restlessly to and fro on her pillow. Like one turned to stone Nella Sefton had Jistened. She did not cry out, even though what she had discovered was he bitterest, most grievous shock she had ever experienced. [Pressing het hands tightly over her heart, she grop ed hi way from the room. ‘The fair moonlight seemed to have been suddenly blotted out, and the room to have grown a k and chill. All the long hours of 1@ night she never slept—her eyes never CIOSE ad. The pitiful secret of Verlie’s love for iy, handsome man who had WwW d dark-eyed Uldene troubled he h nd a mad wish eross ed h mind that she had never aided M iving that child from the fury of the wild waves that never-to-be-for: gotten might in the past—to break he own child’s heart im the after years. She knew that Verlie would rathe die than reveal the pitiful secret that ] like a stone on her young heart. She was one of the kind who endure and suffer in silence In tl days t followed even Murk noticed how his idvlized child was fail ing. “Wihat do you suppose is the matter with Verlie, mother?’ the honest oid light-house keeper asked at lemgth, ** fhe ss ereeps about the house like a sha $ Se ym than a ghosi of her f ner self. We never hear hei gay laugh, like the rippling murmur of a mountain brook, about the house. She never smiles aow, and more than once when I have come upon her unexpected ly. I have found her in tears. Do you think the lass is grieving her life out at } from Uldene, and be Uldene married the milion. aire’s son—she never deigns to write to us separaied cause—since ‘It wonld have been better for her if her path and Uldene’s had never cross: ed.” she cried out, so bitterly that the old light+house keeper looked up into her face aghast. “Why do asked. But Nella turned away with a tearless you say that, wife?’ he sob and would vouchsafe him no an- swer. It was breaking her heart to watch her darling fade like a storm-b! :st- ed flower before her very eyes. She re: alized something must be done, and at once. Verlie must have change of scene and gay companions te win her over tc forgetfulness, Mrs. Sefton never dreamed of the tur bulent depths of love that lay beneath the calm exterior cf this girl’s heart. She could never forget the dark, haughty. handsome face of Rutledge Chester: waking or sleeping it was always before her. In the hour of death his name would be on, her lips. At this critical juncture a strange event happened that changed the cur rent of Mark Sefton’s hitherto unevent ful life. Years before; by the death of ax: older brother, Mark Sefton had be- come the possessor of a narrow strip of and in one of the wildest and most rugged portions of California. In vain Mark tad endeavored to sell it; no one could be found who would take the barren waste off h's hands at even half the low price he had offered it at; so. in despair, at last Mark ceased 'Parted byFate?} \ do it. ime attempts of trying to dispose cf it ind for tong years the strip «f land was riven leet and One day the following brief “Person .!” met Mark’s one of Tie New York papers that had by chance found ts way to is Black Zor bs Liouse: “A valuable vein of ore ‘has been dis covered upon Jand—said to belong to a Mr. Seftoun—~in E—— county, CalifSrnia ny to neg riotous weeds, eyes in Wated ig at Parties having adjoining claims wonld like to negotiate with ‘him as to purchase of same, through thei~ Messrs Harris & Whitney, News York.” ‘he honest olé light-house keeper teld the paper off at it in astonishment. “Ore found in that strip of wild land” he gasped. “It can’t be possible.” aurtorneys, Broadway, arm’s length and gazed great He lost ne time in writing to the at torneys mentioned, one of whom cam«¢ dewn in person in response, offering the ld dight-house fabulous price for the keeper such a bit of wild, rugged land that it fairly staggered him. And Mark, who had fought a relent less battle with stern poverty all his life had known and even want meant, i worred long—who what privatior and who had times innumerable as tu should make both ends meet om his slender income—suddenly found himself a wealthy man. “I shall never leave the house, Nella,” declared. spent the best years of my peen how ‘ he old light- “T have life here he tending the light in the tower hat guides the mariners on their way, and here I shall spend the rest. I could never live away from the sight and sound of the great, restless sea.” “You forget the duty we owe to our child,” said Nella, softly. “Think what an isolated, lonely home this would be for Verlie to spend the best and bright est years of her young life in. ‘The sound of the sea, which is music to ycu is horride in its monotony to her. Age prefers quiet, youth, gayety. You ask me why Verlie has changed so of late. and I wswer you: She misses the brilliant l.e she led while visiting at the home of the Chesters.” These words had more weight with Mark than all she had said previously There was no sacrifice he would noi have made for Verlie’s sake. When the subject was broached to Verlie the girl drew back with a bitter cry. Go out into the hard, cold world in which she, had met him and iearned te love him? Ah, no, she could never (To be Continued.) HEADAGHE AND NEURALGIA. Too many times the origin of a head- ache is miscalculated, and one begins dosing the stormach for it, when an ap- plication of Griffith’s Liniment would draw out the pain and give immediate relief--It will cure any ache, no matter how severe. “TIT suffered from severe headaches and could not obtain any relief until 1 had used Griffith’s Menthol Liniment—the cooling, soothing action of this magical application always takes away the pain. I have not had a headache last longer than ten minutes since I began using this wonderful lini- ment.’’ L. DEAS, 187 Centre avenue, Toron. to, 4 RELIEVES THE INSTANT APPLIED. AT ALL DRUGGISTS—25 CENTS Sold by Geo. E. Hughes. TARTAN SMOKING Ts AE ; il r= =. < TOBACCO {tp 1 J.RatrrrayeCe = MONTREAL CanJ ATCHES Unsurpassed for durability and timekeeping qualities, at prices so lew as to svrprise ycu. H. TAYLORS SUNNYSIDE (i MII ZT ETON TEE PHSIR+ BRAG ~ <e@ UMBELE! O8 6 BOSS HOSCEOSSESUHSESOOSCERHES i MALLET { TTT, Y q% “~~ In stock taking last week we found some lines of furniture we had ceased to make, and as our Factory is crowding new patterns on us, we must make rooni, ‘The prices be- low should make quick clearance for us, and profit for the buyers, FOR ‘Y CASH 'Y ONLY QOASS 18SEC SAGE B9G8ER8F 1 Parlor Suit at $45.00. was $65,00 1 ‘ at 40.00, was 60.00 1 ” at 35.00, was 5009 1 " at 37.00, was 59.00 i s at 3250,was 45.00 ” at 30.00, was 40.00 * at 20.00, was 25.00 . at 17.00, was 22.00 at $7.50, was $11.00 at 7.50, was 10.50 - at 5.50, was 8,50 ™ at 3.00 was 4,00 1 Bedroom Suite at $50.00, was $75.00 os at 35.00, was 50.00 “ at 32,50, was 45.00 ss at 19.00, was 24.00 ss at 17.20, was 22.50 6 at 17.06, was 21.00 $< at 13.00, was 16.00 1 Hall Stand 1 “ 1 4 1 Sideboarc at $17.50, waz $25.90 1 * at 900, was 1250 1 - at 7.00, was 9.00 SPE SA SECS! CPI Aer TR 3 Extersion Tables at $6,009 was $7.75 3 - at 5.00 was 6.75 1 6 at 4,75 was 6.59 TANS ANTM LAT | SE 13 Odd Centre Tables 4 off. 7. Odd Lounges 4 off. 1 Diningroom Set at $30.90 was $40 00 1 m at 27,50, was 36,0u 1 és at 23.50, was 27,50 100 (about) odd chairs, 1-3 off, odd pieces — Whatnots, Cabinets, Fire Sereens, Umbrella Stands, Music Stands, Reed Chairs, Fancy Rockers, Odd Bureaus, Odd Sinks, Odd Bedsteads, all at 1-3 off. ‘fo avoid misunderstanding. we have fastened red tickets showing reduced prices on ail goods enumerated above, _ =. _ ~-e MARK WRIGHT AND CO - HOME MAKERS Lot Oene 29 4 Se Seen iiiemmsiinantensamnibainanaiescimumenlith Cotnchadiaidn enter ee ag ee ~ ‘Saha < aed 2 ee eee Se eens ae LE Tyg Pee NRE Sette ee ee eee ee ee eel INT se SaigRR Ponem, poms ee ee a Mig 3