THE DAiLY EXAMINER, CUARLOTTHTOWN, JANUARY 27, 1£99, 2 “ an an ani , | 7 ‘ | ON ST re er a PRs Gey gama we aga | ; ae ' NO Ogg age) aig gem nf nt? % rat SSS: ante H E THAN KS WW FAVEN LS az SE EE. bie Mes ‘eoess hk Ne ot, z A A a Se teed Yad uy | ‘ 7 SES AP US SES AP AS a Ai a AS : . A >» a “a —*, °. , 9 +a 4 ¥y “So ‘ : + | aia tibia “ar 2 Dn lle Ue De cc : | ee FROM INDIA & CEYLON ¥ re (i Ree i L£d4 I “4 % ws: eC 5 | That he Used Dodd's Kidney) ig i é + f | \ \ F mo . ~ & , : S wae d mn 1 4 ? : +: . . . Boee@ x | a th wa GS 1 AS a Pills, Which Saved his Life. ° 6eee aie S ' ae a . - > acetate 2 ; i ensisliiisiaiimimash ate 5 Als. 0200002000060000 uo «Its a Treat: : ‘ ; Coy : , >} ‘ » o 3 PD & ~ ei 2 : jo , Bowmanville, Jan 21.—Marvellous in-| 8% errs ty By LA U RA J EAN L| BBEY y deed isthecare of Mr A W Gibbons, bs j : ' bate : willer of this town vt 8 ; Ni ys > A thar § 6092. oe Ad he lrap 7? & ' : ’ xn : : . : : eee % f Author of Parted at the Altar, Lov els Maiden, (} Here is his story, as he himeelf tells it: 7 © TL aS | ite ” ee i) | “I couldn’t eat, vor sleep; bad terrib! } : +6 Rlora hel 5 ane “ Pe ws. Re al, p; ba errible vt Me : that his se: llorabel’s Lover, lone, EK te., Ete. 2 pains ip my beck and stomach. = t the victim A] | ee fi “Doctors said I had Bright’s Disease. | (4 { sift he ei ee,’ «a mets ee oh = ase x a eS OX; @ ~—e. bay? = os ao 9 me io = SE ' a couldn’t cure me. : s% & 3 9 y ' CHAPTER II C — hauk Heaven,whether it was Bright’s - or Is ; SR I Continued Disease or anyone else’s, Dodd’s Kidney | 3s as | rs “* +o of the y beauty, Pills soon cured it. a% aS , 5 W S é as} “I hope the news of my cure will spread | “® x . ’ ins and sunshine , ' 1} ; ‘e [CIENT . | * . i the we hand in tea teed tun ae ‘eure Me A _| over the whole couniry, 60 that ali suifer- hs 4 a tet ‘CEYLON C “ n eld in h vn; “p ps it wou! thont cure, ent te Doanding-sch rts | erg will hear of the greatest kidney remedy ag ee eee ; : ~ ‘ . } er he f . . C number, but she never suce ¢€ - in the w ld—-Doda’ K >: ” LE g ; | not. b ht ath a week nt on 1" orl oda’s Kidney Pills. A ris , snc . . . Cyan INTL at any on: « > , : : =o ; ; bitter \ s quick « izht th Te ga ct Mier sige _Dodd’s Kidney Pills are the only medi- “ac : : : Ne 0 9 ae oi or Bes: en Se _ | cine that has ever cured Bright’s Disease, AG Sold in lead packets only “a \\ vaby's han tap ae es ey | meee a —_— WV } = : i K~« ae- ; , ; : - i} words: Se 40¢ to $1 () per Lb * I s i i vou i ti : ‘. ‘ i 7 ° . = ~ - . ‘ » ? cried, w L 8 ler on h We are Sorry, sir, but we cannot The population of London, includes 60, be oe | : of 1 tive Hy . — p the young lady here; she revoin- | 900 Germans, 20,000 French, 15,000 aie : Lit » me Ss ex tha wl } } . > ¢ ; A bepardl ¢ in the tiny palm ® jhe whole sehool. an incites the | Dateb 12,000 Poles, 7,500 alias and] AlWays Best of Tea Values % | i i LOC Cured, ") oe . , Crt of the scholaws to mischief and :e 5,000 Swiss. AZ —s. > Kidney e are uncommon,” he answered, ! pbellion.” —— is f 4 , itfulls “Not one child in t ; , = } et . ‘ i : | orl Wweog “To 34° ; + — 1 s 2 S S WY M2 WZ Nz M% NZ s% % % s% Ye wi we : , that : ; Lik Was In ae spair, vet how > l ] ’ S32 3% ap ese Sc te se5'e ome ——— ome Som -_— ~ hh s them. Heaven forbid tha Mt hon, With fear oat Row could | Keep Minard’s Liniment in the House | i 7s as ae a ae wr aa Pasa er ul. CY : : l. ‘ AdLLS < ‘ a a Chhring to his neck. ; { the gir)’ aPrry “ 248 aa of en eat i se ~ c, and the girl’s merry, : } 7] i Ssttieenenteiieenmee ——- Why?” aske d Nella, turning p pealing laughter rinsing in hie care. and Acsording tothe latest verdict of the Office for Maritime Provinces 7 & 9 Bedford Row, Halifax, N. 8. portend « strang p des lo | her mischievous face trying to look pe New York courts in asuit for breach of om Oe OF Annes ORS uu that | tently up into his? promise it is no defence to plead that the}” ~ Pe oe a ee ™ he uild lying here will have an ex “Tl hawe ; «43 romise tor 1 i ‘ pordinary life—a wonderful ' _ fave no trouble whatever with |! , narry wae made when the man nl er to peer j . «a ‘ : } Vertie,” he declared; “but you, Uldese— | 42 the Case was drunk, ni oO sx ik < nto Lhe £ ‘ + im , ; : . ——— mysteries of the future tm mi r) ; ar on re : -e ee D cl ¢ . ; | mm) ) tut lan ha you r. Chase Cures Catarrh after | |} that power—bnt this is no me ona.e a : mas é Pp me a from school: I know Operations Fail. | S ading ih . gh ready she dec ared, “and let Toronto, March 16th, 1897. ; CS rue science as I find m ine throw those old stupid books into the le My boy aged ereret has been a suttferer . ‘ us carsion the ate , sea. i'd rather read Shakespeare. wt) rom Cavarrh, and lately we submitted him to ee i ; i his face No careful rea r ' 2 : such sweet romance ; ‘ | R : . sh ; an operation at the Ventral Hospital. Since z a | hi _ No careful reader of hu- ees mance S as komneo anc | then we have resorted to J¢r. Chase’s Catarrh we 7 nature fails to detract the ideal | “UHet dn i, or thrilling adventures, jike | Cure, and one box of this medicine has made Ki H S | face of artist and poet when o nei the Arabian Nights, and—” & prompt and complete cure, sae ij - i ae oe erecting “Hush! hush!’ « ees hes : . G. Forp “ “2d Ol be noble -brow of a grea i aa va ‘ ut a em with a Foreman, Cowan Ave. Mire Hall. : solder, s some people m ke tu } #4) ou shoul LOK more ef ‘ C) ei teats oe ik aie We empress 7 pposite Post Office—~ey } Of Human hands, and I find pl 1\ the light pleasures ef this world.” i vey np ponpensts recently arrested —ae enough just what I have told you Writ- " He had remembered suddenly the bin | ate ~ Governor, oe riding his i : Ten upon this one. Yes, hanging over fatal sentence, that had not occurred to eye 70s the wrong Bice of the road. The rst ¥ = this little head ig a black shadow. Hea: ; 2i™ ror long years: “She must neve magistrate discharged the culprit with @ 5 ven grant that it may not obscure the | /°V¢, for she must never marry.” He | C@0u9n. 8 ( sunshine of her life. Ldap to speak, but the words died away pg Mark Sefton listened in wonder tothe | @? 45 lips. Minard’s Linim 0 ici | strange story Nella told him after the { . “-A sane, indeed! Ha, ha, ha! This é bis used by Physicians ® ' | ductor took his departure; nor dil he | 3% Tea@y too much!” oe > . 2 | demur when she informed him of the A little hand, white as a lily leaf, had lo the United Kingdom in i879 there vow she had made the dying mother te | Ce™e down suddenly over his mouth, and | eT 6,859,177 telegrams despatched, J.RartTRaAy & Co, MONTREAL.Can. — oe EPPS'S GOCOA GRATEFUL COMFORTING Distinguished everywhere for Delicacy of Flavour, Supe- rior Quality, and Nutritive Properties. Specially grate- ful and comforting to the nervous and dyspeptic. Sold only in }i-lb. tins, labelled JAMES EPPS & Co., Ltd., Homceopathic Chemists, London, England. BREAKFAST SUPPER EPPS COCOA SOS ° S08 02 OO0°S 8 S]O6S8 We zre Line Of portable Vapor Baths. We have, during the las original manufacturers ten years Supplied thousands of our Baths to Physicians, hespitals, sanitriums, etc, and we are now, for the first time, ad- vertising them direct to the general peblic. NX Vv let (-et one with IN Bl \ ING # steel lrame D>}6O 006309. 03093 ©2°905 26-5 @ a i VAPOR BATH !"*tne‘foor Ifa man ifacturer does ni show you acutofatrame without the covering you may take itior granted that his “Stee! frame” is a wire hoop that rests ©o the shouider of the bather, Get one that is covered with proper material, Insist on seeing a sample of material before ordering, We make our own covering materia! and print it with a handsome “all o ver” pattern Of Niagara Falls. Getone with a thermometer attach- Ment, Don’t go it blind-# bath that is too hot or not hot encugh wiil be of ho benefit to you, Get one that you can return and have your inoney back if avt satisfac- ory in every way, Send for sample of material and in- teresting bookiet that wil! tell you all about Vapor Baths. Vapor Baths are an acknowledged ouschold neceesity. Turkish, Hot Air, Vapor, calphur or Medicated Batbs at Home, 3c, Purifes system, reduces cieaniiness, hea): h, strength. ax vents disease, obesity. Cures Colds, heumatism, Neuralgia. LaGripve, alaria, Eczema, Catarrh Female Ils 00d, Skin, Nerve apd /idney ‘rou- bles. Beautifies ( omplex ion. ' Price ot Niagara Baths, $5.00 : The Kirg-Jones Co., + Toronto ® DerPartyrNr BH. H. AGENTS WANTED. D9D952 62263. 93 9DE em] O 26S ©} © © O@ OGD OSB OS] OV OS ©] OSD 6 * © COCR & 6 2 6646 24° S 02 © 9 OAH] 0S TOG 09 ]F Id as Temonnaile, her A pol containing a litle more than a thousand @ollars, was found upon the dead woman’s person. This Nella solemniy declared, should go for the education of the child she had !efi— every cent. ithe mariage ring she had worn iad the name Uldene engraved in it; and by tl name the child was christened — Uldene Sefton, And both Mark and Nella grew to love the little waif quite as fondly as they loved their own litte Haxen-haired Verlie. Six te own. 1s ‘en years passed by, bringing little change to the inhabitants of the isolaied island of Black-‘lor Light-House, save to expand the two infants into wondr- ously beautiful yeung giris. Verlie was fair of face, with tender, | deep, blue eyes, and hair like golden sun- shine. And Uldene—ah, how shall I find words to describe the dark, wond:- ous, glowing beauty of peerless U dene? the young girl whose life held so trag'e a story! WHer face was dark, piquan: a'd dimpled, with rounded cheeks ana curved crimson as the heart wf a glowing wild rose; great dark, velvety, Uriental eyes, shaded by the longest and darkest of lashes; a low broad brow, crowned with rings of curling love-locks, darker than a raven’s plume, and saucy, smiling mouth, that seemed made only for rippling laughter. Vertie of jips is ¢ was a quiet, retiring tem perament, sweet and good. Uldene—gay, restless, piquant Uldene, was full of faults; at once the torment and darling of the light-shouse. No human beiug could held in.sukiection the fierv. au- THE WEDDING RING. Death lurks in every place in this “ vale There is no happiness, no joy, no gaiety, no success, 10 sorrow and no failure that may not secrete him. A favorite \hiding-place for death, where wo- men are ¢on- cerned, is in the very happiness and rapture of wifehood and the sa- cred joy of motherhood. But too fre- - quently there is death in the embrace of love, and the first touch of baby-fingers is succeded by the chilly grasp of the grim destroyer. If wives and mothers would only resort to the right remedy when they suffer from weakness and disease of the delicate and important feminine organs that are baby’s threshold to life, there would be fewer hus- bands bereft, and fewer homes saddened by an infant’s loss. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription makes the feminine oe strong, healthy and vigorous. It fits for wifehood and motherhood. It banishes the maladies of the period of suspense, and makes baby’s entry to the world casy and comparatively painless. An honest drug- gist will not try to induce a customer to take an inferior substitute for this great remedy, for the sake of extra profit. " Seagle was a great sufferer from a com- biantion of female discnben, a few years ago, from which she has been entirely cured by the of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription,” A. Seagle, Esq., of Box 130, Wytheville, Va. y convince . F So ea to the ‘ Favorite Prescription, and she doesn’t hesitate to say so. She has rec- ommended it to her lady friends, and in all cases, where it has been given a fair trial, it has given entire satisfaction.” ys In cases of constipation and torpid liver, no remedy is equal to Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. They regulate and invigorate the stomach, liver and bowels. They never fail. One little “ Pellet”’ is a gentle laxative and two a mild cathartic. They never gripe. An honest dealer will not urge a substitute upon you. of tears.’ that there is no medi- | — a saucy, voice say young shrily in his ear: trilled “Oh! I can’t be a num; I won't be a nuns i'm too fond of pleasures; I could never be a nun.” “There’s no use of talking, Papa Sef- ton,” declared Uidene. “I shal not go to school any more. I warn you, and promise you, I shall run away at the first opportunity. You might as well think of shutting up a skylark in the four walls of a cage as to shut me up in the four walls of a school-room.” “What will your mether say to bring- ing you home in disgrace, Uldene?’ he Said, abruptly. “Remember this is the twentieth time; and now you have ex- havsted every boarding-school in the state.” “Kest assured she has been expecting me.” declared Uldene, complacently. “thirty days is my limit in any school; and as for being in disgrace, that’s noth- ing new. Just think o:1 the old cat order: up to eur dormitory at eight o clock, Sharp, and every light to be out, and us snug in our beds before the next quarter hour struck, and on All-Hallow Kive at that. I’m not sorry that I put a sleeping potion in madame’s tea, and that at midnight every girl in the s*ho»l ine us crept out to the moonlit lawn. Oh! we had a rousing time, so what does it mat- ter if I am sent home in disgrace for planning it our and carrying it through?” “But the rules of the institution should he respected and—’”’ “Kiddlesticks!’ broke in the inecorrigi- ble, wilful beauty. “When one has te live by rule it is time to die. Ah, ne: give me freedom—gayety—life;” and ste stretched out her beautiful white arms as though she would fain fly away. “What am I to do with this beautiful wild bird?’ honest Mark thought, in puzzled bewilderment too great for words. Mrs. Sefton was quite as distresed and bewildered as her husband had been, when Uldene was sent home in dsgrace trom the last school to which they ec mild possibly send her. What shou'd be done with her now? All at once her woman’s wit came to her rescue, Why not send both the gris te spend Christmas with her old friend, Mrs. Chester, in Washington? Mrs. Chester was a senator’s wife; but for all that the lady was a staunch, true friend of the Seftons. Years age, brave Mark Sefton saved her enly a bright lad fourteen. from drowning, and the laay owed him a debt of gratitude which she told herself could never be repaid. Mark Sefton well knew—even before he wrote her ia reference to the mat- ter—that the girls would be warmly re- ceived. In his letter he had frankly related all of Uldenes strange histery, hd son, ofr requesting that the knowledge that sfie was not his child should not be divulged to her as yet—not un*’l some plan for her future should be settled: for they were sorely puzzied as to the meazong of those startling words: “She must never love, never marry.” Love and marriage seemed only a fit bing crown for the girl's bright life. ‘here was great consternation at the light-house when Mrs. Chester's reply was received and its contents made known to the two girls. Uidene was wild with delight. and Verlie sprang from her chair with a low cry and flung her arms around Ber mother’s neck. “We have always been at home Christmas, mamma,” she said. “I d» not think the day would be a hap’ y o-e for. me away from vor.” for she must (To be Continued.) | “Ineentore Help” Last year there were 83.029,999. — To all who find themselves with health gradually slipping away, Kidneys and Liver 80 disorganized that they aie incapable of keepidg the system free from poisonous waste “uaterial, Stomach Disordered, Bowels Con- tipated, Head Aching, Back Paining, take or. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills, The quick way they help you back to health will sur prise you, London enjoys a greater area of open epaces than any other capitial in the world. Migard’s Liniment Lumberman’s Friend The bitterness of a grain of strychnine can be iasted in 600,000 grains of water. Ask for Minard’s and take no other Baron Rothchilds left £100,000 to the Evelina hospital for children. ee Chronic Eczema Cnred. One of the mest chronic cases of Eczema ever cured is the case of Miss Gracie Ella Aiton, of Hartland, N. B. On asworn state- ment Mr. Aiton says: I hereby certify that my daughter Gracie Ella was cured of EKezema of long standing by using four boxes of Dr. Chase’s Ointment. Wiliam Thistle, druggist, of Hartland also certifies that he sold tour boxes of Dr, Chase’s Ointment which sured Gracie Elia, simplest, Lightest Plate Camera Eastman’s No. 2 Eureka Jr. Takes nictures 34% x 3% inches; weighs but 1244 nces. Meniscus lens, rotary snutter, three stops, view nder, socket for trinod screw. Perfeetly adapted 2SNap-shote or time *xposures and equaily con enient as a hand or tripod camera. $2.0 1.00 rice with piate | Ider, . - - - mmplete developing and printing ontfi . atalogue of Eurcha Cameras and Kodaks free at agencies or by mati. EASTMAN KODAK CO. =. y rheaetes TH E. MPROVED UPTURE CURE 1 doth a 3 GET WELL By taking DR. CLIFT’S treatment for CHRONIC DISEASES and RUPTURE. Dip- lema registeredin U. 8. and Canada. Send stamp forinformation, or call at CH’/TOWN, FRIDAY, SaTURDAY,and SUNDAY, Write today for a free copy of ourinteresting books and ‘‘How you are swindled.” Down go the Prices — Before moving we will sell at low prices The Challenger Tie i do Kenevin do | i do Senator do de Loie do | do Mirella do | 0 Belmont do ' do Chig Bow do. | Gerada do | do Sapp Ho ~~ do . do Saleta do F do Paris Bow’ do t do Nasen do | ti 25 to 33 1-3 p. c, discount. i D. A. BRUCE | London : House. — Ladies JACKETS © Black and Colored --- About Fifty We do not want any at stocktaking ag —_— ~ We have extensive experience in the intricate patent laws of 50 foreign countries. Serd sketch, model or photo. for free advice. MARION & MARION, | Everts, New York Life Building, Montreal, and "atic Builaing, Washington, D. 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