Ta yiey x For Victims of 5 is i yodd's WI : aU as. 3 24 se eta leon ign. S widCase iney Pills, Not a day pa on which the gewspapers do n t record the death of - or i s from Bnght’s 9 prsease \ireacy $ victims num ber hund of thousands. Day by dw the awful total grows larger. No class is safe fro: this destroyer War and i perance, with all their . : ities, are not ’ ‘ ip the o¢ enonsible y aeaths as respons! te This have been | ghts Dis aes ¢ sa way of resisting se. Ve E Vaile ease a a a ae ws. and it; of Grawins : oe ... 5 sS 2 24 SUMmMitie maxing ua A ee = hreez That t ine, Dodd’: hreezc. an ee Kidney Pills, has cures the w wst cases. l cure, hopeless as the case may seen. Would you safely shield your loved ones from the fatal gerip of this curse of mankind—Bnght Disease? Then gse@Dodd’s Kidney Pills, the only cure on earth for this disease. usands of to j i never tals ; EPPS'S COCOA TEFUL COMFORTING Distinguished everywhere for Delicacy of Fiavour Supe- rior Quality, and Nutritive Properties. Specially grate- ful and comforting to the nervous and dyspeptic. Sold only in }-lb. tins, labelled JAMES EPPS & Co., Ltd., Homaopathic Chemists, London, England. BREAKFAST SUPPER PS'S COCOA << -- - <r e QOS s DOH TS OSOHSS6S6 A e90602 0°38 “5 O~8.46 manufacturers 18, We are the origin: of portable Vapor Ba , fe have, during the last ten years © supptied thousands of our Baths to physicians, hospitals, sanitariums, ete, and we are now, for the first time, ad- @ vertising them direct to the general public. Get one with , * 4 IN BUYING A a steel frame ot ly that stands % VAPOR BA I on the fioor Ifa manufacturer does not show you acut ofatrame without the covering you may take it for granted that his “Steel frame” is & wire hoop that rests Oo the shoulder of the bather, Get one that is covered with proper 4 Materia!, Insist on seeing a sample of material before ordering, We make 9 our own « vering material and print it with a handsome ‘‘all over” pattern of Niagara Falls. Get one with a thermometer attach- ment, Don’t go it biind—a bath that is too hot or not hot enough will be of no henefit to you, Get one that you can return and ave your money beck if not satisfac- lory in every way, fend for sample of material and in- teresting booklet that will tell you all about Vapor Baths. Vapor Baths are an ecknowledged household veceesit lurkish, Hot Air, Vapor, Sulphar or Medicated t Baths at Home, 3c, Purifles system, ; on cleaniiness, health, strength. e o= 66 oes =o «= os ‘5 4) ee° ©62]66'3 02 =o = c*eo-=> Tevents disease, o> sity. Cures Colds, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, LaGrippe, ‘ _ a, Eczema, Cxtarrh. Female [lls lood, Skin, Nerve ard Widney Trou- ® bies. Beautifies Compiexion. ' Price ot Niagara Baths, $5.00 ‘The Kirg-Jones Co., Torento DEPARTMENT H.} AGENTS WANTED. DOSE DOD BD 06BODI‘DWVS. — JAMES KELLY Wholesale Con mission Dealer in al! kinds of FRESE: FISH. Ells and Smelts, Specialties, NO. 8 LONG WHARF oSSitisee BOSTON MASS SOLIcITEL Write for stencils and particu)are. eet Have Just Completed My New Oyster Place. Cali ond eve the brilliant display of UUfal oysters on aud off the shell. vi ur Oyster king is standing in the indow, Bee him, and then you will eat Watere. Joha P, Joy, VICTORIA CAFE Great George Street ¢ ons ©9952 58S 628569 i } ' itself, | that while TRE DAILY EXAMINER, CHAKLOTTETOWN FEBRUARY, 21 1899 f yee pm Ww td 4% CHAPTER XIX Continued “wn, Goa, teach me how I am to give up my love whom I love so well!’ mean ed Uldene. “Oh, white clouds!” ghe cried, “choose for me! I ask yor to decide a human life—a human soul to night. If yonder fleecy clouds obscure the face of the moon as they pass, I sclemnly pledge to you that within the hcur I will part from my heart’s eve, making no moan, though it will be the bitterness of death for me. If, on the other hand, yonder clouds sail by, and no shadow drifts over the moon, I will cling Rutledge’s defying fate [ pledge myself to Heaven that these white clouds shall decide for weal or for woe, for joy or the coldness and dzrkness of despair.” Never in this world was there a more look than the beautiful young face turned upward to the moonlit, star gemmed sky, and the white clouds that were to decide either life or death for her. She knelt down in the dew-wet grass with her ice-cold hands clasped over her heart, piteously watching the white clouds. Nearer—nearer they approach ed the great white light. Uldene caught ber breath in a panting gasp. Did the angels realize her woe? Would they in tercede for her, beggimg that merey might be shown her? She was so young and she loved him so. One instant more, and they would de cide her future. That instant seemed the length of eternity. Nearer, nearer to love. puteous they approached the soft, bright, silv>ry orb, and as she watched them, slo viy byt surely they obscured it. Ah, yes! | it was Fleaven’s solemn warning to her that she must pais from her love if she would save him. In that moment the girl turned away with the bitterness of death in her heart, and passed slowly up the lilac grove, sweet with the breath of purple, tossing plumes, to the house She had thought to gain her own room Without being observed; but this was not to be. In the corridor she came face to fece with Rutledge. “I was just about starting out through the grounds in search of you, dear,’ he said. “What were you doing ovt among the roses so long?’ He started abruptly as he saw her face. It was as white as mable, and the large, dark eyes had in them a hunt- ed look, dazed by terror. “Uldenef’ he cried, springing to her side, and throwing his strong arms about the slender, swaying figure, “what is the matter, dear? Are you il!?” He could not understand then, but ke knew but too well afterward, why she shrank back in his arms, clinging to him, weeping and kissing him by turns, her white arms tightly, so about him, yet shuddering at How. could he know clung to him she was bidding him farewell forever? are not well, darling?” he “You are almost hysterically You have been exerting your- : . ; clasping so sa le piteously, his fi nd caresses. she silently “You anxiously. nervous, i Sait self to entertain lately. Such a round of gayeties, parties, balls, rides, recep ticns every day without cessation is | beginning to tell upon you. Go to your | room and rest, dear. I will look in, in the course of an hour, and see how you are. Your face is white as death, ani your hands are burning hot. if tis he pathetie story of Romes and Juliet is re- peated every day in modern with the excep- tion that Juliet does not die by poison. She dies * because of lier own neglect or -. ignorance. + Neglectfulness causes much of » woman’s peculiar sickness. Neg- lect of the minor troubles causes The irregularities. life, serious complications. lariti the burning, dragging ache, the debilitating drains that mark the progress of feminin« diseases, are passed lightly over of ar borne in ignorance of their cause. Thei: continuance means death or insanity. This is all unnecessary. So-cailed female weak ness can be cured. It can be cured quickly and permanently, and right in the privacy of the home without the humiliating local treatment so universally insisted upon by physicians. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescrip- tion does this and more. It acts directly on the delicate organs concerned and makes them strong and healthy. It banishes the usual discomforts of the expectant period and makes baby’s coming easy and almost painless. It tones end strengthens the nerves. At all medicine stores. W. R. Malcolm, Esq., of Knobel, Clay Co., Ark., writes: ‘My wife for perhaps four months pre- vious to the birth of our child took the * Favorite Prescription.’ This streagthened her entire $ys- tem and child-birth, to het. was very easy, being attended with tittle pain. Our baby Ruth is thir- teen months old aud she hus mever been siek a day, not so much as had th: colle me ie heathy and stout, and pretty as ~ pictdfe--pret = she is neuer: — = oo blame Dr i 's family medicinez «or if. oe eee De. Pierce’s ‘isiden Medical Discov- ery, the ‘Favorite Prescription’ and ‘Pleasant tiets’ in our home and use the, We have been married almost three ycarts adj ape cal d a physician into my family but one of our baby.”’ 2 Rosy cheeks. The rich, pure, red of health makes thew. Keep the b} pure and you will hove them. atipa- tion causes impure Ylood. Dr. nee Pleasant Pellets cure it promptly and per- tly and mever ¢& i are earn Vegetable ar’ serhetl o other pill acts so naturally an . fectly. Druggists sell them, SSS SSSs SS Ss SS SS testes 'Parted byFate By LAURA JEAN LIBBEY Author of ‘Parted at the Altar,” “Lovely Maiden,” Florabel’s Lover,” t ‘me, I v ; i “Tone,” Etc., Ete. state of affairs confinues, 1 shall call in a doctor.” A doctor! Ah, who could “minister to a mind diseased?’ She knew, poor soul, that she must part with him while her strength lasted. Slowly she unwound her white arms from his neck, and turned from his, stiflmg the bitter cry that rose to her lips. She dared not look into his face should fail her. again, lest her courage Slowly she turned, and with an un steady step ascended the stairs. Nanon, her maid, was in her boudoir a marvelous ball dress and seed pearls that stitching away at of rose pilk satin she was to wear to a grand ball on the following evening. “Put it away, Nanon, and leave me,” said Uldene. “I want to be alone. See that no one disturbs me, Nanon,” she went on, piteously. When the girl rehched called her back. “Come in in an hour from now, Nan the door she on,” she whispered, with pale Eps, “and on the table yonder you will find a seal ed letter, addressed to my husband. Take it to him with your own hands. Let no one know. You will do this, Nanon?’ “Yes, my lady,’ the girl, courtesying, and } ring at the strange request, answered wondering ; “it shall be done as you | wish,” The girl looked back wistfully as sh« reached the door, and as she saw that levely despairing face then, she saw it never again in this life. Left to herself, Uldene rose swiftly and turned the key in the lock. Ne on must inieirupt her while she was writ ing that pitiful setter to Rutledge. She went to her writing-desk, opened and drew forth a sheet of paper. For the next twemy minutes the silence of death filled the jgoom, broken only by the swift whirr of the pen on the white paper sad the slow ticking of the clock on the mantel. It was not a iong letter, and and it was blotted by burning, bitter tears These are the words he was to read: it “Rutledge: When your eyes rest upon these Hines I shall be far away. I am leaving you wilfully and_ deliberately: and, oh, my darling, I cannot tell you why; Think of me as you will. Our marriage was a bitter mistake. Heaven knows 1 wish from the bottom of my heart it had never been consummated. I am going out of your life quietly, Rut ledge. It will be worse than useless to search for mae. You will never find me. Never! “Believe me false. Perhaps I am dealing has parted us, “There is me for what Il none on earth. in Heaven. I expect none. “Do not quite hate my memory, Rut- ledce, for I cannot bear that. Remem: ber it was fate that parted us. When I clung to you to-night with tears and kisses, J was bidding you a silent, eternal farewell.” false, if you will—crueily will make the blow to bear. Fate that you Rutledge. pardon, mercy for have done. There There is none, perhaps, easier iLO ho 1s She dared not write one word of the great love that was blistering her heart —no, not one word—for her heart would break over it. Time, was flying, swift-winged, past her. A ery of herror too, broke from her lips, for, glancing at the gilded clock, she saw her hour of respite Was nearly up. Kolding and sealing the letter, she placed it on the table, cover-ng it with passionate kisses; for it was to rest in his hands; his eyes were to read she had written—this love of her heart whom she was bidding farewell and from whom fate had parted her. “It is God’s 1 etribution that has fallen upon me!” she wailed, as she threw off the pretty white mull dress and donned a heavy traveling one. “In my mad folly, thinking Heaven would pardon what took him from Verlie; and now God has, in turn, taken him from me.” With a sob, she fastened the ‘ong, dark cloak about her, and threw a dark veil over her agonized face. ‘then, with out one glance behind her, she fled from the room and out of the house. As she crossed the vestibule she saw her mortal foe advancing up the broad ' marble stéps that led to the porch. He saw her and drew back into the shadow, waiting until she had come up to him. “You have decided wisely and well, Uldene,” he said, glancing at her dress. “You are willing to part from him for: ever.” “Willing!” she cried, in a low voice of intense anguish. “Oh, God, no! But I am forced to part with him. And you know it. I am going, but my wretched, bleeding heart I willleaye with him. If suicide were not a crime, I would kill myself with my own hands here and now, rather than go with you!’ CHAPTER XXIII, A FATAL MISTAKE. The man’s dark, haughty face flushed slightly at her vehement words, but he made no reply. “There is one grace I should like tc ask of you,” continued Uldene bitterly. “and that is—that I may leave here alone.” “I have had too much trouble to find you to lose sight of you,” he answered, rimly. : : ‘ “I ‘ill not go with you,” she cried, decisively. “Uur paras ue m directions, You bave broken my now leave me in peace.” “Think what the result would have been, in all its horror, if 1 had not in terfered. Your hissband would have turned from you in horror and Joathing coo great for words. The law would have freed him from you, and you know it. Why, then, wait for the finale? Bet- ter to go away and save yourself, snd spare him.” “Why have I been so bitterly acc irs ed?” cried Uldene, piteously. “I have done no wrong, committed no sin. Why then, am I to be so bitterly punished? I wish to God I had died in my in fancy!” ‘That is the prayer that thas fallen from the lips of every daughter of your race,” he answered, grimly. “But death does not come to them until the terrible prophecy has been fulfilled. There is but one way, and one way only, by which I could consent to leave you to your self, if you should prefer that to ac companying me.” “And that way?’ whispered Uldene, breathlessly, “Is to immure yourself vrhile your life lasts within the walls of a convent.” “Have pity on me. I am so young,” wailed. “I —I would sooner die. The walls of a convent might be a haven of rest to some, but to me its grim wa'is would be a living tomb, I love the gay, bright world so.” eo “Then you would prefer going with ” he said, grimly. } she me, “No! a thousand times no!” cried Ul- dene, with a shudder. “Anything rather than that.” Suddenly, like a gleam of inspiration, an idea occurred to her. Why not con- sent to go with him to allay his sus- picion? She would enter the train with him, amd at the first station at which the train stopped she would spring from ; it, and he would lose her in the dark- ness of the night. He was surprised at her ready consent to accompany him in preference tu xu ing to the convent. He had basei his hopes upon the idea that she would choose the latter, “We have not a moment to lose, then,” he said, drawing her toward the coupe in waiting. (To be Continued. ) Now Is the time when you should take a Spring Medicine to purify your biood, give you good appetite, sound sleep, steady nerves and perfect digestion, That scrofulous taint, that skin trou- ble, that liver dif- ficulty,that bilions ake tendency, that tired feeling, are all cured by Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Give this melicine a fair trial and you will realize its positive merit. It is not what we say, but what the people whe are cured say, which prove that Foods Sarsaparilla 5.2% sca Spring Medi- tine. C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass. Hood’s Pills cure Liver Iils; easy te take, ¢asy to operate. 2e VW — Few TA HS 2% - A 2 s% IS F & “iS ~ * “4 S% 3 “a> si AA sh “> 4 Sf Nl ie an When you know what you want in the printing line come here and we will do it for you. When undeciaed come -to us and taik it over, we've had a good deal of experience in our business. Perhaps we'll he able tu show you the very thing that you want: The Examiner Pub. Co. The Job Printers he Ss Ve Sie BRET TSAI ERK a WATCHES Unsurpassed for durability and timekeeping qualities, at prices 80 lew as to surprise ycu, \G. H. TAYLORS SUNNYSIDE + q Oe 4. C000 CCC CoceecaseacosoneS N « PRICE. — —- 3¢ —__ 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 CASH “ ONLY ar lor Suit at $45.00, was $65,00 GEASS LSSSESESELOCESESE at 40.00, was 60.00 1 © at 35.00, was 5009 1 “s at 37.00, was 50.00 1 “6 at 3250,was 45.00 1 * at 30.00, was 40.00 1 ? at 20.00, was 25.00 . at 17.00, was 22.00 1 Hall Stand at $7.50, was $11.00 1 = at 7.50, was 10.50 1 ” at 5.50, was 8,50 4 ” at 3.00 was 400 1 Bedroom Suite at $50.00, was $75.00 " at 35.00, was 50.00 e at 32,50, was 45.00 * at 19.00, was 24.00 * at 17.20, was 22.56 6 at 17.00, was 21.00 “ at 13.00, was 16.00 1Sideboarc at $17.50, was $25.00 . at 900, was 1259 at 7.00, was 9.00 “ be 3 Extension Tables at $6.09 was $7.75 3 “ at 5.00 wes 6.75 1 66 at 4.75 was 6.59 13 Odd Centre Tables } off. 7 Odd Lounges § off. 1 Diningroom Set at $30.00 was $40 09 1 " at 27,50, was 36,0v 1 66 at 23.50, was 27,50 100 (about) odd chairs, 1-3 off, Lot odd pieces — Whatnots, Cabinet, Fire Screens, Umbrella Stands, Music Stands, Reed Chairs, Fancy Rockers, Odd Bureaus, Odd Sinks, Odd Bedsteads, all at 1-3 off. ‘Yo avoid misunderstanding, we have fastened red tickets showing reduced prices on all goods enumerated above, ——— =e ARK WRIGHT AND C HOME MAKERS >; —_—— — om i. aon awe nee