~_ ET CT Wnt BY bivutows But Dodd's Kidney Pills wii Yet Renew Life. Thousands « die in the rime of life because doctors think Bright’s Diseas and Diabetes incura ble. But Dodd’s Kidney Pills cure them both. They 4ave cured thousands of cases. These diseases and other Kidney s common as ordinary ple don’t realize that d till the disease has » the system. Even -idney Pills will posi- persons myplaints are colds. But pe they are afflict eaten deep in then, Dodd's tivelv cure. Thousands of people are dying on o not realizett. They more of these symp breath, loss of sight, ravenous appe- tite, pale or recdish urine, with brick colored deposit, scalding when urina- ting, constipation, nervousness, pains ing he loins. Their onlyg hove is their feet. but. notice one or toms: shortne memory, failin; 3s Of Dodd's Kidney Pills. They won’t fail Thev never dc 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 }-lb. tins, labelled JAMES EPPS & Co., Ltd., Homcopathic Chemists, London, England. BREAKFAST SUPPER EPPS'S GOGOA OD * 0% 8S ODOO5S6o4 eran O@e >? 44% We are the original manufacturers of portable Va oor Baths. We have, dn-ing the last ten years supplied thousands of our Baths to physicians, hospitals, sanitariums, etc. and we are now, for the first time, ad- © vertisipg them direct to the general , public. OF, 8 @ C2 62 @ * © 462 om Get one with a steel irame 4 IN BUYING A 2 VAPOR BATH $i"ine foot Ifa manufacturer does not show you acut ofatrame without the covering @ you may tak» itfor granted that his “Steel frame” is a wire hoop that rests oo the shoulder of the bather, Get one tha! is covered with proper 4 material, Insist on seeing a sample of material before ordering, We make ing material and print some “all over” pattern la. a thermometer attach- go it blind—a bath that »t hot enough will be of ou, at you can return and ney back if not satisfac- vay, aple of materia! and in- let that will tell you all jathe. 8 are an ecknow'ledzed ‘eesity. Tarkish, Hot rulpbur or Medicated 1e,. 3c, Purifles systern, liiness, healih, strength. we, Obesity. Cures Colds, Neuralgia, LaGrippe, ma, Catarrh, Female Ills Nerve and Kidney Trou- es Complexion. ® Price ot Niagara Baths, $5.00 a our own cove it with a han of Niagara F Getone wit ment, Don’t is too hotor1i no benefit to Get ore t) ave your m 9 tory in every Pend for sa teresting boo 9 about Vapor Vapor Bat household rt Air, Vapor Ratns at Hu produces clea Prevents dise RKheuratism Malaria, Eez 9 Blood, Skin, bles. Beauti —_ ‘>See oS C3 042 02 The Kirg-Jones Co., rorento Bn. . NTS WANTED. LEPARTMFEN AG DOD 96S i) @ 3903203 39.9 JAMES KELLY Wholesale Commieeior Dealer to all kinds of FRESH FISH. Ells and Smelts, Specialties, NO. 8 LONG WHARF ConsiGxMEN’s soucree BOSTON MASS Write for stencils and particulare. > 8 2°66 4S26 4 Have Just Completed My ew Oyster Place. Call and ee the brilliant display of utiful oysters on and off the ehell. Onr Oyster king ie standing in the Window, See him, and then you will eat *yaters, John P. Joy, VICTORIA OAFE Great George Street...... THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, FEBRUARY 27, 1£99 = = ’ A * ftw Parted by Fate} \ ‘ eooegses0000c0G0e ss : By LAURA JEAN LIBBEY b ‘ Author of ‘Parted at the Altar,” “Lovely Maiden,” s 3 **Florabel’s Lover,” ‘‘Ione,” Ete., Ete. x CHAPTER XXV'"' “vou gaa enase them away, one can, Verlie--Miss Sefton,” he said, huskily. “Let me tell you what made me so silent. I was weighing a mighty problem in my mind.” Verlie raised her blue eyes in wonder to his face. He had stopped short in the moonlit path, and the tremulous eloquence of his voice surprised her. “It is this, Verlie,” he said, pressing the little white hand that lay so lightly on his arm. “Has the great, overpower ing love I have given you won love from you in return? Forgive me if I hay: startled you,” he said, bowing his dark, bandsome head nearer the golden one “I felt that I must speak to you, or die.” “Won't Captain Lansing,” faltered Verlie, piteously; “don’t speak to me so Continned if any I—I cannot bear it. You must not love me. Indeed, you must not.” “It is beyond the power of mortals 19 control the love that fills our hearts, little Verlie. Love is fate, and I cvuld not help loving you were it even in my power “I have no heart to give you.- Captain Lansing,” turning her face away from him, “Spare me! Spare your self!’ “Do not turn away from me, Verliie,’ to do so.” she said, cried the impetuous lover. “Give me some hope. 1 will devote my whole life to you, little Verlie. I would = gz through seas of blood. I—I would die to win you. I love you so dearly that I would rather be slain by one word from your lips than be blessed by any other love.” “Oh, Captain Lansing,” cried Verlie earnestly, “I can realize what unreturn ed love is like; but, oh, believe me, I can never love you. I am sorry.” “You need not pity me,” he said. “I want no pity. Death from your hands would be sweeter than life from an other's. Do not play with my heart Verlie. I cannot bear it. Be patient with me if I have startled you so sud denly that you have had not time to re flect how dear I am to you.” “He questioned not her love; He only knew that he loved her.” “There can never be any love be tween us, Captain Lansing. It canno* be. Be my friend, even if nothing more.” “I must be either your lover or neth ing,” he cried, manfully striving to crush down his bitter disappointment. Adding bitterly: “There can be no such thing when love has once entered the heart Ceuld I look into your feel the thrilling touch of your little hands, and simply crave your friendship? No! A thousand times, no! If you favored a- a rival, think you, Verlie, there cou!d be any friendship between that riva. and me? No, again! I should be his bitterest foe, he my own broth Such a deep, passionate love as mine i utterly No matter what the poets say, no man who loves can ever b satisfied with the crymbs of friendship. eyes, were selfish. For a moment a deez silence fell b tween them, broken only by the breeze Sighing among the roses, as they fell in a fragrant shower about them, “You will give me hope, Vere?’ he whispered, eayerly. Si tf i SSS jU> i A Letter for Grandpa. proper care of his health in youth and maturity lives to smile as he reads the letters of his grandchildren. It’s worth something to do that. It’s worth a little daily care and thought for healah. It’s worth a_ dollar here and there for the right remedy for the insidious ills that make the big diseases. When a man’s liver is “ out ef whack ”’ or his digestion is bad, or his appetite ‘‘fin- icky,’’ he should take Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. It makes a _ man ‘‘hunery as a horse.” It fills the blood with the life-giving elements of the food a man takes. It is the great liver invigorator, It makes the digestion perfect. It is the great blood-maker, flesh-builder and nerve tonic. It diives all impurities frem the system, It cures nervous prostration, bil- ious complaints, malarial troubles and 98 per cent. of all cases of consumption. The medicine dealer who offers a substitute for the sake of a few extra pennies profit, is dishonest. “Would have written ‘.7 before now, but thought I would wait until I got entirely well, writes Mrs. Mary Tibbs, of Hitchcock, Galveston Co., Tex. “Now I am pleased to say that I am sound and well. I have been using Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, the ‘Favorite Pre- scription’ and ‘ Pleasant Pellets.’ We think your medicines the best inthe world. I was troubled with female weakness, headaches, cold feet and hands, a disagreeable drain and general weak- ness; was pace nervous, had poor appe- tite, constipation, distress in the stomach, too much flow, falling of internal organs, of two years’ standing. Three bottles of ‘ Favorite Pre- scription ' and three of ‘Golden Medical Discov ery ' completely restored my health." Constipation and biliousness are nasty, nagging disorders that keep a man or wo- man dull and miserable. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are a sure, speedy, perma- One little ‘Pellet’ is a gentle nent cure. ; laxative atid two a mild cathartic. They never gripe. Dealers sell them, Nothing is ‘just as good.”’ ee ‘I cannot, Captain Lansing,” she said brokenly. “Hate me—pity me—learn tc forget me. I would love you if I could but, alas! I cannot.” “fell me one thing,” he asked huskily. “Do you care for any one else?” Ile saw her beautiful golden head droop in girlish, piteous confusion—and he was answered all too plainly. He spoke no word. She had expecte] sorrow, perhaps anger, but she was not prepared for that great, wordless de spair. The white, haggard face struck her with the keenest sorrow: the an guish that lay in the dark eyes startled her, Years passing over him would not bave changed him as this had done. Sh« wes terrified at the awful change iu him, “Captain Lansing,” she faltered, 3 affright, putting out her little, fluttering hands towards him, “ch! what have | done?’ “You have killed all that was bright in my life, darling, that is all,’ he said in a voice husky with emotion, “I have seen strong men weep over a blighted love-dream, and I have laughed at them and thought it the ré#nkest folly; anc now, Heaven help me, I know the bit ter cost of every +heart-pang.”’ Oh! how she sympathized ‘Their sorrow was one in common. loved Rutledge Chester in the same mac fashion this handsome young = soidie) loved her; she pitied him, Oh! so sadly but she had no love te give him. with him Sh “Let vs go back to the lights «ns music, captain,” she said, timidly. And he offered her his arm silently, and led her back to the gay, happy throng with out another word. The moment Rutledge Chester—who had been pacing up and down the green sward in a fever of restlessness at ihe prolonged absence of the captain and Verlie—beheld his riyal’s face, he kuew what had happened—Verlie had refused him. The captain could have died easie: than remain one half-hour longer at the lawn fete. The lights and the music and the sound of gay young thrilled him with a strange pata. “Bid me good-bye; I am going, Verlie,” he said. “I cannot stay to witness a rival’s triumph. I should feel like kill voices ing him before we left the grounds.” She shrank back im terror from the wild, suppressed, gleaming light in his eyes. “On the slightest provocation I wil! challenge the man you love to mortal conbat,” he cried fiercely, “and he ehall kill me—or I shall kill him.” : With those words he turned and jeft her, and had cause to remember them until the day she died. sae “He is no gentleman who dare: threaten a lady!’ cried an angry voice behind them; but Captain Lansing paid no heed save to quickey his pace. He recognized the voice as Rutledge Ches ter’s, and he knew if he paused a singk instant there would be a tragedy at the fete. : “Pardon me, Verlie,”’ cried Rutledge ccming hurmedly up the path and taking the trembling, ice-cold hands i his as he bent over her; “I was coming up the path, and I could not help over hearing that cowardly remark, Think no more of it, I you.” The lovely dimpled face, framed in it: hair, white @ the snow-white bloss wore her breast, and the blue-bells of eyes Were swimming tears. She was trembl ng violently hi: clasped her little hands still closer ans drew her dowa the rose-bordered path t tila little, beg was as ms she sheen of golden ol lovely in SO i the rustic seat beneath the magonlis tree, and seated her upon it. “You sent him away, Yerlie. Was i because you cat2d for any one else?’ | he The man who takes | | whispered, clinging firmly but gentls the little white hands that were struggling like fluttering, imprisoned birds, to free themselves from his clasp Sut did not answer thim He could see a burning flush creep over the gitl’s beautiful, dimpled face, and a thrill shot through his heart Was Heaven ta give him ihe desire of to she strange his heart at last? he whispered to him sel¢. “Look up into if it is so, dear,” face and tell me said, gently, “‘and my he thet wll give me hope.” She attempted to fly from him m pretty, girlish confusion and dismay. She would not look at him—no, that she wculd not for worlds—for he would be sure to read the secret of her love for him in her eyes. “My timid, beautiful Verlie!’ he erted, holding the little hands fast, despite her pleadings that he should release her at once, for her guests would miss her. “TI shall not release you until you have answered my question, dear,” he said. his voice thrilling with eager expectaucy “Was it because yeu cared for some one else—for me?” Only the night winds and the hand some, happy lover knew her answer: but it must have been satisfactory, for the old, old story was told again, that young hearts always respond to and old hearts remember with me mories tender—the story of love’s young dream. When Rutledge parted from Verlie that night he mised her while hend to his lips, whispering, tenderly: “Heayen has granted me the one yearning desire of niy life, Verlie! You love me! You are to be my bride!” How little either of them dreamec what the dark future held in store for them, or how it was to end! Ah! if they had but knosyn. how much misery —— = might have’ been spured them! CHAPTER XVIII. THE RIVAL L VERS. “The desire of my heart is granted Verlie,” said Rutledge Chester, tenderly “You have promised to be my bride, bu there is one promise 1 must exact Of you, and that is, that you will, from ‘this time forth, discourage the attentions of Captain Lansing.” “You must not commence by being Jealous of me,” said Verlie, with an ir res'stible pout of her rosebud lips, “I- coud not endure a jealous Jover.” “I am jealous, my darling. I cann»i help it,” he declared, frankly, ‘“Jeal ousy runs in my blood. It is the curse of the Chesters. It has always beén a matter of life and death with them It caused duels bitter and fierce, Bur there, I must not frighten you, wy darling.” “You must trust me, Rutledge,” re turned Vertie, earnestly, “because I «em betrothed to you. I cannot be rude t others, now, can I?” “If you smile upon any one save my self I shal feel Uke taking you away from him instantly,” he said. “I coulk not bear to see that kind of thing going on. I should long to take your hand before them all, and gay: ‘She is mine Flatter, woo, covet as much as you wi'l she is mine; you have not the leas chance of winning her,’ I have a specin aversiol toward Captain Lansing. li you wish to please me, Verlie, do no dance with him again to-night.” “I think I may safely promise that for he left me in anger, as you came up you know. I am quite sure he has left the villa.” “So much Rut- but preun. the face out O41 transpired. He had fied from the grounds in hot haste; but he reached the arene gateway he experienced quite a revuls:o7 of feelings. “Why should I leave the field so con better,” declared ledge; satisfaction was ture, for, his he saw captain, huriiedly approaching, his quite as calm as though nothing the order of events had the his rais ng eyes, as pletely to my foe?’ he asked himself fiercely, Stil; “faint heart mrever yet won fair lady.” He remembered Veriis had promised to waltz with him. Wh not claim it in spite of all? With the impulsive captain, to think was to act. He turned on his heel and sauntered back into the grounds again searching eagerly among the merry chattering throng for Verlie. At last he beheld her stand‘ng under a blossom ing magnolia tree. He frowned and bit his lip angrily upen seeing Rutledge Chester beside her He glanced at the lovely face atlam« With color, and wondered what Rutlelge had been saying to her that brought th« beautiful blushes to her dimpled cheeks and the brightness to her blue eyes. Anc Vetlie, to nide her confusion, began talk ing hastily to the young captain. VYhis encourage Captain Lansing won derfully, and his hopes, which had been considerably below zero, commenced t rise rapidly. (To be Continued. ) throat Catarrh utke all Other Forms ef Catarrh has its Origin tn the Simple But Neglected fold —@aganese Catarrh Cere Checks and Cures—Prerents the Deep Seating Which Ultimately Must End in Palmonary Troubles Incipient and insidious is catarrh. Smalt beginnings develop into the distressing dis- ase when neglected, und the trail of suf. fering and hopeless striving for relief con- tinues. But there is a new heaven for the catarrh sufferer in Japanese Calarrh QOure, whether it Le of, the head, the throat or the bronchial tubes, And there are no per- nicious drugs to leave a worse ailment than the disease itself to grapple with. John Crow, 421 Keefer street, Vancouver, B.C., says— “For 15 years I was a great sufferer from catarrh. I tried everything under the sun for the trouble, but, after only tem- porary relief, three years ago I bought and used six boxes of Japanese Catarrh Cure, amd was completely freed from the disease, umd have had no sigm of a retura of it. My wife uses it for headaches, and it gives her instant relief.” You take no chances. A printed guarantee in every package. 50 cents. At all druggists. 107 Sold by Geo. E. Hughes. WOTICE. In convection with the visit cf Professor Robertson ard Maccun, a especial train will leave Summerside on Wednesday, March Ist, at 12 o’clock local, for O'Leary, and Alberton, retnrning to Charlottetown tbat ught after the close of the Alberton meeting. Also a special train will leave Charlotte- town on Thureday, March 2od, at 12 o'clock local, for St, Peters avd Souris, returning to Chaslottetown thas night efter the close f the Sonrie meetirg. These trains will cell at all stations goirg and returning. From Summeraide and Charlottetown, the return fare will be One Do'lar, and from all other siations the rate will be in thie proportion. Ch’iown, Feb 21st, 1899 FARM TO LET AT ROYALTY, To let “Milford Farm” on the Nor h River Roa}, about a mile from the city, at present in the occupation of the Widow of the late Georze Thorne. It comprices about 29 acres of land in a high estate of cultivation, fronts on the North River Shore. There is a good one anda hal: story farm house with outbuildings and a large stable and barn, and # tool house on the premises. Possess‘on given, if re- quired lattcr end of November, These premices ave well adapted for a butcher and pastnre farm. Rent $101.00 a4 year, For further perticularsappl: to. DANIEL DAVIES, 264 Dundas Esplanade > G36982%: 200086 TUMBLE! S@ 0000860 COCs COOCECeEHRES N- PRICE. ~—%—— 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, ard profit for the buyers, FOR ‘“’ CASH “* ONLY at $45.00, was $65,00 QOS? 1980886666886 80008 Trlor Suit ‘ec at 40.00, was 60.00 - at 35.00, was 5009 - at 37.00, was 5000 = at 3250, was 45,00 - at 30.00, was 40.00 - et 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 4,00 TE I? ak. ERR EN 1 Bedroom Suite at $50.00, was $75.00 ” at 35.00, was 51) 00 “ at 32.50, was 45.00 ¢ at 19.00, was 24.00 ” at 17.20, was 22.56 4 at 17.00, was 21 OV ’ at 13.00, was 16.00 eT EE AE SMe 1 Sideboarc at $17.50, wa: $25.00 1 ” at 900, was 1250 1 " at 7.00, was ¥ UO SEE Ee ETE 3 3 Extension Tables at $6.09 was $7..5 3 " at 500 wes 675 1 7 at 4.79 Was 6.5% PAS Se es a 13 Odd Centre Tables § off. 7 Odd Lounges } eff. 1 Diningroom’Set at $30.00 was $40) 00 1 at 27,50, was 36,0u 1 " at 23.50, was 27,50 100 (about) odd chairs, 1-3 off, odd pieces — Whatnots, Cabinets, Fire Screens, Umbrella Stands, Music Stands, Reed Chairs, Fancy Rockers, Odd Bureaus, Odd Sinks, Odd Bedsteads, all at 1-3 off. ‘lo avoid misunderstanding. we have fastened red tickets showing reduced prices on all goods enumerated above, ~~ =a Lot li a ie B x 2 : ~ HOME MAKERS . MARK WRIGHT AND CO 4 i ~ : : . * ae