_ ‘THE ONLY HOPE! r Victims of Bright's Disease " is Dodd's Kidney Pills. Not a day passes.on which the gewspapers do not recerd the death of one of more persoas from Bright’s pisease. ‘Already its victims num- ber hundrecs of thousands. Day by day the awful tocal grows larger. Bo class is safe from ithis destroyer. War and intemperance, with all ‘heir miseries and fatalities, are not responsible for as many deaths as Save been by Bright's Dis ease. Yet, there is a way of resisting t+ of drawing its poisoned fangs, and harmless 2s .a sumnicr medicine, Dodd's red thausands of never fails tc case may seen. shield waur loved caused making it as jreeze. That great Kidney Pills, has c the worst cases. It gure, hopeless as the Would you safely sure ov earth for this disease. 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 j-lb. tins, labelled JAMES EPPS & Co., Ltd., Homamopathic Chemists, London, England. BREAKFAST SUPPER EPPSS COCOA 22o° DOS 4D BES *O658 NIAGARA ‘VAPOR 6800 O2>- eS 46.5 | @ supplied thousands 2 manufacturers of portable Vapor Batis. We have, during the last ten We are the origina! x: = oo = oo ears f our Baths to physicians, hospitals, sanitariums, etc. 4 end we are now, for the first time, ad- @ vertising them direc’ to the general 4 public. y IN BUYING ; VAPOR BAT oa the floor pita manufacturer doves not snow you acut ofa trame without the covering you may take ittor «ranted that his 4 “Steel frame” isa wire boop that rests 69 the shoulder of th bather, Get one that is covered with proper material, Insist on seeing a sample of material before ordering, We make ourown covering material and print it with a handsome “all over” pattern of Niagara Falls. 4 Get one with a thermometer attacb- ‘ ment, Don’t go it biind—a bath that ® is too hot or not hot enough will be of no benefit to you. Get one that you ave your money ba tory in very way, tend for sample of materisl and in- teresting booklet that will tell you all about Vapor Baths. 7. Vepor Baths are : household neceesity. Turkish, Hot Alr, Vapor, sulphur or Medicaied € Batons at Hume. 3c, Purifles systern, roduces cleaniiness, healih, strength. *revents disease, obesity. Cures Colds, ‘ Rheumatism, Neuralgia, LaGrippe, » Malaria, Eczema, Catarrh, Female [l/s ’ Blood, 2@kin, Nerve and Kidney ‘ireu- e bles. Beautifies Complexion, ' Price ot Niagara Baths, $5.00 ‘The Kirg-Jones Co., Toronto DEPARTMENT H. H. AGENTS WANTED. D996 20S 2 0B ODIDBS) JAMES KELLY Wholesale Commiiesion Dealer in al! kinds of FRESH FISH. Ells and Smelts, Specialties, NO. 8 LONG WHARF Coxsicnwenrs BOSTON MASS SOLICITEL Write for stencils and particulare. Get one with a steel irame that stands ‘]62]} 06 }]62 66°30 03 ean return and k if not satisfac- ~ oO > eo => no scknowledget Have Just Completed My New Oyster Place. Call and eve the brilliant display of utiful oysters on and off the shell. Yor(yster king ie standing in the Vindow, See him, and then you will eat rs, John P. Joy, VICTORIA CAFE Gres George Street.....¢ . 29095 OO9O9O]8O6O8 SF | ones from the fatal grip of @his curse of mankind—Bright’s Disease? Vhen | yse@Dodd’s Kidney Pills, the only | : beautiful a — THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, FEBRUARY 20, 1899 » Parted 17 COOOOOOBOCOOOOOOS By LAURA JEAN LIBBEY Author of ‘Parted at the Altar,” “Lovely Maiden,” “Florabel’s Lover, CHAPTER XIX Continued “efifer- Openiié the gate noiselessly, “he ed the craunde,,; made a circuit of them, ' finding himself .in the beautiful tlower gurden at the the house. it was not ag enviable position if he were to be detected there by uny ot the secvants. Still he was one of the coolest | and most daring of men. He would be equal he emerg' y. | While he was planning a way to the furtherance of Al bject, fate favored him x] edly Hi saw the side door I ¢] pen a porch suddenly ' ‘ | uN SLendel gracetul neiure emerge from it, cross the porch, and stroli down into the grounds. Un-on sciously fate guided her footsteps in the very path that led to the spot where the | concealed by the the rase arbor Uldene. How looked in the She was stranger stood, well shadows of It was wondrousily bright glow robed in a she moonlight. of the diess of soft, clinging, fleecy white, with dark red roses on her ‘breast, and moses in her dark, curling hair Diamonds glittered in the pretty @hell-like ears, on the white hands ram like a river of glittering fire « the white, perfect throat; but they could not outshine the glittering splender the starry eyes that sought the da night sky so wistfully as she wali } slowly along. “How foolish I am to give way to nervous fears and presentments,” she cried, half aloud. “I wiil forget the dark, haunting face that has made even my dreams horrible. Why should I uot be happy? I have Rutledge’s love, why sheuld I not be happy, I ask myself again? I do not believe the bitterly cruel story Mark Sefton wrote to Lut- ledge’s mother. I am almost eighteen, ond the fate that was perdicted has ot overtaken me—no sword has fallen upon my head.” The moonlight lay white and sIrery on the dew-steenped flowers: the night wind stirred the leaves of the roses, and their odor seemed to float around and enfold her. ‘There was no sound save the twittering of the birds as they sought their nests in the poplar trees; nothing else broke in upon the sweet biooding silence of the night. And in that fata! hour. when the birds twittered, the moonlight fell peacefuily on the roses, and the light of Heavea seemed fairest, beautiful, hapless Ul- dene’s doom fel upon her. A dark shadow fell over the scariet bleoms, looming up darkly between her ond the moonlight; and glancing up, with a low’cry, she beheld a man stand ing in the path before her. In a flash she had recognized him as the stranger she had seen in the picture gallery 4 few days before, and whose face, waking or sleeping, had been before ther ever | since, “Hush!” he cried, springing forward. “Make no outcry, as you value your peace and safety—aye, your very life! I am no robber—no intruder; I have been searching the earth over for you for nearly eighteen years, and I have found you—at Jast, Uidene.” She recoiled in anger and dismay too great for words Who wus this man | who dared address her thus familiarly? What was this stranger who forced tin self into these grounds to accost her? She raised her voice to call the sxer vants to her assigtance that they nogit —— - A Fatal Spider-Web. When a fly acci- dentally gets caught in a spider’s web, the spi- der goes calmly about the work of securing his prey. He doesn’t hurry particularly. He takes his. time and binds first the fily’s feet, and then his wings and his entire body. That is the way with the dread enemy of mankind—consumiption. It has a web—the web of trivial disorders neglected. Whena man heedlessly stumbles into that web, con- sumption first attacks his stomach, then his blood, then his lungs, then every organ in his body. Many doctors assert that when a man is once in this deadly web there is no escape. That is a mistake. Thousands have testified to their recovery from this disease by the use of the right remedy. Many of their letters, together with their names, addresses and photographs, appeer in Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Ad- viser. The remedy that saved them was Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. It cures 08 per cent. of all cases of consump- tion. It cures the conditions that lead up to it. It is the great blood - maker, flesh- builder and germ-ejector. Druggists sell it. “Your ‘Favorite Prescription’ cured my little irl, seven years old, of St. Vitus's dance,’’ writes Sirs. A. E. Loomis, of Walnut Grove, Redwoed Co., Minn. ‘Ske could not feed he f, nor talk. That was fifteen years ago. I have always had great faith in your medicines ¢yer since. I had a terrible cough, and my frié th I d mptien. I teok the ‘Gelden M 1 Discovery aad it cured my cough now I de ousework. I heve always pra your . felne and would lie te Rave Common Sense Medical Advisef.’ I enc stampes.”’ Over a thousand s of medical advice free. "es thirty-ope a cent stamps, to cover cust mai! , to World’s Di on, Buffalo. N. of Dr. Pieres’, SR? Raviger. A veritable me aan Wlustrated with r her, } byFate? ” Tone,” Etc, Ete. #.mmarily eject him, mut Te anticiparmc the movement, and eamght her white arm in a clasp that made her wince with pain, “You would rue it to the day of yonr death, girl, if you were to summon your servants, or perhaps your husband, here, ind they should hear what I have to say you. Your ears, and yours alone, must hear what I have to tell.” “You are certainly a madman,” cried Uldene, indignantly, struggling to fee herself from the strong, steel-like clasp that held ther white arm fast. “You shall judge of that later on,” he ve j to quietly, adding, with an intense I frightened her: | “Your made a relentless foe of re in years gone by; see that you do } same, for I can crush you. or save vou from a fate more bitter than ‘rness that quite mother ; + t do tae ieath, if I so wili it.” ‘rhe words he uttered held her spell ound, ) They froze the piercing cry on made her reel dizzily forward, ke one about to swoon. She would ve fallen but for that steel-like clasp ‘ver loosened its held of her white tant. er | Ss, rim ra single in and in a low, hoarse voice, he his story—the startling revelation was to burn its wav to her bruin, Quickly, 1 canse her to ery out to Heaven for y, or death, An hour passed. <A horrible hour that een counted by the girl’s spasm dic } rt-throbs as she listened to one of the bitterest, eruelest revelations that }ever fell upon human ears and broke | human heart. Long since the stranger had loosened his hold of her, but she did not attempt » fly. She stood before hy with bated breath, scarcely breathing lest she might lcse a word that fell from his lips. At length he concluded his horrible recital, and stood with folded arms be- ' fore ber. “Now you know all,” he said calmiy. “Wil it be necessary for this story to be repeated to your husband, or will you juietly accept the alternative?” With a piteous ery, poor, hapless UI- dene, the child of cruel, sportive fate, cost herself on her knees at the strang- er’s feet, crying out that the sorrow that had fallen upon her was too great to bear, and begging Heaven to let her die and end it all, “Rutledge must never know it,’ she sobbed, in wild, piteous entreaty. “He would turn from me in abherrence and lcathing, and that would be more cruel than death to endure. Oh, I never dreamed that anything like this hung iver my hapless, miserable head. Oh, it would have been better if my love nad died in the hour he was to hate made me his bride than married me. It was monstrous, inhuman that I did not know that I could not have been warned; and, oh, the pity of it, the pity of ir! I love him a thdusand times better than my poor, miserable life.” “You forget that your mother fled With you when you were a little child,” interposed the stranger. “I could rot find you. You say she died, just on the point of revealing some terrible mystery. How, then, could you have been Warn- ed” Something like pity stirred the heart as he looked down into that bean- tiful, agonized face upturned to the Lght of the pitying moon. man’s "Oh, -how can I part with Rutledge when I love him so?’ she moaned, stretching out her white arms to the night stars. “How could I live the long veals While my life lasted, watching the summer suns and the winter snows come und go, and know that | must see hin no more? Oh, I could never do it! No, no, no, I could not!” “lor his sake, if you love him, will go, even though it your heart. You know what the future will bring to you. Qh, unfortunate daugh- ter of an unfortumate race, you canbot your doom any more than ancestors could, for long generations be fore you. You dare not defy fate. If you persist in clinging to him, I must warn him—you can see for yourself that you breaks escape your I must—let the consequences be what they may. I shall give you one hour tu decide, Uldene, although under the circumstances you should not hesitate a Inoment, en a Een “An hour from now I shall eome to this spot, und you shall tell me your decision. If you are not here, I shall go to the house, late as the hour is, and eall for your husband. You know but too well what the result of that inter- view wil) be. I have no more to say.” Without another word he turned and i left ther. Uldene fell with a cry so bitter tbat it startled even the sleeping birds in the trees. The moonlight fell over her as she }lay there in the long, green, dew-wet grass; the summer wind swept over her, ; dying away among the trees as though iit knew, and could understand, that among the odorous roses a human heart was breaking and some one was praying for the sweet boon of death to end it all. An hour later the moon, that in all its rounds has witnessed so many pitiful tragedies, was still shining, the earth lay green and still, the birds were in their nests, the flowers were asleep, the great boughs were still, and again the dark-browed stranger came slowly up the broad, pebbled, flower-bordered path, keeping well in the shadow of the trees. en He stood still and motionless. “She is not_here,” he said to himself, . {Kees Sle SSS SSeS SSS SSS Sse W ( AiImosit uo®% hour ne Wailed, auitie ound of footsteps, no shadow of a figure. “Like her wilful, beautifud mother, her fate on gr.mly, was ho $ desperate, fatally she has brought down her own head,” he said, walking swiftly up the path that | led to the house. CHAPTER XXII. ““CRUEL FATE HAS PARTED US, DARLING.” The deathlike swoon into which U1- dene had fallen was of short duration: with a shoek, memory returned to her. She sprang to her feet with as bitter a cry as ever fell from mortal lips, and gazed fearfully around her. tier enemy was not there: but within the hour she knew he would return for his answer; nothing could prevent that. And then—ah, God help her! She dared not think what would happen then. An hour! She had an hour’s respite. What might not be accomplished in that length of time? Ships had been wrecked, yet whole crews had been saved in half that length of time; floods had covered whole vil- lages, but in the hour the water was rising the people tad fled to the hills and saved themselves, Whole cities had been swept by flaines and the people had saved themselves in the first hour the alarming had been given, Why should she not make the most desperate effort of her life to save her self in this fatal hour? Ah, if she contd put the whole world between herself and her merciless foe—flying, not aloxe, but defying fate itself by taking Rut- ledge with her! “Oh, my love, my love,” she moaned. “in spite of all, how am I to part from you?” If it were left for her to decide, her great, passionate, blind love would‘ in- fluence her, She stood in the long, dew- wet grass, holding out her little white hands to the star-gemmed sky: and only Heaven knew the struggle that was go ing on in her soul, for she knew there would come a day when the curse of God would fal upon her, as it had fallen upon every daughter of her fated race, if. after the warning, she did not part at once and forever from her love ere it was too late. warning Gatarrh When doctors fail and ninety-nine remedies are powerless to give relief and cure to the Catarrh-stricken suf- ferer, Japanese Catarrh Cure—the one- hundredth—comes as the never-failing rainbow of promise and will cure as it cured John Crow of 421 Keefer street, Vancouver, B., who for 15 years had tried every remedy je could lay his hands on that promised benefit or a cure —only to have the parts weakened and more susceptible to most violent returns of the malady when the effects of the false cure had passed off. He used 6 bexes of Japanese Catarrh Cure. Three years have elapsed since he did so, and while he has been subject to the same exposures, there has been no symptoms of a return of the Catarrh, and he winds up his testimonial letter with these words: “My wife also uses it for head- aches and it gives instant relief.” 127 Japanese Catarrh Cure is guaranteed to cure any case of Catarrh,or money refunded. Guarantee and conditions in every package. 50 cexts—at all Druggists or by mail. CRIFFITHS & MACPHERSON CO., TORONTO Sold by Geo. E. Hughes. V ‘J s% as <aouty 3% eee Ty {2D Fs @ a4 s% “ar wv % i & 3 “as \ we aK a 2 RY a rl it = AY »~ a se 3 3 When you know what you want in the printing line come here and we will dc it for you. When undecided 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 BE TRESS TS Kk BE 4 —_- RSA WATCHES Unsurpassed for durability and timekeeping qualities, at prices so lew as to surprise ycu. G. H. TAYLORS SUNNYSIDE ay LOXEGS4 ER a@R® <1 UMBLE! OO 4 COSC COSC OCOSOCCEOSEEERCS SSOCSOSH COSCESESEOOLECTOG BECE 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, and profit for the buyers, FOR “’ CASH ‘Y ONLY arlor Suit at $4500, was $65,00 - at 40.00, was 60.00 GOASF ISSSCHCCESOSEREEO “ at 35.00, was 5009 1 “ at 37.00, was 50.00 1 ci at 32.50,was 45,00 1 - at 30.00, was 40.00 1 * at 20.00, was 25.00 1 . 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 1 at 3.00 was 4,00 1 Bedroom Suite at $50.00, was $75.00 _ at 35.00, was 50.00 at 32,50, was 45.00 ne at 19.00, was 24.09 . at 17.20, was 22.50 6 at 17.00, was 21.00 “ at 13.00, was 16.00 1 Sideboar¢ at $17.50, was $25.00 1 y. at 900, was 1205) J - at 7.00, was 9.00 DUMMIES EL PTE A 2 EO 3 Extension Tables at $6.09 was $7.75 3 66 at 5 OU Wius 6 2d 1 s at 4.75 was 6.50 COVER EE «GEN 13 Odd Centre Tables 4 off. 7 Odd Lounges 3 off. 1 Diningroom Set at $30.90 was $40 00 1 m 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. ‘fo avoid misunderstanding. we have fastened red tickets showing reduced prices on all goods enumerated above, ><. ———_——— —_—-~_— =o MARK WRIGHT AND CO HOME MAKERS ; @©608888'629080 Lot ser Masa ewe. a