! A Wd asic 1ev Disease Preventex Kidney Pi ls, Only. From Kid by Lodd: “Kidney Disease.” Do you know what it means? It means that the kid peys are either roffen, or rotting; the blood is full of poisonous, death dealing corruption ; that the Kidneys can’t do there work ; that the victim is g walking charnel-house; that his hours are numbered ; that the victim yiust take Uodd’s Kidney Pills if he does not want to die. Have you Kidney Disease? Is your skin hot and dry; memory fail- ing; breath short; urine, reddish, or does it scald when our appetite changeavle ; ‘'s swe!l; have you bitter mouth on getting up mornings; is there a brick-dust de- sit in your urine ? Any of these signs is proof positive pale colored . passing , iS do your ank - lh, taste in th of Kidney Disease. Will you be cured, | or will you die? Dodd’s@ Kidney Pills are the only means on earth that will cure you. They never fail. 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 PPPS & Co., Ltd., Homaopathia Chemists, London, England. BREAKFAST SUPPER 420% *% 4 4°Q © ©4246 44464 ee a nt eveeeoS2e3 }°£-% We are the rtable Va We have, dt ied thou riginal manufacturers or Baths. ing the last ten years ands of our Baths~* to cians, howpitals, sanitariums, etc. » now, for the first time, ad- vertising thera direct to the general public. Get one with a steel irame IN BUYING A VAPOR BATH {h"tne‘toor Ifa manufacturer doses not show you acut of atrame without the covering ycu may tke 'tior granted that his [ =) Gmene jae wile Dogs latlt fests oo the shouide Get one that material, Ine - or the Datuer, is covered with proper st on seeing a sample of material before ordering, We make our own cover\pg material and print it with a handwome “all over” pattern of Niagara Fa \s. Get one with a thermometer at'ach- ‘he ODS 86-0} 66-2 042023 Neuralgia, LaGrippe, Malaria, Eczema, Cutarrh. Female Iils Biood, Skin, Nerve and Kidney Trva- bles. Beautifivs Coroplexion, . Price ot Niagara Baths, $5.00 kKheumatism, -y S Cm ODO 9. \O BOSD IDOEO’TD (PHOS HOS9H9S063 6226000 The Kirg-Jones Co., Voronto CEPARTMENT H.H AGENTS WANTED. . oboe ©]Oeo6=]8] DO. %6 Se & 20032730 JAMES KELLY Wholeeale Commieeior Dealer in all kinds of FRESH FISH. Ells and Smelts, Specialties. NO. 8 LONG WHARF ONS BOSTON MASS POLICITEL Write jor stencils and particulars. ee Have Just Completed Ky Hew Ovster Place. — ond eve the brilliant display of tifa! oysters on and off the ehell. Onr Oyster kung is standing in the Window, Bee him, and then you will eat John Fr; Joy, VICTORIA OAFE Citat George Street. ..... EPPS'S COCOA THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, MARCH 1, 1889 Ww 'Parted Author of ‘‘Parted at the “Florabel's Lover, CHAPTER XXVII Continued fveor, hapless Uidiene—always .a erea- ttm of impulse—stole after Vertie as she passed the flower-beds, the lilae and imagnolia walks. Hoth had crossed che stirlighted park, and were nearing the shadews of the trees but a few feet apart “Werlie!” called Uldene, softly. Kut Verlie did not hear the low y rice, so engrossed was she in her own tum ii- ous thoughts, a idene was silemt fer a moment. A bird tlew from its nest in the nearest tree; a rabbit rustled in the brushwood the wind stirred some fallen leaves: (he sound of the dance music in the distance. died away in a low wail. ost) dae. to : Verlie!” she called again, more softly than before. Che girl paused in startled, solemn wonder, it must be only fancy,” she murmur- e. half aloud. “On this night, of a)! | by my beautiful Uldene. I gave her , nights, the memory of Uldene haunts | °véTy thought of my heart—my whule me, Even the winds sighing among the | /ove. I have worn my life out in griev- trees seem to whisper te me with U]- | img over her untimely fate. Now, be dene s voice, Heaven grant it that it is | ‘#use Heaven has sent a balm to my ho sin to love him, even though he be- | Serely wounded theart, do not seek to longed to Uldene first.” hurl it back inito bitter despair again. It Before Uldene could speak again, an- | is our duty to forget a dark, sorrowful other step came swiftly down the grayel- | Past, and try to live in the brightness ed walk. With a quick motion Uldene a a future. I shall always love and drew back among the dense shadows of the trees until he should pass f By LAURA JEAN LIBBEY f Altar,” “Lovely Maiden,” " “Tone,” Ete, Ete. byFate ‘ f with Vefliestie could speak his though*: freely now. we “You avoid me nurposely, Verlie, that T may not tell you what is in my heart. You must have read what | wanted to Say Im my eyes, you criel dear.” “Oh, Rutledge!” breathed» Verlie, shuddering, “I~ I—cannot bear to hear any more to-night. though the spirit tween us. to listen It almost seems as of Uldene comes be- I almost think ! ought not to von. You belonged to her tiving—it almost seems that vou Keloug to her even though she is dead.” “i “Verlie,” he answered, ne gravely, “I agree with you. I ' belonged to Uldene while she lived, but the love of mortals b'ends tender, devoted memuvoryv when one or the other, whom God joined together in holy wedlock, dies. knows I did my duty, my whole duty, into reverence the memory of Uldene; but, because of that, do not l impl re you Aa, Heavens! it was Rutledge Che: He hever knew how she restrained the mad } lmpillse to cry out to him: “Rutledge? Rutledge! weep for me no more. Mourn for me no longer, my love! I am here!’ Uh, how her soul went out to him! He ste’, ’ had brushed the drooping branches of the trees carelessly aside with his hand as he passed them. He would neeer | know of the lonely figure that stood under them, passionately kissing the green leaves his hand had touched. She saw him join Verlie, but instead | of passing on with a nod and a smile, or some gay word, he quietly drew the little white hand within his arm, cluiming in a glad voice: “Here you are, Verlie, darling. I have been searching everywhere for you, I am sure you ran away to avoid me.” The gicl crouching behind the flowee img shrubs, which separated her from these two, listened in wonder. His voice had never sounded Ike that when he addressed her. There was an under- current iu it that puzzled her. She saw Verlie’s fair, sweet face flush hotly in the bright white moonlight. She looked up at Rutledge with a smile drawing in girlish, bashful from his ex- ’ confusion away outstretched arms, an swering, confusedly: c@ a4 + "et 4 usu hot KNOW that youl were search- ing for me—that you wanted me, Rut- ledge.” sCURe’, iis reply was like the shock of dovia to the beautiful, hapless creature listen- , ing to them both so intently. “You did not know that I wanted you! raent, Don’t vo it olind—a@ bath that a : is too hot or not hot enough will ve of Oh, Verlie, what nowsense! Is there a no benefit to you, moment in my life that I doe not want Get ore thet you can return and vou. my darince?” ave your money back if not satisfac- 7 ae : ae © tory in €very way, € [hese were the words that broke a £end for sample of material and - human heart! teresting booklet that will tell youall @| (early. through the solemn stilness ubout Vepor Baths. > best rly, thi ugh th solemn st Haess Vepor Batbs are an acknowledged of the summer nigh*, the words fell household pe ar: oe oe ¢ from Rutledge Che ster’s lips upon he j Jap Sulphur or Medicare ; art » ot : ; ~ Bati s ee a “Puritles ‘systesa, e i heart of the beautiful, solitary figure roduces clean iinese, heal: h, strength. |} crouched among the flowering shrubs. Pre vents disease, Obesity. Cures Colds, ' Rutledge believed. himself anite alex mortify their flesh and vol- a untarily force themselves “to undergo great bodily 4 hardships and deprivation. They are enabled to do this and escape serious injury to their health purity oftheir lives and the fact that they deny them- selves the pleas- ures of the table. An ordinary man who lives in the ordinary way can- not long endure hardship, depriva- tion or overwork, unless he. taxes the right remedy to reinforce na- ture. The average man when he is in good health eats too much. When he gets a little out of sorts he pays no heed and keeps right on “ making a hog of himself.’”’ In some instances he gets thin and em- aciated. In others he gets. ener cor- ulent, and weighted down with ‘labby fat. n the first instance he is 4 candidate for dyspepsia and nervows prostration. In the second for kidney trouble or heart failure. Dr. Pierce’s Gaiden Medical Discovery en- ables che average mat to undergo & great deal of hardship, deprivation and over- work, in spite of the life he leads. It — the food to be properly assimilated. = builds firm, healthy flesh, but does not make corpulent people more fat. It cures ner pepsia, nervous troubles, kidney dsease = 98 percent. of all cases of consumption. prevents weakness in any organ of the a “Im August, 1895, I was taken down in bed ° ins in my stomach with @ burning aon paw dizziness in my der m ead” writes Ira D. Herring, maa os d three of ‘ Pleasant Pellets.’ too my work and eat many thin t not touch before I took these medicines. An inactive liver and constipated bowels are promptly cured by Dr. Pierce's Pellets. They never gripe. as almost abreast of her now. She | i her theart was slain; no words eould picture such grief as hers. It woud have been a thousand times more Perci- fu! if Heaven, in its infiimite mercy, had let her die that night ia the awful col lision, then let her live to face this. The moon in all its rounds, looking | down in its pure white light upon sin, suffering, pain and all human woes, . ‘ addar ly? . i never looked upon a sadder sight. Devout priests frequently | g ’ by reason of the | “In my thoughts i go over the past time and time again,” continued Rut- ledge Chester, slowly. “In the moment ij you and Uldene stood before me, my heart went out to you. Beautiful as Uidene was, she was not the mate my | heart craved. Imagine my intense sur prise, Verlie, upon making the discovery, in an unexpected manner, th: Uldene ijloved me. 1 was amazed, bewildered at the worshipful love a human heart had lavished wpen one who had not { sought it. i “I was intensely sorry for Uldene, withhold your lovg¢ from me, Verlie; it would be unjust.” “Am I mad, or do I dream?’ the wretched girl who watched two, who were utterly oblivious her presence, What Verlie’s answer was she never knew. She saw Rutledge c!asp the little s »bb ‘d these sO of [PSS Sees ice ceca -eomas Soy piteously. _Ah, no, she had never dreamed that his heart, having oace been hers, would return to Verlie, his first love. How cruelly Heaven had punished ber for taking him froma Verlie in that dark pest, Oh, the pity of it! the pity of it! A step among the brushwood startled her. What if some one passing that way should happen to find her! Waat a terrible expose there would be. Her future mattered little enough to her now. She would go quietly away. Rutledge and Verlie should never know She lived. He had not grieved for her untimely fate. It was no bitter sorrow to him thut matters had turned out as they had, for it left him free to woo and win his first love. The words ot an old poem, even in that moment of acute sorrow, re curred to her: “Compulsion may a white detain The magnet. fron its accustomed course; But when not withheld by force It travels to the north again.” As “the magnet, when not withhesl by force,” Rutledge Chester’s heart had returned to Verlie again. There was nothing to do now but xo out of his life quietly. It mattered little Hea ven | night? she wondered vaguely. white hands he held fondly—bend his hendsome head over them, and raige them to this lips tenderty. “Remember, Verlie,” Rutledge weat } on, pitilessly, “I have told you the exact truth as to how I happened tS wed Ul- dene—not but what I loved her well after she became my bride—but you, Verlie, were my first as well as my last love; but for that strange deatia- bed prayer, it is you whom I shbédid huve asked to become my bride.” The words fell like drops ef molten lead upon the breaking heart nenr them. ‘The swaying figure had sunk down among the sharp thorns and brainbles, but she did not even feel the pain of them. ‘Nhe earth and sky scemed to meet above ther; the Jeaves of the trees seemed to moan in the night-wind; £0 the moon hid her serrowful face in the white clouds. If the hand of God had stricken beautiful, Uldene dead, the white face, uprurned to the night skies, could not have whiter, hayless been CHAPTER XXX. “T WOULD FIND F.EST IN THE DARK WATERS, ” SHE MURMURED. Uldene crouched motionless among the swaying ros like ‘ one turn ed to stone, looking and listening. In that moment tie great, yearning love in lhe went on, Wiskily, “and through p'ty i that marriage was consummated. In the ,; after days I saw the folly of giv ng the {hand where the heart could “Since Heaven has severed the bonds 'that united me to Uldene, and I have lagain met you, I have begun to realize that the swee!: possibilities of life are not yet over for me. ‘The happiest hout of my life will be the moment in which I call you mine, Verlie, darling.” They passed on, arm in arm, through the lilac grove. ever the moonlit lawn, making a tour of the circular path. They must not find Uldene_ there when they reached that spot again. Like a hunted hare, Uldene sprang to her feet, hurrying through the pleasure grounds, throujh the arbor, and into the heart of the grove that lay beyond. No human being was nea:; but the birds were soon startled by the passion ate cries of a broken heart; cries that fell freely and clearly on the soft, sweet air, and seemel to pierce the heaves; bitter, passionate cries that took with them the burden of a most unhappy soul. After a time they died away—the moans and sobs ended. The girl lay among the crushed golden: rods, with wide-open, horror-strickea eyes, looking the future full in the face. “Oh, broken dream of love!—oh, dark future, without one gleam of light!-- how was it to end? “How strange it was that the thought hever £0 ——— enough where she went. Silently she turned her beautiful face from all she had loved best on earth, and crept slowly out of the grognds and away from the villa, without casting one glance behind How the sound of the light, gay dance ousic and the rippling Jaughter of merry, girlish voices tortured her? Would they laugh se gayly if they knew a heart so near them had broken to- (To be Continued.) SL a (irippe Do your bones ache ? Feel chilly at times ? Been getting nervous of late? Somehow you think of the grip at once. You know it’s a disease for the weak, not the strong. A weakened body can’t master the germs of the disease. Make yourself strong. Take Scott’s Emulsion Rich blood and steady nerves make the best preventive. After an attack, Scott’s Emulsion lifts that terrible depression, and cures that tickling cough. 50c. and $1.00. POO ree ADVICE ABOUT ee Ls Spice. When ordering a pack: ge Pepper, Ginger, Allspice, Cin namon or Cream of Tartar from your grocer you c7n al- ways feel sure of securing the De ae @ | ing himself free,” she moaned out, LE AT SINT Ca NE A SEND ee —— ee , Overdue Accounts Being Flaced for Collection best quality by asking for ::: eo “SB bkve St + £2 Hwee D8 WOTLCE. In connection with the visit cf Professor tobertron ard Maccun, a special train will leave Summerside ov Wednesday, March let, at 12 o’clock local, for O'Leary, and Albertoo, returning to Charlottetown that night atter the close of the Alberton me et'bg. Also a special train will leave Charlotte- town on Tbureday, Mar h 2ad, at 12 o'clock loca), for St, Peters aoe! Sourie, returning to Charlottetown that night efter the close of the Souris meeting. These trains will cel! at al] stations going ard returning. From Summerside and Charlottetown, the return fare will he One Dollar, and from al! other stations the rate will be in this proportion. Ch’town, Feb 21st, 1899. FARM 10 LET AT ROYALTY, To let “Milford Farm” on the North River Road, about a mile from the city, at present in the occupstion of the Widow of the late George Thorne. It comprises about 29 acres of land in a bigh state of suitivation, fronts on the North River Shore. There is a good ove anda half story farm house with outbuildings and a large stable and barn, and ®. tool house on the premises, Possession given, if re- quired Istter end of November. These premises at: well adapted for @ bu cher and pa-ture farm. Rent $°0).00 a year, For farther particalats apply to. [ave Expense. MIARK HOME MAKERS “+ had never occurred te me of the pw sibility of Rutledge te-marrring, believ- DANIEL DAVIES 254 Dundas SOSEUSd CEO SD WRICHT AND CO SVSECSE Ee NOSO oe gt ee ON S SAREE ORAS LARRE eve me ain te EE =: epee SGP te ae et et a oe Reo ene = stl hcntte Aell ana ~ oer