rH vAiLY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, MARCH 10, 1£99 . Whgmecetage 1s hie “ - SeSese see ele M you want for his photo to ey OLD'S KIDNEY PILLS you'd be silly te bey an imitation. '$ ARE SOLD IN BOXES LIKE THIS. - TAKE ONLY e682 om © 64 62 om y We are the original manufacturers € of portable Vapor Baths We have, du"ing the last ten years supplied thousands of our Baths to 4 physicians, ho» pitais, Sanitariums, ete, and we are now, for the first time, ad- @ vertising ther: direct to the general pubiic. Get one with a steel iframe that stands en the floor rer does not show you ‘without the covering ittor granted that his “Steel frame” isa wiré hoop that rests 05 the shoulder of the bather, Get one that is covered with proper @ material, Insist on s« eing a sample of materia! before ordering, Weo uune our own Cover'ng material and print it with a handsome “all over” pattern of Niagara Fa'!s Getone with a thermometer attach- ment, Don’t ro it blind—a bath that is too hot or not hot enough wiil be of no benefit to 5 Get ore 9 IN BUYING A ¢ VAPOR BAT , Ifa manufact acut of a tran you may take that you can return and ave your money back if not satisfac- tory in every way Send for saniple of material and in teresting booklet that wi about Vapor atl Vapor Baths are an | tell you all acknowledged househo 1 ve eesity larkish, Hot Alr, Vap r, eulpl or Medicated Baths at Horne, 3c, Purifles system, roduces cleaiiiiness, health, strength. *revents disese, Cbesity. Cures Colds, Rheumatis: Neuralgia, LaGrippe, Malaria, Eczema, Catarrh. Female Ills Blood, Skin, bles. Be { Q Price ot Niagara Baths, $5.00 The Kirg-Jones Co., toronto Kidney Trou- ('¢ ‘ o> O° OS OQ OC OD OGD ae DEPARTMEN'’ H.H AGENTS WANTED. ROS 85S DS BWVOZV9OV_IHDWV SO WATCHES Substance Shadow worth $108, you'd be sill a horse t me Sonn y D-O-D-D’S DOD*SOR FDS DHOSA*D*TE eveeoees =]*°£9 ‘=. ~~ 6-5.* © 6®® © 2 04202 6 2 °<£)° 0046S] 6O6526 S29 Unsurpassed for durability and timekeeping qualities, at pri so lcw as to surprise you. G. H. TAYLOR SUNNYSIDE —— 250 ces 5 Cases -»» -CHOICE:-+> Vaelncia ORANGES —AND— LEMONS Landed tc day. ie Car, CARVELL RROS |} ae SSS SSIES SSS |] SSrSS Ss Ss eee: oy Parted j ‘ > DOOCOCOSOOOOOOOOa " i byFate By LAURA JEAN LIBBEY Author of ‘‘Parted at the Altar,” “Lovely Maiden,” *Florabel’s Lover, " “fone,” Etc., Etc. CHAPTER XXXVIIiI Continued “I longed for change of “coi, for gayety and pleasure, as all young girls fo; and honest Mark consented that Verlie and I should spend the coming holidays with an old friend’s family, who spent part of their winters in Washington, dividing their time between there and their beautiful villa in Bos- ton, “In granting my prayer—with which I often petitioned him—to see the world, honest Mark Sefton cursed me with my heart’s desire, “Even now his parting words ring in my ears: ‘You shail see the gay world beyond; but, I warn you, give no thought to love or marriage, child. They are not for you. Remember, Uldene, I warn you.’ I laughed gayly as I turned from him; then, when I was quite alone, tears of vexation filled my eyes. Wy should fate have decreed that I should have no lover? I asked myself, with pouting lips. Other girls Jess fair had lovers, and life seemed all sweet enough for them. Every girl that has a spark of human nature in her breast has her own dream of a lover who is to come to her and woo her in the blissful, golden future. My dreams were quite as rosy as other girls’, and I had my ideal hero. How often I had smiled, and sung the words over to myself: ‘Every heart finds its own true mate Some time in life; for this is fate,’ “Verlie and I would never have been permitted to visit at the home of Sena- tor Chester if honest Mark had not be- lieved that the son was traveling abroad in Europe, and through that error the whole course of my life was changed. When I met Rutledge Chester I said to myself I had met the hero of my dreams. , your honor | Uldene, .; I hope I With this may not weary preface,” faltered O_O “but op this slender, tangled hangs the weighty evidence thread which the end will clear the innocent prisoner, | and cast tae man you are holding yonder | into his place,” “But @re she reached that point she will have spoken her own doom!” cried ihe stranger, with mocking defiance. Uldene bowed her hapless head until the angry tumult which the man’s words had evoked had died down and silence was again restored. “Let me be brief,” Uldene went on, spenking with difficulty, as though the words pained her, and never taking her great dark eyes from the face of the stern judge. “Soon after, 1 became en- gaged secretly to Rutledge Chester. I was on the point of writing this home to liqnest. Mark Sefton, when. I made. a —— —— SUCCESSFUL MEN MANY OF THEM ARZ HANDICAPPED WITH CATARRHAL DISEASES. Dr. A. W.CHASE COMES TO THEIR AID. Success in life is almost impossible for a man with bad breath. Nobody wants to do »business with him. No- body wants to associate with him. He ta handicapped everywhere. Offen- sive breath comes from catarrh; some- times from caterrh of the stomach, sometimes of the lungs, sometimes of the head, nose, and throat. It is from catarrh somewhere, and catarrh is an- other name for uncleanness, Many men understand this, and make every effort to cure it, but it is be- yond the reach of ordinary practice. No self-respecting man can ignore catarrh. If he has it im any form he makes constant effort to be rid of it. There is something about the man- ner of life and the climate of Canada that seems to breed diseases of the mucous membrane. Medical science ordinarily doesn’t try to cure catarrh; it “relieves” it; but Dr. Chase has been curing catarrh for over thirty years, and his name. is blessed by thousands who have shaken off the grasp of this insidious disease. Sold by all dealers, price 26 oente per box, blower free. im ; [startling discovery, Which was written in a letter from the Seftons to Rut- ledge’s mother, and which by accident I Came across, “In it Mark Sefton warned the lady te mip in the bud any flirtation which I —heing of a very romantic turn of mind —nnght fal into if a young and hand- some man should cross my path. She must never love, for she must never marry; so ran the letter. And I[, full of curiosity, read these lines, which had never been intended for my eyes, care fully to the end. It was a history of my life, that read like a tragic romance. lt was then I made the discovery that i was not Mark Sefton’s child—but a waif clasped close in my dying mother’s arms—who had been saved from a wrecked steamer, which was drifting toward the Jight-house one terribly stormy wight. My young mother dil fnot live long enough to tell who we were, or from whence we came. She cried out to Nella Sefton to take her hapless child—for she was dying—and it as her own. ‘The child must never love, for she must never marry,’ sobbed my poor young mother, bitterly, for a curse most terrible hangs over her hapless head that will blast her life, mock her love, until death ends it all. Listen while I tell you what it is. But first you must swear never to reveal it even to the child herself—it is so full of awful horror.” Ere she could breathe the horrible secrét she fell back dead, with the bitter secret untold.” “ ‘Now, you see,’ wrote Mark Sefton in conclusion, ‘why you must guard her, dear madam, more carefully, while she is under your roof, than most girls.’ | There the lecter ended. i threw it in i the fire, and as I watched the glowing | coals I cried out to myself, ‘Why shoulda words? Why rear I care for those written should I let them rob me of love and happiness?’ I could not—no, I would not! I would brave fate itself and marry Rutledge Chester. , “L was on my guard now, and I re solved Rutledge’s mother should never | know I loved her son, lest she should | warn him against me. In his mother's absence one day, Rutledge and I were married. Oh, fatal day! Oh, bitter hour! In that hour I breught my own deom upon my head, And ah! God help me, the penalty was worse than death. Sut I must not deviate. When Rut- ledge’s mother returned and discovered that we had been suddenly married she threw up her hands with a wild cry, fell upon her face and never spoke again. The horrible secret those lips might have told died with her. I knew what |the blow was that killed her—oh! I knew but too well. “I have often since cried out wildly and bitterly to Heaven: ‘Why could I not have died then, in my youth and my happiness? But 1 must digress. I must be brief while you have the pati mot ence to listen te the bitter sorrow that followed,” murmured Uldene, while i} tears fell like rain from the beautiful dark eyes and down themarble-white cheeks. The silence of death reigned through- i; out the densely packed room; no sound broke the breathless silence save the quivering sob that broke from Uldene’s white lips as she went on with her piteous story—ah, yes, surely as she had said, mortal lips. the strang- est, that ever fell from CHAPTER. XXXVITI. THE CURSE. | Rutledge Chester sprang to Uldene'’s | side, almost overcome by intense emo tion, but she waved him off. *Do not touch my hand until you have | heard she said, piteously. “You must not! I pray you let me continue, while I have the strength. Across the inshine of my happiness a dark eoud drifted, bringing with it—my doom. Ail i unawares the cyclone burst above my lh ad; the volcano broke beneath my ) feet. “I was in a picture gallery one day, With the young gir] who sits beside the | prisoner—Miss Temple will remember the occurrence well—when suddenly I Was aware—painfully awar f the fix- ed, burning gaze of a pair of eyes bent upon me, and looking up, I behed a stranger scrutinizing me closely with a look that burned down to my very soul; I could not tell why. I hurried Neddy away from the gallery, but ali the way home the dark-bearded, evil face of the stranger haunted me. One evening, two days later, while walking through the garden at the rear of the villa, I came suddenly face to face with the same stranger, within the grounds. “I would have cried out and turned and fied, but he held up his hand with a gesture of warning, ¢alting cautiously, in a hoarse, awful voice: *“‘On your life raise no outery—no | alarm; I am no thief, no. intruder. Sum- mon help and your doom will be sealed.’ **Who are you? What do you want heer? And how dare you, a stranger, address me thus?’ I cried, fairly raging at the man’s insolence, and trembling with dismay. “‘Qne who has been searching the whole world over to find you, I answer to your first question,’ he said; ‘to the second, I say, I am here to avert—a tragedy!’ and as to the third question, as to why I, @ stranger, dare address you, I answer, by the right of an uncle, who has been appoimted your guardian, and who would have striven to prevent yop. .the last daugeter of an aggyrsed eperpemmeern eames —~ ! race, from marrymg ‘had a peen Tn | human power; but it seems I have come too late. You are married, but I can save you from the doom that follows.’ “I stood motionless, rooted to the spot,” moaned Uldene, “too terrified to cry out or utter any word. Like a flash the fatal words of the letter occurred to me—the words my young mother had uttered on her deuth-bed, that love was not for me. “*What is your purpose here?’ mured, desperately, ““To persuade you that you must leave Rutledge Chester at once and for- ever, or I shall publicly announce that which will cause you to be sent from him by his own command—that which will cause him to turn from you in hor: ror and fear too great for words, I will tell you first the doom which hangs over you, and which has fallen upon every daughter of your race for tenerations back; then you must choose whether you will go quietly back to France (from where you were stolen in your infancy) or enter a convent there under an as he I mur sumed name, and where*you will shut out from the world for life. “"I will give you proof, first of all, that I am indeed what I claim to be, your uncle and guardian; then I wiil tell you your story,’ “Ll examined the portrait of my mother, which he had brought with him, which was so like my own face it might easily have been taken for me. Beneath it Was my mother’s name—Uldene. I kiew he spoke the truth. I could feel it in my heart. Every pulse thrilled as I gazed at the pictured- face in the white, bright moonlight. One by one I ‘Xunyvined the papers he had brought With him; and no doubt was left in my mind but what he was indeed my unele. ““The daughters of your race were all beautiful women,’ he said, slowly; ‘but none Were so beautié@al as you, who seem to have inherited all the beauty of your race. You have inherited, too, their quick, passionate nature. Quick to ‘ove, and to love intensely, and quite is quick to hate, and hate bitterly.” “I knew his words as to my disposi- lion were quite true.” a (To be Continued.) Few men understand women. When a wo- man is weak, sickly, nervous, fretful, irrita- ble and despondent, the average husband imagines that she is simply ont of temper. An average hus- band will probably simply go out and leave her alone for awhile, ‘‘to have it out with herself.’ A bad husband is liable to go off and get drunk, The fact is that the poor wife is suffering from illness of a de- scription that breaks a womaz down sooner than any thing else, Her back is weak and aches. Her “sides stitch.’? She has pains and a dragging sensation in the abdomen. Her appetite is toucky and she suffers from nausea. She has sick headaches, giddi- ness, dizziness, cold chills, flushings of heat, shortness of breath, palpitation, dis- turbed sleep, frightful dreams, irregulari- ties and nervous and trembling sensauions, Her pain-racked nerves are a continual torture. ’ A woman in this condition is suffering from weakness and disease of the delicate and important organs concerned in wife- hood and motherhood. Dr. Pierce’s Fa- vorite Prescription makes these organs strong and well. It allays inflammation, heals ulceration and soothes pain. It has transformed thousands of sickly, nervous, petulant, childless and unhappy women into happy, healthy, helpful, amiable wives and mothers. It banishes the discomforts of the period of prospective maternity and makes baby’s advent easy and almost pain- less. Good medicine dealers sell it and an honest druggist does not try to urge upon you an inferior substitute for a little extra profit. : Dr. Pierce’s Common Seuse Medical Ad- viser, a 1008-page home doctor-book, paper- covered, sent for 31 one-cetut stamps, to cover customs and mailing only, or French cloth binding 50 stamps. Address Dr. R.V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. 7 VOOVS DV SVSSSVV3VSG2@ ADVICE ABOUT , $ Gi 'S Spars € S When ordering a packr ge Pepper, Ginger, Allepice, Cin namop or Cream of Tartar from your grocer you can al- ways feel sure of securing the best quality by asking for : :: Mott's eRVOOQVG7 22 QO B22 "SS a >? OSU © tS eet 2O oO ~~" 7 : | ‘ Farm For Sale 106 acres at Dundas We effer for enle 100 acres of land at Uj;tem, Dundas, formerly occupied by Argus McPherson. 75 acres clear and in good heart, the re mainder under m xture of bard ands o aood. A'lexce ] vot eoil. Termees y. M &D.vU. McLK’D, Attorneys at Law Charlottetown Feb. Ist 1899, The Best in soma at Brahmin Tea The Most Pooular and Best Seller in Canada. — i 4 [| F } Imported Direct from the Tea Gardens ee See oes It challenges comparison with any other Tea now offer- ed here regardless of price, Hundreds of letters praising Brahmin have been received of which the following are a few samples:— ~ New York, October 20 {i . 1) Would it be too much trouble for you to eend me a chest of that India Tea that we are 80 fond of? If you can send it to Boston it will be forwarded to me. i Brooxtrn, N. Y., 4th December. . We liked the tea purchased fron: you last summer so well that I shoubd like to I order the same kind egain if we can get it without too :uch trouble. td Provipsesce, R., I., 26th May. llike the Brahmin Tea, e0 do my friends. I would like an 80 Ib. box came ee before; but I den’t want any other. i! Orrawa, November 4th. The Tea you sent is excellent,so much dowe like it that I want you to rend another box before navigation closes. Toronto, December 26. We arecimply delighted with the Tea; if anything, it is better than the eample | sent. I mayhave a larger order for you next time, as friends who have tasted it . bere thought it very fine, t Monvreas, April 20. Do you remember sending me two boxes of tea last September. Kindly send me six boxes. I would like exactly the same quality as we had before, which would be \ very difficult to beat. Do you want an Agenthere. I believe I conld do a good \ business for you. Sr. Jonv, N. B. October 30. ft Enclosed please find the amount of your bill for the Tea which was most satie- i factory and much liked by my family. I will send for another box when this is finished. Moncrow, N. B. November 2. Sample of Brahmin Tea received. Please send me one box. I enclose P.O. osder for the amount, Hatrrax, N. S. November 6. Ptease send me four chests of Tea, same quality and size as previously sent me, and oblige. Wrvosor, N. 8. February ist The two boxes Tea which you advised having shipped have arrived. The Tea givee much satisfaction, and is also approved by friends who have tasted it, The originals can be seen on application. HORACH HASZARD, Agent for Canada and United States. Ch’town. Feb, 13. anemal PROCLAMATION. te SE = We are now ready and willing to plac? any numer of Hot:ls, Stores am private dwellings ina correct sanitary, and consequent'y healthy cond tion; and this at short notice. We will furnish all who desire it with Baths, Closets, and lavatories ot the latest and most approved patterns at prices consistent with first-class quakty of goods and workmanship. The latest and most beautiful New York designs in electrolicva. A — stock of soil pipe and all plumber’s, steamfitters and engineers supplies now on hand. Call on us at the Masonic Temple [Building. You will receive courteous treatment whether we sell you or not. _A.MacLEAN, — MANUFACTURERS AGENT. 2 = —— eS ——— es == ee — —_— —— = - a — 22 AE Oe ea en ee ee The World The best made Press Shirts in the world are manufactured in Germany. For comfort, fit and finish there are none like them. WE SELL THEM, We also sell the W. G. & R. It’s no novelty for us to sell the best made shirts on rig i ee ee ee ee a ee make. for u the market. Try uor 95c shirt. ASE ' D. A. BRUCE © __ FebQad wkiv imoe . | Morris Block. Victoria Row,