arti es “> < c. tTidnev Disease Prevented ie s Kidney Pils, Only. | . ' \ KnOW | I tie kid i ‘ ’ th 4 death | that the Kidneys the victim 1s | : e; that his ' 1; that the victim K ey Pills if he D ? Is ' ‘ 1 ry fail iIFlt\¢ 1, OF ( i! ‘ whe } | ‘ , ONCEr up x t de | P proof positive ‘ cured, or I » Kidney } on earth that | ' I fail 4A] * HOT ae 3224860886 NIAGARA e ee880o2e0 2° ¢.* anufacturers € We are the original ft of portable Vapor Baths ; Wehave, during the ed thousand s of ; ist ten years © supp mur Baths to physicians, hospitals, Sanitariums, ete, i , and we are now, for the drst time, ad- © vertising them direct to the general puabiic. Get one with y Jy 7 > , IN BL Y ING fs a steel lrame f that stands VAPOR BATH on the floor Ifa manufacturer does not show you acutofatrame without the covering you may take itior granted that his “Stee! frame” is a wire Loop that rests oo the shoulder of the bather, Get one that is covered with proper wateria!l, Insist on seei og a sample of material before ordering, We make oar own covering mate: ial and print it with a handsome “all over” pattern of Niagara Falls. Getone wilh a therm ment, Don’t go it blip is too hot or not hot em no benefit to you, Get one that you cz have your money back Lory in every way, Send for sample of m teresting booklet that + about Vapor Baths. Vapor Baths are an household neceesity Air, Vapor, Sulphur Batns at Home. 3c, P roduces cleaniiness, he revents disease, obesity. Cures Colds, heumatism, Neuralgia. LaGrippe, alaria, Eczema, Catarrh Female Ilis lood, Skin, Nerve ani Kidney ‘Trou- bles. Beautifies Compl: xion, ‘ Price ot Niagara Baths, $5.00 ' The Kirg-Jones Co., Toronto DEPARTMENT H.H. AGENTS WANTED, 896403 GO 2B OQIGO meter attach- i—a bath that igh will be of ‘> e~} £0} oD 5°33 02 Oo a return and {f not satisfac- iterial and in ill tell you all eck nowledged rurkish, Hot or Medicated rifles system, slih, sirength. eo <5 ©. 6 6 © 0-. OD OD O48 OW HS ©, cal >o< ’ 2953606266238 S59 e THE MPROVED wit) GET WELL By taking CHRONIC DISEASES ani RUPTURE. hast LT) treatment for Dip- loma registeredin U. 8. end Canada. Send samp forinformation, or call at CH’TOWN, *RIDAY, SATURDAY, and SUNDAY. JAMES KELLY Wholesale Comm iesion Dealer in al! kin de of FRESH FISH. Ells and Smelts, Specialties, NO. 8 LONG WHARF “Goce BOSTON MASS SOLICITEL Write for stencils and particulare. Molasses and Sugar . Extra choice Porto Rico Molasses, Extra standaid Sranulated Sugar yellow extra U Sugar, Demerara Crystals mn bags. Seliing at lowest prices. HORACE HASZARO Ch’town, Jan 5th 99 42 wks eol DR. CLIFT’S ' “Kutledge, my son!’ THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, FEBRUARY 4, 1859 OoONIocCecoKNeaeoee as td By LAURA JEAN LIBBEY i >> ae gy Author of “Parted at the Altar,” “Lovely Maiden,” t ay ; * ; y : *Florabel’s Lover, f mad 09 7 : . 3 BESO earns CHAPTER VI Continued Xt every unifsnal ever = of | ‘ . 7 wy I n th b ‘ q ‘ i rn } cog pe an eit vis ' ” ; di : - | : Say rhe cause Ww! ex 1 tt ~ . i \ . pics 3 \ l “ ns bs | i nl ry rw: ee wit b I ee . 7 aif hi ve for | ein ‘ — ay ee - : ad \ , a how : ‘ . oe i a s i 8 | edioe 1 first come to } b Ver ah th } } , ; too ; : . i sa has a . 3 ‘ h rhe feo b | be i her. too. how he } a ] k inter in his ey : \ ‘ , i on t , » ¢ t} - —_ \ she | ask 1 the cou le en ss = I Lliy \ ls i the dum conservagiory, had iid a his heatt and hand at her feet, begg nz tie would despise her, and when that ni if she favored his suit. to wea a ni ‘ ie she would die, she t | While rose in her bodice afte unma merseit, , and if it was her wish to reject and iW n 1 irrived, and Verlic Mad’ dismiss him, a red rose so wi hn shouid mot yet returned, Mrs, Chester com be the signal of it. imenced to grow anxtous about her “Verhe wore the red rose at the ap ’ nd i the afternoon | pointed hour,” he continued, husk ed ne dusk of the early] “and | knew then my suit was in yain. \ er aft n her anxiety grew .snio] She did not love me. ‘ . “{ could not rest without making he s had gone out of town] other attempt to win her,” he weut oan, early that morning, and Rutledge had] a sperately. “So 1 wrote her note hed at the club parlors, and it would] yesterday afternoon, begging her to vt r uncertain, he told his mother,| meet me in the conservatory at eight mens he would be home in time t at evenmg, to give me one mere 1 the famuy or not. chance to plead my cause. I was there : uld stand the suspense! promptly at eight. She was not there. ! sent a messenger for her l waited an hour. Still she came not “lL want to see you in re | She wished me to understand by her terence to Verliec.” so ran his mother’s silence that her answer was final. Don’t brief note. ‘Come without delay.” you see how ét is, m es: meee Sone he young man’s handsome, grave face pain me by ancuner petuenl, she hes gone flushed amd paled as he thrust the de quietly away. She knew quite well I licate, pink-tinted effaiz into his breast would tell Fou why.” : wocket. Mrs. Chester's distress as she listen d 1" course there could be but one knew no bounds. ‘This revelation gave meaning to it,” Ne told himself, as he her such unbounded surpiise. For oe seated himself in his sleigh, tucked the she was completely startled out of her buffalo robe around him, picked up the mnay-tke calm. ” eines and gave the mettiesome gray orget her, Rutledge, my dear son, horse a slight cut with his whip that sent him fairly spinning down the snvovww- crusted road homeward, Of course Verlie had recalled him. She bad repented not haying kept the ap- pointment in the conservatory, and had confessed the story of her son's love to his mother, and that tender hearted litle woman had taken it upon herself to become mediator between them, re calling her without delay; for he had announced at the breakfast-table that morning his intention of going abroad for a few months, declaring he should start immediately. It was with a very light heart he drew reign before his home. He glanced up at the windows; no dimpled, bashful, girlish face, framed in golden hair, peep ed coyly down at him from the lace draped windows. Flingmg the reins to the groom, he sprang up the marble steps three steps at a time. A servant answered the sol imperative corridor the drawing-room door opened and he saw his mother, white as a ghost and deeply agitated, stamding on the threshold. “(Come in here, my son,” she excia’m- ed, drawing him into the room; aud while he was removing his gloves she had told him of Verlie’s protracted ab- sence, and of the grave fears she enter tained o” her being lost. Boston was not the best city in the world for a stranger to find their way in. Kutiedge Chester's face grew wh.ter and whiter as he listened. Like a flash a solution of Verlie’s mysterious absence come to him. He sprang from his chair and began pacing up and down the floor with sach rapid strides, his face working convul sively, that his mother grew alarmed. she cried out, in dismay. tut he held up his hand w.th a ture of silence. “Hush, mother!” he cried, b:tterly. “a cannot bear it.” *Verlie is not lost,” he went on, husk- ily. “When she left the house this morning, she left it for good, with the never entering these doo gos intention of again.” “Rutledge!” exclaimed his mother, i wonder and dismay. “What cau yuu mean by such a remark?” “Meas me out. mother,” he went on, The People’s Faith Firmly Grounded Upon Real Merit —They Know Hood’s Sarsaparilla Absolutely and Permanently Cures When All Others Fail. Hood’s Sarsaparilla is not merely & simple preparation of Sarsaparilla, Dock, Stil- lingia and a little Iodide of Potassium. Besides these excellent alteratives, it also eontains those great anti-bilious and liver remedies, Mandrake and Dande- lion. It also contains those great kidney remedies, Uva Ursi, Juniper Berries, and Pipsissews. Nor are these all. Other very valuable curative agents are harmoniously com- bined ia Hood’s Sarsaparilla and it is carefully prepared under the person aperaien of a regularly educated harmacist. owing these facts, is the abiding faith ~~ Coonhe have in Hood’s Sarsaparills a matter of surprise? You can see why Hood's Sarsaparilla cures, wher other medicines totally, absolutely fail. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Isthe best—in fact the One True Blood Purifier. Sold by all druggists. $1; six for $5. pills, aid digestion. 36¢ "Hood's Pills oo caus ‘ f cic initial scale " ie Saves ae cas Penta Gh ta Sec tan’ (Cente, eae ai EE mr 1" SeetinedS Seats o<eentn a ee et re. omer ey i Heart like the thrust of a dagger. She summons. As he stepped into the marb'e | } sin without being dragged still further ‘*Tone,” Etc, Ete. ‘NN =>, 9.9 eS em, 9, Oo Anusha? © she cried, thewing her arms around hs neck and drawing his handsome, manly face down to her own. Forget her, my boy. This lowly born girl was no mute for the heir of the Chesters at best. She would never have been suited to you, anyhow. It is all for the best.” He started back, as though those white jeweled, wrinkled hands had struck him a sudden blow. “Do not speak hard of her, mother,” he cried, huskily. “‘Kemember, I love her better than life itself, and a cutting word spoken of her strikes through my is fitted to wed a king on his throne, if she could not love me, it was not her fault, poor child!’ “No,” admitted his mother, drawing a hard breath, Yet she was puzzled to know how any young girl in her senses could help lov- ing her tall, handsome, haughty, manly son. “| have an idea that she bas gone directly home,’ he went on; “but to make assurance doubly sure, 1 shall ” make inquiries at once. Uh, fatal mistake, that was the tufn- ing point of three lives. At the wharf he was told a young giv! had boarded the outgoing steamer that morning, with a ticket direct for Pensa- cola, Miorida. “Of course it was Verlie,” he thought, turning away. “Il knew she must have gone straight home.” CHAPTER VILL A DUEL AND AN ABDUCTION, Uldene feigned the greatest astonjsh- ment when Mrs. Chester broke this sturtling news to her, accounting for her sister’s sudden disappearance, and that Kutledge had traced her to the wharf where she had taken passage on an out Z for home, “I am not surprised that this is a great revelation to you,” Mrs. Chester went on, looking pityingly into the girl’s dead-white face. “It will no doubt be quite as much of a surprise for your futher and mother, Rutledge is in the library now, writing them a full ex- planation of the affair. It will probably reach there on the same day Verlie ar- rives home.” Uldene could have cried out in terra: as she heard those words; and the thought flashed upon her that she must gomg steamer prevent that letter from reaching its de stimation at any cost. No one yet ever took the first fatal step in deception and down the slippery, steep path, and at iast plunged headlong into the dars abyss yawning to receive her. It was so with Uldene. She had takeu the first fatal stev in a horrible decep- tion and she told herself it was too late to turn back now. “| should like to add a short postscrivt to Kutledge’s letter,” she said, in a voice that sounded like nothing human, “and, if he does not ind, I—I will mail it.” “Certainly,” assented Mrs, Chesicr. “Do so by all means. It will greatly allay your father’s anxiety if you also inclose a few lines.” A few moments fater a sery4nt ap peared with Kutledge’s letter, envelop ed and directed, but unsealed. Karly the uext morning Uldene left the house for the ostensible purpose of mailing the Jetter. When quite out of sight of the Chester mansion she turn: ed in an opposite direction from the post-office, hurrying quickly alonz through the crowded thoroughfare uatil she found herself on the wharrf. She giunced furtivefy about her. No one Wa> observing her; and drawin: the jetter from her pocket, she tne « ito minute pieces, telling herself that, in case of War, 4 general would open and | destroy the dispatches ef.tbe enemy if | =, “Ley Bas ee tus en 5 ~ fa i “ho wo f f | A A sf te to go up Stairs. zemic, doctors being scarlet? VovuuvvenvvuuvvenvyubebeavrvvebubewsberulvrubuiebuWeW ele yy Wubb ire MPI EE RETA I RIN MI ae ES MERE ER RON Bee a he could; lt was the only cwurse lefi to her in this case, With a quick movement Uldene ‘hrew the fragments ef the letter imto the river. ‘Yio her horror they would not sink. ‘he waves drifted the white tilakes together toward the sea, and out of her sight. She was in a paroxysm of terror. What if they should sail on and on, swept on by the hand of an aveng- ing fate, until they reached the solitary island? What if the waves dashed them high on the sands of Black-Tor laght-House, and they should fall mto the hands of Mark Sefton? “The waves will noc betray me,” cried, under her breath. ‘They have had other fatal secrets to keep.” Turning away with a shudder, she quickly retraced her steps homeward. “] have separated Verlie and Ruts ledge Chester,” that was the thought that deadened her conscience, “and in the time to come his heart-will turn to me, It must. Love will win love. I should have gone mad or died if Verlie had won him. 1 love him so.” ‘wo days later, looking over the even- ing paper, Uldene’s eyes fell upon the following item: “ound Dead in theStreet.—A young, fair-haired woman was found, quite dead, buried under the snow-drifts, early last ‘buesday morning. ‘The body was removed to the morgue, and as it re- mained unclaimed, unrecognized, up to yesterday, it was mterred by the proper authirities.”’ _the. paver_fell from. _U ldene’s _£rasp, Doctors now that consumption is curable. Three things, if taken to- gether, will cure nearly every case in the first stages; the majority of cases more ad- vanced; anda few of those far advanced. The first is, fresh air; the se- cond, proper food ; the third, Scott’s Emulsion of cod-liver oil with hypophosphites. To be cured, you must not lose in weight, and, if thin, you must gain. Nothing equals Scott's Emulsion to keep you in good flesh. * goc. and $1.00, all druggists. SCOTT & BROWNE, Chemists Toronto, agree sallow and languid. tating at the heart after slight exertion, so that it 1s a trouble that is Greek for having “ too little blood.” Are you like that ? Are your gums pale instead of R WILLIAMS she , They are “An- tell them; and Pull down your eyelid—Is the lining of it blood- shot and pale? That is where “ too little blood” shows. More anemic and weak people have been made strong, energetic, cheerful men and women by taking Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People than by any other means. Williains’ Pink Pills. a bed x eee ~ bo i ed fr They are the finest Tonic in the world ; they have cured more people than Any other medicine, but you must get the genuine-—substitutes are worse than useless, they are dangerous. David R. McKay, the well-known baker, of Stellarton, N. S., writes‘ I cannot say too much in praise of Dr, I was very badly run down ; could hot work and could not sleep at night. poor and I was loosing flesh. liams’ Pink Pills and was surprised at the rapidity with which they built me up. In a few weeks my weight in- creased from 130 to 149 pounds. could sleep well, and could do my work without feeling tired. aiid” {.e" Forld” beemed “to grow “dark } doubted but fair-haired She never Verlie—the “round her, what it was sister whom she had lured so inhuman- The layman who is introduced t it m jy to an untimely end, Even in this hour no keen repentance touched her heart, which was harder than adamant and colder than marble as she pictured what poor Verlie’s wak- ing moment must have been, or the pain and torture she must have suffered when she found herself deserted, alone, helpless, in the dark grave-yard, with the snow falling around her. How she must have stretched out her white arms to the dark sky,, praying for the help that did not come! At first she must have hoped Uldene had gone for assistance; but as the hours rolled on the hope died out, and she realized that she had been deserted in her crip- pled heiplessness and left alone to die. Uldene had swept her rival from her path at a bitter cost. Let her triumph i nthe knowledge until an avenging God metes out retribution for her crime; for retribution follows every sm ccmumiited, sooner or later. Let us go back, dear reader, to the waking moments of Verlie Selton. We shall see, as we proceed, that it was not Veilie who had been found dead in the streets. Fate had spared her, and for a far different end. And at the mo- ment Kutledge Chester was writing thut letter—which never found its way to the lonely light-house—Verlie was going through the strangest and most start- ling experiences that ever fell to the Jot of a young girl. ‘he swoon into which She had fallen—caused by the intense pain of her sprained ankle—lasted an hour or more. The cool flakés of fall- ing snow drifted down upon her uptu:a ed face speedily revived her. “Uldene!l’ she cried, faintly, am i—\—” Like a flash, memory returned to her, and she remembered. Her first thought, as she lifted herself upon her elbow and saw that she was alone, was that ULI- dene had gone to summon help; but as the hours dragged slowly on and no help came to her, terror seized her, (To be Contiaued.) — oe +Oore Cure a Uold in One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine tablets. All druggists refuna he money if it feils to ralieve® 02°. “Twenty Dollars Reward Any person g ving information ]-adiny to the apprehevsion of the party or paritr> who broke into my hou-e oo North R ver between the dates of the 23rd and the 29 |, “where inet, will receive the above reward. Rk. M. YOUNG. Per ae Er? teeter venue ceneedROZ Little Blood That is what makes men and women look pale, That is what makes them drag along, always tired, never hungry, unable to digest their food, breathless and _palpi- nS . AAA AAAARAAAARAARAAAARAAAAAAAAAARAAAAAAAPAAARB ARAB RAR RS AROS D My appetite was I began the use of Dr. Wil- My appetite returned, I- If your dealer does not keep them, send the price, 50 cents a box or $2.50 ‘or six boxes, to the Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brockville, and get the genuine by return mail. CO SR I A IS ATENOBNS: Cat eR Glass Cutting. ~ ysteries of cutting glass for the time is amazed at the amcunt of + that the workman does entirely t eye. The first stage of the bowl \ is to be cut finds it in a perfectly ; condition, not a scratch upon it only a half dozen or more marks in chalk, which mean absolutely not. «9 to the unpracticed eye. But to ix workman they mean the whole pat! Perhaps the dish isa salad bowl. ‘: 4 marks in chalk will run from the « . five intervals apart, down to the « : of the bowl] at the bottom. In o: : the divisions of the bow! thus m: } there may bea litle further ma:': : in the shape perhaps of a dian This indicates the pattern into v the bow! is to be cut, and it will | peated in each of the five division: ! the intricacies of the design the \ map has in his bead, and they a: on the gless in a way which se: ; | the looker on absolutely marvel New York Times. Deserved It. **Sheriff,’? remarked the conde~ » ed murderer, as that functionary proc i to put the black cap over his bew., *'I seem to be the sinner, sure, of alle s«s.”’ Without. any further delay the s-op was sprung, and the hardened wretch went to his doom.—Chicago Tribune. A Natural Sequence, ‘*The doctors had a consultation ves- terday.’’ “*What was the result?’ “I understand that the family luw- yers are now in secret session, '’—Brock- lyu Life. A CREAT record of cures, une- qualled in medical history, proves Hood’s Sarsaparilia possesses merit un- known to any other MEDICINE. Artificial : Teeth. -_——o i a —— “ee DR JuuN P. MURRAY | Queen St., near London Louse, orm Haan Oe amare ea aT Oy PS he near to satan stapes SM site Sonali. cicero yl * Pk: eo hy eee ee es a “= gL gg Ae gene Raat oY MRS FOE A pO "Qo 2 pe cg pene Ng Me ot oe ae es tT ¥ rae cer tees oe 8 he ane se nent em pertain —uren-geonanesinemrgnnRReRNAE ae: st nee mgt * - 2 a