THE DAILY UXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, FEBRUAR OOS LEE CSL ELY PAYS ce ore ‘ ; ' Heit ae if + ie } rus ge Poce> ° ; 8 Yet at mn? > . : i ’ ; ’ ’ | cure ' : . Ss 4 ; : ; sf> t : ’ These Cis°aAses ~ wey 4 5 : fives . q . rs : : y ré ; “9 a’ : , , acy the carr : ri 5 - . ‘ « of >. > : . : ' ’ t 2 .CK } ; : when t ‘ } . > is . : ) ¢ ; + tiaAli ' ‘ — / EPPS'S COCOA. Distinguished ever) where for Delicacy of Flavour Supe- : rior Quality, and Nutritive Properties. Specially grate- ful and comforting vw the nervous and dyspeptic. Sold only in i-Ilb. tins, labelled Homeopathic Chemists, London, Englanc.. BREAKFAST SUPPER FPPS'S COCOA QIAO De® OD OIAt* COOD —— © e900 @G@eso °£-4°0 * oo 2] oe ~+} ee =] € Weare the original manufacturers of portable Vapor Baths. We have, during the iast ten years © supplied thousands of our Baths to A physicians, hospitals, sanitsa clams, etc, and we are now, for the first time, ad- @ vertising them direct to .se general pubiic. IN BUY l N Gj A z coat oo 3 VAPOR BATH !%,223228 4 : ea the floor Ifa manufacturer does no’ show you acut oi atrame without tt cov ering you may take itfor grant -d that his ume” is a wire that rests oo the shouider of the batb «r. vet one that is coversd with proper material, Ir eeing a sample of ; oeveei ! ran S18t ON oS se @ material betore ordering, We make our own covering materia! and print ew It with a handsome “‘ali vo er’ pattern of Niagara Falis. ‘2° ~4£.* © 2-863 03 oR Getone witb a thermometer attach- ment, Don’! go it blind-a@ bath that is too NOt or net hot enough will be of no henefit to +? . win ou, you can return and mey i Ot satistac- very ‘% \ Wel one ave yor ri tory in « Fena for sample of teresting booklet that about Val rial and in- teil you all mat r Baths 7 Vapor Baths are an knowledged HOUBEHO! veceesitv j rkish, Hot ay, VV apor, ulphur or Medicated Bat 6s al Home. Puri fles systero, &<6<..4<— £8 © *0-s os- produces ciean ness, he kh, strength. Xevents disease ¢ “it ures Colds, theumatisem, Ne: LaGrippe, Malaria, Keczem i, Catarrh. Female Iils Bilcod, Skin, Nerve and idney ‘Trou- bies. Beautifies « omplex .on,. ' Price ot Niagara Baths, $5.00 (The Kirg-Jones Co., Sor DODD o8S285O]98 SF 4 : Terento 4 DEPARTMENT H. H. AGENTS WANTED, s~- BSO6O*6- ROB 2OD-6BVIDWDSIS JAMES KELLY i0lesale Commision Dealer FRESH FISH. ot Ells and Smelts, Specialties, NO. 8 LONG WHARF Cons GNMENTS ¢ ‘soucrvee BOSTON MASS SOLICITEL ag “ :, "Tite for stencils and particulare. Have Just Completed My New Oyster Place. Call and eve the brilliant display of beautiful oysters on and off the ebell. Onr Oyster king is standing in the "iGdow, Bee him, and then you will eat ‘yéters, John P. Joy, VIUTORTA CAFE Creat George Street . “+ Tb, 1869 = : rains > Pomaptnin, « » oven . ns en he Pe M aa on SICH MOCK NICO ese: Carrom Re SETF SS tj 6) F WB 4 : < a ei rred | ate ( i er S ut ti . OOOOH oCoooosD ah rad i ; a ‘ i < 3 By LAURA JEAN LIBBEY ts wer c ” , a Author of “*Parted at the Altar,” “Lovely Maiden,” ® ‘ Ms : : ‘ , | 7 “Tlorabel's Lover, ‘‘bone,” Etc., Ete. ue gt ‘ : [ tien Rhee ee EE 2 Gren 5» Greene“ > Gaines, Se eimenig Senta } PRs *s Sa vad 2 > + vet “ee 9, ‘_/- = ¢ ee —-_ : e ‘tas ee > - = "en ap 9 tgee teats our ae =e Now ie wwibes Cyt 1! alta S KapteRe 1D’ Rentian? eed © Rembead A Unde Pian Vane . a it die ‘ ‘ CHAPTER XVII Continued ’ ic ' oT ee F mentine es ~* Sudden and d: MIs 4 es, repiie< iene. iam This Wire, Ss. Vorbie » } 4) on . You I he k geo if ‘ ‘ ca all would be over : i. . ; mail YOuULG? ;? ove \ if i b i ‘ i ‘ d . i I we t on, ¢ ‘ Ww h siren re ; ; ; ‘ : | ) ee ‘ he 1 4 \j ‘ be © eX me \W} i. terrible w ) ary he} ; : , hay i141 Y VN l c at ‘ | . 7 : ‘ 1 . | ‘ = , : e her ay te her room beg ne : ’ : o ' Ged v0 LOCp ne terrible er? ~ ot ; . : ad ‘ i he COC PLO CCT YS BOL Age j i wn Startiir n s tha i ear, ‘ . vrd ¢ } ; ie™l ‘ i ney i! ! iif ii a A _ rnge qi ipon \ e % The aropnped ; +} ‘ } *anaen nr ped o the floor like one d i and ey ili wo | ] r ef] - t ™ : ew « Phe , trom that moment she had } speech ‘ ; 2 ae n—-tha neve } ould : \ : . : I tai ; : : we Lips in they ‘ . r All ui VW Ss ¥ ] igi U ‘ ! hy ‘ \ } ‘@ A a . . ; ’ : ; ‘ a : ude no sigr She lon . ; 3 lips, for sh cme y \ - . . qy ’ ex} ., nd think how mu — se anew Why. cia 2 “gai ; ; | Kiutledge Chester’s mistake had cos | -——— ’ ; . ’ . ; . he and weep her heart out ib secret CHAPTER XVIII ver her } Ken lovedrs im. rs . ‘How vitin ; i foolish I was o think I y E NOT ALONE, AS THEY BELIEVED } is he ea <i rrié +} : Or } ; «6T ae ad ” I girl ; A m the dark shadow of death I S we ! no one dt n hat | stl 1 its dark wing over the Cl] , ; ma a servants mo f } .% mm « OO 5; Sli d with bated breath. ; . ‘ es > : ; '? : R che ale pores | Rutledge and hte doctor watched un yy a mighty « rt she pu tnougit | Ceisingiy at her bedside. Every one fs r and tread ; n | mo} : ! \ oe , ' and tmed to reju'ce ln | @ise, say the faithful old housekeever or . >) . ' Uldene’s happiness. { and nurse, was carefullv excluded aes te . ee — ; All her _ had been ac stomed | My services are of no avail. ex: ept at a - rss ; ° to give up to beautiful videne in all } to make the sufferer a little more com things. She loved tl heantifr] ’ } eh tee ' ; ings. She loved this beantifrl. spoiled fortable,” the doctor said, frankly. “She } . a> ged ye ° } } ; +7 ac Gark-eyed creature, whom she believed | can iast but a little while longer.” a ; 7 ar o.3. : ‘ 9 4 - ; R : > wit to be h . 8 r, with a love that was ! Mead her body was already, so far as ‘ = + oy +y thea t 1a } | . > . almost lolatrous. S ; a I r to move was concerned: but her given he bright young life—had it been | mind was apparent Y unimpaired, and ‘oO -} aw rT? - . idl . ee . the priee—to save Uldene’s, } expressed itself in the agonized expres- “y are hhamne in hate ine TY) yo 97? >t] You ar happy in his Jove, Uldene? ; R itledge and the doctor watched un «)) - — ini és wee sa a! ; cS she said, w stfully : let me hear you seeching, scared, troubled look of the say so. dear. dim eyes that never for s moment left | | } i “Il am more happy than I can tell you. Verlie,” she answered, raising those dark, starry eyes to the blne ones. heavy with unshed tears. “‘] phim so well that if I were to lose him it would kill me, or I should lose my rea son. From that moment heroic, noble Ver- lie put all thoughts of Rutledge Chester from her. What it cost her, only Hes and the listening angels knew, who heard her pitiful prayers for strength and saw her despairing tears. But even then—even tihe of her own misery—she was glad Uldenc was happy: that thought was her one consolation in those bitter hours of an guish when she fought-such pitiful bat tles with her own heart—to out the love that had built its altar there. How she longed to go away—to creep back to the shelter of the old light-house —fling herself on her mother’s bre vst and die there. Oh, fatal was the hou in which s had drifted away from that island home, out into the sreat, world, where she had met 1 : } , eo . >.> lish day~ireams, hand SO D iieen iove yen at cost crush he lonely hard the hero of Rutledge Chester, .and learned to love him. When Mrs. Chester was removed to her room and a physi } . or her gil 1 Some Man summoned, it Was discovered that she had been stri en with a severe fit of apoplexy—partl) paralysis, induced by some great mental! sh ck, “There was no hope,” ‘the doctor sai and advised them to « Se I Chesier \ th ul del; ie ] possible, for, only a few days the senator had been catied su abroad by a very important affair of the state, and it would be quite a W ee before he reached port :.and found cablevram AW il ing him aa aiecliaaleeeniatoetinnenanssiberadias When a woman get nervous, fretful and desp nae it th - husban the faintest conception of what is the matter, When gets worse, and he final- ly realizes that i) health of some description has something to do she some obscure neighborhood doc- tor The are that the doctor says it’s stomach, or liver, or heart trouble. Nine times in ten he isn’t within a mile of He treats for these troubles and charges big bills until the husband gets dis- gusted and throws hitn out. a he trouble is usually weakness of _disease of the dis- tinctly feminine organism. — ; Many husbands, after paying big doctor- bills while their wives grew steadily worse, have at last written to a physician of na- tional reputation and learne i the truth. They have been justly indignant at the ig- norant pretenders who have experimented noon their wives’ health. By writing to Dr. R. V. Pierce, any ailing woman may receive the free advice of an eminent and skillful specialist, for thirty years chief cons«alting physician to the Invalids’ Hotel and Surgt- cal Institute, at Buffalo, N. ¥. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescriptton is a marvelous med- icine for women. It enres all weakness and disease of the organs distinctly feminine. It heals all internal ulceration and inflam. mation and stops debilitating drains. Ove? g0,000 women have testified, aver their ows signatures, to its wonderful merits. “For several years I suffered with prolapsus of the uterus,” writes Miss A. Lee Schuster, of Box 12, Rodney, Jefferson Co., Miss. “I had a fall from my horse, causing retroversion of the uterus. Our family physician treated me for kidney trouble and everything else but the right thing. I grew worse and worse. My bedy was emicat hands and feet clammy and cold, stomach wren with great palpitation of the heart. I drea for night to come, for I would suffer from neusea all night, and so I continyed until I ta sing Dr. Pierce's Favorite Preéseription, and ? begas to improve right away. Iam now well and happy." Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets regulate and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels. chances right. doesn’t have | with it, he callsin | — the face of her idolized son, as thovet there was something she was constant: ly and vainly trying to communicate to him, “You have something to say to mother,” he said, at length. “Would Heaven you tell me what how hard the hips tried to articu late; but they only quivered convulsive ly and gave forth a litle moaning sound. me, to v9 S. could Se Oh, But in the lighting up of the eager eyes which grew larger and brigh Rut- ter, ledge thought he read an answer to what he had that she had something on her mind which she was vainly trying to communicate to him. As death drew nearer the agony of the expression in the eyes never left Rutledge’s face, and seemed almost leap from their sockets in horror, deepened. Said at times to What was troubling his mother go, forcing out great drops of perspiration about her lips and forehead, making her pitiful to behold. ge felt sometimes as if he ghastly face Rutled would go mad, sitting there by her couch, with those wild eyes watching him so intentiy, that, if he moved away for a moinent, they called him back by their strange power, and compelled him to Jook aight into their depths, where che unspeakable trouble lay struggling to fiee itself, “Mother,” he said again, “you wish to tell me something, and you cannot. Perhaps I ean guess what it is: at least, an try. If you answer my question the affirmative, turn your eyes to the f ft r dJanging over the man- if you mean no, look into my face you are lo gt Do you under: ‘There was a wan shadow of a joyous mile on the white, haggard face. Quick iwht the dying eyes turned to the } ut, Wi am W ; the token of asa nt He ew his mother comprehended, oy : u have on your mind { g faths he asked. No for the s ly gaze of the burn- ; s face \bout property?’ he questioned. _ the ! ul gaze was rivited on ! It ot that. } es ermng me, mother?’ be $ ish of lightning, the di a4 ve d to the portrait on Ah, yes! Vhat she wished con ed himseif. n he mentioned everything in his thoughts. Evidently he vet discovered what it was, uld not bear the unspeakable uy of those eves as auestion after question was answered by that silent “No.” “Is it something connected with any paper in your private safe, mother? he asked, at length, in despair, never dreaming that it was. To his unspeak able astonishment the eyes travelled quickly to the portrait. “If that is the case,” he said, delighted to have touched the subject that was troubling her at dast, “I will bring each and every paper I find im your safe to your bedside; and I shall soon discover which document it is that you wish me to see or read, and we shall soon decide what can be done about it.” The eyes fairly danced now. He could see the pupils dilate and the color deepen in them, as though what he had pro- posed doing relieved her mind infinitely. Rutledge arose hurriedly and waiked over to the safe, which stood in the curtained alcove, and in a moment more returned with every paper he found in it. One by one the laid them before her. until the very last paper was reached. Something like horrible despair shone in the wild eyes raised to his own. He went to the safe and made another careful search, to see that no dveament had supped behind the tlars, “There is po cther paper in the sate mother,’ he said, retuiuing to the bed- side. “Are you sure the document jou wished me to see was put in the safe?” The eyes fairly leaped from their i | } sockmhs to the portrait with a (Np H-LLC Yes,” while greet drops of aony rol lve rain down fhe ghas ty “Et you are sure you put 0} there, there is but one scancdus' ) ar mve at,” he said. “Some-one must have removed it who knew é@t, aud was in terested ip it.” Of course Rutledge had his fath« his thoughts as he Ole He wis | prepared for the ble nd iden Change that came over his mother. ‘The horrible shock was too much for her. “Oh, God that the thought must remain unbroken, And the horrible seovet remain unspoken by the swift and ubtl al of death,” \V hty isp ‘ ll Was ddeq rent from t¢ of ¢ She fell back upon th piils dead, (Wo. wi raw a veil. re over the enes that followed d%w%ring the next tmignt. Mrs. Chester was laid to rest in the nearbl tomb of the Chesters, and the errible re vel; bion she had tried. so nard to make was buried with her. It may as well be stated here, hat j the contents of that fata} letter had not been made knewn to the senator, ve sat by his mother's couch, he had im. | agined himself alone with her: but such was hot the case. He was never alune with her! | he would not find the paper : TY . : . ° ° cause Nefla Sefton had desired it so. lw fT r } 13 + Q 2 He: yen could have tolé how the ing woman regretted, on her death bihe on oe j ‘ : hat had not made a eonfid:n f her husband, that he, in turn, have warned her idolized, handsome son, fatal barrier that lay between him and beautiful, hapless Uidene, the girl-bride, whom fate had decreed must never love, for she must never murry During those hours Rutledre of the Chester Behind the velvet hangings of the bed crouched a girlish figure, who listened with bated breath, to every word that fell so musically from Rutledge Chest: er’s lips. It was Uldene—his bride. She knew what paper the dying mother longed so ardently to place in her son’s hands. Uldene knew, too, that | Mark Sef ton’s letter—in the safe; for at that mo ment it was hidden in her own bosom, against her own wildly throbbing heart, The situation was cruel. But in the hour of Mrs. Chester’s death, Uldene cried out, im the secrecy of her own room, “that Heaven had spared her. If Rutledge’s mother had been given the power of speech, she would have divulg: ed all, and that would have separated ber from Rutledge forever.” (To be Continued.) how shall I do it? In the only com- mon sense way—keep your head cool, your feet-werm and your blood rich Then all your nerves, In the | muscles, tissues S p vi n g properly nourished. Hood’s Sarsaparilla petite, tones the stomach and gives strength. It is the people’s Spring fects more cures than all others. True Blood Purifier. C. I. Hoop & Co., Lowell, Mass. Easy to say, but Ww i and pure by taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla. and organs will be builds up the system, creates an ap- Medicine, has a larger sale and efe Sarsaparilla o.oo ———— ee Hood’s Pills are the favorite family gathartic. Price 25c. é WEAR the celebrated CORSETS To be bought from all leading dry goods atores, SI MIRE SRS SES STII BSE ES SEES SE Se EE 2 STITT 7 ; ! | A CARD. The Phetogranhic and Crockery basinese espried on bv tre late Crene Lewia will] 4 he the understonsd, at the ‘ CQ tnm s! tand vb Gratt n * Yee! Poavkirgte po ] > for pas favers and Looping for we Cullit Usoce uf ne same, TS ES SIS SE = 1 1 ‘< 1 66 1 éé 1 “c 1 be “é 1 Hall Stand 1 ce 1 cc 4 6< sé e¢ | « ac oe 66 1 1 sé 9 oJ <> 66 vo 1 “ec RPP TI ES ce 1 1 6s 100 odd I remain, respectfally veurs ga » ISABEL LEWIS. 1 Sideboarc at at at at at at at at at at at $7 at a at CRETE EO ES ee CR ee at $50.09, was $75.00 1 Bedroom Suite . és » was 51.00 40.00, 35.00, 37.00, 32.50, 30.00, 20.00, 17.00, 50, 50, 50, 00 Cod ors at 35.00 at 32,50, was at 19.00, was at 17.20, was at 17.00, was at 13.00, was Extension Tables at $6,090 was $7.75 5. 4 at at In stock taking last week we found some lines of furniture we had ceased to make, and as our Faetory is crowding new patterns on us, we must make roon, low should make quick clearance for us, and profit for the buyers, FOR “’ CASH ‘ ONLY Parlor Suit at $4500, was $65,00 The prices be- 60.00 50 02 50.00 45,00 40.00 25.00 22.00 was was was was was was was was $11.00 was 10.50 was 8,50 was 400 45.00 24.00 22.50 2L.OV 16.00 was $29.00 was 1? 5d) was 9.00 EOE er} PRs ee RSME ~ ; OY) W ioS 6 ye @ We i292 Was 0.50 SAREE. OE ee at at 23.5 9 (about) odd chairs, 1-3 off, Lo pieces — Whatnots, Cabinets, Screens, Umbrella Stands, Music 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, nme Se“ MARK WRiGhI AND CO HOME MAKERS GSH e* SE 1.549085 , 23.090, was 2 13 Odd Centre Tables § off. 7,Odd Luunges } off. SANUS 1 Diningroom Set at $30.00 was $40 00 27,50, was ocr 36, 0% 7,50 _— k ire Stands, once ecm OEE ENTS: LS ee A a Ri Blane ies emreens SR GE ES a Mm i ict a PE Se AE Nina COO CRE cet Si aN nen ir ies i aa ae tiaiians aria atin ati tal iin