ee 5 ae yes?” oo ~s THLE DAILLY Johnson’s Anodyne Liniment ton ea , toa | ot! , ; 5 : D JOHNSON eases 8.0 mee mat sbi it will Aa tea NR dag — i agen tent lans everywhere. nm infancy to old age. ton after generation. n of a good old family physician, “i genera | quickly relieve, heal and cure, and Care of Sick Room,” i & CO., 22 Custom House Mailed Free. Street, Boston, Mass. . — i . onl ———— THESE BRISK LITTLE PILLS ARE EXACTLY WHAT TU ALWAYS NEEDED iW ait cacrs of CONSTIPATION, SICK HEADACHE, BiLiOUS ATTACKS ane DYSPEPSIA. GSOLo cvERYWwHERE AT 25c. aeox. DODD'S MEDICINE COMPANY, Prorercrons, TORONTO, ONT. a We can vel: you Lodd’s Kidney Mil'isattn | gollowing prices, vz Sec per box, «x boxes | qor $2.9) To the trade- 3 per dozveo or bree dozen at S.7iperdoz:n. Sent by mail to apy address, post paid, GEORGE E. HUGHES wey Chariotic wn You may get over that slight cold all right, but it has left its mark on the mem- branes lining your throat. You are liableto takeanother cold and the second one wiil hang on longer than the first. Scott’s Emulsion is not «un ordinary cough specific, but it is “‘the ourice of preven- tion.” It builds up the system, checks inflammation nd heals inflamed mem- branes. “Slight” coids never bring serious results when it ij promptly taken. Book on the subject free, 8 SCOTT & BOWNE, Belleville, Ont. eSesSesescs mo more than inferior kinds are sold for. eSeseSesrSeseseSese It pays you to get CLAPPERTON’S THREAD. , fj Ask your Dealer d FOR A SPOOL OF THREAD f and he will give you the kind he makes most profit on-- and small blame to him. But ask him For a spool of CLAPPERTON’S THREAD, and you'll get the kind that will give you most profit and satisfaction — and it costs j Does not break or snarl. Sesesesesesesesesese EPPS'S COCOA ENGLISH BREAKFAST COCOA Possesses the following Distinctive Merits: DELICACY OF FLAVOR. SUPERIORITY in QUALITY. GRATEFUL and COMFORTING to the NERVOUS or DYSPEPTIC. NUTRITIVE QUALITIES UNRIVALLED. in Quarter-Pound Tins and Packets only. 2525 Prepared by JAMES EPPS & CO., Ltd., Homcopathic Chemists, London, Evgland. » HA “ff | Before =<" 4 . sy © mi Starting AAO i A \ ‘\ Cn a journey, lalways so provide myself with i ci" a y of Adams’ i Pat i Fn I find = ; } x eep lige stion a right, and with it I : » Can enjoy travel b i x a) land and by sca ' ' — : : s —— “ce that the trade Marx nane Tutti Frutti ive pers for Latest Books, Etc, coupons inside of wrap- 129 nee aes Miss Margaret H, Chisholm, STU DIGO:—Morris Block. VOW, U util July lst; 1897, 8008 in Water Color, Vict oria will give les- Oil, Tapestry, and China Painting. CLAKKSOn’s ~~ PRKIL By WALTER BRUCE ~S (cor tinued) Very calm, but deadly pale, appeared the accused as succeeding witnesses ad- duced fresh incriminating evidence. The counsel allotted Clarkson strove man- fully, but his cross examinations did not shake the testimony en primary points. The case went against the accused from the beginning. The evidence was clear and strong. The notes and the watch of the murdered man had been found in possession of the prisoner, whose revolv- er had been picked up afew yards from where the body had been discovered. Several witnesses testified to his having rushed into “Beauty's Bar” late on the eveniug of the murder looking wild, haggard and excited, like a man who had committed or proposed committin, ' some crime. The landlady swore to his having re- turned to the house at 3:30 in the morn- | ing looking very white and strange, asif he had recently gone through some very exciting scene. More than one person knew that Clarkson had owed the rich unscrupulous merchant a grudge. Closer | and closer the chain was tightening about his neck, and as proof upon proof of his guilt was adduced a peculiar and omi- nous silence settled upon the crowd of listeners and spectators. » ‘TOM, YOU WILL YET BE SAVED.” after a time Tom had ceased to listen to the evidence—ceased even to feel that the gaze of so many eager and curious eyes were upon him. His thoughts had wandered sadly to his old home, his moth- er, his sister and the old days long ago— long ago, when his heart was young and the love of gold had not tempted him te leave the abode of his youth. Then he thought of Minnie. Was she here listen- ing while they swore away his life? This thought brought him with a bitter pang back to the agonizing present, and again he heard the questions and answers, each one of which now seemed to close the doors of hope more firmly upon him, Avain he felt that hundreds of eyes were gazing at him. Was she there too? Yes, he could feel that she was near, although he conld not see her. This circumstance was perfectly explicable. The proceedings were necessarily part- ly in the official language of the conn- try, but many of the jury were well con- versant with English, and every oppor- tunity was permitted the accused to rebut the damaging evidence. He was asked if he had anything to say, and Clarkson repeated his story simply and truthfully as before. He had nothing to conceal, though the truth could help him little. He knew well the evidence against him, circumstantial though it might be, was too strong. Judge, jury and listeners all appeared quite convinced of his guilt, Very calmly and with an unconscious pathos he told the story of his futile ef. forts to obtain employment, his hopeless misery, his reckless resolve to spend his last shilling and purchase that which should render him oblivious of his suf- fering for a time. He told how he had gone into the bar and how the music had created calmer and better thoughts and saved him; how he had gone forth into the street again, and worn out by hunger and fatigue had lain down and slept until morning. The notes and the watch must, he said, have been put into his pockets while he lay on the stoop. He was innocent, he asserted, and in the presence of God he could only repeat it. The court and the crowd were skep- tical, and few of the latter appeared to sympathize with the accused in the slightest. The jury retired, and a painful silence fell upon the Court. In a few minutes tue Jurymen returned, and their verdict could in a sense be felt before it wus given. Very slowly and deliberately it came, ‘‘We find the prisoner guilty.” Noone seemed surprised, and certainly not the pale young prisoner himself. Not surprised; but, oh, how bitterly fell upon his ears and heart the words that con- signed him to a doom of sudden and shameful death! In a low, calm tone the judge pro- nounced the awful sentence, and the prisoner was about to be led away when it was seen that some one was struggling through the crowd toward him. It proved to be a young girl, with wild looking eves and a face the picture of de- spair. It was Minnie Colbeck, and ina moment she was beside her lover. The policemen offered no obstacle. Indeed they appeared to fall back involuntarily. She looked so pale, so fair and so un- earthly that she might have been a spirit from the other world confronting them. Clarkson gazed upon her, but his white lips remained unmoved, and he uttered not a word. “Tom,” said the girl in a voice so low that he only heard it, “‘you will yet be saved. They cannot take your life. You shall not die for another's sin, Heaven will not permit such cruel injustice.” Minnie spoke as all inexperienced people speak on such matters,women especially. Clarkson did not speak. He knew that with the first word he uttered all his self command would desert him. He took her little cold hands in his and held them for a moment as we hold hands that we never expect to clasp again in this world. And with one look into her sorrowing eyes—a look that seemed to bid her an earthly farewell—he was led away. Among the passengers who left Johan- nesburg by the early coach for Pretoria on the day following that on which Thomas Clarkson’s death sentence had acuet mt Drawing from Nature. attending oe hours for children 2-~déw 4w N been pronounced was a girl who, thickly veiled, sat in a corner of the coach with bent head, clasped hands and melan- choly mien. It was Minnie Colbeck. She had made a desperate, firm, though wild resolve to go to the capital, see President Kruger and plead for the life of Thomas Clarkson, Only a woman would have carried out such a resolu- tion. The coach traveled at the utmost speed of eight spirited horses, but to her heat- ed and impatient fancy it seemed to crawl along the smooth, dusty road. It was still early in the day when it dashe:! into the streets of Pretoria. Half an hour later Minnie stood at the gates of the presidency, an unpreten- tious, ordinary looking residence in a quiet part of the principal street. Her heart beat, her hands trembled, and her whole bodily framework shook so vio- ' lently that she could gearcely trust her ' voice to ask for an interview with his honor. That morning the executive was sitting at the presidency, as it occasien- ally does, and Minnie had to wait a long time before the president could give her an audience. Every minute seemed an hour to the anxious girl. She had been conducted toa small room, which seemed so oppressively silent that she could al- most hear the beating of her own heart, Presently there was a firm, heavy step heard, and the president, pipe in hand, homely and kindly in appearance, en- tered the apartment. Minnie does not know to this day how she told her tale, what words she spoke or what argument she employed. She remembers that when she had finished speaking she looked earnestly and intently at the countenance of the president. His face was stern and sad, but there was a kindly look in his eyes and some sympathy in his voice as he said (His honor can speak good Eng- lish when he likes): “Jt cannot be, my child. The jury have found the young man guilty, and the judge has sentenced him to death. It is not for meor my executive to interfere with their decision.” “Oh, your honor, but he is not guilty!” went on the girl with feminine logic. ‘‘I know he is not guilty, He does not de- serve to die. Do not permit such an act of injustice to be perpetrated in the land. He is innocent.” “The jury have found him guilty,” re- plied the president kindly, but firmly. “I pity you, my poor child, but I cannot do what you wish.” “The jury are but men. They are not infallible,” answered Minnie passionate- ly. ‘Oh, your honor, for the sake of justice, for the sake of all that you hold dear on this earth, for your hope ef heaven, be merciful, that you may de- mand mercy for yourself at the throne of grace! Pardon him, pardon him!” She flung kerself at his feet and raised her white face with such an agony of suppli- cation that the president was moved. Sentiment seldom moves this fair minded ruler, and only at his religious exercise: has he for a long time been known to ex- hibit emotion. “I would do what you ask willingly, gladly, if I thought it right, but I donot think so. To pardon this young man would be to emcourage crime in the state. Besides I have not the prerogative alone. It is shared by the executive.” “But he is innocent. I know he is.” “The jury found him guilty, and the judge condemned him to death. People would say, and justly, that we did wrong to reverse their decision and pardon a murderer.” ‘He is no murderer! And he is so young, and he hassuffered somuch, and I love him, and”—here her voice broke, and she buried her face despairingly in her hands for a moment, the president meanwhile sitting in deep thought. Then he rose and abruptly left the room. Min- aie waited, bewildered, agonized, for a few minutes. Then the president returned, bearing in his hand a slip of paper. Minnie’s heart reached her mouth, if there isany- thing in the phrase. “IT have seen my executive,” said the president. ‘*We cannot pardon him and set him free as you wish, but his sen- tence shall be commuted. Gre this to the landdrost tonight. He shall hear further from me.” Minnie took the paper from the presi- dent’s hand, scarcely able to repeat the burning words of gratitude that rose to her lips. “I cannot thank you asI hould,” ehe murmured, “but 1 shall never forgei your goodness, and God will bless you forever.” She took the big hand of President Paul, pressed it reverently to her lips and was speedily gone. Once more in the coach on the way 0 Johannesburg, Minnie’s tears fell fast, but they were tears of gratitude, thank- fulness and joy that she had so well suc- ceeded in her mission. Arrived in Johannesburg, she lost not a moment in seeking the landdrost, to whom she handed the president’s paper. (To be Continu ) D. S. Doan, of Clinton, says: ‘‘ Da. CHase's Oimrmenr will cure Salt Rheum when all else has failed; believe what I say and try it. Don't go on suffering for years as I did.” aye AS 1 suffered with piles for years. rs Outment completely ured me. fs. , F segus. ~~ ™ Mrs. F. Pearson, Inglewood, Ont, , says: ‘‘My baby, five months old, had eczema very badly on his face and head. 1 procured two boxes of the Ointment and when they had been used all signs of the disease had disappeared.” A mountain has been Alaska which is 20.000 feet high, and has t e loftiest summit on this continent. What must the thermometer register on top of it? | discovered in i TVVITV TTT TV TT YTV VV YTV YY YY YTV YY YY Very j The D. &L. Emulsion Is invaluable, if you are i VEVYVVVVTVYY YY YY VrTTY + down, as it is a food as well as a medicine. The D. & L. Emulsion = ound yop up if your general health is mpaired, The D. & L. Emuision Is the best and most palatable preparation of Cod Liver Oil, agreeing with the most deli- Cate stomachs. : The D. & L. Emuision * fg ae Reneet by the leading pbysicians of VVVVV ITY? PrTT Te VVVV FTV IVT TTY The D. & L. Emulsion ; Is a marvellous flesh d will aoe producer and will give 50c. & $1 per Bottle TITTY TTTTTY Be sure you Davis & Lawrence the See & Lamnsuee Co., ave. ae a tourmean | INJURY AND NEGLEOT. He Failed in Health and strength —His Kidneys Achéd and he took Dodd s Kidney Pills 8 (special). —Among and especially by his interest has been Desoronto, Ie!. business people here, fellow workmen, great : taken in the case of Mr. James Stokes, who for the past | fifleeu years has beens shipper for the Rathbara Comtany. Lately he had run down in health and strength to the polnt of being comy ciled to auit work, and his recovery now as the result of using Dodd’s Kidoey Pills is the talk efthe (town. On seeing Mr. Stokes he said: : “From over-lift ag and strain I suffered reatly from kidoc vy trouble, being advised, after all else had tailed, tu Dodd’s Kidney Pilis. From the first dose I got relief, and hundn ds of peop'e here can vouch fer my cure ° £ mse Lady of the Hou-e—Li-ten, Charlotte. T am going to give a party, supper and a dance. Now,jvou will have to «now what yon ean do, so as to keep up the credit of establishment. liching, Burning Skin Diseases Cured For 35 Cents. one Seald Ulcers, St jite Dr. Agnew’s Ointment relieves 39 dav and cures Teter, Salt ithenm, Head, Kezema, Barber’ lich, blotebes and all eruptions of the is soothing and qweting and magic in the cure cf ail baby vkin. acts humors; 3} cents. Cook— Wit, peasure. ma'am, but I can only dare: the waltz ard ‘he polka. You will have to exen-e me from the qut- dril'e .—Lyvstige Blatte Piies Cured by Dr. Chase. I. M. Iral, 186 Drolet Sireeet, Mont- rea!. 15 vears suitered. Cured of Blind Itching Piles. William Butler, Possarcan, Ont, Sutter- ed many months. Care of Protrading Piles by one box. Pabano Bastard, Suffered for 30 years. Piles by three boxes Nelson Simmons, Myersburg, Oat., cared of liching Piles. Dr. Chase’s Ointment will positively enre all forms of Piles. Write any of the above if in doubt. Gowrr Point, Ont. Curd of Itching Wife Tommy doesn’t sem to be afraid of pplicemen. tusband—Bhy should he? was a very preity girl. - Life. His nurse The Lite of Dr, Chase, As a compiler of Chase’s Rec ipe Baok his name is familiar in every }.2usehold in the land, while asa physician” his works on simple formulas left an amprint of his name that will be handed down from generation to geveration. Hie last great medicine,in the form of his Syrap of Linseed and Turpentine, is having the large public patronage that his Ointnent, Pills and Catarrh Care are having. Dr. Ccase’s Syrup of Linseed and Turpentine is especially adapted for all Bronchial and Asthmatic troubles. Friend—W hat is your father doing 0, Jimmy? Jimmy—Father? Doiu? Le’s see. ‘This is Sad rdy. I s’pect he’s rrying to bor- rer a $5 bill about 10 v.—Cleveland t lan Dealer. Sa eas Testing Hi» Honor. Your druggist is h mest if when von asi Scott's Emusion he ulm for a bottle of gives you just what you ask for. He knows this isthe best formin which te ake Cod Liver Oil. “No,” mused Mr. Benedict as he sat down to do some rey a'ring on his clothee— “no, mardiage is pota failure. Waeal was single it was an awful (ack to thaead aneedile. Now ] have a wife. and she threads it for me.”—New York ?mse. A. Railwa) ) anager says = ‘ Iu reply to yor *»,aestion, do riy ehi’- dren object to taki .g Scott’s Emi ision, ] say No! on the co wary, they are ‘ond of it and it keers thea pictures of ‘aealth —-— Sir Julian Paunceforte and Secretary Olney signed the cor vention for the defini- tion by commission of the Alask an bewnd ary line. r a tins tinsel (VERY FAMILY SHOULD ANCW THAT Ia a very remarkable remedy, both for IN- TERNAL and EXTERNAL use, und won- derful in its quick action to relieve distress, PAIN-KILLER §2,27,"3% Sere Chills, Diarrhea, Dysentery, Cramps, Vhotera, and ail Lowel Complaints, PAIN-KILLER %,28". BEST rem- Pick ness, Sot Headache, Pain in_the Back or Side, Rheumatism and Neuralgia, is UNQUESTIONABLY the PAIN-KILLER BEST LINIMENT MADE, It brings sPFEDY AND PERMANENT RELIEF in all eases of Bruises, Cats, Sprains, Severe Burns, ete. - is the well tried and PAIN-KILLER ', 8 pot tet and Mechanic, Farmer, Planter, Sailop, and ic fact all classes wanting a medicine *!ways at hand, and SAFE To USE imtermally or externally with cértainty of relief. ware of imitations Take none but the genuine “PERRY DAVIS.” Sold everywhere; .5c, bg bottle Very large bottles 50 cents A Lumber Yard Without Lumber In it would be a strange ight. But we wouldn’t mind the lock of it if we sold every board, plank and stiek in ours before the opening of naviga- tion. There’s Money In Lumber But it’s hard to get money out of it unless we hustle for it. We will work hard for the next few months and will make it worth your while to buy your spri g¢ lumber now. _ . Come and see how we «o it. T icati elephone communication. JAMES BARRETT. YIM, VIGOR. VITALITY RESTORED IN 30 DAYS GOOD EFFECT3 AT ONCE. CATON’S VITALIZER. Cures general or special debili nsss, sperm atorrhoea, emissions, mpotoner, paresis, ete, Corrects functional disorders, caused by errors or ex cesses, quickly reator- ing Lost Manhood, or young, giving vigor am. aeons where former weak— 8 prev , Convenien effectual, and legitimate. en are Don,t be deceived by imitat CATON’S VITALIZER, Sent sabia haa druggist does not haveit Price $L per p 6 for with written guarantee of complete eure, Information, references, ete, free anu confidential Send us statement of cause an fora week’s trial 3° \ toeach person, CATON MED (O,, BOSTON,MASS dd treatment. One a AE AE NE A FIDLER WANTED. HE WAS FAME) AND AT DANCE MUSIC DID VERY WeCLL. Yun and Frolic fn a Washout on the Ore gen Short Line Milliongires and Imo. grants Aitend a Dance aad Paperience a Musical Surprise. On St. Patrick’s day, 1894, five throngh trains, bound both to the east- ward and westward of the Oregon Short Line of the Union Pacitic, were tied up at Glenns Ferry, Ida. They had been pinght between two serious washouts, tne at Pocatello and the other at Indian Creek, three duys before, and had to wait at Gleuns Ferry for track repairs along the line before they could proceed, Glenns Ferry isa bleak little railroad and sheep nerders’ town of 800 or 400 inbabitants, situate on a sagebrush bluff overlooking the unspeakably dark aud dreary Snake river. The five stalled trains carried 600 passengers of as miscellaneous a charac- ter as cousd be gotten together ata carefully selected congress of types ‘There were emigrants and millionaires, soldiers ou the move; dainty women in palace cars and women bound for Creede and Cripple Creek in day coaches; min- ers who killed time during the wait in shooting magpies circling over the Snake river; Shoshone Indians travel- ing to the Jimits of their reservation; well behaved and quiet people, noisy and tumultuous people. But all were etuck alike, and they made the best of it. Lines of scecial demarcation were for the time erased. All hands mingled easily ou the little station platform and in the little station waiting room. The supply cf food on the dining cars gave out the first day of the hitch, and every- body was fed, and well fed, too, in the station eating room. ‘They sat down at the tables in relays and patiently awaited their turns. The railroad employees and their wives were to give a dance at the little town hall on St. Patrick’s night. The switchman who had been customarily employed to fiddle for them had been switched to another division. In aquan- dary, the dance committee toured the trains and station to ascertain if any of the stalled passengers happened to be carrying a violin and was capable of producing music on it. In one ot the sleeping cars they came across an artistic looking man, with very long hair, a seraphic, oleaginous countenance and exceedingly baggy clothes. They were looking for & fiddler, they said. Did he know of avy on the train? Well, he didu’t know (in outrageously bad Eng- lish); be played a little himself once in awhile, and had rather a fair fiddle with him. The long haired man accent- ed the ‘‘fiddle’’ rather curiously. But thie railroad men were overjoyed. Would be play for them to dance with their wives and sweethearts? Certainly! Did he know dance music? Well, some. All of the stalled passengers were in- vite! to the dance, and they all went. A zood many of them could not get in. The beggily clothed fiddler turned up in gccitime. The pianist was waiting for him. So was the railroad dance committee, one cf the members of which slipped $3 in one dolier bills into the Sadler's hand ngs navment in advance for tha evening 8 Work. 15 Was amuung- ly acecptcd. The dance began. The lirex:an'’s wife, who played the piano, produced an old bethumbed violin and piano tune book znd turned to the lan- cers. She told tbe fiddler, at the end of the first dance, that he did pretty well, only be went too fast. Then there was a waltz. The fiddle? was informed by bis accompanist that he was getting along finely, and everybody in the room began to prick up his ears at the sweet- pess of the violiy music, although the dances Were common enough and tawdry enough. Another waltz—the ‘‘Beautiful Blue Danube.’’ All of the dancers on the floor stopped dead at the first bar, and the travelers with cultivated musical ears moved close to the piano. The pi- auist ceased. She wished to listen. The violin music was miraculous, The play- er swayed from side te side as he phras- ed. He appeared to ba oblivious of his surroundings. He improvised variations of inspiring tenderness. He out-Strauss- ed Strauss. His violin sang, throbbed with passion. When the last note died away, the people in the hall appeared to be in a dream—all but one. .- **M. Ysaye,’’ said Charley Fair, the son of the late Onited States Senator Fair, stepping from the throng, ‘‘won’t you play that lively, rattling thing you. gave us at the Bohemian club in San Francisco the other night? It’s been rnnning in my head ever since.’’ M. Ysaye played Berlioz’s ‘‘Pizzi- cato’’ as he perhaps never played it be- fore. — Washington Star. { “Bevery, did yon make that match be- tween Jack and Kitty?” “Not wuch; I never encourage young people to marry; they always expect me to give them a present.”—Chicago Record. GENERAL AUCTION. Let ali {be town and all the country send in all their Surplus stock to our General Auc- j tion We will turn all your idle goods into money ! and hand you the cash every day Our sale will include all kir ds of geods, dry goods, Clothing. Furs, Groceries, Hesdware, Drugstore Extras, Siverware, Furniture Harness. &¢ Nhis sale will continue aightly and every market day This will be a general c) aring sale with no reserve pri es And we wil positively sell everyihing that is sext to us Wo ar? now receiving goods and hope to be- gin our sale on Friday next, E, H. NORTON, AUCTIONEER. Feb 3 3i To Cure REECMATISM TAKE Bristol’s SARS APARILLA IT 1S PROMPT RELIABLE AND NEVER FAILS. it WILL MAKE YOU WELI Ask your Druggist or Dealer for it BRISTOL'S SARSAPARILLA. |HORSE CLIPPING, As the clipping season is now here arties having horses that they intend ving csip: » would do well tocall at Nicholsou’s Stables, Grafton St., where all work is done at moderate rates, a a ee ee A Tenderfoot’s Amusing Experience In a Washington Logging Camp. “My first experience at lumbering,” said acertain prominent citizen the other night, “was in making a bean hole. Of course you don’t know what a bean hole is. No more did J when I went up on Ram river in 1868 and applied for work in one of Washburne’s camps. I neglected to tell the boss that I didn’t know the difference between a gee haw and across haul, and maybe he took me for an all rounder at the business. Anyhow I was hired offhand, and the next morning the foreman said to me, ‘Weistling, you take Joe and Charlie here and go over to the new camp and chink up and build a bean hole.’ ‘Allright,’ I said, as cheerful as could be, and off we started. “As soon as we'd got into the timber I halted the boys and asked, *What’s this chink up the old man wants?’ Joe looked at me pretty hard and told me about tight- ening up between the cabin and logs with clay. ‘And what’s a bean hole?’ I inquired. But the boysseemed to be getting pretty tired about something. You see, they didn’t like the idea of being put under sucha greenhorm, and both claimed they didn’t know what a bean hole was. So I told them to wait there a minute, and I ran back to the foreman and said, ‘Look here, Mr. Cole, how big do you want that bean hole?’ ‘Oh, 6 by 6or8 by 8,’ be said. ‘And how deep do you want it?’ ‘Three or four feet,’ he answered. “Well, when we got the new camp we chinked the cabin all right, and then | measured off a space 8 feet square, and we started to dig 8 feet deep. I was going to carry out the boss’ biggest figures to show whatagood man I was. We dug all that day and it was hard work, for the soil was loose, and the sides of the hole kept tumbling in on us. When we got back to camp that evening the foreman asked me if I’d finished the bean hole, and I told him not quite, but we'll finish her up tomorrow. Toward noon next day we were pretty near through and we were smoothing the bot- tom of the sepulcher when the foreman showed up to examine progress. I didn’t notice him till I heard him roar, ‘What the-— are you fellows doing?’ I looked up, and there stood the old man with mixture of astonishment and indignation on his face. Then I knew something was wrong —I’d had my misgivings all along—but I answeredas coolly as I could thatI was making a bean hole. ***4 bean hole?’ he shouted, ‘a bean hole? Well, you come out of that bean hole quick, you blanked bean hole idiot!’ And then Le began to laugh, and I never heard a mau laugh like that before nor since. It seemed asif he never would get through, and of course it sounded very unpleasant to me. I soon learned what bean hole is. “You see they build a log inclosure about 8 feet high and 5 or 6 feet square and fill it with clay, In the middle they sink a deep hole and start a fire of maple sticksin it. When there is a good bed of coals, they put in a potof beans and cover it over with ashes and clay, and the beans steam in there till they are done and make the best eating you ever got in the woods. But the bean hole wound me upinthatcamp. The story went all through the woods and from the head waters of Rum river to Anoka, and there was so much snickering wherever I went that I couldn’t standit, Why, men came 10 and 15 miles from other caimps to get asquint at thechap that built the bean hole. So, though I didn’t make any more special- ly bad breaks there, I pretty soon called for my time and got out of the country.”— South Bend (Wash.) Journal. Dr. Chase Cures Backache, Kidney trouble generally begins with a single pain in tte back, and in timg dee velops into Bright’s Disease. Peopls. troubled with stricture, impedimentto 8 Oopige of water, or a frequent desire e’- urinate at night, wil! fied Dr. Chasip Kidoey-Liver Pills a blessing. Read * w: nderful cures in another column. Onr Pill is a dose, andif taken every other niglt will positively cure kidney t:ou dle. RINK TICKETS —_— Feb. Ist, a reduction ickets as iollows: On and after Monda will be madein Rink Gentlemen’s Ticket, $2 50 Ladies’ - 1/0 Children’s a 100 As February and March have always been good skating months the above rates will at Gace be r-eognized as very low ones for two montbs’ sk ee These reduced. t'ckets can only be obtained from the Managers J B DAWSON, A A BARTLEIT, Managers PYNY - PECTORAL Positively Cures COUGHS and COLDS in a surprisingly short time. It's a sci- entific certainty, tried and true, soothing and healing in its effects. W.C. McComser & Son, Bouchette, Que., report in a letter that Pyny-Peetoral cured Mrs, (. Garceau of chronic cold in chest and bronchial tubes, and also cured W. G. McCumber of » long-standing cold. 3) 41 Me, J. H. Hurry, Chemist, 528 Yonge St., Toronto, writes: “ Asa general cough and lung syrup or. t Pectoral is @ most invaluable preparation, has given the utmost i ion to all who have tried it, —— having spoken to me of the benefits derived from its use in their families, It is suitable for o!d or young, being pleasant to the taste. Its sale with me has been wonderful, and I can a‘\ways recommend it as a safe and teliable ce:.gh medicine.” Large Bottle, 25 Cis. DAVIS & LAWRENCE CO., Lrp. Sole Proprietors MonTREAL NOTICE. Thisis tocertify that the partnership here- tofore existing between the und-rsigned carrying on business under th style and firm of MeInnis & Th -rne,. bas on this second day ot February, A D., 159’, been dissolved by mutual consent. Dated this 2nd day of February, A. D., 1897, Signed in the preseace of James J. Johr- ston. ANGUS McINNTS, CHAS. E. THORNE, feb 5-Al Wants, Lost, Found &e Adve tisemente under this heading charge five cents ver line. ) ANTED—A cepable servantina family oftwo. No washing.—Apply at this office, as RDERS WANTED —-Mrs J J Trairor Imperial House, bas excellent accommo. dstion fora large numb rofboarde s. Ratts very reasonable 7 LET.—That beautifully tituated dwell- ing on Prince street. now occupied b © e urchison. Possession given about 25t October.—Appy to Peake Bros & Co —171tf _ LET.—A pleasantly situeted dwelling house facing south and west on Brighton Koad, at present occupied by Harrison Car- vell, Esq.. heated with hot air furnace, and lighted by electricity, and having hot and cold « ater fittings in bath room and kitchen. Containing parior, dining room, office, kit- chen and jan'ry, on grovnd floor, four bed- rooms and bath room on first floor,and two attic rooms, and having lawtiorne h dge and grass lawn in front. ten minutes’ walk from Post Office, five minutes from tennis ground and bathing house in Victoria Park— Apply toW.C NARRIs, JR. septlé-tf bagel A reliaple middite-aged woman of experienced to take charge of an In- fantina priva'e house. Apply at this — B- Weare By the 20th inst, a girl for gener al eo Apply to Mrs Bagnall, Graftoa St, West 33 3i pd UEEN VICTORIA: HER LIFE AND REIGN; great historic work, sells on sightto thousands, Lord Dufferin in- troduces it to Canadians in glowing words. Easy to make $ 0 0) a week some make twice thef. Many make more in spare time than during day at regular employme?t. —_ ws vear’s Great Sexagenary Celebrations tsooming it. Bookson time, Prospectus free tocanva:sers. Terri'ory eeing fast. THE BRADIEY GARRETSON Co, Ltd, Toronto, Cnt. © RENT—The convenient and pleasantly situated cottage and grounds at present escupied by the Misses Wr gnt, nearthe Gas orks Open for inspection +fter the lth inst.Apply atihe Gas Wcrks 2—24—li0 L° 3T on Wednesday 27th January on lower Prince Street or near Davies House, a brass harm jod bunting whip withlash —" TUESDAY FEBRUARY 9 1897. t T SS4244E4444SWAas44S444424 | WHETHER YOU BUY... 7°oc. blend You are getting the best value for yow money. FROM AWCICNT INDIA ano COWCET Ce.ion Isn't the Store hat Promises But the st: ze that does, that grows strong in the peopl-’s confidence. We weigh every word we print thoughtfully in the seals of fct. We measure every value we put before you careful- ly, as a result this is a “sincere store ” Every- body knows just what to expect, and expect just what they find, the very best atthe very lowest prices BeJroom Suits, from $15 ond up JOHN NEWSON THE BARGAIN GIVER FISTS TTT Tee ere TTT TTY FF FF FF FS SS eS SSS eS ee SSE Te Let HOW WE DO IT Highland — Rangs — — Made in Boston —SOLD ONLY BY— ey Fen--ll & Chandler Cher'ottetown, Inly 22. 1896—24 & wv Us whisper in Your E Listen! We buy our goods for spot cash, and give the customer the benefit of up-to date nine- teenth century methods. Our ciaim is the very best value in Boots, Shoes, Rubbers, Overshoes, Gaiters, Slippers, Leggins, &c. Talk about the purchasing power of a dollar acros the line, but if you want to know the real powes s of a dollar in buying Shoes, you will find it ou when yon see our prices. WEEKS & WARREN North Side Market Square. world. the best aliv lish Manures SUPERPHOSPHATES AND CHEMICALS Sole Agents for P. E. Island for THE BRADLEY FERTILIZER CO., the largest concern of the kind in the tnes2 well known MANURES, and can refer purchaser to many of our very best farmers who have been using them for years with very gratifying results. : We can also supply the same goods (Ground Slag) affered by our would-be competitors as “ English Fertilizers at at least 20 per cent less price than they now ask for it, but ot the same time we would not advise its use, believing that THE GENUINE EnGLisuh MANURES AS SOLD ONLY BY US are much Charlottetown April + 1896—2aw (25) & wky We have a large stock, on hand and to arrive, at ralue. Prices, Pamphlets, etc., on application. AULD BROS. pleasures warded uy leaving alcthis offve 3h pe Bissell FOR ONE WEEE SIMON YW CRABBE | Walker’s Corner Carpet Sweeper PRICE $2.50 See 'O2O868888 135 STOVES HARDWARE CARD OF THANES. For the many favors received from my numerous friends and customers during the year 1896, and wou!d wish them a hap- py and Prosperous New Year, and that they may all continue to buy and drink the celebrated Special Blend of Empire Tea. that I sell. Also as many more, invited to participate in the of drinking Empire B!end during 1897, T. J. MORRIS, Grocer and Crockery Man