THE, ‘ be ‘hth aa WDE wewree~ = ait enmueumaneweag » — Be on Your . | er tn ete : arareter eA e wa | eer: MP ge 1 THE BEST ts aiways imitated, Dodd's Kidney Pills, solid onty m bexes like this, are widely mite t ccamse are the = y ware. Take none a el, Guard! rw ~ 2]>62°94/° <2 63 ©6426 € — =e aa = pe ow | We are the original manufacturers of pertable \ apor Be ths. We have, duving the last ten years supplied tht sanlie of our Baths to physicians, hospitals, sanitariums, etc. and we are pow, for the first time, ad- vertising them direet to the generai pubiic. Get one with a ateel Irame IN BUYING .A VAPOR BATH Si"tneaoor Ifa manufacturer does not show you acut ofatrame withoat the covering you may take itfor granted that his “Steel fracne’’ is a wire hoop that rests oo the.sheuicer of the bather, Get one that is covered with proper material, Insist on seetng a sample of material before ordering We make eur own cavering material and print it with. wahandsome “all over” pattern or Niagarad alls. set one with a thermogecter attach- ment, Don': go it blind—a bath that istoo hot or not hot enough will be of no benefit to rou. Get one tixat you can eturn and ave your ,maney back if mat satisfac- tory in @€very way, Send for sample of materi] and In teresting booklet that will tell you all about Vapor Baths. Vapoet Datus are an ackpe viedged housuneid peeceesity. Turkish, Hot Air, Vapor, suiphur or Medicated Baths at Home. Sc, Purifies system, roducese!ea niiness, health, steongthb. ys eowents disease, @esity. Cures,Colds, Kheumatig Nevrealgia. LaGy'ppe, Malaria, Eczema, Catarrh,. Femag [lls Blood, Skin, Nerve and Kidney ‘bruu- bies. Beautidies Comgiexion, Price ot Niagara Baths, $569 The Kirg-Jones Co, ‘Toronto fe a NTS WANTED. O-> OD OD OD O'BRED OB SB OW O'S 6-2 OD © 4 O66B 62 BO 66 a a a J EPARTMEN AG WATCHER 490 lcw as to surprise ye, : SUNNYSIDE 250 .»» CHOICE: *** ~ARDas LEMONS Taanded to day. es64e203 <= 6<¢. * 0<Z)* 46} 46S Oe OD %- 2 9S96SHSBDIDED 9963 | —_— Unsurpassed for duraijity and timekeeping qualities, ¢ prices G. H. TAYLORS Valucia ORANGES CARVELL BROS!) | the little ' hears it but the young doctor, for the | attention of all the others is at the time DOO 71]D]O0£59S4666556 5 FP cones eosemiSeSS | Sareea eh a f PUSS C ba ~ a i = see no means of reaching the flow: } er, or I assure you I would gladly se- cure it for you.” “Ah! but a bold man would climb out there.” “Pardon—he would be a fool—his life would pay the penalty for a pretty girl's whim. Unfortunaetly, perhaps, my life is too precious to some one other than myself, to admit of the sacrifice. I am willing to do much for Lady Ruth, but I decline to be made a fool of.” “Well spoken,” Segins the professor. “Philander!” exclaims his spouse, and man draws in his head very much after the style of a tortoise. ‘Coward!’ ° The English girl is sorry as soon ws the low word leaves her lips. No one directed elsewhere. This time the object of her scorn dors not flush, but turns very white, as he looks her steadily in the eyes, T am sorry You have such a poor opin. ion of me. Lady Ruth. I make no apo- logies, save the one that my life is too valuable—to others, to myself it away at the mere caprice of a girl.” “There is a gentleman who finds a way to accomplish what he wants. Take aliesson from him, Docter Chicago,” she says. BY ST. GEORGE RATHBONE Author of ‘‘ Doctor Jack,” ‘‘ Dector Jack's Wife,’’ ‘*Captain Tom,’ ‘Miss Pauline of New York,” Etc. to throw | ad rae APRICE. # we ~ + | tingers to get t®® shawl] she—perhaps purposely—left behind, to say in a low tone: “T was cruel, forgive me—forget that foolish word,” and while what she nt- ters gives him a pleasurable feeling, vnd brings the color into his set face, he only smiles as he answers: “Willingly, Lady Ruth. I did net be lieve you could mean it.” Then, as the colonel busties up, the subject is tabooed, and the party of tourists proceed down the steep street leading to the Hotel Imperial. CHAPTER II. The scene, so peaceful, so picturesque, is rudely broken in upon by a clamor so strange and awful that the blood is ch'lled in the listeners’ veins. Cries are heard down the steep street; cries thaa indicate alarm, even terror; cries that proceed from children, women, ay, and strong men, too, Our party comes to a halt midway between the brow of the hill and the base. On either side tall houses, the declivity ending only at the water. Jt { is a bustling street at all hours, with loungers. business men, women going to and returning from market, and chil- dren playing as children do the world over, in the dirt. “What can it mean?” says Lady Colonel Lionel has noticed a long pole | near by, in the end of which is a cleft This he has secured, and, by crawling as far as is safe along the face of the rock, he is enabled to just reach the thower. After a number of ineffectual lunges, | he succeeds in clutching the coveted artide in the cleft of the pole, and draws it toward him. A moment later he presents the flow er to Lady Ruth, with a smile and 1 bow. “No English lady wish that a British officer did not bound in honor to grant,” he says. The gir) thanks him and then says: “After all, the flower was prettier af a distance than when in my hands.” Colonel Lionel hardly kpows whether he has made such a huge advance over his rival after all. ever expressed n feel The afternoan can wee + sink We must go down,” declares Aun wen. “One mere Took around and [ am ready,” says Lady Ruth. Already she is sorry for her cruel words. Like the best of women, sh can wound at one moment and be con trite the next. She finds an opportur itz, a minnte later. when the colonel =e at Work IN His LABORATORY. } Dr. A. W, ( HaAsk THE GATARRH GLUTCH | ee This Disgusting Malady is at the Throat ef Nine Hundred ia Every Thousand of Oar Country's Population, rhisis Not Hearsays itis Borne Oat by Care. fully ( ompiied Apa tistics of Diveases Most Prevatent—iis Deye.opment is Watched Carefully, Because ii'a 5° Sure a Fores runner of that Arch “oloch Of Disease— { onsum pilon—if Neglected, WiLL I SUICIDE? Chase’s While There's Life and Dr. Catarrh Cure There's Hope. | 7 | | ot had suffered #0 many years from catarrh that I don’t know that 1 will ever get it out of my remeinbrance. ne day, when f took of of the end- ws prescriptions given me by the \edien! mah t6 a druggist, I asked m hbiuntly, “Will this cure me, or NM it not? Or will it be like the t?” I was nearly desperate, I can you. The druggist said :— No, * as e ~ hing can cure catarrh. I have = * elf untll I often think of suicide. mA \ opium usualy to sleep it off.” I the prescription away unfilled and % home, thinking of what the drug- ad said about suicide, and I was S disheartened. I have that pre- on yet. One day my deliverance 8 A Jady told me she had suffered ses I had, and. pas nearly insane, at a rem known as b Chi c : actually CUl\er y had read a bt about Dr. s Catarrh Cure, but I felt to- wWatl.s I did toward other medi- cine{\4 no faith. I tried it as a I used two boxes of Dr. tarrh Cure, and found it s V. ROBB, Holloway, Ont. ' and the dog. Ruth, as she looks breathlessly dewn the street, No in their party can explain the cause of the excitement. They see people running madly this way and that as if panic-stricken. “By Jove! it must be a fire!’ sug- gests the colonel, twirling his whiskers “Nonsense! we should see the smoke,’ declares sensible Aunt Gwen. “You are right; it is something more one than a fire. The people are almost ernzed. ve seen such a sight in Chi cago, when a wild Texan steer got lcose and tossed things right and left,’ asserts the medical student. ‘That’s what's the matter. See! they point at something as they run! Look out for the bull!” eries Philander. Thus, in watching for a bulky frame in appear, they fail to notice the actua the disturbance. street is people begin ause of The wnere deserted, save to reappear below as theugh the danger were past, to re rppear 2nd shout afresh, as they waye hands. almast their Some one is shouting close to them now. They turn their heads and he heli the crowd of commissionair~s dashing headlong for the shelter of ed- jacent buildings. end acting like crazy men. it is Signor Giovani who shouts, first in Arabic. then in Italian and finally in English. They hear him now, and no wonder the blood rans cold in their veins it is.a cry to-alarm the boldest warrior mm earth. “Med dog! Run, signors!—save the ladies! To the houses or you are lost!” That is what the old fencing master of Malta shouts while he retreats. It causes them to tum their heads, end what do they see? Advancing up the middie of the inctined street, turning aside for neither king mor peasant,comes a great gaunt beast, his square head wagging from side to side, his eyes blood-shot, and the foam @ropping from his open jaws. Heavens! What a spectacle to rivet one with horror to the spot. Wortnnate ly.there are some people of action pre | sent. | Aunt Gwen clutches her infant ty the shoulder, and drags him along in the di- rection of the nearest house. “Run, Philander, or You're a gonem' Jt’s . Ww than the ite of a mad dog is. Haven’t 1 seen a bit ten man so furious that it required six to hold him down? Faster, professor! on your life!’ With that iron grip on his shoulder, poor Philander’s feet barely touched the ground whirled through space, mad or not, that overtakes Aunt Gwen and her jafant must be a rapid traveller, indeed. Thny they reach a house, and in another minute reappear upon a balcony, to witnesg a scene they will never forget. Lady Reth, though naturally quivering with excitement, has plenty of cavaliers t hurry her to a place of safety, Be sides, after that one first shock, she shows more grit than might have been expected of her. She allows herself to be hurried along. A strong hand grasps each arm; and if every one in the path of the mad brute were as well attended, there would be little cause for anxiety or alarm. Now they have reached a house, and safety is assured, for the hospitable goor stands open to welcome them. Already a number have preceded them, for they seem to be the last in the vicinity. Just as they arrive, the colonel, who appears imtensely excited. Is saying hoarsely: “Enter quickly. I beg, Lady Ruth.” She turns her head in curiosity for one last look, impelled by an unknown power—turns, and is at once petrified by what she sees- They notice the look of horror on her lovely face, and instinctively guessing, aleo cast a glance in the direction where Jast the savage brute was seen. He has continued to advance in the interim, and is now quite close, though ise snake poison, he aus ‘blower included. not moving out of the straight line in the center of the street—a lovking object, truly, and horrify the brevest. Colonel Lioacl gives a gasp. He it trembling all over, for it chances that this brave soldier, who has just led forlorn hopes in the Zulu war, and per formed prodigies of valor on Egyptian battle-fields, has a peculiar dread oi dogs, inherited from one of his parents. It is not the animal that has fixed Lady Ruth’s attention. Just in front and directly in line of the dog’s advance 48 a small native child that has been playing in the street, He cannot be over three years of age and with his curly black head and half- naked body presents a picture of robust health. Apparently engrossed in his play, he sees and hears nothing of the clamor around until, chancing to look up, he sees the dog, and fearlessly extends his chubby arms toward it. . (To be Contisued.) rep enough 1 A city business man, who gets to work at nine in the morning, takes an hour for lunch and leaves for home at four or five in the afternoon, little un- derstands the ‘aardships of the } life of the farmer, ‘who starts to work at break of day and frequently _ Works on into the night by lantern- light. A man to endure the hardships of a a. farmer’s life, must be robust physically at the outset, and if he would live a long life, always keep a watch- ful eye upon his health. He should re- member that it is the apparently trifling disorders that eventually make the big dis eases. It does not do for a hard working man to neglect bilious attacks or spells of indigestion. If he does, he will soon find himself flat on his back with malaria or crippled with rheumatism. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery is the best of all medicines for hard working men and wo- men. It makes the appetité keen and hearty, the digestion perfect, the liver ac- tive, the blood pure and rich with the life- giving elements of the food, and the nerves strong and steady. It builds firm muscles and solid fiesh. It is the greatest of all blood-makers and purifiers. It cures mala- rial troubles and rheumatism. It is an un- failing cure for biliousness and indigestion. An honest dealer will not try to substitute some inferior preparation for the sake of a little additional profit. ‘“T was a sufferer for four years with malarial fever and chills,” writes Robert Williams, of Kiowa, Barber Co., Kan. ‘ Four bottles of Dr. Pierce's Goiden Medical Discovery cured me and I now weigh 160 peunds instead of 130, my eld weight.” Costiveness, censtipation and torpidity of the liver are surely, speedily and perma- nently cured by Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pel- lets. They are titry, sugar-coated granules, One little “‘ Pellet’ is a gentle laxative, and two a mild cathartic. They never gripe. They stimulate and strengthen the jaded or- gans until aregular habit is formed and may them he discontinued without a return of the trouble. They stimulate, invigorate and regulate the stomach, liver and bowels, Medicine stores sell them, and have ue ater pills that are ‘‘just as good.”’ Charlotietown Sewerage. TENDERS FOR SEWER PIPES SEALED TENDERS endorsed “Proposed for Furnishing Sewer Pipes for Charlotte- town,” addressed to the uncersigned will be received at this office untill noo on TUESDAY, 4th OF APRIL next, for furnishing “toneware or Vitrified Scuwer Pipe and their appurten? nces accoid ing te conditions, specifications to be seen at the office of the ‘‘ommissioners of Sewers and Watersupply ‘or the City of Charlottetown Prince Edward Island or at the office of their Chief !nginesr, Freeman C., Coffin, E-q. 53 state > treet, Boston Mass Proposals must be onthe forms supplied from this office, add earth tender must be ac- companied by a certificate ban« cheque for Three Hundred and Fifty Dollars ($350) pay- able to the order of the said commissioners. This cheque will be forfeited if th e parties decline the contract or fail to complete the work econ’ racted for, wad willbe returned in case of non acceptance of tender. The siid commissioners do 1 t bind them- gelyes to accept the lowest or any tender, HENRY SMITH Chaitman fice of Commissioners of Sewers and Water pply, Chariottetown, P. E. Island,—Feb. 27, * Unparalled Bargains at Jurey & Co's ucetssful acrifice ale <y=" ‘ Look where you will, but dow’: buy un- til you get our ale prices. Bight day striking clocks from $2.50 up, warracted to keep time. Watches from $2.00 up. ? Silverware of good quality and nice de» signs, ai very low prices. Rugs, Broach~ es, Bleeve Links, Chains, Bracelete, Stick Pins, Lockets, etc, at reduced prices. Spectacles and eyeglaesss a cheap. We also have a nice line of Chinaware, Fancy Goods, Tey, etc. whiek wil! be sold at extracrdivary low prices to clear. Repairing attended to Clocks, Watches and Jewe lry. The obra Jewelry and Fancy Goode store of SURHY & CO. Sunnyside, opposite Post Offce CHARLUI'TETOWN, MARCH 15, 1899 << Seay SB, TS Be SD TEE IE kk SRE ; FROM INDIA & CEYLON Sees seco Its a Treat: 2e—Tio Drink “TETLEY’s”’ ‘“PpReM ANCIENT INDIA and SWEH CEYLON ' EAS —aEE Sold in lead¥packets only' te > $1.0 per lb, Always Best of Tea Values Se Seabee ea eee ek eee ee Office for Maritime Provinces 7 & 9 Bedford Row, Halifax, N.8 is TES TO STOO ee EE ET, ED Fe Sle SIGS I Neale a eaeaaea Wg ae Ss = a SS IF YOU HAVE MONEY TQ BURN Buy any kind of a piano that may be brought to your home: If you want to make a sure thing of it, CALL ON US and s-lect a Heintzman & So, Piano. They are the cheapest Piano after all, that you can possibly buy. Durability, quality of tone, ease of action and general ap pearanee considered. Sold on eary terms HEINTZMAN PIANO! The selection of a full size, Concert, Grand Heintzman Piano for the Ch’town School of Music is another of the many proots we can furnish of their superiority. MILLER BROS., The P. E. Island Music House Connolly Building, Queen St.... Tailor-Made vs. Factory-llade ! TT Take up the printed announcements of m»h«rs and importers of ready-made clothing,and kh # they strive to give emphasis to the ales d merits of their clothing th+y inv -: t.ll how nearly they approach to taile- d Here are some quotations — “Elegantly tailored.” “Cut and finished equal to ord +r. ed work,” Kqual in quality, fit, and finish to suits made tu order, cr similar statements. Then tailor—made clothes are different t» im ported facto: y-made, otherwise there weu'1 vv no need to make comparisons. If tui'cr nale were not the better clothes they would not be held up as the ideal to which the ready-made strive to 1each, The fact is there ie a great deal of differ« ence between a faciory-made imported suit anda tailor-made in style and dur- ability. The man that is indifferent ae to the appearance of his clothes when he buys them and when worn a month, may be Satisfied with a factory~made, but if he has regard to looks and economy, he will buy tailor-made garments. ho are not disposed to give the prices usually paid i ube Gide to special order, and are not satisfied with the imported ready-made clothing, we have mada, and are daily adding, Saits aud Overcoats of superior workman- ship that we are selling as low in price as imported makes of inferior quality. All Wool Oxford Tweed Suits, All Wool Serge Snits, $9.50 All Wool Worsted Suits, $9.50 DD. A. Bruce, MORRI3 BLOCK, VICTORIA ROW. $9.15 = NEGRO AEE LO TIONS I ES Te _ — “a3 ae OE ST cena ais De ee . . ae ry tie