“ghe comes from the past and re-visits my room s as she did then, afl beauty She lo k and bloom go smiling and tender, so fresh and ant yonder she sits in nby cane- bottomed chair Yany 4 man sits silent and alone ina pome of mourning and conjures up before gis eves the face and form of the woman Mt x0 was On z wife and a faithful pelpmate In thousands of such cases the gfe might still be alive and well and ppy. had the man beeu not only a good yysdand, but a wise adviser. Women grink from the ordeal ef consulting a physician _ They shudder at the thought ¢{ sabmitting to the obnoxious examina- gous insisted upon by most physicians. {n the majority of cases they have none of this hesitancy about consulting their gesbands A wise man will understand at moe that troubles of this description will gon break down a wontan’s general health fewill understand that a specialist of emi- gnce and world wide reputation should be frankly consulted at once. Dr. R. V. Pierce, gy thirty years chief consulting physician the Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Insti ute, at Buffalo, N. Y., is one of the most minent and widely-known specialists in geworld. With the assistance of a staff d able physicians, he has prescribed for gany thousands of ailing women. He hag fsovered a wonderful medicine for wo gen, that may be used in the privacy of #eir homes. It is known as Dr. Pierce’s i wyorite Prescription. ‘It cures surely, geedily and permanently,all weakness and disease of the distinctly feminine organism. fallays inflammation, heals ulceration, pothes pain, gives rest to the tortured grves, aud checks debilitating drains. e a lovis eee PPS'S GOGOA ENGLISH BREAKFAST COCOA Possesses the following Distinctive Merits: DELICACY OF FLAVOR. SUPERIORITY in QUALITY. GRATEFUL and COMFORTING the NERVOUS or DYSPEPTIC. NUTRITIVE QUALITIES UNRIVALLED In Quarter-Pound Tins only, Prepared by JAMES EPPS & CoO., Ltd., Hom@opathic Chemists, London, _Englend, Many persons .cannot take plain cod-liver oil. They cannot digest it. It upsets the stomach. Knowing these things, we hve digested the oil in xott’s Emulsion of Cod- lver Oil with Hypophos- ites that is, we have oken it up into little glob- iles, or droplets. We use machinery to do the work of the digestive gans, and you obtain the good effects of the digested alatonce. That is why you faa take Scott’s Emulsion. soc. and $1.00, all druggists. MOOTT & BROWNE, Chemista, Zoronte > ta For Sale. The subscriber offers for sale the fol rite. Properties, formerly owned by * late Richard Pillman, at French rer, New London, » A fara containing 25 aseres, all tdand ina good state of cultivation, pin to the south. Xe A plo containing 2 acrea, with dwelling house containing ll rooms Stew bars and wagon shed, thereon. there is also ther*on a store, complete Mth shelving, ete., and a granary. * Ove acre of land, across ibe read, psite the store, and building lot at the Toads, near the store. se properties are well situated in an finest localities in Prince Ed- ‘land for business or farming Prposeg ell, subscriber also offers for eale a ie house and lot at Kensington. ““s@ contains Ll rooms, and is ip Rod repair wa further particalars apply to Messrs, Charlot Morson & McQuarrie, Solicitors, flown, or to the owner, LAVINIA J. PILLMANS “a a 20 s, j3n0 Aver, Mats TO BE LET a —— ing eon King St, near Queen, contain tied fvea rooms = Also suop adiovning, i ly for @ grocery store. Ouse ints 0 let conjoiatly or separately. 00 the premises to the undersigned, MRS. JOBN McQUILLAN. ; ~Zipa JH& DAILY EXAM! A PRISONER’S RUSE, TOO MUCH BEST MAN, A BACHELOR WHO OFFICIATED AT HOW ROC ESCAPED FROM THE SPAN- ISH PRISON BY A TRICK, i | & Clever Pirate Who Won Freedom For Eiimself and His Companions by Forging | a Letter and Playing on His Captor’s Fears. Mr. Frank R. Stockton, telling St. Nicholas readers about ‘The Buccaneers of Our Coast,’’ describes the clever es- cape of Roc, the Brazilian, a famous pirate, from captivity among the Span- ish at Campeachy. Mr. Stockton says: When he was coming into the bay, Roc had noticed a large French vessel shat was lying at some distance from the town, and he wrote his letter as if it had come from the captain of this shop. In the character of this French captain he addressed his letter to the governor of the town, and in it he stated that he had understood that certain companions of the coast, for whom he bad great sympathy—for the French and the buccaneers were always good friends—hbad been captured by the gov- ernor, who, he heard, had threatened to execute them. The French captain, by the hand of Roc, went on to say that if harm should come to these brave men, who had been taken and imprisoned when they were doing no harm to anybody, he would swear, in his mest solemn manner, that never for the rest of his life would he give -juarter to any Spaniard who might fall into his hands, and he moreover threatened that any kind of vengeance | which should become possible for the buccaneers and French anited to inflict upon the Spanish ships, or upon the town of soon as possible after he should hear of any injury that might be inflicted upon the wafortunate men who were then lying imprisoned in the fortress. When the slave came back to Roe, the letter wes given to him with very particular directions as to what he was to de with it. He was to disguise him- self a# much as possible, so that he shoul’ not be recognized by the people of the place, and then in the night he was to make his way out of the town, and early in the morning was to return asif be had been walking alorg the shore «f the harbor, when he was to state that he had been put on shore from the French vessel in the offing with a letter which he was ordered to present to the governor. The slave performed his part of the business very well. The next day, wet and bedraggled from making his way through the weeds and mud of the coast, he presented himself at the for- | tress with his letter, and when be was allowed to take it to the governor no one suspected that he was a person em- ployed about the place. Having fulfilled his mission, he departed, and when seen again he was the same servant whose business it was to carry food to the pris- oners. The governor read the letter witha disquieteid mind. He knew that the French ship which was lying outside the harbor was a powerful vessel, and he did not like French ships anyway. The town bed once been taken and very badly treated by a little fleet of French and £ngilish buccaneers, and be was very anxious that nothing of the kind should bappen again. There was no effective Spanish force in the harbor at that time, and be did not know how many buccaneering ves- sels might be able to gatber together in the bay if it should become kuown that the great pirate Roc had been put to death in Campeachy. It was unusual for a prisoner to have powerful friends so’ near by, and the governor took Roc’s case into most ear- nest consideration. A few hours’ reflec- tion was sufficient to convince him that it would te very unsafe to take risks with such « dangerous prize as the pi- rate Roc, and he determined to get vid of him as svon as possible. He felt him- self in the position of a man who has stolen a baby bear and who hears through the woods the roar of an ap- proaching parent. To throw away the cub and walk off as though he had no idea there were any bears in that forest would be the inclination of a man so situated, and to get rid of a great pirate without provoking the vengeance of his friends was the natural inclination of the governor. Now, Ree and his men were treated well and, having been brought before the governor, were told that in conse- quence of their having committed no overt act of disorder they would be set at liberty ancl shipped to Spain upon the single condition that they would abandon piracy and agree to become quiet citizens. To these terms Roo and his men agreed without argument. They de- clared they would retire from the buc- ganeering business and that nothing would suit them better than to return to the ways of civilization and virtue. There was a ship about to depart for Spain, and on this the governor gave Roc and his men free passage to the other side of the ocean. There is no doubt that our buccaneers would have much preferred to have been put on board the French vessel, but Roc made, no suggestion of the kind, knowing how astonished the French captain would be if the governor were to communicate with him on the subject. S«= SURE you get wnat you war. when you ask for Hood’s Sarsapa- rilla. Unequalled in Merit, Sales, Curet. There’s no substitute for HOOD’S. Campeachy, should be taken as | } eustern FORTY WEDDINGS. Fee Why Lieutenant Prince Has Such a Fine Collection of Scarfpins—Each One of Them Is the Key to sa Romance—A Warning to All Young Men. Lieutenant Oscar Prince is rapidly ' peaching the age when his friends will stop asking him the question, ‘‘Why don’t you get married?’ and substitute for it, ‘‘How did it happen, old man, that you never married?’ Lieutenant | Prince is as acceptable as the average ‘man, and he has no antimatrimonial | views. He is, however, a victim of wed- dings, and therein lies the explanation of his failure to marry. One of the fin- est collections of scarfpins in this city may be found in his bachelor apart- ments, but no wife. ‘**My collection of scarfpins was be- gun about ten years ago,’’ he said, ‘‘and each one represents a scar more or less serious. They have simply made a pin- cushion of my heart. My case, I am ' sure, is an nuusual one, and I am will- ing to discuss it, that it may serve asa Warning to young men. Let me start with the assertion that I believe in the noble institution of marriage, and it was probably my advocacy of it while I was at West Point that suggested to a classmate—Brown—to write me to act as his best man when he got mar- ried. Let me see. The date on that pearl pin is 1387, isn’t it? Yes, that was Brown's little token. Brown had a fine wedding, and as I had been sta- tioned west at a God forsaken post since leaving the Point it was my first op- portunity to get at short range with girls. There are no girls like them, my boy, and don’t make any mis- take about that. ‘‘Brown was married in Newport, and we did have a good time. Let me look at that pin again. Yes, Ethel was ber name. You see, I have it tagged on the pin. Ethel wasa mighty fine girl —tall, good swing and a high stepper. We bit it off together in fine shape. Who was Ethel? Why, in this case, she was the maid of honor. We had a de- lightful week at Newport, and when I went back to my post I had Ethel’s per- mission to write to her. I heard the other day that her oldest hopeful was the star boy in a kindergarten.’’ Lieutenant Prince puffed his pipe hard for two minutes. “Ethel was, about as nice asany of them. We might have been very happy together, but for Jones’ wedding. I think it was Jones. Just band me that little clover leaf pin, will you? Yes, it was Jones. Here is the daté, 4888, and tagged to the pin is ' Maud’s name. You don’t understand. No, of course not. Yon haven't acted as best man or usher in 40 weddings. 1 thought a lot about Ethel while on the railroad traim that took me to Boston, where Jones married, and there I met Maud. There is something very demoral- izing about the associations of a wed- ding party if achap is at all suscepti- ble. The girls all rejoice with the bride, avd they are all in their best frocks. Somehow you begin to speculate about yourself, you know, and wonder hew you would appear as the bridegroom withbione of the bridesmaids as bride Maud was different from Ethel, more vivacious, and then she was short and Ethel was tall. On the night ef the wedding I asked Maud if I might write to ber. Dear Maud! I wonder what has become of her. I sent back all cf her letters and her pbotograph just a short time after Adams vot married. That is the pin in the cusbion—the one with the small diamond in the center. Adams was married three months after Jones, und I wes anusher. Those three montios were happy ones, and I shali always re- member Maud. I had been sent east just before Adams was married. and he icod’s Cure all liver ills, bilious- ness, headache, sour stom- ach, indigestion. constipa- tion. They act easily, with. out painor gripe. Sold by all druggists. 25 cents. The onlv Pills to take with Hood’s Sarennpartiia. For Evening Dress Women find the D & A Corset as well suited for evening — as it is for ordinary pu t gives ‘*chic’’ to the figure, without stiff- ness or discomfort. It is sold at Wear the D&A Corset. all things considered, | Pills R, CHAR .OTTETOWN APRIL 1 1898 “Sanled we tv De UsMer VECBUsE, aS 26 put it, 2 bad been 1n the game before. izry was her name at Adams’ wedding. ihat doesn’é describe her at all. No name could. She was just as attractive as Ethel and Mand, but different. We discussed very serious matters, did Mary and I, and I[ knew that she wasa girl who would make a sensible, think- ing man happy for life. ‘*It was a discussion of telepathy that made me forget Mand, that is a discus- sion and a subsequent attempt to experi- ment. Mary didn’t ask for ber letters back after Rogers’ wedding. I told Sal- ly—sho wag one of the bridesmaids, and a very joliy southern girl—all about Mary, and she said she didn’t mind. I came very near proposing to Sally, but by this time I had become a professional ; a8 an usher and best man,and since Sal- ly there have been by actual count 33 other girls, any one of whom might have made me happy. I felt after meet- ing each one of them that if I could only keep away from weddings my hap- piness might be assured. I could marry the last girl—that is, of course, if she would bave me, and they were all very sympathetic—and feel that Il was lucky. I couldn’t dodge the weddings, though. **A)l my friends are married now, and I have assisted in each caso. It got so that while I was at work I would unconsciously begin to whistle a wed: ding march. Walking in time to it made me slow cn parade. I couldn’t keep up with my company. I have, I am glad to say, dons my duty by my friends, but it has ruined me sentimentally. When I look at that collection of scarfpins, each one labeled with the name of a girl who was the only one in the world for me, I haven't the nerve to propose. I am a victim of circumstances. Now all of my friends are married and I am not likely to march again to that familiar old mesic. I have the finest collection of scarfpins in this city, but I am stilla bachelor. Let my examples be a warn- ing to all young men.’’—New York Sun. The English parliament has met on Sunday 11 times, the first in the reign of Edward iil, the last at the death of George II, ~~. tate, Sms Ax OLp Axp Wet. Tried Remevy — Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup has been used for over fifty years by millions of mothers for their chiidren while teething with perfect success. It soothes the child softens “the gums, allays all pain, cures wind colic, and is the best remedy for Dierrboea. Is pleasant to the taste. Sold by druggists in every part of the world. ['wenty-five cents a bottle. Ita value is incalculable. Be sure and ask for Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup, and take no other kind. ——— oe t “J For Coughs, Colds, Bron- Spruce a a | KERRY, WATSON G@ CO., Prornecrons, MONTREAL. i = ocean, ad i =) je 5 A : We are no’ going to move But we are selling Crockery just as cheap as we were. Special discounts on all Crovkery China and Glass now in stock, to make room for sprir g importations. Also:—First class Photographs made in all the leading styles, at the old stand, C. LEWIS Exactly opposite the Nort’s Side of Market House. Gerarton Sv aenr......... Italian Ware House Beal’s Corner Cor. Grafton and Ct. Geo. Sts North side Queen Squarre jules Robin Medicinal Brandy —_———— JOY & DAVIES. Wholesale Wine Merchants. For 10 cents” in cash or stamps, we will mail. you, all charges prepsid, a handsome metal box, size 5% inches long, 3% inches wide and 1 inch deep, filled with TETLEY'’s ELEPHANT BRAND INDO-CEYILON TEA, 50 cents per Ib. quality. The box alone is worth the money—the Tea it contains is worth more than the money. It’s Me ¢ delicious Elephant Brand Teas, and incidentally to offered as an inducement to make you acquainted with the see where our adver- i} tising is best read—and so kindly mention the paper, TETLEY'S LLEPHANT BRAND INDO-CEYLON 1% and 1 Ib, lead packets, be had from most ” $s Teas are soid only in bulk dealers in good groceries in Canada, At the price printed or each packet (25 cents to $1.00 pcr Ib.) they are considered to be the Best of Tea Values. never in and can TEAS ELEPHANT BRAND. JOSEPH TETLEY & CO. MONTREAL AS THAAHAARAARAARARAAAARAASA The Way to Get Good Reliable Whisky in Ges to Ask Some Reliable Dealer For 14 LeEMoINE STREET, e& eo guaranteed TEN YEARS OLD, and is stills in the Highlands of This rare old whisky is of the product the most noted Scotlaad. Once Tried, Always Used, Ask for the “Black Label MORNING DEW SCOTCH tA For Sale By All Licensed Vendor EERE EEE EEE EEE EEE EE PABARAAAAGHARSAARAASAAS RING OUT THE — BELLS. Hear what Madame Albani’s special uccompanist has to say about the BELL PIANOS Tue QuEEN’s, Toronto, Feby. 22nd, 1897 To Wuom iT MAY CONCERN: In connection with my visit to Canadaas Pianist to Madame Albani, I have had occasion to cbserve various makes of pianos, and have been much impressed with the advances which are being made in the art of piano construc- tion in this young and fluurishing country, One of the most recent instruments to arrest my attention—and I might say one of the best—is the well known “Bell” Piano. Its tone is admirable throughout, and the touch firm and responsive— just what we musicians like—in fact, an excellent piano in every respect. The new Orchestral Attachment (which I understand can be obtained on ‘Bell’ pianos only) is also an excellent feature, and one which will doubtless excite inter. est with all classes. I do not hesitate to say that I consider the “Bell” piano a good, honest instrument, and so recom. mend it to any intending purchaser. (Sgd.) ARMANDO SEPPILLI. (Conductor, Koyal Italian Opera, Covent Garden,) Pianist to Madame Albani, Canadian tour, 1896-7, For sale only at FLETCHER’S Piano Ware:ooms, Opera Hous? Building, T. C. P. Yeo. Agent at summer-ide, TIME IS UP © For winter shoes cf all kinds." Lay them aside, and greet the approach of spring with ajya‘r of new Oxford Tie Shoes. We have just opened 25 casas of new shoes in Chocolate, BlackJand Russets. d W. H. STEWART & CO London House Building, ht rere Re Re ao apni aa agen si ae» comin et Sg TE Gy ED ee St a <a es ene 5 caer SS oe ee ao Se ae atacent ions a ee — a a — eee wee — oe oie. car eemengpg natseng r en pee pees 8 als ERS EL a et EE ee ee ee