uYV IuVUVVe & 4 iin ail la Ma rT m ‘ , ” ° When you get to the roof use Our lamous wets Si Eastlake k ¥ . : . Fire, Lichtnin r £ a a st wcll—are nd Rust proof wrs, hee ; ; - : : ction iJ ; getting i ances, Uny never ’ | : sail. 3 ¥ Write us f information. | Betalii, a ee DTS ; gf Fe F fi A Mealy } bm Sus Limifed a % : SrTo 4 >, > —N_—_— a See if sHLUqenteSUsUeeRRgnSOON UUUERKREAAUUELREGOBELERETES BUSUETELSSTTEANANASANUAESEDEREADCSAMESERESLALIDES ETSI ESTE aie ceteeeeees ed mm . a . . iil sonnet . TGS TOURETTE TEP TE tere PULL Fier ieriee Op eee vee Pobesed sai Montreal Just one cent invested in a Post Card and directed to G. A. Holland & Son, Montreal, will bring you a neat sample book of their magaificent line of Wallpapers by return mail—free of charge—with special discount rates. = English Wallpapers Japanese Wallpapers Scotch Walipapers American Wallpapers French Wallpapers Canadian Wallpapers. = We are in touch with the leading manufacturers of the world and buy- ing in large quantities enables us, through the Press, to supply the people of Canada with a very ex- tensive assortment of Wallpapers at minimum prices. THE POST CARD. ———————_— In writing your card mention : Limit price Colors wanted Rooms to be papered Size of Rooms, G. A. HOLLAND & SON Established 56 Years Caneda’s Great Wallpaper Store 2411 ST. CATHERINE ST. MONTREAL. P.S.—Agents for the Dominion of Ca- nada for C. J. & G. G. Potter, Darwen, England. aaa ———— THE JHE PHANTOM RIC KSHAW. , age ) answer to my last mn 1 saw the infernal thing block- y path in the twilight The dead | fast and by short cuts unknown to ordinary coo¥es. I laughed aloud a ser | time and chk my laughter suddenly. for I was afraid I was going ! ! t nd for visible questi ing ! través ; ‘ cred mad. Mad toacertain extent I must have been, for I recellect that 1 reined in my horse at the head of the rick- shaw and politely wished Mrs. Wessing ton ‘‘Good evening.’’ Her answer was { knew only too well. I listened to id and replied that I had heard it re, but should be delighted if she had anything further to say Somo malignant devil stronger than I must have entered into me that evening, for | have a G..o recollection of talking the commonplaces of the day for five min- utes to the thing in front of me ‘‘Mad as a hatter. poor devil, or drunk! Max, try and get him to come home , Surely that was not Mrs. Wesstng ton's voice! The two men had over- heard me speaking to the empty air and had returned to look after me They were very kind and considerate, and from their words evidently gathered that I was extremely drunk TI thanked them ccnfusedly and cantered away to wy hotel, there changed and arrived at the Mannerings"ten minutes late | pleaded the darkness of the night as an excuse, was rebuked by Kitty for my unloverlike tardiness and sat down The conversation had already become general, and under cover of it I was addressing some tender small talk to my sweetheart when I was aware that at the farther end of the table a short, red whiskered man was describing, with much broidery, his encounter with a mad unknown that evening A few sentences convinced me that he was repeating the incident of half an hour ago In the middle of the story he looked round for applause, as profes- sional story tellers do, caught imy eye and straightway collapsed There was a moment's awkward silence, and the red whiskered man muttered something to the effect that he had ‘‘forgotten the rest,’ thereby sacrificing a reputation as a good story teller which he had built up for six seasons past I blessed him from the bottom of my heart and —went on with my fish. In the fullness of time that dinner came toan end, and with genuine re gret | tore myself away from Kitty. as certain as | was of my own existence that it would be awaiting for me out- side the door The red whiskered man. who had been introduced to me as Dr Heatherlegh of Simla. volunteered to bear me company as far as our roads lay together FEaccepted his offer with gratitude My instinct had not deceived me. It lay in readiness in the mall and in what seemed devilish mockery of our ways, with a lighted head lamp. The red whiskered man went to the point at once in a manner that showed he had been thinking over it all dinner time ‘‘l say. Pansay. what the deuce was the matter with you this evening on the Slysinm road?’ The suddenness of the question wrenched an answer from 7 bias .¢ I Wos aware ‘“Thot'”’ said L, pointing to it. . uiay be either D T. or eyes for aught | know Now you don't liq- uor Is: a8 wach atdinner Soit can't be D T There's nothing what- ever where you're pointing, though you're sweating and trembling with fright like a scared pony Therefore I concinde that it's eyes And I ought to a 9 * DAILY a 3.. me ? iN & uli re understand allabout them Come a! howe with me T[’mon the Blessinyut lower road.’ To my intense delight the rickshaw instead of waiting for. us, kept aout 20 yards ahead—and this, too, whether we walked, trotted or cantered. In the course of that long night ride I had told my companion almost as much as I have told you bere ‘*Well. you've spoiled one of the best tales I’ve ever laid tongue to,*’ snid he, ‘but [ll forgive you for the sake of what you've gonethrough Now. home and do what IF tell you, and when I've cured you, young men, let this be a lesson to you to steer clear of women and indigestible food till the day of your death. ’ The rickshaw kept steady in front. and my red whiskered friend seemed to derive great pleasure from my account of its exact whereabouts. ‘‘Eyes. Pansay—all eyes, brain and stomach And the greatest of these three is stomach You've too much con- ceited brain, too little stomach and thoroughly unhealthy eyes. Get your stomach straight and the rest follows And all that’s French for a liver pill I'll take sole medical charge of you from this hour, for you're too interest ing a pheacmenon to be passed over. By this time we were deep in the shadow of the Blessington lower road, and the rickshaw came to a dead stop under a pine clad, overhanging shale come cliff Instinctively I halted, too, giving my reason. Heatherlegh rapped out an oath ‘“‘Now, if you think I'm going tc spend a cold night on the hillside for the sake of a stomach-cum-brain-cum- eye illusion— Lord, ha’ mercy! What’s that?" There was a muffled report, a blind- ing smother of dust just in front of us, a crack, the noise of rent boughs, and about ten yards of the cliffside—pines, undergrowth and all—slid down into the road below, completely blocking it up. The uprooted trees swayed and tot- tered for a moment like drunken giants in the gloom and then feil prone among their fellows with a thunderous crash. Our two horses stood motionless and sweating with fear. As soon as the rat- tle of falling earth and stone had sub- sided my companion muttered. ‘‘Man, Asitiima cCuied Sfter Nwelwe Years’ Sufrering—To- ronito Physicians Advised Leaving Hier Home to go to Manitoba-— Cilarke’s Kola Compound Cured. MeTaggart, SO Vanauley et. Lor- onig. writes : have been troubled with asthma and bromehitis for twelve y- :¥rs. which gradually grew worse each yewr mn the hurdreds of dul ars my’ Dus- Irs. spite of band has spent wilk several doetors, and a}- most every remedy we could procure, ch only afforded teu porary recief., For tae past two years I «ould not lie on mv eft side, and during the past year prev'os to taking Clarke's Kola Compound the «s.ama b-came so severe that I bad not had a fall night's sleep, and during mest of that ume we had a doctor in attendance. We gave up servers! doctors, as 1 was becoming 0 b- iter, all the last coctor, after about two montis’ treaunen . tod me he could do kv th’s:g for me, and advised me to go io Mant- trhha-ar some dry ciimate. We h of (Clarke's Kola Compound being a crre ful rsihima, and hb ak'ng this remedy maue several inquiries from those wuao had tanes fi‘, ond in each cause found the reeult so sal- isfa ry that we resolved to iry if. A ‘.er taking the first bottie [I became much et- ter, nnd began io ep wellat nighta. S nee taking the third bottle I have not feit tt sl ghtest symptoms of my former t onble. I have Curing the past six months vv'ned nearly 20 pounds in flesh and feel perfeety healthy in every way, J can assure you that I will do atl in my power to tnduce any sufferer froin this terrible disease ro try : ? Certified correct by Pe er McTaggart, Proprietor of Toronto Dairy Co. Scld by Geb. E. Hughes ‘ * 5 ; 2 * Dyspepsia Cure Nature’s remedies are not like man's—they never fail. Of the many remédies intended to c “ sour stomach, distress after eating, weight in the stomach, wind on the stomach, loss of appetite, poverished blood, catarrh of t ingly successful—that is nature’s own remedy, to cure dyspepsia, va dizziness, nausea, im- Rae he stomach, sick headache, and similar results of indigestion, only one is uniformly and unfail- found only in DR. VON STAN’S PINEAPPLE TABLETS. The pineapple contaius a large amount of Vegetable Pepsin— nature's most potent aid in digesting food. Mix meat and pineapple and agitate the mixture at a temperature of 103°, and the pineapple will completely digest the meat. Take two of Dr. Von Stan's Pineapple Tablets after your meals § without aid from thestomach. This d heals the stomach, The tablets and they will digest your food @ course rests, strengthens an ee eens r ae will cure the most chronic case of d psia. They give im- mediate relief. Take them fora ot tae and your stomach will be as strong and hearty as that of a farmer's boy. They are as pleasant to the palate as candy. Atall druggists —35c. a box—or direct from THE VON STAN MEDICINE CO., pS Toronto, Can., and Buffalo, N.Y. I Bold by Dr, S. W. Dodd and Geo. E, Hughes, Druggist RCN A AIS SNE te tai EXAMINER, CHARLOTT HUW | eyes, brain and stomach = AY 6 YW: if we'd gone forward we stiould have been ten feet deep in our graves by now ‘*Thete are more things in heaven and earth * * * Come home, Pausay, and thank God I want a peg badly ’ We retraced our way over the church ridge, and | arrived at Dr. Heather: leyh’s house shortly after midnight His attempts toward my cure com- menced alinost immediately, and fora week [ never left his sight Many a time in the course of that week did I bless the good fortune which had thrown me in contact with Simla’s best and kindest doctor Day by day my spirits grew lighter and more equable Day by day, too | became more and more in- clined to fall in with Heatherlegh's ‘spectral illusion” theory, implicating i wrote to Kitty, telling ber that a slight sprain caused by a fall from my horse kept me indoors for a few days. and that I ' should be recovered before she had time ' guard. | time, ‘*not a rupee, please Go out and | see if you can find the eyes, brain and & to regret my absence Heatherlegh’s treatment was simple toadegree It consisted of liver pills, cold water baths and strong exercise. taken in the dusk or at early dawn, for as he sagely observed, *‘A man witha sprained ankle doesn't walk a dozen miles a day. and your young woman migkt be wondering if she saw you At the end of the week, after much | examination of pupil and pulse and strict injunctions as to diet and pedes- trianism. Heatherlegh dismissed me as brusquely as he had taken charge of me Here is his parting benediction ‘*Man, I certify to your mental cure. and that’s as much as to say I've cured most of your bedily ailmeuts Now, get your traps out of this as soon as you can and be off to make love to Miss Kitty ° I was endeavoring to express thanks for his kindness short ‘*Don't think I did this becanse I like you I gather that you've behaved like a blackguard all through But. all the same, you're a phenomenon and as queer a phenomenon as you are a black- No,’ checking me a_ second my He cut me stomach business again I'll give youa lac for each time you see it.” Half an hour later I was in the Man- nerings drawing room with Kitty. drunk with the intoxication of present happiness and the foreknowledge that 1 should never more be troubled with its bideons presence Strong in the sense of my new found security, | proposed a ride at once and by preference a canter round Jakko. (Centi: ued on page 8.) = 7 CLE } = P . =a Regt TRU WALTER'S TRUE BRAND CUTLERY ISMADE OF WARRANTED BEST STEEL, LEADING DEALERS SELL .T. ah oo atl] ah el fa] al] orp pep bre Pati ae Hn Tig Sometimes they ar: also azreeable, as the followino quotations from afew of our customers show: The Royal Oak Soap just to hand, it is the pink of perfec. tion. Am delighted with ur sap. * Second to none ” Iam thoroughly satisfied with the soap reveived at your factory this day, and beg tu thank you for your prompt attention. And so we might goon AD INFINITUM. J.) CAPTHORN Charlottetown Soap Works qosiaa at ae a J [p> Bi» [> o>» Bo» fo» Sunlight and Lifehuoy Soaps are absolu‘gly pure, equally good for tae toilet or the laundry. They will not injure the tenderest skin, or most delicate fabrics. Try them, OFFICE TO LET laIn the subscriber's building, Queen St. Rrge well lighted and of easy approach, ent moderate 9lwk J MeEACHERN -_ - ea aaa ~- = Aer rH : sha ay Wf ELEPHANT ~ CCFICN q. SPRING SUNS & OVER! it has alweys paid us (o look after ovr custon ers interests, That is one reascn why we are always basy ix our tailor shop OU MR. SIUS McLELLAN 18 AN AM Taxing first lecome a practical tailcr, he then :tudied the art ofa and is ncwwester of the art, with fifteen years «x} erience, which wi Lenefit of the kncwledce how the suit slculd Le nace, gies hima vantacecwr crdinary cutters, : Our importations of Clathes in English, Irish, and Canadién for the spring trade ere excey ticnally { na, Showlll sity of design and colorirg, uot confined to one idea We invite jou to examine our stock and iny prices, whether you buy or not. SIXTIS FeL&h ! oh, ‘ hue MEN’S STYLISH OF —— Clothing for Everyone at 25 to por cent. less than reg- % ular prices Our big purchase ot Men’s and Clothing at the Doull & Gibson sale ha rived. Wecan now supply you with O@ ing atthe manufacturers’ cost prices, Men’s Tweed Pants from 50e, ! $1.60, 1,25, 1,50, 200, worth 50 per & more—Men’s Tweed Suits from $3,75 @ upwards. lt will mean money in your Pp? lothing f et to buy your ¢ othing: from us J. B. Macdonald & tod =.“ fa rea "z= a a