Ee Terms : Four Dollars yor Year me), 3/ 4 PUGILISTIC BLUFF, : . - nabeh wow AS cE, QUIET MAN SEST ANT IN A FIGHT A Quarre! Over the Wire That Had to Be The ion of Clark anc His Office Settled by a Persenal Encounter Transformat and How It Worked, e ‘ Returning from a th’s hunting in ¢he Teton } tains, ‘nree of us who had come | ver ft t $3", U day S bye fore were jmmens ly glad. to s¢ the little red static n building at Beaver as it lay away down there ir: the basin, looking in the vastness of space like some kind of tired bug. We wert gl ui, for Clark, the ts legraph oper ator and station agent, had proved himself to be a worthy citizen during the two days we had waited there on our way in— two of us r the third of the hunting trio. Clark was a spare, peaceful looking man of about 30, who seemed to delight in doing good turns to his fellows, and he a was the last man on earth to. suspect of ay nursing combative tendencies. We were Uy therefore vastly surprised when on our re cane turn trip the door of the little red depot a opened and a fierce looking creature step- ped out to welcome us The unrecognized man head his hair clipped close to his skull; his mustache svas shaved off to astubbie: a thick sweat- er in-deflance of the hent of the day climb- eduptehischin With one hand he held the rope Which ended in the form of a vile * looking bull pup) The strange man was smoking a very short and stubby cigar ie Altogether he looked tough, very tough, 1 pugilistically tough. “Hello!’’ he yelled. Then we knew it was Clark. Clark's own transformation was im- mense, but greater was that of his office. ad In the days of our lounging there Waiting 4 for Hawkins we had been enabled to srike a rather fair inventory of the fur- nishings. and we knew them all, from coal box to water cooler and oilcan. Now, however. there was a great metamorphosis. ig ° “Why, what does all this mean?’ Johnson inquires. “Them?’’ said Clark. ‘The boxing gloves and punching bag and Indian ciubs?”’ “And the pictures? When did you take upthe prizcfighting business? Who are all these bruisers you have hanging on the a well?’ “Well,” said Clark, “I’m blessed if 1 . I wrote toa man in Pocatello and sent him $15 and told him fo ship the worth of itin secondhand things that had to do with prizefighting As a fact, | don't know a blessed thing about fighting, prize or any other kind, but them make a daisy bluff, don t you think?” “Ishould say so Why, any one com- ing in here would take you, in that outfit and with these surroundings, to be the thampion middleweight of the universe.” “Thats what 1 thought,” said Clark. “You see, I'm waiting for a rman.” Then he explained Three weeks be- fore he had had troub!e over the telegraph line with the new operator down the road at Canyon, and the debate over the wire had ended on Clark’s part by telling the )@her operator that he was several kinds @ aliar and on the part of the Canyon ‘Inan of promising todrop in ebuut the end of the month and beat the life out of Clark. “And he’sa tix stiff, with arms | like flour barrels, 1 have heard,” said the me agent. “So I decided that as a thin. “@ peaceable man like me couldn't lick him one way I'd try it another He thinks > @ V'm just what | am, a common sernb rai)- =e Toadoperator <Aliright. When .ne gets t off No. 7! here and walks up the platform and sees a man like me looking like the fellow who is xoing to whip Corbett, and _ When he sees these sporty furnishings and pictures, and expecially when he lights on the pup—well, 1 kind of think he’l! decide he ain't got any business in my neighbor- hood after all. Notice the padded round- _ Ress of this sweater.“ - We were Joafing at Marey’s general store NO 7) rolled up from the southward thenestmorning We walked idly over © the station, talking on the way of _ Glark's queer plan of impressing and ’ ng the enemy, when suddenly John- F herent “By George, who’s that walk- . ing Rpihe platform? It's the man from Canyon Well, the slaughter of the inno- SEN ts 4) out to begin.” The Canyon operator, a big thewed vil- dain, O}ened the door of the telegraph Mom and iooked flercely in Clark wasn't them, but his sporting garnitures were Min stared at them in some surprise €fd then started toward a chair, doubtiess PeMtending to sit down and wait. We were PA the window and saw it all Clark step- Ped cheerily in trom the bauugage room, Weater stub cigar, bristling head and ai The pup followed. “What do you want” Clark called doud!y Can t 0 man take a 20 mile run Wkeep in training without seme biz dub Py -” od ru 2 were SNA ee ar “Tais is True Liberty, ene a eee enetettteate — ee ee ee ae CHARLOTTETOWN, = precipi - tt when Free Born Men, h avingt» advise the Public, may speak tree.”—Euripipzs, Se Single Copies two cents. a os NO 294 we ‘ | Serate kead, gov t Opinion it goes clothes that clothes are uot low. AO h worth $5.50. now $3.95. al] worth $6.74, new $4.50. HI ; ind $13, for 9. Men’s Pants. 75c. $), 1 Letter of Where is a saying that “the coat doesn’t make the man.” woo: fibre line 24 blue beaver Overcoa .O0, These are no old shop worn out will let themspeak for themselves eee a long way towards well fitting apparel is most marvellous. wear and clothes We keep the good that d tweed lining, d Waterproof U!sters, shades. 100 Ulsters, mixed shades and qualities at a big dis, ts, very fine; d. b. worth $12.54 ») 2 2.50, 3, 3.50, 4, 4.50 | it shough. lt represents the O | $2.90 to $7.00. | | | | | Youths’ Ulsters. heavy Boy» Knicker Pants, 452 Girls’ heavy blue serge y g of season goods, but just the goods the season demands—and the prices—wel!, we OE TTT LL ee ane Visitor Groppea of “nis Cnalr in mmght and crouched on the floor “Say! Quit that, mister!’ he cried. “1 don't mean any harm to you. I come up bere to lick a ham operator named Clark. “Oht You didt Well. get up. I’m Clark !" “You?” gasped the other. “Why, I didn t Know—you—were a fighter, or— sey!’ as an idea cameto him. ‘Is this town Uraniter”’ *No. It’s Beaver.” “That’s it! That's it! There, now, dont hit me It’s all a mistake My man Clark works atGranite. I'm awfully sorry, mister, and if you'll be kind enough to accept my apologies and let me go out so | can catch No. 71 and ride up to Gran- ite I'll promise you'll hear of a fight that'll remind you of your old ring days. Thank you.” And be bolted for the train, which was now leaving the station. He really did go to Granite, the next station north, but instead of making any hostile demonstration at the agent, a man named McPherson, he boughta ticket and took the passenger train back to his own town, Canyon ‘The conductor said that when thetrain was passing Beaver the big man from Canyon hid under # seat. The next day Clark sold his pugilistic effects to the proprietor of a newly started saloon. ‘! hate tosee em go somehow,” he said to Johnson, ‘for they did their part nobly, especially the pup 1 think it was the sight of the pup that added the jast straw to the bluff that biuffed him,” meaning the man from Canyon Hawkins, however, insisted that it was Clark sown short cropped hair and tough, siubby mustache curbing scornfully over the butt of a cigar. —Chicago Record. The fuil intensity of living is reached only by the perfectly healthv. Sickuess 4+iscounts the capacity for erjovment. Ji hs body is all ont of order and ran down, he will not be able ty enjoy anrthing, no matter bow full of enjoyment it may be for other people. If he is just a little bit out of order, if he is not -ick, but doean’t feel just right” he will only be able to enjoy things in a half-hearted sort of way The vearer he is to being perfectly wel | the nearer will his capacity for his enjoy - 4 Cming in and vceupying his ufficer Have JOU tionkey With any of this athletic SPreratus? it thought yeu bad. I'd nick and throw you out over the tracks “mt ito the ditch Just as I threw the O80 Francisco three years ago Uet out of F you big tramp! What? You duns Mover Take that!’ And he landed a hack flonase the Canyon man s head. a W20p's PHOSPLIODINE Great English Remedy. Si2 Iuckages Guaranteed to promptly and permanently cure all forma of Nervous Weakness, Lmissions,Sperm atorrhea, Impotency and a’ effects of Abuse or Excesses Menial Worry, excessive 1.38¢ . of Tobacco, Opiumor Stimw * lants, which soon lead to In me. Consumption and an early grave. Gong fg et over 35 years in thousands of the only Reliable and Honest Medicine Beam Ask druggist for Wood's Phosphodine; if tome Worthless medicine in place of this, PeaS® Price tm letter, and we will send by return bate, eas one Dackage, $1; six, $5. One will WER owre, Pamphlets free to any address, The Wood Company, Ww Canada. eS ewiry HM Chicken’ out of the ring in | | tisene of the body. god, digestion ard outrition perfect and ment be perfect. If this condition doesn’ exist, eomething ought to be done. Tha means bine cases in ten the use of De Pierce’s Golden Medica! Di-covdry. It works directly on the dige-tive organa, and on the blood and through the-e on every It makes the appetite supplies rich, red blood to all the tis-ues, building sp solid, healtifal flesh. Send 3! centain one-cent -*tamps to Worid’s Dienemsary Medical A-sociation, Buffalo, N. Y.. and receive Dr. Pierces’ 1f@s pave «Common Sence Medical A‘‘viser,” pretneely illustrated. JUBILRE A new and superior white soap— a mar- yel of beauty, pority and efficacy, the ueen of fine Laundry, Toilet and Bath. Should you buy itonce you will always use and forever thank Jas D. Lapthorne & Co., Makers rr 4 Sea ay Mckay Woolen Company LEADERS OF VALUE ‘The transformation made by not; between good clothes kind only, but that doesn’t mean that the prices You can easily realize that by a glance at these offerings Men's Clothing, heavy blue black Ulsters, storm collar, Youths’ and Boys’ Clothing 90 youths’ Overcoats, mixed shades and {qualities,*from Children’s Overcoats and Ulsters. Sneh a variety of prices we cannot enumerate them, but we promise they are the best values ever shown in Charlottetown storm collar, worth $5 50, now $3 50 P. E. ISLAND, SATURDAY, DECEMBEP 148 4897 lothes sale But in our humble difference between and pocr Cs all wool chamois fibre lined Reefers, $1 50 How a person can gain a | pound a day by taking an | ounce of Scott’s Emulsiom is hard to explain, but it certainly happeus. It seems to start the diges- tive machinery working properly. You obtain a greater benefit from your food. The oil being predigested, and combined with the hy- pophosphites, makes a food tonic of wonderful flesh- forming power. All physicians know this to to be a fact. All drugzists; 50c. and $1.00, SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, Toronte | | 50 YEARS: EXPERIENCE TRADE Marks DESIGNS CopyYRiGHTs &c. Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinicn free whether an invention is probably patentable. Communica- tions strictly confidential. Handbook on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents, Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American, A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cir- culation of any scientific journal. Terms, $3 a ; four months, $1. Sold by all newsdealers. MUNN & Co,22r20 New York Bran F 8t.. Washington, ans ——~—— - ‘A MIGHTY CHANGE. Made Well and Active Alter vears of Suffer- ing, Paine’s Cele y Compound Was the Great Li e- giver. New life, health, vim, energy and activ- ity are some of the blessings Paine’s Celery Compound bestows on thoss who are now helpless, weary and half dead. If you area martyr to rheumatism, tortured with neuralgie, distressed with dyspepsia, or laid low with kidpey tronble, that ivfallible life giver, Paine’s Celery Compound, will restore you to perfect health and give you alorg lease of life. Mrs. Page, of Aroprior, On‘., afier yeurs of suffering, experienced the happy and mighty change that Paine’s Celery Com- pound alove can give to the afflicted. She says: “I have been for many yearsa great suftterer from rheumatism and a complica: tion of other troubles. About a year ago I was prevailed upon to try a course of Paine’s Celery Compound, with a result xo marvellous that my most iotimate frieads and neighbors could scarcely believe me to be the same woman. Formerly I could only move about with the greats: caution; now Iam well and active and my general heaith is good. I believe P:ine’s Celery Compound will do all that isclaiw~ ed for it.” IF 11 IVOHES MAKE OVE FOOT, Italian Ware House Cor. Crafionand Gt. Geo. Sts North side Queen Squarre De Kupyers and Herman Jansen Genuine Rotterdam GIN. JOY & DAVIES, cocharta SBVOTt =F Fe TOV. €t- cqeee 35 Feet Make 190. 00 fet tale ha. and it requires 1800) feet to build a certain house How much, 12 inches per foot, and like measure,. wonid it take to build the same house? And what Saving would there he if lumber were purchased at $10 per M, latter meas- ure iu preference to $8 per M of the first ? We sell all kinds of lumber by the latter table at reasonable pri ves. TeLepnoxe 181 JAMES BARBETT, Connolly’s Wharf, e2443024230720 47223 Bottled Joy. Empty bottles wanted, cheapest cash price paid for all kind of empty bottles, JOHN P, JOY, © =e 2 2 6] 242 4 2 =>oa co ~s ae ee a LESSON FROM THE OYSTER. Many a Peari of Wisdom to Be Gleaned From His Life. STOMACH STUFFING. Common Sense Reasons Why You Should Not Be Greedy. What special pleasure is there, after all, in overloading the stomach? It certainly is not a sensible thing to de, and yet the so called greedy people often form this habit simply because they do not take the trouble to reason out the certain results. We see almost daily reports of death at- tributed to heart failure. Did you ever stop to think what it is that tho heart fails to do? The heart is said to be the most perfect organ of the animal economy and one that never shirks its duty. It is ‘stomach stuffiing,’’ and not ‘‘heart failure.’”’ that causes the trouble in many instances. The heart goes right on doing its duty throngh- out our lives without one second’s rest, night or day, sometimes without the in- Some ; termission of a single pulsation for 100 years or nore At every beat it propels two ounces of blood through its structure. At 75 pulsa- tions per minute, 9 pounds of blood is sucked in and pumped out; every hour, 540 pounds; every day, 12,960 pounds; every year, 4,730,400 pounds; every 100 years, 473,040,000 pounds, and all perform- ed without one moment’s rest; verily, a good record. Now the heart has the very meanest neighbor that ever an organ had—namely, the ctomach—especially if it be the stom- ach of a greedy person. This organ isa drunkard, a glutton, a trespasser and al- most everything thatis bad. It ought to be walled in and compelled to keep on its own grounds. The stomach lies directly under the heart, with only the diaphragm between, - and when it fills with gas it is likeasmall balloon and lifts up until it interferes di- rectly with the heart’s action. The stom- ach itself never generates gas, but when filled with undigested food fermentation takes place and yas is formed, and the in- terference depends upon the anicunt of gas in the stomach. ‘Yo overcome this obstruction the heart has to exert itself in proportion to the in- terference, more blood is sent to the brain, and the following symptoms are the ro- sult: A dizzy head, a flushed face, a losd of sight, spots and blurs before the eyes, ite cf light, zigzag lines or chains, often followed by the most severe head- ache. These symptoms are usually reliev- el when the gas is expelled from the stom- ach. Now when this upward pressure npon the heart becomes excessive, there are more dangerous symptoms. A larger quantity of blood is sent to the brain, and if blood clot in the brain result the pa- tient dies of apoplexy. When a sick per- son or an old one or one with weak di- gestion sleeps, digestion is nearly or quite suspended, but fermentation goes on in the overloaded stomach and yas is gener- ated. The oyster is pre-eminently a creature of leisure, and he consequently has much time at his disposal for thinking and re. flection, and, in the absence of proof to the contrary, we are obliged to accept the de duction that he employs that time profita bly, theugh he may keep his wisdom to himself and employ it for his own uses He certainly has reduced light househkoep ing to a fine art He lives right im the water; hence the question of water supply and drainage is one that he never has to concern himself about. He manages also that the water shall bring him his food; consequently matters of commerce, of supply and demand, the prices of commodities and other questions which worry other members of the ani- ma! creation, whether they are quadrupeds or bipeds or whether they walk on the earth, fly through the air or swim in the water, do not concern him. As for his house, as soon as he settles down, after a very brief period of wandering and sowing his wild oats, he builds it himself right out of the material brought to him by the accommodating water, and thereafter he lives a life of ease. He knows perfectly well that things ; will come his way. He doesn’t even bother with having legs and eyes, for he has no need of transportation. He does not need to see in order that he may gather his food, and he finds no necessity for idly gaping about, and thus uselessly exciting his nervous organization. He sits down un- der his roof, if not under his own vine and fig tree, and enjoys a life of quiet and dignity. He has enemies, but he does nothing to stir them up, since he eschows all religious and political controversies, and he thus manages to retain the good will of all the denizens of the land and sea. There are many lessons indeed to be gicaned from the life of the oyster that we might learn and follow with profit.-- Pittsburg Dispatch. Scmething to Learn. As Mr. Ruffedge sat down after having elbowed his way back from a between acts trip, he happened to see some Japanese students sitting farther in front “A great many Japanese come over to this country to get civilized, don’t they?”’ he remarked. ‘I suppose it takes them a good while to get used to our ways.”’ Aman is found deadin bed, and the medical attendant pronounces it the result of heart failure, and such is the certificate of burial given. Now that man was out and partook of a late supper; ate roast beef, turkey, lobster, oysters, mince pie, plum pudding, ice cream, cake, an orange, nuts and raisins and drank three or four cups of coffee, or perhaps several giasses of beer or wine. He went home at mid- night, retired, and died of heart failure before 9 the next morning What did the heart fail to do? A more truthful verdict would have been: Death from a habit of yreediness formed in youth, ending in an exagyerated case of stomach stufling.—Philadephia Times. . eee’ & WHAT SHAKSPERE SAID was nearly always about right. He knew more of human nature than most men of his time, and the pre- senttime too. He never gave better advice to mankind than when he & wrote, ‘Throw Physic to the Dogs,” Some people are ‘physicing ther- selves all the time for ills that are & Principally imaginary. Little dis- orders of the system,—caused by ir- “1 suppose so,” said Miss Cayenne. “And I don’t think those young men have been here very long.” * Why?’ “I haven't seen one of them climbing over the people between him and the aisle every time the curtain went down.’”’— Washington Star His Gift to Eddie. Little Willie— Papa, is it more blessed to give than to receive? Papa-—That's what the Bible tells us, and the Bible must be right. Little Willie—Then I ought to yeta credit mark for giving Eddie Warner the measles, oughtn't 1?—Chicago News. Andrew Lang tells of an authoress he knew who saw a novel sort of ghosts— namely, the’characters in her novels. She onze saw “tne principal character of one of her novels glide through the door straight upto her. It was about the size of a large doll.” you NEED Hood’s Sarsaparilla if your blood is impure, your ap regular living, poor blood, a sluggish liver,—can be twisted to suit some patent nostrum and increase the wealth of some juggler with health. What is really wanted is only a sys tein regulator,-a pure, simple, hint efficacious tonic. Such a preparation Abbey's Effervescent Salt. A teaspoonful taken every morning before breakfast, keeps ‘the blood pureandthe systemin such tone as to be able to withstand disease. Its use in many cases has prevented seri- ous illness, Eminent physicians and prominent porvens have testified to the bene- t they have derived from its use. Our free booklet “‘ An Invitation to a Health,” tells all about it. All druggists sell this great Englisa eh YL" nets ot “a z qe. Anam . thi os tite gone, your health impaired, Nothe ' da preparation, Price 2/6 or 60 cts. a bottle, ~~ THE ABBEY EFFERVESCENT SALT CO, Liurven, - MONTREAL, CANADA, 7 \s Six gold-headed canes direct from New York yesterday. We offer three for sale t0 ——<— en ae ot tl = as eee ae noe aciadelieateiea Mice