?__ 4-rg., - i GUARDIAN bHARLOI'I`E1UWN FE3RU.XRY lo 1899. _ ll"WARllS, . un Bwo other . V . I \. Viii-hwoi-k and to win-to keep a sane | mind in a sound body-to laugh at worry. | vlGOR_t0 ward off disease;1ttql cena . quer obstacles-to ti-aizsmit he an s eri . su\`;II‘§ihIil‘l'(\)I-y;ot`dr Essist ttie fearful strain and tension of modem lit`e-- to make uP fo, the wngtant drains of d erwork. Dr Ward’s Blood and Nerve P\lis confer \ll°these essential qualities ol th¢ 45"- i EDITOR_’S MAIL- CLEANLINESS- ` ’ -- Silt,-In re to _tour article unrler the iii :\f.tiii~-3 of Vital Statistics. ‘-It is never I". too late to mend, ` comes as a we.comc , rtalizaticn both in respect to indi\'idua‘s, ard coiiiiniiiritii s. 1 The water works and sewerage which i I,withcut hope of enioluinent or praise,» have advocated for almost ii quarter oi' ii century, are now becoming acconil plished facts, and there cannot be any merit in merely asking for statistics to inform us of the diseases which people die of. while we carelessly or culpibly shut our eyes to actual tacts in regard to the causes of disease. Where is the medical man in Char-I lottetown who has the courage to come boldly forward and condemn these ispecial sources of spring and autumn diseases-the filthy backyard. and the quite as abominable piggeries which exist even behind the dwellings on the nrincipal streets and by the public, _“ns EVIDENCE IS AMPLB PROOE 1 ilower-beautitied squares of our city P Before using Dr. \Vard's Blood and Nerve Pills I felt weak, nervous and full down. I had lost_ weight steadily fol: some time; my circulation was poor i hands, feet and limbs were cold. I always khweakand my muscles trembled. f\l0“fi giter the use of one box of Dr. Wards Pilb, I feel like my old seltl I have gained ‘ve pounds in weight and loo pef C€I\I~~ in cheei-fulness. _I now walk Iirmly, my muscular system is strong and my blood circulates vigorously. I have more comfort than I have experierlC¢C\ U1 Yeafs- Dr' Wa¢d's Pills hav-_-,~ done more for me U13!! my medicine I ever took. Persia Caitiaiciinizii. 13 Bright St., Toronto, Ont. an good ariiggisn can supply y°“- lf they won't, we will by mail. Price 5oc. Ser \¢¢,9r Sboxes for $2.00. THB DOCT R WARD CO.. Lirnited, Toronto. Qui. __ 0069096696699 :mi siii aiiiig riiiii his Bald Flaiorllg Extracts Pm Gull titties ‘Pm Boll lilly Folder Pl H _$ FFS. oooooooeoooocoeoo re Sold Spices For QUALITY a VALUE are UNSU PASSED. Ask for them. Send to Pure Gold, onto. for souvenir. §’Mail orders have specia attention. Agent, A. L. BEER, .O. Box 50, Cli’town. oereooeogoeog Pio! J 'il Robertson ‘DAIRY CO" MISSIONER, and mo resscn liincoun 1 _ Ofthe Exper nental Dairy Farm l will visit this province inthe inti rests of the QHOUGUIIQUO Thanks to a kindly Heaven for _the covering of snow which, for a period of the year. keeps down the fever-breed- ing exhalaticns. Were it not for that precious boon we might almost hail the cleanly advent of an American in- vasion. _ Yours, JUs'ritr1A - 1_l_..l_..<._.;.___.._- Ai. glo~l'ronch Disputes The French Ambassador in London and Lord Salisbury are reported to be trying to settle the numerous matters lin dispu'e between the two govern- ments. Great Britain is willing to code “a great deal to Franco in West Africa tin return for the surrender by the lFrench of the fishery rights to New- foundland. This ought not to be hard, as the fisheries have lost much of their former value to France; national pride has hitherto prevented that nation from y yielding :he last of her American pos- . sessions. By a treaty nearly two hundred years ago, Franch secured the rights of catch- ing and drying fish on the shores of Newfoundland. No territorial rights were ceded to France by the treaty. Although the sovereign’y ofthe Island I remained with Gr: at Britain, the effect ofthe treaty was to exclude the in- habitants ofthe island trom some of ,its most valuable territory. There has been constant friction be- tween the English and ,French fisher- men over the shore privileges and mat- ters became so acute in June last, that §English fishermen combined to resist what they considered the French en- croachments. With a view to settle the long standing dispute a royal coin- uiission was appointed last Sep‘ember to enquire into the condition of affairs in the French shores. In Africa, France has a chance ot building up a new colonial dominion in the territory that lies south of the Sa- ,hara and which stretches from the 'western shores of the Atlantic to the coast of Lake Tchad. What should be the western boundary is a matter Britain. Marcha.nd’s evacuation of HOTti0HltHI'iStS'Fashoda has somewhat sim litied the ind will hold meetings as follows: 1 dlonday, 27th Feb.-At Rustico Bank it l'2.30; Btadalbane Hall at 7. li '1`uesday,28th Feb.-Kensington Hall ft at 2; Suninierside at 7. ` Wednesday, March 1-0`Le:iry Hall at 2; Albertcn at 7. ° Thursday. March 2-St. Peter’s at 2; ` Souris at 7. Friday, March 3 -Charlottetown in , Kindergarten Hall.at 2; also at a meet- ing of the Dairy Associations ofthe Pro- vince. specially called at Charlottetown at 7, in the same place-same evening. , Saturday. March 4-Eldon Hall at 22.30; Murray Harbor South at 7.30. r It is particularly requested, as there , are two meetings to be held each day, that all meetings shall be held on sharp time. P problem. France contends that her sphere of influence should include at least a part of the Bahr-el.Ghazel dis- trict, in order to give her access to the valley of the Nile. Great Britain wants to extend her sphere of influence ,lwestwardtoa meridian drawn along the eastern shore of Lake Tchad. in- .cluding the whole of the fertile tract watered by the Bahr-el-Ghazel and its aftluents. It is said the matter could be settled by a moderate concession by Great Britain. France objects to the tr’partite treaty by which Portugal agreed to divide her possessions on South-eastern Africa be- itween England and Germany. How- ever she might be reconciled to this by a promise that not objection would be made to his acquiring the Congo State, when Belguim gets ready to part with it, which will be before many years. , If Great Britain contemplates the as- sertion ot a protectorate over Egypt, HO -iiiiowiii probably bo postponed iiiiiii 0 the settlement ofthe other matter. It New Chinese Laundry, ‘ Great George St. - Qur vvork will be the best, but our prices villbethe lowest- Collars lc, Cuffs 2c gain Ssilrts Sceach- ¢n93m . will be readily seen that she has as much right to a protectorate over Egypt, as France has one over Tunis and Mad- igascar. British and French interests in the far east are said to be irreconcilable. I Ill I-I '-1 France wants the right of access by rail- way to the south-eastern provinces of China Great Britain would never consent to that, though she might not object to the French entering the Yunnan by railway from Toukiii, pro- vided the privilege was accorded her of entering the same province by rail from Burmali. The first essential for the keeping of hogs profitable is suitable shelter. A pig can stand a low temperature as well as any other domestic animal, but it can cold wind plays across a hog an hour or two, the animal will be much the wor e pation, which is one of the most com- mon and dangerous ailments that atllict hogs. Hogs require a warm and diy sleeping place, fairly protected against dlaughls. While ll hog needs exe;-cige, which has the effect of making its body, quiver with lite, that is entirelv different from causing its body to shiver with cold. The notion that any kind of shel- ter is good enough for it has been pre- haps the greatest hindrance to progress in the industry. ' The swine building should be well lighted: Plenty of light is a great pro- meter of cleanliness and health. The - walls of the hog pen may be built of any mateiisl which is convenient and cheap, but itthey be built of stone thev should be built with a holl ' ~ ' ow space. While the passages and gutters in the hog pen may be constructed of cement, stone or brick, I think the sleeping quarlers of the pigs should have ii wooden iloor. There is nothing better than earth or dry sand for breeding swine or young aff/ _ Y __ fthe way people eat and 'drink has perilous conse- uences ‘q . Very fewpeople jknow how to treat their stomachs. Eating too much: or riot enough; or the wrong kind of food; or at the wrong -time-gets the digestive organs into such a thoroughly disor- dered condition that at last noth- ing' whatever can digested. 7 CUC by imperfect nutrition. There is noth- ,X ing_in the world_ which restores or- ' ganic tone and vigor so quickly and scientifically' as Dr. Pierce’s Golden Med- ical Discovery. _ lt acts directly upon the nutritive organ- ism; it gives the stomach power to extract a high percentage of nourishment from the food, and enables the liver to filter all bili- ous poisons out of the circulation; it puts thered, vitalizing life-giving elements into the blood, and builds up solid Hcsh, mus- ot dispme between her and Great' ctilar force and healthy nerve-power. In all dcbilitated conditions and wasting diseases it is vastly superior to malt extracts or any mere temporary stimulants. It gives permanent strength. It is better than nau- seoiis emiilsions, because it is agreeable to the weakest stomachs. Whenever constipation is one of the complicating causes of disease, the most perfect remedy is Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets, which are always effective, yet ab- solutely mild and harmless. There never was any remedy invented which can take their place. “In Aiigiist. 1895, I was taken down with what my physician pronounced consumption," writes Ira D. Herring. of Needmore. Levy Co., Florida. " My trouble continued for several months. Four bottles of Dr. Pi¢l’G¢'l Gi Medical Discovery cured me." Shelter for Hoge- I _ ni i ng;-Vnxn Ui I cold ls danger- oul. Doii’t let It get the start ot you. A few doses ot mi Cold Cure wl break up any form gt cold ilu l. tm ours an rave dliiitlierll a‘i-iiimliiiieumoliila. It llioud be ln everyl home and everievesl poelr t. It ll tts! thene e lite lii|ur~ ance policy. y IIUNYON. ' 256. I vial. _ Outh to Hula n$tM?dl free. ~~~ -~ Phill- not stand exposure to cold winds. If ii F U L ij -» J lf- s _ for it. It is almost sure to cause consti- I MECHANICS HALL Thursday, Feb 16 '99 PROGRAMME Selection-Pines Mr Ferfuso Chorus--G Ca. Phe unk V ssrssuthfr land McKenzie McDougall bam be Robertson, Winchester an McDo nl _“QCII . . Sutherland. Solo. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..LittleNel1 Miss Vanbuskirk- t . Reading... .Uncle Caleb's Gourtsh C. A_. Campbell. ' . Song- (Whistlingfl ....................... ._ Master R. Hogg. '9° Duett 'l‘iie=. Wed. Thur. GRAND noon _prrlnrrrrrrrt Charlottetown Engineer Go’y. Lyceum, Friday. Fat. |7th,8 p. in- Uoder the Patrooaga of Hts llolor the Llauteaaot lloieror and the ills- trlct lltflcar tonnanllng. When the appetite fails and the PRUGRAMVE, _ . liver become-5 sluggish' the whole ` 1. Tableaux. . _ ._ . . .B`ritain and America. United system is dragged down and dead d 2, Burrell Peering Lontest ..................... ._ equadroii irom Left and Right Halt company, 3. Fencing-First Bout . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 4. Bayo_netExerci.se ...... 5. Fencing-Sec ndBout................ ...... .. Swordsversus Bavonet............... . . . . . ._ Ta.b1ea.ux.... . ._ . _“The Roll Call" Fencing-Final .............................. . . Fqr silver Medal. Nritlzxiissronr. ll-The Last Stand. A Real stir: Reproduction ot an Incident in a late Caméiaigp in India. GOD SAV T E QUEEN. Admission 25 cents Reserved Seats 35 cents. Sui able Music willbe provided. Members of other Corps are requested to arf tend in Unit . _ orm Tickets on sale at- Arthur Reddins. George Hirggqi. J. Morris. 8: the Gas Co Office. . . 9°.".°° We are compelled to ,E run day and night to ‘; ' keep up with our 3 tllttlllllllllll -' 4-- F . l. l __T0__ 4 As we have transferred our busi- ness to other parties our books must 'sued for. W. A. WEEKS & Go. j‘ elpgznieggdpyaiogo or oivn nngiaoortn oo, GHARLOTTETOWN. - - - P. E. ISLAND .u‘i22.€“s‘”.§£.’i£‘P§.t’...:.-§*°r..°F°,.L.‘Z:.;’;~**2.9.r‘ . D-gg-- .Sanderson 8: i , -ooooooeoooooooooooooond%&*m%m%3”h~‘ irmnmano C0 sf orders. *E `_'* ` I _ t ai Does into snow 1; _ whether we are pleas- Z3 'ing our customers or '§ not? -'- DEBTCRS J. D. TAYL OR Pninren :3 Queen St. ;: of J am. viz: = T, ion esfoodaweiii _ Cmsse & Blackwelrs nruri o iornii t ri MMIII wllllill ’ L u_ c;n_ som ct Et i Agia in 7 lb pails, in Strawberry, i , Baspberry, Apricot, Peach and Red Currant.. . ‘ ll. . . . . _ .,, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . _.Selected ll pigs. lllitil they are put into fairly close 12 lgloifls ‘md Chas' M°D’“”‘ld‘ In Stock taking last Week We qlI8I'Ii8I'S I0 D8 I8.lIt6D6d. F1001 P1'0f . 8 i I ' . . . . . I I I ' I . V ' I ture We qeased to make a Robgrtggyfg Repo;-t_ , 13. Dlalog‘i'~_ . . . . . . . . . . . . ..9I'he Threatened Visit . . _ ’ Ladm ‘gglsiagpgggggd Horne- _ crowding NEW PATTERNS on s,we must ‘ Doors open at wo- Cm iff-at Sshafvi rices below should make quicK c _ , ~, = f for the BUYERS. \ \' / . IN I e ON i y s » - ` = 1, ‘ ........ ..: ....... ... . . . . . . .. _ .. 2 . ll. - _ ' , . . " Ji 11. - . -. . , ;_, 3. Solo..Selected ............................... .. -1. Missllllllott. ‘ ' 4. Reading-Mrs. Smart: Learns to Skate Mrs. C. A. Oamgbell. . Clarlonet Solo....... inute Gun atSea g Worth Bros. ' _ Recitation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... ................ .. Son '-(ScotcliMss Rummy' g- J ‘gr . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ._ io 1 ` ' fo p B l-‘I-'it-ll-li-ll-ll-l`r-5 " " oi. $35 oo w ¢. lx H c. at $32 50 W “ “ . at $30 00 W “ “ at $20 00 w 1 Hall St-' nd at $7 50 w at $7 50 W at $5 50 w Hit-it-\ :__-: 2:: GOI-*I-ll'-lt-*I-ll-l Bedroom Suite at $50 - “-` " at 35 0 32 5 19 0 17 5 17 0 “ at 13 0 I Sideboard ar. $17 50 was 1 Sideboard at 9 00 was 1 Sideboard at 7 00 was “ “ at 6| ¢¢ (G (4 tl H at 3 Extension Tables at_$6 3 Extension Tables at 5 5 i. #ik F und some FIRCHSH " . Parlor Suit at $45 00 was “ “ at $40 00,was as at $37 50 WE $50 00 as as at $17 00 was as our arance - _for $65 00 $60 '00 $50 00 . . $45 00 $40 00 $25 00 $22 00 ‘ I 1 Extension Table at 4 . 1 Dining Room Set at 27 1 Dining Room Set at 22, l i 0 ‘ l s $11 C0 $10 50 $8 50 at $3 00w re $400 was $75 00 was ~ 50 00 was 45 00 I was 24 00 was 22 50 was 21 00 were 16 00 $25 oo 12 50 9 00] 0 were $7 75 0 were 6 75- 5 was _6 50 13 odd Centre Tables nm 'lhlrd off. ' 7 odd lounges: (mg thi gff, 1 Dining Room Set at $30100 was 40 00 50 was 36 00 50 was 27 50 1 100 (about) odd chairs, min 'lhlpd Qff. be * pio0oS_WOl»l10lSi‘ U8.lJiIl6I§S, Fil'6 SGP88DSi U chsad up ai mms. g , _ I Music_Stands, Reed Chairs, Fancy Rockers. Odd An thoseindebted to us Wm oblige . _ . . odd Sinks. odd Bedsteads, all at (png ‘lhlrel Qff-V by making immediate payment at the ' I ' .. . . ` ,OLD STAND. - A q A _ To avoid misunderstanding. we have Agcuunts km” nvarduol . I. _ _ I tickets, showing REDUCED PR CES on all if not attended to at once willbe we sg" the Best Make ated ab°Ve' 1 "S& 1' S0 lil fire r l PIII In no iiioi~¢iiio~¢4'eA`t"i"' > QF VII. . N A C Hood -whole rem on “Iam-flyem eugegedindrl hnvobeenerxpi and-I’wu"eel»e different llnii eiirern»._1?aiz endian-hort_tf| loft! fthoi-ghtlvu tone, uid! i UIIIWIIIIII e fllnoarenal Ieoiildaotele leveropnin|_ Ulillplrllleu timelhltrell .llvingelspeei APor llmettendlni lllductothel Slhlinrlllnf olmyhmuy. llldlleoeulen Tliieyi rlllasndnood 'H noon inn Wlterville,1tIi Hood’s ilthotmz--iiiii Q liood’-s» P 3 °&&e to in lstiiei