urns snvis 1 l " - _ » . _ O ' .<,._M_{~_»£_‘__|»;§i'i;_-, _ _,g 4.. - -.. . _ . PIRBT 0]' ' '_ ' -.'71 ‘.21- -- '- __ .rj-,,., _ '-1 _ _ . - -,»~ > ' ._'i‘.,.-. ,_ it ~»*f';‘ _ _ i | s _. i _ i ._ . . ` .v.i..? y,_ \_¢,W;» _ V' .. ~ F _‘_ :'. -.. ~:f~‘_“i,»_. j, ,g .,., ‘ J ff r , ‘_ . \ _ heathen masters of that 1 I I ' I ~ Ur orrrro . _ 5?” _H¥§§'ZN-I-»g¥gTORY' :Sian lnsuilerable and. grossly sbsu ._ ' WN N’S __ Eseration. Think of the 'act ' condition o . By Rev W- Harrison. cnsr1ouezows__1emy of uisfhthe omwmmmg m A well informed travellor tells us new and uma" mu Wh” t that midway down the Simpson Pass 5l°"l°‘15 cvlngel was fi the tourist pauses to read upon s|p'°°l“i”‘°‘1r stone by the wayside the single word 'nm the GUY Of ROIDS during “Italia." The Alpine pinss cling tc rst century of the Christian the mountain sides between whose °“* °‘, “ l>°l>“1s¢i°n of 1.s1o.ooo steeps the rough way winds.- The ' snows cover the peaks and the brooks are frozen to the precipiees. The traveller wraps his cloak about him Bgsinst the frost that reigns un- disputed upon those ancient thrones of ice-bound rock. But at the point where that stone -'with the 'word "Italia" stands, he passes a bound- si- line. From there the wa 'bs Y y gins into another world. Soon almost every step makes plainer how great has been the change from Switzerland to Italy. The brooks unbound, leap laughing and making their own sweet music over the cliffs. 'i`he snows havs melted from the path; The air grows warm and. fragrant. The regiments ol hardy pine no longer ‘ struggle in broken lines up'the mountain side, The leaves of the Olive trees glisten in the sunshine. The vines follow the wayside. The very sky seems near and kind. And below, ernbossorned' in verdurc. Lillie M9-ggiore expands be- fore him. As he rests at evening time he knows that the entrance into a new world was marked by the word "Italia" upon that stone at the summit of the pass. So in a_ much higher sense human- ity has crossed a new boundary line between two eras up to Bethlehem was one way growing bleaker and more barren and colder as _the human race hastened on. Down from Bethle- hem has been another and sunnier, happier time. _ The one civilization was as Swit- zerland sbut in among its icy Alps? the other is as the genial and fruit- ful plain. The coming of the Christ- Child meant a difference, such as no other ebild's has ever made. Thst birth marked the entrance into the sphere of sense and time of ons who had existed from Eternity and is- volved more important consequences to the human race than any other birth has ever done, of all who look- ed, that first Christmas night on the Babe of Bethlehem, there was not one-not Herod, nor the wise men, nor the shepherds, nor Joseph not even Mary herself nor any mortal on any single spot of the old, old world, -who so much as dreamed of all that He was to bring to pass. It is no faii-.romance but sober fact when we say that when Mary’s Son was born volume one in the world‘s strange tumultuous history was closed and volume two was opened. Something happened that holy and forever mom- orablc night while men the wide world around were sleeping and only a few shepherds were watching which ushered in a new crn. in the world's thrilling and uncensiug pilgrimage. The old passed away and tho new the in t oo; Ona" Mimisen tous us that so 0U Of every five m d whom St. 1'aul llasseiin othn the :tim iwith less rights in tl, ' e eyes of :law than your l\0g. The same w rue of Anthens. Let us look for tions which prevailed in Roms wh Bile was the mistress of the | , wo 'and we shall find scene after sc Uerpetuated in some dork comer in inliumanity in the broad rl li f-DCFBCY of that ancient time "Yon ugonies of death and to gn-stifye butchered before thom_ P°|Ii0» had an Aquarium of L th\?y preferred human flesh _to an his favorite f h C y made his money raigiiiog diild 33 princes and pair'ci ' . lthousand slaves i1n?lnI1iore?v`i:ii;?1 (E of wounded and dying mem Julius Caesar furnished from 1 tory by exhibiting five tlioilssud _ reac e w en the first people human shambles, assthctloslly Stllily the lines and curves drawn th deatl- knew what a revolution had been! th t mst Cm. tl . 0 . n in uns niornins wrought by the quiet amazing pow- _ _ "- er of God' ' _lt would bc n. matter of compai The wonder of that day after thc Advnnt has grown with majestic movement of all subsequent yearn, and Christianity has been and Will i 'u miracle continue to be an ncreasi g _ - _ _ of the I»01`\i'B lll`f~;iS0U¢0\9»“\1 'l"0“'&" °"ii'li(Id’<;: f]i)siI)rt‘l1eti(r)'roiigiiilriihiiudiistliini our sorrowing an neeiy ear i. very inspirations .n th D. . _ time we write the figures "i911" wcw _h. 1 ‘ _ B Wm” "¥‘l‘“1f' bear witness to the fact that, for us “,‘°h Jdwcended “_‘t;’ h“ma“ h“‘t° eiilfzrgciiiciit of liumnu fl‘i‘cdi|i|i, tl agencies which are co-opvrntiiig at least there are but two great di- Wm" “us “m’°a'°‘ among me” tl n er~crndle of Bethlehem, We Ie ma 5 . - ’stupsndou-4 clirnges for thc l tt _ I __ _t . 4 - -‘ i ie e . "mst ’°n}m3?er :'ll:\'I; gist; ha: mai He had not failed to secure. W Chung” ° 5 ws _“_ t butydemsivel breathe u different air, we chori fact *Wd “O rl lm' lofticr hopes and aims and live in _ . . world whose. nicnlnl und moral, so- ¥r‘““Y “BVS f°“l"“e‘I_ *md “°°°“‘phs\li‘9d= cinl :ind religious climate has be and vanishing dreams. lt is a fact in lil the most tangible and “mmm ngiclinnceil ly tl i-hri tmuity of tl form. Men sometimes sayi "W5 Call" Son `,`,| Gf,d_ le S _ not walk in the air. We must stef! to our conclusions upon solid facts. "These Christian conclusions are devoutly to be desired; hut_ we can go no further than we can find firm footing from fact to fact of exl>c\‘- isnosj' In the fact of a changed world and that world grandly, surely changed by the comingof Christin- to its history and manifold affairs, we lmvs s fact just as certain as the battle of Waterloo or the Island of St. Helena or the dawn of day. One of the most recreatlveforces which some with the advent of Jesus was the new revelation of God. Man has .een God in Christ as man neyer saw God before. The one word ‘wihch declares and unfolds God is Obrlst- God is esscntialll’ ‘md etemany Cliristllke. Thus God the infinite and unconditional l‘F0l00t5 Hlmseu I; Christ into His own creation an manifests itself as never before hto finite intelligence, and what this tell; meant to the human race and E; means it is well-rush imD0““’° ° express. It has proved and is proving the most practical and potentinllifn- fluence in ancient and modern _fi cl Before this great historical maui HB tation of God. ssn0sU°l°“‘» gt °“‘t’{‘- deism, and the whole brood o heat enisms must DBSS HWW' This is 3 revelation which is Y0i'» to l’°“s”° the thoughts and faith of human§ty and rule a redeemed universe byh it: gracious and unwastlnil 90"" C 1' Br li;-ought ond made wonderously c eu s new revelation of man. 1 Tho _ gospel of the _Incsrnat oi; means not only 51° °°m“‘g d°W;i ° ood but the imma ur- 0' “\°“» “P- not this man or that 'man but H1 the course of time man evcrYWh°f°~ Our common human nature is stamp- ed with a new value. clothed with B new meaning and diltllliiy. b°°“““° God has become man. Nineteen hun- dred _years ago this conception 0: man's rank and imP0l‘**1“°° ' “““’ have sounded in the ears of that canary in 'l»unnon?"-Youth’s Com- worjd md sspsolally in the ears ofpsnion. perute effort of any kind work out line running by the manger-cradle ads and is still makin it m ll ~ The late Gail Hamilton once said; "lt requires no learning to see that .if the Stamp of Christ and every- ithiizg which has come from* into .thc life of the world could sud- of thc memory and consciousness and idenly nnd completely burned out record of maxi society would .bc chaos.” POOR RECOl\iMENDA’l‘ION. to see an old bachelor uncle. "Wool, Tammns, ye have gotten what can she do, lad?" "Do!" echoed "Tammas.” ' scones?" "Oh, no. she docsn't know 110W ido those things," said Tamms ger.” “Hoot, monl" cried his uncle, dignantly. "Gould YOU “W 8% "’”"”"""1i710'iR’s _;_J. CH OCOLA TES his rst the ers. the 0. ' t were °l'"°“° '1`hi“k 0! it; umie of the Imperial City were slaeses the “‘°m°”t _Of W0 at the actual condi. en rld "or the “mst "W0"-I“B brutallties Sgt wh __ 0' ’ att m°t“’P°uta“ UW but spectacles . . _ ay ght an °“3°Yed by' the aria-‘ Flamiuius had a b ' .ng \vho had never seen aocifrliian :e:ii¢llrixli'ani,ii;) ~ _ his curiosity, the y u . ei . 25 ::i:_;:?;..°'§;i; DI‘cys_ and one day found out 5:; thing else and he had yn y0l\ng slaves whose flesh was tender, frequently cnt “ll Hilo tlun slices as a delicac for . ' I - _ _ . er, ing slaves chained in gangs afif tix(- were cattle. _Many of these Romog en ne 'had twenty thousand. It was to en. tertain the well-t -d 'ul that ainpitheatrcso wird litliilltot £3333 gladmtofs by the thousands fought until the sands were crimson wit human blood and the coliseum echoed and re-echoed to theicries and groans prisoners of war three linndi-ed 81,1; twenty Pal" Uf Eladiators. Titus got up_a. carnival of human carnage 'which lasted for more than one hun- 'dfed days. Trojan celebrated a vjc_ _ _ in mortal combat and Domitian excelled himself and discovered a new sensa. tion for those degraded and bloody <19-YB by Ufmllging a battle between idwarfs and women. And the horrible 'climax of brutal refinement was ll fl h ' Qf Rome gathered together at these to by e i agony upon the faces of the fallen. These arc samples of a civil- ization which giutted with blood fod with slaughter and amused with flcsth the people." nut the new Pow- er came, and Jesus Christ is that _Power and the vital determinating 'fnct, the fact behind all other facts _ is the new l .t‘ _ f tl penml began and only th” “gels of man wliicdli rdiiineointoutlie ‘iimrih .a_ live ease to show how the command- ing modern pliilnntliropics, the hos- ~pitnl systems of the world thc great ic as 8. Hg ll' ' _ , At tii d t . l tl - vision? m th? worm H wonderffn. iliarityl Switlii ntyilcd ‘("‘.1:J(in1‘i`li‘t;:'land._ What other Island is there? To 'lhe fmnrdian and its many renders wc extend best wishes for ii merry Giiristmss ond u happy limi prosperous New Year. The New London North Farmers' ln:-ititutc hcldi a most interesting meeting in Long llivf-r Hail on Sat- mqlny Ievcning, December ltitll, the Vice-President, J. Bradford Millmau, p,.cSi,\ing_ The subject before the meeting wus that suggested by QM Dspartm-cnt of Agriculture for dis- cussion by In.-atitutcs for thc r\10nU\ of December, viz., The l-'ollltfy Iildllfl' try, Many phases of the io‘.vatt was well worth h(.M-ing, Mr. llowatt has for some time been imllrcvlnli his l’°“l' tl-y, He favored the Barred Ply' mouth Rock as the best general pur- pose hen. and emphasized the need of “owing grit in poultry houses at _all times, and the necessity of putting only strictly fresh eggs o_n the mark- et, 'The address by John R. Marin wss"tho actual experience of .one who has taken more than usual interest in poultry raising for a number of years, and was listened to with deep Intel” est Hy all present. He attended the meeting by special request, not being s member, but at the close of the rncetifng expressed his desire to be- come *_ member of the Institute. Oth- ers taking part in the discussion were the vice-president, John Bernard, J. N. Evans, Wm. Johnstone and the Secretary. Many questions were ask- ed Mr. Howntt and Mr. Marks durlnd their addresses. Which 'brought out much interesting information. The meeting was adjourned till Friday ovening, the 22nd, when it is hoped a larger number, both of members and visitors, will he present to discuss this important branch of ai;l`lc\1lU~\¥`8~ The bulletins issued by the Depart- ment of Agriculture were much ap- preciated and of great assistance to the speakers- ::"The School that has won the con- ddence of the people." Union Com- mercial Collece. 8-31fl’f~I- _ if rr" i \i.»‘._`~".'~"_»;f‘.'__`,,-i.;:~il.f,?¢“"‘»'"` " l 1 ;-_; jf<'fj .is ff L_' 91-. l .~ \j" ' .--I" _j-if-" “'- -` '~i<`. _I `>_'YYn'f"\ °_!|N\ » _.L li _J I ~ .._..._.._._._.._.__.___... .. _ "gf-..-: ié I _ 1 Are the kind you should buy for your XMAS ?IF;`S. 132%; are fhe dnest made and are most attractively b°X° - °“ 5 call and nee our very excellent display. 'The MacKinnon Drug Co. ., Cor. Gt. Geo. and Kent Street 1 \ ‘ vi"’i'/ No need of sin nr the praises of ou Bak ry Goods w en all over town you can gear tb m nra sed by those wh%use our sam §r¥°ad.Oakes ate daily. hay are pure, who some and nutrlt ous. Sfewarfs Bakery .._~_ 163 Kent Street U 1 I ` / . -' i ' i I x - . _ ,,\_, _Y ` _ _ A l I 5 ~< \ \t t", ‘, In if \ " , ; . ‘ \ . "WY " ‘i v nm : _:1'~,» .---v,.~”~_ - ‘\f _:_ V* » s it-' 4,# 1_‘»‘~.:i~.,i~..'. v._\»'..‘. ,fi | ' ' . ` ‘--f '~‘ ‘ 1" = i ` ‘ v ’ ' 'f " ‘” ‘ ' . - ‘ ~ ..r-m~ - ' Miss Edith Huntly, teacher of the Earnscliife School, paid a flying visit to her parents in Charlottetown, re- turning yesterday morning. Cephas Munn, Winsloe ` Road, who ,was one of the principal sheep exhibi- tors at the recent Amherst Winter Fair, won seventeen prizes: five tirsts, live seconds, two thirds, four fourths and one sixth, besides taking first and second in the black test with the keenest of competition Mr. lvlunn has well deserved the many Eézsngratulations received on his suc- s. The firm of Prowse Bros. & Co., Ltd., city, have greatly im-proved the Illwearance of the interior of their store by night by providing increased lighting throughout the entire store. The old Keros Lights have superced- cd the powerful tungstens now placed UlP0U§hout the various departments and to those who have been familiar with the old system the great im- Provement made by the installation of the new lamps will be at once up- parcnt. These lamps are of the tung- sten variety und range in power from 200 c.p. to 400 c.p., both giving an extremely bright and radiant light. Their many customers will appreciate the ffrm’s evident concern for their convenience and the assist.: ance afforded in making their pur- chases. Another feature of the new lights is the abolition of the odor which almost invariably accompanies the Keros lights. The firm are to be congratulated on the marked im- provement enectcd by their latest change. :ZCITY TAXES-A list of names for unphid_city taxes will be advertised in a few _days-Parties that have not paid will please take notice. 11-28dtf. :'.The Earl Grey will leave Char- lottetown at 7.30 in the morning. Returning will leave Picton at 2 p.m. making round trips daily until furth- er notice. The C. G. S. Minto will leave Sunimerside at 7.30 a._m. and Tormentine at_Z.30 p. m., making daily round trips until further no- tice. 11-21d3i. BROWNIE N' :_, "- s _ _ _Q59 .u I. Y ( -._ .I~ - if § "\-_"Q (“ s-_-.°- \. ’ ¢" »..`, ,-_P 4 ra "Z5 “ -r, ""' " ` \:‘ `~ . ____ \ 1 Cameras $2.00 fo 3510 00 ~I0llliSf>c & .lnhusnii N... 'rw rr liziniircds _ 5 _‘f af? ,_"_- PJ F# 1 4'. fluxes f . fl 2 of _- -1-.; flliorolates _ _ await your iuspfcliou at our store. Our assmiiuent _ - of Neilsoifs, Moir’s and I Ivanhoe Clioonlsics is not surpassed in the City. 3:; I _ Prices io suit any purse. 1-" '_- 25 cenis io $5.25. i 31. l`)clivcred free to any _-L-_ part of the City on Lbrist- '~j mas Day or Saturday . OPEN _ ' OPEN Jai” arieé ." ING ~ N _ mm”/,WMM rvtm G We Call S ecial Attention _ _ P _-..___ Today to Our Page on Ii -Page 6 ,__ ' . ia\o§ se" rw ~__. (__- _ i.~,_ '_ ._ *film Give H im cz Smart' Coat Sweater 'Il-I li Cl-~l.\NCES ARE he has been looking in . 1 ~ - our wInr.->.v :if .nose bcnutie v.=i~>2:in_s;' ihzi-‘_ lil. had one. < 'l uc-y are so comfoi-tab one. 75c, $1.00, l.25, I 58, sfroni time to time and lc-s0 cozily warm, and withal so stylishly neat that every man would like _ ' Prices--you can get him one nt L95, 2.55, 315, 4.50. and n range of prices between, Boys coat 'sweaters at Sflc io 2.55. , . ww'i~@w~rvmr I knew a very mean mnn-the menu- est man on earth-so mean that he kept u five-cent piece with :i string tied to it to give to licggars; and \\'licn the backswere turned hs jerked it out of their pockets! Why, this man was so confounded mean that he gave his cliildren» ten cunts apiece every night for going to lied without their supper, but during the night when they were asleep, he went upstairs, took the money out of their clothes and then whipped them in the morning for losing it. The other day I dined with him, and I noticed the poor little servant girl whistled all the way upstairs with the dessert; and when I asked the mean old scamp what made her whistle so happily he said: “I keep her whistling so she cnn't eat the raisins out of the cake.” ` Another mean man was old Backus Long. He used to send back his saus- age skins and have them refilled. Tlicn there ivan .loliu Whitney. llc always stopped flie clock nights to keep it from wearing out the cogs. That was moan, but old man Gal- kins was 'so mean that he skimmed .his milk on top, and th.:n, when no mic was looking, ho turucil it over and skiinnicfl it on tho lnottmn. liut the uicmirut r.`.i\_u was old Dea- con L`-r.'\wfor¢l_ (inc day l)\':».|fi>ii Craw- iorfi found n, stray bong-lioic over u.- round a cooper shop, and do you know what he did with that stray hunghole? Why, gentleman, you may call it a lie, but if' he didu't take it up to Morsc's cooper shop and, hund- ing it out, asked Gardner Morse to please give him a barrel to fit that cre bungholc! He did, by gosh! \VASHl.\'G'1`ON M()NUl\lEN'l`. The Washington monument at thc imtioiiul capital, liigiu-st of stone structures and designed by its build- ers to stand as long as thc pyra- mids, is suffering from u. disintegra- tion that, while not immediately fa- tal, will materially shorten its life, says John S. Mosby, Jr., in the De- cember Popular Mechanics magazine. This great shaft, 555 (cet in height, consists of walls 15 it-et thlcllat the bass, Theso walls are mndc up of an miter facing of marble blocks and a four foot inner wall made of granite and other hard stone. Between these two walls there is 9, filling of hetero- geneous stone, field togethefby fem' ont, This describes the first 198 feet, is the art now af'ccted This -ri evening. | "2 If’s io your adva nialic fo ` .e-.. .@¢n -5 see our .stock if you wanf f im-1-ei-.-a-f_~»;-...._|.¢||1_=-1__' 1 chocolates. ' Johnson (D. Johnson _ a_____s-=.==_-_.<~- ie- -- if -_jilsxo \L g' _ The gift HE really wants is iight here, We Iisveunaden. close study of what mon need and like . during the Holidnysfnson and we are lure you will find the right gift here at lhe right price, llerc are a few suggestions. Bi x of cigars. Cneed pipe, Safety razor. ll-_vxexf Shaving brush. i Set of military brushes, Ca mera, Ci-se of smoking iobacco, SI' iving outfit, Il._nd mirror. |49 Grant George Sfrcct. which " D - ~ part was built continuously from. the beginning of thc structure. Then for years the construction halted at that height. It is the interior filling be- tween these walls that is now, through the deadly effect of heat and cold and dryness and dainpness at- tacking it alternately. beginning *O disintegrate sud ooze out between the joints of the outer wall and the crev- ices made by the action of the ele- mvuts. . from Icelanic 'steik‘, used- in the some sense as the English word, ‘which meant properly roasted meat. from stcikja, to roast; that is, l51l\°‘ ed on a stick before the fire (com- pare Swedish, stek, .Danic-sh, stek, roast mcat.)’ ‘_ The same authority BHYBi ‘A 90" tcrhouse” steak is a choice cut of Ge t - ` ` STEAK. if f sv- _ or .1-_-__ 4.--.__.l. (From the ‘National Provisioner.) H' I to no »f fm the Encyclopaedia Britannica, _W0 ."/"/Fi word ‘steak' is apparently derived well known “porter house,' and cat- li l . hops, steaks, etc., ‘N7 ’ _ ing cum Wm-It lit were served ai',_ e re Very busy. and porter or s o _- steaks were a specialty wmihsildxiircgrilled between two other Just tf) Wish you ali 3. steaks, which arc not served after the' cooking is finished, is also some- times culled a "porterhouse steak. Not in these days of high cost meat would such a practice as the latter be very generally followed however utlszincc.--Airliisoii (l\au.) Lllobc, James Bryce, in his agreeable "Principles and Maxima for the Reading of Books," gives this bit of advice: “Ono should read in a criti- cal thot is to say. a searching, test- ing spirit. Uv" 'uirit ought, no doubt. to be respectful to the author of the book if he happens to be if well-inforincd man; but respect is not the same thing as submission." That word “well-informed” makes us think Mr. Bryce must bc speaking of books that aim to give informa- tion, to supply facts, or to show the relation between facts. Books that do this, or f.h`at try to change the read- `er’s mind, may of course snlcly bc read in a searching, testing, critical spirit. But. how about books that stir the feelings or set a lighted match Lo the inlaginution? ls it not true that reading such boolas in' ii, critical spirit is almost .the same- as not reading them at all? That the only way to read them is to be tem- porarily submissive? Take a particularly happy nnd| greatly enjoying reader like Hugo von l~lofn~.:mii:~ztliul, and list(-.u fo iii,--. acrount of the right. way to read it poem by iifnvtliu or'h‘tefuii (ieorgi-. Hc does not think he has read such n poem, hc tolls us, until he-.I luis lived, it. Clcnrly lic reads in nlinostnfury of submission. Living much among books he gets one of his iicutest plea.- sures by surrendering hiinscif for the time being to his author. l.uter, when! hc has cooled down. Herr Von llof- mannsthal can criticize with the bcsi. of them as his prosc essays show. Anybody who looks buck across thc reading year and picks outtlic- fiction nnfl the pm-.tl‘_y that luivr really counted in his lifc, will find that in most cases hc read them in his least critical spirit. They laid their spell upon him so strongly that his criti- cal faculty was inhibited. Nor, if he is wise, will he bc sorry that he once read them in this way.-New York Globe. SHOCK FOR Tlild (`liUlRGH. Tho Church of England should be shocked by tho revelations nf the bish- op of Lincoln. Hc says that when the licensing bill was bcforc thc house of lords, the bishops received letters from the great brewery firms, in which the writers reminded the cler- gyman of the financial ossistancc fcn- dered to the church. One bishop won told that but for the brewers' moncv __ “fi-'_--'f.;=_'-_-=' y ____ l, THE RIGHT WAY TO READ. ‘ CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY. The Usnaoian Pacific is the Short [Direct Route Chnrlottetown to Mon- itreal, tho trip being made in twgnty- four hours. (Ili-so connections are imado for all jf<»inf.s beyond, and :changes and trnnslnrs ni-o avoided, |I*-ow ciocfric light sllmpera on the O. gP. R. Halifax Montreal run, and this jrond has the best dining car service. ‘This is the only line oporatlog mm. partmeut ciirs-Montreal and Ottawa ;to Toronto, and Montreal and Toron- to to Vancouver, J. K. Ross, the local C. P. Il. agent, can supply all information. 4|-tl, Give hor a nlao Sweater Coat you will find the finest range f_1 town ready for you here. 2.35 to 5.00 ouch.--Moore 'li McLeod l 2-20dtf. AlI_;_far\oy goods in thu Christ mas h"Eiz.-‘lor are being <.l< nred out at heavy disooiints. All goods worth to 356 on solo at li-lc. Allgoods worth to 650 on safe at 39c. Come on in to-day and socurea pn-.tty gift for a song. Moore & hloLet»d I2!-2odtf ,_ You are invited io see my display of plants suitable for the Christmas season. I have a choice ioiof Primroses in al- shades, also (fyclamcn, Jeru salem Cherries. Ferns. Palms. efc.---Jas. Tail. jr. Brighton, phone 269 1 2~r3eI1/:>1e\1‘>e»e/cts Sure to be Happy: ~ All will be happy from us, those who buy them from 3 1.' netsw/s."'D':icxc\' ‘ . oooooo 0 00§)®@\s Morning presents bought ll them to you " Everybody pleased §`.2.°.’I.‘f.'s'§,"‘Zi.§i‘°..i°i§`;..“`l-.§‘$`i.‘f`°3;....“‘1; With our fme Display - _-‘ll \ a \ ., ._, . _ -Paola ». »Y»>C')@’eA'§@@®©7) 9GB