—e? ‘ orem oe ee RD eet Oe ee « aes a eet RRA YS SS ee CL Are you Building? ee Why not use our ons his of cattle he may be able to acquire. tle works for a couple of years until he can get 11 oxen or cows. Then he hies himself to the Zululand on ; Steel Siding, Gal. anized on the east or to other countries controlled b : “] by or Painted. black men and there buys himself a wife. Ten cows is the price of a wife. x} he eleventh is killed for the wedding feast. The Katlir remains a few months with his wife, then off to the mines he goes to earn the price of an- other. When half a dozen ves, the Kaffir’s menial toil is over, and he gentleman. His = TO ae CTP: Fe , wives plant the mealy (corn) and look - = Fa awrad +, or I c 423 » Wwacw ifter what cattle their lord and master TLD OPA AY ne is a day laborer and reck- he possesses becomes a | owns. With a kraal full of daughters the Kaflir must become a rich and im- | portant person, The daughter of a chief costs cows and the danghter of a king 60, no matter how old or ugly. The chiefs | are severely strict in their watchful- ness over the morals of the Kaffirs. If one is found guilty of dishonesty, he is fined so many oxen. The Kaffir is said to be better in his original state than when contaminated with what they call civilization.—Columbia State. (a It makes a wonderfrily durable and economical covering for new buildings, orfor improving old ones, Gives a most handsome effect — is very easy to apply ---offers fire proof protection — and can’t be penetrated by dampness By deciding in its favor you's get the best results, at least expemse, Write us if you’re intereste:/, we'll send full information. 235 The Farm Beat the Mortgage. The following story illustrates the METALLIC ROOFING CO., Linueed resources of a Nebraska farm: A Manufacturers, Toronte. DELAYED IN SHIPMENT BUT HERE VOW ’ = { Our large stock of - i| Hl ) il —w HAS ARRIVED Rare Works of Art. | | Take Care of Your Ears. Men and women have much to do to keep straight. A hundred nerves and Prices that will sell them. muscles are at work all through the waking hours, giving warning or re- Ready for your inspection. | ceiving orders that the body, with its HAS7ARD & MOORE: many joints and natural instability, SUNNYsID farmer got discouraged because he | @idn’t get rich the first year and, as there was a mortgage of $700 on his |} farm, was about ready to jump the whole but determined to | make one effort and sowed 80 wheat. It happened to be a poor year for wheat and the stand was not very good. Concluding that it wasn’t worth harvesting he pulled up} his stakes and moseyed back to Mis- souri, leaving the farm to fight the mortgage all by itself. The farm was equal to the occasion. The wheat ripened, fell down and de- posited the seed in the soil again. Next spring the wheat begaa to grow lustily. Some of the neighbors were honest enough to write about it down to the | fugitive in Missouri, and he got inter- ested enough to come back and take a look. Then he stopped and harvested his voluntary crop. He sold it for enough to pay off the mortgage and the rest of his debts and had a tidy little surplus over, with which he moved his family back and now declares there is no state like Nebraska.—Lincoln (Neb.) Journal. business, more acres in | shall preserve its equilibrium, shall not stagger or double up in a _ hopeless heap. These nerves and muscles are a | highly organized signal the ‘ Y chief offices of which are in the semi- At Midni nt circular canals buried in the “stony” |} bonework that protects the inner ear. Were it not for these canals a human being would find it difficuit, often im- possible, to maintain a proper balance either while walking or standing still. So long as these canais are in healthy working order their reports are trust- worthy, but when any undue force has shocked them or any agency, such as sickness, has interfered with their workings their messages are incoher- ent, and the brain, like the engineer of a battleship in action, when the men ——— a x —L* } service, Your prescription can be filled at Macdonald's Drug Store Corner Kent and Great George Streets. Residence in connection with store. VELEPHONE. White’s Caramels and Snowflake of Chocolates =~ Can be had at any of the following firsy class store T. J. Morris D. L. Hooper W. Pilekard & Vo. W. A. Hutcheson W. F. Carter Stewart & Gates Sanderson & Co. J.D. McLeod & Co R. H, Mason, —— CHEQUE LOST. Cheque No 117, drawn by Mr. Cousins Spee erent = = ens The fondest anticipation ina woman’s life is when she is looking forward to the com- ing ef the sweet and ten- der little bundle of hu- manity that will some day call her mother, It is a pity that this joyful expectancy should ever clouded with solicitude and dread of the physical which matern- ity in- volves. is no need this excess- ive anxiety if the prospective mother will avail herself of the health - sustaining power of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription taken early during the Y expectant period. The special organs and nerve-centers pertaining to maternity are directly fortified and reinforced by this wonder- py ful ‘‘Prescription.”’ It gives the mother — ao ent strength, capacity and cheeriuiness, It renders Me ordeal of motherhood abso- lutely safe and comparatively easy; smsures egainst subsequent relapse and prostration; promotes ample and healthful nourishment for the child and endows it with natural constitutional vigor. ly thirty years Dr. Pierce has been chief congntiog physician to the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute of Buffalo, N. ¥. Any wo- mai may consult him either personally or by letter free of charge, and with absolute assurance of receiving sound, practical advice from the highest professional authority. By enclosin thirty-one one-cent stamps to pay the cost a, customs and mane only, she will eo a aper-bound copy of Dr. Pierce's thousand-page itlustrated book, “ The People’s Common Sense Medical Adviser,” or a handsome cloth-bousd copy, for fifty stamps. . Fred Hust, of Burnt Hills, Saratoga Co., wis, yecerts wae ber a poms wie in so See T got rot bottles last September, and THE KAFFIR WIVES ’ ; : | wealth in the number of heads } ' i is this?” th, I had a twelve-pound baby girl. when Tae confined I was not sick in any a Recretary Treasurer, Park Coroer Cream . I did not suffer any pain, and when the chi ery on the MERCHANTS BANK OF P E. ISLAND, for $36.00 dollars. Finder | was porn, t walked into arene or any other will pleage return to drawer, The public ein. This is the eights child and the largest it hereby warned against cashing sbcv | ef them all.” j ‘he que. | above ere blinded and bewlldered, has nothing to do but let things go.—Ber- lin (Md.) Herald. Railroad Slang as Translated. Extract from report made by head brakeman: “The con was flipping the tissues in the doghouse. The hind shack was freezing a hot hub near the hind end. Tallow Pot was cracking diamonds in the tank. Eagle Eye was down greas- ing the pig and I was bending the rails when they hit us.” It was translated by an old timer in the office as follows: “The conductor was examining the train orders in the cupola. The rear brakeman was cooling a journal. The fireman was breaking coal. The en- gineer was oiling the engine, and the head brakeman was throwing a switch when the trains came together.”— Maine Central. Making Ducks Lay Black Exrgs. According to a writer in a French scientific paper, ducks fed on acorns, which they will eat ravenously, not unfrequently lay black eggs. The rea- son is that their eggshell is naturally rich in iron, and this combines with the tannin in the acorn to produce a good, fast black. The same paper states that if fowls are fed on boiled lobster shells they will lay bright red eggs. Mixed. On one occasion the Prince of Wales visited a Hindoo schoo! in Madras. The youngsters had been drilled inte | the propriety of saying “Your royal | highness” should the prince speak to them, and when the heir apparent ac- } costed a bright eyed lad, and, pointing to a prismatic compass, asked, “What the youngster, all in a flutter, replied, “It’s a royal your prismatie highness.” compass, The Passing of the “Hayseed.” Who does not know him, with his goatlike beard, his wispy hair, his “gal- luses” of homely cut, his trousers evolved by the seeming aid of a buzz- saw, his voice of an impossible nasal- ity, his speech uncouth, his gestures ungainly, his greenness amazing? Who has not seen him on the stage of the vaudeville farce or outlined by the overworked caricaturist? No one. We are familiar with him from ab- surd hat to ludicrous footwear, and have been for years. Whe sees him on the streets of northwestern cities to- day? Noone. In a modified form he exists in that part of the nation which Bostonese are wont to call “way down east.” He also exists to some extent in the New England that is nearer Boston than Maine, while from New York and New Jersey he is not altogether absent. West of a line drawn north and south through Chicago he is rare—at least as an indigenous variety. The passing of the “hayseed” is de- sirable. As the farmer becomes more like him of the city he and his children will eare less for the so called delights of metropolitan life, will recognize his innate and indestructible independence and will be better satisfied with his lot. —Minneapolis Times. What President Was Thist One day a president of the United States sent for me. He had been elect- ed to that high office, but had not yet been installed. “T hear,” he said, “that you have just come back from Washington.” "Te. “Did you go to the White House? You did? Well, please sit down and tell me all about it. What sert of a house is it? How is it managed? How many rooms are in K? Whereabouts does the president de his work? And hew did you get in there—how de vis- iters manage te see the house while a president and his family are living in Mey “Why,” I exclaimed, “you have often been to Washington! Have you never visited the White House?” “No,” said he, “I have only seen the outside of it. I have never even seep a president or, in fact, any great man. Iam so peculiarly constituted that if 1 knew the greatest man in the world could be seen by walking to the corner 1 would not walk there. But now that I am about to make the White Iilouse my home, 1 should very much like to hear all_that you can tell me about it.’—Julian Ralph in Saturday Evening Post. A Reflection on the Judge. In an address before the Virginia State Bar association James P. Harvri- son of the Danville bar told tbis story of an eminent judge in Virginia, who sat on the bench with his feet up be fore him, showing his soles to eoun- and audience: “The defense had offered a little negro as a witness for their elient. and the commonwealth’s ‘trorney challenged the witness as too ing to testify. When the pickanin- » had been sworn on the Holy Evan- <olists, he was asked by the common- vvealth's attorney what he had done. ‘| swared,’ said he. “*And what will happen to you now if you tell a lie? the lawyer roared. “My mammy. she'll whip me.’ “ ‘Is that all” insinuated the defend- rnt’s attorney. **No, sah. De debble, he'll get me.’ “And then the judge took his feet Jown. and leaning over the bench with sy} Sci . )" Queen Si, - 24 a ChE Daowxy KXAAMINER CHAKLUTTETOWN, JAUNARY 9. 1906 menacing finger said. ‘Yes, and [il get you, too, sir? “When quick as a flash came the boy’s ready reply, ‘Boss, dat’s jess what I done said.’”—New York Sun. What Women Don’t Know. “One of the mistakes of women,” said a woman’s lecturer the other day, “is in loving too much. They can ney- er make a mistake in loving, but they ought to be careful in picking out the man. They are rather apt to do it on the grab bag principle. Another of the mistakes of woman is not knowing how to rest, and still another is not knowing how to eat. What women don’t know about both has built 10,000 hospitals. Consider the way of man and be wise. Women worry too much. They are misers to jollity, and they nearly always die leaving a large ac- count in the Bank of Merriment.” A Fire In Japan. A fire in Japan is exciting. The Jap- anese seem to lose their heads -com- pletely in the presence of the fire de- non. The people move from the houses where the fire breaks out into the next, then to another, and so on, until the fire is over, the united families moving from house to house with great non- chalance. A man dancing on his roof with a paper fire god is supposed to avert the danger, and no man is more surprised than he when, in spite of the fire god, the house ignites, and in a moment roof and man fall together. In three days the houses are rebuilt atu aii traces of fire removed. No Cure for... Bright’s Disease In ite advanced stages—The Rea- son Why—Danger Prevented by the Timely Use of Dr. A. W. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pilis. To understand Bright s Disease is to know that in its advanced stages it is past the reach ef human aid. The cells of the kidneys undergo a wasting change, which leaves them dead so as performing their functions is concerned. Just think of having the kidneys dead. Think of-the poisons left ia the system when these organs could no longer perform their duties as filters of the blood. It would be difficult to conceive of anything more dreadful, and yet this is the goal to which every case of neglected kidney disease mustlead, hen the back aches, when urinating is difficult or too frequent, when there are de- posits in the urine after standing for 24 hours, there is no time to lose in procuring Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills. It is not claimed that they will cure Bright's Disease in its last stages. ‘They are an abso- lute cure for kidney disease, and so long as the kidneys are not entirely wasted away they will give new strength and vigor and enable them to resume their duties of filtering the blood. Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills will step backache and headache in short order by re- moving the cause, and will positively prevent Bright's Disease. One pill a dose, 250. a box, At all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Ca, Toronto. A Bilious Letter Qo — Thursdav evening we dropped a bill ia the Post Office for a prominent gentleman of this town. The next morning we had the pleasure of rece pting it, This is what we call rromptness. (Ob, that others would do likewise.) Wa have been drop- ping, dropping, softly dropping a number of bills in the Post Office; and we are wait- ing,waiting patiently, to have the pleasure and to give the rleasure of receipting them. Please do not al! come together; but if you do, what a happy, happy gathering It willbe. We bave a number of bills io pay, and a large number of small bills that should be paid ns, Kindly pay yours and we will be in a position to do likewise. Yours very truly J. J. GAY & SON, CHARLOTTETOWN. HIN K. The Rink will cp*n for the season Xmas afternoon, Tickets same price as last year. Gents? ........ . 6.100. BB.5O BUM 66s 600+ bees $2,506 Children’s......... .... $1.50 Aliterneon............ $1.50 Present your friend with a ticket or Xmas. Tickets for sale at Johnson & Joan sons’, A. W. Reddin’s, and Apcthe caries Hall, or the managers. E.H. BEEK. B. C. PROWSE SSC HALF TONEO<<>> J Zinc ETCHING ELECTROTYPING., — 7i DOCK Sr = St. JOHN, N.B. . Tc LET The northend of a house situated on Prince Street, conta‘ning niae rooms, suit- able for a boarding house-or private resid- ence. Apply to THOMAS McQUAID, ~~ e ly IL. S&S. Jourson —Fifty ago this mont our rather, Dr. Johnson, leftf em) ve : Johnson's p2e ’ eons I have sold it ie. Ican most truly say thatit \ — M, Ever MomHer Sout? Have it in the tlouse To cure the common ailments that may | of family as tong aslife as woes, OHNSON'SANOBYNELINIMENT' iio tarcliowser ‘term . cure every form: of Pain and Inflammation; |s Safe, | Soothi g.Sure. Otherwise itcould 4 not have existed for almost, : j acen ySON's AAODYNE LINIMENT Is stric lya omy remedy for hg Internal as much as External use S To cure Colds,croup,Coughs, Catarrh © & ~ Cramps and Colic it acts promptiy.~ i: ORIGINATED BY AN OLD FAMILY PHYSICIAN. x 6 There is not a medieine in use which possesses the confidence of the public toa greater extent than Johnson’s Anodyne Liniment. For almost a century it has stood upon its intrinsic merit, while generations after generations have used it. The best evidence of its virtue is the fact that in the state where it originated the sal You can safely trust what time bas indorset @ standard and popular? from that time to the present. JOHN B. RAND, North Waterford, Maine, January, 1991. Send for our Beok om INFLAMMATION, mailed fres. Sold by all Druggists. ’L 8. JOHNSON & CO., Desion, Mian, SIMMER Put up im Two Sizes, Price 25 and 50 cta. re a pe’ re ' o& oO a Pe’ pe’ & RD om eee TORTOISE HEATER Tortoise Heaters-—— Wat ker’s Corner _ ne : T. J. Harris, SPRY Py, YY WHFS rx Sa nee pS ae | SASS ES rise Nee EK SS 2 ‘ Wi Boots and Rubbers all styles and_ sizes fall and winter wear — for possible prices, at McQUAID’S, LOWER QUEEN STREER Boot and Shoe Store. suitable tor the lowest eS ets Ue Nis Island Crown $17.50 Sampson Cook, No. 8 $13.50 This price for 2 weeks TT er t FROM $7.50 UP Sm Simon W. Crabbe STUVES & HARDWARE a Me EY Mey Se Ie ee SE $ LADIES’ FUR MORES ut A FEW > We-vant to clear them out. If you appreciate 36 a bargain come in and see them. % ee Beaver, Persian Lamb Greenland Seal Baltic Seal, @ppossum Monkey hehe ete s ¥ < as LONDON HOUSE Hs Our Laree Stock of winter Overcoating and Suitines... IS NOW COMPLETE AWAITING YOUR INSPECTION. JOHN MLEOD & CO > ve nae eno th a 5, La Reman Sesame et 7 om amass Ever ,- ~ Eee. Seen he gg aan — 24 ve gadiremmnmnns 8