sslfso t the lowest or any tender- .. bs ddresssd to the nn Ossl.’ ' 2 5 Z ¢F TH E DAY f.'i|°”:*:;l\:lllv eahrrsrnsn in the ' rosa ' . hu’ symlp. o and pall ,One of the most reliable p 1i°n° retiatrodueedroms ubilcroi- the Imm late Relief andPCu.re of 6094!*-f. Cvlir, Bmrmiilir, Haan?- ,wm ' c ._ Qi... .f"§..1’.“.é"‘.;.‘{.‘i;“”'r”......“’“ ' an ungs, Taken with Cod Liver Oil in the 581! lil f C ' be fonndeiisviaalnatbligmptioni lt Wm For :ale everywhere. Price 2 dr mail on re¢'eip¢_afpric¢. 5 i ¢af°e?.f’;'.`i’.i.i".1‘¢?,i}i§.T¥.‘l‘i,“¢‘.?$I.i.'.°'”“` ' |l6GlLlI'8'av1'r¢wnu~r PILLS ron ‘ . Vous liwlli also nouns. 0 All those suffering with Bolle, Scrofula, Eczema ` will find Weavers Syrup , and Iieraie ,, invaluable to cleanse thc blood Davis dr lawrence Co., Ltd., Montreal. Guvernnuni Hav. Notice, to Agents of Govern- , n1en`t Hay. _ All 'Agents are requested tr strictly comply :with printed in struclions sent and to obtain ii every case properly signed receipts from farircrs for hay sold them. The receipts must be taken ai the timei of delivery. no matter how smsill s qvnmitv is delivered , i ARTHUR PETERS. I 3 dw. tf Pat 8: Ex. 'Go to`ja friend for advice go to a woman for pity ; gr to strangers for charity, Lui for a good reliable guarantee( watch at a low price, go ,tr TANTON`S. Special prices for a shorl time. W~u.i.i.uuf Tsupens Charlottetown, Summerside and Georgetown Court- houses, also Hospital for Insane, Falcouwood, and Ferry Steamers. De rtmentzof Public Works, , Chulcitrcmwn. Much 16\l=.19°s~ . ‘Sealed Tenders will be received ai this umm until noon on Thursdav. April 6th. IQOS. from any person or persons willing to contr-set to supply the Provincial Building, Court l-louse, Prince of Wales College, Poor House, Qneen's County Jail. Summerslde Court House and jail, Georgetown Court House lad J all, Ifalconwood Asylum and lhrry Steamers. with coal at per toast' n3o lbs . and to be deilyertg lnjthi vlnlrs ofthe above mention bnlllllpjs, .at the cost of contrrctors '.tll sat of Septembernext. Weigh Scsltssfo be approved by the Depart- gnl lparticulars as to the quantity and k nd for each building can be had at .this otllce. The names of two responsible par- , Willis' to become bound for the %‘afal:psr£rmance of the contract ‘i\§%‘aocor'npany eaclrtendsr. , _ ‘* #Department does not bind If and niarked °-Tender Ru 1.. s. M¢\i1"LLAN. , -,f _ _ 'Sec‘y Public Warb- wuir w|LLi1Esusooi I Supposing you Refuse .invite You to Meet Asiths ci ig; SEE 5-ii 9.59. OCP ll ‘ . l‘r:d's:i=k“I=l‘:o‘i:.`:t Lirinalinrs. Ottawa. ~Los Angeles, Cal., Jan. 29,-From an Incidental reference to an ancient, Oriental marriage custom the preach- er in this sermon draws lessons np- pllcable to modern life. 'l‘ho text is Psalm KW. B. -"All thy garments “men °l myrrh and aloes and cassla out of the ivory palaces!-'- The marriage bells are cmming. The glorious robes of a kingly bride. h" mil! bridesmaids are rustling. Royal jewels are dashing. The most skillful of musicians are playing. And as the “wedding march" sounds f°|'l-Il the marriage procession is np- proaching. the kingls throne worn over boulevards of gold. The num- berless inhabitants of the metropolis of tha universe, with its walls of Jasper und its gates of pearl and its palaces of spotless ivory, are making tho walkin ring with hnllcluiahs of novor ending\ joy. The banqut-ting houss ls prepared with the wedding supper for the coming guests, for tho Divine Bridcgroom of my text is bringing; his quoenly bride to her place It his side, over which hangs U18 banner that his hands have placed there, the banner of love. Never on earth nor in heaven has been seen and never- shall be witness-` ed n wedding procession like unto Nlil. Gorgeousncss infinite., wealth and power unlimited, splendor and magnificence passing all understand- ing, will there be manifested on every hand. Earth has 'beheld some wonderful wedding. pageants. When the present Emperor William of Germany was married to the beautiful Princess Au- gusta. Victoria. the representatives of all the civilized Governments of the Wirth were there. Among Bcrlin's guests ut that time were thc King and Queen of Saxony, the Grand Dfuks Alexis of Russia, Crown Prince Rudolph of Austria, the Crown Prince of Sweden, thc present King of England, the inte Duke of Aosta of Italy und scores of other notables. The young bridegrooxn came from Potsdam at the head of his gigantic foot guards to meet his bride. On tho day of the ceremony the homes and the stores and the public build- ings were decorated. When the uup- tial vows were taken' tho cheers of the people who crowded thostrccts about the Royal Palaces echoed the thirty-six salvos of artillery which thundcred the news to the world that Prince William and Princess Augusta. Victoria were one. When Napoleon III. in 1853 rode to the Cathedral of Notre Dame to be united in marriage' with Eugenie, the most beautiful woman in Europe, the progress was one cofntinuous ovation. Seated in the wonderful glass coach thut had been 'built for the corona.- tion of his illustrious uncle, the Em- peror passed through long. lines of his enthusiastic subjects, who rent the all' with their vlves. When the young. Queen of England became the bride of Prince Albert in the, Royal Chapel of St. James nothing that the money, the wealth and the love of a nation could do to make the wedding ceremony impressive and joy- ous wes left undone. Memorable in the annals of tho world are such spectacles, in whliCIl all that human ingenuity could con- ccivo has been done to render tihe nuptlais of the rulers of nations scenes of overwhelming magnificence. But the culmination has yet to Collie -not here, but in that glorious realm in which the Lord of Hosts has sat his throne. The marriage of the [_/amb will be the grandest and m0Ht2 glorious of all unions, when Christ takes to himself his chuI‘Ch. WhiCh he has redeemed with his precious blood, "n glorious church, not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing, holy ond without blemish.” Flumnn imagination fails to con- ceive of it spectacle so glorious. Let us instead of dwelling on _thc mur- vr-lous scene tnlre but one detail of its beauty, the wonderful gnrnsvnts with which the Divinc B1-idr\gl°uon1 is to be robcd on that glorious ouc- raslon. 'The pr-lalmist nwntlnns them in the words of my text. ’l‘lu‘_v nrt- woddlng rubus that have the nromn. of myrrh nnrl nloos and casein. Let n few practical gospel lessons fron. them. The royal robes of the Divine Ilrldc- groom will be thc most cxponsivc of ull garments. Costly was thu wed- ding apparel of Louis XIV., which hc wore when hc was married to Morin Theresa of Spain: of Prince Fcrriin- ,md Wim, he stood by the side of his dauphin of I-‘rancc who. Al Pl°lnC0 Francis, mnrrlodthe beautiful Mnry. Queen of Scots; of Emperor Nicholas II.. who in 1894 gave his heart and hand, in marriage to tho hoautiful Princess Alix of Hcsso; of Napoleon Iionaparte when ln 1S10` ho wcddcrl Marie Louise in the ‘place of-thc dc- fhroncd and cxilcd . osophinc. But the robes of the Heavenly Ilrldegroom will surpass all these in their valuo. llow do we know? The oriental im- agery of the text signifies it. Flnc and beautiful in texture. they an- to be perfumed with myrrh andaloes and canst; out of tha ivory palaces. Now, w at old and silver and Pre cious stones II: dress moan tp thr western mind myrrh and aloos and csasla in a sense mean to the oricn tal mind. Al I would lay $0 you. "Har dross was sparkling with &w\ us try to describe them and to lr-nrnq bride, Isabelle of Castile; of tho ‘- to Meet Divine Bride- groom.-'Marriage Bells of heaven Bride of Christ-Your Cry -Should Bs : "Load on .lSe.vio\|r I Lend On l" Even Now We May Hear the Wedding Chimes mllllhl for the Nuptioils of Heaven. ' Dwell." the oriental, to depict sumptuoueness and expenslveness of apparel, would say, “His garments were aromatic with myrrh and alocs and cassfa." Myrrh was one of the treasures of the~east. When the wise men came to bow at the manger, what expensive, presents did they bring? Gold and frankincenso and myrrh. These oriental sages would not have offered to a king a present of myrrh unless =it had been of great value. “The aloes of Cochin-China,” g:°°;n'°nd °f his \"`id0» V-be dough*--i wrote Dr. Faussett, "are worth their ° “ ‘l“°°”» and the KBl`m°“¥»H 01 weight in gold." The value of cassia also was enormous. It was used, as Dr. McClintock informs us, as an in- gredient in the costliest unguents. When the psalmist tells us that Christ‘s wedding garments smell of myrrh and aloes and cassia we know that he means us to understand how precious they will be. .Let us consider what makes them precious. They are the glory of our Lord. He will wear them in joy and gratitude for the sacrifices his people have made in his cause. They are going to cost all the moneys we give to our churches and to our reforme- tory institutions. We must give this moncy for Chrlst’s robes. I-Ie bids us ElVe» They are going to cost all the moneys we send to foreign missions. "Go teach all men" is the Bible com- mlllld- Not only have -they cost "‘l01\0Y. but blood. They are going. to , cost all the blood of the martyrs which has been shed in the past. Ah, now the expense of those wedding robes is rolling up.. lf the dead body of a common laborer slain hy an ex- press train in New York State is worth $5,000. how much must have been worth the martyrcd blood of a Paul, a Peter, a Stephen, a Polycarp, a Justin Martyr, a Savonarols, a Ridley. an Elphege, o, Gileyrn de Mulor, a. John Rogers, a Lgiwmnco Sllllders. a John Harper, n Brcboeuf, a Lnllorniand gud of tho thousands and the tens of thousands of mon and women slain by sword and spear- and battleax or burned at the stake and 1- tortured with untold agonies in many "chambers of horrors?" God alone can know how the value of Christ's wedding garments is increas- ing. But thd supreme element in the-cost of those wedding garments is the blood of Christ himself. It was hy his own suffering and death that he won the right to wear them. Do you Wonder that Isainh when in prophetic vision he sees these wedding robes de- scribes them by their color-the color of the bloody sacrifice? "Who is this," cried he, "that cometh from Edom with dyed garments from Boz- rah-this that is glorious in his apparel? Wherefore art thou red in thine apparel and thy gar- ments like him that treadeth in the \vino v~a,i,?'f Ah, my friends, I am glad to-day we can talk about the royal crimson and not the royal purple of Ch1'ist's wedding gar- ments. I am glad that oven in heav- en, when looking upon the Divine fuce of Jesus, we shall not be allowed for one moment to Rlrget .tho enormous cost. in money and blood of the mar- riage robes in which Christ will be clad as the bridogroom when he takes thc church as his bride in eternal nuptlals. Am I going beyond my right in declaring that Christ’s wed- ding robes are to be the most ex- pensive of garments? But, drawing near to the Divine Bridcgroom. I find that Christ/s wud- ding robes have a wonderful cur- ativo quality. ’l‘heir touch is like the cool hand upon the feversd brow. Oh, yes, they are more than that. Their touch gives spiritual and phy- sical healing. It is like the healing lpowcr of Christie earthly robe when the border of it was rcsscd ust an woman who had an issue of blood for twelvo years. No sooner did her flesh como in contact with its folds than 1 pr I iinstnnt by the fore-finger of the poor ,immediately “the woman was made whole from that hour." Wo have read how the ancient. devotees used to travel many miles to be cured pf their physical pains at the tomb of St. Ann de Beaupre, or at the "heal- ing spring" of Lourdes, or by the 'sowing robes of sr.. Anthony, sr. Patrick or S* Bernard, but never did tomb or fabl water or flowing gar- ments of dead saints have such cur- ative qualities, spiritual or physical, as will have the wedding garments of Jesus Christ. How do I k`now this? The symbols of the myrrh and the alocs and tho caasia teach it. They were all used medlclnally. “Tho myrrh. as is well known." writes an authority, "was celebrated for its use ln medicines. The ancients prepared a wine of myrrh and also an oil of myrrh. It was found as an ingredient in many of the celebrated compound medl- clnss." "llyrrh is especially of great. ule.'i says another author, "along with aiostlo‘ medicinal and com- pounds of iron." 'lbs medicinal qual- ity of aloss is dsllnsd in every dic- tionary, and oassla.,waa also used as a drug by the ancients. Thus when wo como in touch with Om-lst.’s wed- ding garments ws know that they are going to Hsal all of our diseases and asauage all our pains and be the balm. which will take away ovary heartache. But have the royal robes of Christ no hilhsr than tho more pra- vsntloa of n or of ilsartaohsl? If that be all the smoacy of these wed- ding gémsats of the Divine Brida- groolni. than Iaay lst me have my pain #il hsorihshss. Tlisrs is somo- tlllslfl 'in' auIsri . ’I‘hsi's~ is solhosnmni. psaos inagaln. As Ton- l\¥l0 ltfltss, lflt is bsttsr-_to llsva T? for us than 1 would want none of d not wish to live a. s on earth if to do it e to endure the mere ence of an Australian n though then I might Thus I come weight of myr Lamb shall ne the Jordan sh E be aromatic ro er ending peac woll my answc are to be unit had my doubt with the myrr Divino 'Brlriegr wif and moth riod. your fian S EP; §iiiiiii§E ii" ` 5 never" to have wedding ring up- you wlshnovor t placed there? It may s ago since the hand on your finger was laid Would you like to blot out all the in rthly ills? ` "Oh, no;" No, noi My joy to-day emorlos you have had the beautiful halls-of n thinking over again days we spent togeth- ooner have had 9. dear s was and have had ay than never to have tho companionship of d meant to a wlfe.” lf incurable physical pain V . s the Physician [tvs plate to deaden your nd your mind for years "Oh, no." you answer, be nothing more than creature or a lo or a 8 my thinking mind with tlnunl iunoonsciousnoss ' Well, then, the wed- Christ must do more nerely alleviate suffer- sical or mental suffer- to thc climax of m_v royal robes- of Christ positive assurance that ceremony of the Di- om and of the church to be a beginning of oy, not the mere end pain or suflcring or this, you say. I will. us," I cry, "whither g? Friend, why is thy o sad? Why dost thou side that great burden ound ,wel‘ght‘?" At once e same Nicodemus who s by night, looks up, t his eyes are lllll-rl d his face drawn down ‘row_ “I am going,” h this hundred pound rh and aloes to em- of Jesus Christ who Y » - crucified. We are going aviour`s body in the h of Arlmathen. I Wish be preserved by thi-so as possible." "What. ill these spices of myrrh serve the body of .le- answered the ruler of cy will. If you will ex- mmies preserved for ears in the E tian y KYP l find that these spices causes of their pre- Herodotus, the "father early 500 years before rucified, records that always preserved the eir dead with these then fill the body with rrh and aloes and cus- perfurnos, except frank- we find by these two at the wedding gar- ments of Chris o e. preservative, qual- ns, carrying* the figure e of symbo , that the ents of Christ will nev- er fade or gro t not only have a cur- w old. 1 never become elloxv Y are some of the bridal were worn many years ago. They will useless. The w never be put aside us eddings songs that we the marriage of tlu- ver have an end. 'l`hv with which we greet on the other side of. all never grow mono- loving kiss which thc oom places upon the de shall never become ercnt. The myrrh and fl the aloes and cnssia shall preserve oy, even as the wed- of Christ; shall halt kill sorrows. Oh, yes. robes of Christ are to bcs, symbolicnl ol nev- e. The ever increasing hull roll and swell and crease through all the "Hosanna, blessed is sracl that cometh in the name of th From whcnco o Lord! Hosa.nna!" como these airs laden the myrrh and the cassia of Christ/s wed- ? They como from the of heaven." Mark you r. Not from one ivory om many. That. means as part of the church od to Christ we are our own individuali- text said, “In the iv- heaven," I might have s about it, but thcro ere. thcrr- muy he many s” in heaven orlorous h and thc nlor-s und fear fluff. sonic of us who are invite d to lic ai. flu! worl- muy not hu |1|'i~s-1|-ru. It is one thing to get nn invituilon ge ccrcnrony; it is uno- ther to be the o our lllvlnu Bride- s, thou 1"1~int'0, we will re. Shall we nt this we will not unitr- e shall not livc with ory palnco of lwuvr-11 not lived with thee- on It be that all our dcnr ones who have g 5 . on to our-nuptiul vows with Christ in have to wait for us in one he 'ond who arc tho ivory pulucl- of on refuse to mf-et. tho oom at the nmrriagc n, what will .Iosus rio? our loved ones, your cr and father and lit- havo one bcvonrl- K ._ sy all do? Supposlng rs about. to be mar- oon had refused to ap- ould you have done? ay, "that was impos- ms too much not to ed there." Can it be, 0 s of Christ, that you y less than your loved one lovsd you? Saviour-i Lead onl Even ay hsar the wedding chimes ringing ces of hoavnn. for the nuptials in SP8 z... °- imuo use sauna ».2£'°......'°‘ ’.‘i’."2f; wvinflll-lbs l‘¢lI’C New lowsr . 3 "'”€?"""1’°"'* ’-= = “il ‘ _ -.‘,_'.v. _ ' » ( for 81,000 for a. disease germ that it gen-ls deadly to vsgstal matter. lars,inoney ,t b th fl tbt- I h tle and give iitarfreg tgyesclg. slgk ocile o cure’ t at were made by ‘L '"‘° "°“"' "7 ‘L Germ Diseases I These are the known germ diseases i ACN LiR8 QXYKBIL All' that medicine can do for these troubles is to help Nature overcome the germs, and such results are indi- rect and uncertain. Llquozone attacks the germs, wherever they are. And Llquozone is not made by com- pounding drugs, nor ls there any alco- poltin it. Its virtues are derived sole- y rom gas-largely oxygen -b _ process requiring immense ixiareyiutd Whse! nie geilmsufvhwh cause 3 disewe and 14 days. ume_ This process has. are es roye , e disease must end. for more than 20 yeam been the com and forever. That is inevitable. stent stlibject of scientific and chemical :puma M-mn gm Few-lnausma researc . "°““ °°““' The result is a. liquid that does what §i3g3li:}|I,.'°° {:\1‘g°¥¥¢:° ` oxygen does. It is a nerve food and §5i»f2i'i'r.>iii$i.i: iiiixliiriirf-hiiririfsrrirl blood food-the most helpful thing in §Z°“¢"'°°C,°'°* lil" 3"" 'l`f°“b|=¢ the world to you. Its effects are ox- 63iiZ`l'i':i'¢i\iii' '"°"P"°““'°°" hllaratlng, vitalizing, purifying. Yet it ”°"'" “"'°“ ararr -Cnnoer P1 n ,_ E ..:“...::n“‘°" is an absolutely curtain germiclde. The llnenwrr-Dlnvrhss Dandrul-Drops] U “|11 Bcrolula-Byohllll llklu Dlasaaes , Stomach Troubles 1 cannot kill. We do this to assure you Llquozono goes into the stomach, that Liouosons does kill germs. into the bowels and into the blood, And lt ls the only way known to kill. to go wherever the blood goes. No lerms in the body without killing the germ can escape it and none can re- tisauss, toot Any drug that kills germs slst it. Tho results are Inevitable. for is a poison, and it cannot be taken ln- a germ disease must end when the tsrnslly. Medicine is almost helpless germs are killed. Then Llquozone, in any germ disease. It is this tact acting as a. wonderful tonic, quickly :inch Sires Liquozone its worth to restores a condition of perfect health. nmsnity, aworth so great that, after Diseases which have resisted medi- tsatllw the product for two years, cine for years yield at once.to Liquo- through physicians and hospitals, we zone, and lt cures diseases which medi- pald $100,000 for the American rights. eine never cures. Half the people you And we havespent over one mill-ion dol- meet-wherever you are-1-can tell you reason is that germs are vegetables; ,n,,,,,,,,, Thu, ~_|»,,,,,,,,,, , \ _ : , ' We Dffer I, For n Disease' Germ ~ ‘Haut Llquozone Cass’t Kill. Un every bottle oi’ Llqnozone we of- and Liquozone-like an excess of oxy- lnsms-srrrinsnn ssmnovvs Fsvsrs-Gal slonss Ethan- Diss# s Home-G gon Qrzprrnagiéloss vl°o=ss‘s|'D\ssa|ss rnauon-all oa::=:3:Ii°m‘iil‘:d;i:s.;1:a:e:a1 “l1.'.?2.5‘$l.ll’lir‘Iilll"s?'..‘I.°;l.‘2.’l"2».'.’°.'i°s nan... looompllsliing wlradno drags our do. 591:. Bottle Free. If you need Llqnozons, and have never tried it, please send us this coupon. We will then mail youan or- der on a local drugglst for a. full- size bottle, and we will Psy tho drug- glst ourselves for lt. This ls our free gift. made to convince you; to show you what Llqnozone ls, and what it can do. In justice to yourself, please, accept it today. for it places you. lm- der no obligation whatever. Liquozone costs 50c. and 81. i CUT OUT THIS ,COUPON for this oder may not appear agiiih 22:33; the blnnks and mail rt to Tr _. q Company, 558-564 Wabash Ave., Chrmgo. Mydlseasels . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. I have never tried Lirluoaone. but ll you will supply me a 5oc. botl e free I will take it. .... ........... . . . . . . . . . . . ~ »~¢a»s`A|.~~.» us s n an s I 3 D 1 A ....... ................ Give full address-write plainly. An ph sician orho ital not ulilll Liquowll will ge gadly suppliedpfor a test. | _ ..._ __. ~ ‘ ~ ` Q- ~~.-rar. ".11,-»“ . ' I For Torpid Liver, Dizziness, Sick Headache Constipation, Biliousness TAKE I Bristol’s Pills Safe and quick. Do not gripe. Never ' Fail. The safest and most rell- W able Household Medicine known : SEE 'I`I'IA'I` YOUR DRUGGIST ALWAYS GIVES YOU B R I S T O L ’ S A Sugar-Coated Vegetable Pills _ . V 'rr -2. :-;` .:= -g . " \ ` _:_ ¢,.., *._ \ "fe . em. -- ___ ..._ ___ av' 0v» =_ T5? E= ",/ _ 9 “R :_= _gf ' \ ,QQ fI§¢}T;g;-> ___ _ *JE > g\ bl/-f ‘ . W; '91 \,,1‘ /'Il ,sill 5' I I. The Flour of The Family For nnfailing success in baking -- for health-for economy-for every daysatisfaction -“ BEAVER" FLOUR is the pride of the pantry. It is a blend of l‘,,'.{‘l§1’,".{‘,.?,i”,‘~2fl $2222 -com- bines the food properties of one, with the bread- ~, making qualities of the other. It is the only flour ` blended especially for home baking. ’11l_1is blending of two kinds of wheat into one Hour, enables the housewife to get the best results. With Beaver Flour for all ycur baking, the bread and biscuits will always be white and light---the cake and pastry will always be delicious and inviting. “ Beaver” Flour is always the same-always the best flour that money can buy. And the best costa no more than the next best. Your grocer will get it for you if you specify “ BEAVER " FLOUR whenever you order. At Your Grocers \ ,' -~ - 0d I _U /I bonu ,762 Hé‘;'.fL,£; Ill 6 "II .»'»"i¢.!_i'- /fiirllllliu I (551 choose' T1-dis pesr HICKEY TWIST. PEARL OR RUBY V Has never derived that rr-nl enjoyment which is his. They are the gems of the trade. FINE CUT MIXTURES IN 1 AND 2 P0l`ND TINS. I"I ICKEY & NICI'IOLSON,_ Tobacco Manufacturers; Queen St. Charlottetown, P.li.I. Dominion Atlantic Railway. And Steamship Lines to Bolton via Yarmouth Thvpo 1 hat Liu lelwcen Haters lava Ezoltiis and Boston Via W ndlar Junction and lallfls. EXPRESS TRAINS leave Halifax, daily *ex- cept Sundsv)at 7.35, a. sn. for Di\gby and ar- Eaouth n -king connection at armontlr for oston. The Royal MailSteamsl1lp " IB O S 'I' 0 N " The Fastest and Finest Stearns! plying be tween the Maritime Provinces and Boolms. Leaves _Yarmonth. Wednesday and Saturday for Boston on arrival of lx real vain: from Halifax. Returning leaves lion; Wharf, Boston, Tuesday and Frldav. at a D ln. bancnaersarriving in Halifax neat day 7.3;: 1. ln. by xp1eas1`ra n. For a\l information, guide books, folders, elo- which will he sent free, write to P. H. Arna- atvong. General Passenger Agent, Kentvilie N. S. ll Trains nm on Atlantic Standard lime. P. GIFKINS. General Mer. _._.‘T'.'_l *__ _.__ _I3 INTERNATIONAL DIVISION Reduced Rateseffe-:live Mav xsf.`o5 St. john to Portland, $3.00. St. john to lloslon, $3.50. Coxnmencing March 72, 1oo5, steamer leaves St john Werlnesdays at 8 a. ru. (Atlantic Standard) for Lubcc, East- port, Portland and Boston. Saturdays at 6.30 p.rn. for Boston direct RETURNING From Boston, vis. Esstport and Lubec Mondays and Fridays at 9 a. rn. Frorn Portland, Mondays at 5.30 p.m. Passengers arriving at St. John on evenings previous to morning sailings can go dircct to steamer sud take cabin berth or stateroom for the trip. All cargo, except Live Stock, via steamcrs of this company is insured against fire and marine risk. W. G. LEE, Agent. St. john, N. B. A. H. HANSCOM, G. P. & T. A. CALVIN AUSTIN, V.P. A Gcn'l Mgr. Boston. Mass, P. r. 1._n|1w1v C lrilnfnelvlg Monday, January :rd tgoy, lhl Tralur ol lhis Railway hill lun as follows. Trains Outward Trains inward Read Down Stations. Read Up No. N0. ho. Nu. I 6 "v`» U""J\ .I U'-Ei I'.M. A Ill. n,oo 11.o§, 6.33 11.52 r g cu 7.u| 12 31 FHM. Poll Hill 7 5- 1.41 0 Leary 2 4| Alberftn 35 ar lignlsh lv lv. SL-mr-neraide sr. W hln I rw.- F35- so 1: F5-~e 335358 ? a~g~| o=§=_'\ Fisssss A.\l. No, No. No. No. No. No. 13 11 '15 14 12 '16 r.l|. P.\l. a.a|. A I. Ll 3.10 4,oo 7 zo lv Ch'Ir»wn lr lo 45 1 4.40 5o\ ooo Ml Stewart jc. 9.15 3.l3 5 13 ly _ii Mrrell 3.54 iooii tit. le-tru 7oo11.1~ ar. Sourla I 1.50 F M. A.M. IKM. 4 ;-...._ ~ 852.'-o'-S? 'sr sf it 3. N0. user |,&;.£ z ?vvpP;P ‘a%%F I3 El. lv lt. ltswan jc. sr Cardigan ar. Geo'towa lv No v. No. ra r.ss. a. al. 5 35 lv Emerald June ar s.ss o 4° sr tt, 'traverse lv '/.ss I ls LK. 'mini are run by Atlantic Standard Thur. 'Numbers 15 and no Trains run Monday, Wedncsdav and Fridav. Allcther trains rua daily (Sunday unplvd.) D. POTTINGBI. Ban. lp 6ovt.'RLa Hannon. I, (Z .LSHAIP npe|iv\ie11denl.P I U Railway. Charlottetown. P. lt. I . December gosh 190;. » _I Cape Breton Ads lsrvlstsrs Solicitors & sad Notaries. loss; o Loan-sualslt Loan or iron Building sa Loan Company. oilicea ra Ross llork, lydney. C. I. noon moss. L1.. a. uovuan s.aoaa. sa. L. I.. s G. L. MURPHY & C0. SYDNEY. C. B. »ral Commission Florchants. Island Produce handled on commis- I . R (l?ron1 t returns made. 15 tibw lyr. I it gems# »@':»‘? Eastern Steamship Co. 1--».,_ a- _..-.