and his whole little fat body , shine with health and cleanli after his tub with the “ Albert” Baby’s Own | Soap. This soap is made entirely yith vegetabie fats, has a faint oie sO quisite fragrance, and is unsurgiss- ed as a nursery and toilet soap. Beware of imitations, ALBERT TOILET SOAP C0., : MONTREAL. | oe } I Mrs. aden veo DELAYED | IN SHIPMENT BUD H URE NOW Cini Pieiares — HAS ARRIVED Rare Works of Art Prices that wiil sell them. Ready for your inspection. HASZARD & MOORE SUNNYSIDE. S@e¢ &*s 0 Gur Friends Our Customers and the General Buying Public For making the 22nd and 23rd the best days in our 18 years of business, We wish youa Merry Xmas and a Happy New Year. Yours respectfully, Reddin Bros., OPPOSITE P. O. O 208 coe. ——————_—_e eS LE RINE. The Rink will epen for the season Xmas afternoon. ‘Tickets same price as last yar. Gents’ ..... sive women Dare... coves cee 82,50 Children’s ..... oie Alternoon socoemeeaa Present your friend with a ticke* or Xmas Tickets for sale at Johnson & John A. W. Reddin’s, and Apcthe s0nS , caries Hall, or the managers. B. C. PROWSE E.H. BEE, qi os x to Ye — } ' chill that lasted an hour. At nee WENT UNDER A LADDER And Superstition Guly Became Deeply Hooted In Him. A local newspaper man forgot his usual caution the other day and walk ed under a ladder. He couldn't very well avoid walking under the ladder, because it slanted directly across the way. Ordinarily, be goes around lad- ders or climbs over them or waits for the ladder man to come back and take the ladder down. This time he walked under it. Nothing happened out of the common for aun lLour or two. Then somebody stole his umbrella and he had to walk to the car in the rain, When he stepped off the car, he didn’t notice that there was a second step, and got a decidedly unpleasant stunible and jar. He hadn’t been home but a. few min- utes before he broke a bandsome table ornament that his wife valued highly. Then he began to think of the ladder incident. Later in the evening he was persuad- ed to drink a glass of cider that was just in the act of “working.” It was nice. [le went to bed at 10 o'clock, princi- pally to avoid getting into more mis- chief, and was awakened by a most excruciating pain in his midst. It was that nice cider, which had evidently kept right on working. It was an aw- ful pain, and it didn’t let up for a full half hour. Then the victim fell into a troubled sleep, from which he was suddenly awakened by a mysterious sound com- door. He More SO ing apparently from the front listened so hard that he grew numb. The noise continued. Burglars were evidently at work cutting a panel from the front door. He slipped out of bed and swiftly pattered down the stairs. His heavy canbe was in the corner of the hall. He seized it, noiselessly turned the lock and flung the door open. Darkness there and nothing more! Then he went back to bed and had a In the morn- ing he awoke feeling like a boiled owl with insomnia. And now you couldn’t force him to | walk under a ladder at the muzzle of | | | | / | | a revolver. Conflicting Testimony. Police Magistrate—Your watch and purse were found on this man. Do you recognize Lim as the man who knocked you down that night and rob- bed you? Complainant (hesitatingly)—That lit- tle manikin? No; it wus a much larger and stronger man. Prisoner—He calls me a manikin? Why. I hammered him till he cried like a baby and begged me to spare his life.—Simplicissimus. He Put It Up. He had oue of those patent umbrel- las that open when you touch a spring A eT Even the healthiest con- stitution some- times gets inte — won. Many people are weak and miserable because ‘their systems have slipped off the smooth road- way of health and are ditch- ing along through the mire of disease, which might be avoided ail- together if some strong and friendly hand would only give them a lift. ai Thousands of weak and debilitated men and women have found Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery the powerful and timely aid to set them upon the level road of per- fect recovery. It creates health by making the digeStion —— and the liver-action lar and thorough. - “tt repairs wasted tissue and builds up solid healthy flesh and muscular power. It is palatavle, and digestible by the weak- omacn, “ite a aie coughs and lung diseases, it is far superior to nauseating a emulsions or mere stimulating malt “extracts. Its good effects are real and permanent. a For nearly thirty years Dr. R. V. Pierce has been chief consulting physiciam of the alo, N. ¥., during which time this re- amet ‘Discovery’ has wrought thou- sands of cures which seemed well - nigh miraculous. Some of the most interesting 1ese obstinate cases are - oe chapter of the great thousand-page illustrated book “The People’s Common Sense Medical Adviser” by R. V. Pierce, M. D., which will be sent free for cost of customs and matling only ; |‘ stamps, OF cloth-bound for 50 stamps. N. Gaddis, Esq., of No. 313 Ss. J. ee Tashi on, writes: “I was taken. a § ere. with headache and pain in my back. I cailed in a doctor and he came three times. ie said I was bilious, but I kept getting worse. i took a cough so that I could only sleep when ELECT: O1YPIMG.*5t-JoHn.NB) | _ My lungs hurt me and I got propre that poe skin and bone. I thought I was going to die. I tried a bottle ~ vee ! Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery apa it i me so much good that I tried re ‘ and it made mé my life.” strong and weil. RY Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute, of | fully discribed | 3i one-cent | ae ~ @&f ee ee (\ | (_( AS3a. wues People. evaWueuaveuevauUerwaWewuvuWUNeueNeneruuereNeueeuENnur A x Williams’ Pink Pills. perhaps they will help our Ettie.” and given to the baby. Instead of dying, as the doctors predicted, she lived. Then she opened her eyes and smiled at those around her. She gathered strength through Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills as a flower gathers strength in the mist of the morning. To-day she is seven years old, the sunshine of the aunt who saved her life with Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale This is a true story. The child is Ettie Moncrieff, daughter of Mrs. Helen Moncrieff, formerly of Hamilton, Ontario. who now resides with the child at 1317 South roth Strevt, Philadelphia. The facts are fully verified by affidavits. DR. WILLIAMS’ PINK PILLS CURE WHEN OTHER MEDICINES FAIL. TARAARAARRAAARAAARARARAAARARARAAA RRA ARAN AAAS The Aunt is Mrs. M. G. Meek, {ALA NWAAMIANNANNA The Story of a Baby. The physicians at the Hanemann Hospi- tal of Philadelphia said Baby Moncrieff could not live. It was against all the laws of nature and of medicine for this eight-month baby to survive a nervous disease of the spine. The family doctor agreed with those at the hospital. The mother watched the child as it slept upon the pillow, the faint- est flutter of breath telling her that life still lingered. An aunt who loved her like a mother said “We will try Dr. They are prescribed for nervous disorders, A pill was divided in three parts eee TAA RARER: ARRAR in the handle, and as he arirtea mt a cheap eating house he hesitatingly ap- proached the desk and said: “I’m temporarily broke. this up for a meal?’ The man behind the desk gave @ quick glance at the silver handled silk umbrella and nedded his head. Thereupon the stranger touched the spring, thus putting the umbrella up. The man behind the desk breathed hard for a minute and then said: “It’s on me. You can have the best there is in the house.’—Chicago Post. Can I put He Was Used to It. “Buffington, our center rush, was in a bad elevator accident yesterday. The ear fell eight stories and was all smash- ed to pieces.” “That’s too bad. Was he disabled?” “No; he came through all right. Aft- er they had dug him out of the wreck he opened his eyes and said the fellows on the other side hadn’t tackled fair, so we have bopes that he will be abie to go in the game tomorrow just the same.”—Chicago Times-Heral& — a Some Keep On. “I suppose,” said the young man who was being shown threugh the magazine office “that every one who sends you a poem or a story which you are compelled to decline stops taking your publication as soon as his or her manuscript ts returned.” “Oh, no, indeed,” the edétor replied. “If that were so, we wouldn’t have any subscribers left.”—Chitago Times- Herald. Preytag on the Imagination. | “Briggs never fails to get a seat to ' himself every Saturday night in the street car.” “How does he manage it?’ | “Carries a chunk of ordinary cheese ‘labeled ‘Limberger’ ostentatiously in his hand.’”—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Action and Reaction, | “Daughters are a great anxiety.” “How so, Mrs. Nooch?’ “If you don’t dress them handsomely, ‘they are not attractive, and if you do dress them handsomely men are afraid to marry them.”—Chicago Record. Rough Riders. “Who are these Chicago rough riders who bave just formed an organiza- tion ?” “| don’t know for sure, but I think they are bicyclists who live on badly paved streets.”—Chicago Post. ‘A MQDERN FABLE. The Story of the Elephant Who Was Very Ignorant, Once there was an elephant that tired of life ‘n the jungle, so he decid- ed to join a circus at the first opportu- nity. Shortly after making up his mind ou this point he was strolling through the forest, cursing the flies high and low. when he came upon the agent of a great American circus who was en- gaving African talent for the following senson. Although the agent saw him coming. be paid no attention to the dis- contented elephant, who naturally felt slighted. “Hello!” be trumpeted. “Wouldn't you like to have me grace your cir- 47 cus °: “Ob. I don’t know!’ carelessly re- plied the agent. “What stunts can you do?’ “What can I do?’ asked the surpris- ed elephant. “Well, you’re a bright one, you are,” sarcastically replied the agent. “Can trunk, or turn a back somersault, or play the intermezzo from ‘Cavalleria Rusticana’ on a slide trombone, or do a high dive into three feet of water, or conduct an orchestra?’ The poor, bewildered elephant meek- ly acknowledged his inability to per- ferm any of the feats mentioned. “| thought so,’” remarked the circus man. ic scbool for five or six years and study hard xbout 16 hours a day I'll make you an offer that'll’— But with a loud roar of despair the stagestruck animal took to the woods. Moral.—The professions crowded.—Brooklyn Life. ate over- Briefs From Billwville. We understand that all Dewey needs in his new house is coal. We haven't any coal, but we have shipped him two c2zrloads of Georgia light wood knots, With our compliments. sruinby day was even more than we expected. All of our relatives swooped down on us, and we had to hire a fright train to take ’em to it. Billville is not represented in the leg- islature this year. Our late representa- tive got a government pension for hay- ing Lis leg cut off while reading war news, and he has gone to Ty-Ty to spend it. We have no advice to give the Geor- via legislature. The menibers got in asic iene _— you balance yourself on the tip of your { “Now, if you'll attend a dramat- ee i ' make | ghowease.”—Chicago Post. there, and they know what for.—Af- lanta Constitution. A Fracas in a Flat, “Yes, I quarreled with Stiggins.” “What's the trouble?” “We have adjoining suits in the same flat. Stiggins snores so that he shakes the partition. All I did was to ask him if he wouldn’t kindly cut his snore into trombone lengths and licad it into a me- chanical piano.” “What did Stiggins say?’ “He advised me to get my ears weather stripped.”— Cleveland Plain Dealer. Obvious, “What is a totem pole?’ suddenly asked Mrs. Wipedunks, who had been reading about Alaska. “You ort to know what that is from the word itself,” answered Mr. Wipe- dunks severely. “A tote ’em pole is a long stick of wood the Chinese peasant puts on his shoulders when he wants to carry two buckets of water.”—Chi- eago Tribune. Ha@ Her Doubts. “IT don’t believe professors know s0 yery much,” said Mamie. “Why! How can you talk so?” re- joined Maud. “Well, 1 don’t see why Mr. Fulpate should have seemed so surprised and puzzled when I asked him how to say ‘rubberneek’ in Greek.’’—Washingtoa Star. Willing to Please. “I won't take those pictures,” said the woman angrily. “Why, they make me look like a fright!” “Madam,” said the suave photog- rapher, “I see that you do not want a photograph, but a fancy picture. Just your own selection from the Convincing a Connoissenr, Some years ago the late Dr. Colo- nette undertook to make a bottle of port that should not cost more than threepence which the best judges should be unable to distinguish from the highest priced wine that could be obtained in the island. The preparation was compounded openly before a large assemblage, and three competent judges were selected to test the prod- uct. The basis of this compound was cider, colored with an infusion of log- wood. To this he added a few grains _ ef tartaric acid and salt of tartar fo give respectively a rough taste and a mellowed appearance. When three glasses of this compound and three glasses of recognized port were pre- sented to the judges to taste and pass their verdict, without being told which was which, they unanimously pre- nounced in favor of the doctor’s cheap preparation and rejected the genuine port. What they would have said the next morning if they had consumed a bottle of this preparation remains a matter of conjecture.—London Chroni- cle. a Fifithorn For Fame. Professor Axengeld of Perugia has dis- covered thet thrve-fifths of all men of distinction are firstborn children; the other two-Afths are either second or third children, or eise ‘he youngest of very large families. Among the first he points out Luther, Dantas, Raphael, Leonardo da Vinci, Confucius, Heine, Schopenhauer, Goethe, Ariesto, Mohammed, Shelley, Erasmus, Milton, Byron, Moliere, Car- lyle, Rossini, Talleyrand, Swffon; among the last Loyola and Franklin, both thir- teenth children; Schubert, a fourteenth child, and Volta, a seventh child The professor thinks thix arises from physio- logical reasons and a law of nature. A Lunatic’s Repartee. Sone visitors were being shows through Kew Lunatic asylum, Victoria, one day, and, coming opposite the siock in the corridor, one of them, looki quickly at bis watch, said, “Is that “loa right?’ “No, you idiot,” said a patient stand- ing by. “It wouldn't be iu here if it weee right.”—Melbourne Australasian Perry.... PICTURES We carsy a full line of the cel- ebrated Perry Pictures—-l<¢ eac colored 2% ew. Gell and loo over the cavalogue. You may find some you woulé like. CHAS J. MITCHELL, BoorsELLER and STATIONER 145 Queen Street, | Opposite Prowses’ i re: * —