f lows cUKRDiAN ' _ ll. 10th r-Gh longs, "Mo? Card 'Prt lntlleggflieio l. e Cro‘ amt.’ moose-Bll-tmw- Jan 10 N ran-nee‘ Tl-tavlue Fox wens to otter Jeane communicate with oltloe o! Dillon ‘ sud Stpllletnl Queen-Street, D1028 1 21 FUR COATS —-.- bodies-fur coats. beet quality, will bt-rsold at cost ' __ price by the Montreal-Fur Remod- _ . ~' a t t R m s n Try ll: ‘For ii onerous HALLWELL HEAT. .il"$ '- ED tor League o! the Cross Whist and Auction forty-Eve's Tuesday -‘ THE INDIAN GAME NATUIiAL CUFilOSiTY IN SCOTLAND January sncolld. Ooma you will eu- ~,¢y yourselves. PROGREBSIVE WHIST AND AUCTION FORTY FlVE'8 League l! the Cross Hall, TuesdayJan- uary 2nd at 8 o'clock p.1n. Ad- mission only 26c. BRANT LAID UP — Capt, Tfly. lor of the Marine Dept. went. to Georgetown last. week on an in- spection trip in connection with the C. G. S. Brant which ls lar-‘ng up in Georgetown tor the winter. Skm lnguries 8: Diseases AT THE PRINCE‘ EDWARD WEDNESDAY THURSDAY Scientists Upheld Organic Evolution Lacrosse is an Indian game! ——— “m ' which the hite mcn adapted and! A singular natural t-urivslty ‘l0- lcwu‘ sigvlgii _' hi“ f‘ organized into the modern pas-lflfllfld l" the valley of the Arman in gasses at t e ‘non (lommereittl flme4hat we know today ‘Scotland, ‘is what is known as the 0 else and set n inn for a sood Canada“, national game ,5 u“. Devil's Beef-tub. In is m the form D08" 011- F1111 --‘Pl1'1l°"‘|lll9 0'1 llll-lque among all national sports. [uni a ltollow or basin. surrounded by unaaum‘ to Prim M°ran~ was found here, like all thaothenhlgh hm“ Whl@'1‘m-'1k@ '1'! B" 6501'"!- 10512 28H‘ "Mum; ruaoun-Qs o; we cmmtryJcd a spot that a large number of ————— It belonged to the among, e , “d persons can conceal themselves in NOTICE T0 FOXMEPF- C» H. was taken ow,- fmm them“ s), ‘tfieilt with ease and remain unseen by Mtonkley and Chas. R. Stavcrt wit] newcomer“ [Canadians (lewhped others in the immediate neighbor- a and Improve Your Bakingis BAVBI FLOUR eentslus sll Ike rllolsaoss snl [sedans of Ontario Winter Wheat sonblosl 7|“ ‘zflli Wesson Hui Wheat to [in ii IIIIIII - ' OAlZVItBIhEDGJE, Mass. ‘Dec 29. —~ A result zifiirmixig that “no scien- tific generalization is tuorc strong- ly supported by thornughy testetl evidences than is that o! organic evolution." was; zuloptetl today by ll is Ills only scientifically blended leer on lbs moths-end Qll boinllol on so [Viva the best his in] Insults ‘new, lieu. Ask for It st your ‘robot's. THE T. H. TAYLOR CO. umreo - i ' .CHATHAM ounuuo t In We, extend to all WA Hearty Greeting and best wishes for a \ ,. day next at 9.30 o'clock, I and men's overcoats. As he in this clty on Monday, 1mm. day and Wednesday to buy furs and receive shipments ior Frotrkl l-zuth and Co.,.London England. the playing rules, and Canadians crosee pla-ycrs in the world. With the Indians lacrosse was u community game. it was fre- qyontly played with from 600 to 1,000 men to a side, and the con. FUR COATS FOR LADIES ON sale. Also made to order nt rea- sonable prices. Furs remodelled teet took plane and repaired. All "kinds nf yiolts mile lo '. 1350 m dressed and tanned. Our work isigame fie plnyt,“ ‘my, 25 me’ t: guaranteed. ‘Moral/real Fur llomo- a side, two o!‘ whom were goal tlellmg 00., Riley; Building, Queemkeepers, ‘ ' St. 10690312 21mm The‘ first Hllzurtl of white men "_-—- l" i - i ’ ctsanme sane. —-A clearing é£i."".i?é§°?.“‘ttitii.."ii.,yiiiti“° out sale of goods saved from splgume oi’ (Jnuznlzt the twelve nnam McDonald's store. The sale ht-gmsltcam canto lutn existence I u a-t Wadmaws old stand on Tues- ' Ladies fur coats. mantles, dresses, suits _ lites-mm‘ A London bookseller is small these will be the nnlylllnd Q, Dltrelttser "lines offered for the first three ‘manuscript 341111’; days. 2| society which KlPLlNG NOW AND 'THEN is trying to at $4000 for a. or Analodndlan ‘have produc l ‘Kiplhng ‘is Sam m —‘-——- ct in [p . t _ wAe seven: STORM - ThQin India. Kiplingc, .5‘Z"°£.Z“ storm last. ‘week was by lnr the [in the ' l t iiilppyiftlliliiliiilSptil0llS/‘iA New Year tutti Marry‘ delighted with the good things they‘ onjoysd est- g on Ohrlstrnis. ' ' ‘ - m.“ "mpg". bgkglffllih Gold Bond and Garden Olly Flour. 1.5mm, m, w." “W: with the "celebrated AZBY Flour q in“, p 1g and Mumps dram our Whole Whsst Flour ‘and every- dy lo avid-flint coupons, ‘tqtessh In on the siivoi-‘lsblo were prom- iifums, iiown In ‘this splee- ‘ . thouzht so liiile oi’ it that after giv- about ccs. The snowfa for over "24 hours. and the, _ An author does not consider him- "Bflwod ' “B! mill!‘ an llOllF"b9qiB|f befriended when somebody e2:- twgen midnight Thursday and humes a literary indiueratlon dead "11 flight Saturday. At one time and buried. When he penned the city. the storm mllesnn hour. within his lifetime would not have '———-<0->-————— occurred to him as possible. FAMILY OOIMPLIIOATIONG. f As n young man, on his way home -—-—- from lndla, Kipling paused in I’hll- Many i-n-senlous Cilnlpllttllllfllls in fldelphia and tried in vain to d-ls- Kcneulogy have been compiled, ‘bugpose oi‘ some oi‘ his lhecinating the following one has lllo merit ohtales for publication at $50 apiece. helm: definite as to time, "time gmfEven in 1905 the late Richard wat- People. it concerns a family l-lvlng son Glider expressed his con-sternu- at Favereham, in Kent. lu February, tlon over Kipllngfis expectation 1760. Old Hawood had ttvo-daught-‘UIMO for a short story submitted ers tby his first wife, of whoma thet-tx) the Century Magazine. When the elder was married td John CaehickJauthork-z vogue became firmly estab- the son, and the younger to John dished in England the editor of an Cashlck, the father. (Ynshldk seniorlundergratltiate monthly at Cam- had a daughter Iby his first -w'i-te. bridge, hearing that -Kipling's price ‘The , tlaughted of owl Haywood married and of had n son, which led to the complication eummel up in the irlllowlpg dlstict, summed up be spoken by Cashiers second wile: My father is my son, and l am my mother's mother. My sister is my tlnuzhtevrnaud I'm grandmother to my brother. —Jb0lNlll(iN TAfP-LER. eHoPPmo sum and naked for a word. The ans- w-er was “Thanks? But that. is not the answer to the book-seller who puts on the mark- et n ghost that the writer Jcrveut- ly desires to have laid forever- more. ~'. Some women want house dresses for ‘(Ib-‘b-tmzrs. but ‘movie tickets are considered more ueeiul. Gladys, at the druper'e:"'l say, Mabel, il’ we nren‘t going to buy any-thing, let's look at something more expensive." ~ _ " .__-_@-_.___- I ‘ I . . ' / PNEUMONIA and other Inns; Diseases Claims many Victims in Canada and should be guarded against Minard’s Liniment 1| n grout preventative, being one rf the oldest remedies used. Min- nrd's Llnlment has relieved thou- sands cases of Grlppo. Bronchitis, Bore Throat. Asthma and kindred disease». It is an one to Germs. Thousands of bottles he n3 used ov- ery day. Ffaaiug-hy lll drugrilets o era . 1111:519- lllnlIIs-Is: (.10., Lid-- Ylfi nonli- ‘l’. l. Forgotten “i lieatllhis j ‘ no rep- s utation»- to build, ’ . but witlrnn estab- - llfi oneito. main- w. have always excelled all other la-' "In ancient times n was frequent" in every Englishman is exemplified thlew 39 manuscript such a price urpon itl 01'] was a shilling a word, sent him thnt/ hood. ‘ly used as a hiding place for stolen ‘cattle, anti it is this fact wait-h has lglven it its name. it i-s mentioned "in several oi the novels oi‘ Sir Wal- ter Scott. ‘ PET CAT PUT UP I A TERRIFIC FIGHT. NEW YORK, Dec. 29. —A pet cat ‘attacked tllrce members oi’ a |Br0ok.‘yu lzrlnilly tonight, and for ‘more than an hour withstood an eifcrts of the members of the household and three policemen to sutbtlue it. it was only alter the animal had boon driven into a bed- room and the policemen had bat- tered it with their clubs and tired eight shots that the cat was kll-led. -<o>- HORSES HOBBY OF HRINOESS MARY. "Phat love ol‘ a horse is ingrained in the ‘House oi’ Windsor, iornler- ly Gue'pli, for horsehlesh in every rguise may be said to be a keynote orenjovmont to nearly evcry mem- ber at‘ the ‘British Royal Family, says the Philadelphia Public Led- lger. From the times oi’ the “Merry Monarch", who was mainly instru- the council of the American Associ- ation tfor the Advancement of Science. Tho resolution express- ed the conviction that any legisla- tion attempting to limit the teach- ing oi‘ the (lozatriitc oi‘ evolution would be "a profound mistake." =It cited an attempt in several states to prohibit the teaching-oi evolution in thc pu-biic schools and the wide publicity given to assen- tlons that the theory of evolution was a mere giless which leading scientists were abandoning. The resolution affirms that. the evidences in favor of the evolution of man are “sufficient to convince every scientist oi’ note in the world" that the theory 0i’ evolution is one oi‘ the most potent of the great influences for good that have thus far entered into human experl ence." and that to limit its teach- ings "coulld not ia-ll to injure and retard the advancement oi’ know- ledge and 0i human welfare. ‘by denying the ircctlont 0t‘ teaching and inquiry which is essential to all progress." The men-Ling ot‘ tho council mark- ed the opening of the 76th annual nteetln-g oi the association here at the joint. invitation oi’ the Dflassa- chusetts Institute oi’ 'Ilechuo-logy and ‘Harvard Ilniversity. (EVBTY ibrarwh oti’ science is repre- sented among the 3,000 delegates mental‘ in introducing the sport of matching the qualities oi’ the thor-l ough-bretl, down to the time of the fate King Edward u‘blquitously_ ‘dubbed "the first sportsman o-fl Jdurope,” the horse had come in for; imore than a fair share o-i’ adulation’ land, atlmiratlon. but it has beenl leit to a princess of the present_ reig-n t0 develop the knowjetlge oi‘ horses qutlte unusual in ladies oi’ royal birth. The princess is Princess tMalry, Viscountess Les- cellles. . As a litt-le girl Princess Mary ‘loved the stalblle far more than other parts of ‘the stately patiuccs i‘n which she was reared, for hero were t0 be iou-ntl the zrfliectionntt: animals in which, as she grew old- |er, she was to find her chlel‘ inter- ests. At four or live years her ntanagemen-t oi’ a horse was fre- quently remarked upon. 1'01‘ ill‘ lhoutrh no anlmz-ll oi’ vicious rumi- eneics was ever entrusted with tho carrying of this lmpvrltillll l/"lllll-Y lady. ye-t even at this tender :u.zo she had n-‘o use for an animal with- out some modicum of “gingcr." it was not until ‘some live years later, however, that the PTlHPOX-KR began to show ‘that peculiar know- lletlge oi’ individual horses which has since developed into an almost uncanny sort o! second eifllll- She can now ‘pick - out one horsl- from n bunch at 600 yards dislunco tell you its name, it! 5K9 "ml sundry other information known miiy u,‘ the smome, tor the Master oi’ the Horse (the Earl qi’ Granard who married an Amctricatnlatly. Miss Beatrice Ogden Millie) la neither expected nor probably cares to know more about the stables than the number of tlr animals in the‘ stalls and that thvy are in good heart and fettle. This innate lovve of animals ehv shares squishy with‘ her brothers All oi‘ them are no mean perlorm ers in the saddle. whether "nl thanqe" or "over a country". ln to the meeting. Dairy butter Egg-s per doz Wool, Wool, unwashed . Hides - Hay . . -- Oats, per bushel .. .. Pork . i ' m, F "r3 [Ydlwva in fkéioramodorirfiollgiecixtzlsre ‘iWg Oldxitgmesiéeaige “THE MARKETS summsestoé MARKET. washed Butter Eggs The scientists were welcomed tn- Oats . . . . .. and stitute of dent Lowell oi Harvard. Profits-l sor J. Playfalr Mc-‘Murrlch of TrriButtem, . . . . .. rnnto. president of the oseociatiottlidggs . . . . . lnicht by the mayors of (iam-hritlgrflliotatees tBos-ton, Donn Tabot o-l‘ the ln-lPflrk . . . . .. Technology and Prcal-Iilny ivionrAeur-f ‘sheath introduced his predecessor, Dr. E. Oats . . . . .. dress. J fact, ‘the Prince of Wfllefl. 5060"!‘ pliehetl in winning an open steeple riders in the country, when having his very first mount at the House- hold Brlgade meeting at Haw- thorne Hill. e teat which the sporting crowd nether-ed upon the course cheered him to the echo. This, too, in ;s measure prob- nhly had much to do with the gyrnpglllfllfl understanding ‘which later brought about theirlucess‘ i‘ engagement and. marriage to 10rd ‘tau i‘ ‘would smug-c,‘ Llaesiilcs. another man noted ior his dove of the horse. ' v _---oo>-,--- . THE AWFUL TRUTH ‘A-‘You look M up. old tmsn." "Yes, trvs llld a thrilling day. Thai. little been dI-snoflcs buy or as»: =~ -‘-. n‘ IIRIII 0P. . .. a ‘hiatus, f»: t him s’ chase cup ‘agslnet the best smateur ' n. ‘Moore, of the University 0i’ (‘hi-‘Pointoes cage, who made the principal ad-,Pork .. Hay I-st en CIBARETTEB 51,131 CHARLOTTETOWN MARKET 0-1315 damage the wall or Turkeys "Geese . . . . . . . . .. pCblckens .. . ' lFowl ........... ...2s-3s Hides - - -- 40, gm Butter 1s‘ Eggs _ 7_10 Pork 31g‘ Oats. S 40 E358 ..... . . . . . . . . . . IIQUIII Win-n marking up a price tag al- 28-—30 ways be sure ‘the person who re- 50 oeives the gitft will not exchange. 42 The lighter electric irons do not knock a hus- $13 baiud out like the heuvy ones. 30