Rat 4 ae ene | eee ed Perhaps you don’t know tistic effects and age 1 OyUSI ng our | Sheet Metal Fronts with Cernices, Door and Window ‘ : sO Vant Caps, etc,, all complete. PiUSeaar | gee oa ' see4 ‘ 4. nd ' X Aad X ad . tas? \ ” = . te. ot iL} we Si oe ee ye Stee he + » > ; ENE er BE fhe Re = ae TD hens : ices Ms b Lid Ss OK ‘ 414i. Cost and are mn ali? t ‘ . i : ix ue al r tS t Suit al I > t -y are Cas a} € ring s$atisi } jgchead : ~ = a 4 a & : ; i & ape 4 i ! ul ng i a 5 iz [ : j v¢ S ; r } ALLIC ROOFING CO., | Manufacturers, Toront« queen = ‘ Yj... ¢ a "b : = ; ae . POrLAYru y +. L ee IN SHIPMENT BU HCRE NOR yi] ins pecti HASZARD & MOORE SUNNYSIDE. At Midnight Your prescription can be filled at Macdonald’ Drug store Corner Kent and Great George Streets. Resideace in connection with store. VELEPHONE. W hite’s Caramels and. Snowflake Chacolates ~~ Can be had at any of the following firs. class store T. J. Morris b. L. Hooper W. Pickard & Co. qW. A. Hutcheson W. F. Carter Stewart & Gates Sanderson & Co. J.D. MeLead & Co R. H, Mason, CHEQUE LOST. Cheque No 117, drawn by Mr.8 Cousins retary Treasurer, Park Corver Cream ery on the MERCHANTS BANK OF P E. ISLAND, for $36.00 dollars. Finder will please return to drawer. The public is hereby warned against casbirg abov shi que, Once Was Enough. > ‘ ‘ ‘S44 4 3 i The Blood Red Banner. Royal and national colors vary with iatiol nd times: but since ¢ slew Abel blood red has been the sign of re- earliest revolt known to tory, ' n the Persians rose against their 4,000 years ago, they were led by a blood red banner, and during the riots which took place in Varis the men in the blood red caps were follow- ed by the mob. A blood red flag waved orer Bunker Hill when the Americans fought us for liberty, and it was the emblem of the 7erman peasants ip their great upris- ings In 1424, 1492 and 1525. Bloed red was the color of the trade union flags during the middle ages, and it formed the background of the emblem of the Swiss confederacy in 1315. Through tbe whole of French and t- } < KIDZ writers, they have professional ~~ tellers. It is their art to imterest the listeners with tales of love and marvelous adventures, and hair-breadth escapes, and magic cures. There’s a story of a der- ful medicine that has made of cures that seemed almost magical, which every woman should read or hear, To have heard it or to read it, may save g wo- man her own life or that of her husbapa. med of The cine is the bee pt * R. V. Pierce, am eminent and ful - cialist, for thirty years chief ‘ hysician to the gréat Imvalids’ Hotel an urgical Institute, at Buffalo, N. ¥. It is oe as Dr Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis- covery. It makes the — hearty, the digestion perfect, the liver active, the blood pure and rich, the nerves speedy. the brain clear and the body strong. It is the great blood-maker and desh builder. It. Seen Se 2S Set. 68 Oe ie tion and ciseases 0 poonea. ; cures nervous diseases and {s the best icine for overworked men and . t A’ by it when he feels out imen are heediess about the . Medicines stores sell it. Doctor health. M . utation is - and aloe towederen, of Buffalo, N. Y., thin! so highly of him that they made hip their Congress, but b love for Pr positic ae isight honorable on i bd the remainder of his He to the relie the sick. wae ood thing to have in the house | is a vial of Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. { They cure biliousness and constipation aud ucver gripe. | been left sacred to revyolutionists.—Lon- don Answers. ae ne Didn’t Object to His Creed. The English language reminds me of | some these typewriters and the | e of whist It looks mighty sim- ’ ' I I the ther tu go along the } a and swet p x is. W i ill heard of tl in id S I a 2 it i i I £ he must confes he , . I j 1d that.” 2 d are Presb 3 t a > rr ‘ and City Life, Boy Babies I favorable to women q ‘it cia on ‘ Cs aie Mo;re ’ for statistics show that mors boy e & months inp es | girl babik Families, according { { Statist are larger in cities | he m +} 1 Pe0er rr ; than in the country There are more I rriage in proy ‘tion to the popula t es n | ‘ ¢ ; i alan ‘ tix I ’ r} fo oO : gn ; I +} : lation ties is I or ¢€ ited, and ”) . 'Y ts V ‘ ~ ‘A ‘ s c | Not n Bit of a Popular Hero. ¥ much about t) + y? St. ff . who a] nned out 1 W p vy > t : ‘ TY © 1 7 A Lively Streak ef Mouse, c | ? ‘ i S ‘ x l {)] hile least y were very us little als and, instead of being of the color, were black and rked in large blotches like active, curi proper mouse white, mé | Holstein cattle or old fashioned swine. holes int The and out of which they ran were close together, and they chas- ed around so swiftly that it was im- possible to count them, for sometimes there was a mouse at each hole and sometimes one outside and the others inside, and sometimes it appeared as if there were just one long mouse in a circle revolving on a pivot, with noses and tails at intervals. The mad race was kept up for some time, and finally all the mice disap- peared as if by magic. One of the spec- tators went into the store and asked how many mice there were in the cage, stating that he and his companions had not been able to decide, as they moved too quickly to be counted. A clerk said there was only one mouse, and it was impossible to count it except when it was asleep and, seeing a look of in- credulity on the ceuntenance of the caller, raised the top of the cage and showed one little black and white mouse nestling on a piece of cotton in a corner.—Portland Oregonian. The Bottle at Ship Launches, Down to Charles II’s time it was cus- tomary to name and baptize a ship aft- er she was launched, sometimes a week or two after. The old Tudor method used for men-of-war was still in use. Pepys’ “Diary” shows that. The ship was safely got afloat, after which some high personage went on board with a special silver “standing cup” or “flaggon” of wine, out of which be drank, naming the ship, and poured a libation on the quarter deck. The cup.was then generally given to the dockyard master shipwright a3 a me- mento. When did the present usage of nam- ing and baptizing a ship before she is sent afloat come in? I trace the last explicit mention of the old method to 1664, when the Royal Katherine was launched (see Pepys). The first men- tion of smashing a bottle of ‘vine on the bows of a British man-of-war that I have found is in a contemporary newspaper cutting of May, 1780, de- scribing the christening of H. M. 8. Magnanime at Deptford, but nothing is hinted that it was then a new cus- tom.—Notes and Queries. A Novel In a Nutshell, Met bim. Met him again—in love with him. Met bim again—no longer in love with him, but he in love with me, be” cause I am so beautiful. Met him again—hbe is still more in love with me, not only because 1 am beautiful, but because I am also good. Sorry for him. Again I met him—he is colder than be was. Think he has forgotten my t I cen severe beauty and my goodnesg. 1, however, CHAKLULLELUWN, JAUNARY 6 1906 am inclined to think that I am In love with him a*ter all. How lucky he is, and how angry Mamma will be! Mamma proved to be strangely pleased. Makes me angry, for | know she is not a good judge of a young girl's heart. Flirted with ORs ssMac WALA iN Put ‘ heel AON CERES every other national history those } 81 ing? in their own ways for liberty | the blood her cap and hail- ed the blood red banner as their leader, ! lt isa t that never has a | monarch chosen it as his color. It bas him outrageously te make mamma mad—didn’t succeed. Engaged te bhim-—-glad. Married to him—sorry.—London An- ; swers. declined to Robert has i Womanly intuition ad learn to spell. positively monishes Robert’s mamma that Robert | will doubtless say something very bright if pressed, and she a y argues with the boy. “All great they were little boys,”’ “Well, that was before you uld *€ men learned to spell when she Says a stenographer for $3 a week,” replies | Hobert. Of course Robert’s mamma loses no me in telephoning for the news hr Dion ail F + : a brief outline of what has hay; and bidding them send their best re- porters right up.—Detroit Journal. cer emer ee eR nee te Se ’ Surprised the Congregation, Two little folks went to church alone. It was only around the corner from their home, and their mamma knew they would be safe. During the long sermon they got tired, and the ne, supposing that school rules held good in church, led his sister up 1 front of the pulpit and said, “‘Please may we go home?’ the clergymen gazed at them over |! ¢} Luc Much surprised, sue Then be understood g ectacles ind “Certainly, my children.” And oddied out while the congre- n smiled.—Weekly Bouquet. ’ Ay the two t Only One Fault, “There’s only one fault to be found with your comedy work, old man,” said the dramatic critic. “What’s that?’ young actor The (CHARM OF ~ \% BEAUTY Not in the Features so much as in the Grace and Vitality of a Healthy Body--Dr. A. W. Chase’s Nerveand Blood Pills make Women Beautiful. There's a certain charm of beauty in the gra: erui, ¢ f movement ar m- piex n< f a ulthy w nin w 1 tie itcae tures io not play an im a The pale, sallow complex } , jeaden eolor of the skin, dark circles under the eyes, headaches, pains in the back and sides, dull eyes, weak nervousness, despondency and low spirits are rtoms of weak, watery ~d nerves blood and im properlv-nourishe No woman ¢ is enriched and A. W. Chase's Nerve blood and nerves, Dr. A. W. Chase's Nerve Food restores the energy and strength to a run-down system, Note your weight before using them, and the increase week by week as the brightness re- turns to the eyes, the color to the cheeks and the form rounds out with firm, healthy flesh, the natural result of rich, pure blood and a healthy nervous system. Face cut and facsimile signature of Dr. A. W. Chase 01 every box of the genuine. a box, a!! dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Ca, Teronate in be Leaut ful until the blood the nerves strengthened. Dr. Food is a iood for the Tenders for Charch EALED TENDERS will be received by the undersigned, until February Sih, 1900, for the construction of a new Romap Catholic Church, at Souris, P. E. Island, designed by Mr. W. C Harrie, Architect, to be built of stone or brick, about one hundred and eighty feet over all in length, and te seat about nine bundred and fifty people. The plans and specifi: cations can be seen at Sourie, from Jan- uary 8th,to the 15th, 1900, aod cen be seen at the Bishop’s Palace, in Charlotte town, from the 15th January to the 8th of February, 1900. Each tender must be accompanied by a certified cheque for $100.00, or an approved note to tha’ amount, which will be returned if tender is not accepted, and which will be forfeit ed if tenderer fails to undertak+ the con tract after his tender has been accepted. The lowest or any terder not necessarily accepted. Teniers to be sent to the undersigned and marked “Tenders for Souris Church.” D, F. MACDONALD, P.P., Jan. 4, 1900. Souris, P. E. I. A Billous Letter .——_— Thursday evening we dropped a bill in the Post Office for a prominent geutleman of this town, The next morning we bad the pleasure of rece pting it, This ie what we call promptness, (Oh, that others — do likewise s — have been ae piog, dropping, softly ping a number o bills in the Post Office; and we are wait- ing, waiting patiently, to have the pleasure snd to give the pleasure of receipting | them. Please do not al! come together; but if you do, what a happy, happy gathering It ill be. We have a number of bills to y, and a large number of small bills that should be paid us. Kindly pay youre and we will be in @ position to do ikewise, Yours very truly J. J. GAY & SON, CHARLOTTETOWN. asked the aspiring older | = HeCOMBINATION Tit 4, Colds Croup Coughs Cramps Cholera Vipgeee Chills fe pe §6Colic. J Anodyne Liniment he Ways Dropped on Sugar. aety sy Will cure many common ailments which may occur in every family. It is strictly a family remedy. For INTERNAL as much as EX- TERNAL use. Originated in -810 by-an old Family Physician. Could a remedy have existed for nearly a century, except for the fact thet its virtue end excellence have won the public favor to a remarkable degree? You can safely trust what time has indorsed. Send for our Book on INFLAMMATION, mailed free. Sold by all Druggists” 9 Put ep in Two Sises, Price 25-and 50 cts. I. 8. JOHNSON & CO., Boston, Maas Pie RRR AR AS EIN A RR RAS U8 £* a FIRE es ’ —r es } BRS re ri PRS IR Z A IX an rs 2 Be XS —_ FQ FR me i er 7%, i PRS FR a @ PPAPPCOEOOO IIS OO GOCRGGEGES S&S és 4 dy - Boots and a vubbers ior lowe -t . i i | a 4 Ke pene McQUAID’S, LOWER QUEEN STREER ‘ nat BA LE NAS <> Boot and Shoe Store ae } mm rn a BS PROT yROS Pe j : e Pi. : 5 a - yy 7 ¥ fk PSP ROPSPOD PSE TA SPP SAASZ SZABO im MATE CECT 2 TL SP THE WORLD'S GREATEST COMPAN) tA wesy mm eS eae ee The Mutual Life Insurance Co. of New York RICHARD A. [IcCURDY, President ASSETS—$277,517,325.36. ANNUAL INCOME—$55,006,629.43 INSURANCE IN FORVE —$971,711,897.79 <e> All Canadian Policies payable iu goldapg Before placing your insurance please call or write fo stimates. JOHN McEKACHERN. AGENT 27—-Sat & Mon Imo We Cordially Extend => <= <~ 899-1900. 3 #—_T he Season’s Greetings To our friends throughout the city and country. SANDERSON & CO CHARLOTTETOWN Whrlesale & Retail Grocers Sa — EEE Ee ——500—— Fancy Cups:Saucers HALF-PRICE To Close Out To-night at W. P. COLWILL’S ee EE Ree oa ee Qe ES ae See Our Carbon Portraits Just the thing for Xmas presents. The handsomest and most per manent picture made. New scenery and accessories, and the lates designs fcr photo work. Baby always weleome at the studio of we GEO. H. COOK, - Corner Queen and Grafton Streets CHARIATIBIOWN oe