-0.'-’¥»"'v-Qrsl°'*'\rl 'P We have s. line in these popular bracelets thee.. ig i worthy of your inspection. These sro"mad§"in` the litest _ designs with plain top for en- graving. _ _ Engraving free on goods purchased here. ii. ilisoa, 'Jewe‘lle‘r. ‘ I _ »..._.<=~-_-u -ic* _ _ . \ _ P, F. ISLAND. RAILWAY ‘i i' _» _-_ _*- Christmas and New Year Holidays. lixcursion Return Tickets at one way first class fare will be issued ‘from and io all stations on' this Railway, from licct-niber 21nd, 1905, to january ist, inoo, both days ‘lnclusive,~ good to re- inrn until January 3rd, 1906. Tickets Mitt not good for going journey after date of issue. G,_A: SHARP, _ _ Superintendent. Railway Oflices, i6d3l»- The Cut of the _Clothes in the main point in a suit. Oi' counro the particular pat.- wrii of the cloth adds A aomethgff to the look-but the cut.-w , we shine there. _ _ To be* Identified As a well dressed man you ni athav o lmtaro up '<°»»“.§f':.»'=iiiL‘I~.;..i*i:*”it"°~ Queen Street. 6-15 dw I yr A i W AA NAT E D A teacher for Iilfhile Sands School. Suppicincnt. Apply to H. E. BREHAUT, White Sands P. O. Sec’ y Trustees iz-i4di.w.._ ,_ - _ _ i __ il il » A 1 I CRAIi}___&f___ElGGiNS, _ . ‘__ '. _ ‘,. ~C,,§,,.;,, jguuii |_iuuii inertia Would Scratch" and Tear Away the _ Flesh - Neighbours Called it ‘ ° Worse Case Ever Seen-Grew I Worse Under Doctors. CUBED BY ONE sri or cuilcuniiuuruirs “My baby’s face was a mass of sores. Th_e doctor called it eczema, b\1t_‘the child grew worse, the disease eating the flesh away from his nose, and spreading to his body. Neigh- bours said it was the wprst case they hnd_ ever seen. His sufferin was tefflblei and hb would scratch and tear away the flesh. We then used the Cuticura`Remedies, one set cur- ing hiin completely, and healing his face without scar or blei.uish`.-Wm. C_ndiand, 35 Winchester St. Penton~ ville Rd., N. London, Eng.” -ll - BABY QUIRK’S CURE Of Torturliig,' Raw, and Scaly Eczema By Cutlcura ‘ ‘ My baby was aiiiictéd with a loath- some running eczema on the face. Two _dgptlors treated him _f_<_;»r _tllliree inontihs, _ li: rt:W WOIBC. _e en gtgrtg to fuse Cuticura, and noticed an improve- ment at once. In a fortnight the run- ning had ceased, the scabs nearly all C dricd off, and in ii month his face was perfectly clear.-- W. H. Quirk, No. I _W st End Cottages, Ruywood Road, N. Southampton.” -i_.__. GUTICURA A BLESSING To Skin-Tortured Babies The suffering which Cuticura Soap and Ointment has alleviated among the young, and the comfort they have afforded worn~out and worried par- ents, have led to their adoption in countless homes as priceless curatives for birth humours, milk crust, scallcd head; eczemas, rashes; and every form of skin and scalp humours, with loss of hair, of infancy and age. ...f-’“.'i°.T.i‘ ‘i3’.-",lZ:.?.“i'.'Ilf.‘i‘$;._'¥i’é`.lIl.2§ZJ3i2‘ 's"..'.’i“i‘l?i‘2 is una in is ina. ainmii ii. 'ruwrn s oc-..s_yd¢rey_ roncr iinrg r. cncm. cor fbcnen. sais Pro ._ Ilrhiallcd iroc, "lluw ge Caro fur llaby's S¥ln.‘~ Xmas Presents Our Xmas Goods which are being opened daily are very attractive. ‘ Toys, gamcs,dolls, fancy china, toilet, manicure and jewel cases, glove. handkerchief and tie boxes, sheet music, calendars, Xmas cards, music hooks, photo frames, stationery and all kinds of musical instru-ments. 2~ildtbs tww3n_\. i a _The Adventure of the Abbey Grease No. I3 of the Series f9'NH||¢. IIN. ll A. Csnsa Sql: ssl C0|iiu‘: ' ~ irmn.) Lfwnm. im. 1, Micro... Munn 0 c.J "To give me ii' Elie account of all that happened at the Abbey Grangd -'last night-a true account, mind you; with nothing added and nothing taken oif. I know so much already that if you go one inch oi! the straight I’li blow this police whistle from my win# ddw, and the affair goes out of my hands forever." ' A. Tanton 50. Co._ \ Great George Street. ` ‘ Tho' sailor thought for a little. Then he struck .his leg with his great sunl burned hand. "I'll chance lt." he cried. "I believe you are s. man of your word and t White man, and I’ll tell you the wholé story. But one thing I will say first'. So far as I am concerned I regret; nothing and I fear nothing, and I. would do it all again and be proud of the job. Damn the beast, if he had all many lives as ii cat he would owe them all to mei But it's the lady, Mary- Mary Fraser-for never will I call het' by that sccursed name. When I think of 'getting her into trouble, I who would give my life just to bring one smile to _her dear face, it’s that that turns my, soul into water. And yet-and yet-L what less could I do? I'll tell you my story, gentlemen, and then I’ll ask yon, as man to man, what less could I do. ' “I must gc back ii bit. You seem to know everything, so I `expect that you know that I met her when she' was is. passenger and I was first oflicer ot thb Rock of Gibraltar. From the first day I met her she was the only woman tb me. Every day of that voyage I loved her more, and many ii time since have I kneeled down in the darkness of the night watch and kissed thc dock of that ship because I knew liei' dcni' fcct had trod it. She wus never ciigngccl to me. She treated mc als fairly ns cvci' n. woman trcntcd a man. I hnvc nn coni- plnlnt to make. It was nil love on my side___~_un_d_ all good comrmicslrip niirrr friendship on hers. When we parted she" was s freo'w6man. but I could never again be a free man. f‘Nex‘t time I came back from sea I heard of' liér marriage. Well, why shouldn't she marry whom she liked? Title and money-who could carry tiicm better 'than Shel I dldn’t grieve over her marriage. I was not such a selfish houndas that. I just rejoiced that good luck had come her way and that she had not thrown herself away' on a penniless salloi-.‘ Thats how I loved 1\In`ry'Fraser. "Well, I never thought to see her again, butlast voyage I`wus promoted, and' the new boa`t"wus not yet launch- ed, so I` had to "walt for n couple of months with' my 'people at Sydenham. 0né`diiy oiit in scountry lane' I mat Theresa' Wiiightg hci-‘ old maid. Shi: ‘told nie all about her, about him, about `cver'ything. I' tcll‘you, gentlemen, it nearly drove me mad. This druilken bound~that he should' dare to raise his ha`nd"to her whose boots he was not worthy to lick! I met Theresa again. Then I met Mary herself, and inet hor again. Then she. would meet nie no more. But the other day _I had s no~ tice that I was to start on my voyage within a week, and I determined that I would see her once before I left. Theresa was always my friend, for slie loved- Maryand hated this villuin al- most as much as I did. From her I learned the ways of the house. Mary used to sit up reading in 'her own little rooni downstairs. I ci-eprt round there last night and scratched at thc win- dow. At first she would not open to inc, but in her heart I know that now sho loves me, and' she could not leave me in the frosty night. She _vvbiSP€i‘@d to me to come round to the big front window, and I found it open before me, so as to let me into the dining room. Again I heard from her- own lips things that made my blood boil, and again I cursed this brute who mis- hzindled the _woman I loved. Well. gentlemen, I was standing with het' just inside the window, in all inno- cence, as God is my judge, when he rushed like a madman into the room, called her tho vllest name that 11 mul! could. mls tq a,_wopiun_und _waited ber \ _ _ , 5 ' Z . l E .25 ._ -I went through him alpif he had been .across the race wiui ,tae sucx ue aaa in his hand. I‘hld sprung for the poker, and it was a lair iight between us. Seo here on my arm where his i1rB¢_ _ blow fell. Then it was my turn, and it rotten pumpkin. ' “She bud screamed when |10 Blrlldl ber, and that brought old Theresa down from the room above. There was u bottle of wine on the sideboard, ana 1 epénai iz and poured ii nine no tween IInry's lips, for she was hal! dead with shock. Then I'took a drop myself. Theresa was as cool as ice, and it was her plot ss`much‘ _ss mint. We must make it appeanthat burglars had done the thing. Theresa lrcpt on repeating our story to liermistress 'Published in Prince Edward Island Exclusively by iiéllitlf Ibsxerlfid \1{>_'"1§ _§“l:__§_|1f__f;>_l;*_f - ~.,._:g ;.__ =.,_ _ _ o ee. eu use ` Th9 Ch°|'|0"9,tQ\Vn Gu§~§di5n- i chair and frayed out the end of the -- I ' _ I rope to make it look natural, else they “'0lI ' ld \\ ondcr how in the world a bur- glar could have got up there to cut lt. '_i‘hcii I gathered up u few plates and pots of ailvcr to carry out the idea of the robbery, and there I ‘left them. with ordcrs to give the alarm when I had n quui-ter of'un~hour's»-start. I dropped thc silver into the pond`and lnndc for Sydenham. And that's the truth and the whole truth, hir. Holmes, if it costs me my neck." _ - T0 BE CONTINUED. sri-lin-_ani ‘ Deafness Cannot be Cured 5 by local applications, as they cannot i-cacli the diseased portion ofthe ear. There ls only one wa? to curo deafness, and that is by const. tutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an lnfinmerl condition of the mucuous lining of theEust.ac-hlaln Tube. \Vhen this tubels inflamed _voti have a rumbling sound or imperfect hear! ‘ Deafness is the result. and unless tips iniiainniatlon can be taken out and' th s tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nide cnscs oui. of ten arc caused by Cntarrii, which ls nothing but an lntamcd con rlitlon of the mucous surfaces. We will give One I-iumlreriDollnrsfor any case of Deafness (cnuiefi by catarrh) that cunnothc cured by _I all`s Cararrh Cure. I' Send for circulars, en, . F. J. CHENEY SC C0,. Toledo, O. Sold by Drnizglsts, 750. Take lIall's Family Pills forc l.C.R.EMPLOYE INJURED. ' MoNc'roi~.',Dec.15.-Dnnicl McLeod, l. C. R. ciiipioyc, fcll ofl` thc roof of the station yesterday to the ground, about I2feeic, and was painfully, though not fatally hurt. ‘ AN AMERICAN DISEASE so far as national but ' doctors box or ng. and when lt. is entirely a.losed,,, . I Meds Coats! There’s a way- to fbe cosily comfortable at home-and he’d'not-catch \he’nacl':7of1't, if the wife, daughter, or sister uidn’t help." ' And so we are talking to women. For women buy most of the House Coats. There’s easy and- splendid choosing he re; V ‘~ ‘ Good sorts at $5.00 and $6 oo There isn't a safer' gift to give him. He don t want you to choose his cigars-bubyoulre away ahead of him on the House Cost subject. The styles here are different from those shown elsewhere. so no danger of buying one that’s just like Mr. Smith's»or Mr.1Jones’. Some are very elaborate, yet the gayest are- in good taste. ' Give »hlni_one for Xmas. Select it now. 1 1 ' 1. _ o o , . ' i_,..' _ 1» `l. :~. I’ , Clothier and Haberdasher, ru _Fl _c toria Row, ' Opposite P. O. ii' ~‘ l `=‘l&‘¢i¥"$% __:3_»...» "l"W‘I9 53:'-'~ ?L"*I£L"'§.TFe`K\"l‘ L :n"i'~'.&`.?$"!Z%.‘\. ¥?‘%!.‘?5:~’ 'S A r The Tobacco Epicure who does not use the HICKEY TWIST, PEARL OR RUBY Has never dci‘ii‘o:l that real oliioyincn which is his, They are thc gcnia of tho thc trade. ' FINE CUT MIXTUIIES IN l AND 2 POUND TINS. f HIC EY & P E Island .0 ., SE THE BEST _ cnusrn iv Rfcmi fini li niinliiis sions O-ur claim withthe Insurance adjusters having' been Settled today, We have now decided to clear ` out- our eniiire stock consisting oi Ready-to-wear Clothing' and Men’s Furnishings off every description. Our stock apart from* damage sustained by smoke is one ofthe best in P E 1. ` We will now sell our stock at straight discounts of 33 1-3 pc and 25 plc, We have also a very large department oi clothes consisting' of Tweeds, Worsteds, and Serg'es_ Thisis ii rare chance oi' securingfa suit length of cloth at a snap. 33 1-3 p. c. .off 25' p. c. off Fur Robes Overcoats Valises / ~ 4 -so AW!! ..'eiar..zr?af=L'1;€‘? s s, *niece* - .f Suits Trunks . My Pants Suit _Cases Q-~ ’ Reefers _O_veral1s. , I l Raincoats An 4 other goods not here mentioned (B:/gills Working Jacket' subgect to like discounts. Hats and Caps ' ` opens Monday at 9 o’clock Dec. `Men’s F urnishings 1_8 and will continue until stock is Sweaters etc. sold. This* is a. rare opportunity of securing goods _ali nearly half pi-ice, _ NA|.i>, 'E-.'.?.=~.t:'.'.'.’e _ " y ‘ ` ""`¢ 7'5" A \ I I " ' -_é_i_i'.’.‘_~rf..§ ._ ..,". _ ' » <- 'U .. I ii -_‘sa'Sr~_i »'-1§£k~.A§"i§4‘ ~ . _ ~ ~ _- _.;i_,f-..».~.,_..._. ». - .-,ew ._ »» _ _ _(_ , . . - yr g]=lQ !".l(! il _..5..1`......~I.,~ » _ ‘. . .__ . Y ,. .. _ ,_ _ , _ _ __ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. __ __