‘~ff ._~ as Y! _ __, ap il _<§f,;,f.,_1_;;., :L .II 7%_’¥&&.;,.,__/11,,-_ '_ , ,... H.. ,,._,, _ _ , _ ,.._.\.._.,,,-.gh ,Q .tn .-». 1.- g; I. »~,a..<. _ _ U _ __ _ ,pf f_ if -“I” F, ' . ’ ` 'ir' f3<"”I fi 7’ /f>`\.5'€_lf{ f'if}'/’;l§i"§ V; L "i"`?'4___Li;'2l}iT_i_'} _l’..l`Exfl¢;l_.’fi1“-»."5_.1-' ."§?l"f° l 7 ‘ ` _ 1 ` Farmers keep your hens laying when eggs aie a 1 _ .§riCe. - _ '=_ ” * 1 We have just received direct from the manufacturers" a few tons of Lowell Bone and Meat Meal, Lowell Cracked Bone and Lowell Raw Ground Bone. 7 This -valuable food for poultry is made chiefly from animals that have passed arigid government inspection for liumaii food. _ It is a a high concentrated bone and -meat food, contains several times _the nutrirnent of fresh meat of equal weight, It__is_ constantly growing in popular favor and poultry raisers will ii-nd it indespensible as an egg roducer also for growing poultry for market. A. HURNE & G0. THE IIUTUAI. LIFE 0F UIIIADA. ' Formerly tue ONTARIO MUTUAL LIFE. ' I: cad Ollice, Interest Income. I ath Claim s "“"°" i°‘°°'d.'° WATERLOO' _ Paid. Death Cla ms hid. D ’ orlast year,’oi $255.3|7 02 5 885 0 50 $62306 52 ‘$15 .851 ive $|’04o’065 64 $848,622 48 I6 “St " si.7oi.s798a $1»48o»1l_S48 ince Co’y -"' -- rxanized 18 0- 52»37~92607 »ss.is2,41i ss ‘9 _ ' I1. Slppl I. - A. P. Trowsdale, Roy W. Connors, General Agt St. John, N. B , Crapaud. ~ ' Summerside, G-enenyal. .a.'¢o2n.‘ts Henry Birks ` g 3° and Sons ‘° - New Catalogue of _ i Gift TIIIIIQB , .Send it. They want you to liav¢ i _ one. Your name and address on a pist _ 5 ,gd will bring it. ' ' HENRY Binxswsous _ - s Manufacturers of Pine Jewellery, - Silverware & Rich Cut Glass. . Mon'rlu:AL. _20»32.24» \ _ F QUEBEC STE AMS IP, CURIPANY, LIMITED The Last Trip of the eason Proposed Sailing of S. S. CAMPANA. Frorn. 1\dZontrea1 and Charlottetovvn. UALUNG AT FATHER l’0iNT, GASFE, PERCE, GRAND RIVER, SUMIERSIDE AND PICTOU From Montreal . From Charlottetown ~ Monday 5rd November Saturday Sth November _ _ _J Subject to change should circumstances require. B 0%Rv 11-:=1'._.1;.. 13395., norms ;nqn._we , ri,seasqi_ mad Cove Coal ' . noN_e.___s1'v\=.|=> line Invcmcss Ra1hvg§~‘“and Coal Company nleonn co 1': slu=.:'roN. Minnislno soiruvuufss coil Screened, Run of Mine, Slack. First-class both for Do- mestic and Steam Shipping facilities most modern type at Port Hast- of all classes and sizes of in C. B. for COMPA‘.lY» ' 85| » steamer: and New diariotteton. if Townsend Brady. 4 "* , icons Enos xl “Sill llllllil THI _ _ MUUNlilll;S. A “Short Sermon "'by’“Cyrius ‘ . '-‘_ TEXT FROM PSALM |2121. Will Lift Us Mine Eyes Unto The Hills from Whence Cometh- My Help. I will lift up mine eyes unto the hills,- ;"salm cxxi., 1. \Vhcn John Fiske died a short time since I was greatly interested to note the diverse character of the tributes which were paid .l1im. Philosophers wrote of his services to science; his- torians dwelt upon his contributions to nistory, and there were Christians broad-minded enough to love him for his theological books. Personally, I revelled in his history, I admired his philosophy, and his theological books stimulated and moved me profoundly. One of them, called “Through Nature to God," came to my mind as I stood the'other day on a mountain peak which rises like an-‘observatory in the centre ot one of 'the most beautiful vnlleyfsl in the Adirondacks. High on theelskyline the giant hills and mountains swept 'around the horizon, broken by the great peaks of the stupendous range soaring into the September blue. At my feet lay lakelet and river, farmstead and town, as far as the eye could'see. ' _ “We praise thee, "0 __God, we ack- nowledge _tboeto be the Lord” -sprang instinctively to my lips as I surveyed' thc glorious panorama( The. pine-clad hill and the verdant valley, the lake and the river, the fertile field and bar- <- 0 ren cliH, all spoke to me of God. I rc- oolled the Addisoniap verse, _"‘The hand that made us is divine.” I bowed my head on that 'heaven-kissing hill,” A ncverent learner in the solemn school of natnrcf in nwc before the great -Cre- ator evidenced co rnajecticcliy in this tiny bit of His great creation. W - It is the fashion to eiecry one’s own ago. The vices near at hand loom large and the virtues are .far away. “’Tis distance lends enchantment” to a period, and we are prone to _take a despair-in`g view of that environment of which we are the centre. This is an irreverent age. It is materialistic as few ages that have preceded it have been. Rev- erence in the home, in the church, in the |’_,State, is more or less a va-:quislied qual- ity. As from the mountain tcp I looked over the roof of the world, for the rocks upon which I stood were the eldest ex- istent, the first that thrust themselves above the waste of waters when the Spirit of God brooded over the deep, it came across me that if the age docs reverence anything it is the workings, the forces, the results of nature. Mean is the soul which the vast bulk of the towering mountain, the wide expanse of the tossing sea, the silent distance ot the great prairie, the thunder of the mighty cataract do not impress. Man, nt first glance, seems inconsiderable by any of them-a point lost in the im- melisity of force or of distance. Yet, when carefully considered, man is abso- lutely the master of the earth and the things that are thereupon. By the ex- ercise of his mentality he weighs the globe, as it were, in the balance. He subdividcs the atom, he pointshis tele- scope ou_t into space ,and pierces “through distances inexprcssibie by numbers that have name” till he dis- :overs new stars. With the microscope lie sees things so small as _to be other- wise indescribable. I_Ie levels the moun- tains, harnesses the cataract, fertilizos the plain, masters thc sea. The mind of man, therefore, overniatches and subdues the forces and workings of nature. Materialists go a. step higher and _reverence mind. One single word, with its mental impetus, will outlive a pyramid. ~ “Heaven and earth shall pass away; -but My words- shall not pass away." 1‘he mind alone is material, perishable, when disassociated from that marvel- lous something we call the Spirit, for after He had brooded upon the waters 'God breathed into the dust of the earth the breath of. life _and man became la living soul! It _is the spirit that gives to the mind the power __of immortality. Some day the veil of oblivion will be drawn ov{m"tllc actsof a Nero and thc jects ¥5§Rsoll`,'but words ol 5 (Init grow brighter and larger _and no they radiate further and from the foot of good gift and I .1-is l~ all exhibit themind of man touched by the divine iiri-,fwnieii iiifrerenumqes the realist from the idealist, the mental' from the spiritual. I go liigher, there- fore, and reverence man, not merely as |. mental machine, but as_a spiritual being. “Know ye not-that ye are thc temple of God, and that. the Spirit of God dwclleth in you?” - _ So-from ,nature through man we ar- rive at God- That is the lesson of tbl hills. It is the lessor. of everything ihat is created. . When Christ said, “Consider the lilies of the field,” when He called attention to the wonderful care which docs not permit even a spar- fow to fall to the ground uniieeded, He pointed _to God. The things that are supplement the divine 1'cvel=`itiori. make it credible. They enable us not only to hear, but also to sec and be lieve. We reverence men, therefore, al they stand between nature and God. Now, what man shall we reverence? The Perfect Man. I admire the the- ology oi Paul, the logic of Aristotle, the precepts of _Moses, the code of Napol- eon, the wisdom of Plato; I thrill to the eloquence of Pericles, the courage ot John, the devotion of Stephen; -I mar- vel at the brilliancy of Newton, thc erudition of Darwin; lov_e the music of Beethoven, the poetry of Shakespeare; I stand in awe before the Sphinx and the Pyramids, Transiiguration, the dome of St. Pctcr’s. I revere but one man, and that is the Man so endowed with all the virtues we love to see in men and women that it is no empty title to call Him Master, Saviour, Lord. Aye, through nature to men, through men to the man Jesus Christ, through Wim to God. ` win ooonns uiv|;_souon _Something that will Stop the I Ravages` of the #much _B amuse money Diseases ' Evidence froiu Kingston that the One Sure and :Simple Remedy, is Dodd’s Kidney Pills-W Ci - Bennett’s Interesting Case. Knieszfoiv, Ont., Nov 7.-The statistics of into years show so many deaths charge- abic to diseases arising directly hon the Kidncys that medical research has been l largely devoted to those particular organs and to the discovery of methods ot treat- ing them other than than that have bool _'med me mac purine: ~ In this connection an interesting case if frepuentiy discussed here. It is that sf W. C. Benm f, and il one more sail - i-factory proof that Kidn°y Complaint cl. be cured and cured permanently. Same year; ag: while working an forf- man in R. Horsey’s tinsbcp, Mr. Bennett v as troubled with Kidney Complaint. Hi- hack was very weak. and f.-he pai s wire so -:ev re he could scarcely endure them. il-. frfed Dodd’s Kidney P.lis, and the result was a gradual improven. nt that code-..x in his complete recon ry, With av.ewxo seeing whether iii re- covery was p:rmanent or merely t~~ui- porar'-y, Mr. Bennet. has been iutervi wed "I wish to say," said Mr. Bennett, “that `the cure in my csse seems to bc compiftx It is about three years since I stopped taking Dodd’s Kidney Pills, and aa I had no return of my trouble. I think we .can conclude that the cure is A permanent one. I had to take ten boxes to effect A complete cure.” This futher evidence of the rmcacy of Dodd’s Kidney Pills is viewed with satis- faci ion by the uubiiefltsbows that science is steadily conquering disease long thought incurable, and that all forms of Kidney Complainis, such as Brightfs Disease, Diabetes, Rheummisui, etc.. are robbed of their terrors by that simple but sure ,re=medy, Dofid’s Kidney Pills. ~_»- " KNOCKED DOWN BY CARRIE _.Zi sr Cnsnmsrou, S. C., Nov. 4.-Withfa right swing on the jaw Carrie Nation knocked down a cadet from the South Carolina Military Academy yesterday morning be- cause he was smoking a cigarette on the street. The boy was caught ny his com- panion beforc his head struck the pave- ment. - _ _/-' Pmcezse " *c 1 _ . _ \?~__. o A new sensor 1 IIEKUIBIIE Il|U_H.lll Gueccllficrlnc of heoflocilo iafthirty StopophotBho\gn_athm,__ud np a odd in Oulaic gm. iocrlrikn- yeste _ . _ if against McKo'§v§'!‘,,,the ‘payer Kcnsit, the _anti-Bgituciistio crulsaier. i _niwiws _ l ' ` ‘large Sales ,lb lots, cabbage by the ton: l ~ 1 [ . - 'I hat our Watches are as pretty to look Loon ruour. RUN ruonr. Piucns Rioirr. I M \ lliillimcild’ KENSlT’S Lrvnnroor., Nov I rctnrnpd n verdict order F4 __ _ my Qunurv _ ‘ i_;.-JIUK , .. hy HIS is the one-.thing we 'aim at T in the making of our Tobaccos manufacture with careful selection; CABLE TWIST CI-IEWING , TOBACCO ...ii calculated to secure popular ap- proval. Sold everywhere 5 cents per Plug _ 5 3 ' F I ll MT f Buy from the Producers It pays to buy direct from the producer. In the large American cities business is so buy very largely can avail themselves of --but thank goodness _§f,we the _Pf¢dn¢sf_i.°%e iseeniiiiiisedi make prices to theniiselves We are producersywe g1‘ow_ and we sell direct to the consumer and our prices so low that, many wonder ,how _wel make, ends meet, Qui' profits are; ,_ __ __ ____=- ,,,., .`_. -,= ~ p..-"_-¢ va -1.5¢, »-~»-»v>»¢_,’_»\f=:_x`».--:\.~.-»-_.v:_,..5 . _.£5 .. - ~ ..`.- -».....,. ,.,,_,, Lum iialliax ew|f'I_i||; ~ “_ I Glmionummrq combine skillful 1 CALLING PLACES of the leaf and our knowledge of , Sheet H31'b01'» 5811110!! what the consumer demands eu- - I5a3°_ H3fb0¥» _ bles us to produce. 5 merslde’ Cau5°»An¢h3t= bury, Port Hood. RATES-Specially low ft pctatoes, etc., etc Merchandise at moderate CARVELL *_ L_ Will run as follon for the of xgor, _ at 7.oo a. in. rr . 2.00 .z +°° 5-3° “ 12.45 p. m. ‘Z 2.oo - - have not' as -. yet anybig I ‘ ‘~°° ~ “IES 1°' lbines or trusts `;-all _ iseecovn. comm-4. :- small we _ad'1fni’t.-'-but i our Shippe1js.__ _¢`aiid_ one in need of a lb of tables will it to their vantage to look upour on celery by the looo, - or doz,onions by the bbi"or 1 doz,parsnips,carro1s and by the 'zoo barrel or bush indeed anything in the vege-I table line, see our prices, in at word buy from the producer when you can.--J. J. GAY & Son, Market house and head of Prince St., Charlottetown.- li Phone 180. £1.23 Mon, Wed.& Fri Bc w lf. sv.. -.1 1 -f-- -1., ¢ Incoroorated_i_8;o Head Oiiice, St John, N B mllal $590 080-iiesml ful $700 880 Ch’town Branch, Stamper Block .BLUE UF lllll BRUlUilliiKp Savings Bank Department Interest allowed on deposits of $1.00 _ and upwards. A General Banking _ Business, Transacted. ` A. E. WILLIAMS. Manager.; at,as reliable t* ne-keepers and as lo in price as can be purchased anywhere They ° All time pieces sold bv us are carefully tested before being offered to our customers and guaranteed as repre- sented. We are determined to please you. N. TANTON, GREAT GEORGE STREET, 3 doors from Grafton Street. O W. Z ri, - - Tr Many leading phy- _sicians recommend Ripan'Tabeles to their ' patients, because they well_kn_ow their eHect- 'iveness in eases of in- digestion, weak stom- ach, poor appetite and poor»‘Sl“`ee`-p.. _ ` .- Exchange Bought and Sold : a. in Qllk _l-.I-b_» M.. onion?" I-:::nn:'.rm:n. lull!! 'lllilllhfllli' Ill Leap: as below every day, Sundays POINT with C. R WG! Fro 9.15 a. CA PE SYDNEY Stenme ia nd. for Boston At HALIFAX with C. A. and PLANT ’Ihro'.1gh°'ickets to be had at Grand Canadian Pacific, Inter-colonial a d P Railways, and on the (`omp1ny‘s connecting lines in United States F- W. HA Ch‘tc wn P. If -:»-I6, d 2 wks Time Table, Rocky Point Commeucing Monday, Oct 6th Steamer ‘°ELFlN” Leave Bri nee St. Wharf 'Leave ( *rx Al n.oo “ “ “ x.oo p. arranged thatouly those who “ SUNDAYS- A! 9.1178. 81. ' A! 10 ai noon, Frldnv Portland ll _“E _ _ KNOW 9.5.1. on On and after Monday. Oct. trains of this railway will run mu excepted) so followu- rrains Outward. Read Down. Rmtions. No. No. No. 2; 5 ! inn. r.n. A.u. 5.zo 3.25 825 lv. Ch’t.own nr . 8. R . oo 343 An oyalt June zzz 4.24 909 nhwiltshire 6.35 4-37 9-19 Hunter River 7.ac 5.18 o.49 Emerald June. 1 LK. 64° &7|~l:¢l» Hoc PX. PH Ll. lvltmeraid june .xx 5.51 1c.r3 Kensington |139 79| 1.40 6.25 xc.35. ar lv xr ic Nc. No. 8’8Ide No. N; n mx. :H PK- o.55 lv W ui n 36 1. e n on 8. I 138 Pgitxiéill Bog 419 -54 I-31 ' U I 9.35 25° Alberto: 236 ll R0. I5 NO. N016 iéiiii T:§E§'E§‘i§a FF 5;# 5"# iris _ mn. 3-5° xo.oo 3.45 nr Tlgnbh honors; 1.!- ll' 3-55 }-on l0.lcl0.x7 _~l'.¥in»l. Ll- " ltlse-out 3 *’£1l’i’ "g *ii* is R lv I0. g. rx. or lv U - are Atlantic” 9%!-