i a When vou get to the roo > Our Tamous Eastlake Shingles Galvanized or Painted. | ' They look well and last well——-are | Fire, Lightning and Rust proof | —and are quicker laid than others. be- cause of their patent telescopic side lock. Be sure of enduring protection by getting genuine Eastlakes, they never | | Write us for fall information. Metallic Roofing Ce. Limited TORONTO, ‘DELAYED IN SHIPMENT. BUT HERE NOW Our large stock of — sil clues — HAS ARRIVED | Rare Works of Art. Prices that will sell them. Ready for your inspection. HASZARD & MOORE SUNNYSIDE, a a re eer =e At Midnie ht Your prescription cin be filled at Macdonald's Drug Store Corner Kent and Great George Streets. Residence in connection with store. VELEPHONE. a Tenders for Church S EALED TENDERS will be received by the undersigned, until february h, 1900, for the construction ofa new man Catholic Church, at Souris, P. E. god, designed by Mr. W. C Harrie, chitect, to be built of stone or brick, yut one hundred and eighty feet over al! length, and to seat about wine bundred id fifty people. The plans and epecifi: aticns can be seen at Souris, from Jan- | aaty 8:b,tio the 15th, 1900, and can be Seen atthe Bishop’s Palace, in C barlotte town, from the 15th January to the 8th ot February, 1900. Kach tender must be &companied be a certified ecbeque for $100 06, which will be returned if tender #8 not aceepted, acd which will be forfeit td if teaderer fails to undertake the con ‘tragt sfier his tender has been accepted. ‘The lowest or any terder not necessarily Rccepted. Teniers to be sent to the ‘indersigned and marked “Teoders for Souris Church .” D. F. MACDONALD, P.P., Ven.4, 1900. Souris, P. E. 1. tee —— ‘SUNNYSIDE DENTSTRY ARIES Office in New Prowse Block first door to the right up tairs. |} grand? | ple that throng the morgue will cry Telephone connection. : } JR. AYEPS THE DAILY HXAMINHK CHARLU'TI'TETOWN, JANUARY 13 1900 ait A ROMANCE ; toward him and said, With just a tinge “Ah, Pierre, ’tis but an hour since we met!” “What does it matter? I love you!” “Oh, joy! To my arms!” “Mon ange!” “Ma vie!’ “Today, Eugenie, we will wed! The bells will ring, the sun will shine, all our friends will be there to say: ‘Hap- py Pierre! Happy Eugenie!’ Is it not Come, let us fly, for ’tis tor- ture waiting.” “Beautiful life! Beautiful love!’ “But Eugenie, have you any mon- ey?” “None! Have you?” “Ten sous! Alas for hope! cursed by a cruel fate! I weep!” “Mon Dieu! And I was so happy!” “Wipe away thy tears, Eugenie! I have a plan. Ten sous will buy enough charcoal for one grand suicide. So it shall be!” “Ah, Pierre, thou angel! How stu- pid of me not to think of it before! We shall die in each other’s arms!” “So pale, so interesting! All the peo- We are and murmur, ful!’”’ “Ané the papers will all brim with ‘So young, so beauti- | | the thrilling accounts, and immortelles | will be bought for us by subscription!” “And our friends will say, ‘Ah, they | were wonderful people, these two— Pierre and Eugenie!’ and will swell with pride as they say to the canaille | that crowds about for a peep: ‘Back! In life they were our friends,and death has not dissolved the bond!” Beanti- ful!” “Quick, Pierre, and get the charcoal before the store closes! Merci! How my heart beats with impatience!”— Kansas City Independent. The Flight of Fashion, Mrs. course, that my daughter and I were to have gone to Miss Cashmore’s wed- Frillington—You heard, of | ding tomorrow. And now, I’m sorry to say, the ceremony is postponed for a month on account of the bridegroom's accident. Country Visitor—How very distress- ing! Nothing serlous, | hope? Mrs, Frillington—Oh, but indeed it is mos¢ serious! We have had our gowns made specially in Paris, the very latest thing, and of course in a month’s time they will be utterly out of date!— 2 unch, a : ution “A Word to the Wise,” Ete. The young man had taken off his coat and hung his hat carefully on the hall rack. Coming into the parlor, he went to the fire and held his hands out to warm them. The girl waited for him to speak, but it was evident that he was a bashful young man and knew not how to begin the conversation, Finally be said: “Tt was very, very cold last night. I staid at home and hugged the stove al} the evening.” The girl turned her great brown eyes ——_ f Se. THE WEDDING RING. Death lurks in every place in this “ vale of tears." There is no happiness, no joy, yo gaiety, uo success, yo sorrow and no failure that may not secrete him. A _ favorite hiding-place for death, where wo- men are ¢on- cerned, is in the - very happiness and rapture of wifehood and the sa- cred joy of motherhood. But too fre- s quently sere it in the embrace of love, and the oe of baby-fingers is succeded by the chilly = of the grim destroyer. If wives and mothers would only resort to the right remedy when ther suffer from weakness and disease of the delicate and | important feminine organs that are baby’s threshold to life, there would be fewer hus- bands bereft, and fewer homes saddened by an infant’s loss. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription makes the feminine organs strong, healthy and vigorous. It fits for wifehood and motherhood. It banishes the maladies of the period of suspense, and makes baby’s entry to the world easy and comparatively painless. An honest drug- gist will not try to induce a customer to take an inferior substitute for this great remedy, for the sake of extra — te i le was a great sufferer from a cotn- oteatien so iuane diseases, a few years ago, sein which she has been entirely cured by the use o Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, ee A. Seagie, Esq., of Box 130, Wytheville, Va. oy is thoroughly convinced that there is no se is cine on earth equal tothe* Favorite Prescription, and she doesn’t hesitate to say so. She has rec- ommended it to her lady friends, and in all cases, where it has been given a fair trial, it has given entire satisfaction.” In cases of constipation and torpid liver, | no remedy is equal to Dr. Pierce's Pleasant | Pellets. They regulate and :mvigorate the stomach, liver and bowels. They never fail. One little “ Pellet” is a gentle laxative and two a mild cathartic. They never gripe. , An honest dealer will not urge a substitute | upon you. , the trouble. ‘ manager is ended. of art in her voice: “I don’t see any use in hugging a stove.”—Baltimore Herald. ccineutocisioniseemsteiiioninmaenine Healthful Ignorance. “Don’t you want the water of your well analyzed?” asked the traveling agent of the chemical company. “What fur?” inquired the hale old farmer sitting on the front porch. “To know whether it is pure and wholesome or not.” “Il reckon not. If there’s anything the matter of it, mister, I’d ruther not know it.” “How long have you been using it?’ “Eighty-seven years.” The traveling agent passed on.—Chi- cago Tribune, Profitable Silence. “IT think that husbands ought to pay their wives a weekly salary,” declared Mrs. Tomdik. “About how much?” asked Mrs. Ho- jack. “Well, say $10 a week.” “I used to think so, too, until I dis- covered that my husband pays about $800 a year for my millinery and clothes alone, and then I decided that any salary I would like to ask for wouldn’t go very far.”—Detroit Free Press. Not So Brave as He Looked. Stricken by panic, the audience was jamming itself into the exits. The celebrated funny comedian went on with his “turn” cool, calm and col- lected. “Run fer yer life!” shouted the prop- erty man in a whisper. “De house is afire!”’ “Gee!” said the comedian. “I thought it was just the usual rush.’’—Indianap- olis Journal. ? The Woes of a Veteran. “Yes,” said the one legged veteran, “Billy chipped splinters off my wooden leg to light the fire with, an when I got a cork leg the old lady wuz puttin up catchup, an she used six inches of it for bottle stoppers. That’s why I look 80 lopsided!”—Atlanta Constitution. THOSE METEORS. A Thrilling Romance of the Far- away Philippines. A silver moon floated high above the palms. Night birds called just as they do in Stephen Crane’s books. A solemn hush had fallen on the land, such a hush as falls upon the congregation when the rector says, “Let your light go shine.” Aguinaldo sat on the bank of a listless flowing stream pondering, with chin sunk on his breast, like Na- poleon in the tea store lithographs. Then with one accord the heavens burst. A rain of stars fell, their re- flections twinkling on the verdure. Aguinaldo pulled himself together with a start. “Takawana® Takawana!” ed in an affrighted tone. The faithful aid came around from behind the bush. “Oh, Takawana, Takawana! was that?” “Only a meteoric display,” was the answer. “Thank heaven!” exclaimed the shiy- ering leader as he fell upon the neck of Taky. “Methought I had been cap- tured and was being spanked. Come! Untether the mule and let us be off!” A silver moon floated high above the palms. The night birds called.—De- troit Free Press. he call- What Monkey Up a Stick, w Baby Lion—This is a nice present, ma. put how Goes it work?—New York Journal. The Danger of Modesty In Politics. The chairman of the state commit- tee glanced at the latest batch of re- turns and sighed wearily. His look was the lock of a man who had no hope, who saw an abyss at his feet and knew that he must plunge into it. “Why. what's the matter?” his chief assistant asked. “You Jook ill.” “| am.” the ehairman replied. “Have you seen those latest figures?” “Yes, but surely there is nothing in them to discourage you. They only add to the glorioyg victory we have won. Our plurality keeps getting greater and greater as the distant counties are heard from.” “Yes,” groaned the chairman, “that’s My career as a campaign After this I shall be shelved. The party managers will never repose any confidence in me again. Our vote wili be at least 8,000 aboye my highest claim! I bare al: — AOE tt a ways been afraid that my accursed modesty would ruin me, and now the | worst has come.”—Chicago Times-Her- | ald, | A Parent’s Cares. A Voice In the Dark—Papa, please | give me a drink of water. I’m so thirsty. “No; you’re not thirsty. Turn over _ and go to sleep.” A pause. “Papa, won’t you please give me a | drink? I’m so thirsty.” | “If you don’t turn over and go to ' gleep, I'll get up and whip you.” Another pause. “Papa, won’t you please gimme @ | drink when you get up to whip me?”— Tit-Bits. Neither. “In order to settle a little bet,” the young man said, passing a ring over | the showcase, “please tell me whether the correct pronunciation of the name of the stone in that ring is turkeeze or turkwoize.” The jeweler inspected it and handed it back. “The correct pronunciation is glass,” he said.—Chicago Tribune. Needed Cheering. Husband—Smikeson’s wife is away, and I’m going over there this evening to cheer him up. Wife—Why don’t you bring him here? Husband—Well—er—I’m not feeling very well and need a little cheering up myself.—New York Weekly. aD - = a DR. GAUTHIER ENDORSES his tite to... « DRe GHASE’S Kidney Liver Pills Dr. J. T. A. Gauthier, of Valleyfield, Que., writes: ‘‘I, the undersigned, certify that the contents of this letter, in regard to the cure of Mr. Isadore Major, by the use of Dr, Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills, is correct.” Here is Mr. Major's letter: ‘‘ After 20 years of suffering from backache and krdney disease 1 owe my life to Dr. A. W. Chase. I had tried an endless variety of remedies to no avail, and on the recommendation of a friend began the use of Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills, Two pills that night and two next morming gave great relief, and I continued their use until now Lam completely cured. My friends are surprised and pleased to see me well again, for I spent hundreds of dollars in vain trying to get cured. Before using Dr. Chase’s Kid- ney-Liver Pills ray back ached so 1 could not put on my shoes and couldn't lift 20 Ibs, My shoulders were sore, I had headachesanda bad taste in the mouth. These troubles are now entirely gone and what 1 say I arn ready to rove, f have told my friends of my wonder- ul cure, and many have been greatly benefited by using these pills,” Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills are the great- est kidney cure the world has ever known One pill a dose, 23> a box at all dealers, of Bimanson, Bates & Co., Toronta A jury et Women Who have tested the merits of. Dr A. W. C}ase’s Kidney-Liver Pills return the vor- eict thatfor backache and kidney disorders there 1s nO preperation in any way equal to this great discovery of Dr A W Chase, Amer- ica’s greatest physician. This great kidney cure issold by ali dealergat 25 cents a box, and has proved most effectual asa remedy for the manyi lls to which woman is subject. ee The woman who can write disagreeable things, but cannot say them, is the one who keeps aservant just because she is afraid to discharge her. inard’s Liniment for sale everYwhere, Every one’s lot appears to be preferable to our own. C.C. Richards & Co. Dear Sire, Your MINARD’3S LINI- MENT ie our remedy for sore throat, colds and all ordinary alimeots, I: never faila to relieve and eure promptly. CHARLES WHOOTTEN. Port Mulgrave. Is there avythiog more ineulting to one’s intelligence than to read a newspap- er through with the greatest interest, and then diecover that it is over a week old ? 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You can safely trust what time has indorsed. Send for our Book on INFLAMMATION, mailed free. Sold by all © DB Pat up in Two Sizes, Price 25and 50 cts. I. S. JOHNSON & co, See ee JORNSON'S i BEB EE Ta, De [f Twis porree must Bc Kert wei commen |} | YOU WANT TO REPLACE — SOME OF YOUR—— BLUE DISHES. Cp cae tee We are selling the balance stock of Blue Ware at 25 per cent discount. Call and get a bargain at W. P. COLWILL’S = Es pr See ee ee eS wera ie Ocean, Accident and Guarantee CORPORATION, Ltd. CAPITAL $5,000,000 Covers disablement cansed by any sickness or accident, The most Liberal a attractive policy iseued by any company. SICENESS Ja no respector of persons. The rich and poor, professional, businees or laboring man, suffers alike through illness, as without any warning their earning power ceases completely or is materially reduced through disablement caused by siekness or accident. 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