ew. g A Delicious ? Tih} $ lubbin > $ rd t refreshing sieep—there ; bette r for any baby. -BABY’S OWN SOAP and your child will have a fine complexion and never be troubled with skin diseases. The National Courcil of Wo- men of Canada have recommend- ed it as very suitable for nursery use, The Albert Toilet Soap Co., MONTREAL @ Makers of the celebrated Albert Toltet Soane @ e oa 99D O99 99S99 FO9 OH 30SOO8 COS DELAYED 9SSO90909 S900 0OSOOOCHO SO OY 999990900006 0990609000606 600000808 IN SHIPMENT. BUT HERE NOW Our large stock of - Liisi rlclires ~~ HAS ARRIV#D — a Rare Works of Art. Prices that will sell them. Ready for your inspection. HASZARD & MOORE SUNNYSIDE, Tenders for Church EALED TENDERS will be received by the undersigned, until February Sth, 1900, for the construction of a new Roman 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 to seat about nine hundred and fifty people. The plans and specifi: cations can be eeen at Souris, from Jan- wary 8.b,to the 15th, 1900, and can be seenatthe Bishop’s Palace, in Charlotte town, from the 15th January to the 8th ot Yebruary, 1900. Hach teader must be accompanied by a certified cheque for $106 00, wh‘ch will be returned if tender is not accepted, and which will be forfeit ed if tenderer fails to undertake the con tract after hie tender has been accepted. The lowest or any terder not necessar ly accepted. Teniera to be sent to the andersigned and marked “Tenders for Souris Church.” D. F. MACDONALD, P.P., Jan. 4,190). Souris, P. E. I. Stig 1900 One case Oak Mounted Goods consisting in part of Nalt Cellers, Pepper Boxes, Mustard Pots, Butter Dishes, Breakfast Cruets, Muflinners. The above are very pretty and durable, ' amicably with her husband. THE D.JLY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETUWN,JANUARY 22, 1900 LOVE'S TOUCH. 7 i night,”* he said and he held her hand ; &nd hoped that her eyes would understand What his tongue refused to say. He held her hand, and he murmured low: ‘I'm sorry to go like this; It seems so frigidly cool, you know, This ‘Mister’ of ours and ‘Migs.’ “I thought, perchance,’’ and he paused to note if a) med inclined to frown, But the smile on her lips his heartstrings smote As he longingly looked down, She spoke no word, but she picked a speck Of dust from his coat lapel— So small, such a wee, little tiny fleck— ’Twas a wonder she saw so well. But it brought her face so very near, In that dim, uncertain light, That the thought, unspoken, was made quite clear, And I know ’twas a sweet ‘‘Good night.’’ —Lewiston Journal. cCagdCDONONOOONOO ON OOOO OOOO 0000N ° THE PHANTOM HORSE. Oo ° °o ° = He Led to the Detection of a Mur- ° °o ° Oo oO °o °o ° ° derer. oOo role] olololololololelolelelelsielejelejeleleze) ole “Well, now, major,” said one of the party in knickerbockers and golf stock- ings, “I would never have put you down as a believer in spocks.” The party here alluded to was a par- ty of bicyclists gathered together in the hall of a roadside inn, which called itself “the hotel of the piace,” but owed its prosperity chiefly to the fact that there was no “place” to speak of thereabouts. “What do you call ‘spooks,’ young | man?’ asked the major in a leisurely way. “A spook,” drawled the doctor of the party, “may be defined as something at the bottom of a happening that never happened.” “That's funny enough,” said the ma- jor, “and, of course, it lets me out. [I | don’t believe in the existence of any- thing at the bottom of nothing.” : “f thought not,” said number one, | “You don’t look like a naturally timid man. timid people often make the best sol- diers’’— “And what has timidity to do with } it?” said the tinjor. | Sell, the S-Sereee thes aoe, tremulous folks who persuade them- | selves they have seen what you may , call ’em, isn’t it?’ “Is it?’ said the major. “H’m! Well, since you don’t think me an easily frightened and tremulous person, per- haps you may be the more ready to be- lieve what I can tell you, and”— “Go on, major!” was the general chorus. “And can SwWeai to, if*— “Never mind the swearing,” said thé young woman ip bitie serge. “I will tell you.” “But you will tell us, Wott you?” the young woman gently pleaded. “Very well, then. As you all know, I ride a wheel now on all occasions when a wheel is possible. Time was when I looked down upon bicycles— looked down on them from the back of a fine, bonny gray, about 16 hands—a beast that would take me four miles in half an hour at an easy fox trot or carry me straight across country at a gallop, without stopping to so much as wink at any ditch or fence that might occur on the way. “Now, about that fox trot of Cruis- keen’s—he was an Irish horse with ar Irish name—there was a certain indi- viduality which I learned by ear after a few months, just as you learn to know a familiar tune. If I had lent Cruiskeen to any of you, for instance, The story is told of a young married wo. man, who asked atiother young married woman how she managed to get along sa The answer was, ‘I feed the brute—his stomach with food and his mind with flattery.”’ Evena man will have to admit that this young wo- man had solved about two-thirds of the art of making the average man happy. The other third consists of keeping his body ia such condition that he will enjoy his food and his mind in such condition that be will be susceptible to flattery. Itisn’t much use to put tempting food before a man who hasn't an appetite. It doesn’t pay to lavish and overworked. The average man pays very little attention to his health, and won’t take medicine of his own accord until he is flat on his back. A shrewd wife will keep an eye on her hus- band’s welfare in this respect, and when she sees that he is bilious or suffering from indigestion, or is generally out of sorts, will see that he resorts to that most wonderful of all invigorators, Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. It is the best of all appetite - sharpeners, blood - makers and flesh-builders. It corrects all disorders of the digestion and makes the liver active and the blood pure. It tones the nerves and cures all cases of nervous exhaustion and prostration. It cures 98 per cent. of all cases of consumption, bronchial, throat and kindred ailments. Medicine dealers sell it. becca F. Gardner, of Grafton, York Co. gn ae “I was so sick with dyspepsia that HE. W. TAYLOR, Camsnon Biock, CHARLOTTETOWN. ' Disco . . weigh 125 pounds. at anything for over four months. oe aes oang to die. I weighed only Se nds. I took two bottles of the ‘Golden Med- * Yam now as well as ever Of course, 1 know that vaturally | smiles on a man whose nerves are racked | children growing nicely ? Stronger each month? A trifle heavier? Or is one of them growing the other way? Growing weaker, growing thinner, growing paler? Ifso, you should try Seolls€ 0 lei It’s both food and medicine. It corrects disease. It makes delicate children grow in the right way—taller, stronger, heavier, healthier. oc. and $1.00. all druggists. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, Toronto. and you were bri hging home a party of horseback riders, I could instantly have distinguished Cruiskeen’s trot among all the others. Now I want you to pay particular attention to that point. “Well, one day—I was out west then —I was riding Cruiskeen along a bit of freshly made macadamized road, just as good and hard a bit of road as that I superintended myself. It was about 10 o’clock in the morning, and the sun was terribly hot. “Just as 1 got to a clump of yourg larches that had been planted along the road about two years before Il heard a horse coming along the road— coming toward me. Cruiskeen had been at a walk, but when I heard the hoof beat of the other horse I spurred up, just out of curiosity, for there were | few people about there who owned } horses, and 1 knew all of them. “So here was Cruiskeen trotting on toward the north, we'll say, and this ; other horse was cantering easily from the north. southward. I ought to have met the man on horseback in about a minute, “But as we turned the corner by the clump of larches I was very mucb sur- prised to see—uothing. : “There wasn't a sign of mau or beaSt anywhere on that road. “At the same time the easy canter turned into a trot.” “Echo, of course,” the devtor sug- gested. “Doctor,” said the major sadly, “did you hear me say 1 could swear to Cruiskeen’s trot anywhere, or were you asleep when I said that? And was the canter also the echo of Cruiskeen’s trot? “Well, let mié finish. While 1 was wondering at the strangetiess of the thing, knowing that there was no other road where a horse’s trot would sound like that within leagues, Cruiskeen suddenly shied to one side of the road, and shied so violently as to throw me clear out of the saddle. “Luckily I was not seriously hurt, only a little bruised. And Cruiskeen, being a goed, affectionate beast, would not gallop away and leave me. He wanted to, poor fellow. He was look- ing away along the road in the direc- tion he had come from, neighing vio- lently, with his eyes staring. I never Baw a quadruped such a picture of fright in all my life. “Ae gogo aa I could get mr senses ta- getber 1 could distinctly bear the Im visible horse trotting away. It had passed on, and the hoof beats were get tung fainter and fainter.” “You see,” said the young man wha had first started the conversation, “that was an Irish horse. Irish horses are like Irish humans—imaginative.”’ “That only accounts for Cruiskeen’s shying, Mr. Perks,” said the blue serge young woman, “not for the ma- jor’s hearing the hoof beats. And the major isn’t Irish; he is”’— “Pennsylvania Dutch, young lady,” said the major. “Now, if the company wants to hear the rest of that story, or the sequel, if you like, why, just wait till I light this cigar.” “Light lamps and forward!” came in chorus from all parts of the hall. “The secuel, my incredulous friends, was the discovery of a murder,” said the major in his most matter of fact manner. “Yes, a murder. Cruiskeen could hardly be got to go any farther, but I had business to attend to at the post, and that was still four miles away. “Considering how incredulous all you civilians are, I need hardly tell you that the fellows at the post would not easily have swallowed a story like mine. Some would have called it sun- stroke; some might even have hinted at intoxicating liquors, an insinuation which I could not have borne. So I said nothing about the matter at head- quarters. I simply transacted my busi- ness, mounted Cruiskeen again and turned his head homeward. “When we came to that clump of young lazches, poor Cruiskeen began to tremble. I was obliged to dismount and lead dim by the bridle. “We had passed the spot where Cruiskeen had shied on the way to the post when he gave 4 jerk at the bridle and pulled back. Then I knew that I had found something—a trail. “All 1 could see when I stooped to look at tke bank of the drain was a Bor constipation —Dr, Pierce’s Pellets, ARE THE —— ' To understand Bright s Disease is to know eee re But that was enough. “Well, I needn’t give you all the de- tails of my search. Somehow I felt that I was looking for blood trails, but I found no blood. I only found the branches broken and bent, making @ trail right into the middle of the clump. And at last I found the body. “Yes, the poor fellow had not been dead 24 hours. He had been shot right through the head. He had an empty revolver holster on his belt, and he wore spurs on his boots. “The question was, Where was the horse? “Cruiskeen and I solved that mys- tery too. The murderer, fearing that a horse coming riderless to the next farm, or, stili more, to the settlement farther on, would arouse suspicion, had killed the horse, too, and, with the assistance of some accomplice, had dragged its dead body through the rail fence, evidently removing two rails for the purpose.” “That was a ‘curious coincidence,’ I suppose, doctor?” “Did they catch the murderer?” the young woman asked. “I am sorry to say, my dear young lady,” said the major, “that the mur- der was traced to an enlisted man of my own regiment, and it came out that his wife, a half breed Indian, had sug- gested the crime and helped him in it. The victim was a young drug drum- mer.” Then the whole party lighted up and wheeled home to the eity.—Troy (N. Y.) Times. — No Cure for... Bright’s Disease In its advanced stages—The Rea. son Why-—Danger Prevented by the Timely Use of Dr. A. W. Chaso’s Kidney-Liver Pills. that in its advanced stages it is past the reach of human aid. The cells of the kidneys — —— change, which atts iia their duties as filters of the blood. Discount sale ot Willow Marke Baskets ; porrorming their functions is con’ ned, Just think of having the kidneys dead. Think ofthe poisons left ia the system when these organs could no longer perform [t would be difficult to conceive of anything more dreadful, and yet this-is the goal to which every case of neglected kiduey disease mustlead, hen the back aches, when urinating is difficult or too frequent, when there are de- posits in (h# urine after osauwaiig {OT 94 hours, there is no time {2 ‘ose in procuring Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills. eat It is not claimed that they will cure Peight's Disease in its last stages. They are an avsc lute cure for kidney disease, and so long as the kidneys are not entirely wasted away they will give new strength and vigor and enable them to resume their duties of filtering the blood. Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills will stop backache and headache in short order by re- moving the cause, and will positively prevent Bright's Disease. One pill a dose, 25c. a*box. At all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Ca, Toronto, Gradually but surely the “CRESCENT” STEEL AGATE WARE is supplanting the old heavy, cum- bersome, rough crockery for toilet purposes. It is handier, cleaner and vastly more economical. Each piece bears our label. MADE BY THE THOS, DAVIDSON M’F'G Co, Moatreal. Last week we received a large case earth away with the heel of a boot. ws ae ARMUTMEAANLALECREETEEATN OVTSTH NMDA cat taesieD fs HUPMON TY At pentane rooe SEE THAT THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE —or— 9oo0 Drors ne” ANegetable Preparation for As- similating the Food and Reg ula- ling the Stamachs and Bowels of ESET | Promotes Digestion Cheerful- ness and Rest.Ccatains neither m,Morphine nor Mineral. OT NARCOTIC. es —— iin uit IS ON THE WRAPPER OF EVERY BOTTLE OF | Aperfect Remedy for Consti | ee Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Worms Convulsions ,Feverish- ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. Fac Simile Signature of f Xf Flledir, WNEW YORK. - At6& months old }j DOsEs —35CENIS Reape of Ola Tir SAMUEL PITCHER 5 a Be Poanyliis Sead Rochelle Ainise Oastoria is put up in one-size bottles only. IS His not sold in bulk. Don’t allow anyone to sell mi you auything elso on the plea or promise that it is “just as good” and “will answer every pure i pose.” 44> See that you get O-A-§-T-O-R-L-A, The fac- a 6simile {is on signature Lldk every of * «e . Frapper. — EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. - = neal BRE——-- Ocean, Accident and Guarantee CORPORATION, Lid. te eal $5,000,000 The most Liberal a Cena oS a ee : ey Covers disablement cused by any sickuen- attractive policy issued by a'¥ C>mpany, SICENESS Js no reapector of persons. The rich and poor, profession), businees or laboring man, suff-ra alike through illne2s, as wuhout any warning their °arning power ceases completely of is materially reduced through disablement caused by siekness or accideut, DISABLEMENT From sickness or accident causes financial Joss to all persons, without regard to oc cupation or position. Protection and Compensation Can be obtained by a contract, which will indemnify for any disablement caused through sickness or accident, and a cottract of this nature is sold by the largest corporation in Canada— The Ocean, Accident and Guarantee Corporatio Ltd., The first and oaly corporation in Canaia to issue a contract covering disablement caused by any sic«ness or accident. The benefits obtained in a ccntract euch as the above will be fully appreciatea by all business and professional men, and will doubt- less prove very popular as a protection to their earning power. JAMES J. JOHNSTON, Barrister, Agent,Stamper’s Block. Charlottetown, Pecl9—deo dtf. TORTOISE HEATER | Island Crown $17.50 Sampson Cook, No, 8 $13.60 or accident. Tortoise Heaters—— FROM $7.50 UP ms a ———— ee eee am + nao te 5 angen: oe ees eA <> ‘actmanstimatann oe secu e iie * nts arene y ~ perouege amee ¥ ee ee " F ° of Willow Market Baskets from Eng- land that should have been here 3 months ago but were delayed some- where on the way. In order to clear a lot of them out quick we have decided to take a dis- count of 12} per cent off our regular selling prices, This is a chance to get anice servicable market basket ata low figure. Call early and get your pick of them. Been & QUrF GROCERS. DR. CLIFI cures CERONIJC-DISEA SES and RUPTURE by Salisbury treatmeat, Send atam. for infcs mark, as if some one had kicked the i Merchants’ Bank This price for 2 weeks Simon W. Crabbe STUVES & HARDWARE Plumbing & Heating ——— 86 46 ~& 6664—— I am now prepared to do Sanitary Plumbing in all its branches. Also Steam and Hot water Heating and Gas Fitting. Jobbing promptly attended to. All work yuaranteed first-class. Estimates furnished at short notics, See me before placing your orders—it will be money saved. Orders left at R. B. NORTON & CO’S. Store, or at residence, Edward Strect, will re- ceive prompt attention. Angus McInnis, PRACTICAL PLUMBER Wasker’s Corner wation, or call at Trure, hova Scotia, Office of Halfax Building | Gas, Steaua and Hot Water Fitter, Ch’town, P. ——= ee rene a eras meme mewn ane ge “ge ctor te RI So a om a a aa ae — sa pie ere ce meaner te a SS ASANO AN IR TH a gaa Sas ai % aa STR ESS uy - oe Le fi ‘ ey ’ - aa a ge sa a. = a NRT aera capes - ee ee PET vipa Aram RDC AT rm AA RE IY 7 eae ae ORRIN RCRA mem a. AER