FT SiS oP BS Perfect Satisfaction in Every Province, DIAMOND DYES Are True Home Favorites. “T find great pleasure io dyeing with the w ndrfal Diamond Dyes. They make old clothes, dresees, silks, feathers and wool goods look as good as new.” Mrs. M. R. Bat, Victoria Harbor, Ont. “Have used the Diamond Dyes fcr many years and they have proved true and sure to colorevery time. ‘hey are witbout doubt ibe best of al! dyes.” Mas. J.G. Waker, Quebec, P. Q. “f— am afarmer’s wife and have ueed Diamond Dyes for years, and am well sat- isfied with them. I highly recommend Diamond Dyer; they are the most valuable and surest of al! dyestuffs.” Mes. A. Hopaes, Nichvleville, N.S. “F have used « great many of the Dia- mood Dyes and tind them the best for all kinds of dveing; will have no other kind for my work.” . Mrs. Jas. Harats, Robinsonville, N B. “T have Diamond Dves with great euceess. 1 recommend them to a)) ladies who wisb to do their own dyeing. For coloring dress goods they are jst perfect.” ne d the Mas McNett, Stanley Bridge, P E lL. “The Diamond Dyes are a great enccess T have used them: several times end they »! wives turo out lovely colore. lam delighied with them.” Me3-Joun Lowe, West Selkirk, Man. “We usethe Diamond Dyes and find them fast and beautiful colors; they are the best.” Mas Cus Jonsson, Montgomery, N WT. “The Diamenu Dres are the best sold in the country; they alwaye give me satisf.c- tion, and I will always praise them.” Mary A Sreapmay, Vancouver, BC. — “Dar isn’t much comfort in de re- mabk dat contentment is better dan riches,’’ mid Uncle Eben. ‘One is jes’ shout as hahd to git as de other.’’— Waskiasicn Stor THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN. OCTOBER 15 1898. MURRAY HARBOR NOTES. Potato’ digging is well advanced in this section. The cropis exceptionally poor. The cheese factory bere closed its sea- son’s cheese makiug abouta week ago; and on Mooday next will start making butter. The number of cheese made this Jseason is leas than the preceding year, there being a slight falling off io the number of patrons and the factory having closed earlier thie season. The work and management is bighly creditable to Mr Cowan and assistant J A Bull. Av interesting eyent took place at the home of Mr. Forbes on Thursday evening. 6th inst., when Mr. Donald Jackson of + H. North and Mrs Ann White (widow or! late Wor White) were united in marriage Mr. Forbes supported the groom while tb: bride was attended by Mies McKay. The ceremony was performed by Rev. Henry Carter. Tuis happy pairare both on the verge of the allotied three score and ten years aod this is the third time for each being married; consequently this wil! douvtless revive hope withio any who may h«ve considered themselyes doomed to live a life of celibacy. A tew inumate friends assembled at the Methodist parsonage on the morning of the 7th ult,to witness the marriage of A. B. Allen, Eeq.,of Montreal to Miss Margaret Hall, daughter of Thomas Hall, Eeq Bathurst. The bride was attired in cream cashmere with peat trimming and carried a boquet of bridal roses and maileo hair ferns. The ceremony was performed by Rev. J. 8. Allen, father of the groom Aftera dainty breakfa-t the happy pair left by the SS Electra for Charlottetown en route to Moatreal where Mr. Allen holds » responsible position. Cor. W. Marray Harbor South, Oct 8tb, 1898. -_——_ << e ee . NEW PASSENGER DEPOT. Sir.—We waota new and up to-dae passenger depot, and we want it now”; ‘“‘and pow is the time for three reason: ; lst and most important—we need it now 2onand impertant tco—a property well suited for it is now in the market, the Morris property at the foot of Queen Street 3rd there is a delegation from the Board of Trade going toOttawa and could urg- thisatthe same time. Let us tbave r tation * up-to-date, and have it-at once PrRocress. A CEASELESS TORMENT. Eczematie Gnawing and [rritation Have a Short Stay After One Application of Dr Agnew’s Ointment—It Helps Immedi- ately and Cures Quickly, C W Howard. Peak’s Island, Me, writes “Enclosed find 35 cents, for which kindly send me a box of Dr Agnew’s Ointment. | have been afflicted fora long time with eczema, and it has done rae so much good I wantto try avotber box. The first ap- plication gave me more relief than any- A planter in Honduras has a right to “register’’ himself and 50 laborers, whereby they are exempt from mili tary _- A PITAS8LE CRIPPLE. From Rheumatism—Blistered by Doctors Till He Didnt Know Himself— South American Rheumatic Cure Performs a Wondrous Cure. D. Desanetele, Peterboro’, writes: “For months I was unable to work, bad rheu- reatism inevery part of my body. I was bhietered by doctors at ten d fferent times, My hands were drawn out of shape, my fingers were distorted, and my wrists and forearm were double their natural size. My leg was encas:d in a plaster case for four months. I tried South Ansoerican Rbeamatic Cure; I took two bottles. Twenty-four hours after first dose I felt like a new man, One week after! was able to go to work. Now I am 4s hearty and strong as ever. Sold by Dr 3 W Dodd and Geo E Hugbes. el A TRICKY BUTCHER “The greatest business mind I ever rn up against was possessed by the former proprietor of a meat market out ia Germantown,’’ said a street car con- doctor the other day as his car was waiting on Front street. ‘‘This butcher bad a fine, squeaky voice, which you coald hear a block away. Tricky? Yes, that’s just what you would call it. I xsel to watch him sometimes when he was waiting on customers, and it was positively amusing to see the ap- ymrent ease with which he would make % two pound steak weigh apparently three or more pounds. “He would take a couple of pounds of meat and throw it on the scales so that the pointer wou!d show four pounds and then take it off before the scales could register the true weight. ‘There’s jast four pounds exactly,’ he would say to the customer in that squeaky voice #° his, and then continue with the state- tent quickly made: ‘Four times 12 is cr. Call it 60,’ and unless the customer was watching him closely he would al- ways get even cnange. **He was in the meat business only a ‘ew years and amassed a competency. Vhen he left it. What worries me is bow he is going to get along now. I un- derstand he is in the real estate business, and I wonder how he works it when he sells a piece of land. The scales «von't ‘elp him mucao there. '’—-Philadelpbia CS i) ALL HEADACHES whatever «ause cured in half an hour by VMPPMANS ILEADACHE POWDERS WW cents an) 25 cents at all druggists. thing Lever tried. It’s going to cure me outright.” Sold by Dr S W Dodd and Geo KE Hughes. a The Only Time There Was. The necessity that there shall be only one man who ‘‘has the say’’ in a mili- tary command is thoroughly recognized in the United States army. A story is told of General Shafter which illus- trates the punctilio of the regulars in this regard. At acertain frontier post at which Shafter, who then held an inferior rank, Was commander many years ago, a dis- cussion arose among several officers as to the exact time of day. A captain, witb his watch in his hand, said: “It is now exactly 8 o’clock.’’ ‘Oh, no!’’ said a lieutenant. ‘By my time it’s eight minutes past 3.”’’ A third young officer drew his watch out of his pocket. ‘‘I know my time is exactly right,’’ he said, ‘‘and my watch says two minutes past 8.’’ At this juncture Major Shafter looked at his silver watch. “I don’t know what your watches say,’’ he remarked, ‘‘but I wish you to understand that in this command it is five minutes past 3.’’ Then the young officers remembered that the authority of the commanding officer extended even to the time of -_-—- Dominion Rifle matches at found to bave been made of bad brass sup- ply at the Quebec factory, quality ie promised for the future, that negotia' » shall be NEWS NOTES. at the Ottawa are The bnrating cartridge ehells Brass of better Germany is about to provide by Jaw 4 inciting workmen to etrike punished by imprisonment for terms of rot less than three months nor more than two years. For the next winter mail service the Allan Company will probably eapply two boats and the Dominion three. The Allan boats will probably be the Parisian and the State of Califoroia The Dominion will probably send the Labrador and Van- couver, and to third boat eitber the Scoteman or thy Dominion. A fis -clase paper mill, em, loying seve- ral bundreds of m » bas been established at Grand Mere, Quebec, The charges against the Tarner Govern- ment, of Britixh Columbia, have after in- vestigation, been deciared not proven. —~—@e@e A USEFUL COFFIN It may not be generally known that the Dutch Boers at the Cape, especially those living in remote districts where material is expensive and labor difficult to obtain, frequently purchase at least one coffin beforehand which is placed in a conspicuous position in the ‘‘voor- kamer’’ or principal sitting room and utilized as an article of furniture, for ornament or as a receptacle for clothing and other oddments. One farmer well known to the writer possesses a beautifully finished article of this sort which he purchased abcut 80 years ago. During that period he has buried three wives each of whom had to be content with coffins of the com- monest material and roughest work- manship while his own awaiting its possessor stands in all its luster of pol- ished teak and silver mountings. For the present the old gentleman uses it as a couch for hismidday nap in order, as he sometimes remarks with grave humor, that he may get accustoim- ed to it.—Cape Times. A German Word Serpent. A German correspondent comes to the rescue @f his countrymen, concerning whom we expressed surprise that they should prefer to use a word of four sy!- lables when another word expressing the same thing in 40 syllables was available. He sends usacopy of The Kolnische Volkszeitung, in which oc- curs a sentence of 607 words, occupy- ing 69 lines of the newspaper This word serpent occurs ima legal judgment, and even the printers got to hate it after setting up about 450 words of it. So they put in a full stop, which, like a rifle bullet in the spine of a boa constrictor, killed the whole sentence. But it must really be nice to have news- papers in which you can begin to read a sentence at brez/tfast, continue it in the train and triumphantly reach tho verb at office.—London Globe, Experienced. ‘‘Have you made up your mind just what qualities you expect to find ina husband?’’ asked the matron. ‘“‘Why, of course,’’ answered the maid. **Too bad,’’ commented the matron with a sigh. ‘*Why do you say that?’ demanded the maiden. **Oh, I always hate to see young girls disappointed,’’ answered the matron. — Chicago Post. So Kindly Considerate, **Why is it,’’ the daring young man asked, ‘‘that your daughter still wears such short dresses?’’ **Oh, I keep her dressed that way,”’ Mrs. Giddibus answered, with a bexuti- ful blush, ‘‘because if she had long skirts on people would think she was wy sister when they saw us together. I have no Wish to conceal the fact that I have a daughter who isas tall as I am.’’—Cleveland Leader. Ifyou hsve been sick you will fird H sud's Sarsaparilla the best medicine you Voll in lead packets only. —tmms ELEPHANT BRAND PURITY AND STRENGTH c : tte, Binet ° Combined wita flavour, make Tetfey’s Elephant Brand [Ido Cevion Macket Teas, favorites the world over. These qu 42W prices have made them known as Best of Tea Value Retail pric- -1 every packet, 25c, TO $1.00 P, a ! i ee Your (mocer Cannot supply you, write us and we will see your o London, Eaz.. Cana ' can take to gi day.—Youth’s Companion. saaimeanah give you appetite and COL JOO UL ; x Pt we DOO " jmaate: oan ' FROM INDIA AND CEYLON 90 C9009000300.00 alities and their a rdev is filled. PT mr ben ' CalaTS 9000-000 0000006 00000000 00000077 a tiead Office, 14 Lomoine {' Is ee Dyspepsia, Which Ruins the Brightest Intellects. Dodd’e Dyspepsia Tablets Remove this Curee by Benishing ite Cause — Their Action is Speedy, Their Effect Positive and Peruanent. Dyspepsia isa blighting curse of the modern business world. Nine-tenthe of the members of all the professions, too, are victims of the modern dragon. The shrewdest, most far- seeing mereh~ ants, the most astute brokers, the clever- est lawyers, the most e'oquent clergymen, avd even the most skillful surgeons eni physicians are tortured by Dyepepsia. Many a bankrupt can blame Dyspepsia for his failure; many a sermon hae been —_ — $12.00, $15 and $18 .00 $4.50 and $5,00. $4.50 and $5.00. night till 10. ~~ THE BANE OF BUSINESS MEN. — = apoiled; many a lawyer has lost his case— because of Dy*pepria. Dyspepsia unstrings the nerver; makes van irritable, moody, uosociable, cranky; saps the frraanecs, strength avd v'g tT of manhood, sod unfits the victim for wor. Keenness of foresight and Dyspepsia never go together; clear-beadedoess and . ia are bitter enemies. ode Dvepepsia Tableteare the best friends the buriness man and the pro- fersional maa cao have. Dodd’s Dyepepsia Tablets absolutely cure Dyspepsia. They cure it rapidly, thoroughly and permanently. Dodd’s Dyspepsia Tablets cure Dyspep- sia by removing ite cause. They digest the food,and give tone and’ vigor to the stomach. They fit # man for his business, giving him aclear head, and steady ner~ ver, and ensure strength for the whole syatem. "Kitty cents a box; six boxes for $2.50, at Below is some of our prices, see the quality and assortment. ali drage ists.’ A+ &SGSEe The Finger aaa Tne Points to tne hand when the question must be answered--‘'where shall buy my fall and winter clothing. same old “re you going to trust to luck or ale you going to trust us. Come in and Men’s O’coats—$2.75, $3.75, 25, $7.50, $8.50, $10.00 Men’s Ulsters -$4 50, $5, $6, $7, $8, $9, $10, $12, $14 Children’s Suits—$1l, $1.50, $2, $250, $3, $5.50, $4 Children’s O’coats and Ulsters—$2, $2,75, $3.25, $4, Youths Ulsters— $3.25, $4, $4.50, $5, $5.50 $6, and $6.50 Yes you can trust our store, for we rep- resent our goods just as we believe them to be, and cheerfully make every wrong right Open every night till 8, and Saturday Frowrse ~— Bros. The Wonderful Cheap Men "= SHPO SSIRES 997 dy tf PLANT Line. To Boston COMMENCING MAY (Oth. Che favorite 8S: S. “HALI- FAX” will leave Charlot- town for Roston Every Tuesday, at 1 p. m. calling at Hawkesbury and Halifax. RETURNING leave Boston every Saturday at ncon. Passengers leaveing Ch’*own Wednesday morning via Pic- tou, can make close conniec- tion at Halifax with S. S. “HALIFAX.” Sailing Wednesday evening at 11 p. m. Tickets for sale at stations P. E. L Railway. For further rates and all informa- tion apply to H. L. Chipman, Canad- ian Agent, at Halifax, or to W. W. CLARKE, Agent, Ch’tewn. Quebec Steamship Co’y, Ltd. “STR. CAMPANA.” Sailing Sailing rom Montreal from Charlottetown at 2 p.m. about 6 p. m. Monday 10th Oct Mondry 24th Oct Monday I7th Oct Monday 7th Nov Monday 3lst Oct Calling at Summerside, Perce Gaspe Mal Bay and Father Pviot. Delightiul summer trip for tourists. Passenger accommodation unsurpassed, Freight carvied at competition rates. Eggs band- led with great care. CARVELL BROS Agente" Beaver Line COARLOTTETOWN and LIV*RPOC. DIRECT SERVICE [t is preposed to sail the Steamship “LAKE WINNEPEG”, 5500 tous Monday 2rd Oct From From Charlottetown Live { Sept. 20 Oct. 4. Oct, 27 Nov. 10 Nov. 26 The above steamer is fitted with cold storage, und has modern improvements for carry ng live stock. r Kxcellent accommodation for passengers For freight, passage, statemoons, and other information apply at the office of N. RATTENBURY, Ageat PICKFORD & BLACK. 106 a & CHARLOTTETOWN, SEASON OF 1898. 8.8. CITY OF GHENT will sail from Uharlottetown every Friday at 10 a. m., curing the the season of 1298, for Halifax, salline at Summerside, Port Hastings, § Port Hawkesbury, Arichat, Canso, Isaac Harbor, Salmon River, Sheet Harbor; returning will leave Halifaxevery Tues day at 6 p. m., makiog same calls, The steamer hes excellent passenger accom- modation. Saloon amidships. Special freights will be given this season. For further information apply to W. W. CLARKE, Agent Ch’town, May 13,1898 - LYE Will be opened at the P. E. IS LAND COMMERCIAL COLLEGE, on Munday, October 3rd. - And will b> continued through the seison on Monday, Tuesday and Fri- day evenings. Same courses as in day classes. Apply at once. ISAAC OXENHAM, Principal