THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, AUGUST 30 1898. e¢ a} _ bought at AZ oOnocet only to | ve ha aN : 3. We refer t pass, Any shoe raade in UU! sy, OF the United States. a A fresh supply ee just in. s afact, Strat re gentlemen Cat : | ‘ é/ : i style, fit, apd comfo af sSnuoer. They equal it i now nome, a 1 in the / w. ALLEY & CO., but true get && . not sur }40a sé THE SHOEISTS tected. oe .\4e% @.! 2 «7 o> 7 fires. They tu you at any freely insured companies you are pro- may time. jn Charlottetown Fire Insurance ) Protects You against the carelessness of your neighbor, as the purely accidental as well come If my E. R. BROW Insurance Agent Corn Made from Telephone 98, ] SOFC CSEE BOG aR0H0a “eé 6% “e “e of ~ Gems Corn fresh to-day. Price 10c per doz sé +. &é 6é ce Fiour D. STEWART ECLIPSE BAKERY BAKES BEST BREAD. 00000000008 # 20000000000 SESECCOCE SOS M GOEBEL IZSZOOOO ‘Local and Other Items, i ST. Perer’s Scaoo! s.—St. Peters schools r-open Tuesday, Sept. 6th. A few vacan. | cies in both scbools, Fees, boys $24; giris Sloa year. Apply to the Rev James Simpson ecd td. siantineiiibiinisih MackereL.—The mackerel fishery this | season, Commander Spain says, will prox | bably be a failure. here are plenty of | fish and they are following their accustom- | ed haunts; but they seem to be so well fed | that they will not take the bait. Bi Pr MPT ,.— Prom ptness is the mother of confidence and gives credit. It is the best possible proof that our own aftairs are weil ordered and well conducted, aud gives others confidence in our ability. The man who keeps his time (i. e., is punctual), as a rule, will keep his word. inion THe Comine Srorrs.—On Sept. 8th, the public may expect some good sport on the } C. A. A. A. grounds. The annual cham- pionehip games of the Maritizse Provinces Amateur Athletic Association are then to beheld. Thisis the first time that Char- lottetown has had an opportunity of see~ ing the best athletes of the sister provinces competing with our own men. _—._ Nova Scotia Provincrat Exnisitiox.— For the benefit of exhibitors and others attending the exhibition at Halifax, Sep- tember 22nd to 29th., the Plant Steamship Line will issue return tickets from Char~ lottetown to Halifax for one first-clage fare. These ticke’s will be good for sailing? from Charlottetowa September 20th and 27th , returning from Halifax up to the 23rd of October. For all informa-~ tion regarding rates on exhibits, etc. apply to W. W. Clarke, agent, Charlottetown. tf { —>— Weppines.—James A. Gillis, formerly of Kinross, P. E. Island, and Mies C. Zo Heskett were united in marriage last even~ ing at ths residence of the bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs C. W. Heeakett, 1205 Broad-~ way. The wedding ceremony, which was & pretty One, was performed by Rev. B. E. Utz, of the Christian Church. —Spokane Spokeaman Review. Mr. Hugh Maynard, of Port Hill, and Miss Annie McArthur, of Northam, were married atthe residence of the bride’s father at Northam on the evening of the 24th inst., and were the occasion of a large gathering of friends and acquaintances, The interesting ceremony was performed by the Rev. Mr. Murdoch. A_ very pleasant evening was afterwards spent by all present. Scorr Aer 1x Moncron.—In Moncton, for twelve months, says an exchange, the sum of $3,000 was collected frem liquor dealers. The Scott Act inspector says he has received several threatening anony- mous letters of late, and that some parties have openly threatened to take his life, while two partiesnow in the penitentiary made a private confession to the officials thatan attempt has been made to hire them to aseassinate him. Dr. Chase fures Catarrh after Operations Fail. Toronto, March i6th, 1897. SiMy boy, aged fourteen, has been a sufferer from Catarrh, and lately submitted him to an operation at tne Hospital. Since then we have resorted to Dr. Chase’s Catarrh Cure, and one box of this medicine has made a prompt and complete cure, . H. G. Forp, Foreman, Cowan Ave. Fire Hall. BILINGUAL TELEPHONES ———@ — J. G. Nolen, who is an old timer in the electrical construction business, tells a story on ‘‘Val’’ Biatz, the millionaire brewer of Milwaukee, “Our company had had some corre- spondence with Mr. Blatz regarding the putting in of a telephone plant in his big brewery establishment, and I was sent up to try to close a deal. “I took a couple of phones with me in order to make a praotical demonstra- tion should one be required, and I went with the intention of making a sale. ‘*I got to talking with Mr. Blatz and sh@ved him the advantage of putting in our intercommunicative system through- out his establishment. He listened at- tentively, and finally said: “Yes, that is all so; very true. But,’ and he spoke with the conviction of one who was putting a poser, ‘but my men down in the malthouse and the warehouses and cold storage are all Dutchmen. ** “I, myself, though a German and a graduate of Leipsic and Heidelberg, can speak English, but what would your telephones be to my Dutch workmen, who cannot speak English at all?’ ‘*Well, I saw how the land lay: Old Val could not get it through his head that the telephone would transmit any- thing but the language of America. 1 was bound to make the deal, as I said before. So I remarked to Mr. Blatz: ‘**I can put on some German recejy- ers if you so desire. I have some with me.’ ‘I connectag up the phones, made a show of changing the receivers, and in fialf an hour Mr. Blatz was talking to one of his Dutchmen down in the malt- house. He was delighted. ‘**You may put them ia,’ he said, ‘and I shall want one German one in the malthouse, one German one in each warehouse, English ones in my office and the business o and a German one in the cold storagé house.’ ‘*We closed the deal and Mr. Blatz was glad to pay $2 extra for each Ger- man enunciator we put in. When the phones were shipped from the factory, I had them labeled German and English respéctively, and the big brewer was perfectly satisfied. ‘It was five years before I saw Blatz again,’’ concluded Mr. Nolen. ‘‘He rec- ognized me at once and said with a hearty German laugh: ‘You are the ac- commodating gentleman who put in the German and English telephones for me. Well, you are a good one.’ ’’—Milwau- kee Telephone. — Chronic Eczema Cured, One of the most chronic cases of Eczema ever cured is the case of Miss Gracie Ella Aiton, of Hartland, N. B. Ona sworn state- ment Mr Aiton says: I hereby certify that my daughter Gracie Ella was cured ot Eczema of long standing by using four boxes of Dr. Chase’s Uintment. William Thistle druggist, of Hartland, also certifies that he sold four boxes of Dr. Chase’s Ointment which cural Gracie Ella, TOURISTS.—Prince Edward Island Illustrated is a beauti. fully illustrated book on P. E Island. For sale at the bookstores or at this office— 50c + ifs Money Your Afier, is it . = > Well just watch our advertisements and you will soon learn how to get it—It’s an old | but true saying that a peuny saved isa penny gained. Here are a few of the many ways you can save money by dealing at MY STORE.— 9 On every $ worth of hats purchased here you save 99¢ $3 worth Mantle Cloth purchased here you save 5Vc 3 $ worth Flowers, Feathers, Ribbons and.Laces you save 33) $ worth Dress Goods, you save from 33 to 50c erie es $ worth Linen Tablning and Napkins you save from 20 to oe $ worth Fancy Goods you save from 20 to 50c $ worth Shirt waists you save from 40 to 50c : $ worth Sunshades and Umbrellas you save frum 295 to 90c $ worth White Wear you save from 25 to 50c $ worth Lace Curtains you save from 40 to 50c $10.00 Jackets for $5.00, $3.00 Jackets for $1.00, $5.00 Capes ‘for $2.96, 7,75 Rubber heed 7+? -_ UAKS Lo SS $7. ; ; a« y fe > > ” £ =) Hundreds ot other lines, money savers—every one of them. Sentner, McLeod & Co's, te Whe Ate - ee NEW JACKETS. Direct from London One Hundred and Seventeen. Sample Jackets including all the new Styles and Colores for fall, 1898, LADIES SLE THOSE GOODS You may say that this is a little early to rush the fall Jackets, BUT WE ARE—~ — BOUND TO LEAD Our Mantle room is one of the best on the Island. and ladies of taste will find it to their aevantage to buy their fall sacques from us, We show nothing but the latest aud bess, PROWSE BROTHERS The Wonderful Cheap Men A Negro Turning White. A curiosity rarely witnessed in this ° ® country was seen at the. office of the pension examiners in thiscity today. It was @ negro man turning white. The man’s name is Sam Smith. He is 67 years old and came here today from Georgetown to stand an examination for a pension, he having served in the Union army. More than three-fourths of the man's entire body is white, the skin fairer by far than that of the or- dinary white man. The dark skin re- maining on the body is only in small spots. Smith says that his skin began turning white in 1867, and the dark skin has been disappearing from the i ¢ ¢ body ever since. The physicians who Blouses examined him today think that should the old man live a few years longer he Sailor Hats along with the rest of the body, the Al 0 white only showing at a few places be- will be entirely white save perhaps the Ch neath the hair on the forehead, and not 7 on the face at all.—Lexington (Ky.) At or eatly reduced p! 1C€s. face. A peculiar feature of the case is Letter in Cincinnati Enquirer. Ladies’ Capes that the face has not been turning white —————— TT nn mee Londen House To Examine the Eye. If anything gets into your eye, don’t rub it. Good advice, but a little diffi- cult to follow, for one instinctively rubs | j HARRIS the eye under these circumstances. Nevertheless, don’t do so. Get some one 3 to turn the upper eyelid gently over a thin penholder, so that he may see the ball of the eye thoroughly. If lime gets | into the eye and if you see the substance at once, wash out the eye with vinegar to two parts of water. If, however, you — s don’t see the particle immediately, sim- ply put sweet oil or olive oil into the eye and send for the doctor.—New Yoo® Ledger. WHAT: sae Ue ALWAYS PAYS..... FIRST | Why saving dollars, Ifyou are going to paint your house PHOENIX of Hartford. ‘vou should get particulars about the cold water paint MAG- Assets over $5,000,000 i : it costs le an halt the price of oil paint andis also Lowest Rates. | NITE it costs less than halt the p p Generous Settlements a fire retardent. Ask for a sample shingle coated with this paint. w= E. . BEER, sonnei) = PENNELL & CHANDLER ee oe FIRE LIFE. ACCIDENT a Se Seceh. name achiamem- nee aeaice iis ™ ae ome Egy esr ecg