‘ 4 * : 5 DS Bee et AE ge a Re ten “SIEM om rE . > KNOWS A GOOD THING WHEN HE SEES IT. BABY’S OWN SOAP MADE BY THE ALBERT TOILET SOAP CO. MONTREAL, MASSER OF THE CELEBRATED ALBERT TOILET SOAPS. THE views Cheap Crockery Store. JUST RECEIVED A beautiful lot of Dioner Sets, Tea Sets, Glass Sets, Charaber Sets. All kinds of fancy china and glass --ALSO— Lamps of every Style and Price Liberal dis- counts for cash. This is the place to buy. No trouble to show goods. Wall Faper ' LEWIS, LARGEST “AND BEST VARIETY PHOTOCRAPHS We are now makingall the latest Styles of Photos, finished in a superior manner, either oa glossy or flat paper. At THE oLD Srayp, Grarron Srreet, North Side o! ‘Market ‘Square. i VALUABLE BUSINESS STAND FOR SALE ano 4 MONTAGUE BIDGE This property consists of a commo dious store ancl dwelling, heated with hot water, and said to be the best business stand in Montague. Titse Guaranteed. Possession immediately. Apply to E. H BEER, Ch’town, 63 2awtwti ——_ WECURSIONS TO > BOSTON. PLANT LINE. Excursion ‘lickets will be issued by Plant line of Steamships, from Sept 20th to October 20, Charlottetown to Boston snd return, good toreturn by any steamer within 30 days from date of issue. RATES — Charlottetown to Boston and return $11.00. NZ a W. W. CLARK, Agent. Valuable Lots For Sale IN CHARLOTTETOWN. been able to dispose of late residence of the Hon. Frederick Peters, en bloc, 1 have been in- structed to sel] a large portion thereof in blocks of ecre Jots. Roads have been laid off for this purpose aod in this way some of the most bea atifal Jote in Charlottetown will be disposed of. Sale will take place at “Sidmount” on Wednesday the 21st day of September instant at 11 o’clock. ROBERT BEARISTO, Auctioneer. Ist 98 205 dtd Not having “Sidmont”’ the Ch’town Sept HENRY R. LORDLY C. E - M Can. Soc. C. E. Graduate College of Civil Engineeriag Cornell University. Consulting Engineer for General Work, Specialties: Hy iraulic, Sanitary Engineer- ing and Bridge Designing. Offices at Charlottetown and St. John. Island correspondence addressed to tharlottetown, rE THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, SEPTEMBER 20 1898, A THRILLING MOMENT. One of the most thrilling experiences pecorded in the annals of shooters’ ca- reers was that in which Dick Singleton, an old time Bradford shooter, played the role of hero. He played it well too. ' That the sensational drama did not turn Se owt to be a tragedy in which six lives were taken in the last act is due to the hero’s cool head, quick decision and su- perb nerve in the face of almost certain death. Singleton was one of the best known shooters in the Bradford field. He had all the qualities which enter into the make up of a successful juggler with death's agencies. He had shot hundreds of wells and transported glycerin all over roads which at certain seasons had no counterpart for all reund vil- lainy anywhere, but his reckless caution had always averted a catastrophe. One day Singleton started out to shoot a well located near Bradford. The well bad been ‘‘drilled in’’ two or three days before, but the shooter had been too busy to put in a shot. Arrived at the well Singleton pro- ceeded to fill the shells with glycerin from his cans. That is a proceeding of some delicacy, as glycerin allows no liberties to be taken with it. Care must be exercised in pouring the stuff from the cans into the shells. The well was about 1,800 feet deen, and during the interval since drilling had stopped about 1,000 feet of fluid had accumulated in the hole. There was nothing unusual about that, but something unusual did hap- pen speedily and most inopportunely; something calculated to turn one’s hair gray and make such an impression on the memories of the men present as time could not efface. The glycerin shell had been lowered several hundred feet, and Singleton was slowly playing out the cord, when he felt the line slacken. Immediately he heard an ominous roar. It was a sound to appall the stoutest heart. The well had started to flow! Singleton knew the meaning of that gound. He knew that a column of oil 1,000 feet high, obeying the impetus of the mighty forces of nature, then in convulsion 2,000 feet underground, was forcing to the surface with a velocity of a cannon ball a shell containing 20 quarts of glycerin. He rer!ized that the zopulsive energy $e SICK HEADACHE Positively cured by these Little Pills, They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, {ndigestion and Too Hear ty Eating. A per- fect remedy for Dizziness, Nau: sea, Drowsi- ness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Ton gue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels, Purely Vegetable, Small Pill. Small Dose. Small Price. Substitution the fraud of the day. \ See you get Carter's), Ask for Carter's, Insist and demand Little Liver Piflg 9060 0066 0606 » 06050061 00 WwW $ MONEY TO LOAN. : On Farm Property aleo on Real Carter’s Estate within the limits of the city in sums Of from two to five bundred dol’ars at a reduction on current ; rates of interest. ; J. H. Reddin, Solicitor Cameron Block. 2004 00000000 < 00000000 s000 | — Never Sefore Lave good Watches been so low in price as to-day. We have them recently bought at the latest re- duced rates, and will sell low. G. H. TAYLOR Jeweler and Optician. arlottetown Delicate children! What a source of anxiety they are! The parents wish them hearty and strong, but they keep thin and pale. To all these delicate chil- dren Scott’s Emulsion of Cod-liver Oil with Hypo- | phosphites comes with the best of news. It brings rich blood, strong bones, healthy nerves, and sound digestion. It is growth and_ prosperity to them. No matter how delicate the child, it is readily taken. soc, and $1.00, all druggists. SCOTT & BOWNE. Chemists. Toronte. — . of that columuh of oil WoulZ project the shell against the timbers of the derrick with tremendous force. No need to speculate on what would follow the im- pact. All this was flashed upon Singleton’s consciousness as he stood leaning over the hole. The thought flash and the signal of peril wre coincident in point of time. It was an awful moment—such a | moment as no man had ever experienced ' and lived to describe. Singleton’s companions understood | the import of that terrifying sound. Acting upon a natural impulse, they | turned to fiee, seeking in flight the | safety which they knew it was futile to hope for. Almost before terror could impart motion to their limbs the catas- | trophe would befall. If Singleton had lost his head or hes- itated for only a fractional part of a sec- ond, six men would have been blown into eternity, and another horror would aave been added to the long list charged to the account of nitroglycerin. But he cid not lose his head. He knew that fiight was useless. No time for that. Whether he should run or stay, death seeemd to be inevitable. If he should stay, there was one chance—only one. It came to Singleton like an inspiration. The one chance de- cided him. Desperate as it was*a mil- lion to one that it would fail—he re- solved to take it. Who can say what passed through che man’s mind during the inappreciable fraction of time that he waited to put his plan into execution? Perhaps Singleton himself could not describe what his mental vision beheld in that brief interval between the warn- ing and the appearance of the messenger of eternity. He was conscious of nothing but the peril which was rushing upon him and his compan.ons and of the stern resolve to stand at his post and do all that he- roic manhood could do to avert the im pending doom. Men think quickly at such time. Sin- gleton’s mind acted with the celerity of lightning. His muscles obeyed the man- date of the wil) with electric prompti- tude. He made his title clear to heroism on that eventful day. He braced himself, and as the shell shot from the hole he threw his arms around it, not knowing but the sudden arrest of motion would explode the charge and not knowing that he could hold the shell at all. Desperation gave him _ strength. There he stood, victor over death, sur- prised to find himself alive and smoth- ered in the thick, greasy fluid which flowed from the well and fell in tor- rents upon him. But he held fast to the prize which his alert mind, quick eye and prompt action had won in the hand to hand grapple with the forces of destruction. Singleton is still living somewhere in the lower oil country, and he occa- sionally tries his hand at a shot, but if he should live until the fina) day of judgment he could never forget the day when he played back stop in the game between life and death, with nature in the box and 20 quarts of nitroglycerin doing service as a ball.—St. Louis Re- public. The bandaging of the feet of Chinese girls is begun in many cases at the age af 4 a Our new blue store akes the lead for cheap crockery, glass and ebinaware.— W.P. Colwill. | WOOD’S PHOSPHODINE. The Great English Remedy. Six Packages Guaranteed to promptly, and permanently cure all forms of Nervous Teakness, Ervissions,Sperm- atorrhec, Impotency and all effects of Abuse or Excesses, . » Mental Worry, excessive use of Tobacco, Opiumor Stimu- Before and After. lants, which soon lead to In- firmity, Insanity, Consumption and an early grave. Has been prescribed over 35 years in thousands of cases; is the only [Reliable and Honest Medicine known. Ask druggistfor Woed'’s Phosphodine; if he offers some worthless medicine in place of this, inclose price in letter, and we will send by return mail. Price, one package, $1; six, $5. One will please, six wil cure. Pamphiets free to any address, The Wood Company, Windsor, Ont., Canada. — Sold in Charlottetown by George E Hughes, Druggist. THE GREAT DESERT. With a feeling that my words will carry little weight with thcse who think otherwise, I veyture to suggest that the Sahara is not exactly whet it is commouly assumed to be, and yet in many ways it is not very cifferent. Its first sands, when approached from the si% of El-Kantara, are giant rocks, burned brown and red. ender the glow hf the southern sun, standing out in wild pinnacles from the gently undn- lating surface. ‘This is net the desert that is ordinarily pictured by the mind —that flat, endless expanse which fades off unmoved and unbroken to the limits of vision—but it is the desert, neverthe- less, just as much as the mountain snows of the far north are a part of the great arctic ‘‘sea of ice.’’ Beyond, how- ever, is the great plain itself, its swell- Ing undulations hardly relieving to the eye the appearance of absolute flatness which the picture offers. The truth is, the Sahara presents itself in a donble aspect, that of the flat and sandy plain and that of the rocky ridge or mountain, the Hammada. It is the Hammada that is more particularly dreaded by the camvans, for amorg their wind swept crzgs there are few oases, and only the blowing sands and a relentless sun are the companions of the footsore pilgrim. In many parts of the flat desert traveling is moderately easy, for over long distances the surface has become coated into a hard, slimy crust—a solid basement rock, one may call it. Along our route of travel there were no sand dunes of any magnitude, the highest perhaps scarcely exceed- ing 15 or 20 feet, but Iwas informed by | the distinguished French explorer, M. Foureaud, who was then stopping at Biskra, that beyond Tuggurt they rise to the prodigious height of from 1,200 to 1,400 feet. This speaks even more eloquently for the power of the winds than do the high tossed sands of coral islands.—Ponvular Science Monthly. Perfectly Cured Weak and Low Spirited — Nervous Prostration—Appetite Poor and Could Not Rest. ‘‘T take great pleasure in recommending Hood’s Sarsaparilla to others. It has been the means of restoring my wife to good health. She was stricken down with an attack of nervous prostration. She suf- fered with headaches and her nerves were under severe strain. She became very low spirited and so weak she could only do a little work without resting. Her appetite was poor, and being so weak she could not get the proper rest at night. She decided to try Hood’s Sarsaparilla, as we had heard it highly praised, and I am glad to state thet Hood’s Sarsaparilla has perfectly cured all her ailments.” G. BELLAMY, 321 Hannah St., West, Hamil- ton, Ontario. Remember po d 3. Sarsa- ood s parilla Is the Best—in fact the One True Blood Puri- Ger. All druggists. $1, six for $5. Get Hood's. + are tasteless, mild. effec- Hood Ss Pills tive. All druggists. 25¢. To Boston PLANT LINE OF “STEAMSHIPS ——ee Charlottetown to Boston Pictou end Halifax $8.75 Passengers leaving Charlottetown on Wednesday morning connect with steamer “Halifax” at Halifax the same even:ng. Tickets for sale by via., W. W. CLARK, Az, $9.50 Lightest Plate Camera Eastman’s No. 2 Eureka Jr. Takes pictures 344 x 344 unces, Meniscus lens, rotary shutter, three stops, view nder, socket for trinod screw. Perfectly adapted > snap-shots or time *xposures and equally con- enient as a hand or tripod camera, inches; weighs but 1244 rice with plate holder, - £2.50 omplete develuping and wintin ontfit, .- 1.00 wtalogue of Eurcka Cameras and Kodaks free at agencies or by mati, EASTMAN KODAK CO. rochester, N. Y. MOLASSES AND SUGAR Now landing ex scooner “MARY P’ direct srom Barbados, 500 barrels bright Barbadoes sugar, 200 puns choice Bar- badoes molasses, N. RATTENBURY. 193 2 mos i SHOREY’S Ready to Wear Rigby Waterpoofed Spring Overcoats Are made by tailors, stayed in every vent, and keep their stylish shape to the end. SILK FACINGS AND THE BEST LININGS They cost much less than coats made by the best custom tailors and cannot be equalled in style by the smaller tailors. Shorey’s Guarantee Card in the Pocket is the wearer’s certificate of permanent shape and highest tailoring excellence, Ask for Shorey’s “Ready to Wear" Clothing, Jas. Paton & Co, Selling om: for chitown a SENT IE NS GAT Ha ts MEEPS The best that Scotland Yields ! Pattisons Whisky A wholesome aad aggreeable stimulant of unrivalled quality and flavor. Rich, Mellow, Soft The King of Scotch Whiskies For Sale by leading Wine and Spirit Dealers. +n int ASS , —. ee we ~ te a zc BF LPP PES aT LS S. B. Townsenp & Co , MontreaL, AGENT FOR CANADA LABS PRES FEET EES ag eT ErrenneET ery ernTE OE ePTFE REYNE SDILVERW ARE That Will Wear Richt Tea Sets consisting of Tea Pot, Holders. Trays, *alad Bowls, Cake Baskets, Nutter and Pickle Dishes. ALSO IN SOLID SILVER, FINE GOODS 5 o'clock Spoons, Tea Spoons, Souvenir Spoons, Oyster Forks Cheese Scoops, Cold Meat Forks, Tea Bells, Thimbles, FABIA LAL: REGS IBEGAS a on OTA ge he tent 2 & ' oi fe ee « Uj ae a ee i —> . ae Coffee Pot, Sugar, Cream ard Spoon Baking ili ia The cheapest ladies’ Watch that we think would be worth buying, $4.00, better ones $7.50 to $50.00. Watches for Boys, $2.75 to 16.00, Watches for men $5.00 to 100.00. Beautiful Rings Any Birthday Stone Ring mace to Order Nearly every one knows we are the pioneers in the spectacle busines and in keep up to date in our stock of spectacles and ey eglasse K. W. TAYLOR, Victoria Jewelry Store Nearly opposite Post Office Charlotietown, P. EK. I. High Grade. English WManures re the BEST, CHEAPEST, and Only Reliable Fertilizer on market. Have been largely used here for 10 years, with most gratifying results—wwd without a single failure. Pamphlets etc., on application. VUV IV IVS ITC VV ITV IGG ICV VY V7 V———— ee AULD BROG