ee [oer : ' ee e a cS tt nae 5 AE! RM alien ERI ARE Bae te ts I a ne ti se eer A PesS ve Tae : eye ; = * my) * g + iy 4 ¥ 3 & & ; k § ¢ Pi if if : y - : ‘ae . ngreret DAIL! EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN JUNE 27 1900 Quebec Steamship Co. Str “CAMPANA,” From Ch’town | Monday 28th May | llth June | From Montreal sendayv 22nd M ay onday 4h June * 18h « ee @a * “ 2nd July “ Mh July; “ 16th “ e¢ Ge * “ 20th “ = 6th Aug. “ 13:b Aug. * oe = 7h * “ 3rd Sept. * 10ch Sept. °° e.™ * 24h * e Ist Oct. ™ Sth Oct . ie = we * we > “ 6th Nov. “« 13th Nov. Fr ight bandied carefally and at cur- reut ra es @ ..«ngers will find the accomodation the ~rv Lest, aad the tripup and down the S: Lawrence the most delightful. CARVELL BROS, Ch ‘orn, May l4th, 1900 Agents. ivlaw wed & wat. Th; Fourth of July will be commemorated by the people of St Juseph’s Parish, Lot 29, by hold- en that day —femouti Tea Party—- t rp oe funds in aid of their new | and to assist in replacing the al bouse burned down last st willingand vigilant com- isitee will make lavish preparations tu los; itably cater to every need and } + of those who favor them with thoi. yresenee and patronage on that | day ; shile the ladies of Kelly’s Oross wr ail given the well merited credit | of |» »ny mest capable bakers a.d love cour. ons waiters, t.v ry refreshment obtainable, and ever ng calculated to satisfy and to ev ertein, will be provided. Come | te KK s Cross, therefore, friends on M «day the 4th of July, to the| fir-i, and, most probably, the best Tea By order of com, M. A. SMITH. Secy. Com. Os DOWN CASH DOWN eee i |} higkes‘ for serap iron, les, copper, brass or any ol :}.\ at Esdale Foundry. T. A. McLEAN, Charlottetown | Spring Brewery, SHERBROOKE, P. Q. $3.C. NUTTER, Prop. S y Ale and Porter %of th above Brewery are vastly superiorto the goods pro- duced by any other Brewery in the Dominion, 1nd in order to give everyone a chance to sample them, we eg to quote the following | low prices for cash. Der bhd.... cece eseeee- $16.50 orm Per halfdo........+- 8.25 Si Pert dO..useeeeeee- 4.25 Per doz quarte.....-. 1.50 Per doz pinte......... +85 Delivered in any part of the city, steamers or trains. MACDONALD, NOTICE. No ice is hereby given that the business Matheson, Painter, of the iste Charies will be carried on by the undersigned un- tis further sotice The bu-ioees will be under the man- agement of Jobn C. Murpby, who been in the employ of tle deceased for the past pine yeers,is ® master workman, aod quite competent \o conduct the work. The patronage of former customers kindly colicited JANE MATHESON, St. Avard’s, June 12th, 1900, — ead. Molasses. ee Direct cargo, schr. “Omega” from West Indies, arrived to- day—121i puns, 20 hds, 24 bbls. Choice quality. What Is Dr Chase’s Nerve Food? In appearance Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food is an oval: choclate coated pill. Inthe condensed orm it contains all of natures Most strenth n- ing and invigorating tonic and restoratives and for this reason itis unapproached as a@ ° blood builder and nerve restorative. It cures | all diseases caused by thin bluod and exhaust- ed nerves and makes pale, weak nervous men, women and chilpren strong and healthy” 50 cents @ box. <n Ambition 1a a small boy’s desire to chop with a big axe. To Cure a Cold in One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All ruggists refund the money ft fails to cure 6c. KE. W. Grove’s signature is on each box Ln Doubt your own ability if you must, but never let anybody know it. A Good Stomach Is essential to health and happiness, but don’t bleme the stomach for billousness. It is deranged, and causer poisonous bile tore main in the vlood causing indigestion. head- ache and irregular action of the bowels Dr. Chaee’s Kidney-Liver Pills regulate the liver, kidneys and bowels and by their direct ac- ion ob these organs eflect prompt and last ing cures of biliousness, dyspepsia* headache and all kidney ailments, O71 e pill a dose, 25 cents a box, at ail dealers, LL I, We could all pursue our opportunities more succeesfully if the road was not 80 wide, DR. A. W. CHASE'S CATARRH CURE... 25c. is sent direct to the diseased parts by the Improved Blower. Heals the ulcers, clears the air passages, stops droppings in the throat and permanantly cures Catarrh and Hay Fever. Blower free, All dealers. or Dr. A. W_ Chase Medicine Co., Toronto ana buffalo. —————— i > +A Some women are such immacaiate housekeepers thet they baven’t time to indulge in family effection. Ask for Minard’s and take no other. — oe Sometimes very foolish and etuapid peo- ple surprise us by holdiog opinions iden- tical with our own. Minard’s Liniment is used by Physicians After wediscover that groping after the uvattainable wakes us uubappy we continue .O grope. ee When It Hurts to Cough. The covgh that hurts, the conghthat gets tight in the chest, is daily getting deeper and jeeper into the bror chial tubes and is making jirectiy for the lungs, to become pneumonia, inflammation of the lungs or consumption. Such coughs yield only tu the wonderful effi- ciency of Dr. Chase's Syrup oi Linseed and Turpentine which loosens the tightness and cures cough and cold together. 25 cents a bottle, Family size 60 cents, sold every- where. Ohe phase of culture is getting eo you can suy mean things in a yolite and | ecbolarly way. The copy of an old photograph taken & generation of the north side of Queen Square, which forms the frontis- piece of the June P. E. Island Magazine is quite The signboarde, sidewalke, fences, eice, appear decidedly ago, interesting. ant'qneto the young folks of to day. There are a lot of other interesting things in this month’s magazine. At all the bookstores. Fivecents a copy. Ninard’s Liniment Lumberman’s Friend, Freeh print butter at Brice’s Grocery 18 cents per pound, Summer Underwear for men and boys all sizes cheaper than ever at R H Ramsay & Co’s, “Say, paw. “Well? ” “,;What is a kopje ?” “A kopje isa place where the British stopje, and it generally has a Boer or two on topje.” THE UNEXPECTED HAPPENS F Ch’town was OTTAWA would toeday have you yeen sorry you were not Cover- ered for a large amount. I have good companies and oan quote you low rates. E. H. BRER Merchants Bank of Prince Rdward Island, Collections made on the most rea sonable terms and promptly remitted for. CARVELL BROS. Ch’town May 14, 1900. s= J Chea oh se ape. Deposits received and interest allow- ed at best current rates. INTERESTING ABOUT CHINA. SOME China and its dependencies have a total area of 4,218,401 Square miles, and a population of 402,680,000. In | aren it includes nearly one twelfth of the total area of the globe, while its : population includes nearly one-third of ' As com- | all the people in the world . pared with the United States, the latter’s island possessions being ex- cluded, China has 800,000 more square miles of territory and more than five times as many inhabitants. The population of China proper per square mile is 292 ; that of the State of Rhode Island is 254, and that of Texas 9x. China is the land where everything is upside down. Thus in Canton the women act as sailors and boatmen, while the men are employed as cham- bermaids, laundresses and seam stresses. In salutation the Chinaman shakes his own hand instead of that of his visitor. As a mark of respect he puts his hat on instead of taking it off. Their signboards are perpendicular in- stead of horizontal. In _ reading Chinese print it is necessary to begin at the right hand side at the bottom and read to the left and up. The Chinese raise the toe of the shoe and depress the heel instead of raising the heel, so that they sometimes appear to be in danger of falling over back- wards. The Tartars, who overthrew the na- tive Chinese dynasty of China in 1644, are the ruling class in China. There are in the neighborhood of 10,009,000 Tartars in the empire. The “Chinese pigtail” dates from the Tartar invasion, when the Tartars forced the Chinese to grow cues after the Tartar custom as a mark of subjection. Thousands of Chinese were kiiled for refusing to plait their hair, and ever now the New China party has as one of its objects the abolition of the old rule. There | are, or were until recently, less than 12,000 foreigners permanently resident in China. Of this number 5,000 are British, 1,600 Americans and 1,200 Japanese. Most Christian ministers wear black clothes. The Chinese priests stick to bright yellow. People on this side the world signify their sorrow at the death of a relative or friend by putting on black garments. In China the mourn- ing colour is white. In the United States most people believe that the liv- ing have the first call upon their charity and care. In China more precautions are taken for the preservation of the body after death than before, and a Chinaman will lie down suf pes'ess on his mat rather than neglect to light the evening joss candle in honour of his dead relatives. In most countries the | deathbed is surrounded by weeping relatives, and often a minister and a doctor are present. In China the dy- ing are carried out of the house and left alone in some vacant space to die. There are three priacipal religions in China—Budchism, Taoism, and Confucianism. ‘The latter is almost without forms and cermonies, consist- ing chiefly in study and ccntemplation of the teachings works of the ancients. Buddhism and Taoism both have elaborate and splendid cermonials. Taoism is the older, Buddhism having made its appearance in China about 1,800 years ago. It is now the relig- ion of almost eight-tenths of the peo- ple. In the north-east add south-west there are 30,000,000 Mohammedans. The Roman Catholics have more than 1,000,000 adherents and _ support twenty-nine bishoprics. The converts of all the protestant churches are estimated tonumber not more than 50,000. Back in the remote interior ‘ of the kingdom the hill tribes are still nature worshippers or heathen. If the Chinese themselves are to be believed, the Chinese Empire has been in existence for more than 100,000 years. Other students say that it was founded 2,500 years before Christ: and by some Fohi, supposed to be the Noah of the Bible, is considered the founder. The great wall of China, portions of which are still in evidence, was completed 211 B.C. Printing:is said to have been known in 2o¢ OG ik. 3907 A. oT European arrived in China. In 1575 Jesuit missionaries were sent to China from Rome. eral earthquake shook the empire, and more than 309,000 killed at Pekin alone. Tea was first brought to Englandin 1660. Com. mercial relations between China and Russia began in 1719. The commencement of the estab- lishment of the so-called “sphere of in- fluence” in China was in 1897, when the Germans seized the Port of Kiau- HEN YOU are feeling tired and out of sorts you will find Hood's Sarsapariiia will do you wonderful good. Be sure to GET HOOD’S, FACTS Chau, on the east coast of Shantung, the first | people were | and during the next month secured from the Chinese a lease for 99 years of the tewn, harbour and district. Two | months later Russia got possession of ' Port Arthur and ‘alienwan, with their adjacent waters, on a lease for 25 years, with the privilege of renewal Within the boundaries of the leased territory which are as yet undefined, Russia has supreme control. Port Arthur harbour and the largest portion of the harbour of Talienwan are there- fore closed to all except the war vessels of Russia and China. In June, 1898, Great Britain took possession of Wei-Hai-We', and is to hold the port as long as Kussia holds Port Arthur. Finally, the French, in April, 1898, se- cured a “lease” of Kwang-Chau-Wan bay, onthe east coast of the Tien- Chau peninsula. During the year 1898 China imortd- ed from all foreign nations goods valued at $146,000,000. During the same year the exports of China amounted to $118,000,000. As an evi- dence of which nation has most interest in China so far as trade and commerce go it, may be siated that of the total of Chinese imports Great Britain and its colonies supply goods to the amount of $111,000,000, while of the exports it buys about $60,000,000, or more than one half. Most of the English trade with China is transacted through the British Crown Colony of Hong Kong, which was ceded to Great Britain by China in 1841. During the same year the United States imported goods from China to the value of $13,000,000 and sent back in return American goods valued at a little more than $9,000, - ooo. Pleedine Pi seeding Piles A Prominent Business Man Testifies to iis Cura by Using Dr. Chase’s Oint- ment. Not a day passes but many people volunteer recommendations of Dr. Chase’s Ointment as an absolute cure for every form of piles. x1 Mr. Jas. Jackson, of the Laurie Spool Company, St. Alexis dcs Monts, Que., writes:—‘‘ You may put my name to LS Ry ICE CREAM Men’s Summer Underwear Prices per suit i.J. farris, For One Week. 2 quart $1.75 3 “ 2.25 4 “ $2.50 FENNELL& CHANDLER Cotton, Balbriggan, | Merium, Natural Wool. | 40c, 50c, 60c, 75c, $1.00 up. | London House uny praise you can give to Dr. Chase’s than any medicine I ever used. a was treubled for two years with tnat cruei disease, bleeding piles, and after using Dr. Chase’s Ointment, I can say I am entirely rid of it. It is a treasure to all suffering from piles.” Dr. Chase’s Ointment is guaranteed to positively cure any case of itching, bieeding, or protruding piles. It bas rever vet been known to fail, and cer- | tainly will not fail in your case. Fer many years Dr. Chase’s Oint- ment has stood alone as the only ab- solute and guaranteed curs for piles and itching skin diseases; 60 cents a box, at all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Toronto. Dr. Chase’s Syrup of Linseed and | Turpentine has by far the largest sale f throat and lung | of any remedy for troubles. 25 cents a bottle. Hillsborough age Bridge The New Bridge is com- ing and so are the dry streets and roads. Then you will need some- thing nize in footwear. We Have a fine Selection Selling Very Low J. H. BELL The Bargain Boot and Shoe Store. FOR SALE €*Newlands” In 1662 a gen-’ The late residence of Mal- | colm McLeod, Q. C., in Char- lottetown Royalty, containing twenty and three quarters acres. Ointinent, for it has done me more good |! , SPO, HPV? ——S oe —_- stl With shirts at ;20 t 30 per cent discount off reg ular prices. We bought more shirts than our ordinary trade de- mands; for this reason we are giving such big induce ments to reduce our too large stock, Our Challenger is a 4& cent unlaundered shirt. A. BRUCE a — on —————$ ne es CITY HARDWARE STORE. --F'or-- Builders, Farmers, Mechanics, HARDW ARE—— Paints, oils, glass, carpenters tosls, all cheap FOR CASH. The celebrated Norton Machine Oil. TERMS CASH, R B. NORTON &CO.LIMITE | Apply to | D, C. McLEQD, Solicitor, &c. Ch’town, June 19th, 1900, dy tf straw Hat Enamel IN 152 TINTS. Try a can, only 10 cents. Apri: 11th 1900. SIMON W. CRABBE. Walzer’: ‘ - aa, a9 ~ ~