4 ) rT \ * 6 t n id ‘i r bh d & h . _ . re atl | Ona Rae | | jgogpodatien arrives from the Lt ( ‘ / f ( ( , ' f f f t ‘ i h. MACNEILL, M. D., one (t his profession, may be con 3 ‘ed cn all bianches ot general medi be inciedirg the speciaities, ‘ ffce and Residence — Prince Street gral and Departure of Trains ixprees arrives from the west.. 50 p m.} iggomodation leaves tio ** eaves for the jpoomodstion .600 pm. jecomod $ arrives from the east.. 910 am. od . Agoomodatioa jscomodation arrives from the tvaves for Pictou every morniug irrives from Pictou every even- Arrives from Bostoa and Halifax every Monday............-. 12pm. Leaves for Boston and Halifax every Wednesday ..... jecee | Sen HALIFAX. Arcives from Boston and Halifax every Tharaday .....00+ seeeveeee © 7 Pm Leaves for Halifax and Boston every Friday .... sscseeeees Lpm. Arrives from Montreal and Que- Leaves for Quebec and Montrea! Arrives from 4Hslifax Leaves for Halifax every Friday 10a m. Leaves for Orwell Wednesdays, Thursdays........ 3p m Leavés for Crapaid every Fri- MME Tatas cs 2 « cc0es cons 3p wm. Waves for Crapaud every Satur | eae scvccecsos ome SP We “Hillsborougu”—Leaves Ferry Wharf for Soathport every half hour. Bifin”—Leaves for Rocky Poiat daily at *22223 2227 A O™ Ye 22 we] ee es Tee fo Ne SA We Ss SS MS a * su. | # A . “ar $ e : Ee -” 2 ; a\t/, . fn i ° . ep ince Edward sian 2 < m aly Ss ¥t wz ~ i fii! bu “ai— # : we > : : bh KSLOTES ait x " a\tZ — 4 , k aT l i av ; Ap ‘ ) co Me at SA / wir | Is al d. , ar i ‘ az | for touris!* wir | ps #ie } * '! vw % Me Me NEN SS SKESZEES aikae ik AS ar av ay ay aie NP TAD AN ARARLOPTETOWN— IME TABLE (LOCAL TIME. } a and Steamers. TRAINS «leaves for the west....+ & 35am. Fe for the 410 pm. Sein ssnensgns eveccoove coocooewe —" g.ion arrives from the WERE ve vveeeee oeer i 55 am. ery, | me eal “for the eeihticia 7 054 m. leaves leaves for the eget... seeeeeeee eeeeeeeee 3 00 Pp mm, ee eeeeesoeoee a teeeeeeee = 50 p m. STEAMERS PRINCESS. *ereeve eee 9 v0 a’ ™m Bbrserrvccsecereee sees . eee oe coccccgce S SD P M. LA GRANDE DUCHESSE. CAMPANA. bec every alternate Friday.... the following Monday evening CITY OF GHENT. every Thursday aftero00a .....0008 « JACQU dS CARTIBR Tuesdays, FERRY BOATS. $30, 8,9, llLam; 1,2,4, 6, p m, local time. Suodays at9a m, 12.45, 2,3,4p m. R-turninz 1.15, 2.30, 3.15 aod §.30 p m, Southport” —Runs up Eas. uiiver every Tuesday, leaving at 5.30 @ m, and 3 mlocal. Kuos up Weet River every tiday, leaving at 5.30 am, and 4pm WANTED 1! A young man with some ex- ~Ss> = perience at carpenter werk to learn ths art of pattern making! Apply to Pounders, Fagineers, Machinists and Boiler Makere.% Steam Nav. Co’s Wharf, Ch’town, PE J Phone 125 é Bruce Stewart and Ce. | f ) é enacts A CARD Having 30 years experience in the cor above Kindergarten Hall. AROUND THE WORLD, Trat New into sfone York man who ‘s turning seems to be playing in hard , wo luck denver Post. Guatemala now wants annexation to e l nited States, It might serve Un- | — for a watch charm.—Topeka pital. A Philadelphia man claims that he can manufacture ice at a cost of 40 centy aq ton. ‘This, almost beats nature.—Cleve land Leader. No “taffy,” please. The up to date Sa- mioan says, “Settle the dispute by talking as sweet to me as you like, but don’t give Ma-taafa.””—Hardware. The polar expeditions, the relief expe- titions and the expeditions for the relief of the relief expeditions keep the north- ‘rn waters all churned up.—Minneapolis 4 1100s. ir we are not to have a slice of China. we may at least sell the invading Chris- tian powers the locomotives they will need in their new territory.—St. Louis l’ost-Dispatch. Now that little Japan has been admit- ted into the senior class of ¢ivilization she must remember that dignity and self poise are traditional necessities of such & position.—St. Louis Republic. When it comes to trying to put a book into a,single word, the Germans certain- ly take first prize. They have called their new electric cabs “automobiletaxameter- droschken.”—New York Herald. The kissing bug was invented by a band of Washington correspondents ta xive them a sensation for the dull season. They even invented its alleged scientific uame. Entomologists say such an insect joes not exist.—Pittsburg Dispatch, if the Pennsylvania professor who has discovered that asphalt can be made out ef red herring would now turn the proc- ess end for end and show how red her- rings can be made out of asphalt, the erocess would possess an eahanced com asercial value, The Sponge Animal. If the sponge as brought up fresh from the sea bottom were a familiar object. says Dr. Ledekker, few would be in doubt as to its being an animal. When fresh, it is a fleshy looking sub- stance covered with a firm skin, and if cut it presents somewhat the ap- pearance of raw meat. Its cavities are filed with a gelatinous substance call- ed “milk.” American sponges, and those of all other parts of the world, are inferior to the sponges of the east- ern shores of the Mediterranean. The finest of all sponges is the Turkey toi- let sponge, which is cup shaped. The Ameritan sponge most nearly ap- proaching it in quality is the West In- dian glove sponge.—Youth’s Compan- ion. Dewey Had No Grievance. “Where do you take command of the fleet?’ a lady friend asked Dewey just before he left for Manila. “At Hongkong,” he replied. After a silence the lady said: “Aren’t you aggrieved, in view of our possible trouble with Spain, over being ordered to the remote Asiatic station, which can hardly be in the picture ig case of war?’ “Sailor’s luck!” replied Dewey. “Moreover, I haven’t entertained griev- unces for years.” And then he added, ev:dently as ag after thought, “Besides, you know, Spain owns the Philippines.”—Ladies Home Journal. Giving Him a Hint. “John,” she said softly, “have you been saying anything about me to mother lately?” “No,” replied John. ask ?”’ “Because she said this morning that she believed you were on the eve of proposing to me. Now, I do not wish vou to speak to mother when you have anything of that kind to say. Speak to me, and I'll manage the business witb mother.” aud John said he would “Why do you HEART | DISEAS is a tom of Kidn oa A wall denier doctor has said, ‘‘ I never yet madea post-mortem ex- aminationinacaseot death from Heart Disease with- out finding the kidneys wereat fault.” The Kidney medicine which was first on the market most success- ful for Heart Disease and all Kidney Troubles, and }; most widely imitated is Dodd’s Kidney Fills Hour—gto 13 a m. 1 te 3 and a THE DAILY EXAMINER CHARLOTTETOWN SEPTEMBihk 50. souu Peculinrities of the Japanese Bath. ro their credit, be it said, Japs are regular whales at bathing, and usually Whea not drinking tea are bathing. heir only trouble in life seems to be elr Inability to enjoy both these de- shts at the same time. If some American trick swimmer could teach the Japs how to swallow tea out of a bottle while under water, they would iid a tin temple round him, burn in- celse made of old rags and bones un- der his nose and worship him. Public baths are numerous in which “mixed bathing” was practiced until lately, but now a bamboo fence sepa- rates the sexes, though it does not screen them from view, the fence be ing only two feet high in bathhouses in the interior of Japan, Some homes have a wooden bathtub, circular shape, With a stove built in one end, which heats the water. The whole family, beginning with the father, bathe ip the same water. Sometimes women “tub” themselves and their children outside their doors in the streets where sidewalks should be. The first time a foreigner falls over one of these bath- ing parties and into the arms of the bather he feels the situation is unique, but by the time he has tumbled over half a dozen he tires of the fun, rubs his shins and makes some very uncom- plimentary comment, while the polite little woman underneath squeaks out, “Sayonara” (Sir, please call again), etc, What the Mouth Tells, A certain philosopher declares that a woman is known by her mouth, not by the words that issue therefrom, but by the shape and color of the lips and the lines and dimples that gather about this important feature. He is support- ed in his theory by physiognomists. who all endeavor to prove that no wo- man with the small, red lipped “Cupid bow” mouth, so praised in song and story, was ever intellectual or generous of heart, and it is consoling to those whose mouths are not in accordance with the lines of beauty laid down by the poets to be told that a “wide, straight mouth, with strong, white teeth.” denotes the woman of su- perior intelligence, goodness of heart, strength of mind and a thousand and one other sterling qualities which one likes to think she possesses. It is the fashion at present for wo- men to hold their lips slightly apart. This is supposed to give that innocent, wistful, wondering expression which was the peculiar property of the heroines of old fashioned novels, but which bicyele riding and kindred mod- ern amusements have caused to van- ish. It is difficult for the thin lipped, determined woman to acquire this trick, but perseverance works wonders. —Baltimore Herald. Unapprectated. The teacher of a district school in Maine tells a story that reminds me of jary and her little lamb, only it is of and his little dog. Joe was a boy about 8 years old and was devoted to a small, lank puppy. Out of school hours boy and dog were iuseparable, and Joe apparently could not reconcile himself to the necessity of leaving the dog at home. For sev- eral mornings the teacher allowed the puppy to remain at Joe’s feet under the desk. Then there came a day when the small dog could not be kept quiet, but frisked about, to the delight of the school and the dismay of the teacher. “Joo,” she said firmly, “you must take that dog out.” Joe looked at her mournfully, but picked up the pup and, with its head against his cheek, started for the door. The boy's feelings were evidently hurt, but be said nothing until he reached the door; then, giving his teacher a re. proachful look, with a pitying glance toward his dog, he said slowly, “And he’s named for you!”’—Youth’s Com- panion. Am Insect T.mgedy. There is something really pathetle in the way a mother butterfly builds a nest for her children. In the first place, the little home where the eggs nre deposited represents a great deal of sacrifice, for it is lined with several layers of down plucked from the moth- er’s own soft body. The eggs having been laid carefully upon this luxurious, pretty couch are protected by an equal- ly pretty coverlet made of the same material. These butterfly bedclothes are often arranged with an intricacy that is quite curious and perplexing. Some- times a bed is made so that each sep- arate delicate hair stands upright, thus giving the entire nest the appearance of a little brush of downy fur. Then again, the eggs are laid spirally round a tiny branch, and, as the covering tollows their course, the effect resem- sles the busy tail of a fox, only tue nest is more beautiful than the “brush” ef the finest fox that ever roamed over corntry. tbe latest earthly labor of the mother butterfly, for by the time it is com- pleted her own delicate body is denud- ed ef its matural covering, and there the building of th's downy ness is- Watches Fine Value} She Silenced Greeley. forace Greeley once had a discus- sion with an advocate of suffrage shortly before the civil war. American Ile was using as his final argument the inability of women to fight. “What would you do, for in- | stance,” he asked his friend, “in the event of war?’ “Just what you would do, Mr. Gree- ley.” she replied promptly. “1 should stay in an office and write articles urg- ing other people to go and fight.” } women’s ee Measuring Time, Just when the day became divided into hours is not known, nor is the process explained. The Greeks and Romans measured time by the water ‘ an ginss and the sun dials. The hourglass, filled with sand, was the outgrowth of these from which the water dripped through tiny openings. xenical ciliate If a pair of herrings could be left to breed and multiply undisturbed for a period of 20 years, they would yield an amount of fish equal in bulk to the giobe on which we live. ye vessels, LTimelseepers. E. W. TAYLOR. —BOER-BRITISH «© WAR rtcteres: Everybody will now want pictures illustrating the various battles fought in South Africa. We have at great exreng: published nine large and beautiful pictures, on heavy, superfine, calendared p~per. ‘Battle of Belmont,,” ‘‘Charging the Boey Guns at Elandslaagte,” ‘Attack of Royal Canadians at Paardeberg.” ‘*‘Charge of Gen. French's Cavalery on the Retreating Gen. Cronje’s Army.” These pictures are 20x2s in. Samole and terms, 25 ets, each; all four for 80 ets.; $1.75 per dozen. 25 for $3.25 ; 50 for $6.00 ; #11 per 100. “Battie of Tugela River,” ‘Rattle of Spion Kop” “‘Gordon High- landers at Battle of Belmont,” ‘Battle of Magersfontein,” “Surrender of Gen. Cronje at Paarderberg.” These pictures are 22x28 in. Sample and terms 40 ets each ; all five tor $1.60; $3 per doz.; 25 for $6.00; 50 for $12.00 ; $24 per100. Very hendsome; printed in 6 to 14 colors. AG ENT eoin_ money, Rig vrofit Enormous success. The pictures are RED HOT SELLERS. Veritabie mortgage raisers Une agent sold 68 in oreday. WewillrendaComplete Outfit Consisting of all the Nine Different Pictures for Only $2.00. Tii:» »um you may de duct whea you have ordered $20 worth. Absolutely no pic'ures sent free’ Don’t waste time and postagein writing for lower prices. We pay all charge,’ We take back &ll unsold pictures anu refund your money, Cut this ont and send today and begin to make money. Address HOME NOVELTY MFG. Co. (Dept. 256.) P. O. Box, 518, Chicago. Saturday. Nothing takes impudence out of peo- pie so promptly as adversity.—Atchi- zen Globe, As Far as He Went. “I asked you if I could sue on that claim,” said the disappointed litigant to his lawyer, “and you said I could.” “True,” admitted the lawyer, “but I didn’t say you could win.”--Chicago Post. He Does Not Need Them. Landlady—lIs it true that sharks have three rows of teeth? Boarder—Yes, and they don’t live in boarding houses either.—New York Journal. Generosity. The Major—Yer boorthday is it. me boy? Then, look here. I'd like ye to get yourself a gold matchbox from me, and, bedad, I'll owe ye for it.—Moon- shine. aD Mania for Operations Among the Doctors. No Need of the Knife to Cure Piles. A Surer, Cheaper Easicr Way, Dr. Chaso’s Ointment: Dread of the surgeon’s knife causes multitudes of people to suffer on year after year with piles, when they could be cured without risk, expense, or dan- ger of an operation by using Dr. Chase's Ointment, the only preparation guaranteed to cure any case of itching, bleeding, or protruding piles. Rey. J. A. Baldwin, Baptist minister, Arkone, Ont., writes:—* For over twenty years I was a great sufferer from itching and protruding piles. I used many remedies and underwent three very painful surgical operations, all without obtaining any permanent benefit. When about to give up in de- spair I was toid to use Dr. Chase’s Oint- ment. and did so, finding relief at once, I used three boxes, ana am almost en- tirely cured. The itching is all gone. I have advised others to use it, believing ‘'t would cure them as it has me,” Dr. Chase's Ointment is the only positive and actual cure for every form of piles, 60 cents a box, at all dealers, er Edmanson, Bates and Co,, Toronto Se eee — ~ Linseed Oi] NOW LANDING | 25 bbls. Lirseid Oil. 50 bbls. Portland Cement. For sale low, SIMON W. CRABBE Stoves and Hardware. Ch’town, Sept. 17th, 1900. Walker’s Corner s sd ee ees ee ae ea “THE LONGAND = te, Tomatoes forChow Chow. |§ NAORT lik z Ripe Tomatoes Red Peppers: | <a Smali Cucumbers Canli-| & flower. White Portucle Qnions, NOTICE— As the season is very P Boot and Shoe Store. short for the above it will be wise on Me ed ed es ee your part to secure a full supply now. We do not book orders to be fille USE YOUR ROUGH WOOD next month (we may not have them When Heating Your House with a then) we have them now. FAMOUS MAGNET furw FURNACE Extra large firing door. Is to get a boot that will wear and fit you, ,then you will have satisficiion. You also want something to suit you ia price. Yeu will find them all at McQUAID’S, LOWER:QUEEN ‘STREET Pickling Heavy corru- gated fire-box that cannot crack. Sec- tional fire grates that will not burn out. Fire travels 3 times the length of furnace. Direct and indirect draft. Cementec cup joints that will not leak smoke, No Lean Stock is found where a Famous Evaporator is Used. THE HANDIEST BOILER ON THE MARKET. Has sheet steel body that cannot warp. Removable galvanized iron pan. Heavy cast iron grates and linings, preventing their | burning out. Does the quickest work at the least cost. | Can also be used for boiling sap, _ ESTIMATES AND PAMPHLETS FREE from our local agent or our nearest house. A fall supply of celery sugar corn, yellow corn, cabbage, bee's, carrots, | parsnips, turnips, lettuce, squash | is nothing left for her to do but die, a sacrifice which she promptly and heroically makes in the interest of the coming butterfly generation. a THE McCLARY WEG. CO. lewpon, Toronto, Montreat, .WINNIPEG AND VANCOUVER, © S. W. Crabbe, Local Agent,harottetown. pumpkin, green beans, butter beans, | large red enions, large sitver skin onions, etc, etc, at I's alls: : t ‘ i ’ i t } = es “spon ET RE: Eetgreee see eee ot elie A ties pinch tiie ne mgt Sanam aoeeteaeet. nt gO CRE TURAN ST, a iemeneny cen a - cetadineiellniistiaratslesedtmncetiinalidinndiions, ik tareaninieg iittala ae LOE SE NR TRS GPE AO REE TR TT ee eR peep .. ca a A: EATS AMIE lt NRE A MIB i ene ose om Sn eat aac sianeenety om ape ar anaes ein lagi ~“) Se Senet VC. shat oedidichumnd Seccatttaiaasteaant eiaatartiaa tet tateenaaee te ea Peendieates mtb tty omnis unedited es psec Fe eg RR ORR mag ae oe Tia Ss ec ie rece eal oe os lines, eReR! € TRE, SBR goes : hinges mm ; PJ ~ aa ¥