een — Pans miption is contracted as well as in- herited. Only strong lungs proof against It. Persons predisposed to weak - and those recovering lang ia, Grippe, fom Pneumonia, Bronchitis, or other exhaust- ing iliness, should take Scolls Emulsion. f enriches the blood, grengthens the lungs, and yilds up the entire system. . - ft prevents consumption and gures it in the early stages. soc. and $1.00, 1 druggists, gcort'k BOWNE, Chemists, White’s Caramels and jnowflake Checolatcs =~ Can be had at any foliowing first class T. J. Morris Dp. L. Hooper W. Pickard & Co, W. A. Hutchesen W. F. Carter Stewart & Gates Sanderson & Co. J.D. McLeod & R. H. Uason, Plant Line BOSTON TO BOSTON ammercing Jane 29th, 1900 5. S. Halifax Fillleave Charloitetown at NOON on FRIDAY, and §.§. LA GRANDE DUCHESSE kvry WEDNESDAY at $ a. m. for Scion via Hawkesbury and Halifax. Pasteagers Jeaving Charlottefown via Pictou, mnke close connection at Halifax from Boston Tuesdays and Saturdays. TheS. 8. Halifax takes Freight and Passengere for Hawkesbery and Halifax. Tickets for sale at Stations P. E. I. Railway, For tickets, rates and all information apply to ore W. W. CLAEKE, Agent Charlottetown, H. L, CHIPMAN, Manager. Hy Figs on Our Bey’s at the Front Keep them away from the tolks at home. Urder screen Apl 24. | doors and Widows now. 4, Duchemin & Co o ae >» 8. 1.’Door end Sash Fac'ory — Mcleod, Morson & McQuarrie Barristers, Solicitors, &. Urrick—Brown’s Block; Souch Side Qucen Square. HARLOTTETOWN. PE I ___ LOANS NGOTI ATED PE island Commercial Coliese: The at a a cf those who desire & ate 65 Sod practical preparation for an ae vetneees life is called to the sdvan- Leeping, Ont by this College. Book eae — Law, Arithmetic, is e a Correspondence, er? eee, Tee ad seen eecenght in the moet direct it givedic | meaner. Special atiention Werinedl ‘Scaling graduates in good 0 ae aes New term opens on = ‘Bera : AUG. 20th inst., at 930 a. OF prospectas. P. O. Box 242. ISAAC OXENHAM, Avg 2 déw ty, | Highland battalions. JEF TAILY EXAMINER CHARLUI'IETOWN AUGUST 3, tgeo. THE SCOTCH PIPES, Morning upon morning for weeks, the very earliest sound upon the veldt was the opening groan ofa pagpipe beginning, the reveille of one of the! Do you know that first note of the pipe when the is beginning to rush out of the bag and through the ‘chanter’ even before the bag is filled, and when the piper is adjusting the bag to his body and and his fingers to the stops? It isa weird, long-drawn, shapeless note, a nasal groan, a chord of agony wrung from the nose of barbaric har- mony. It always preceeds a tune as the piper tries himself and his instru- ment before launching into his flight of melody. Every morning it was that protesting note of the pipes next door which roused the Wessex Fusiliers and me. It was likethe snoring of the Scotch elder during church service, of which the whole congregation com plained because ‘it wakened us all.’ And yet it was different, for, once the pipes began, they never had a rest the live-long day and part of the night. As far into the night as nine o’clock and later, long after we ofthe Fusiliers were put to bed by General Orders, the pipes still wheezed and groaned, or—as a Scotchman would say— frolicked with or wept out their gay or their plaintive airs, The pipes put me through several moods and changes of mind in those long weeks of waiting. At first, the abundance of their queer music—of which © had but little up till then—came asanovelty. Next, they roused my curiosity as to how a piper could have either the will or the Strength to play for sixteen hours on end without a longer pause than the minute it required to change from one tune to another. And, next, the un- ceasing noise annoyed until it madden- ed me, and I cursed the pipes as an in- strument of torture. ‘The piper walk- ed to and fro, the length of the regi- | ment’s lines, and ata distance the air was full of a ‘zizz-ziaz-zizz, like the note of a demon bee, while the nearer it came the more its nasal chords mas- tered the neighborhood and quivered in my very bones. At the last (I cannet tell why or how | itcame about) I grew to like the sound. and to miss the melody when) the piper was afar and only the} buzzing came to my-ears. When he. was near he played upon my body and my senses. My pen raced with the| purple music of the reels, | my blood warmed under the defiant, challenging, scarlet chords of the battle songs; a pleasant sadness possessed me when the tunes were plaintive and grey. Without a drop of Scotch blood in me, I yet began to lowe the Scotch, and to take interest in all that I could see and learn of them. With nothing to connect me with their land—except that my father attended a course of medical lectures in Edinburgh—I yet could feel the pipes move me and my heart go out toward their players- In time I used to leave my camp and cross the narrow lane to the can- vas village of the Flighlanders in order to watch a piper ut his work. And lo! I discovered that instead of one man being tlk sole piper’ a score of men shared his work. These stood ig line silently listening and watching as the musician of the mo- ment strode jauntily up and down, giving tohis hips that swaggering, boastful, swaying movement which your true master of the bag aud reeds never fails to practice. They looked at him for hours, now hungrily, now cloatingly, as he stepped to and fro, just touching his toes to the veldt like a man practicing to walk on eggs— like one whose body is lifted like his soul by the music he creates. For hours, I say, but in every hour at least two different men were the play- ers. Those who watched were wait- ing their turns, and ever and anon the moment halted, the flying ribbons fell behind the ‘drones,’ and the pipe was passed to one of the men in the patient line. Then off strode the fresh player with the streamers floating from his»pipes, with his hips swaying, his head held high, and his toes but touching the — eden aa { was cured of a tevere cold by MIN ARD’S LINIMENT. Oxford, N.S. R. F. HEWSON. I was cured of a terrible MINARD’S LINIMENT. FRED{COULSON, Yarmouth, N.S. aa Aw, I was cured of black Erysipelas> by Sprain by earth. Once I hearda man say, ‘Gie’ was martial and when another was me the pipes, Sandy;1 can teil ye what naebody has said’—at least, those were the strange words I thought that I distinguished. What I was certain of was that I had discovered why i! seemed that the regimental piper played steadily for six- teen hours a day. I learned that there are other things about the Scotch which mark them apart from the English. For instance, their regimental discipline has not yet transformed the Scotch *T. Atkins’ to an automaton. He thinks undisciplin- ed thoughts and then speaks them aloud, for one thing. Strong traces of a feudal relationship between the offi- cersand men lead then to speak to each other with some freedom—and even to converse, And onSt. An- drew’s Day, I am told, the men go the round of their officers’ tents, visiting, to remind them of the hallowed day, and to be asked to drink in honor of it. I even heard of the men of one Highland regiment calling vpun an officer whom they detested, rather than mar the custom or lose a drink. ‘Good evening to you, Captain MacTavish,’ said the spokesman of one convivial band; ‘we maun tell ye that none o’ us like ye—in fact, ye’re detested by near- ly every one, fer ye’re unco’ hard—and ye’re a dour man—but we'll take a wee bit drmk wi? you—on account o’ the day.’ But all this is digression. dealing with the pipes. I fell to studying the Scotsmen and their music after a battle in which the Highianders had met with a great cal- amity. For weeks they were low-spirit- ec and unsocial, even with one an- other. Such is their temperament—a brave and gay one, but with a_ sub- stratum of melancholy which will, at times, come uppermost. ‘J should not like te crack a joke at our mess,’ said to me at this time an officer of theirs who was not wholly Scotch. ‘It would sound profane, and my fellow-officers would surely think me mad or idiotic. I suggested cham- pagne the other night at dinner, and I'll not de that again until we get back our spirits. The men are in the same mood as the officers. It is the pipes that make themso. The pipes are keeping them a great deal resentful, and still more melancholy.’ ‘The pipes?’ I echoed, enquiringly. “What nave the pipes to do with their feelings ?’ WHAT THE PIPES ARE SAYING, ‘Eh, man? Don’t you know that the pipes can talk as good Scotchas any man who hears them ? Surely ‘tis so— and ’tis what the pipes are saying, first in one player's hands and then in another’s, that keeps the men from, forgetting their part in the last battle. Once. as. the days passed, when I saw this officer again at leisure, I wert to him for an explanation of his surprising disclosure. [had been try- ing to learn the language of the pipes in the meantime, but I acquired no more understanding thana dog has of English when he distinguishes between a_ kindly human tone and a cross one. I could tell when a tune We were Eyer” MOTHER For common ailments which may occur in every family. She can trust what time indorses. For Internal as much as External use. Dropped on sugar it is pleasant to take fer colds, coughs,croup,colic, cramps and pains. I have used your Anod pne Uintment tn tree eur infant (only ore men hs old) for colic, and little three year o enter for summer com | t aad bo ; ral) fonnd ® ose centre A itceedan. +t Jor y' yon Doone ** LINIMENT Relieves Every Forn of Infammation Originated in r81e by an old Famil Physician. No remedy has the con gence of the publie toa greaterextent. Our book on INFLAR MATION free. [Price 25 and 5Gc. 1.8. Jebna ma & Co., Boston, Mase ee aes Parsons’ Pills “Best Liver Pill wsaa" rositiveiy cure Bilious gers, Sick Prstar'.o, al Liver and Bowe! coro. piatnta They expel im vurities from the blood women nd B suet from using them N & CO, Roaten, Maze crelf.-ate Price 250. L & JON NOTICE. Is hereby given that snv per:on found fshicg without ypermissicn or otherwise respeesipe on the stream or property at Moore’e Mill. Milton, either below or above the mill, #:ll be prosecuted without dis- tincticr. dv 2 aw tf. DR. GORDON ALLEY > PHYSICIAN & SURGEON (Graduate McGill University) MINARD’S LINIMENT. Inglesville. J. W. RUGGLES. rincipal and Proprietor, | Office and Residence ~ Dorchester Stree Office Mows—2 to 10, a. m,, I te 3 land Ze ~. um. Leas ps actcation te KeLig isi | theairs of the old ballads with trills mournful. When a gay one rang out— if any had—I would not have mistaken it for a dirge, To some this may seem a very little learning, but [ had begun by thinking all the tunes alike. ‘Yesterday,’ said my friend the of. ficer, ‘we'd a little match between men who had some skill at embroidering those, but I called my _ soldier- servant up and asked him what was ' being played. “Well, sir,” said he, of those grace-notes that they call “warblers,” but this ccntest was broken up by a rugged son of the hills who, after asking for the pipes, flung frem them a few strong, clear notes which gained the attention ofall who are born to a knowledge of the music that speaks. I am not one of “that’s McCallun—a greac museecian heis. And hark, sir; he has the right of it and boldly he is telling every one his thoughts. He says that every man kens that the yon’ general who’s dead was as cunning and skilfw, in war as ony man above him, and ‘tis late in the day—now that he’s laid away and dumb—to put blame on him as if he were an ignoramus and a butcher, like some others. And now, Oh! brawly ye’re tellin’ it, MacCallum —he says there may be scheming and plotting in high places, but no skulldruggery o’ any sort, however it is gilded, will ever deceive ane single true chiel o’ the Highlands.” ’ ‘And then,’ said my gossip, ‘the pipes passed to the hand of another man, and my servant—seeing me about to move away—touched my arm and ed that Hector Macdonald is coming to betheir new brigadier, and the pipes are assuring them that every Highland- er may be himself again, certain of victory and new glory under a leader second only to the one they have lost.’ I still believe my conjecture was right. And I know from living next door, as it were, that the cloud of gloom that had hung over the brigade was dispelled almost with the suddenness of its horrible ap pearance. After that ‘the kilties’ began to make in this war a continuation of their glorious record in so many lesser Wars in the ti.ae that was. oe He ran a mile, and so would many a young bade me wait, as this new player was | another adept with the pipes. “He’s Stewart. He’s saying, sir, thai the reason none will heed those who blame our grand leader that’s gone is that there’s men of rank among us— and of proud blood--that’!l stand up to any man at home and swear that when our fallen chief came back ‘with his orders for the battle he complained of them sorely, but he said, “No better could he get,’ and when he lay down in his blanket his head _ was full of trouble that was coming on him -—he not being able to learn what he needed to know against the morrow.”’ There was more of this recital of what the pipes had spoken to the regiment, but it would only be irritat- img asore to repeat it. The pipes spoke even more plainly as the beld out-pourings ef one incited bolder from another. At last there were sug- gestions, by pipes grown mutinous, of sentiments which, happily, have seldom been spread within the British army. But what I have told suffices tto il- lustrate my sole point, which is that the gift of eloquent speech in chords and trills. is born with the master- pipers. THE NEW CHIEF'S WELCOME. I never saw my officer-friend again for more than a nod or a word in pass- ing. But on one day the pipes next door rang jubilantly, and man after man applied himself to them with gin- ger in his touch. Each blew triumphant thrilling, heart-stirring chords, and every piper swaggered at his work with such a will as to send his aproned, kiltto and tro with what seemed a -double swing to each beat of the grand at it,” said he; ‘‘well done, ? lady, rather than take a bath without the “ Albert’ Baby’s Own | Soap. y ‘Tt leaves the skin wonderfully soft ard fresh, and its faint fragrance isextreme- |) ly pleasing. | Beware of imitations. ALBERT TOILET SOAP CO., Mfrs. | MONTREAL, ez we =e It's Important . Ia order to have good castings ¢ that the patterns be good also. We have in our employ ‘“‘expert ¢ pattern mekers” and do not hesitate in saying that our patterns are first-class in every respect. If you do not have & pattern of the article you want cast we will be only too glad to supply you with tame: Your orders are solicited. Bintce Stewart and Co. Foundere, Engineers, Mechiniste 3 and Boiler Makere. Steam Nav. Co’s Whar, Ch’town, PET Phone 125 ~_e2 ss > > Oe ee O28 *? | DD >> se «i~~~a 22 Wo ~ ~e2 qe TO BE Lr. Imwediaive yurcession of that Build- ng adjoining ths Masonic Temple. Suiv ‘time.’ I said to myself, ‘They have learn- iable for offices etc. Apply to Mrs. D, McKinxon, McGill Avenue, Ch’T own. dv. 1 wk. Se , Some brands of Flour have advanced in price ai the Mill» as much as 90 cents per bbl. within the past toor three weeks, and some millers think that they have not touched the top notch yet. We were fortunate in securing severa hun- ared Dbls) early, and we are now offering them for sale ata very 'easonable figure for spot cash Ifyou want to buy Flour will pay yon to write or call and get our prices before buy- ing elsewhere. Every bbl. guaranteed first-class or money refunded. Beer & Goff. Catherine The annual Scottish Gathering of the Clans under the auspices of the Caledozise Souris Driving Park, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 22nd, 1900 Trains leave Charlottetown at 7.50 loca}, Georgetown 6.50 local, stopping at al! in- termediate stations, Return tickets fron Charlottetown 85c, Georgetown 85c, intermediate stations 6? proportionate rates. Return tickets will be issued from als atations west of Royalty Junction at one- first-class fare on August 21st, good te return on August 23rd. For traia arrangements, prize lis's and ull particulars gee programme and adver- is¢mente in neweraners later JOUN McPHEE, President. D. R .McLENNAN, Rec, Secretary- AC ARD. R. MACNEILL, M. DY Having 30 years experience in the practice of his profession, may be con- sulted on all branches of gencral medi- cine including the speciaities. Office and Residence—Prince Street: third door ahove Kindergarten Hall. 7 to 8 p. m. dy & wkly 3 mos, ) Soar LOST-A stick pin with cameo reodaent Finder would blige by leaviaratthig office’ Repair su gaeoderatsatsctsccaekeantanaan National Wheels Carniva!s, Scotsman, 20thCentury, E. & D., Columbias Hartiords have had a large sale in Charlottetown. We are still receiving the above daily. Look them over—Wri.e for catalogue, pplies—SecondHand Wheels. Wil K i # » i a ‘a es a e i &®’ é. —a- J Ciub of P. E. Ieland, will be held a” a ap em caer m Hours—g to 15 a. m. r tc 3 amd 7 a tae ag ea. Oe