_ - . * ‘ MOY AES at AB tags | 8 - Wg \ . é Ns MO ae es eh ee, 2 > ¢* 3 ety PR al all alt “f mig Mine *s A . ‘ Pe wih stam. pet tn Aensien: a hscanc cys ag cages . a ° e* 24 *”. ‘- » * * * é, eh e <t ‘ a . Le . a at we: Baw aealy ’ " ? 7 « f ~ B a $ sag he cot ised Weta A PEL e - 0 hae ., & - a“ - «@ 2 e-* . Oo: AG eee ea ge® * AO ART ae LR age Lite che eee or oaandetariey tengo: - 7 a . es - r . eB ad Sat IIE 4: ae. * ah. * «* ot of ee DP ane ic a 9 eNO eR tO LSE Np cant ee Dav of Week Sun Sun j High Rises | Sets | Water : h. m. n.wm. | mon f | Thursday i 18 141i ii @ 21 Friday | | 49 | 9! 116 ‘$3 | Saterday I) | HY | 1 47 4 ( Sundav ~0 iS 219 oi M 4 | 1S | 2 49 6G | Tuesday eA iS 3 30 7 | We sday 2 | i7; 408 Si rs ae {7 $f 48 | 9 Kriday 2 | 16 5 So 10 | Saturday 23 | 4) 63 al Sunday 2] 45 72 «2 | Monday 26 | 15 8 18 13 | Tuesday 27 4} 905 14 | Wednesday 2S 45 9 56 BS | Thursday 20 43 10 50 16 | Friday 30 mae Bee 17 | Saturday i 31 41 | 1 47 IS { Su 2 10 2 20 19 | Monday 33 3Y 2 54 4) | Tuesday ot 38 3 26 21 | Wednesday 35 37/ 4.00 <2. Thursday 36 36 i 3 23 | Friday 37 35| 506 2A Saturday 3s ot dD 52 25 } Sunday 39 33 6 47 a Mor \ 10) oe 4 46 27 | Tuesday tl 3] 8 32 "S| Wednesday {? 30 0 1S 28 | Thursday 15 28 10 05 30 | Friday 15 27 10 58 31 ! Saturd t 46 7 20 ll & (CALENDAR, JUY, 1897. MOON S CHAN birstQuarter, 7th. 9h. 19.5m, a. m Full Moon, 13th, 12h. 34.8m., 1 Last Quarter, 2ZIst, 11} n. Ne Moon, 29th, lh. 45.4m.,. a. m. dD. Sm... cy ——. ———— eS P E ‘sland ailway On and after FRIDAY, 4th June, 1897, the ains of this Railway will run daily, ays excepted,) as under. (Sun- i frains Out-| ; os Trains In- ward. Read STATIONS. ward. Read down. | up. P. M.|A. M. 3 3016 30 Charlottetown ... O15 2 10 3 52! 6 44’. Royalty Junction.) 9 ry 1] {8 4 42) 7 18.--North Wiltshire. .; 9 9019 58 4 58] 7 28 .- Hunter River... g 18/10 13 5 S41 7 52. Bradalbane., -e+e*) 7 54/10 07 5 44) 7 58).-Emerald....... 7 48} 9 57 5 59) 8 08}.. Freetown ....... 7 38 9 42 62) 82 - 5 epi ts --++ | 7 93) 9 20 6 55, 8 46 ir. SC ' ty. 7 00) 8 45 7 30110 ooLv § > Se 4 LY 6 05) 8 10 7 45/10 22\.-Miscouche ...... 15 497 56 8 0210 49,-- Wellington...... x 16. 733 $ 90,11 39'-- Port Hill ....... om 7 ll > 200 en -.C'Leary......... 315 6 20 9 36) 1 15,-- Bloomfield ...... 250 6 O4 10 00) 2 03)--Alberton........ 113 5 40 10 40! 3 oo|--Tignish .... .... 1 05 5 00 P. M.!P. RO: ii wi hh A. M.|P. M.| A M.IA. M. 6 45 3 00)..Charlottetown ...| 9 15' 5 40 « 05 3 14)--Royalty Junction 9 ()]/ 5 20 ee ere 8 37) 4 47 10, 4 OO'AT.1V yc», | Ly.) 8 15) 4 15 20, 4 05 nee ‘f Ar! g 10 t OO 9 OO] 4 33)..Morell.......... 7 42) 3 20 9 2D 4 54)..St. Peters ...... 7 20) 2 10 16) 5 28).. Bear River ...... 6 46) 2 03 Al Gh 6 Oh). -oemme.... ...... | 6 15] 1 20 A. M./P. M, A. M./P. M. 8 25) 4 05)..Mt. Stewart ....1 8 10] 3 50 9 37; 4 58|..Cardigan........ 717, 238 OO 5 15|..Georgetown ....) 7 OO] 2 15 ‘ M.|P. M. A. M.|P. M. [P. M.j iM 2 ie. eed =...... | 7 45 8 45)..Cape Traverse ..| 6 55 |P. M. |A. M. Trainsare run by Eastern Standard Time. A McDONALD, D.POTTINGER, Superintendent, Gen Mgr vovt. Rys, harlottetown. Gioneton, B. Railway Cfiice, June 1, 18$7 ‘Lime Table Rockey Point Ferry, (897. The Steamer “Elfin” will leave Prince St. Wharf daily, Sundays ex- cepted, as follows.— At6.30am, 8am, 9.30am, lla m, 1 pm, 2pm, 4pm, 6.30 pm. Wi! leave Rockey Point as follows: At 7 am, &.30a m, 10am, 11.30 am,1.30pm,3pm,5pm,7 p m, SUNDAYS, From Charlottetown at : At 9am, 12.45 p m, 2 pm, 4 p m. From Recky Point : At 10am, 1,30pm, 3p m, 5.30 p m. SOUTHPORT FERRY. Hillsborough will ply on the South- port ferry till further notice as fol— ows :— Sundays excepted, leaving Ch’town dailyat 6.30 am and every half hour up tol0 pm. Leaving Southport at 6.45 a m, making half hourly trips np 22 10.05 p m. Sunday trips: Boat ssaves Ch’town at 7am, making half hourly trips up to 8.35 pm. Steamer laid off from 11.05 to 12 o’clock noon. On Tuesday and Friday of each week steamer will run off time to accom- modate the travelling public. _—— --AT THE--- beauty. THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, JULY 15, 1897 If we told you that your baby was starving, that it actually didn’t get enough to eat, you might resent it. And yet there are thousands of babies who never get the fat they should in their food or who are not able to digest the fat that they do get. Fat is a necessity to your baby. It is baby life and baby A few drops of Scott’s Emulsion for all little ones one, two and three years of age is better than cream for them. They thrive and grow on it. SCOTT & BOWNE, Belleville, Ong, Ts ~ ~~ N 1 \ Wants, Lost, Found &¢ WANTED.— 4gerts for ‘‘Queen V ctorir Her Reign and Diamond Jubilee” Over- flowing with latest and richest pictures. Con tains the endorsed biography of Her Majesty, with authentic History of her remarkable reign, ard full account of the Diamond Jub- jlee Only $1.50. Big book. Trémendous de- mand. Ronanza for agents Commission 50 per cent. DUTY PAID Credit given. freight paid OUTFIT FREE. Write criek for outfit and territory. THE DOMINION COMPANY, Dept. 7, 256 Dearbon St, Chicago, dy 6i A few boarders can be accommidated at Mrs. John. McIntvre’s, on coraer of Bayfield and Great Geo. Streets. WANTED.— A general servant in small family. Good wages and hometo the right person. Apply at this office. W ANTED.—A Cook; wages $10.00; no wash- ing: geod references required. Apply to Mrs E, Bayfield. Char'ottetown dy and wky guar. S’side journal. COOK WANTED.— For the Seaside Hotel at Rustico for the season, Apply to John Newson. TO LET—A house containing six rooms sit- uated on King St. back of Merchants Bank, of P. E. I. Possession given Ist of June apply to Miss. Lowden, Dundas Esplanade. W ANTED.— Chief Agent for P.E.1. to sup- *rintend the business of the Manufacturers’ Life Insurapce Company. ‘lhe business is now so extensive as to require a resident man ager. District Agents also wanted in every anreprerented district ApplytoJ.B Paton Box 292 Charlottetown. 128— Guar LOST.—In this city yesteroay afternoon a sum of money, including :» $20 bill, Reward on ieaving same at this office. 2i GREAT SOAUGHTER rhb On Readymade Clothing FOR JULY 500 Men’s Tweed Suits, good all wool, regular price : $8 suit for $4, $6 suit for $3 | 100 Boys’ Suits at less thaa first cost. Men’s Pants, 75c, $1 and $1.50, worth double. fee them. Bargairs in Underclotaing. White and Colored Shirts. Our prices will be found from 10 to 15 per cent. lower than any in town. See our Women’s Shoes,65c. See our Men’s solid leather laced Boots for 98c. J.B. Mactan Ud Stal, Opposite west end Market. CHARLOTTETOWN DENTAL PARLORS North Side Queen Square. You can have your teeth extracted free of pain by the means of either general or ocal anesthesia. atisfactorily. DR. J. H. AYERS All kinds of work done Buy your tickets for Boston by the fast Steamer Halifax. W.W. CLARK, Ticket Agent 116— CHINESE SQUEEZES, OMclal Promotions Go Hand In Hand With Enormous Bribes. Prior to each promotion the official has to be received in audience by the emperor. But this is a very costly af- fair, for no one’s presence in the cap- ital city is recognized until he has bribed the gatekeeper to register his name as having passed toto the city and duly report his advent. That Li Hung Chang had to pay an enormous sum in tips and bribes—over £1,000,000 —on his last visit to Peking is a matter of common knowledge, but the narration of two instances that have come directly under my notice may per- haps serve to make the English reader realize even more vividly how inexora- ble and how shamelessly open is the eystematic corruption. The governor of Kiang-su province, who was an intimate friend of Prince Kung, thought to take advantage of his great influence by coming into the city without bribing the gatekeeper. When he called upon his royal friend, Prince Kung exclaimed: ‘‘When did you come? I cannot possibly recognize your pres- ence, for I have not seen your name in the chung-wen-men report,’’ and he had to return and pay double the usual bribe to the gatekeeper before Prince Kung would receive him. Even more remarkable is the case of Tso-Tchung- Tong, one of the greatest of our gener- als, who, having suppressed the Moham- medan rebellion in Turkestan, had ac- quired for the Celestial empire territory about half as large as China itself. The emperor, who held bim in high esteem, wished to see him and sent a special summons calling him to an audience at Peking. When on his coming to the city the chung-wen-men, or gatekeeper, de- manded 80,000 tael, he refused to pay anything. But even he was not officially reported, and after he had remained several months in Pekin, waiting for an audience, the emperor issued another edict, asking why he had never come. Tso-Tchung-Tong responded by telling the whole story, adding that, having spent all his own and his family’s mon- ey on the support of soldiers during the war, be had no means with which to pay such a bribe. He. appealed to the emperor graciously to relieve him of the imposition. In reply the emperor said: ‘This [the feeing of the gatekeeper] is a general and ancient usage, and the viceroy and generalissimo must submit to it like another.’’ And as Tso-Tchung- Tong really had not the money, his friends raised a subscription, the dow- ager empress herself contributing half the required sum. —Fortnightly Review. Never Drink on the Water. ‘It is a curious faet, easily verified, that domesticated aquatic fowls do not drink while they are swimming,’’ re- marked M. A. Fulton of Arkansas. “An old farmer friend of mine down in Arkansas called my attention to this a short time ago, and I have since been | closely observing the habits of ducks, | geese and swans in this regard to see if there was any variation from the rule | laid down by my friend. I have thus | far failed to find the least exception. ‘*?wo weeks ago I watched a flock of | tame geese nearly all day to see if one of them would not dip his beak down in the water while paddling along its surface and take a drink. One shrewd old gander twice startled me by swim- ming ashore and satisfying his thirst, after reaching terra Se guzzling copiously and with marfest relish from the water along the bank and | then swimming out to deep water. again. Even the goslings went through ~ the same performance when they grew thirsty. I would say: the geese did this Because they had no better sense, but when I saw ducks and swans go through the same performance I oannot bring a sweeping accusation of idiocy against the already too much maligned goose without including in the indictment all other domesticated aquatic fowls. Prob- ably the foolish and useless habit is due to the fact that when young these ani- ANADA’S "=r INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION ST. JOHN, N. B. {4th-24th Sept 1891 OVER $12,000 IN PRIZES For Live Stock, Farm & Dairy Products Competition open to the world. Very Cheap Excursion Rates on all Rail- wuys and Steamers. Kates and dates an- nounced later, special Arrangements are made for the Cheap transport of Exhibits. A splendid new Poultry Buildingis in course of erection, ana Amusement Hall will be eblar3ed and improved. In addition to Industrial, Agricultural and Live Stock Exhibits, six nights of HAnb & Co’s Magnificent Fire Works and an hourly programme of Special High Class Dramatic Effect, will be given in Amuse- ment Hall, making together the best and cleanest special attraction ever brought before the people of the Maritime Provinces. A trip to the Sea Shore, a visit to Canada’s Winter Port, and astay in the cleanest and healthiest city in Canada, can be combined with a visit to the I:.ternational Exhibition, at the very Low Rates to be later advertised, Arrange Now to Come to St. John. Entry Forms will be forwarde! to evepy ne who applies personally or ,by letter to CHAS. A. EVERETT, Manager and Secretary, ST. JOHN, N, B. W. C. PITFIELD, President, li7dywy tf Lavilor is the place to have a nice job of PRINTING done; you not only get a nice job but you can get it done cheaper than any other place in the city. The is he is under less expence than any other firm in the city and he has the latest facilities for doing good work quick. Ji De TAYLO Always Busy Printing Office. — A large dem and and low price. $5400 Cash and only a few ieft. A. HORNE & CO, 2— AGENT If You are Going —rTo— BOSTON mals are taught to drink from troughs and pans, and they haven't intelligence enough to shake it off when they get grown. I cannot account for it in any other way.’’—St. Louis Republic. the cheapest and best route cooemenephigingeipnomngeniones is via the Safety Elevators, An improved system has been adopt- ed in respect to the new elevators for the library of congress. They are built with a special view to safety, and in addition toa safety catch are provided with what is termed the air cushion— the latter not a real cushion, inasmuch as it is not soft, nor is it made and put in position, being formed only when the elevator is dropped to the bottom of the shaft, and thus all wear and tear on the cushion is avoided. The principle is very simple. At the bottom of the shaft is a well about 13 feet in depth, the sides of which are so arranged as to come at the top within the sixteenth of an inch of the side of the elevator, this space gradually growing larger until there is a distance of an inch and a half between the elevator and the shaft. When the elevator is dropped from the roof, it pushes before it a quantity of air, and, dropping into the well, the air is compressed and, escaping very -“ allows the elevator to settle easi- y. a Our shirt waist stock takes in this large sizes as well as the medium and smail.A yood assortment shown in 38,40 and 42 inch at Stanley Bros., the Always Busy stere, 2in. Or any part of the United States, Fliant Line, THE POPULAR SUN- MER ROUTE DIRECT - SERVICE FROM CH’°TOWN. The favorite S. 8. “Halitax” will \leave Cb’town for Boston every Friday at l p. m. Returning leaving Boston every Tues- ‘day at noon. Steamer calls at HAWKS: _ BURY and Halifax both ways Via Pictou & Halifax | Passengers leaving Charlottetown Mon- days, Thursdays and Saturday mornings, via Pictou make close connection at Halifax with steamers | *Olivtte” and “Halifax” for Boston di- rect Teesdays and Fridays at 7a. m and Saturdays 11 p.m. | Tickets for sale at stations P.E.J, Railwav, Ch’town Nav Co, and Clark tieket office. H. L. CHIPMAN, Can. Agent, Smooth as Vel Laurn Morxvers FENNELL&CHANDLER EYES Paris Green, Paris Green, at CITY HARDWARE STORE, ee ee eae penne ve ‘ q # +o a Your lawn if properly look after and kept cut with all of our « Will be smooth as velvet. —————— There are which cannot be bencfited with glasses; but how many con. tinue to suffer with eye troubles, who, if they would use 5 properly fittted, would be entirely cured? Try us for Satisfactory eB OAIUTGHRSON, Jeweler & Optician QUEEN STREET. er; Paris Green. HHPrPrn PHT PHnOrOT TNT Machine Oil, Haying Tools, Hardware. Call and see. Everything cheap for cas Don’t ask for eredi me 3, NORTON & CO, J. F. NORTON, PROPRIETOR a is Just a Minut , Halifax, N.S. } d&w You may be busy; » are we, and have been all the Spring, So busy that we did not have time to advertise and tell all the fine things we have for this season aad the low we are selling tor, but the people find us out, for it takes over forty people to keep the orders we get made up, 30 it us moving to keep everything going right, But for those whe do not know, we might say that we keep a'l the old reliadk cloths such as Bellwarp Coating and Serges, Tyke and Blep heim Serges, Fashionable Trouserings to no end. Come anf see us and see our stock and the fine clothes we make, JOHN MACLEOD & CH MERCHANT TAILORS. —— so Just Got Time- - To Breathe and wish to inform you that from ihis date until further notice we will do High class Tailoring at big reductions, We have a large stock. and it must b reduced ut any sacrifice: We want room for our larg fall importation. | MR. J. J. McDONALD is still ou~ cutter, and witho doubt is the only artist on P. E.1. He is giving tht greatest satisfaction. Good Dressers get their suits made by us, We are the up-todw Tailors. a McKay Woolen Co., High Grade Tailors. Spring Specialties. Retrigerators, Lawn Mowetsg) Ice Cream Freezers, Green Witgl Net Spring Door Hinges, Garde Trowels, Gold Paint, Rubber Hosé SIMON YW CRABES " Walker’s Corner 135 STOVES HARDWARE PTE Gl aes il ——_ - 2 a,