<n y RHEUMAT!SN: BRIGHTS 0! DIABETES D-O-D-D’S DOI D'S. KIDNEY PILLS, the only positive, never-failing cure, ou earth, for all Kidney diseases, Take No Other. Get the Genuine. Refuse Imitation. There's Only One Rodd’a __ABEWEIT GRESGENT Bicycle and Athletic Sports -——-ON THE—— C.A, A. &. Crounds — ON — TOMINION DAY, JULY 4st, 99 PROGRAMME, 1 Mile Novice euesucesesestuadseentencesoesceceah — “>>> oe eeere Fe PEELE CP eee CK ee eee Te ee ees } “ flying start (heats) 4 “ Open ~*~ Ore 2 “ Handicap 5 oe e 1 “ Boys 16 and ander 100 Yard Dash (Handicap) 990 ae “ 4 10 ‘ ‘e te x80 “© Run ” 120 Yard Kaoning Entries c Tune 26th. Specie] low ers. Fort Sports be jon 25c. ( Hurdle Race Broad Jamp se with Secretary, Monday. Fees 50 cents for each event fares on all trains and steam ain arrangements see posters. ‘in atl p,™.*harp. Admiss- rand Stand 10c. L. B. McMILLAN, L.F. MUNSEY resident Secretary 132—dy2av w ——— LE BOKS WHATIS THE USE BOTIHERING With Inferior Soaps ? ROYAL OAK ALL GROCERS 73 -—< + ’ jy aaa Bxcuisite Studio And Photos to match tle Studio, a Better come in and arrange for a sitting. a a a W ISTLAKE BROE., Photographers New Prowse Bucer Le) PO “*NOTICE! The New York Life lnsurance Company is prepared to treat with gectlemen throughou: the Maritime Provinces, for appointments as district representativer, city andccuntry. Sozse valuable posit- now vacant, will be conferred on suit 1008 able applicants. Experience not absolut~ New ely necessary. ADDRE38.—Agency Director, York Life Building, Montreal. 135— THE SEE YUP, By BRET HARTE. (Copyright, 1998, by the Author.} ¥ don't suppose that his progenitors @ver gave him that name—or indeed that it was a name at all—but it was currently believed that—as pronounced See p—it meant that lifting of the outer angle of the eve common to tl Mongolian. On the other hand, I had been told that there was an old Chines custom of affixing som —Or even a sentence . + gues oe motto or | genda from Confucius— as a sign above their shops, and that two or more words, which might be merely equivalent to “‘ Virtue is its own reward,’’ or ‘‘Riches are deceitfygl,’’ was believed by the simple Californian miner to be the name ot the occupant himself. How See Yup accepted it with the smiling patience of his race, and never went by any other. If one of the tunne] men aways addressed him ag ‘*brigadier general,’’ ‘*judge”’ or ‘‘com- modore,’’ it was understood to be only the American fondness for ironic title. and was never used except in personal conversation. In appearance he locked like any other Chinaman, wore the or- dinary blue cotton blouse and white drawers of the Sampan cooly, and, iz spite of the apparent cleanliness and freshness of these garments, always ex- haled that singular medicated odor~- half opium, half ginger—which we reo- ognized as the common‘‘ Chinese smeli.”’ Our first interview was character®tic of his patient quality. He bad done my washing for several months, but I had never yet seon him. A meeting at Jast had become necessary to correct his impressions regarding ‘‘buttons’’— which the had seemed to consider as mere excrescences, to be removed like superfiuous dirt from soiled linen. [ had expected him to call at my ltodg- ings, but he had not yet made his ap- pearance. One day, during the noontide recess.of the little frontier school over which I presided, I returned rather early. I'wo or three of the smaller boys, who were loitering about the school- yard, disappeared with a certain guilty precipitation that I suspected fer the moment, but which I presently dismiser- ed from my mind. I passed through the empty schoolroom tomy desk, sat down and began to prepare the coming lessons. Presently I heard a faint sigh. Looking up, to my intense concern I discovered a solitary Chinaman whom I had overlooked sitting in a rigid atti- tude on a bench with his .back to the window. He caught my eye and smiled sadly, but without moving. **What are you doiug here?’ I asked sternly. **Me washee shilts, me talkee ‘but- tons.’ ” **Oh, you’re See Yup, are you?’ ** Allee same, sohn.’’ **Well, come here.’’ I continued my work, but he cid not move. ‘*Come here, hang it! Don’t you un- cerstand im it, **Me skabhbee, ‘ccmme yea.’ Ext me no shabbee Hiellikan boy, who caichee me, allee sam You ‘comme yea,’ 3 shabbee?”’ Indignant, brut believing that the un- fortunate man was still in fear of per- secution from these mischievous urchins whom I had evidently just interrupted, I putdown my pen and went over to him. Here I discovered to my surprise and mortification that his long pigtail was held hard and fast by the closéd window behind him, which the young rascals had shut down upon it after having first noiselessly fished it outside with a hook and Jine. I apologized. _——__-_—_—-—_-—-—-—- --> and her baby can have lots of A mother fan together if they both are well and strong and hearty Health makes them good happy; but ali the delights of are lost if the mother is weak natured and motherhood and ailing. Mothers of young children are subject to a heavy draft upon their physical resources, and their health ought to be specially forti- fied, both before and after the baby is born The most remarkable strength-sustainer for women is Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescrip- tion. It imparts health and endurance di rectly to the organs, appendages and nerve- centers concerned in maternity. It makes motherhood perfectly safe and nearly paia- less. ft protects the mother from relapse; makes her capable and cheerful; insures abundant nourishment for the baby; and completely reinforces the vitality of both mother and child. : It is the only scientific medicine devised by an educated experienced physician for the express purpose of strengthening and healing woman’s special organism. The reasons why it is the most perfect and successful remedy of its kind in the | world are more fully explained in one chap- ter of Dr. Pierce’s great thousand-page illus- trated book, ‘‘ The People’s Common Sense Medical Adviser,” which will be sent Sree, paper-bound for 31 one-cent stamps to pay the cost of customs and mailing only. Of handsomely cloth-bound for 50 stamps. Mrs. F. B. Cannings, of No. 4320 Humphrey St., St. Louis, Mo., writes: mother of a fine, healthy baby girl. I feel that our ‘Favorite Prescription’ and little Pellets ave done me more good than anything I have ever taken. Three months previous to finement I began using your medicine. three bottles of the ‘ Prescription. quences were I was only in labor. forty-five min- utes. With my first baby I suffered 18 hours, then had tolose him. He only lived 12 none, For two years I suffered untold agony, and ha i two miscarriages. The ‘Favorite Prescription Conse- saved both my child and myself.” | DAILY EXAMINER CHARLOTTETOWN, JONE 14, 1899 , s siill, He did not complain, although he must VU} ahve ae “Velly good for Mellikam man,” he scid. have been fixed in that uncomfortable position for some minutes, but plunged at once into the business that brought him there. *“‘But why didn’t you come to my lodgiugs?’’ I asked. He smiled sadly but intelligently. *‘Mishtel Bally’? (Mr. Barry, my landiord), ‘the owes me five dollee for washee, washee. He no payee me. He gay he knockee hellee outee mealies time | I come for payee. Some no come housee, me come schoolee. Shabbee? Mellikan boy no good, but not so big as Mellikan man. Nocan hurtee Chinaman so much, shabbee?’’ Alas, I knew that this was mainly true. Mr. James Barry was an Irish- nan, whose finer religious feelings re- volted against paying mcney to a hea- then. I could not find it in my heart to say anything to See Yup about the but- tons. Indeed, I ‘spoke in complimentary terms about the gloss of my shirts, and i think I meekly begged him to come again for my washing. When I went home, I expostulated with Mr. Barry, but succeeded only in extracting from him the conviction that I was one of “‘thim black Republican fellys that wor- shiped naygurs.”’ I had simply made | | an enemy of him. But I did not know that at the same time I had made a friend of See Yup. I became aware of this a few days later. by the appearauce on my desk of #2 small pot containing a specimen of cameliia japonica in flower. I knew the school children were in the habit of making presents to mein this fartive fashion—leaving their own nosegays of roses from their parents’ gardens—bui I also knew that this exotic was toc rare to come from them. I remembered that See Yup had a Chinese taste for gardening and a friend, another China- man, who kept a large nursery in the adjoining town. But my doubts were } set at rest by the discovery of a small roll of red rice paper containing my washing bill, fastened to the camellia stalk. It was plain that this mingling of business and delicate gratitude was clearly See Yup’s own idea. As the finest flower svas the topmost cone, | plucked it for wearing, when I found, to my astonishment that it was simply wired to the stalk. This led me to look at the others, which I found also wired! More than that, they seemed to be an inferior flawer and exhaled that cold, earthy odor peculiar to the camellia, even, as I thought, to an excess. A closer examination resulted in the dis- covery that, with the exception of the | first flower I had plucked, they were one and all ingeniously constructed of thin slices of potato, marvelously cut to imitate the vegetable waxiness and for- mality of the real flower. The work showed an infinite and almost pathetic patience in detail, yet strangely incom- mensurate with the result, admirable | as it was. Nevertheless this was also like See Yup. But whether he had tried to deceive me or whether he only wished ine to admire his skill, I eould not say. And as his persecution by my scholars had left a balance of consideration in his favor, I sent him a warm note of thanks and said nothing of my discovery. As our acquaintance progressed, I be- came frequently the recipient of other small presents from him—a pot of pre- serves of a quality I could not purchase iin shops, and whose contents in their wrafty, gingery dissimulation so defied definition that I never knew whether they were animal, vegetable or min- eral; two or three hideous Chinese idols, ‘‘for luckee,’? and a diabolical firework with an irregular spasmodic i i activity that would sometimes be pro- longed until the next morning. In re- turn 1 gave him some apparently hope- less oral lessons in English and certain | sentences to be copied, which he did | I remember | with marvelous precision. | one instance when this peculiar faculty | of imitation was “T am now a happy | my con- | t took } disastrous in result. | In setting him a copy I had blurred a word which I promptly erased and then traced the letters more diatinctly over the scratched surface. To my surprise See Yup triumphantly produced his copy with the erasure itself carefully imitated, and, in fact, much more neat- ly done than mine. In our confidential intercourse I never seemed to really get nearer to him. His | sympathy and simplicity appeared like | his flowers—to be a good humored im- | itation of my own. I am satisfied that his particularly soulless langh was not derived from any amusement he actually felt, yet I could not say it was forced. In his accurate imitations I fancied he was only trying to evade any reaponsi- bility of his own. ‘Chat Gevoivea upon his taskmaster! In the attention he displayed when new ideas were present- ed to him there was a slight conde- scension as if he were looking down upon them from his 8,000 years of his- tory, “Don’t you think the electric tele- graph wonderful?’’ I asked ane day. **Velly good for Mellikan man,’’ he said, with his aimless laugh. ‘Plenty makee him jump!” I never could tell whether be had confounded it with electro-galvanism or was only satirizing our American haste and feverishness. He was capable of either. For that matter we knew that the Chinese themselves possessed some means of secretly and quickly communicating with each other. Any news of good or il] import to their race was quickly disseminated through the settlement before we knew anything about it. An innocent basket of clothes from the wasle, sent up from the river bank, became in some way a library of information. A single slip of rice paper aimlessly fluttering in the dust of the road had the mysterious effect of diverg- ing a whole gang of cooly tramps away from.our settlement. (Lo be Continued.) ; oes ee ete nee one Nerves... Wasted and Dr. A. W. Shattered by Worry ’ or Overwork are Chase S Revitalizedby Nerve Food ** Nerves”—what a world of meaning this word has to scores of thousands of womer who, through the strains of social life and the worry of home cares, are fast approaching the grave. Nervous headaches, dyspepsia, irritability by day, restlessness and sleeplessness by night. Pains and aches in the body, derangements of the organs peculiarly feminine, loss of energy and ambition, despondency and despair. These are some of the symptoms known té the woman of exhausted nerves. These are symptoms which entirely disappear when Dr. A. W. Chase’s Nerve Foud is used. By creating new, rich blood and nerve tissue this great food cure of Dr. A. W. Chase re- stores and revitalizes the wasted nerve cells, uts new vigor and vitality into thesystem and Ss woman of many ills which are due te exhausted nerves. Dr. A. W. Chase’s Nerve Food cures by the building-up »rocess, which makes the body round and plump, and restores the glow of health to the pale, sallow cheek. soc. a box atalldealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Toronto. | } | ; i , i : ADVI°E ABOUT Spice. When ordering a packege Pepper, Ginger, Alispice, Cin namop or Cream of Tartar from vour grocer you can al- ways feel eure of securing the best quality by asking for ::: Riott’s: OR %ORt?t £ G6 6G O28 7838B $2464 *°2°64 @ S “24 49330 eo~- *-S@tO >? SGT | £24466 2 O2GO05 ~~ en it Groceries You want the vest groceries your money can buy. You for the want to have good groceries money you pay out, You do not want to be disap- pointed. Well, you won't be if you patron- We are doing business to We would like you to Ize us. secure trade, try us once. Driscoll & tm Hornsby QUEEN STREET——— | Dividend Notice Mercnants Bank or P. E. I. Charlottetown, June 1st, 1899 Notice is hereby given, that a half vearly dividend at the rate of 3 per cent per annum, on the capitel stock of the bank has been declared payable at its banking house on and after July 3rd next The Transfer books will be closed from the 19:h June, to the 3rd of July next, both days inclusive. By order of the Board. J.M. DAVISON. Cashier, “Ss Castoria is for Infants and Children. Cast 5s 8 harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregor._, ~~<ops and Sveothing Syrups. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. It is Pleasant. Its guarantee thirty years’ use by Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays Feverish- ness. Castoria cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. Castoria relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. Castoria assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels of Infants and Children, giving heaithy and natural sleep. Castoria is the Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. is Castoria. *‘Castoria Is sc well adapted to children that I recommend it as superior to any pre- scription known to me” H. A. ARCHER, M. D. Brooklyn, N. F Castoria. “Castoria is au excelient medicine for children. Mothers have repeatedly told me oI its good effect wpon their children.”’ Dr. G. C. Oscoonp, Lowell, Mass. THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OF @ que —— revenennreer vent Men’ Shirts Underwear Collars Tes Gloves” rovonennngnanenneaponnnngnnrrnp¥ns” ps IJ. halt “Z > HYOVETHUPOTTETT ORT PTAA ND DT TT TPT ORN TE ATP P TTI TE PPP HTN ET ITP ‘ = = POSES FHSS 2908 64 FE OOSE OSHS O06 C9OO8S%4 OGG 1) ws aN is Mb ibhdMd NAb Ld LUA AkN LGU 640 LA LUA dA Lhd 24th bd bik ANO AAU dak en ; } i ! oo —______-_- eae Swords will be beaten into plough shares later on; but our armers do not need to wait til! the ‘* Peac2 Conf+rence ” over, before buying their plough shares, as they cin do so at orce, by calling at the Masonic Temple Store, where any share, or other plough extras can be had for Jess money, and better than any imported. Prove this at once, by trying hem. is a Sp EEE DP T A. McLEAN, MANUFACTURER OF ALL KINDS OF DAIRY & FARM MACHINERY, { Esdale Foundry and machinery Depot. Office, Musonic’Temple, Charlottetown, P, EI AE a O: all Wine «orn Sify. Wholesale from the distiller, A. G. Taomson & Uo, Glasgow June lst, 1899 etree ame eT ere seer mension gr ga ee nage rn eat ea mmrgen aoe gers spn mie oa Saeed ae ae igen ee eS a