t . V2 FERRER ES PICTURESQUE prince Edward Island 250 at all Bookstores. . - - a Se s ‘ . * ~ Tie 7 + ? “7 su ‘ > ue Ap illustrated book on P. KE. . Is ged, *9 jateresting souvenlr f for tourists. fp nicicet - ikki -—omARLOMTETOWN— IME TABLE (LOCAL TIME.) priral sa Departure of Trains and Steamers. ' , } TRAINS es for the west...... 8 35am. as from the west.. 950 pm. ‘on leaves for the jcoomodation 410 pm. jsomodation leaves for the Wilisceccewsose qpewoee ep ooemooy °C *°* cgorned ‘on arrives from the oe Re ins all 55 a m. joa arrives from the — cee e es oe teeesoroe 2 25 ptm. “Teavee forthe east...... 7 05% m. ‘arrives from the east. . 910am. jecomodation leaves for the anaes © ¢ 6 6 SeeceeeN eeeeeener 3 00 pm. Accomodation arrives from the i pecscmees & Oe & 0 STEAMERS i\PRINCKSS. morniag Abicccosecrecceess ee oeeeetee G 30 A mw Arrives frum Pictou every even- ing a... sectttes cee e see seoeereree ~ 30 p mm. LA GRANDE DUCHESSE, Arrives from Boston and Halifax every Mondav.........+++-- Leaves for Boston and Halifax every Wednesday ........+- HALIFAX. Ar-ives from Boston and Halifax every Thursd@y wsecees evereeeee Leaves for Halifax and Boston every Friday w... seccscoees.-- CAMPANA, Arrives from Montreal and Que- bec every alternate Friday... . Leaves for Quebec and Montres| the followieg Monday evening. CITY OF GHENT. Arrives from Holifax every Thursday afternooa ......... . ‘ Leaves for Halifax every Fr. ay JACQUES CARI iu. Leaves for Orwell Tuesdays, Wedueedays, Thursdays........ Lesves for Crapaud every Fri- SEE, tivdis oo othe duokhas ° leaves for Crapaud every Satur- ss ice ote piiiinehs «060 FERRY BOATS. “Bilisborough”—Leaves Ferry Wharf for Southport every half hour. “Bip”—Leaves for Rocky Point daily at 63), 8,9, 1l,am; 1, 2,4, 6.30, pm, local time. Sundays at 9a m, 12.46, 43,4pm. Returning 1.15, 2.30, 3.15 tod 5 p m. “Southport”—Rune up East River every Tuesday, leaving at 5.30 a m, and 3 tm local. Runs up West River every enn? leaving at 5.30 am, and 4pm 660 pm, Levee for Pictou every 12 pm. 10 a x. 7 pm i pm. 10a m. 3pm Sp m. 2p m. HOTEE ACCOMMODATION. For the benefit of tourists and others "epublish the following list of hotels and ao in Charlottetown and Charlottetown—Hotel Davies, Queen Hoiel, Revere Hotel, Eureka House, ee Railway Houee, Lepage au ~e Ve me ee. Finlay Gou-e, Baumerside— Clifton House, tus Mei, Campbell Hotel, Perry House uris—Sea View Hotel, Ocean Tracadie—Acadia Hotel. ; Stico—Sea Side Hotei. tachope—Clitf House, Mutch House. elev Point—Shaw House. wertou— Seaforth House, : Albion . Mal ’ em FL . Store House, _— no Hoare l-- Florida Hotel, Dominion Veroon River Bri i ridge—Finlay House. Corgetown—Aitken : Cute; Acadia House. ee sb Traverse—Lansdowne Hotel Tignieh— MeKenn Maoh Raiay Howe, owns Believe tial Roce Clarke's Hotel, Commer- Noatague—Mecdonald House. Wa Howse "8t—Clarke’s Hotel; Man- aa —-Pleas . Pont Biber ail Bee ~s Mere are a good : meant tbtougbont the province om Tele may be ohen tion ata. reasonable tien may obtained. Further informa- House, ' no-doubt-about-it feaching Etiquette, “Madam,” he began as the door open- ed, “I am selling a new book on ‘wt. quette ax4 Deportment.’” “Oh, yor re,” she responded. “Go down there and clean the mud off your eet!” “Yes’m. As I was saying, ma’am, I am sel”’— “Take off your hat. Never address a strange lady at her door without re- moving your hat.” “Yes’m. Now, then, as I was sAy- ing” — “Take your hands out of your pock- -~ , ets. No gentleman ever carries bis hands there.” “Yes'm. Now, ma’am, this work on ‘Eti”’— “Throw away your pipe. If a gen- tleman uses tobacco, he is careful not to disgust others by the habit.” “Yes’m. Now, ma’am, tn calling your attention to this valuable”’— “Wait. Put that dirty handkerchief out of sight and use less grease on your hair in the future. Now you look a bit decent. You have a book on ‘Eti- uette and Deportment.’ Very well. | don't want it. I am only the servant girl. Go up the steps to the front door and talk with the lady of the house. Bhe called me a downright, outrigkt, idiot this morning, and | think the book you're selling is just what she requires.” “After = Battle | Im the first ald that ig rendered om the field after a battle nothing is at- tempted beyond the arrest of hemor- rhage, the application of temporary splints for fractures and antiseptie dressing. There is no washing or ex- ploration of wounds. The clothes are merely slit up with scissers, not re moved, thus insuring protection to the patient’s body and saving unnecessary disturbances. The sergeant in charge of the collection staticn has a field companion, a water bottle and a small reserve of bandages and first dress- ings in his care to replenish the sur- gical haversacks with which the bear- ers are supplied. Triangular bandages are chiefly used on the battlefield, made from a 38 inch square of linen or calico, cut diagonal- ly into halves. Almost anything that comes to hand may be used as impro- vised splints—sticks, telegraph wire, bark of trees, straw, rifles, bayonets, lances and so on. The splint, if neces- sary, is padded with straw or leaves or grass and is fastened with straps torn from the soldier’s equipment or with strips of a shirt, securely bound wito the triangular bandage. Bound up with the rifle splint, a wounded man is made so secure that he can hardly move a muscle. One leg is firmly bound to the rifle, and the an- kles are tied together, so that the in- jured limb is almost as rigid as the rifle at its side.—London Standard. A Cheerful Lizr. “I have followed trout streams ever wince I was a boy,” said a Providence crank, “and have tried to solve for many years the cause of the apparent decrease in brook trout. Recently lI think I discovered the cause of the ex- termination. I was fishiag along a brook near Oakland Beach, R. I., when I saw a large snake with a half masti- cated trout in its mouth. The action of the snake interested me, and, stand- ing quiet, I studied the snake closely. “On the end of the snake’s tail was a sharp bony growth shaped like a hook. After a few moments my watching was rewarded by seeing the snake glide over to some bushes growing along the bank and catch a grasshop- per in its mouth. The snake then placed the grasshopper carefully on the hooklike thing on the end of tts tail. “By this time my curiosity was thor- oughly aroused,” continued the fisher- man. “The snake crawled up on a log that extended from the bank into the brook and let its tail hang into the wa- ter. In a moment up came a trout and snapped at the grasshopper. It was short work for the snake to trans- fer the fish from its tail to {ts mouth, and I had solved the problem of the ex- termination of brook trout.”—Cleve Plain Dealer. — ———— eens ae 2 a —— SS a Dodds». Kidney Pills betes. Like Bright’s Dis- ease this dis- ease was in- curable until Doda’s Kidney Pills cured it. Doctors themselves confess that without Dodd's Ki Pils they are er against Dia- tes. Dodd's Kidney Pills are the first medicine that ever cured Diabetes, Imitations——-box, name and ill, are ad vertised to do so, but the medicine that does Diabates ie Dodd’s Ki Pills. Dodd’s Kidney are fren te mene upon application at eet | THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, AUGUST 3, 1900 Proud of His Lape:=. A distangy looking young mzn Loard ed a Fourteenth street car at Massa. chusetts avenue the other night. He Was carrying a leather suit case. Pasted all over the suit case were la- bels indicating much foreign travel— steamer -pasters slapped on at Dieppe, Havre, Ostend, Bremen, Cherbourg, Liverpool, Yarmouth, Naples, and rii:l road labels that bore the names of ali lines all the way from Constantinople to St. Petersburg. The young man of “‘Istangy appearance put the suit ease down between his legs, and all the peo- oie in the seats opposite began a fas- cinated sort of inspection of the labels. A stout man with several of the com- ponent parts of a jag who sat next to the young man seemed to regard the tbels with particular interest. He Stooped over and deciphered then carefully and elaborately, and then he ‘eked up at the owner of the suit “ase with a leer. | “Been around right smart, hain’t -2u, podner?’ he inquired. The young man regarded him with a smile. “Never been farther away from Washington than New York in my life,” he replied, without any hesita- tion whatsoever. “I got that whole bunch of labels for half a dollar at a little money exchanging joint, down near the Battery, in New York. Hot scheme, isn’t it?” The frankness of the statement se dazed several of the passengers who everheard it that they got off at the Wrong theater.—Washington Post. The Stag Beetle. As you walk by the hedgeside a strange noise suddenly arrests yor at- tention. It is the buzz of an insect, but loud enough to startle you. It might be mistaken for the reeling of a night jar, but it is perhaps more like tbe jarring bum of a fastly driven me tor car. Once Was Enough. The young man who was trying te make the St. Joe boat was about two minutes late as he tore along River street. He could see the steamer hands casting off the ropes as he drew nearer, and, bumping amazed citizens out of his way, he rushed for the dock. The gangplank had been hauled in, and. the nose of the steamer bad swung six feet out into the river when he finally reacbed the water’s edge. But that did not deter him. He was going to spend Sunday in Michigau or know why. With a giant swing he tossed his va- lise aboard and then jumped for the steamer. He caught a rope and a post and held fast. Every officer on the boat expected to see him drop Into the river, and bells jangled noisily as the captain peered over the side. When he saw the intrepid passenger was safe, the captain was twice as mad as ir be had dropped into the water. Shaking his fist at him angrily, he yelled: “Here, you, by jiminy crickets, don’t you evér do that again!” The passenger had hauled himself aboard by this time and, turning a look of scorn at the captain, sald: “What do you think I’m going to do —jump back and try it over?’—Chica- go Chronicle. Tempering Copper Not a Leat Art. The allegation that ancient Egyptians tempered copper and bronze to carry & razor edge is not borue out by investi- gation. Thomas Harper of Bellevue, Pa., challenges any one to produce a piece of metal tempered by the an- cients that cannot be ra@re than dupli- eated by any metal worker today. He says that in examining hundreds of specimens alleged to have been temper- ed to the degree that steel is tempered he failed to find any, nor had he dis covered any one who had seen such. work, and the fable which has beer implicitly believed for centuries is be ing shattered in the light of modern re- search. This {s not the only story believed for centuries tending to belittle the man of today, to make him the Inferior of his forefathers, which failed under the searchlight of inquiry and science. The ancients were children in mechanical knowledge as compared to the people of today, and if there was a demand for any particular building or piece of work such as was produced by the an- cients it could be duplicated and im- proved on by the skilled artisans of the nineteenth century.—American Manw facturer. How Kaffirs Bank Their Money. The natives of that part of South Africa which to a great extent is in- habited by bushmen and Hottentots bave a peculiar system of banks and banking. These Kaffirs among whom this curi- gus system of banking obtains live pear Kaffraria, in the south of the Colony country. The natives come down south from their country to trade in the several villages and towns in fraria. From those who trade of their own pumber they select one who for the eccasion is to be their banker. He is converted Into a bank of deposit by utting all the money of those whose + Denker he is into a bag, and then they sally forth to the stores to buy what ever they want. When an articie is purchased by any ' ef those whe are in this banking ar- large numbers and then return to Kaf- — veut, the price of the article is tuken by the banker from this deposit money bag, counted several times and then paid to the seller of the article, after which all the bank depositors cry out to the banker in the presence of the two witnesses selected: “You owe me so much!” This is then repeated by the witnesses. The gen- eral accounting comes between the banker and his several depositors when all desired purchases have been made, after which all the natives de- part for their northern wilds. Every Kind of Backache Yields to Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills, Beoause They Aot Direotly on the Liver as Well as the Kidneys. Pains in the small of the back, over the kidneys, are usually due to de- rangements of the kidneys, and dis- appear when the kidneys are set right. But there are other kinds of back- ache, by far the greater proportion, that can never be reached by treating the kidneys. Pains in the shoulders, through the centre of the back, and in the sides are caused by a torpid ac- tion of the liver, and can only be driv- en out when tne liver is made healthy and active, To reach the liver, as well as the kid- neys, to set the filtering organs in working order and to cure every kind of backache, there is but one unfailing remedy, and’that is Dr. Chase’s Kid- ney-Liver Pills. It is the only treat- ment ‘that has this direct and combined action on both liver and kidneys, and the only one that positively and per- manently cures backache, whether caused by liver or kidreys. Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills, one pill a dose, 25 cents a box. at all deal- ers, or Edmanson, Bates and Ca, To- ronto, : A knows there is one sure way to reach a man’s heart, and that is by always having a nicely spread table. To do this you must have choice groceries, canned goods and provisions. We Can Help You: There; We have the best of everything in that line. What we want is your trade; can we have it! 7 JOHN McKENNA. Queen Street, eatin» w»e eo 4 O21 O8 MASON’S STORE You can get the latest Canadian aod American newepapers received by mail each night. Drop in if you want a paper or magazine or book tor-ai, Fruit, , Confectionery, Tobacco, Cigare ete. @ when you're passing this way. | R. H. Mason O00 0G Ov sO eo? 1S“S 2262262097 3 %632004808 et ee Something New Something Nice FOR TOURISTS and for our own people. Direct from England comes ashipment of P, E. ISLAND CREST CHINAWARE, made expressly for Haszard & Moore. Everybody should have a piece of this beautiful Island crest goods. All sorts of sizes and pieces, See our show window. Haszard & Moore a a ieee —_—, A. BRUC= CUSTOM TAILORING AND MENS Morris $lock, Direct South of Post Office, i ~ —— © Wanttodo — Business With You We want your trade in Clothing and Meu’s Furnishings, we are doing our best to advance your patronage. Our store is one of the prettiest and best lighted in %h -- lottetown, enabling you to carefully examine the guvds a_d helping to make buying easy, D. Make 1t a point to give our store a trial, ou We are sure you will be pleased with your visit and purchase, We have an unusally large and well selected stock. Here are a few lines we are selling quantities of just now. Men’s Underwear. Men’s Fine Cotton Shirts and Drawers usually sold for 20 to 25¢ per garment, Our reduced price....sseseeeeseee L5C Men’s Double thread Balbriggan Shirts and Drawers regular pete 650. Our BR. v.00 colvedeueeseaeecess ba i nerviat Wig) cis d io ocng 0th vicvct ceeanehe 60c Men’s Natural Cotton Shirts and Drawers, well finished, feel like silk, well worth $2.50. As we have an extra supply of this line we have reduced the price, the suit......$2.00 Natural Woo], Medium Weight, although the manufacturers price is advanced, we will sell at old price ......... $2.25 For those who cannot wear cotton we have very fine and light weight made from Australian wool, the suit........$4.0@ Men’s Colored Shirts. In this line we have the larzest stock of up-to-date patterns found in the citv. Stuff bosom, collar and cuffs attached, sizes 14, 144, 15,153 and 16, .. Redegad: rom T80t@weisece's is obee0eis bees Dark an¢ mdeium dark stripes and checks, open fionts, regular prices $1.25 and $1.35 reduced to...... seseeeeee ee Sl. 00 Silk Front Sbirts with or without coilars. Straw Hats at less than cost. “TRADE WITH US AND YOU'LL SAVE MONEY.” D. A. Bruce MORRIS BLOCK. A The Gem Freezer and the Priscs. 1,Quart $1.25 — 1.50 2 9 1.78 4 2.20 eee Retrigerators at costs We guarantee our"pcices;the lows. DODD& ROGERS 33-Quinea BYCICLE (Ladies’ or Gents’) FREE 30 ‘ PIANO FREE, 80“ «= GOLD WATCH (Ladies’ or G 30 “ — SEWING MACHINE FREE, TRIP tothe PARIS EXHIBITION af 1900, nts’) FREE, ‘ALL EXPENSES. PAID, VALUE 180 Ouineas, ‘FREE In order to increase the circulation of the Woman’s WorLD we have mad arrangements whereby any subscribes may gain a ladies’ bicycle, value 30 guineas, a gentleman’s bicycle, value 30 guineas, a 7-octave walnut pianc, valu - 30 guineas, a gold watch, ladies’ or gentleman’s, value 30 guineas, Witnout an cost beyond the subscription money. This system is not intended for the idle —to receive something for nothing—but for those who are willing to use a litt cleverness, in their spare time, for which they receive handscme prize Carriage paid to your door. : If you want any of the articles named above you can procure tnem by be! coming a subscriber to the Woman’s Wortp. This makes you elizible to par- ticipate in our method of procuring the articles named free of cost to you. Every subscriber to the Woman’s Wor p is entitled to on- of these prize % according toconditions we send. Subscription for one year Post free, 5s. rod, Send addressed envelope with stamp (of any country will do) for copy past, and full instructions, how to proceed, also say which prize you selec ress.— % THE “WOMAN'S fWORLD,” * BRENTFORD, LONDON, 'W.,cENGLAND. oo ws > %, Seiad _ ~_- my oo ne og | \ : inane! ee 8 Se 2 er Sy ts ay at ae Pty Masia RE ae ne mr SS iT Sam