Quetec Steamship CO. Str “CAMPANIA,” fom, Montreal sesdny 220d May onda: «'b June crom Cb’\own Monday 28th May * llth June ““ l <\ ‘6 ‘“ 5th “ s a July “ Mn July ~ 30. ’ 6 Zora. e 3 . = 6th Aug. -@ 35.> Az; oe 20th * 2754 “ 3rd Sept. * 10:h Sept. o eo = 34m ‘S 66 lst ct. “« 8th Oct. * 16th «e 22 d ‘ «e 29th sé és 5th Nov. “612th Nov Freizit handled carefully and at cur- yent raves Pas-envgers will find the accomodation the ver) Lest, and the trip up and dow: the St. Lawrence the most delightfal. CARVELL BROS, Ch town, May } 4th, 1900, Agents. dy2uw wed & sat. he Ch’tew STEAMERS “Nerthumberland” and “Princess 1 Steam Navigation Co, uixmmited. Leave as below every day, Svndays exc pted. From i «ist Dv Cuens, on arrival of 11.6 3t. Jobo for SUMMER*IDR, tralu from . g with express train for Cnar- let e'aw pba Tigt ish, : From StMMERSIDE on arrival of morning ce Ce train’ trom Charlottetown and a! etatroos of P. E. I. R. for Pormr De CuHeENe, (connecting with afternoon train for tr. Jouxy, Boston acd MontTrea*. Connect.\on at Monoron with train fo Caosdu and N. B., et St. Jonn with C. P. R.and railway for U. 8, and Can eda, also at it. John wich Steamers o! International and Dominion Atlantic R R Tires, Tuesday and Saturday after- Lions fo: Boston direct, due followin day at poop, acd on Monday, Wedues- dey end Fridey mornings with steamers for as‘rort, Portland and Boston. Fion Pici.v about balf-past three a» arrival of dav train fom Halifax and Syorcy for CHaRLOTTETOWN. Fret CHArtorretown for Picrov at 8.30 THE DAILY EXAMINER CHARLOTTETON AUGUST 28, 1900 ALMOST A MIRACLE — ct. sett ete: Strange Case of Kidney Disease Re- ported at Smith's Falls. Smirn’s Farts, Aug. 27,—One of the moss remarkable cures ever performed by Podd’s Kidney Pills was that of Mrs. Gorge Barnes of thistown, Mrs. Barnes ves fileted with Pema'e We: kness and Urinal Trouble resulting from Kidney in-euse The disease had also a serious ii cl on Ler senses of sight aod beerivg, r»t times Mra, Barnes would be ex- - d ogly deaf and short-sighted. Mr+. Barnes gives an account of her cace for publications —“I have consulted a ‘octor,” she writes, ‘‘who gave me medicine that seemed to make me worse times. LIwastold of Dodd's Kidney and I got one box. I have used srtcf the box and am completely cured, a { -\range to say both mv hearing and e vut are now unaffected.” Pas é, Water is the hardest of all substances t»h wt, with the single exception of hy- d-o-:en gas. The easiest two are mercury aid lead, which stand in this respect on n-atlv the same footing. To Cure ajCold in One pay Take Laxative Bromo Qulnine Tablets, All ruggists refund the money it fails to cure se, HK. W. Grove’s signature is on each box ee A taste for tomatoes has to de acquired, and when acquired it doesn’t pay. + <i — Minard’s Liniment cures Garget in Cows Men respect women when women res- pect themselves, DR. A. W. CHASE'S 9 h CATARRH CURE... & WC. is sent direct to the diseased parts by the Improved Blower. Heals the ulcers, clears the air Passages, stops droppings in the throat and rmanantly cures Catarrh and Hay Fever. Blower free. All dealers, or Dr. A. W. Chase Medicine Co., Toronto and Buffalo. Don’t hang @ piano; it is not fair play, minard’s Liniment cures’ Distemper. The right time for a girl to marry is when she has found the right man. Minard’s Liniment cures Colds, ete. B.» . COnnectinog there with day trainé fur Coupe Kre'on and Halifax at Norre Sypyiy witb steamer Bruce for New- foun ‘lard 1Hatirax with ©. A. and Plant Live for Boson. Pessengers from ali place: ov P. E. J. Rat. way east of Charilottetow: | can leave bone 24 bourse later than :: joni g Piont Steamers in Charlotietow eid counect with same éteamer i: Halifax Tbhreugh tickets to be had at Gran Arevk, xpadian Pecific, Intercolonia ind P. E. J] Rai!waye, on the Company’ Bteem+is oid connec'ing lines in United States end Conada. Stesmer- are run on Eastern Stardard, Time. F. W.,HALES, Secretary. Charl ttetown, 2. EB. 1. ‘ , ki« ws there is one sure way to reach a man’s heart, and th:t is by always having a ric'y spread table. To do; you must have chcice eveceries, canned goods and .ISIOnS, : aw’ ia \ G Ne Czi Help You:There: We have the test of everything at line What we want is » ur trade; can we have it © ICHN McKENNA, Opneen S+re@et. Ki bh LVERGARTEN — > cue Ax & yc.isa Lapy (experienced teacher) wie h ughbt Kindergarten for several yer + 1. England wishes to obtain pupils. Lertou~ given at pep'lsbomes. A course of lkeecus would be given to teachere or Others desning (o be traiwed in the Kin- dercgar'en sxetem. Thoroughly compet» entaud renieble. Gccd references. Apply to MRS. L.°J. MALONE, pe P. 9. Box 402. a ba : A. A- MciLeanQ. C. Rarrister et.., Brown’s Bleck Charlcttetown. excrads 2.500 miles and the The coast line of the Chinese Empire Jand frontier 4,40) miles. ii_ard’s Liniment cures Diphtheria. DR. GORDON ALLEY PHYSICIAN & SURGEON Graduate McGill Univeraity) he and Residence—Dorchester Stree ‘ti-~ Hours—9 to 10, a. m., Il to 3 ani — ‘oA, p. m. -> mrt sttention to country calla. 4 CARD AR. MACNEILL, M. D.. Having 30 years experience in the practice of his profession, mzy be con sulted on all branches of general medi cine including the specialties. Office and Residence—Prince Street 3rd door akove Kindergarten Hall. HHours—g to 113 a. m. rte 3 and te § p. m. dy & wkly 3 mos, —— Nez erring Just received 25 barrels prime Labrador Herring (warranted). These Herring are rot very large, but you prefer flayour and quality to size these are the Herring to buy. We have just received also some iarge fat Cape Breton Herring. We | causupply them in pails, } bbls. }/ bbls. and by the dozen, also in barrels for the wholesale trade. For the regerve Season We have just received 50 dozen reserve Jars in glass and stonejwhich will be sold low to clear out the lot. rtaspberries. Orders filled for Raspbernies by th pail. R, F. Maddigan & Co Lower Queen Street. DR. CLIFT Cures CHRONIC | DISEASES and RUP- Moxey tc Loan. #00 tear seate, TURE. Office at Mrs. Stumbles, corner | Prince and Kent Street, Charlottetown, f.om Saturd“y evening’ te'Tueeday] a.iim. every weex. NOT A MODEL FOR CANADA, (Toronto World.) The British army is confessedly in abadly demoralized condition. ‘The officers have been found lacking in the most rudimentary tactics of warfare, and under incompetent leadership the men are necessarily below below the standard in military discipline. The exposure at Aldershot ferms another strong argument why Canada should cut loose from the British milltary sys- tem and develop her own military re- sources in her own way. A healthy rivalry between the different sections of the Empire cannot fail to have a beneficial effect all round. The peo- ple in this country are not in sym- pathy with the practice that prevails in Great Britain of appointing the offi. cers from the young men of a certain social rank, nor ,do they approve of the introduction of that practice in the Canadian miitia. British influence and control does not work for the best interests of our citizen soldiery, Our idea of what a soldier is, and how he should be treated, is quite different from the idea prevailing in Great Bri- tain. The two systems will not har- monize very well, and any attempt to create in Canada a duplicate of the British military ideal will fail. But independently of this 1adical difference n the constitution and spirit of the two ipeoples, we find that the British army is a very bad model for us to follow or to have forced upon us. A_ strong, healthy military sentiment now _per- vades this country, and nothing should be done to discourage it. The inter- ence of British officers who do not the spirit of our people certain- ly does discourage the development of our military resources, and the sooner the Canadian military system is made entirely independent the better it will be both for Canada and the Empire. RUSSIA A DEBTOR NATION, ~ New York, August 24.— There was no confirmatiou in Wall Street yesterday of the rumor from London that the Russian Government is going to negotiate a loan of $150,000,000 in this country. At the offices of the New York Security and Trust Com- pany, the fiscal agents of Russia in this country, it was said that nothing had been heard there of the loan. According to the London despatch the Russian minister of finance, M, De Witie, was about to make an ar- rangement with a syndicate of insur- ance ccmpanies to raise the money. The New York Life Insurance Com- pary and the Equitable Life Assurance | Society both have money invested in | Russian securities already, but there is no indication that the amounts will be increased. The President of an important bank with Russian con- nections said yesterday : “Russia is a debtor nation ; but she must borrow where she can get money cheapest. I think chat just now she could get better terms in x = se —mencnnsren see ee France than in the United States.” FOR PERSIA’S GOOD, a It isreported that the Shah of Persia, who has recently been on a tour to western Europe, combined business with pleasure to some extent by consulting certain men of practical enterprise with reference to reforms he contemplates adopting in his domin- ions. He app.ars to have awakened, as did the ruler of Japan some years ago,to a conviction that if he did not adopt modern ideas and methods his throne and empire must pass away, a prey to the aggressive spirit of con- quering Christian powers. To aid him in the proposed work of remodeiling and retorming his government and in- troducing western Civilization he has taken an Englishman, Mr, John Mars- den Ward, into his employ, who has planned a system of Persian railways to supplement the lines under con- struction _by Russian engineers. It is generally understood that Persia has been divided into two spheres of influence, Russia claiming the north- ern and Great Britain the southern half of the empire. Mr. Ward is now in the United States purchasing loco- motives and other railway material as well as the plant for a trolley street railway in Teheran. WON THE QUEEN'S SCAR. Private R. R. Thompson, of D Company, first Canadian contingent, it is understood, is the Canadian who has received one of the Queen’s scarfs fer conspicuous bravery in South Afri- ca. Her Majesty knitted four of these scarfs, one to go to a member of each of the four differen) colonial contin- gents in South Africa for conspicuous bravery, Private Thompson is a native of Ire- land, and son of a large confectionery manufacturer in Dublin. Some years ago he was irc South Africa in the gov- ernment service, He afterwards came to Canada. Shortly before the first Cana- dian contingent was raised he was in Buffalo, N. Y., on a visit to friends, but as soon as he heard of the troops from ] Canada going to fight the Boers, he re- turned to Ottawa and enlisted in D company. Mr. Thompson is about twenty-three years of age. It is pre- sumed that the act which wonthe scarf was Private Thompson rescue of a wounded companion at Paardeberg. He rushed from the trenches and in a hail of bullets carried to safety a soldi- er who had been wounded and was lying quite adistance from the trenches ani exposed toa Boer fire. TAUTH IS NOW KNOWN. london, August 28.—The Colonial Office today made public the text of the correspondeuce sized at Pretoria. Besides Mr. Henry Labouchere, Mr. John Edward Ellis, Liberal member of Parliament for the Rushcliffe division of Nottinghamshire, wrote to Mrs. j vaal, and. Dr. — — mew Gavin Brown Clark, Radical member for Caithness, and former consui-general of the South African Republic in London, wrote to President Kruger, under date of Aug- ust 29, 1899, of the unsatisfactory re- sults of a conversation he had with Mr. Joseph Chamberlain, the secretary of state for the colonies. Dr Clark said he thought war was_ inevitable, and discussed the effect of President Kruger’s seizing the passe%. — The French consui at Hankow wires that.an attempt at an uprising oc- curred during the night of Aug. 21. A band of Chinese tried to set fire to a house adjoining the Customs}Bank,ad- jacent to the British consulate, with the object of pillaging the bank and burning the European quarters, The viceroy, however,took immediate steps and arrested the ringleaders, seizing at the same time arms and documents demonstrating the existence of a se- cret society. and an organized plot. Two of the leading culprits were de- capitated, their heads being subse- quently exhibited in the centre of the Chinese town. Twenty others were imprisoned. More trouble is feared when the flight of the Emperor to the west, if true,becomes known. —— ee ee ee A despatch to the ‘Standard’ from Durban, Natal, says that 9,000 Uitlan- ders have registered there.. A Uitlan- ders committe has addressed a protest to Sir Alfred Milner, Governor of Cape Colony, and High Commissioner in South Africa, against the appoint- ment to offical positions in the Trans- vaal of persons whose character and antecedents merit the adhorrence of honest men. The committee says that such appointments will bring dis- credit upon the administration and amount to a public scandal. The Daily Mail’s Tien Tsin cor- 'espondent says that much feeling | has been aroused by the action of the Russians in d2stroying with dynamite the locks of the Lutai canal, despite the protest of the British commander. As a result, the water in the Pei river has fallen eighteen inches and naviga- tion is impeded. A Durban despath says that a food and passenger train has been wrecked at Dannhauser, in Natal, North of Glencoe, by a small party of Boers which have been operating in that neighborhood. There were no fatalities, but the line was destroyed for a distance of a hundred yards. Thetransports Dilwara and Nongo- lian, with 2,000 Boer frisoners, have sailed from the Care to Ceylon. All the Dutch officials of Har- rismith, including the landdrost, have Solly for facts favorable to the Trans- ¢been sent to Ladysmith, = — mee . on — ee na gery oo” : we 22 Medicine Of Unusual Merit, Known and the World Over, Is Dr, Chase's Kidney, Liver Pills. Having a direct and combineg on both the kidneys and liver Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills most valuable as a family and positively cura constipation forms of stomach trouble, * Mr, John White, 72 First avenue, Ot. tawa, writes:—“*I usej Dr, Kidney-Liver Pills for deranged lives and pains in the back, with excellent results. “My wife usel them for e trouble, 1nd pains shout the heart, ang is entirely cured. They are invaluable as a family medicine.” Scores of hundreds of fam! not think of being without De ae Kidney-Liver Pills in the houge, They @re purely vegetable in composition ang remarkably prompt and effective action. One pill a dose, 25 cents ¢ at all dealers, or Edmangon, Bates Co., Toronto. f CANADIAN : ee) Node Lom Ay TORONTO Falk Aug 27th to Sept 9th, 1900, For Round Trip from Charlottetown $24.05. Going Aug. 28th, 29th and 30th, Sept. Ist and 4th. For Round Trip from Charlottetown $20.05. Going Aug. 31st and Sept. 3rd. Return limit all tickets 13th‘ 1900, Canadian Pacific Railway if the po a route; only one night on the road, Dining cars serve all meals. A. J. HEATE, DPA ORE St. Joba, N. B. BARBADOS MOLASSES & SUGAR — Direct from West Indies, cargo scht, Malabar. ; 200 puns. tieroes and bb's, bright Bar- badoes. Mol asses, . 300 bbls. bright Grocery Sugar. Now landing Connolly's wharf and for sale ap N. RATTENBURY. ae! Aug 20th—eod. — GREAT GLEARANGE SALE OF BOOTS CHBSTOCK OF W. H. STEWART &CO. Who Have Gene of Business, Will be Sold at TREMENDOUS SLAUGHTER Discounts 30 to 40 per Cent and Half Price The Stock Is Practically New. Now is the time to buy Shoes at your,own price -22 Goff Bros will conduct the sale. . ? ™ wo ~ = ww" ~~. oe oF a &: gs eae ae ow » Dy ania Family bit aee Be atte - Doom Yo ReMi De De ee Me DEM | >. rae Se >