—_——— GRRE PE # PICTURESQUE Prince Edward Island 25c at al! Bookstores. Ap ‘Iluetrated hook ona P. KE. s& , interesting souvenir Me ¥ Ie and, ao for tourists. f mailed kis aS | | METS Te IK a6 ~~ _OmARLOTTETOWN — IME TABLE LOCAL TIME. ee ee rival and Departure of Trains, and Steamers. f TRAINS , 3 leaves for the west...... & 35am. resa arrives from a 950 pm. j leaves the a... nnn deal kocomodat: v th ation lea -eamaneet * ‘seleial ices treanibe ion Rr cscaeeenaeesecd 55 a m. joomedation arrives fromthe neg 9 0 00 6 0.6 Cgnennes 125 p m. jeaves for the east...... 7 064 m. arrives from the east.. 9 10 a m, jecomodation leaves for the Sasso deapregietes ere 00 p m. Accomodation arrives from the BE Bs oc cocee cccccoene 4 Oe Dp Om PRINCESS. Laves for Pictou every morning ee Arrives from Pictou every even- IDG Ml.....e eee s .3 30 p m. LA GRANDE DUCHESSE. Arrives from Bostoa and Halifax _ every Monday............ 12pm. Leaves for Boston avd Halitax every Wednerday ..... 10a m. HALIFAX. Arrives from Boston and Halifa: { every Thursday ........+ seereres 7pm leaves for Halifax and Bostor every Friday .... sesseeess lpm. CAMPANA. Arrives from Montreal and Que bec every alternate Friday... Leaves for Quevec and Mootrea the following Monday evening CITY OF GHENT. Arrives from MHelifax ever Thureday afternoos ......... Leaves for Halifsx ever, Fe-ida lO a tm. JACQUES CARtTER Leaves for Orwell luesdays Wedneedays, Thursdays..... — Leaves for Crapaud every Ir. , day at... coerce cece ceeee 3p wi. aves for Crapaud every Satur ay Mt ...... 2p m. FEKRY BUATS. “Hillsborough” —Leaves Ferry Wharf for Southport every half hour. " i. tatoes for Rocky Poi at daily at 690, 8,9, ll,am; 1, 2,4, 630,pm, local time. Sundays at9a m, 12.45, 2,3,4pm. Returning 1.15, 2.30, 3.15 and 5 pm. “Southport”—Runs up East River every Tuesday, leaving at 6.30 e@ m, and 3 m local. Runs up West River every herd leaving at 5.30 am, and 4pm ————— HOTEL ACCOMMODATION. For the benefit of tourists aad others "epublish the following list of hotele and ing houses in Charlottetown aad where ;: — Charlottetown—Hotel Davies, Queen Hove, Revere Hotel, Eureka House, ear House, Railway Houre, Lepage House, Duncan House, Finlay Hou-e Mc sdyen House. Summereide— Clifton Houve, ass tel, Campbell Hotel, Perry House Souris—Sea View Hote Uceas Ouse, Tracadie—Acadia Hotel. ustico—Sea Side Hotel. Stachope—Clif House, Mutch House. Brack lev Point—Shaw Houce. Alberton—Seaforth House, Albion Terrace. Malpeque—Hodgeon House, North ore House, Ownal-- Florida Hotel, Dominion Ouse, Veroon River Bridge—Finiay House. ‘orgetown—Aitken Hose, Tapper Ouse, Acadia House. ne eg Lansdowne Hotel. Bith— McKenna House, Bellevue Hotel Railway Hotel, , Aensington— , . . A. foe o—Olarke’s Hotel, Commer Hon'egue—Mecdonald House. Va va Stewart—Clarke’s Hotel; Man- Ouse en Pleasant View House. ort Fili—Port Hill House, ides, there sre a good many private tbronghowt the province where Bi accommods:ion at # CRISIS IN SERVIA Due to the King’s Betrothal, Vienna, July 26.—The announcement of King Alexauder of Servia of his be- trotbal to Mme. Mascin, formely a lady-in-waiting the Queen Natalie, caused a sensation throughout Servia and a com- motion in Vienna. The lady is obscure, aod her birth is regarded ae almost ple» beian. She is 12 years older tha. King Alex ander. The Servian Ministry,upoe lear log of the fact Saturday promptly resign - ed, aod the King has as yet failed to fied successors to them. The match is regarded in Belgrade as pre; Orterous, and & meaace to the State. Feeling is so strong that the Kiog has placed a guard srvund Mme. Mascia’s nouse, fearing Ao allempt will be ma e to abduct ber. Kx-King Milam, King Alexander’s father, who was taking the waters at Carlsbad, learned of the betrotbal with ulter amoZement last night. Within ten minutes he telegraphed a resignation to hie commend of the Servianarmy. Milan ig now in Viennaen route to Servia. In is ramored that King Alexander will stop him at the frontier. b at interview Milan expressed regret and grief for his son’s action. Wedding of the Aged. Woopsroox, Ont.,July 26 —John King, & Widower,aged $5, bas just married Mrs. Elizabeth Elstone, widow of the late Geo. Eistone, who ie «ged 7}. Both have considerable property. Porxers For Carz Bretox.— The Bras D'Or Gazette reporte the recent landing there of “a pair of thoroughbred (register ed) Yorkehire piga tor Colin Nicholson, E-q.,of Oban. Mr. Nicholson imporied them from the herd oi J. W.Calbeck, Eq, of Agustine Cove, P.E Island, a success- fol breeder who owns the fineat stock io the Maritime Provinces, if no: ia Canada. A glauce over the prize list of 1899 exbi- bition at St. John and Halifax, wi!) show that Mr. Calbeck’s herd made a clear sweep of the firet and second prizes. CHINA THEN AND NOW. When Japan declared war against China in 1894 the Chinese soldiers were trained 1n the tactics of the old Manchu fighters. Some _ regiments carried nothing but long spears, which were about as useful asa flagstaff would be. The Japanese shot them down at long range, and the spears never came into action. Other Chinese forces were armed with old-styled muskets—so old and in such bad condition that the men who fired them were in more danger than those who stood in front of them. Some of the battles and their results at that time with the engage:ments of the weeks will be _ interesting. instance: At Pekin-Yang the 40,000 Japanese who attacked the entrenched Chinese army of 20,c00 lost 30 killed and 270 wounded. The Chinese lost 19,000 killed, wounded and taken prisoners. At Port, Arthur the Japanese lost only 250 killed aud wounded together —one acccunt gives but 18 killed, The Chinese lost about 2,000. This ina charge against entrenchments de- fended by eighty»fine guns, with about 18,000 troops on each side. At Kin-Chow 10,000 Japs were attack- eq by a large force of Chinese, which they defeated with great slaughter, los- ing themselves but 20 killed and sixty wounded. That was the Chinaman of 1894. There is a different story in the present operations. Admiral Seymonr started for Pekin with 2,000 men, but did not get far on his journey before he was forced back to avoid annihilation. The Boxers were joined by Imperial troops, and Seymour lost 92 killed and 207 <a ae — Lumbago is Rheumatism of the back. The cause is Urie Acid in the blood, If the kid- neys did their work there would be no Uric Acid and no Lumbago. Make the kidneys do their work. The sure, positive and only cure for Lumbago is Dodd’s Kidney Pills is reseonable i y be obtained. Further informa- be obtained upos application at wounded. compared | | past few | For i THE DAILY EXAMINER, Since then the 12,000 European and Japanese troops‘ were practically besieged in the for- eign district of Tien Tsin, until July 16th; when the native city was captur- ed by the allied forces, whose casual- ties exceeded eight hundred. A INI CLEVER DESPATCH. SEER An English paper records the follow- ing instance of the ingenuity of Colonel Frank Rhodes when the relief column was making its way to Mafeking, and Plumerand Baden-Powell had sent messages asking for details as to members, guns and supplies. It was impossible to trust a_ straightforward answer to the risk of the road, and_ so the native runners were supplied with this ingenious reply: “Our numbers are the Naval and Military multlplled dy 10; our guns are the numbers of sons in the ward family; our supplies the O. C. gth Lancers.” It would have puzzled the Boerf Intelligencé Depart- ment to find out that the Naval and Military Club is at No. 94, Piccadilly; that the House of Dudley has six sons, and that the officer commanding the gth Lancers is Colonel Small- Little. DOESN’T UNDERSTAND ENG- LISH. —— An English prisoner talking to his Boer captor was told by him that “the Boers must succeed because they are constantly praying for victory.” “But soare the English cunstantly doing that,” said the prisoner. “That is no matter,” said the Boer, “for God does not understand English.” And the Boer believed tais because President Kruger had told him so! —— THE BIRTH OF KHAKI. Veteran writes:—‘‘Khaki (angtice “drab’) was adopted asthe color of uniform first by the famous Guide Corps under Lumsden and Hodson in 1848. In the Indian mutiny of 1857 we dyed all our white clothing khaki, and since that time it bas al-{ ways been worn in India—either in drill, serge or cloth—as the fatigue or fighting dress of the army. During the Afghan campaigis of 1872-30 we! orneea lh , + serge throughout wore kaki drill or ”? the operations The Nimrod--If he was only lower down, I wouldn’t do a thing but knock him on the head with the gun barrel!— New York Journal. The Richest Author—W. W. Astor. The mest cheerful author—Samuel Smiles. The noisiest author—Howells. The tallest amthor—Longfellow. The most flowery author—Haw- thorne. The most amusing author—Thomas Tickell. The happiest author—Gay. The most fiery author—Burns. The most talkative author—Chatter- ton. The most distressed author—Aiken- side.—Chicago Times-Herald. Ameotheir Day. 10,000 or | 3 ARS w \\ Ns lane “Well, I’ve volunteered.” “Oh, Cecil, how brave—how noble of you! “Yes, most of our chaps are off te the home!” front, so I’ve volunteered to stay at CHARLUTTETON JULY, 27, 1908 Head Work. “It might be well enough,” said the lecturer, “before the lights are turned down and the pictures are thrown upon the screen, for the janitor to close one of those windows. The tadies in the audience will be taking their hats off in a few moments and the breeze upon their heads may be unpleasant.” The windows were not closed, but the hats came off.—Chicago Tribune sian: His Cash. Druggist—Rockwel] seems to have money to burn. Grocer—I don’t know. He always pSys me the cold cash.—Chicago Trib une, Itching Piles Aoute Misery From ths Terrible Itching —Cured by Dr. Chaso’s Ointment. It is doubtful if any remedy ever re- eeived so much grateful, unsolicited testimony as Dr. Chase’s Ointment. The reason is not far to seek, for it is the only preparation known to man which never fails to cure piles. Mr. F. G. Harding, a retired farm- er, living at Nilestown, Middlesex county, Ont., writes as follows:—“I have been troubled with bleeding and itching pilee fur four or five years, and suffered intense agony at times. I had tried almost everything, but could get nothing that weuld give relief. On hearing of Dr. Chase’s Ointment I pro- cured a box, and it only required part of it to completely cure me. I am re- commending it to all afflicted as I was.” Such hicontrovertible evidence from responsible persons cannot, for a mo- ment, be doubted. A few applications of Dr. Chase’s Ointment will convince the most skeptical of its wonderful healing and soothing influence. A box or two will positively cure the most 'se- vere case of piles; 60 cents a box, a8 all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co, | Tororito. D. A. BRUCE. CUSTOM TAILORING AND MEN'S FURNISHINGS Morris $lock, Direct South of Post Office, ten a —_——_————— Wre Want to do Business With You We want your trade in Clothing and Men’s Furnishings, we are doing our best to advance your patronage. ae Our store is one of the prettiest and best lighted in ™ ar lottetown, enabling you to carefully examine the go ls nd helping to make buying easy, Make it a point to give our store a trial. ' 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 25e per garment, Our reduced price.....s.cseceeees 15€ Men’s Double thread Balbriggan Shirts and Drawers regular price G06. OUP Prides cose ccrcvcccvicdsccedcdccce state Bp DOR VIOE WHERE s n0:00.000 dae 9206007 04:ecempeesnneeen ee 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......$2.06 Natural Wool, 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........$4.00 Sao Men’s Colored Shirts. In this line we have the larzest stock of up-to-date patterns found in the city. Siiff bosom, collar and cuffs attached, sizes 14, 143, 15, 15} and gj 16. Redaced from T5cto.s.reccsccecceccssesserecs OC Dark and mdeium dark stripes ead checks, open fronts, regular prices $1.25 and $1.35 reduced to.. sss eoeceeeee eo S1.00 Silk Front Shirts with or without coilars. Straw Hats at less than cost. The One Who Cooks knows there is one sure way | tu reach a man’s heart, and | that is by always having a} nicely spread table. To do! this you must have cLoic: | 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 S'reet, oo Every Child Has a Right to a more or less exten- sive education in music —an1 there are few par- ents who need to deny their children an oppor- Madd (ee eaten “TRADE WITH US AND YOU'LL SAVE MONEY.” DD. & Bruce MORRIS BLOCH. The Gem Freezer and tu Priscs. 1 Quart $1.25 a 1.50 a 1.75 4 ~~) (9 ° . . ; A Retrigerators at cost. We guarantee ourtpricesgthe lowes. DODD& ROGERS SS, a SS" eS OO aa NESW & tunity to acquire this charming accomplish- ment. Heintzman pianos—the equal of any instrument man- ufactured, are sold at low figures and on easy terms. —Come in and learn all about them. Miller Bros Queen Street. Coanolly’s Building. rvvarnennennesvrenenrneeenonrtpenen iy ornentt? A boy having some poets p cutie iccmastnpencncicatialn Priating. One who cso feed referred. Apply: at ‘JPR cE. AAA ADAALAAAI QUAAANAAAALAAA JLddA Beautiful Enamelld Belt and neck clasps, broaches, cuff links,Joat%pins, scar pins, coffee and tea spoons. i We have them witb British, Canadian, Scotch,{Irish and French coats of arms. Also flag and maple leaf pins from 10c. and 15a. up. We have sold a number of wedding rings lately, but}"as we are MAKERS of rings can quickly supply any style’ of ring required. New gold spectacles and eyeglasses. EW .Tayilor OFTICIAN ot Job # i q presses VALLE Tus Faeauryer ae Oamorea Block,” Ohariottetew ~ April 2nd 1909, . ESE Ng a Se ee eg i a ' 4