BNE AONIA eaves the lungs we ak and isthe door for the germs ope: ' r te Consumption. Don’t wait until they get in, and ou begin to cough Close the door at once by healing e inflammation. Salle Emulsion. makes the lungs _germ- proof; it heals the inflam- mation and closes the doors. It builds up and strengthens ‘Re entire system with wonderful rapidity. x soc. and $:.00, all druggists, GODIT & BOW NE, Chemists, Corente a — LOUH ) ! When yo barrel of choic2 flour, give us a call; we sell all the leading} brands every want a and harrel we When in need of one call and let’s quote you prices, SANDERSON & CD Victoria Row Grocer s. guarantee sell, us on % 7 7 3 CO 4 Pig TO BOSTON os S. S. Halifax NOOY Will leave Charlottetown at PRIDAY , ard 5.5. LA GRANDE DUCHESSE Every WEDNESDAY at 9 a. m on Boston via Hawkesbury and Halifax. Passengers leavirg Charilottefown via Pictou, make close connection at Hslifax from Boston Tuesdays and Saturdava. TheS. 8. Halifax takes Freight sod ‘assengers for Hawkesbury and Halifax. | Tickets for sale at Stations P. E I. Railway. For tickets, rates and al! tpply to formation W. W. OLARKE, Agent Charlottetown i. L. CHIPMAN, Manager Apl 24¢tf. Most cereal require a double boiler, and at least 20 minutes cooki g, while Ralston Breakfast Feod is prepared with fase and dispatch in a single boiler in five minutes The Vig w and strength impa ting prop- erties of Ralston come from Gluterean heat, the whole berry of whic! is milled into Ralston Breakfast Food. There’s not another dish s for breakfast that yntains as mu as Ralston Breakfast Food. FOR SALE BY JENKINS & SON The Corner Greee@rs 'PSole Agerte. delicious h-nutrition McLeod, Morson & McQuarrie: Bantistars, Soliciters,2&6. Orrict—Brown’s Biock; Souch _ Side Qucen Square. CHARLOTTET( WN SPAKST. LOANS NGOTI ATED = when a Powell was naturally a good deal up- set at this, and he wrote rather sharply | 'to Snyman, saying that while he could | take a joke with everybody, ne thought | is Plant Line ' garrison’s smoking mixture. , Snyman shelled the town for another | to the civilized world so extraordinary i for } THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, JULY 30, 1900, seeeeteenionnane | = PPL PO OOSCCCOSCOS ‘South Africa £ and the East. = i i> => > fey BADEN-POWELL’S HUMOR Sn (London Illustrated Bits.) One of Baden-Powell’s most regular correspondents was General Snyman, the party who madea_ regular job of | trying to rush Mafeking evey Tuesday | and Friday, and passing the rest of the week in recovering from the effects of his rush. | Thecorrespondence would start in a curt sort of way. Snyman would drop a line to say that he was about to shell | the hospitals and the women’s _laager, 'as he didn't seem to be making any impression anywhere else. Then | Baden-Powell would acknowledge the receipt of his kind letter and offer to place every facility in the way of the sweetest pleasures of life. Snyman’s _Teply to that would be in the shape of | all civilized nations. splinters of scrap iron, and after an | dictor of the imperial telegraphs is play- hour or two’s steady shooting he would | ing the game of the empress at Pekin. send in another letter telling Baden-| That game is time. Powell that there would be hour’s rest for the funeral of the vic- tims. Baden-Powell would reply in a general sort ofa way that so far there was no victims to deal with and he trusted Mr. Snyman would go on shooting as long as his fancy permitted. Sometimes Baden-Powell would write ina less concilliatory yein. It ;seems that on one occasion, after ‘shelling Mafeking for three hours and ‘ahalf, the Boers smashed up a two pound box of cijsars in Baden-Powell’s tent which he had omitted the shooting began. was going alittle too far to jack the In reply, two hours; and then Baden-Powell wrote rather sharply to Snyman, saying |shells ina corner of thecity that , wrighed several tons,and they really; that the devilish Mmmenciog June 29th, 1900 | hadn’t the room bric-a-brac. | Ifthere was no shooting in the af- ' ternoon, Baden-Powell would organize some athletic sports and an occasional church bazaar or Sunday-school rat- fle. While the show went on he would | wander round telling the leading citi- zens stories of his childhood to make ‘them laugh and keep them cheerful. / Sometimes, when things were going ' along all right, he would go up to his studio, and do a little painting. It on such an occassion Mr. Snyman sent a | message calling on the garrison to sur- to spare for useless | render at once, Baden-Powell would | reply with a little note saying he would | be obliged if Mr. Snyman would please go away into the next street, as he was busy working on his new postre for the | military tournament, and hadn’s any time for frivoling just then. In the evening Baden-Powell turned | himself into a public entertainer for ithe time being. He would have a piano on the platform inthe cuncet! hall, and he would announce that he was about to give a little Corney Grain nterlainment tur the benefit of the | stcained Boers. Now and again there would be an interruption. Just as he had got unto the rolicking chorus of a | song imitating Kruger having a nigat | out, the call-boy would come out with 'an urgent note. Baden-Powell would read the note, and then say: “Excuse me, ladies and gentlemen. I have got to go ont ina rather a hurry to push | the Boers back alittle. I will return in about half an hour, and will then | 5 : ' in : THEN | have the honor to present my unique | ’ TRY }imitation of Dr. Leyds trying to speak | the truth without the aid of mechani- ; cal apparatus of any kind.” Then Baden-Powell would go out, . { was cured of 4 ‘evere cold by MIN ARD'S LINIMENT. Oxford, N.S. R. F. HEWSON. I was cured of a terrible eprain by | MINARD’S LINIMENT. FRED COULSON, Y. A. A.C, | | Yarmouth, N. 8. MINARD’S LINIMENT. logleevilie, pemm-. J. W. RUGGLES. I was cured of black Erysipelas by are for dusting the Boers off the outskirts of the city. After a few minu‘es steady shelling, and a couple of bayonet rushes or so, he would get a letter from Snyman charging him with harshness and brutality toward the poor Boers who were trying to sneak into Mafe- king under cover of thenight. Then Baden-Powell would smile quietly to himself and call his men_ back and tell them to go and _ get ‘drinks. After which he would return to the concert-room and give his imita- tior as promised, together with a couple of encore verses that he had thought up during the little scuffle. half aa | delay is his motto, and to gain it this health and | to remove. Baden.- | that they would really have to charge} to refrain from the conviction that he him for housing his waste scrap iron. {is sudjecting the powers to the mgst He said they had a cellection of burst ; insulting mockery and the mest deri- and, having returned once just to take | | his call before the certain, would hurry | away to the back and draw upa plan ' t At night, when the citizens were in bed Baden-Powell would go down in- to the laager and experiment. It ap- pears that as invented a receipt for horse sausage knocks the saveloy of commerce clean off the field. he | } tnat THE WORLD MYSTERY. THE TWO ARCHPLOTTERS OF CHINA, | Sheng and Empress Dowager hey hold the secret which is agitating Sheng as the Everything for | crafty Chinaman is sending out des- | patches to the powers a2nouncing that the ministers are safe. He is sending ‘out appeals for mediation to the same -end. The despatches are undoubted- ly hes but they are having the effect he | has been working for—to prevent the | immediate advance oi the allies on | Pekin. The ministers are dead. This lis practically certain but this arch- conspirator hopes tu dull the desires for revenge by time. With an impud- ence and a boldness in keeping with his past disreputable career. Sheng retains his headquarters at Shanghai--- that is to say, the one city in China whichm has the _Jargest foreign population, and, whichis com- manded by the biggest number of for- | ¢ign war ships. From thence Sheng | has during the past thirty days issued * series of messages, purporting to come from Pekin, that it is impossible of hoaxes Ingenuity of the Chinese could devise. Every message that has to come from Pekin durin month, no matter whether from lhe Emperor or from the dowager empress, from the Tsung-li-Yamen, from Conger, from the Japsnese minister in Pekin, sive and cruel suc. ession purported the last Oo 5 etc., has passed through his hands—if, indeed, it did ~ot originate in his hands. He alone knows to what exent the message to the state depart- ment at Washington, to Pres. Loubet, to King Leopuld of Belgium and to the other powers are authentic The very fact that all these messages have come through Sheng deprives them of the principal elements of their reliabi- lity. even if they were not in themselves uf so cortiadictory a character. For Sheng has on several occasions given to the outer world messages ad- muting the masacre of the foreigners, only to issue some fresh communica- ton purporting to have come from Pekin, and insisting that the envoys alive and safe. That Sheng is aware Of the real condition of affairs in the Chinese capital, with which he con- trois the communication, every one is convincec. That this yellow faced juggler knows the real fate of the en- voys—whether they are living or dead We TC —all who posses any experience of China are assured. Yet possessing this informativn, for Hsu | Boers for committing the brutality that ‘1 Si—these two are the plotters in the they evidently regarded as one of the | darkest world mystery of modern times eagerly waiting ke withholds it. He declines to furnish us with the proofs which he assuredly possesses as to whether the foreigners at Pekin are living or dead and appears to take a delight in prolonging and rendering more acute our anxiety. His latest an- nouncement, is a promise by the Chinese government to con- vey the foreigners at Pekin to Tien Tsin and to deliver them over to the allies. But his announcament is receiv: ed with just the same _ incredulity by every one here as all the previous noti- fications issued by Sheng. In order to understand the distrust with which Sheng is regarded by every one who has ever lived in China or had any, dealing with the government there, it must be explained that for the las: fifteen or twenty years he has officiated as thechannel by whieh foreigners in search of concession and _ privileges have been wont to pay their bribes to the viceroys and leading goveinment officials. PLAN A GENERAL WAR. CHINESE SCHEME FOR TH€ DEFEAT OF THE FOREIGN ARMIES, The London Daily Telegraph prints a Shanghai despatch containing infor- mation from a very important source, which, however, the correspondent states he cannot guarantee to be authentic, to the effect that if the officials of Central and Southern China persuade themselves that the partition of the country is iutended, the whole Empire will rise against the foreigners. Yuan-Shih-Kai, Governor of Snantung, has drawn up definite plan of action for the present crisis which has been sent to the Viceroys and Governors. The substance of this plan is that the generals who are marching to the rescue of the Emper- or must not attack Prince Tuan or the Boxers until the Viceroys see land. If the members of the Legations have really been murdered, the Western powers, he says, will try to destroy Pekin. The generals must help Prince Tuan and the Boxers to avert this. They must form the rear guard during the flight of the Empress to Hsianyu, where a new capital will be establish- ed. All parts and cities accessible to foreign warships must be strengthened, and a solid front presented. This will induce the foreigners to make peace. Overtures must begin prompr- ly, the war preparations proceeding concurrently. The Governor adds that diplomacy always helps China, He further says that the export of arms and munitions from Europe is being stopped, and the Chinese arsen- Legations be alive, and the partition- ing of China reliably disclaimed, the generals who are moving north will order the Boxers to disperse on pain of attack. Peace will then easily follow. CRONJE. With regards to the recent paragraph relating that some one had given Scot- land the credit of having sent Cronje’s ancestors over to South Africa, a correspondent sends me the following from the Cape Town Mercury:—‘*Now that the world is ringing with the name of Piet Cronje, the famous Boer gener- al. itis interesting to note that his patronymic was originally French. His ancestor—Pierre Crognet or Crosnier —was a French refugee, who left which the whole civilized world is SO Are You Bilious ee 6 RRS Best sLiver gence <7 - DR. GORDON ALL: Y_ i (Graduate McGill University) Office and Residence - Dorckest-r stree Office Huure—@ to 10, 4 m., i to u aod 7 ts 5, p. i. ' Parsons’ Pills © PHYSICIAN & SURULGS | Prot ot aier Now 1 TO BE LET. Immediate possession of that Build~ ‘ing adjoiniog the Masonc Temple. Suit- able for offices et:. App'y to Mrs. D. McKinnon, McGili Avenus, Ch’Lown. dy. lwk. France owing to the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes, which had the effect of banishing all Protestants from that country. This Pierre Crognet arrived in the colony in 1698 and settled at Drakenstein, where ae married Susan- nu Taillifer, widow of Jean Garde, also French refugee; he left six children. tis Curious to find that the Boer gen- eral bears the Christian name of his French ancestor; Pierre, it is super fuous to add, being the French equi valent for the Dutch Pieter. Cronje isa Dutch phonetic spelling of the French name Crognet or Crosnier.” The personal estate of General Wau- chope, who was killed at Magersfontein has been valude for probate purposes at $82,000, ie BEST should be your aim when buying medicine. Get licod’s Sarsaparilla and have the i best medicine MONEY CAN BUY. The ‘‘ Albert’ Toilet Soan Co’s Baby’s Own Soap makes young- sters, clean, sweet, and fresh, It keeps their delicate skins in good order. Made entirely from vege- table fats, it is an emollient as well as a cleanser, and is as useful on a lady’s toilet as in the nursery. | Faintly but exquisitely aro- | matie, | Beware of imitations. 2 Something New Something Nice FOR TOURISTS and for our own people. Direct from England comes a shipment of P, Ey ISLAND OREST 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. als must, therefore, work double time. The Viceroys south of the Hoangho mu3t continue to protect foreigners untilthe court is safely at } Hsianyu, when a general war will be | inevitable, Should the members of the Haszard & Moore CRAND scottish Cathering The annual Scottish Gat bering of the Clans under the auepices of the Caledonian Club of P. E. Island, will be held at Souris Driving Park, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 22nd, 1900 Traine leave Charlotietown at 7.50 local. Georgetown 6.50 local, stopping at a!) in- termediate stations, Return tickets from Charlottetown 85c, Georgetown 85c, intermediate stations a!l proportionate rates. Reiura tickets will be is*ned from al! stations wée. of Royalty Junction at one first-class fare on Augnst 21st, good to return on August 23rd. For train arrangements, prize lists and ull particulars see programme and adver- isements in newspapers later JOHN McPHEE, President. D. R .McLENNAN, Rec. Secretary. LADIES We have just received some of Madame May’s (Boston’s Complexion Spevalist) Toilet Preparations including ALMONDIN=S and Frenco CREAM, Macdonald’s Drug Store For Tourists — Ferguson’s celebrated “Edinburgh Rock” —_— _ Candy. ——— Se eco — X‘he Ch'town Steam Navigation Co. STEAMERS . “Northumberland” and “Princess Leave as below every day, excepted, rom Pom? Dv Cuene, on arrival of 11.6 train from St. John for Evmmererm copnarcting with express train for Char lotietown and Tignish. From SumMERSIDE on arrival of morning train from Charlottetown and a) stations of P. E. I. R. for Pomr De CRENE, connecting with afternoon train for St. Jonn, Boerox ard Mowrreat. Connection at Moncron with train for Caveda and N. B.,a Sr. Jomn with C. P. R.and railwey jor U.S. and Can! sda, also at 8t. Jobn with Steamers of Tvternational and Dewinion A‘lantie R. R Lines, Tuesday avd Saturday aftere noone for Boston direct, due followin day at noon, and on Monday, Wednes- dey and Friday mornings with eteamere for tastport, Portland and Boston. From Picrov about half-~past three om arrival of dav train from Halifax and Sydpey for CHARLOTTETOWN. From CHaRLotrEetowy for Picrov at 8.36 &. m. Connecting there with day traine for Cape Breton and Halifax at Norurm Sypvey with steamer Broce for New« foundlard. At Havirax with ©. A. and Plant Live for Boston. Passengers from ali places ov P.E. I. Railway east of Charlottetowr can leave home 24 hours later than if joining Plant Steamere in Charle"etowi and connect with same steamer ix Halifax. Through tickets to be bad at Granc Trunk, Canadian Pacific, Intercolonia: and P. KE. I. Rai)ways, on the Companys Sieamers and connecting lines in United Statee and Canada. Steamers are run on Eastern Standard, T:me. Sunday g F. W. HALES, Secretary. Charlottetown, ?. E. I, hite’s Caramels and Jnowflake Chocolates <»- Can be had at any following firs: class Tt. J. Morris DB. L. Hooper W. Pickard & Co. W. A. Hutcheson W. F. Carter Stewart & Gates Sanderson & Ce J.D. McLeod & ER. H, Wason, ——__—— cre E"lour. Some brands of Flour have advanced in prize at tle Mills as much as 90 cents per bbl. within the past toor tree weeks, and some miller+ think that they have not torched the top notch yet. Ya ware fortunate in securing severa huu- dred bbls: early, and wi. are now offering them for sale awe very reasonable figure for spit» sh. If you want to buy Flour “it will pay you to write or cal and get our prices befure buy- ing elsewhere. Every bil. guaranteed first-class or money refunded, Beer & Goff. Don't Negect Your Watch [f you allow your watch to run too ig without cleaning, or with damag- . parts it may be wornso badly as te jistroy its usefulness asa timepiece; setter have it examined ty your Watch Doctor and if in need of re- airs he will advise you accordingly and perhaps save your watch. WE BOAST on our repur depart- ment turning out first-class work only. WE GUARANTEE ALL OUS WORK; if you have not given us atria! it will pay you to do so and we wii be pleased te see you at Great George Sraeet. W N TANTON veweler S1GN or rue Bia Wartcs. Se oil ie I om a ee i PR a “aA ge agg! Pay RR A a: ee en ce ay te PA tony eer te i a 2