i ganna P pigTURESQUE iggg Edward Island & ase at all Bookstores. book on P. B. souvenir Hgstrated : Sie WS RICE IR IR IR BSA wi L geet arse te A] qocaL TIME.) —— SF REAPS. SHES SF 7 pan an Departure of Trains 5 qud Steamers. : — , “ TRAINS heooe ,835 am. m pg orn the west 950 p m. pe te tom, yeasiion Eanes oe 600 pm. sovstoe? seaereter® . ee ; ow a from the i er all 55 a m. “ion arrives from the [Ne errr gaeeee 220 pT. ~ tw e me Gelhesosente aredceoeooe™ 7 05 ahem jeaves for the east...... fe are from the east.. 9 10 a m. ‘on leaves for the a e. 3 00 pm. sgnodation arrives from the pe mg ° ooo 6 06e0eeee® 4 50 Pp ID. STEAMERS PRINCESS. caemaenhe (ye ee) jrves from Pictou wear bie. B larts 1g Bhicccceceoverecccs LA GRANDE DUC HESSE. jrives from Boston apd Halifax wety Monday....-.--+-. ... 2pm. laves for Boston and Halifax eery Wednesday ..... 10a m. | HALIFAX. | ) ff Arcives trom Boston and Halifax z Thursday «+++. eMececcsee 82« PM ) | Lave for Halifax and Boston gary Friday .... cccccsscees.. Lpm. CAMPANA. Ayrives from Montreal and Que- bee every alternate Friday... . Laves for Quebec and Montreal | the following Monday evening. CITY OF GHENT. drives from UHolifax every Thursday aftern000 sesso .. aves for Halifax every Friday 10a m. JACQUES CARTIER. leaves for Orwell Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thuredays........ 3p m Waves for Crspaud every Fri- ce Miwestectoossccocce Bp tas leaves for Crapaud every Satur- _ er Fe FERRY BOATS. “Billstorough” Leaves Ferry Wharf for Southport every half hour. "Diin’~Leaves for Rocky Point daily at bi, 8,9, LlLam; 1, 2,4, 6.30, pm, weal time, Sundays at9a m, 12.45, +34pm. Returning 1.15, 2.30, 3.15 aod 5 pm. “Suihport”—Runs up East River every Tuesday, leaving at 5.30 « m, and 3 - local. Runs up West River every tor leaving at 5.30 am, and 4pm ; HOTEL ACCOMMODATION. Je the benefit of tourists and others ¥e pablish the following list of hotels and ~ing houses in Charlottetown and Wewhere : — Charlotte w a—Hotel Davies, Queer ten Revere Hotel, Eureka House “ Houee, Railway Houze, Lepag¢ »+<ncan House, Finlay House, yen House, need Ciifton House, Russ Mei, Campbell Hotel, Perry House. Batis Sea View Hotel, Ocean Trtcadie— Acadia Hotel. USti0— eg Side Hotel. : ‘achope—Ciiff House, Mutch House. Dy tev Point—Shaw House, iberto {Seaforth House, Albion gltlPey—Hodgson Honse, North - House, — Florida Hotel, Dominion Vernon River Bridge wtown—Aitkes He House. House, Tapper tive Traverse—-Lausdowne Hotel. Bish—~ Mok Hote), itway ee House, Bellevue el “ Hote Clarke's Hotel, Commer= ODtagua Moan Macdonald House. Wet Hose "At —Clarke’s Hotel; Mane ui Port Bin Pleasant View House. dose ott Bill Donate ih there are a good many private Sellen, MATRON AND MAID. Mrs. Astor has a table service of solid gold and a table cover of old honiton. Isabelle, the flower girl of the Jockey club, a Parisian notoriety of the second mpire, died recently in a Paris hospital a great destitution. Miss Helen Gould has been made an onorary member of this year’s senior lass at Wellesley and has accepted an ivitation to be the guest of the class at s commencement exercises, Mrs. George M. Pullman of Chicago as bought the most beautiful ring in ‘aris—a ruby, whose rich red luster has een much coveted. She paid $7,000 for t, and it is for her daughter. The first lady to run an automobile in Stockholm is Mrs. Edward D. Winslow, vyho is the wife of the United States con- sul general. nake and is propelled by electricity. Mme. Ristori retains all her faculties and was vigorous enough to make a speech at the recent dramatic congress in Rome. She goes to all the “first nights.” Ristori is now 79 years old. Minnie Hauk is still singing. During her recent pleasure tour through the East Indian tropics she gave a few concerts in Batavia, Soerabaja, Singapore, etc. The prima donna, we are informed, was most euthusiastically received by English and Dutch alike and won flattering tri- umphs by her singing. Mrs. Leland Stanford on the anniver- sary of her son’s birth delivered over to Bishop Grace the deed of the old Stan- ford mansion, which is henceforth to be known as the Stanford-Lathrop Chil- dren’s home. At the same time the transfer of $75,000 was made, which is to serve as an endowment fund for the home. Countess Gabrielle von Wartensleben is the first woman to obtain the degree ef doctor of philosophy from the Univer- sity of Vienna. She is 30 years of age and the divorced wife of Count Konrad yon Wartensleben, by whom she had a son, now 9 years of age. She was a Bar- oness von Andrian-Kerburg before mar- riage, and her mother was the daughter of Meyerbeer, the composer. While Mile. de Stael, daughter of the Russian embassador to Great Britain, was being married to Count Alexis Or- loff-Davidoff in London according to the Russian rite, with the Prince of Wales, Lord Rosebery and a church ful] of nota- bles looking on, her bridal veil caught fire from the lighted taper she held in her hand and blazed up. She kept still while the bridegroom put out the fire with his hands and others pulled off the veil, and the ceremony went on. POULTRY POINTERS. Fowls half fed are never in good condi- tion for market. Too much linseed meal given to the hens will make them fat. If chickens are allowed to go on the roosts too young, their breasts often get crooked, and their appearatice is spoiled. Ducks are so much clumsier than chick- ens that they should not be reared in the same apartment. Give them a place to themselves. Grease closes the pores of egeshells which prevents their hatching. For this reason do not grease the sitting hens or the nests they occupy. The water troughs of fountains need thorough cleansing occasionally. The bet- ter plan is to scald them thoroughly with strong soapsuds. A filthy drinking foun- tain will breed disease sooner than any- thing else. In sending poultry te market at this time feed and water them well before putting into the coops. Send the hens in coops separate from the roosters. Have the coops sufficiently high so that the fowls can readily stand up. Be careful not to crowd too many into a coop.—St. Louis Republic. IMPERTINENT PERSONALS. Mr. Gates of the Steel and Wire com- pany is not afraid of earthquakes. It is said that he can stand quite a jar.—St. Louis Globe-Democrat. When Kitchener was last heard from, he was trying to think of some way in which he could get his name past the cen- sor again.—Denver Post. A lady up in Vermont wants to be nom- inated for vice president on the same ticket as Admiral Dewey. But Mrs. Dewey has her eye on that position.— Mexican Herald. Julian Ralph threatens to return and lecture against Webster Davis, and the worst is yet to come. Richard Harding Davis hnen't deelared what he will lee. _——_——— uMbago is Rheumatism of the back. The cause is Urie Acid in the biood. If the kid- neys did their work there would be no Uric Acid and no Lumbago. Make the kidneys do thelr work. The sure, positive and only cure for Lumbago is Dodd’s Kidney | Pills Her machine is of American : THE DAILY EXa.v.iNER, CHARLUTTETON AUGUST 8, 1900 again.—St. Paul Dispatch. If the persons to whom is intrusted the selection of a profile to adorn the new half cent coins have an eye to harmony and the eternal fitness of things, they will give Uncle Russell Sage’s face theis careful consideration. PAINTERS AND WRITERS. Olive Schreiner has a book on the South African situation nearly ready for publication. Ernest Seton-Thompson, the artist- writer, has been elected an honcrary —— of the Rowfant club of Cleve and. Biiss Carman, the poet, is making a study of old French Capadian folk songs and stories for translafion into English verse. Stephen Phillips, the English poet, has completed the first rough sketch of the metrical play he is writing for Richard Mansfield, but to all inquiries maintains a rigid silence as to its theme. Edwin A. Abbey's contribution to this year’s Royal academy exhibition will be a large painting of Catherine of Aragon and Henry VIII before the court assem- bled to decide as to the validity of the royal marriage. HOUSEHOLD HINTS. A piece of heavy unbleached muslin neatly hemmed should be placed over the flour barrei under the lid to keep out in- sects and dust. A few grains of alum in tepid water will relieve those whose hands perspire very much.’ Wash the hands in tepid water and then place in the alum solution for a few minutes. In selecting a chair for the hall avoid upholstery or any gilt trimmings. A lit- tle flat leather trimming is permissible if the style of the chair demands it, but preferable even to this is the chair or bench all of wood in a simple, severe style. CHURCHGOING IN OLDEN TIMES. — Attendants at Service Used to Havea Very Sociable Season. Sir Walter Besant has written whim- sically, giving a glimpse of churchgoing a couple of hundred years ago. He says: “Did you ever go to a church in 1703? I have just come from a service at St. Stephen’s, Walbrook, a Sunday morning service in that year. The congregation began to arrive a quarter of an hour or so before the service commenced. The la- dies were dressed finely. A footman ora page or an apprentice walked behind them carrying their prayer books. Efe preceded them up the aisle, opened the door of their pew and placed the books on the desk before the seats. This done, he retired to a place under the gallery where the domestics sat. “The women ip the pew stood up and exchanged smiles of greeting with their acquaintances; with those in the pews be- fore and behind them conversed openly; the church was filled with the buzz of conversation. When the service began, a great many, to show their devoutness, repeated everything out aloud, even the absolution and the verses assigned to the clergymen. They even read out loud the lessons of the day and the gospel and epistle. Some of the people continued to talk to each other from one pew to the other. A psalm, not a hymn, was sung, and only one. “During the singing most of the people sat down. After the service was over the churchgoers renewed their civilities to- ward each other and their conversation on things of the most worldly kind. My companion lamented the il] timed talk of the people and the foolish habit of re- peating the whole service out loud; as for sitting while the psalm was sung, he said it was to be excused on the ground that the version was miserable. Besides, it was a ‘custom so inveterate’ that there was no hope of getting it altered. “Yet when I went to church with Ho- garth 30 years later the people all stood up for the singing. How and when was the custom changed? How long did the people continue reading the service aloud? And when were the practice of conversa- tion and the exchange of civilities before the service discontinued ?” Gil Bathing. Oil bathing is a regular institution among the Hindoos. An experienced masseur rubs the oil on his patrons, friends or relatives generally once a week. And it is a fact that moles, warts and such faults of the surface of the skin are very rare among them. The newborn infant gets the oil bath daily for 40 days. The intervals are then gradually lengthened, but he will be con- sidered a very naughty boy who during his school days tries to shirk the oil bath at least once a week. As a youngster he yells all the time he is being bathed. Perhaps it is good for his lungs. Any- how nobody thinks of finding fault with the nurse for the hallooing of her charge, and, generally speaking, it may be said that Indians have better lungs and better pectorals as compared to the body weighi than the Europeans, and the feminine bust is decidedly fuller and more perfect. —C. N. Saldanha in Lancet. They All Change. Mrs. Younglove—Oh, dear! Such is life! Before we got married George was tagging around after me all the time. I couldn’t get away from him for a minute. That was three months ago. Her Dearest Friend—Poor child! What has the wretch done? “He said last night that he thought we'd move next month to some place where he can have a den so as to get by himself once in awhile.”—Chicago Times A Big Array. “Jt’ll take 10 cents to carry that, mad- am,” said the postal clerk. “Oh, t Will it?” she exclaimed. “Well, give ten 1 cent stamps, then.” “Why not 10 cent stamp?’ “No,” she said, want to feel that I’m getting mg ; werth.”—Philadelphia Record. ture on wien he takes to shirt walsts THE VERDICT. There will be a big time at the St. Louis exposition of 1903, consisting of a watch 75 feet in diameter.—Los Angeles iLerald. After all it is not surprising that post- age stamps should stick to the fingers in a warm climate like that of Cuba.—Sioux City Journal, Foreign nations are looking with in- creased respect on the American drei- bund—IKing Coal, King Cotton and King Corn.—Philadelphia Ledger. Two American vaudeville companies have sailed for Manila with a few kegs of salted coon songs and picked jokes of the 1899 vintage.—Minneapolis Journal. Witb milk that will kill eats and but- ter that will kill rats the scientific adul- teration of food products has reached a high stage of efficiency. — Minneapolis ‘Times, A Paris physician tried on himself a long aioe he had compounded, with the resul that his life in the other world will be longer than he anticipated.—Bos- ton Globe, If there is one thing worse than the bicycle scorcher, it. is the automobile scorcher. He is just so much more a nui- sance as he is bigger. He needs to learn the same lesson that has been inculcated at much expense wherever the wheel has bred recklessness.—New York Press. The rural postoffice is:threatened. If the rural delivery system proves as suc- cessful as is anticipared, the little corner grocery with its rttle pigeonhole ease in the corner will be a thing of the past. It has been a venerated institution, but the progressive age is disposing of many things our sentiment would spare.— Huntington (Md.) News-Democrat. Weak, Sickly Children Are Restored to Health and Vigour by Using Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food. Many children are pale, weak, and bloodless from their birth. Many others have their blood and nerves exhaust- ed, and their systems broken down by the ravages of disease, or as the ree sult of over-study at school. Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food is the ideal treatment for children. It supplies the very elements which are lacking in the pale, weak, and nervous. It restores the colour and richness to the blood, invigorates the nerves, and builds up the system. As a restorative after the exhausting and debilitating effects of measles, scarlet fevery and such ail- ments, it is of incalculable worth. Mrs, Stephen Dempsey, Albury, P, E. rounty, Ont., writes:—* My little grand.- daughter, nine vears old, was very pale rnd weak, and had no appetite. She had a tired, wornout appearance, and wes delicate and sickly. I got some of Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food for her, and it hag helped her very much. She is gaining considerably in weight and looks real healthy.” Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food, 50¢ a box, at all dealers, or Ecdmanson, Bates and Company, Torento, Something New Something Nice FOR TOURISTS and for our own people. Direct from England comes a shipment of P, E. ISLAND CREST CHINAWARK, made expressly for Haszard & Moore. Everybody should have a piece of this beautiful Island crest goods. All sorts of mzes and pieces, See our show window. Haszard '& Moore er See The One wh Cook 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. Ne Can Help You:There; We have the best of everything in that line, What we want » is-your trade; can we have it! file JOHN McKENNA. ‘i Queen Street, aa OI i ieee: acnenee D. A. BRUCE CUSTOM TAILORING, AND MENS FURNISHINGS. Morris Blosk Dirast South of Past 0 Bs, We Want todo Business With You We want your trade in Clothing and Men’s Furnishings, we are doing our best to advance your patronage. Our store is one of the prettiest and best lighted in Ch-r- lottetown, enabling you to carefully examine the goods ard helping to make buying easy, Make it a point to give our store a trial. 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. = oe =. Men's Underwear. Men’s Fine Cotton Shirts and Drawers usually sold for 20 to 256 per garment, Our reduced price....ss.ssesscees 15€ Men’s Double thread Balbriggan Shirts and Drawers regular BEIOS BOC, CURE BFE: 0a. 00.cdilec00.cic00s cceeilewuh eee B. RARVIOL WEGRccnsnd vacacidiicccscectbbewlesee eben Men’s Natural Cotton Shirts and Drawers, well finished, feet like silk, well worth $2.50. As we have an extra supply of this line we have.reduced the price, the suit......$2.0@ Natural Wool, Medium Weight, although the manufacturers price is advanced, we will sell at old price ..........$2.25 We are sure you For those who cannot wear cotton we have very fine and light weight made from Australian wool, the suit........ $4.00 Men's Colored Shirts. In this line we have the larzest stock of up-to-date pattera found in the city. Stiff bosom, collar and cuffs attached, sizes 14, 143, 15,153 and 16, Redweedfrom 75c'to.'s « ssinecties.cicp boom ouvapp e Dark and mdeium dark stripes and checks, open fronts, regular prices $1.25 and $1.35 reduced to...... ceccscceeeedlsO@ Silk Front Shirts with or without coilars. Straw Hats at less than cost. “TRADE WITH US AND YOU'LL SAVE MONEY,” D. A. Bruce MORRIS BLOCE. The Gem Freezer and the Priscs. 1, Quart $1.25 2 « 1.50 S «- 175 " 4 ~~ 220 Retrigerators at cost. We guarantée our prices the"lowen. ODD & ROGERS —— ——~ -_ a THE SEASIDE f HOTEL =e Opens for the season on }July Ist. yThic Hetel has without joubt the finest location of any Summer Resortem the Island, Fine surf and still water bathing, beeutiful walks and drives through one of the finest sections of our Island, and fishing within a short distance are among the advantages to be had by patronizing the “Seaside.” Also croquet lawn, covered bowling alley, ete., good tables. Terms moderate, Apply to Mra, Newson a the Hotel, Rustico, or to | ve is JORM NEUISON, . - mah Ty ee i ‘ tail hg nore Me te ee ot ae a sion wii stn ta Tan i, je ee ~~ = — ‘ i. © == perraee Fs wey Tae mae 2 om ae ae i WARM. 8