HILDREN Arethey troubled with head- aches? Are the lessons hard for them to learn? Are they ale, listless and indifferent? bo they get thin and al} run down toward spring ? If SO, §colls Emulsion. will do grand things ! rs them. It keeps up the vital- ity, enriches the blood, strengthens mind and body. The buoyancy and activity of youth return. coc. and $1.00, al] druggists, SCOTT & BOW NE, Chemists, Torenta, [——————— FLOUR When yjo want a barrel of choice flour, givefus_a call; we sell all the leading brands every and guarantee barrel we sell. When'in need of one eall on us and let’s quote you prices, SANDERSON & CO Victoria Row Grocers. Plant Line BOS iui TO BOSTON lmmencing June 29:h, 1900 | S.S. Halifax Wil! leave Charloitetown at NOON FRIDAY, avd §.5. LA GRANDE DUCHESSE Evry WEDNESDAY at 9 a. m. for Boeton via Hawkeebery and Halifax. Passengers jeaviog Charlotiefuwn via Pictou, make close connection a' Halifax ftom Boston Tuesdays and Saturdays. TheS. S. Halifax takes F tight and assengers for Hawkesberv and Halifax. Tickets for sale ut Station rie’ ae Ee Railway. For tickets, rates and al! ioformation apply 10 oo W. W. CLARKE, Agent Charlottetown : CHIPMAN. Manager Apl 24tf. Most cereals require a doutle boiler, one at least 20 minutes cooking, while talston Breakfast Food is prepared with ease and Minutes. The vigor and strength imparting prop- Whe of Ralston come from Gi terean at, the whole berry of which is milled Mo Ralston Breakfast Food. . There's not another dish so delicious of breakfast that contains as muct-nutrition 4s Ralston Breakfast Food. FOR SALE BY JENKINS & SON The Cerner Greett Ager ts. McLeod, Morson & McQuarrie battisters,*Solicitors,2&c. Ure ics dispatch in a single boiler in five on Side QueenfSquare. ARLOTTETOWN,2P K I. WAN’ NG@OTIATZD ie) a eee £ COST is bee | i lived till | LCPLPLHP HOO] OOP HD BODO D South Africa 3 + ROH E: and the East. = i= + PODPPPOODHP OPO] 89D — et es | TRISH ARE A FIGHTING RACE. FAMOUS FROM WELLINGTON TO ROB- ERTS-—-HARDLY AN ARMY WITH- OUT AN IRISHMAN, ee ee ene The London Monitor and New Era had some time ago the following arti- cle, apropos of the number of Irish soldiers who fought in the British army during the Boer war: “The Irish in the Btitish army-—from Wellington to Roberts—are famous where English is spoken. The story of the gallant Irishmen who have won distinction in other armes is less wide- ly known. Yet there is hardly an army in the world that has not had an [rish general. ‘‘ France had an Isish brigade com- posed of the exiled soldiers of James [I. The ancestors of Viscount Dillon formed a regiment which was com- manded by a Dillon. Colonel James Dillon fell at its head at Fontenoy, Colonel Arthur Dillon was guillotined in the Terror of 1792; and the regi- ment was disbanded. ‘Another branch of the Irish Dil- lons produced Count Francis Dil'on, who was major-general in Napoleon’s army. Count Edward Dillon was se- verely wounded at the head of his men at Solferino in 1859. ‘In Austria, the Taaffes of Counfy Sligo was first represented by Major- General Lucas Taaffe, who defended Ross against Cromwell in 1649, and then became a general in the Austrian army. ‘His cael ae : sO:aiers descendant, Count Nicholas | Taafte, was a famous general, who de- feated the Turks at Belgrade. The tresent Viscount Taaffe, in the Irish peerage is now acolonel inthe Aus- trian army. ‘Field Marshal Count Nugent came of an Irish family, which had many representatives in the Austrian army. | He left Ire’and with the English king’s | permission, joined the Austrian army, fought at Marengo against Napoleon, and in 1809 was a major-general. In 1813 he made a daring march through Croatia, then occupied by the French, and cleared them out, afterwards fight- ing the bloody actions of Keggio and Parma. He was captain-general of the Neapolitan army, and then he returned to the Austrian army, where he was field-marshal. He saw further fighting in Italy and Hungary and 1862. His son, Count Al- bert Nugent, a colonel in the Austrian army, fought gallantly as a volunteer at the seige of Acre in 1841. ‘Edward Dalton, of Grenanstown, } County Tipperary, was another Irish- ! man who enlisted inthe Austrian army, where he became Count D’Alton and a lieutenant-general. He was killed at the seige of Dunkirk. “In Spain the ex-premier, Charles O’ Donnell, duke of Tetuan, is descend- ed from ‘Red Hugh’ O’Donnell, an Irish soldier who was exiled in the reign of Elizabeth. ‘In the Russian army today is an- other Irish general who has Russian- ized his name of O’Bryanto O’Brut scheff, ‘Inthe United States army there | are many Irish officers, notably Gen- eral Coppinger, who once served in Papal Zouaves. In the Civil War, the Brigade was commanded by Gen- eral Thomas Francis Meagher, who in Dublin in the ‘Young Ireland’ period had been called ‘Meagher of the Sword.’ “His men fought with dauntless courage, and at Fredericks- burg, in December, 1862, the Times correspondent spoke ofthe hillsides for miles around covered with Irish corpses ‘as thick as autumnal Jeaves’ At one period there were 200,000 Irishmen in the federal army. ‘‘On the Confederate side there were fewer, but General Patrick Cle- burne led an Irish brigade for the Southerners. tne Fapvai « ‘Even the Papal States had its Irish brigade, 2,000 Irishmen in 1860 landing under Major Myles O'Reilly. { was cured of a fevere cold by MIN ARDS LINIMENT. Oxford, N.S. R. F. HEWSON. I was cured of a terrible eprain by MINARD’S LINIMENT. imBrown’s Blo k; Souch MINARD’S LINIMENT. FRED COULSON, Y. A. A. C. j wae cured of black Eryeipelas by eet J. W. RUGGLES. | Yarmouth, N.S. Inglesville. THE DAILY EXAMINER CHARLOTTETOWN JULY, 26 They fought well against overwhelming odds in Spoleto and Ancona. “One of the most remarkable Irish- men of this stamp was General George Thomas, a six-foot Tipperary man, who went out to Hindostan poor, and became general of the army of Begum Somru. Finally he became a king, holding a district of 3,000 square miles, issuing his own coinage, casting his own cannon and making his own powder. Heraised and drilled a na- tive army of 5,000 men, with which he made some famous marches. and gain- ed many victories. His personal courage and energy won him the na- tive name of ‘Jowruj-Jung’ or ‘George the Conqueror.’ Drink and the intri- gues of the French hastened General Thomas’ downfall, and he died at Ber- hampore in 1802.” PEKIN. For nine centuries, says The Lon- don Daily Express, Pekin has been an Imperial city. In 986, under the title of Nanking, or “Sonthern Capital,” it was made the headquarters of the invading Khitan ‘Tartars. A century later it was recaptured by the Chinese, who reduced it to an or- dinary provincial city amd rechristened it Yenshanfu. In 1151 Tartar hordes of the Kin tribe took possession ofthe city, ele- vated it once more tothe rank of a metropolis, built a royal residence with- in it and called it Chungtu, or “Central Capital.” Seventy years afterwards the Kin Tartars were driven out by Jenghiz Khan, who followed the example of the Chinese in 1080 and reduced it to a mere town. Following Jenghiz, in 1280 came the great Kubia Khan, who rebuilt the city, called it Yenking, or ‘‘Grcat Cap- ital,” and held his court there in great mag nificence It remained an Imperial city under this title and under the Chinese names of Tatu and Khanbalk until 1368, when a Chinese succeeded the Tartar dynasiy, and the modern city of Nan- kin, on the Yangtsekiang, became the capital. In 1403, howewer, Yung Lo trans- ferred his court to the old City of the Khans, and rechristened it Pekin, or “Northern Capital,” and the capital of China it has remained ever since. The modern city consists of the “Nul Ch’ing,” ur outer city, of which the former is more generally known as the Tartar City. The city walls are thirty miles in circumference, vary from 30 to 50 feet in height and from 15 to 40 feet in breadth at the top, and enclose an area o square miles. a = ra ; The Imperial City or “Hwang Ch’ing ’ is enclosed within the walls of the Tartar City, and within this again is the “Tszekinch’ing’—the Purple Forbidden City, in which stands the Imperial palace. Entrance to Pekin is gained by means of sixteen gates, each of which is surmounted by a galleried tower, so constructed as to enable the city guards within it to direct their fire up- on any point. — Some verses called “The Jewish Sol- dier,” by Miss Alice Lucas, are being prvately circulated among the Jewish |} Save Your MONEY. To save your money, by getting more for it ask your dealer in medicine to show you the new §0 cent size bottle of JonNSON’s ANO DYNE LINIMENT. It contains over tkree times as much as the old 25 cent style. which is a great saving to those who use th's valu- able tamily medicine. The superior quality of this old Anodyne has never been equaied. ON'S cys ous LNIMENT Fifty years ago this month, Dr. Johnson left i zith me some Johnson’s Anodyne Liiiment. I remember him Jistinetly. and could teil yer just how he was dressed on that day. Ihave !} seld Johnson’s Liniment ever sirce. Can tri ’ evvy it has maintained its high standard fr thattimeé to this. No medicine today possessee thie contidence of the public to a greater extent JOHN B. RAND, North Waterford, Me.,Jun., 160 L As a family remedy it has been used and ix- dorsed for nearly a century. Every Mo'h<? should have it in the house for many com:uox ailments, Internal as much as Externa! Our book on INFLAMMATION free. Price ®5 and 50c. £ §.Joknsov & Co., Boston kiass PHYSICIAN & SURGEON (Graduate. McGill University ) Office and Residerce— Dorchee:er Stree Office Hours—® to 10, a. m., ito 2 and 7 to 8, p. m. Prom pt athentiGn tc cerriry - TO BE LET. Immediate possession of that Build~ ing adjoining the Masonic Temple. Suit- able for offices ete. Apply to Mrs. D. McKinnon, McGilljAvenue, Ch’Town. tledy. lwk. | between them a .« bis ——— community inLondon. They ecpress in language of dignity and feeling the loyalty of English Jews and their wish to share to the full in the pains as_ well as the advantages of British national- ity. These two stanzas will show the tone of the poem: “Thou has given us home and free- dom, Mother England, Thou hast let us live again Free and feariess ‘midst thy free and fearless children, Sharing with them, as one people, grief and gladness, Joy and pain. “Now we Jews, we English Jews, O Mother England, - Ask another boon of thee! Let us sh¢re with them the danger and the glory, Where thy best and there let us follow O’er the sea.” bravest lead CHINESE PROVERBS. SOME SAYINGS THAT GUIDEA CHINAMAN THROUGH LIFE, A wise man adapts himself to cir- cumstances as water shapes itself into the vessel that contains it. The error of one moment becomes the sorrow of a lifetime. Disease may be cured, destiny. A vacant mind is opento all sug- gestion, as the hollow mountain re- turns all sounds, He who pursues the stag, regards not hares. A wife may not spend her hus- band’s money in thought even, taking the gowns in gratitude, asking no more. If few she shall not deport herself in languid demeanour, but shall walk with energy, as though well pleased. The gem cannot be polished with- out friction, nor a man_ perfected without trials. A wise man forgets old grudges. Riches come better after poverty, than poverty after riches, A bird can roost but branch. Who swallows quick can chew but little (applied to learning). For “enough is as good as a feast,” the Chinese say: “A horse can drink noe more than its fill from the river.” If the root be left the grass will grow again (the reason given for ex- terminating a traitor’s family). The gods cannot help a man wha loses opportunity, but not on one a THING (From the Nineteenth Century Review. We are accustomed to ij of “China” and “the Chinese peopic’ as ifthey were distinct entities. This is an error at the bottom of many of oir mistakes and contusions. We may use the w.rd China as a convenient expres- sion to connote a certain vast porticn of the earth’s surface, but in no more exact sense. What figures as China on the map is anumber of districts often separated from each other and, from the centre by immense dis tances differing widely in climate, resources and configuration, inhabited by people of largely varying race, temperament, habit, religion and language. The Mohammedans, of whom there are 30,000,000, regard the Bud- dhists as irreligious foreigners. ‘‘The inbabitants of the central and _north- ern provinces,” says Mr. Keane, “scarcely regard those of one extreme southeast districts as fellow country- men at all. A native of Shanghai was heard to say, ‘There were seven Chinamen and tw» Cantonese.’ A man from Tien Tsin anda man from Canton can no more talk to each other than can a Frenchman and a Dutchman. Moreover, there exists virulent race hatred. I lost the best Chinese servant I ever had because, being from the north, would induce him to ac. atu in the south cof China, where his speech would have betrayed him. “Cantonese velly bad man, he saidto me; “I go NO SUCH AS CHINA. > aa master.” home.” Thiscurious inter-hatred is conspicu- ous where Chinese from different parts in Bangkok, or on the plantations in Malaya or the Dutch Indies. Savage faction fights are of constant occurence Consequently it is easy toraise a force of Chinese in one place to fight Chinese: in another. It is because there is no such thing as “China” thatthe military caste of the Manchus, comparatively infinite- ‘simal in numbers, have been able to impose their rule upon the enormous masses of Chinese. Thus it is unwise to predict anything of China as a whole, on to believe that what suits one part will necessarily suit another. Over the heterogenous and conflict- ing masses of China there has never been any effective central control, and what control there has been has stead- ily grown weaker. The “Vermilion pencil” makes a faint mark in the south, while in the southwest and ex- treme northwest it has litde but an academic iafluence, and on the Thibetan borders none at all, “Respect this!” appended to every imperial rescript in the Pekin Gazette is as far from actuality as the “Oyez”, of the usher with us, or of the challenge of the Queen’s champion at the coro- nation. There is, therefore, not the slightest pc ss bility of the establishment by Chinese authority of a national army, or navy or civil service. And the corruption, which is the fatal curse of China, is directly due to the fact that thereis not and cannot be any central authority to exercise control over local officials, or, in the absence of this, to pay them. The Chinese people, in the language of physics, is a mechanical mixture, and not a chemical compound, and there- fore itis irresponsive to the action of any single regent, and incapable of ex- hibiting any common property. —_— Mr. Michael Davitt, who since his return from the Transvaal has retail- ed some things decidely unfriendly to the British Tommies, has a story in the Freemans Journal which, seeing its source, is especially interesting. He tells how the Dutch commandant who had charge of all the British prisoners taken after the battles of Glencoe, Dundee, and Nicholson’s Nek, on going hisrourds at midnight on one occasion was astounded to see an English soldier acting as Boer sentinel over the prisoners. He paced up and down the space of his limited vigilance with his Mauser carried in true Eng- lish sentinel style, and on meeting the astonished commandant calmly saluted and reported, ‘‘All right, sir.” In reply to the commandant, Tommy gave the following extraordinary ex- planation: “Well, sir, this ‘ere poor little chap,” pointing to the sleeping form of a Boer lad, 15 years old, “was dead broke for sleep after two nights of dooty. I take pity on the little chap, and I says: look’ere,you’re regular done up, you are, that’s sartin. You give me your rifle and take a bit of sleep, and I’! do sentry-go for you, I will. Honor Bright! I won’t do nothink wrong; blow me if I do! So the little chap went off. I’ts all right, sir; don’t you blame him, please, he is only a_ kid.” I cannot report, says Mr, Davitt, ! what the commandant did on _listen- ing to this account of Tommy Atkins’ humanity, but I was assured that neither “the kid’ nor the kind- hearted English prisoner suffered over the unique incident. Baby’s Own | Soap Is specially recommended by many family paysicians, for nursery use. Beware of imitations, some of which are dangerous and may cause skin troubles. ALBERT TOILET SOAP CO., Mfrs. MONTREAL. eo dics shinesd y BLACK The §. 8, Bonavista sailing from Mon- treal Tuesday morniog July 24th will be due at Charlottetown Friday July 27th and sails for St. John’s, Newfoundland, via North Sydney, carryiog horses, cattle and eheepon deck, and produce under deck, at lowest possible rates. For further particulars aa to freight and passage, apply to PEAKE BRO & CO. ' Connection at Monoron with The Ch’town Steam Navigation Ge. . . Limited. “Northumberland” and “Princess Leave as below every day, Sundape excepted. rom Point Du Cuexg, on arrival of US train from St. John for SuMMERsam, conor cting with express train for Cham lottetown and Tignish. rom SUMMERSIDE on arrival of moruing train from Charlottetown and eff etations of P. E. I. R. for Powe Be CuENE, connecting with afrernoon trae for Sr. Jonny, Boston and Mowtreat. train @ Casada and N.B.,a Sr. Joun with G, P. R.and railway for U.S. and Ces ada, aleo at St. John with Steamere ae Ivternational and Dominion Atlantic &. R Lines, Tuesday and Saturday atten noone for Boston direct, due following day at noov, and on Monday, Wedow- day and Friday mornings with steamenms for iastport, Portland and Boston. From Picrov about half-past three om arrival of day train from Halifax emf Sydney for CHARLOTTETOWN. From CuarLotrerown for Picrov at $28 a.m. connecting there with day tram for Cape Breton and Haiifax at Nome Sypyey with steamer Bruog for Wee foundland. At Hatirax with C.A. and Plant Lie for Boston. Passengers from al! plasm on P. E. I. Railway east of Charlotteteem can leave bome 24 bours later theadt joining Plant Steamers in Charlotietews acd connect with same eteamer ig Halifax. Through tickets to be bad at Gren Trunk, Canadian Pacific, Intercoleniel and P. E. I. Rai)ways, on the Compaurts Steamers and connecting lines in United States and Canada. Steamers are run Oo Eastern Standard, T.me, F. W. HALES, Secretary. Charlottetown, ?. E. I. CANADIAN ~~ rr PACIFIC Short Line to Quebec VIA. MEGANTIC, LF Lv. St, John 5.15 pm, daily, exce pt Sunday Ar. Quebec 9.50 am, daily except Monday Imperial Limited Ocean to;Oecan IN 116 HOURS. Knights of ~ Pythiag Meeting Detroit, Mich., August 27:h to 3Le., One fare for the »ound trip we SUMMER TOURS i900 Send for booklet. as Shell be glad to quote rates for specu tours on application to 4. J, HEATH, | D.T. A., ©, P. B.,'StfJoin JN. By or W. C. KENNEDY, Soiutiting Agent C/P.K. Crarlottetow Flour. Scme brands of Florr have advanced in price at tie Mille as much as 90 cents per bbb within the past tov three weeks, and some mie think | that they huve not to «hed ithe top notch yet. We-were fortunate in securing seve'a hun dred bbls. early, an? wea are now offering them for °2!a art very reasonable figure for spot ash. If you want to buy Flour it will pay you to write or call and get our prices before buy- ing elsewhere. Every bbl. guaranteed first-class or money refunded, Beer & Goff. Don’t Negect Your Watch Lf you allow your watch to run toe 1g without cleaning, or with damag— « parts it may be worn so badly as te jistroy its usefulness as a timepieve; setter have it examined by your Watch Doctor and if in need of re- pairs he will advise you accordingty and perhaps save your watch. WE BOAST on our repair depart ment turning out first-class work only. WE GUARANTEE ALL OUR WORK; if you have not given us a trial it will pay you to do so and we will be pleased to see you at GREAT GEORGE STREBT. W N TANTON vewel@t Agente. Cb’tomn, July 24 bh, 1990. Sian er tHE Bia Wartcu. ‘th Seg Far et ee sae dlls ie id a ae Sada ;