SON GF OORT AOR A ila em wet lat oe ere (ose PHOGCPHPC HOO DOe , THE FAT IN the food supplies warmth and strength; without it the digestion, the muscles, the nerves and the brain are weak, and gencral debility Slows: But fat is hard to di gest and is di liked by y Many. coll Emulsion. supplies the fat in a form pleasant to take and easy to digest. It strengthens the nerves and muscles, invig- Orates mind and body, and builds up the entire system. and $1.0o SCOTT . BOWNE, ‘Ch —~ q Opera House One Night Only SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT OF The Lyceum Co —ON- Monday, June 25th. PRESENTING HAMLET Shakespeare’s masterpiece. Prices—50c, 75c and $1.00. The Fourth of July will be commemorated by the people ef St. Joseph’s Parish, Lot 29, by hold- en that day —Mamouth Tea Party—- to raise funds in aid of their new church, and to assist in replacing the parochial bouse burned down last Autumn. A most a and vigilent com- mittee will make lavish preparations to hospitably cater to every need and pleasure of those who favor them with their presence and patronage on thar day ; while the ladies of Kelly’s Cross wre all given the well merited credit of being mest capable bakers aad love courteous waiters. Every refreshment obtainable, and everything calculated io satisfy and io entertain, vill be provided. Come to Kelly’s Cross, therefore, friends on Wednesday che 4th of July, to the first, and, mest probably, the best Tea of 1900. By order of com. [. A. SMITH. Secy. Com. Plant Line BOSTON TO BOSTON Commencing June 29th, 1900 S.S. Halifax NOON on Will leave Charloitetown at FRIDAY, ard §. S. LA GRANDE DUCHESSE Every WEDNESDAY at 9 a. m. for Bostoa via Hawkesbury and Halifex. Passengers Jeavivg ( harlottefown vis Pictou, make close cuanection at Halifax from Boston Tuesdays aod Saturdays. TheS. S. Halifax takes Freight and Passengers for Hawkesbury and Halifax. Tickets for sale at Stations P. E 1. Railway. For ockets, rates aod all isforma:ion épply 'O W. W. CLARKE, Agent Charlottetown, H, L. CHIPMAN, ‘ Manager. Apl 24tf. ne TO List. ee use and Stables with out five acres cf land. Rent $250 00. i so Parkview Cottage, adj pining above, with about three acres of land. Rent $1 Cv.00. Both pleasantly situated and in good order, City water in both houses. Eons to pay taxes. A) ply to D C. McLEOD, May 17th, 1900 tf. | 1151; THE DAIL’ EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN JUNE 22 ee <> South Africa and the East- POPP SOPOD OOO pn poo> AK v¥ pee: A < SIM OE bot / PEKIN. The history of Pekin is to be read in the walls which surround it in ruin or preservation, and if one traces them within and without the city they will’ show where lay the famous ‘Manking’ of the Khitan Tartars in 986; how the famous ‘Golden Horde’ of Kin Tartars laid out their capital of Chung Tu in what Ghengiz Khan and his Mongols thought a great city should be in 1215; how the immortal Kubla Khan constructed Khanbalik, ‘the city of the Khan,’ a century later—Polo calls it Cambaluc; and much more in- teresting history down to the advent of the present Manchus in1644. And it is the walls, in excellent preservation, that mark the division of the Pekin of today—first the so-called ‘Chinese,’ or Outer City, more properly the South- ern City; adjoining it isthe Inner oc ‘Tartar City,’ or Manchu _properiy- Northern; inside this the ‘Imper «| City’ and inside this again the ‘For- bidden City,’ the actual imperial resi- dence itself. The ethnological distinc tions of Chinese and Tartar are practi- cally effaced; the only distinction for the flying visitor is that the shops are in the Chinese City, while most of the temples, public buildings, and ‘sights,’ together with all the foreign residences, are in the Tartar City, andthat the wall of the latter is much the larger and more massive structure. The ground plan of Pekin is supposed to represent a human body, but it is bet- ter described as being chess-board plan west of Chicago. There are two great streets which in- tersect at a central point, and from all parts of these other streets, lanes and alleys run in straight .iaes. Every cor- ner in Pekin cecims to be a right angle; there are no winding thoroughfarzs. The heuses are all very low, with fla roofs, and itis hardto see a single first-class Chinese dwelling-house in the whole city. But it is the streets of Pekin that strike the observer first, and fade last from his _ recellection. Whether wide or narrow, dark alley or main artery, they are entirely unpaved —the native alluvial soil and the na- live sewage from every Pekinese pathway. From this state of things spring several curious consequences. The roads are so uneven, the holes in theta so numerous and deep, the ridges so high and_ steep, that no vehicle with springs can navigaie half a mile. The only conveyance, there- fore, is the famous springless Pekin cart, drawn bya mule. Aftera good shower of rain in Pekin, one caunot set foot out of doors; the mud is three feet deep, and the centre of the street sometimes a coup'e of feet high er than the sides. But on the other hand, if no rain comes, there is the dust, and a Pekin dust storm once e:- countered isa dieadful memory for- ever. After a drought the -dust is ankle-deep, every night at s inset it i- watered with the liquid sewage of thx city, and so ithas come to be com posed of dried, pulverized earth anc dried pulverized fifth in about equa! proportions. And when the sturm comes one is blinded and choked by it; it penetrates one’s clothing to the skin; windows and doors and curitair and covers do not stop it for an instant: people say it even finds ils way ini the air-tight boxes. So whether the barometer ind!cates ‘rain’ or ‘fair’ one is equally badly off. of American cities often “LEAGUE OF UNITED PATRIOTS.” Additional facts about the Chinese Boxers have ;been given by a_ corres pondent of the London ‘Times, who says : 1. Name.—The proper name of the society is I-ho-ch’uan, which may be translated “League of United Patriots.” What is the origin of its popular designation, Boxers, is uncer- tain. This name may have been giv- en them for the prominence its mem- bers appear to attach to gymnastics in Dear Sirs,— Within the past year 1 koow of three fatty tumors on the head having been removed by the application of MIN- ARD’S LINIMENT without any eurgical operation and there is no indication of a returo. CAPT. W. A. PITT. Clifton,; N. B. Gondola Ferry. laid out on th2! their training, or by a pun on.the last character in their Chinese name, ch’uan also meaning “fists”—the char- acters are different, but the pronun- ciation the same 2. Origin.—The seizure of Kiao- Chau by Germany, as one of the measures of punishment for the mur- der of two Catholic missionaries in Shan-tung, and the consequent acquisi- tion (practically seizure) of Port Arthur and Ta-lien Bay by Russia, of Wei- Hai-Wei by England, and of Kwang- Chau by France, gave rise to a general belief among ihe Chinese that the source of international complications lies in missionary propaganda, and that if missionaries and converts could be once got rid of things would run smoothly. This idea was availed of by Yu Man-tsi as the basis of his cam- paign of destruction in Szu-Chuan, and to a certain extent by the “Large Knife Society” in their uprising on the boarders of Shang-tung, Anhwei and Kiang-su, although in the latter case dearth of food was also a large contri- buting (probably the main) factor. It is the same idea which has led to the present outbrezk of the I-ho ch’uan in Shan-tung, the province in which Kiao- Chau and Wei-Hai-Wei are situated and in which the railway development being pushed on from the former place has encountered se much oppo- sition. 3. Objects.—It is not unnatural therefore that, as the Ckina press re poiis the case, the society’s flag should bear the device, “Uphold the dynasty. Drive out foreigners.” It is also per- haps not unnatural—however mad the policy indicated by such a device may | appear to us westerners—that at a tin’: when great and widespread dissatisfac- tion was being openly expressed with the empress dowager’s policy, not only rrr POA »~ I will guarantee «y that my Kidney Cure will cure 90 per cent. of all forms of kidney complaint end in ‘many instances the most serious forms of plicated send a four- ounce vial of urine. We will analyze tt and advise pou free what te do. at . Herbert —My pa ia ric h r’o your ps. Freddie—No, he ein” Herbert - My pa Ov. =~ ‘'h-ee houses in this block. Freddie—U m—but my ps ows the | mortgage on ’em. Ninard’s Liniment Lumberman’s Frierd. DR. A. W. GHASE'S ©: GATARRH CURE... &0/C- is sent direct to the Giscased parts by the Improved Blower. Heals the ulcers, clears the sir Passages, stops droppings in the roat and permanantly cures Catarrh and Hay Fever. Blower free. All dealers, or Dr. A. W. Chase Medicine Co., Toronto and Buffalo. an. The infant of the househo!d was in its credle. The head of the house was at home, peevish and ‘ault-findin 1g. Al lens ih be became unedurable. “You’ve done nothing but made m's takes tonight,” he growled. “Yes,” she answered, meekly, “I began by putting the wrong baby to bed ” When It Hurts to 'Cough. The cough that hurts. the congh that gets throughout China but by Chinese domiciled abroad, a society which openly avowed the maintainence of the dynasiy as one of its main objects should be viewed with favor by the reactionaries ‘n Pekin. Yu-Hsien, the late governor, not only took no action to suppress the society at its in- stitution, but by his behavior aided , development, and little seems to have been done by the newly appointed governor, Yuan Shih Kai, and the foreign drilled troops he took with him to curb its action. Recent tele- grams have told of the advance of these men on Pekin and of the destruction caused by them. In the Pechili camps there is a number of troops more than ample to suppress the movement, if they can be relied on to obey orders todo so. But can they? In popular outbreaks in China as the number of adherents increases the original object of the movement 1s very a; t to be lost sight of; but ifthe I-ho-ch’uan acts up to its motto it is proab e that sympathy with its object will prove sironger than discipline among the Manchu troops. And for the } ast two years Gen. T’ung- Fu-hsiang, who is high in favour in Pekin, and his truculent Kansuh troops, who were guilty of the attack on the engineers of the Pekin railroad eme two years ago, had openly vowed that the policy advocated by the -ociety’s flag is that which they desire ocarry out. Here lies the danger. No doudt the advance on Pekin will be scotched. Burt, un'ess the move ment and its sop, orters be stamped ou’, these clemeits of disorder and of danger wi/i remain seattered broadcast over the country, and the evil day will he oriy pos! pone d. VERY , OTHER Hé.veitin theHouse For common silrieuts which may occur in every family. She can trust what time indorses. For Internal as much as External use. Dropped om sugar it is pleasant to take = = ee cea SON'S , z out LNOWENT! shesouee cally ot: rane fitdie three feat old dae : miter for — —— powel joumi oo ais Relieves Every For » of Inflammation. Originated in r810 by an old Famil vp d Physician. No re nedy has the ence of the public io a greater —- book on INFLAB MATION free. Sona eee I. 8. Johns a Boston, Mase Parsons’ Pills a Lives Pill meee Positively cure B Headache, al Liver and Bowel — ae expelim urities from the bl licate women find s if from using them, ca 25c. US YON aS \ & CO, Bosten, Mam, a iaw Society. es The Tre annna! aw Seciely of Prince E'ward I-lard wi!) be bed in the law Library, in the Law Courts Bai'd« ing, on Monday, the 25th duy cf Jene inet.,ateleven oc'ock, a, m.. fr the election of officere and the trans: ction of | other business. Be order, F. L. BHASZARD,. Secrcta-7. ‘ y mieft ng of tre , directiy for the lungs, to become pneumonia, tight in the chest, is daily getting deeper and deeper into the bionch: al tubes and is making inflammation of the lungs cr consumption. Such coughs yield only tu the wonderful effi- ciency of Wr, Chase’s Syrupo! Linseed and Turpentine which lecsens the tightness and cures convh and cold together. 25 cents a bottle, kemily size 60 cents, sold every- where. “ How still storm,” “Yes: nearly all the women are afraid of ligbtning.” ~—-- To Cure a Cold in One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All }UggINS Feijund the Monty it fails to cure } Ec, kh. W. Grove’s signalure is on each box it always is before a Minard’s Liniment is u is used by Physiciazs meee cae p eee ‘“‘What is Bobby crying about ?” ‘Our new neignbors are baking ginger bread, and we’re Bot acquainted with them yet. ” What Is Dr. Chase's” Nerve Food? In appearance Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food is an oval; choclate coated pill. Inthe condensed orm it contains all of natures most strentasn- in: andinvigorating tonic and restoratives and for this reason itis unapproached as a blocd builder and nerve restorative. It cures all diseases caused by thin blvod and exhaust- ed nerves and mekes pale, weak nervous Men, : *omen and chilpren strong and healthy’ 5) cents a box. in the city < eee womens |G OI S GEEZ EZ STRAW HATS We’re rushing them out by hundreds; you see them on the best dressed men and boys add 5U per cent. to your comfort. Don’t leave it any longer. You want one right away. It won’t cost you much, You’|! be glad you bought it In the spring a young man’s fancy turus towards a “New Suit of Clothes” If you would be with the crowd — just visit cur Clothing Department of a Saturday night and see the immense trade done in this line. The Goons are alright because we buy only best makes, widely known and highly recommended. The Price is alright because we make it so. The fit is faultless because we keep a full range of sizes and because the head of this department has had 15 years experience in the Clothing Business ‘All customers are fully convinced when makiog a purchase that the “Tailors Efforts are Surj arsed and his Prices cut in Two.” Men's Suits Men’s Tweed Suitsin Plaids and mix- tures, good nobby _manke, $4.00 to &.00. Men’s Tweed Suits in Browns and Greys, made by Saxes $3.99 to 7.50 Bargainsat much higher figures. Blue Serge Suits, just the thing for sum mer wear, light and durable $4.50 to 10.00. Separate cvat, vest or pants in either Tweeds or Serges. Boy’s Suits Boys 2 Piece Sailor Suits made of Blue Serge, and ruitable for summer wear $1.25 Boy’s 3 Piece Suits, mixed or plain $2.25 to 6.00. Special line 2 Piece Brany Suits Arey, Scarlet or Blue trimming, very nobby $2.50 A fu'l range of cloths in Serge, Tweed or Worsted _ Pantings in a number of different pat- terns. All of which canno* be duplicated outside Matthew & McLean’s at prices above quoted. Customers who appreciate ou desire to please come back to us because our clotting gives rat- isfaction and is the best obtainable for the money. ro Wy Eo) IWIATTHEW & MILEAN. SOURIS, P. E. I. STRAW HATS The verdict is this—‘For the nobbiest straws in the city, go to Ramsey’e,”’ Don’t you think you are wise 10 carry around that warm felt that on the hotdaye when youcan get one of our specialty nice straws that will make you look better and will STRAW HATS R. H Ramsay & Co. STRAW HATS - - Seem RIE et inc GAIT i Aa RE RTE REN RT, MET OR POLL EEN, MEE A NAS LENS ST A LING FIORE OE TI Ne Yo