ee ee ee ae eS ee ee eee a ee le ee | |0UelCUre } ’ en AS aw vy, | 1, Sis Fie AV AY % FFICTURESUE ! a a atores. ¢ at all Book Prince Edward Island 25 : : > . se iiuetrated book OD P. BE. o sveating souvenir Island, ** interesting = for tourists. M2 Me ar a ae ae a Ye Me Me SM SY HSS x< Ie AP 78 ———— ~ _-QHABLOTTETOWN ME TABLE (LOCAL TIME.) vy and Departure of Train: and Steamers. ————— TRAINS a leave? for the west..... . 8 35 a m1. ema arrives from the west.. 950 pm. ‘on leaves for’ the _—.... ... 410 pm. tion " jeaves for the — eeeeeete eccereen ee teeeee 6 00 p D ® jogomodation arrives from the oe Fs seeee scciiies AG 56 a mm. ‘ion arrives from the jeronols : seco a 5 p m. r the east...... 7 056 a m. he east.. 9 10 a mi. iri Bp ereeeeeeee + WBE ivvcereeeere* reas leave® fo press arrives from t Agoomodation leaves for the TU re — » Jation arrives from the ee... weoee 4 50 pw STEAMERS PRINCESS. eeeeee +” [aves for Pictou every morning jrrives from Pictou every even ing Biases severe ce ree seeneeees 8 30 p ia. LA GRANDE DUCHESSE. jrrives from Bostoa and Halifax bo cS every Mondav......-.-+--+-- leves for Boston and Halifax every Wednerday HALIFA*.. 10am. Arrives from Boston and Halifax every Thursday .++..++ evecccoee 66 PM Laver for Halifax and Boston gery Friday ...- CAMPANA. lpm. eeeteereeen eee Arrives from Montreal and Que- hec every alternate Friday... . leaves for Quebec sod Montreal the following Monday evening. CITY OF GHENT. Arrives from Halifax every Thareday afternoon ....... os Leaves for Halifax every Friday JACQU ES CARTIER. Leaves for Orwell Tuesdays, Wedneedays, Thursdays........ Leaves for Crapaud every Fri- hie sceccutecenecens. OH Un leaves for Crapaud every Satur- day at.... soosesscasooncsee PEXRY BOATS. “Hillsborough” ~Leaves Ferry Whar Southport every half hour. ‘Rifio”—Leaves for Rocky Point daily at 6.30, 8,9, ll,am; 1, 2,4, 6.30, pm, 10a m. m™m awe "O 2p m. for iocaltime. Sundays at9a m, 12.45, 23,4pm. Returning 1.15, 2.30, 3.15 and 5 p m. “Southport”—Rune up Hast River everv Tuesday, leaving at 5.30 @ m, and 3 pmiocai. Runs up West River every Friday, leaving at 5.30 am, ond 4 pm local, HOTEL ACCOMMODATION For the benefit of tourists and others we publish the following list of hotels and tding houses in Charlottetown and Waere :— Charlo:terow o—Hoatel Davies, ()ueco Hotel, Revere Hotel, Eureka Blouse, Joean House, Railway Houre, Lepage Oute, Duncan House, Finlay Boure. McFadyen House. Smmerside— Clifton House, Russ del, Campbell Hotel, Perry Houre. uris—Sea View Hotel, Joean vase, Tracadie~ Acadia Hotel. Rastico—Seq Side Hotel. Stanhope—Cliff Bouse, Mutch House. Brackley Point—Shaw Houee. Alverton~-Seaforth House, Albion errace . Malpeque—Hodgeon House, North Ore House, Ownal-- Florida Hotel, Dominion One, Vernon River Bridge—Finlay House. torgetown — Aitken Ouse, Acadia House. Rokk ee Lanetowee Hotel. ‘S5leb— McKenna House |, Ra'lway Hotel sian wetington~-Clarke’s Hotel, Commer- a Hotel, Agnes ue—Macdonald House. a House. Hampton —-Pleasant View Houee. ort. Hili—Port Hill House, Besides, there are & mana ivate houses throughout i ort Vokes “sctllent actommodation at ® Tensonable :ja Brooklyn P| ———— Oh ee. ee ee House, Tapper Bellevue Stewart—Clarke’s Hotel; Man- a mn SUR FIRST PHOTOGRAPH. it Was of Charles West, a Brooklyn Man, Still Living, ‘hat the first man who ever sat be fore the camera should live to see pho- tography in color an accomplished fact | Shows very conclusively the rapid de- | velopment of the art. Besides being the subject of the first camera made in America, Dr. Charles E. West, nonagenarian, is alse the possessor of the finest collection of Jap- first Aanese curios in the world. Dr. West red ntly said “It was during the winter of 1839-40. ; just when Laguerre’s great discovery was made public by the French gov- ernment, that Samuel F. B. Morse, of telegraphic fame, whose studio (for he was au artisy as well) was in Washing- ton square, New York, returning from France, brought the news with him which was Gestined to create as great & sebpsation old. ° or Ol ia the new world as in the Morse, John W. Draper, profess- chemistry, and I became greatly interested ia the subject, and George W. Prosech, an instrument maker of Nassau street, made us each a camera, the first three made in America. “Of course the intention was simply to take inanimate objects, as it was argued that animated ones could not remain motionless long enough for the process. Finally, however,« Draper tried his wife’s picture, Morse his danghter,;and Prosch took mine.” Here the doctor showed a handsome, velvet lined wooden case containing a cracked and seamed copper plate, but nothing more. The daguerreotype had Yanislied. Not a trace of a feature could be seen. The sunlight had stolen it away. “You see,” resumed the venerable doctor, “Daguerre, in making his pic- used fodine, while we used lo- dine _and bromide and vaporized them by pouring them on heated plates. The vapor lodging on the plate made ift.very sensitive to light. It required an ex- posure of 20. minutes to get any results, and I sat before the mirror, the reflect- ed sunlight in my face, for that length of time. And naturally when the pic- ture was finished it showed me with eyes. But automatic picture ing of human beings was an ac- mplished fact, and Mrs. Draper was first woman upon whom it was demonstrated and | the first man.”— New York Pheto-Era. tures, closed The Speed of Cable Messages. In operating long cables very deli- cate instruments are required, and the currents arriving at the receiving end are very feeble in comparison with these employed in land line signaling. The longer the cable maturaliy the fee- bler the impulses arriving at the re- ceiving end. A short cable, a cable of under 1,000 miles being generally con- sidered a short cable, gives a speed of signaling amply sufficient for all pur- poses with a conductor weighing about 100 pounds to the mile, surrounded by an insulating envelope of gutta percha weighing about an equal amoupt. When we come to a cable of about twice this length, it is found necessary, in order to get a practically unlimited speed—that is, a speed as high as the most expert operator can read it—to employ a core of 650 pounds of copper to the mile, insulated with 400 pounds of gutta percua to the mile. These are the proportions of copper and gutta percha in the 1894 Anglo-American At- lantic cable, which is considered the record. Atlantic cable, for speed of working and has been worked by auto- matic transmission at the rate of some 45 words a minute.—Scribner’s. An Embassador’s Breeches, Foreign embassadors on court occa- sions wear trousers with a broad gold band runing down one side of the legs — trousers that closely resemble those worn by certain attendants that ean be seen standing outside licensed houses of refreshment. When, how- ever, an embassador appears before the queen, he has to wear knee breech- es. A few nations, for the most part unimportant ones that pride them- selves on being up to date, have re- fused to allow their representatives to low this antiquated custom. [a ease this dis- ease was in- Fills are the first medicine that ever cured Diabetes. cura bleuwntil Dodd’s Kidney. Pills Imitations—-box, name and ill, are advertised to do so, j el Dodd S are the only medicine that id will cure Dia- * cured it. Doctors themselves confess that. without. Dodd’s Kidney Piils they are t the medicine that does eure - ie : oie we x ; ry ie Dodd's Kidney Pile. Dodd's Kidney one betes. Like Dia- o fifty cents a box at all obtained. me Fu ia Sets apon appliontion af Bright’s Dis- erless against betes. Dodd's Kidney druggists. annem THE DAILY EXAMINER CHARL@TTETOWN! JULY, 2; (goo . ee EE, these cases the dipiomatists, seeing that they must wear something differ- ent from their everyday dress, have de- cided to wear lavender colored trousers with broad gold bands running down the seams, If they had only come uD- der the influence of William Morris, they might have chosen the more regal purple as the color of their nether gar- ments.—Chambers’ Journal. Artificial Cork. Phellosene is the name given by a French inventor to a substance he de- artificial cork and which my be used for all purposes for which eork has hitherto been found needful. ’t is an analogue of celluloid, says an English authority, and consists of cork bark ground to an impalpable powder and agglutinated by a solution of nitro- cellulose in acetone. This material is uto a doughy mass, compressed ds and dried. It contains about 10 to 12 per cent of nitrocellulose and is snid to be a trifle, if anything, more combustible than cork under the ordi- nary conditions. Agricultural Experiment Stations. Under the direction of the agricul- tural experiment stations thousands of simple co-operative experiments in which farmers take part are DOW an- nually carried on in different parta of the country. They consist principally in the growing of different kinds of crops, such as wheat, grasses, sugar beets, vegetables and fruits or in the testiag ef different kinds of fertilizers as applied to the soils and crops in dif- ferent localities —Forum. Decoy vogs tn Foxes’ Skins. There are still left in England about 30 “decoy dogs,” whose Intelligence fp their queer trade is something remark- able, It is the decoy dog’s life work to catch ducks. He is usually a red dog and is besides sometimes “dressed up like a fox.” with a fox’s skin on bis back and a fox’s brush,tied to him. Thus fantastically arrayed, or in his scribes as ’ maaue into ! native colors, if he is foxlike enough, the decoy dog jumps about at the mouth of a stream leading to a pond favored by the ducks So far as known. only one decov dog in England now actually wears a fox's skin when on busipess, nnd he is a marvel worth studying. Drawn by curiosity as to Ue antics yf their ancient euemy. the dtuicks tock nearer and nearer, until tie bunter is actually able to cat a net. There are many kinds of | which seem unable to keep uwns a fox when they see one, aud (bese V sometimes “mob” a red dog by wis take. Our Internal Machinery. Dr. Carl Schlatter of Vienna, who not long ago showed that the stomach was a superfluous organ by removing that of a woman, who lived and got along perfectly well without one, has cast further doubts on the use of our internal machinery. He recently re- moved six feet of the small intestine from an Italian who had been stabbed in a brawl. That intestine is believed to play an important part in absorbing food into the system. The Italian, however, gained in weight after the operation and eight months after leav- ing the hospital reported that he had lost a few pounds, could not digest the solid food he had been accustomed to and didn’t feel like working, though he was in pretty good health. The Lancet admits that Dr. Schlatter’s operation shows that a third of the intestine may be dispensed with, but is astonish- ed at the wonderful powers of adapta- tion of the buman body. Nettle Fiber, The British Board of Trade Journal says that in recent years nettle fiber has come greatly into favor in tbe manufacture of fine yarns and tissues. Many factories in Germany uSe these fibers for spinning and other purposes. Nettle fiber produces one of the finest tissues obtainable from any kuown kind of vegetable fiber. In view of the importance which this seems likely to attain in connection with the weaving industries, it is intended to introduce the cultivation of nettles, if possible. into the Cameroons. The idea is to prepare the products of this experi mental culture at the place where they are obtained and test them in German factories. Should favorable results follow from these experiments it is in terprises on an extensive scale. THE INFALLIBLE MAN. Theze was a man who never made A blunder in his life; He loved a girl, but was afraid If she became his wife That he or she might rue the day That brought them bliss, and so He put the happiness away That wedded lovers know. One day the man who never made Mistakes perceived the way That led to fame, but, still afraid, Drew batk and stole away; He shunned the winding paths that led To distant, unseen enus And kept the road that stretched ahearc With neither steeps nor bends. At last the man who never made Mistakes fell by the way In garments that were badly frayed, rR Ana pale and starved he lay; No weeping friend bent o’er him there, Nor servant, child nor wife, Sut victory was his—he ne’er Had bilundered in his life. —S. E. Kiser in Chicago News tended to organize nettle growing en- re JASY LOVE, Baby Love came prancing by, ‘ on head and sword on thigh, fiorse to ride and drum to b All the world beneath his feet. it~ Mother Life was sitting there, Hard at work and full of care, Set of mouth and sad of eye; aby Love came prancing by. Baby Love was very proud, Very lively, very loud; Mother Life arose in wrath, in arm across his path. Baby Love wept loud and long, But his mother’s arm was strong. Mother had to work, she said; Baby Love was put to bed. —‘‘In This Our World,’ Charlotte P. Stetson. ~=@ of the Four Hundred. Harry Lehr, who has achieved a cer- tain amount of distinction in New York society, is worth looking at. When he greets a friend, he allows his hand to drop in a listless fashion a few inches from his body and merely accepts the proffered grasp. His voice and man- ner of speaking betoken intense weari- ness. He is perhaps 3¢ years old. A few nights ago he was promenading the Waldorf corridors in evening dress, with his trousers turned yp well over his ankles. He stopped to speak to a friend in front of two very rich self made men who are not in society. The men watched him with absolute aston- ‘shment depicted on their faces. They had never seen his counterpart.—New York Letter. Eczema on — the Scalp Would itch and Burn until the Child Screamed with Agony—-A Wonderful Cure Effected by Dr. Chase’s Ointment. The case recorded here is one of the worst ever brought to the attention of Toronto’s best physicians, 1nd when doctors gave up all hope of recovery, Dr. Chase’s Ointment was successful in producing a perfect cure. Mr. James Scott, 136 Wright avenue, Toronto, states:—‘‘ My boy, Tom, aged ten, was for nearly three years afflict- ed with a had form of Eczema of the scalp, which was very unsightly and resisted all kinds of remedies and doc- tor’s treatment. His head was in a terrible state. We had to keep him from school, and at times his head would bleed, and the child would scream with agony For two and a half years we battled with it in vain, but at last | found a cure in Dr. Chase’s Ointment. About five boxes were used. The original sores dried up, leaving the skin in ite normal condition. To say it is a pleasure to testify to the wonderful merits of Dr. Chase's Ointment is put- ting it very mildly.” Dr. Chase’s Ointment, at all dealers, er Edmanson, Bates & Co., Toronto, a ee AC ARD R. MACNEILL, M. D., Having 30 years experience in the practice of his profession, may be con- sulted on all branches of general medi- cine including the specialties. Office and Residence—Prince Street ‘hird door above Kindergarten Hall. Hours—g to 13 a. m. 1 tc 3 and 7 to 8 p. m. dy & wkly 3 mos, Zz the One Who Cooks 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 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 ; @ JOHN McKENNA. Queen Street, ‘Merchants Bank of Prince Rdward sland, for. ) ed at best current rates. groceries, canned goods and | es ain Th e Gem Freezer and tue Prices. I Quart $1.25 2 G4 3 6. 4 “6 1.50 1.75 2.20 Retrigerators at cost, We guarantee our%prices}the lowe_v. DODD& ROGERS t— gloves, we can do best. April 2nd 1900, JULY —— Ss Is our great cleaning month our prices i uring this month will be very low. Where Worth and Low Beautiful Enamelid We had a big June trade, we want to make July even better. If you want a good suit of clother at asmufl price see us, we'll do better for you than you caa do elsewhere, In white and colored shirts, underclothing, collars, You should see our job lot of white and colored shirts for 50c, worth from 90c to $1.50. Boots & Shoes at lowest prices. J.B. MACDONALD & and Prices; Meet. a Belt and neck clasps, broaches, cuff links, nat pins, scart pins, coffee and tea spoons. We have them witb British, Canadian, “Scotch, Irish and Frenzh coats of arms. Also flag and maple leaf pins from 10c. and 15c. 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 "Taylor OPTICIAN Try a can, only 10 cents. Oamero. Blocx.” Charlottetow — senna straw Hat Ena IN 15 TINTS, ] SIMON W. CRABB. Apri: llth 1900. Walker's Corre Collections made or the most rea sonable terms and promptly remitted its received and interest allow- Builders,” armers, Mechanics, CITY HAROWARE STORE —-HARDWARE—— Paints, oils, glass,,carpenters tools, all cheap FOR'#CASH. : oe . oo _ The celebrated Norton;Machine Oil.§ j 7 | BB, NORTONS COLIMITED * a po eo se Spo Bio wage ry ee reaeepoarrs ogi ar sen Agric ate ee al acl Ag ae tte Wn es ee ey +