5 — ida} indicates insufficient nourish- —— | ment. Itleadsto nervousness, ets. ss, general debil- J ieeplessness, general < bee wy gad predisposes to ‘Con- a, ity, ng ! 1 748] ymption and other prevail- | @iing diseases. a guard | ai se take a | igainst thes ; Scolls Emulsion. he Standard remedy for jiwasting diseases in young x old. It improves dig es- tion, gives flesh, strength, rigor and resistive power, oc. and $1.00, all druggists, & BOWNE, Chamists, Torents, —— 8 | eC {FLOUR RKELBBEALLELERSRSSASEE it When y’o want a barrel of choice flour, ) giveus a call; we sel) a all the leading brands and guarantee every barrel we sell. When in need of one all and let’s 5 cuote you prices, FT saNenson & oC Victoria Row Grocers. on us i ayer yee a Plant Line {aa 6 OS TON 10 BOSTON “Wanencing June 29th, 1900 Cl ss. Halifax NOON iileave Charloitetown at RUDAY, cd Coal , 13.5. LA GRANDE DUCHESSE i on ery WEDNESDAY at 9 a. m. for bovon via Hawkesbury and Halifax. ,Fameogers leaviog Charlottefown via : rou, make close connection at Halifax a Boston Tuesdays and S sturdave. Thes. $. Halifax takes Freight aod Puengers for Hawkesbery and Ho lifax. icketa for sale at Stations P. E. 1. W. W. CLARKE, Agent Charlottetown Apl 24tf. ee food & wets cS ~ : TIME, TEMPER AND ICES TION Snes eo Most cereals require a double boiler, Hi at least 20 minutes cooking, while siston Breakfast Food is prepared with “ase and dispatch in a single boiler in five Rinutes, The vigor and stren i rOp- : ngth innparting prop 7 Ralston come fron Biuter can in at. the whole berry of whichis milled #0 Ralston Breakfast Food tor here's 2 t another dish so delicious . takfast that contains as muchynutrition Ston Breakf ist Food. FOR SALE BY JENKINS & SON 8 The Cerner Groc?ts- e ESole Agents. a o leLeod, Morson 7 battisters,:Solicitors,2&c. y pe Side Que en' Square. LOANS NGOTIATED mn & McQuarrie ‘BY: 9 Net—Brown’s Block; Souch THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLUOTTETON JULY, in — 25 1900 SC Fee = <_ _ South Africa ¥ and the East. = < - > VHA TTS «< <> <<< <<<! <><? OPO &<D-<D << <7 « —<—>= | LAST DAYS OF KRUGERIA. — ane, Douglas Story, London ‘Daily Mail.’) Pretoria, May 12. They have said, Oh God, that this must be To the we pray olksraad of the Re- to prevent that. The words came in the chaplain’s pening prayer, so that all who. were there knew they were present at a A gravity that was real y agloom settled on the faces of the Raadsleden, and of the women in the | crowd the greater number wept. All knew the inexorableness of the fate that pursued them, though none admit- ted it. And they looked a synod of kirk elders rather than a parliament, this company of sun-burned men in ill-cut »roadcloth. Thev filled their chairs uneasily, for, for seven months, they had known no softer seat than a saddle Their deep bronzed faces contrasted strangely with the office pallor of the Hollander clerks, and the healthy mahogany of the chairman, Lucas Meyer, made ghastly the fishy white- ness of the President’s cheeks. For a deliberative assembly they were young, with only two greybeards conspicuous in the First Volksraad. Douce, sober-minded farmers they seemed, more suited to the taking of a collection than the deliberation of a nation’s destinies. All men in their prime, full of the passion of life, there was but one influence could curb their animalism—their own material nistoric sitting. gain. Peace had its price in this Transvaal national assembly, \ the reckoning day was coming, and the members were already uneasily count- ing its cost. In the chairs at General Lucas Meyer, a great man, deep-chested and deep-voiced, pre-eminently a man of presence. High onhis left hung the portraits of those [he had aspired ‘to be reckoned among—Paul Kruger, Piet Joubert and Nicolaas Smit. A war he had valiantly fought against had intervened to keep him from their company andtodim in some degree the lustre of his reputation. He had not done badly in battle, but he had not proved himself the leader the people had thought him, and so he was somewhat of a smaller man than at the date of his last election to the chair. He had been tried in the fire, and the burghers were not satisfied with the assay. At his right hand satthe change- less one, Paul Kruger. Sitting crink- led up in his chair, the eld, leaden- faced man looked badly beside his | burly colleague. And yet had he lost {nothing of the respect which he iclaimed at the commencement of the | struggle. Day in, day out, ceaselessly, | tirelessly, the President had worked. } | Many of the big battles had been designed by him, all of the State's . ae ' great business had heen conducted by ) For tickets, rates aod all information | Wply 10 ate! a , dam 4, CHIPMAN, Manage r He had been indefatigable, labor- all him |}ing through the darkness and {through the Sunday. Every principle |of his daily life had been violated. At seventy-five he had broken laws which had been immutable with him Ee childhood. He had set out on llong journeys on the Sabbath, had \ forgotten the peasant’s precision in poor the ir- driven by | dining hours, and had | Tanta San@ nealiy caddy | regularity of his ways. | But there is much of the hero in | Paul Kruger, He has had a_ great battle to fight, and, with the materia! ‘to his hand, has fought it well. He | stood out that opening day pre-emin- | emtly the greatest an in the state, jas he did when last he sat in the Raadzaal. He alone stood firm in the faith while others faltered. He was other states, would ‘go down in history as Paul the | Great; nor would he there disgrace many of his compeers. Granted some grace of body, some dignity of presence, and Paul Kruger would be avowedly a great man, Sitting there | huddled together in his chair, with | |a man who, in | { was cured of a tevere cold by MIN ARDS LINIMENT. | Oxford,N.S. BR. F. HEWSON, |MINARD’S LUINIMENT. FREIYCOULSON, Yarmouth, N.S. 3. a MINARD’S LINIMENT. Ingleeville. J. W. RUGGLES. BARLOTTETOWN,22jE T. the thumbless hand fretting over the I was cured of a terrible eprain by | | | [wae cured of black Erysipelas by | bers, one at least was dependent upon 'a crutch, who had walked straight and ceremony, he i of Geduld made needless, tedious merely the farmer president. But through it all the restless eyes are roaming, resting for a moment with silent wonder on the brilliant uniforms of the foreign consuls and the glittering breasts of the military attaches, but resting longest on the vacant places. Only two of the ex- ecutive chairs to his right are occupied. Mr. Reitz, the State Secretary, is there, looking busy but buoyant, re- gretting sorely the time lost in this senseless ceremonial; and _ Vice- President Schalkburger, pessimistic, burdened, tired—the man who has overlain his opportunity, the Transvaal Hamlet. Piet Jourbert’s seat is held sacred to | him by a great wreath of palm leaves clasped by a bunch of Transvaal rib- It is his guerdon fora clean— vanded life of service to the state; General Joubert may have been no great tactician, but he was an honest man—the proudesi epitaph a man may earn in Soutn Africa. Three other executive seats are empty, those of A. D. Wolmarans, gone to Europe, Jan Kock, killed at Elandslaagte, and Piet Cronje. Jan Kouck’s place is marked, as Joubert’s is, by the insignia of an honorable death. Over the vexcd chair of Cronje is draped a vierkleur, and on that is placed an oak wreath—memorials of the man who so blindly planned the Republic’s Sedan at Paardeberg. Down in the body of the Raadzaal two wreaths show the seats of Mr. Barnard, died at Doompoort, and of Mr. Tosen, succumbed to hardships suffered at the front. Ofthe mem- Don, well six months before. Round every hat was a band of crape, and the hand of war lay very heavy on the Assembly that bright, sunlight afternoon of May 7, 1900. Three members remained out of seven upon the executive benches, and the President referred to the vacant places not inelegantly in his speech: To my mind it would not be out of piace to express here how sincerely we appreciate the services of these our dead brothers. History will know how to value the work of our late Com- mandant-Genera!l. He not only com- manded the respect of the enemy, but his humane and glorious deeds have added significuuce tv the state among the nations.’ A suitable resolution was afterwards adopted by the House. Blunt company of farmers though they be, the Transvaal Raadsleden are jealous of their parliamentary cere- monials. Their President may only enter the Raadzaal on their express invitation, and must remain through- out a guest with all a guest’s limitations of privilege. At this, the opening of a chosen commission of members, wears his broad, green sash cf office, and so much of a pair cf white gloves as he can conveniently manipulate. He isan old man, Paul Kruger, now; of a curious leaden complexion, who speaks, without stop or breath, in a hard, crackling voice that positively barks when he is irritated. His voice was a gcod base once, but it has gown sadly rusted on the veldtin battle and in the chase, and is now a greatly de- teriorated instrument. His language is the true voortrekker’s taal, forcible. sometimes picturesque, but terribly il- literate. Punctuated by hard, dry barks, it is difficult to fellow; anc much of the clerkly Hollanders’ dread of him is due tothe mystery of hi- tongue. He entered the Raadzaal this afte: noon with the bluff ‘Goede middag heeren, and settled in his seat to hea: the reading of his formal speech. La er, he spoke, and his speaking was : passionate recital of his efforts afi —— Hale New Bich oo! Sonn wee knows. Put upingiass KDOW™ es. Recommended Parsons’ Pills ce Bean ree “ES ommeon B0ck: Beaten. Maas DR- GORDON ALLEY PHYSICIAN & SURGEON (Graduate McGill University) Offce and Residence— Dorchester Stre: Office Hours—? to 10, a. m., Lic: an! 7 wo #, p.m. Prom ot atteption t¢ ccuniry « i a CC AAAS TO BE LET. Immediate possession of that Buiid- | ing adjoining the Masoaic Temple. Su't | able for offices etc. Apply to Mrs. D. McKinnon, McGill,Avenue, Ch’Town. the Raad, he is escorted to his seat by } peace and of his country’s treatment at the hands of the British. The sub ject of all of it has been known to us this longtime; but there was no con- viction in the old man’s voice as he thundered: ‘I tell you, God has said, “Thus far shall you come, but no farther.” We live in the Lord and we shall triumph.’ And yet this was no Roundhead Parliament, and that no Oliver Crom- well. It was the most corrupt body of politicians on the face of the globe, throwing its faite utterly upon a God of just dealing ! But Oom Paul was as honest in his_ belief at ever was Old Noll. In that belief the better part of this fighting has been undertaken. And so if was until the next day, when the government introduced to a secret session its proposal to dispose of certain underminig rights, the pro perty of the state and of private per- sons, ‘in the worst market and at tae worst time.’ No longer was the sea- green incorruptible secure in his faith. He must have money, and he would have money. He wrestled with the Raad, bullied it cajoled it. It was useless. ‘The Raad would have none of the proposition, and the old man flung himself homeward in the deepest dudgeon. Again, on the Wednesday, the at- tempt was made in a new form; but the Opposition swore to end their part in the war, to withdraw their sons and relatives from the fighting line if this things were done. The president was worsted. And so the session of 1900 was ended. It hadended badly. Moder- ate men, sobered by the long-drawn tussle with death, left again for their commandos, wondering sadly that such things could be while the very veldt was rusted with the blood of patriots. Was this, then, to be their last re- collection of the Volksraad; —~-— HUMORS OF THE CLERGY. IRISH AUDIENCE THAT LAUGHED DUR- ING SERVICE AT A SOLEMN SCOLD- ING. “An Irishman of the full blood cannot resist an opportunity for re- partee, no matter how solemn the oc- casion or what his surroundings,” said an English clergyman, a visitor in Washington, the other day, when the conversation turned on the funny ex- periences of clergymen, and the humor that creeps into matters connected with the church. “The only time I ever heard a con- gregation laugh unrestra.nedly during the regular services in a cathedral was back in the eighties, when I was a resident of dear, dirty Dublin. On one Sunday morning the Archbishop of Cork preached. man, an Irishman to the backbone, and possessed of as fine a brogue as ever distinguished a son of Erin. His ccngregation was made up of the very essence of fashion in Dublin, which in those days was one of the greatest social centers in the world. Notorious- ly, people were living beyond their means, for the income from the landed estates of Ireland had taken a big tumble. But that made no difference, and good dressing went as s matter of course, and was one of the smallest of the extravagances. The Archbishop preached on the subject of extrava- gance, and spoke particularly \of over- dressing asa prerequisite to attend- ance at church. His arrangment of the sin of debt and the wickedness of seiting the heart on fashion and dress. He attacked the over-dressed woman, and wound up this particular reference this way: Now, supposin’ every one of ye— vy ty one, man and woman, should aa up in this church, take off the » oes you have not paid for, just kin’ out with only the things on y ur back ye have paid for—a pretty io kn.’ lot of scare-crows: ye’d be.’ -fnere was a pause until the real si n dicance of the suggestion had per- co «td through the members of his Conpresd iv... chen some one snicker- ed. Everyone was picturing to him n. herself the real scence that would should the archbishop’s idea be t tusband, and members of each auily nudged one another. The lu i¢rous side was irresistible, and the aigh was general.—Washington Star. ', + buman-hair industry is & very ac- oe in France, the departments most frig ently visited by the hair merchants b sg those of Correze, Creuse, Allier, bor Dardogne and Haute Vienne. The . Tage price given for a fnll long head of bai i from e gti sbill ngs to thirty-five tilvgs for the best quality aod color. The g:rle of the districis mentioned above, wh ch are exceediagly poor, stipulate that their bair shall not be cut short in front, and conceal the ehort appearence at the bsck by @ draped colored bankerchief. The best shades of light aod blonde hair are obtuined from Germany and Switz- erland, and for theee high prices are dy. lwk, given. He was asplendid |! ed into effect, while wife looked ; What Cured | Your Cough ? ADAIISON’S BALSAM! No cough can stay after being treafed with it. It simply soothes it out of existence. There is nothing harsh or im- DAMSON'S TF A M It heals the sore parts, tones up the irritated air passages and strengthens the bronchial tubes — thus stopping the sources of the cough. 25c. E'lour. Some brands of Flour have advanced in price at the Mills as much as 90 cents per bbl. within the past toor three weeks, and some millers think that they have not touched the top notch yet. We were fortunate in securing severa' hun- dred bbis. early, and we are now offering them for sale ata very reasonable figure for spot cash. 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. Hor Sweaty Swollen Sore Aching Tender Tired AT ALL DRUGGISTS, Heet Try Foot Elm for cale at Macdonald's Drug Store Nicut Bett Norsgs’ ReGisier. | DENTISTRY : BY SPECIALISTS. PAINLESS DENTISTRY by uee of ELECTRICITY or by the BERLIN METHOD, MODERN DENTISTRY Crown and Bridge Work (Teeth with- out Plates). ARTIFICIAL TEETH—We make all kinds. Teeth Extracted Witbout Pain. Berlin Dental Parlors. CHARLOTTETOWN. FOR SAUK. 20 Building Lotstor ea'e 50x100, will be sold cheap. Also two Dwelling Houses ov Highland Avenue, together with our whole stock of Crockery Glass- vare and Groceries, etc, P. MONAGHAN, Queen Street. es — ee oe aoe Oo o ee i 23a =. “a a 5; —, eR SS The S. 8, Bonavista eailing from Mon- due at Charlottetown Friday July 27th and eaile for St. John’s, Newfoundland, via North Sydney, carryiog horses, cattle and sheepon deck, and produce under deck, at lowest possible rates. For further particulars ae to freight and passage, apply to PEAKE BRO3 & CO. Agente. Cbh’town, July 24:h, 1900. e- BRAISS TS treal Tuesday morning July 24th will be} | The 3 : ° Ch’town Steam Navigation Ge. STEAMERS — “Northumberland” and “Princesg* Leave as below every day, Sundape excepted. From Porxt Dv Cuexg, on arrival! of LL& train from St. John for ScuMMERemm, connecting with express train for Chess lottetown and Tignish. From SumMersipe on arrival of mornizg: train from Charlottetown and ell stations of P. E.I. R. for Poms: Ds CHEN®, connecting with af'ernoon trae for St. Jonx, Bosrow and Montreat. Connection at MoncTow with train far Casada and N. B.,a Sr, Jonn with C. P. R.and railway for U. 8. and Ca ada, also at St. John with Steamere af Ivternational and Dominion Atlantic & R Lines, Tuesday and Saturday afte noons for Boston direct, due following day at noon, and on Monday, Wedues- day and Friday mornings with steamese for tastport, Portland and Boston. From Picrov about half-past three ow arrival of day train from Halifax and Sydney for CHARLOTTETOW S. From CaarLotTrerowN for Piorou at 2.38 a.m. connecting there with day treiam for Cape Breton and Halifax at Nowra Sypvey with steamer Bruce for New foundland. At Havirax with C. A. and Plant Lee for Boston. Passengers from al! places on P. E. I. Railway east of Charlottetowe can leave home 24 bourse later thaeat joining Plant Steamers in Charlottetown and connect with same steamer. = Halifax. Through tickets to be had at Grane Trunk, Canadian Pacific, Intercolowm and P. E. I. Rai’ways, on the Compsop® Steamers and connecting lines in United States and Canada. Steamers are run on Eastern Standsst, T.me. F. W. HALES, Secretary. Charlottetown, ?. E. 1. W hite’s Caramels and snowflake Chacolates <=~ Can be had at any following firs\ class T. J. Morris BD. L. Heoper W. Plekard & €o, W. A, Hutcheson W. F. Carter Stewart & Gates Sanderson & €e. J.D. McLeod & . H. Uason., aor@ (CANADIAN 7 PACIFIC. & “, Ae Short Line te Quebec VIA. MEGANTIC. Lv. St. John 5.15 pm, daily, except Sundes Ar. Quebec 9.50 am, dails except Mocca Imperial Limited Ocean to;Oecas IN 116 EOURS. Knights of Pythias Meeting Detroit. Mich., August .7th to 3ie. One fare ior tue round trip. SUMMER TOURS [¢O0 Send for booklet. Shell be glad to quore rates for + pr cid tours on application io A. J. HEATH, D. T.A.,C. P. B.,"3:.Johr JN. BZ or Ww. C. KENNEDY, Solititing Agent C.P.R. cy» OO Those Whe Deal Witt With Us Qur Goods are Right Our Prices are Right It liee with you, reader, togive us @ thance to prove the above assertion. We are receiving new goods daily. See our Novered Chip Market Baskets from 10c up. Yhoice Creamery Butter juet received. Try our Orange Pekoe Tea at 28c per bp. It will please you. We also sell Haezard’s genuine BRAHMIN TEA. A big stock ofother Teas on band, from 20c per Ib up. Aleo in stock, canned Ssimon, Lobstere, Clams, etc., ard 2 fel ine of general groceries, ail at the owest’ possible prices. Free delivery of zoods to sll parte of the city. Telephone communication, R. FP, Maddigan & Go mi Feely <a. Ta tay AB canna é 5 “Fie spree omnes = = * sp SHURE Ae namin ts iy ny “) * Sone cleaners a 3 ee ee otal sneer Base Bg AON IR UE a ate " jh