PART RA ABSOLUTE SECURITY, Genuine Carter’s Little Liver Pills. Must Bear Signature of VE ZA See Fac-Simile Wrapper Below. * Very emall ead as easy to take 8.) sugar. FOR HEADACHE. CARTERS FOR DIZZINESS. FOR BILIOUSNESS. FOR TORPID LIVER. IVER FOR CONSTIPATION. FOR SALLOW SKIN. __|FOR THE COMPLEXION | | GO GNUINE wvar mvt Spice. |ipuraty Vegetable, <AeesAZ ere | | Ree a eee. Sal CURE SICK HEADACHE. a Hillsborough oo bridge The New Bridge is com- ing and so are the dry Then you will; need some-— atreets and roads, thing nice in footwear. We Have a fine Selection Selling Very Low tJ. H. BELL The Bargain Boot and Shoe Store. wiravinn IS THE SINCEREST FORM OF FLATTERY.” eee eee The best proof that WANARD’S LINIMENT has extraordinary merits, and is in good rzpute with the public, is, that ' iT {S EXTENSIVELY IMITAT- | ED. The imitations resemble the | genuine article in appearance only. | They lack the genera excellence of Genuine This notice is necessary, as injurious and 191 tations, called WHiTe LINI 1 s:., .iabk to produce chronic inflam matin of (he skin, are often snstituted fo 4INARD’ L!NIMENT by Dealers, because hey pey a arger profit. They al) Sell on the Merits and Advertising of MINAR D'S. C1: im particulag claiming to be made by a emer proprietor of Mrxarp’s LINIMENT, bich simply is a lie. INSIST UVPON HAVING MINARD'S LINIMENT MADE BY C. RICHARDS & CO., Varmouth, N.S8., we do not Select some few articles and tell how low we sell them, don’t think that our goods office or store is in need: of iak, pens; mucilage, or any- bing in.oar line, call in We wil] supply you. MITCHELL'S BOOKSTORE Que en'St, f Opp. Prowse’s.{ y 861 009000 JULY 23, 1900. ‘AUSTRALIAN SHIPPING TRADE, Tus rapid growth of the Aastraiian shipping trade during the last few years is largely due to the improvements effected in steam navigation, wad the increased size of the steam vessels employed in both the intercolonial and over-sea business. For-~ merly, steam communieation between Europe and « Australia was maintained by 8 ‘monthly branch service of the P. and O. line betweea Burope and India, but with the establishment of direct communication by the Orient Company 4 great change be- came effected, and at the present time, in : : re high priced.’ If : { ad dition to” the weekly mai! service effected | by the @ alternate fortnightly sailings of the |P. and QO. Companies from Sydney, there ‘are monthly services by French, German, ‘end other boats, many being of of large size, lsome of the German steamers being over 10,000 tons burden. There are also three lines of steamers between Sydney and | Japan, and intermediate ports ; another | between Sydney and San Francisco, and fifth between Sydney and Vancouver. ~ Be- cently there has beea increased communi -~ cation between the port and those of South Africa. In addition, | there are smaller services with various parts af the Mast. ‘In 1890 the total shipping trade of New ‘South Wales was 4,761 872 tons ; eince /then_ it bas snoually “increased until, in 1899, it was6,995,551 tone, being 5.2 tons | per head of population. eecirsssennitallel lee stadia Aipntionininipiciy NOTES AND COMMENTS. —The Legislature of British Columbia is now in session. —In the language of the Montreal Gazette, the session of Parliament which haa just closed has been one of the longs est, most wearying and jeast profitable in tne record. —It is expected that Hon. A G Jones will receive his commission as Lieut enaut~ Governor of Nova Scotia this week, and will be sworn into office on Wedneeday, Aug 1. As Government House has to be renovated and painted the new Governor will not take up his residence there uatil the autumn. Sir Malachy B.Daly’s tenure of office expires on July 28th, on which date, accompanied by Lady Daly and Miss Daly, he will leave for Chester where he will spend the eummer. They will epend tne winter in England. —The huge stake that Britain has in China is forcibly revealed iu the following statistics furnished by reliable authority. _ the total anuual trade of Chins. amouut- ing to £69,000, 000 Britain’s share is 63 5, pe cent. Jay van’s share is Only Sl p:r cent, hile the United States comes third with und+r 10 per cent, and Russia a modest fourth with less tvap 5 per cent. As for the other countries who have prominently ltaken haads in the Chinese game, France and Germany, their trading interest in | China, plus thatof all other nationalities, ‘amounts to only 10 percent, ; —A memorial bust of the late Sir John Thompson, erected by the Nova Scotia Bar Society in the county court house of ‘Halifax in memory of the departed jurist ‘and statesman, was unveiled on Wednes-~ day by Lieutenant-Goveroor Daly, in presence of a goodly company of lawyers and friends of late Premier of Canada. In addition to members of the Nova Scotia bench and bar, the speech of the Lieutenant-Goveraor was a graceful trib- ute to the work of the departed statesman R L Borden, M P, president of the Bar Society, had charge of the ceremony, Dr. B Russell, MP, who bas just returned from Ottawa, was also present. After sonanes by Chief Justice Macdonald, Archbishop O’Brien, Attorney General Longley and BR L Borden, M P, the cere- monies concluded with ‘*God Save the Queen,” played by the @3rd Rifles’ band. — The St Johns (Que) News supplies Sir Wilfrid’s measure as a probibitionist {or the guidance of its temperance reacers. It asks a very pertinent question and con- cludes with an important statement of fact, a6 followe: “If parliament had been asked to pase a law prohibiting the manu- facture and sale oj liquor in every prov~ ince but Quebec, then Sir Wilfrid’s ar- gumént might be held to have some force in it; butwhen it was simply asked to authorize every province, Quebec includ- ed, to prohibit or tolerate, as it saw fi‘; there was no separating fence put up, the ee was general, not particular. bat ie there so peculiar about themanu- facture and aale of liquor that each prov- ince should not have the same control over it that it has over'the licensing, over ite mines, ite forests, its game, its fisher- ies, without thereby being placed in the position of separating it from its neigh- bors? ‘be fact of the matteris that the Laurier Government played with the pro~- hibitionists for political purposes, and be- trayed at the dictation of Quebec.” Montreal wk the throne at (oa speech from ‘ of Parlia- ment speaks tithe iil ntion the members gave to the Rare « of an excep- tionally protracted session, and declares a have important _ Fi skehay erf mar has at kis oWould. syeeches from the “ane bow we are ie. timg irony. ‘ FORO ewe WHAT THE DAILY ‘BXAMINBR: beelief that the legislation thereof vs THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, JULY 23, 1900 if IGHT “HAVE BEEN. The Admission Made by a Boer Envoy. Mr. Robert P. Bell, the South African traveller and lecturer, relates an amusing little anecdote ofa conversation he had with the firet of the Boer envoys, P Loutar Wessels. . Mr. Bell bad given his illustrated lec- ture on South Africa, “Land of the Briton and Boer,’ in tbe City Hall at Waterbury Conn., and the Boer sympathizers of that ‘place, who hugged to their breasts the delusion that their native land was stil} being oppressed by Eng- lan!, arranged for @ monster meet- ng to follow at which the Boer envoy snd the Trish disturber Maud Gonne were o he the principal speakers. The meet- og was beld and attended by a mob of shouting Anglophobes at fifty cents a head [he Gonne woman confirmed the opinion of al! rational people who heard her, tbat she had long siace forfeited the usual cousiderations accorded her sex by her eatravagant statements and utter die~ regard of truth and her shameful attacks on Her Majesty Queen Victoria, whom all Americans of the better clase re- spect and honor. She was followed by Mr. Wessels, who, besides announcing the fact that he wasa Boer,a fact which anyone knowing the Boers might have doubted, as he had very much the appearance of a gentlemaa, gave what purported to be a brief history of the English and Dutch occupation of South Africa, laying particular stress on the ex- cellent native policy pursued by the Boer States. At the conclusion of the demonstration the promoters had arranged for a meetiag between Mr. Wess ls and Mr. Bell,at which time they confidently expected to enjoy the latter’s complete discomfture, when the envoy,with his might’ weapons,Trath and Right, would completely rebutt any derogatory statements concerning the Boers, which had been made by the American. Ths argument between the two gentle- men continued for some time aad occasion- ally waxed exceedingly warm, the Boer who was « Free Stater exhibiting very little knowledge of the Transvaal. At length, after Mr. Be)! bad walled the envoy’s attention repeatedly to the? articles of the convention of 1884 and urged that the principal stipulation made therein by Great Britain was in substance “Equal Rights for All” in the Transvaai, sud Mr Wesells had replied that such con~ dition bad been complied with, the Ameri- can said: ‘‘Mr. Wessels, as you know, I am an American and represented large French interests in the Transvaal, and if when I first entered the country, the laws a3 to franchise had been reasonable, it it would have been to my advantage to become a oburgher and settle smong the Boers; but, as you are awere at that time it would have been neceesary for me to first foreswear allegi-~ ance te my own government and then re- mainin a probationary state for [4 years, daring which I would have to maintain a residence iu the South African Republic, ana after that I would be given but a partial franchise.” The Boer mused @ moment, and then replied: ** Let me see—vou are an Ameri- cen and you are representing French in- torests 2? Well, why did younot make those facts known and we would have made yous citizen at once ”! Still the Boers contend,that ail men were | treated fairly and alike in the Transvaal and no favoritisus was shown. Mrs. Gladstone. T. P. O'Connor writesin** M, A. P.”: “To every member of Parliament Mrs. Gladstone was familiar. She always oc- cupied the same place, the corner seat io that part of ihe Jadies’ gallery which is at the disposal of the wife of the Speaker, or his daughter if he has now'fe. Her pres~ ence there was as certain a proof trat her husband was going to make a great speech as the criflamme of Henry of Navarre was to his troops during battle. She seemed to be almost part of the House itself ; she leaned forward s0 as to catch every word, aud was so palpably interested in her hushsnd and soanxions that she seemed almost part of himself. * It waa her old-!ashioned idea that the wife should always be in the gallery to encourege the husband in the greater mo- ments of his career. Once a friend of mine pad to makea speech of some length and some perplexity during the big home« rule struggle, and his wife had got a place to hear him. There was some difficulty in getting tc the front row, as the gallery was crowded. Mrs. Gladstone turned round and said: * Why, it’s his wife!’ and saidno more. That seemed to her a sufficient aod unanswerable claim to any plase the lady might like to have. “Mrs. Gladstone was even more at bome whea her husband and she were on the platform together. Indeed, the pres- ence Of the one would have seemed in-~ sufficient without that of theother. She always sat immediately behind her hus- band, and now and then she took advan- tage ‘of @ pause created by the cheers to give him a hint, or ‘utter a gentle remonstrance.” * ++ oe An Old Structure. The farmbouse built by General Henry Knox, at Thomaston, Maine,)iu 1794, is now the Thomaston depot of *the Maine Central Railway. It has not been moder- nized but is exactly the same as it was when General Knox died in 1806, with the exception of one small window which was needed and has been set imto one o1 the walls,’ A Bangor paper saye it is one of the oldest buildings in the Uniteu States. There are Several, it is snid, tha, are quite as old in this province and in Nova Scotia, ew dud ar 2a |) oe 5 * | How Many Women There are whose corset bones show through the back of their dresses like a pair of supplement- ary shoulder blades or rudiment- ary wings Tain't ¢0 if you get em here; we're sure of that, we’ve always suld more real solid valu> for the money than others, but Prowse Bros Special corset at 75c the pair beats even our own record. They’re well made, they’re well stayed, strong where they ought to be, weak where they should be, you can wear them neat without hurting you, because they’re made flexible and made to be worn neat. They’re only 75c, low in price, but high in quality. Better see them, LADIES SUITS One of the best known mills in America made the cloth—one of the best makers in Canada made the suits--and one of the best clothing conceins in one of the best cities in the best country on earth is going to sell them to you during the great July Sale at 33} per cent off the already low marked prices, It is needless to tell you that “we are the People”; $6.00 suits $4.00, $4.00 suits $2.67, ae 2 and of perfect cloth at 4 rowse Bros. What trade we have we'll hoid, and what we haven't we’re after, id ,, fhe Examiner Calenda, eeee FO KR JULY... ———nenenee MOON’S aCHANGEs, First Quarter, 4¢h. Full Moon, 12th. Last Quarter, 18th New Moon, 26th. |D | High Water! > >eac= | off Day of We’. ey Water | Sa M | Morn Aftn Ree = er cS lSunday : ae —, 2|Monday | % 1 35) : a 14g ' BTuesday {| 215 2 36 2 | 4 | 4) Wednesda y | 255/315 » | 5\Thursday | 4 2 3 | 4 | 6 Friday | ‘ 36 459 % ¥ | 7,Saturday 5 52, 6 16% & 8)Sunday 7 5 73) % & | 9 Monday 8 12) 8 29 2 4% 10 Tuesday 9 5 9233 26 | & \1)Wednesday| 923! 9 52) 99 | # \2Thursday | 10 56) 1) 4) 2» 43 13 Friday | 11 17| 11 45! 39 | ® (14 Saturday 11,51) 40 18| 3) % 15 Sunday 033 3 v a | 16 Monday 11 135 33 | # steered | 1,50, 214 3 # § Wednesday’ 230! 3 6 35 4 | 19 Thursday 351 418 38 3 | 20 Friday 5 25, 5 48) 39 | cs | 24 Saturday 6 50, 7 18 3p § | 22 Sunday 7 54, 8291 39 | # |23 Monday 85/\ 918 | & 24 Tuesday 9 36,10 2) 4 ay | 25 Wednesday 10 16 10 41) 49 | & | | 26 8 rsday 1040 11 0 4 0 27 PHday = 11 14 11 36 45, | 3 28 Saturday 11 25 11 47, 4 | 99 Sunday 0 0 O02 % Monday 0 31, 0 52 48 x 31|Tuesday ‘' 1 3 1 26146 59 1% eee REED <oneenen een Excursions 0 Pic ‘the most pleasant wa Way of Spending & hot day. Return Tickets geod for day 3 | issue, will be sold on steamer “PRINCESS” for one dollar and fifty cents each, Fare will include Tea on ren voyage. Steamer leaves half past nine loe Returns about nine in the evening, By order F, W. HALES, | , B Secretary Steam Navigation Co,, lid Ch’town, July 7th, 1900, Da ‘A PICKARD & CO PESKE’S NO. 1 WHAT A full stock of the best Cola hand and arriving daily. A share of your patronage is soit ed. LOWEST PRICES PROMPT DELIVERY Jane 30d&wilm then eod $ w5m, Silver Spring Brewty SHERBROOKE, P.4 S. C. NUTTER, Pu Ale and Porter above Brewery are W! superior to the goods F duced by any other Bret Don't + Negect Your Wate! te in the Dominion, ‘rder to give everyolt — chance to sample them’ Pty ow Oe t. quote the fol y> | Ou JTS aT j Der hhd.... or. 1s 7 low prices for cash. ll , Per half do.. § “ae Per } do.. "tag Per doz querte.. re Per doz pint...-+++* é Delivered in any pat the city, steamers oF al A- MACDONALD, | Sor henet Lt you allow your watch to roo 1g without cleaning, or with parts it may be worn se bedly # distray its usefulness a8 4 ive retter have it examined Watch Doctor and if in need Sof cairs he will advise you 2000 and erhaps save your w® E BOAST on our repair ment turning out first-class Stl WE GUARANTEE ALL ouR WORE “i . have mot given us/@ trial it i you to do so and we will see. you at GreaT GEORGE WN TANTO Sian or THE Bie Warted. a"