° Are they troubled with head- aches? Arethe lessons hard for them to learn? Are they ‘em listless and indifferent ? o they get thin and all run down toward spring? If so, Scolls Emulsion. will do grand things for them. It keeps up the vital- ity, enriches the blood, strengthens mind and body. The buoyancy and activity of youth return. scorr's SNES ae Opera House One Night Only SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT OF The Lyceum Co —ON— Menday, June 25th, PRESEN TING HAMLET Shakespeare’s masterpiece. Prices—50c, 75c and $1.00. McGILL UNIVERSITY, Montreal SESSION 1900-1901. Matriculation Examinations preliminary the various Courses of Study, will be hela x etry and at local centres on lith une, and at Montreal in September under: 4 ie *Faculty of Arte (Men and’ Women) +Facalty of Applied Science ;Mon. 17th Sept. Faculty of Medicine Yeulty of Law J guilty of Comparative Medi- and Veterinary Science, “at. 22nd Sept) the Faculty of Arts (Revised Curriculm. courses are open also to PARTIAL sTU- VENTS without Matriculation tin the Faculty of Applic l Science the courses in Civil, Mechanical, lectrical and Mining Engineering, Chemistry and Architec- ture, are also open to PARTIAL STUDENTS without Matriculation. Examinations for twenty-one first year Eutrance Exhibitions inthe F altv of Arts, ranging from $90 to}$2 00, will .e held on the 17th September at Montreal, Halifax, St. John, N. B., Charlottetown, P. E. I., St. Jonn’s, Nfld , and other centres. _ The Royal Victoria College, the new res- idential colleze for women, will be ready to receive students on 17th Seotem ber. The McGill Not mai Schoo! wil! be re-opened on ist September. Particulars of Examinations, and coples of the Calendar, containing fail information, may be Obtained on application to W. VAUGHAN, Registrar. _ Plent Line ee BOSTON TO BOSTON Commencing June 29th, 1900 S.S. Halifax Will leave Charlottetown at NOON on FRIDAY, acd §. S$. LA GRANDE DUCHESSE Every WEDNESDAY at 4. m. for Boston via Hawkesbury and Halifax. Passengers Jeaving Charlottefown via Pictou, make close connection at Halifax from Boston Tuesdays and Saturdays. TheS. 8S. Halifax takes l’reight and Passengers for Hawkesbury and Halifax. Tickets for gale ut Stations P. E i. Railway. For tickets, rates and all ioformation apply to W. W. CLARKE, Agent Charlottetown, H. L, CHIPMAN, Manager THE UNEXPECTED HAPPENS IF Ch’town was OTTAWA wouid Apl 24¢tf. loeday you have geen sorry you were not cover- ered for a large amount. [ have good companies and “an quote you low rates. Feith i i i a DP<LP PPO PPDDOD ><> .? {= ~s ene ee ae Chetwyn wrote that, as far as he had = South Africa . - —_ a SSNS THE OLD COLORS. For the first time in history the British army has marched into battle with no colors at itshead. They have been left at home, sometimes hung in churches and cathedrals. The follew- ing fine verses from The London Out- look are in reference to this fact: That rent is Talavera, that patch is In- kerman, A hundred times in a hundred climes the battle round them ran ; But that is at an ended chapter, they will never go to-day; Hang them above sa link of love where the women come to prey. In the country of the cactus, in the vale of Al Rashed, I took them away from the boy who lay in a ring of the dying—dead; Dead—but he smiled as living; dead— but his hand held this, The banner had been as the grace ef his Queen (God’s light be hers and his!) Perhaps when all is quiet, and the moon looks through the pane, Under that shred the splendid dead are marshalled once again, And hear the guns in the desert, and see the lines on the hill, And follow the steel of the lance and feel that England is England still. BOER VERSION. The Boer narrative of the fighting east of Pretoria, posted on a_ bulletin outside President Kruger’s car at Machadodorp, ran thus: ‘The commandos east of Pretoria, in the direction of Brockhorst Spruit, were compelled to retire after a fierce stand of more than two days, in a way that won the admiration of the acting commandant-gerecal. The short range rifle fire was very hot, and for part of the second day, especially late in the afterroon,the enemy fought ata distance of 100 yards. Our loss can- not be given yet. The acting com- mandant-general only mentioned Field Cornet Jan Van_ Buren, killed. He was one of the pluckiest menin the field. Information isagain to hand regard- ing the miserable conduct of the en- emy’s troops that have penetrated to Johannesburg and Pretoria. They con- tinually complain of the lack of foud. Several British soldiers have died in the streets of Pretoria of exhaustion and starvation. Along the roads are the corps of horses and mules, while the living anitnals are so weak they are hardly able to carry their loads.’ SOMETHING OF METHUEN. Saturday Evening Post: Previous to his going to the front, Lord Methuen was extremely popular with the masses He is a genial man and tooka very active interest in the British Volunteer. But his soldiers did not like him They considered him too shifty and nervous; they had no confidence in him, and soldiers are great at discov- ering the real ability ofa leader. A story is told of Lord Methuen’s_inter- view with Lieutenant the Honorable Walter Chetwyn. . Chetwyn came to Aldershot In charge of the Staffordshire miliua, ordered out for the annual month's training. Methuen, who is an officer of the Guards, the smartest of ail smart regiments, journeyed down from Lon- don to inspect the miltia, and, after putting the men through their paces, called up Lieutenant Chetwyn and gave him a wigging. | After the inspection Lieutenant Chetwyn, “mad clean through,” ran up to London, and making his way to the Lowther Arcade, where toys for chil- dren are sold, invested two severeigns in trim tin soldiers. These he tacked on aboard, in perfect order and with- out any wrap or cover over them, sent them by special messenger to the Guards Club, addressed to Lord Methuen. On the reverse of the tag ear Sirs,— Within the past year 1 know ‘ane fa ty tumors on the head having been removed by the application of MIN- ARD’S LINIMENT without any surgical operation and there is no indication of re CAPT. W. A. PITT. Clifton, N. B. Gondola Ferry. + $ i and the East. = > oie < < PPPO DOPOD POSS ODD |- > THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARL OTTETON JUNE 25, been able to gather, this was Lord Methuen’s idea of aregiment. The arrival of this atthe club caused con- sternation among the officers, as it was taken net only as an insult to Me- thuen, but a serious reflection on the Guards, who hate to be thought more or less ‘show’ soldiers. This that at first looked like developing into a very awkward incident was, on the advice of the grey heads of theservice, al- lowed to drop. TERRIBLE SCENES IN INDIA. The famine in India grows worse. It would be rash to assume from the almost stationary relief figures that the corner will soon be turned. So _ de- vastating has been the cholera out- break, so enormous the mortality, and so blind the terror iaispired by this black death, that the famine relief camps in Bombay presidency, which cortained thousands of workers, melt away and are left empty in the course of a couple of days. Starving though they may be, the people prefer te fly to their homes, and to die in quiet than to remain in the famine relief camps where the cholera is striking duwn a a hundred workers daily. Terricle stories come from Dehad. There the famine is at its werst, and now the cholera has arrived to complete the work. A correspondent says: ‘As we walked through those quiet streets we saw deserted homes and dead bodies. One of the bravest acts witnessed was a little girl about seven attempting to care for two little brothers after the mother had given up all hope and lain down nearthem todie. She was feed- ing a fire which burned beneath a broken pot in which simmered the al- most rotten feet and bones of some dead animal. The scene cannot be painted too black. No account we have ever read of any famine would picture the state of affairs at Dohad.” The London Standard’s correspondent says the mortality estimates are inac- curate. Innumerable dead bodies are polluting the streams and _ spreading contagion. A member of the British House of Commons, who has had an_ important connection with South Africa is telling a story of a telegram alleged to have been received from Cape Town, which says that Mr. Kruge: has really es caped and 1s already on the seas bound for Europe, and that the person occupying the Excutive chair is not Mr. Kruger, but is a substitute. A Boer report from Machadodorp by way of Lorenzo Marques, gives the burghers’ version of their success at Leeuw spruiton June 14. It says that two Britsih convoys were captured, a locomotive and several carloads of railway material were destroyed, and three hundred workmen and fifty sol- diers were taken prisoners. Commandant Piet Viljeon reports that fifty miles of railway in the Orange River colony have been dastroyed by his men, Another engagement on June 18 resulted in the capture of 31 British troops. \ Urinary Troubies Kidney and Bladder Ailments that Would Yield Only to Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Picis. Mr. Wm. Giles, carpenter, Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., states:—‘ Unsolicited I write to tell you of the good qualities of Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills in curing urinary troubles. I do not write for your especial profit, but for the good of those afilicted as I have been. I have used eight boxes, and do not now feel the old trouble in the least. “J felt relief one hour after taking the firet pill. It is a great source o: comfort to me to Know that there is a medicine to help my weak kidneys. Those wishing further particulars may address me as above.” Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills are specific for all kidney, ladder, and urinary derangements, and liver troubles, and have an enormous sale all over this continent. One pill a dose, 25 cents a box, at all dealers, or Ed- manson, Bates and Co., Toronto. Dr. Chase’s Ointment is a positive and absolute cure for piles. It is the only preparation which is guaranteed to cure every form of piles. ee he eee FOR SALE OR “et That nicely situated resid- ence, with out buildings, on the Malpeque Road, one mile from Post office, with 9 or 32 acres of land, as desired, Apply to !'To prevent the influenza, should he WEVE ALL ’SEEN HIM. (Forest and Stream.) Have you seen our Izaak Walton, With his bambeo posed with grace, And his castirg-lines and flies around his hat, But the quarters to buy fish with Kept discreetly out of sight, With the pennyroyal to keep away the gnat? Have you seen his natty creel, too— A square hole in its lid, Showing sandwiches and milk and lemonade, whisky Kept discreetly out of sight— wade? Have you seen him lug his fish home, And heard him spin the yarns ’Bout his fighting them, and pile up lie on lie, But the boy who sold them to him Kept discreetly jout of sight, While - posed ‘a holy terror’ with the y? Why, of course you’ve often seen him, And you've been there, too, yourself, And you’ve done the great prevari- cating act, But the quarters that you’ve squandered Kept discreetly out of sight, As you’ve passed off whopping lies for solid fact. When It Hurts to 'Cough. The cough that hurts, the cough that gets tight in thechest, is daily getting deeper and deeper into the bronchial tubes and is making directiy for the lungs, to become pneumonia, inflammation of the lungs or consumption. Such coughs yield only tu the wonderful effi- ciency of Dr, Chase’s Syrup oi Linseed and Turpentine which loosens the tightness and cures cough and cold together. 25 cents a bere Family size 60 cents, sola every- where. Ninard’s Liniment Lumberman’s Friend. ee Capt. Leesberg, an American attach- ed to the Boer artillery, has arrived at Lorenzo Marques. He says that the Transvaal’s ammunition factory has been removed to Lydenburg. He declares that Gen. De Wet has 6000 | men in the Orange River colony, and Gen. Botha 2,500 in the Transvaal. Fifteeu hundred men in small bodies are elsewhere. Transvaal agents in Lorenzo Mar- ques are credited with admitting that State Secretary Reitz has gone to Eu- rope on a Dutch warship. This story, however, lacks confirmation. Fresh print butter at Brace’s Grocery 18 cents per pound. Mackeral Bait Mills a few on hand. —-- A. Duchemin & Co, dy 2ins wk 4ins. Summer Underwear for men and boys all sizes cheaper than But his flask of Four Cibent ever at K H Ramsay & Co’s. | in the city It won’t cost you much, J:T, PEARDON. STRAW HATS add 50 per cent. to your comfort. Don’t leave it any longer. You want oue right away. You’|! be glad you bought it. R. H RAMSAY & G0. STRAW HATS | In the spring a young man’s faney turns towards a “New Suit of Clothes” If you would be with the crowd— just virit our 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 making 9, purchase that the “Tailors Efforts are Suryassed and his Prices cut in Two.” Men’s Suits ( Men’s Tweed Suitsin Plaids and mix- tures, good nobby make, $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 tuitable for summer wear $1.25 ~ Boy’s 3 Piece Suits, mixed or plain ‘\lQgmpl- $2.25 to 6,00. LE Special line 2 Piece Brany Suits Zid} Scarlet or Blue trimming, very nobby $2.50 A full 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 oui desire to please come back to us because our clothing gives sat- isfaction and is the best obtainable for the money. MATTHEW & MILEAN. SOURIS, P. E. I. STRAW HATS We're rushing them out by hundreds ; you see them on the best dressed men and boys The verdict is this—‘‘For the nobbiest straws in the city, go to Ramsay’r.” Don’t you'think you are wise 10 carry around that warm felt that on the hot day when youcan get one of our specialty nice straws that will make you look better and will STRAW HATS cee ate