THE DAILY EXAMINER CHARLOTTETOWN, JUNE 26, tgov — Colds ix: Chest O1OS re UNES are dangerous; they weaken the constitution, inflame the lungs, and often lead to Pneumonia, Cough syrups are useless, The system must be given strength and force to throw off the disease. will do this. It strengthens the lungs and builds up the entire system. It conquers the inflammation, cures the cough, and prevents serious trouble. Plant Line TO ee TO BOSTON Commencing June 29th, 1900 S.S. Halifax Will leave Charlottetown at NOON on FRIDAY, ard 5. S. LA GRANDE DUCHESSE Every WEDNESDAY at 9 a. m. Boston via Hawkesbury and Halifax. Paseengers Jeaving Cheriottefown via Pictou, make close connection at Halifax from Boston Tuesdays and Saturdays. TheS. 8S. Halifax takes Freight and Passengers for Hawkesbury and Halifax. Tickets for sale at Stations P. E. I. Railway. For tickets, rates and al! apply to for information W. W. OLARKE, Agent Charlottetown, H. L, CHIPMAN, Manager Apl 24tf. 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 groceries, canned goods and 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 ! #7 JOHN McKENNA. Queen Street, -», Those Who Plain Sailing 4 Deal With Our Goods are Right Our Prices are Right I: les with you, reader, to give us bance to prove the above aseertion. We ire receiving new goods aily. See our Covered Chip Market Baskets from 10c up. Yhoice Creamery Butter juct received. Try our Orange Pekoe Tea at 28c¢ per It w'll please you. cell faszard’s genuine BRAHMIN TEA. A big etock ofother Teas on band, from 20c per |b up. We also Also in . stock, canned Salmon, Lobsters, Clams, etc., and a full ine of general groceries, all at the owest’ possible prices. Free delivery of roods to all parts of the city. Telephone communication. RF. Maddigan & Co LOWER QUEEN STREET. > Odo > DD OD 20200002! + - South Africa and the East. So thoroughly interwoven with secret societies is the Chinese Em- pire that it is a marvel the national > existence maintains itself. , on earth presents such a spectacle in | this regard. Long as the life of those No country societies has been, and so wonderfully imbued with their principles as the , people are, the dawn of their extin- guishment seems to have flickered on the mystic East. The western sun of enlightenment shall soon, in = all probability and hope, shed a news light over China. The life of the secret societies dates from the second century of the Chris- tian era, an existence vouched for by history. They are diverse in the ele ments of which they are composed, in their rules and practices, although most of them, especially the Triad, which is the most important of them all, have such extraordinary analogy with West- ern Freemasons as to simply a com- munity of origin. The only foreigner who ever cbtained admission to the Triad, namely, an Englishman of the name of Mason, achieved this feat on the strength of his belonging to the higher grades of the Scottish Rite of Freemasonary. Originally a form of Oriental mysticism, these societies be- came political factors toward the seventeenth century, and until a year or so ago had in view as their principal object the overthrow of the Manchu or Tartar dynasty, and as watchword “China for the Chinese.” The Tai- Ping rebellion of forty and fifty years ago was fostered and promoted by the ‘Triad, and came near overthrowing the Pekin Government, which it could doubtless have accomplished had it enjoyed the co-operation of the other secret societies. To-day the meaning of the watch- word of the various secret societies, “China for the Chinese’’is changed. For the aim is no longer anti-dynastic, nor do they seek the expulsion of those ten or twetve millon Manchus who, for the last two hundred years, have imposed themselves as the ruling class over four hundred miilion Chin- ese, compelling them to adopt the Manchu style of hair dress, namely, a pigtail, in taken of subjection. Today the secret societies have for their ob- ject the expulsion of the foreigner from the land. It isa mistake to be lieve that the Chinaman is a stranger to patriotism. His fibre of patriotism has been utilized by that extraordinary clever woman, the Dowager Empress, to rally the entire nation into the pres- entation of a virtually united front to the foreigner, to» convert the secret societies from anti-dynastic into anil- foreign movements, and to achieve that which the Triad sought in vain to bring about at the time ofthe Ta Ping rebellion, namely, co-operation of all secret societies one with another against the common foe, which this time is not the Manchu, but the white foreigner. It cannot be denied that for more than half a century China has been subjected to a degree of indigniy, in- sult, extortion ard bullying on the part of foreign powers which no Christ- ian power would have tolerated. ‘l'reat- ies have been imposed upon her by force, her finest harbors seized, and vast stretches of her littoral succes- sively placed under foreign rule. She has been compelled to consent to agreements providing for the transfer of her immense river trade to foreign flags, and for the gridironing of the en- tire land by foreign-built and foreign- controlled railroads, while for every concession made by her a dozen new ones have been presented by the foreign powers. At length, exasperated be- yond endurance and driven to the wall, the Empress issued in December last an address to the viceroys of the vari- ous provinces. “The foreign powers cast upon us looks of tigerlike voracity, hustling each other in their endeavours to be the first to seize upon our inner- most territories,” she declared. ‘They fail to understand that there are cer- tain things which this empire can never consent to do, and that, if hard pressed, 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 surgical op2ration and there is no indication of a returns CAPT, W. A. Tastes Clifton, N.§B. Gondola Ferry. we have noalternative but to rely on the justice of our cause.” Four weeks later another edict was despatched to the same officials by the Dowager Em- press, who, according to widespread belief in the Orient, has English blood in her veins, her mother having been an Eurasian, or child of a white father and a Manchu mother. In this sec- ond edict the viceroys were warned to exercise a prudent discrimination to- ward the disturbers of public peace. “The reckless fellows,” who band together and create riot on the pre- text of securing reforms, were to be punished, while those “‘oyal- sub- jects who learn gymnastic drill for the protection of their families and their country,” that is to say, the members only a non-Christian and thoroughly Tokio Government threatens to throw an army of several hundred thousand men inte Corea and China if the Russians march on Pekin, and in the same way the Czar’s representatives de- clare that if Japan moves they will immediately occupy the nothern prov- iences of China, The other powers con- cerned, namely, England, France, Germany, and the United States, have no military forces adequate er near enough to deal with the matter prompt- ly, especially intaking any effective steps towards the protection of life and property. Yet they are reluctant to entrust either of the two powers in never wavers and always pursues the same aim until it attains it, sometimes only after the lapse of many years. But she has now, according to all ap- pearances, cut herself adrift from her Moscovite entanglements, realizing that Russia is niore ravenous than any other foreign power for Chinese territory and constitutes a more seri- ous peril to the integrity and inde- pendence of the empire than any other nation. The Empress is resolved to rely on the Chinese alone, and by cleverly appealing to the keen love for their native land, and above all, te their fierce and fanatic abhorrence of question with the task. Japan is not Asiatic nation, imbued with the _hat- sociation,” were to be favored. This was the first heard of the so- called Boxers—openly a society for the cultivation of gymnastics, secretly an anti-foreign political movement, some- | i thing like those “Turn Vereine,” or}! gymnastic societies, which played so] i important a political role in Germany | t at the beginning of the present century. From that time forth the so-called} s Boxers were more er less openly en-j|t couraged by the Empress. came a means of union among all the} s various secret societies, and if today these societies in all parts of the im- ously taken to arms to expel the for- eigner it is due to the cleverness of the old Empress, who is thus, at the close of the nineteenth contury, emu- lating the role played nearly one hun- dred years ago by Queen Louise in men to rid Germany of the thr ldom of Napoleon. There is every reason to believe |s that on this occasion the Dowager Empress has at her back not merely her Manchu retainers but all China, seething population of more than feur hundred millions, who are almost in- sensible to pain, have no fear of death and are imbued with fierce hatred of the foreigner. Itis true that both Canton and Pekin were occupied some forty years ago by an allied Franco- English army of fifteen thousand or twenty thousand men. But the late Sir Harry Parkes, who accompanied the commanding general as chief in-|t terpreter, explained long afterwards | ; at Tokio that Canton,as well as Pekin, were such immense cities that the Anglo-French forces only occupied a smail quarter thereof, and that the re- mainder ot the two cities were so little under their control that each morning the heads of those European soldiers who had strayed beyond the cordon ot sentinels during the night would be hurled from neighboring houses into the Anglo-French lines. Indeed, the so-called seizure of these immense capitals was so ineffective that not one | ¢ in a thousand Chinamen will admit that it really took place, and even Chinese who were living in Pekin at the time of its e@ccupation have de- clared by all they held sacred that the story must be untrue, seeing that they never set eyes ona French or English soldier at the time alleged. More- over, Chinese history ascribes the de- struction of the celebrated summer pal- ace not tothe Frendh and English troops, as was really the case, but to Divine agencies, as punishment of sacrilege on the part of one of the members of the Imperial family. Russia and Japanare the only two powers that can invade China now and place large armies in the field. The former has at the present moment probably one hundred thousand sol- diers stationed at Vladivostock, Port Arthur, and along the south-eastern frontier of Siberia. Japan, on the other hand, has an army of at Ieast twice that number of men, assembled at various points on the Mikado’s Empire, ready for immediate transport across the small stretch of sea that separates Japan from China. ‘The MareNew Rich Bioo and remeve impurities ctom the stomash, lire? and bowels, by the use of the best blood purifier known. Put upinglass vials. Thirty ina bottle; one a dose, Recommended by many physicians Parsons Pills ‘Best LIVER PILL MADE.” Positively cure Riliousness and all Liver and Bowel complaints. vid by Druggists, or sont post-paid, for 25 cts. feck tree, E'S. Jounoom Cok: beston. Masa =e @2o2 sees SH oot MASON’S . STORE You can get the latest Canadian ¢ sad American ne#epapers received by mail each night. Drop io if you want a paper or magazine or book toreai. Fruit, , Confectionery, Tobacco, Cigsre etc. when you're passing this way. emo %*e&* @aee of the “Righteous Harmony Fists As- | red fer the white man common te ail yellow races, but is also possessed by the most aggressive ambitio is, only to be satisfied at the expense of the Western powers. nations, and to drill the Chinese army © They be-| In one word, there is no positive as- trol of China at the present moment she would not use that control against all mense Chinese Empire are simultane- | Western and Christian powers, thus intensifying the so-called Yellow Peril. trust Russia, a country with a long list of broken pledges. day that she obtained from Corea the harbour of Masampho, the finest on Prussia, when she roused her country- | the entire coast of China, in spite of her most solemn pledges to England, as well as to Japan, not to take any conduct in connection with or, the Black Sea. by the Treaty of Berlin that Batoum and China contains a teeming and | should remain a free port and _ unforti- fied, yet deliberately closed it eight years later and converted it into a naval stronghold. antee or assurance marches her troops into China and seizes the capital she will consent to march out again. If she remains there and obtains control Government it will be equivalent other nations. ues. either a Russian or a sion of China would suffice to quell | the The ideaof Japan s to obtain a preponderant influence n China, to secure differential duties n her favour, iu such a way as toclose he Chinese market to all other foreign 0 as to make it a weapon for the fur- herance of her dreams of grandeur. urance that if Japan were to obtain cen- Neither are the powers willing to It is but the other lt is in keeping with her | Batoun, | She bound herself uch step. The powers concerned have no guar- that if Russia the Chinese to he closure of the vast Mongol Em- ire to the trade and industry of all of Meanwhile the insurrection contin- Itis by no means certain that Japanese inva- | anti-foreign movement. | juite probable. For she must have, observed that the Moscovite Empire kiodly colicited is the only foreign power whose policy —————————— eae Molasses. from West Indies, arrived to- day—121 puns, 20 hds, 24 bbls, The | of the late Charles Matheson, Painter, forces that would confront an invading | will be carried on by the undersigned un- army are ioo great, the empire is vast in extent, the population too col- | ossal. That there may have been | sympathy on the part of the Dowager | Empress for Russia in the past is | quite competent to conduct the work. | -* . too | til farther notice. agement of John C. Murpby, who been in the employ of the deceased for the past the foreigner, may be said to have welded her four hundred million countrymen into a colossal force that no longer constitutes the danger, but a support to the throne, with the watch- word of “China for the Chinese.” _—_— _ a Most cereals require a double boiler, and at least 20 minutes cooking, while Ralston Breakfast Food is prepared with ease and dispatch in a single boiler in five minutes. The vigor and strength ee prop- erties of Ralston come from Gluterean Wheat, the whole berry of whichis milled into Ralston Breakfast Food. There’s not another dish so delicious for breakfast that contains as much-nutrition as Ralston Breakfast Food. FOR SALE BY JENKINS & SON. The Corner Grocers, BRB Sole agente. —— Direct cargo, schr. “Omega” Choice quality. CARVELL BROS. Ch’town May 14, 1900. NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that the business The bueiness will be under the man- nine years,is a master workman, and The patronage of former customers JANE MATHESON, ? St. Avard’s, June 12th,1900, _—eod. in the city add 50 per cent. to your comfor It won’t cost you much, | R. H. Mason SOS BO8TIDES BET! STRAW HATS STRAW HATS Don’t you think you are wise 10 carry around that warm felt that on t. Don’t leave it any longer. You want oue right away. You’l! b2 glad you bought it. R. H. RAMSAY & 60. When you. want a sPRAW HATS FLOUR barrel of choice flour, give us a call; we sell all the leading brands and guarantee every barrel we sell. When in need of one ‘all on us an let’s quote you prices, SANDERSON & CO Victoria Row Grocers. THE UNEXPECTED HAPPENS F Ch’town was OTTAWA toeday yeen sorry you were not cover- you would have ered for a large amount. I have good companies and san quote you low rates. cE. . Sao Handrads of Beautiful Articles Suitable for Wedding Gifts now in Stock: in Silverware we have Tea Sets, Butter Dishes, Celery Stands, Fruit Dishes, Pickle Dishee, Combination Sugar bowls and Spoon Holders. Syrup Jugs, Cream ard Sugare, Berry Spoone, Scup Ladies, Boo Bons, Knives, Forks and Spoons. In Chinaware:—Cup, Saucer and Plate Sets, Sugar Bowls, Cheese Dishes, Berry Sete, Butter Dishes. In Glassware :—Lemonade Sets in Crystaland Gold, Berry Sete, Butter Dishes. We havea nice linc of Souvenir Goods, also an a-tortment of Wedgewood and Blueware. A big line of Watchee, Clocks and Jewelry. Give us a call and you will save money for we are se\ling cheaper than any cther store ip the city. Jury & Co Sunnyside Ch’ town, 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’s,” the hotca when youcan get one of our specialty nice straws that will make you look better ani will STRAW HATS ey NS oe (gt A cal Ne sett aaa rae 17g