eo . er = == ee ee THE MOTHER with a nursing baby has two lives to support. Her Jesh, strength and vitality are taxed to the utmost, and must be maintained or both will surely fail. Scolls Emulsion. qill keep up the mother’s strength and vitality. It also enriches the baby’s nourish- ment, and supplies the ele- ments necessary for proper rowth and development of is tecth and tissue. sec and $1.00, a)l druggists, SCOTT & BOW NE, Caemists, Toreata Plant Line BOSTON TO BOSTON Commencing June 29th, 1900 S.S. Halifax Will leave Charloitetown at NOON on FRIDAY, ard §.§. LA GRANDE DUCHESSE Every WEDNESDAY at 9 a. m. for Boston via Hawkesbury and Halifax. Paseengers Jeaving Cheriottefown via Pictou, make close connection at Halifax from Boston Taesdays aod Saturdays. TheS. S. Halifax takes Freight and Passengers for Hawkesbery and Halifax. —- Tickets for sale at Stations P. E. I. Railway. For tickets, rates and all information apply io W. W. CLARKE, Agent Charlot tetown i. L. CHIPMAN, Manager Apl 24tf. rLOUR When barrel yo Wilt ¢ of choice flour, give us a call; weisell allfthe leading brands and guarantee ev ry barrel we sell. Whenfin need of one call on us and let’s quote you prices, SANDERSON & CO Victoria Row Grocers. RES BEES FP tee een oiler Spring Brewery, SHERBROOKE, P. Q. 8.C. NUTTER, Prop. Ale snd Porter of th above Brewery are vastly fuperiorto the goods pro- duced by any other Brewery in the Dominion, 1nd in ~rder to give everyone a nence tosample them, we mm €g t. quote the following Ow prices for cash 1.50 85 Delivered in any part of he cily, ateamers or trains. >» MACDONALD, — i eee » 8. Cer 8.25 ’er } do 4.25 er doz quarts... .+-. er doz pints...... roe : . oo? eee P.K.S. eA NTFD A servant for general house- Heu., sat weger. Apply to Mra. J. B. Ces). 439 Kent street, th TO LET.—Shop o . at =f n Street. -K. Brace, Pere ee ait tca” tee nv N11 ~Girl ter gereral housework. lor wibir, Ced with al) mcdern appliances aha ae Bwcik eery. Liberal wages to the Fes #115. *pply at this « ffice. AMET 16006081 we, on fer irice paid for ladies and gente left Liop a co) ©*!! at their residence for them, kee. din the Post Office, or call to ae Kirt, Street, opposite Nelson Bros. ——Arby, Clothing store WAN Mr NITED. . —A maid servant. Gegrge Peake, Euston Street. THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, JULY 13, 1900. POPP PPD PPPS ODD |< * *= South Africa + + + 7 + and the East. = Seooe OODD> DODD 9.99 > «< = LORD SALISBURY ON MIS. SIONS. A STATESMAN S WARNING TO MISSION ARIES, The Premier of Great Britain ad- dressed a missionary meeting at Exeter Hall, London, on the occasion of the celebration of the zooth year of the Society of the Propagation of the Gos- pel in Foreign Parts. ‘Lord Salisbury, who on rising was received with loud cheers, then moved the resolution :— “ That the Society for the Propaga- tion of the Gospel in Foreign Parts, on entering on the 2ooth year of its exist- ence, desires to recognize with devout and humble thanks to Almighty God the measure of success which has been vouchsafed to its labors in planting the church in the British colonies and in evangelizing the heathen.” I accepted the summons of your President to take part in these proceed- ings, began Lord Salisbury, though I felt how little worthy I was to join hands with many of those who sit be- side me and have had far greater ex- perience of this noble work. But this is a great occasion. It is a point, a standpoint in the history not only of our church, but of our nation. (Cheers) That this society should have lasted during the past two centuries and grown constantly in authority and power shows not only, as your Presi- ent has pointed out to you, that God is with us and has honored us with a special call, but that there is a great field of duty open to you which you are now summoned to possess. I am here, perhaps, rather as a stranger, for I must not conceal from you that at the Foreigr Office mission- aries are not popular—(laughter)— and that perhaps the Foreign Office may look upon me rather as a deserter in appearing upon your platform at the present time. But intruth we owe to you, we owe to this great society, our assistance, not only on account of thes: high motives to which our President appealed, but because the civilization which it is in a smali degree our duty to serve is not an unmixed blessing to this and other missionary societies.] THE FOREIGN following AND OFFICE. I believe that over the vast area of the British Empire the mass of those who draw their originand receive their teaching from these shores are no un- worthy members of the religious bodies which England possesses. Y2t we must recognize the difficulties which it is not in our power to avoid placing in the paths of the missionary societies. The difficulties result not so much from any lack on our part of a desire to assist them, but because our very assistance carries with it certain draw- backs. We are startled when we read the history in old times of the vast and sudden conversions which seemed to sweep over a race or a country in obedience to the teachings of the early missionaries of Christianity, and we wonder whether it will ever be that phenomena of so striking a character will take place in our own time, but then we must recognize that the posi- tion is entirely different. DAYS OF MARTYRDOM. In the church of old times great evangelists went forth to their work, exposing themselves to fearful dangers, suffering all the terrors that the world could inflict—all in support of the doctrine they preached and the morali- ty they practised. If an evangelist or an apostle—Boniface or a Columba— preached in the middle ages he faced the difficulties, he underwent the martyrdom, he braved the torments to which he was exposed and the whole of the great moral and spiritual influ- ence of his self-devotion acted without hindrance on the people whom he addressed. But now if a Boniface or a Columba is exposed to this martyr- dom the result is an appeal to a Con- MISSIONARIES { was cured of Bronchitis and Asthma by MINARD’S LINIMENT MRS. A. LIVINGSTONE. Lot 5, P. E. 1. I was cured of a severe attack of Rheu- matiem by MINARD’S LINIMENT. Mahone Bay. JOHN MADER. I was cured of a severely sprained leg by MINARD’S LINIMENT. JOSUHA WYNACHT. Bridgewater. i Apply to 2 sul or to the mission of a gunboat, and unfortunately, though it cannot be helped, though it is a blame to nobody, though far indeed from being a blame to our devoted missionaries though I cannot admit it is a blame tu the secular Government by whom tkeir fate is avenged—still it does diminish the purely spiritual aspect and action of Christian teaching ; it does give to men the opportunity and the tempta, tion to attach a different meaning to that preaching, and to suspect it of objects which are far indeed away from the thoughts of those who urge it. (Cheers.) They have a proverb in the east :—‘ First the missiona y, t:en the Consul, then the General. (A laugh.) ‘That, as a matter ot fact, has too often been the case. That is to Say, it is true, and it could hardly be avoided, that those nations which are the most active in their missionary work are also marked by the constant_ expansion of their frontiers. This can not be avoided. You must accept it ; but do not hide from yourselves tiaat it is a great hindrance to your work, and that while secular results of this character follow from the results of Christian teaching, the Christian faith and the Christian cross do not shine upon the people of the world with the unblemished splendor with which they shone in old times. THE TROUBLE IN CHINA, Just look at this Chinese matter. You observed that all the people who are slaughtered are Christians. Do you imagine that they are slaughtered simply because the Chinese dislike their religion? There is no nation in the world so indifferent to the subject of religion as the Chinese, It is be- cause they and other nations have get the id_2 that missionary work is a mere instrument of the secular Gov- ernment in order to achieve the objects it has in view. That is a most danger- ous and terrible snare. I need not say itis utterly unjust, and that no men could be more devoted, more free from secondary motives, than the missionarizs who leave these shores ; but the fact that it is so does not dimi- nish the reality.of the danger which arises from the suspicion—a suspicion whose operation you now see in such terrible and blood-stained characters at the moment when I speak te you. AND WANTED. CAUTION PRUDENCE And may I attempt ‘o point the moral ?—and that 1s that caution and prudence, within the due limits of devotion and enthusiasm, are the duties of missionaries in a foreign land. who not only are preaching the Gospel, but are also representing to the eyes of the inhabitants to whom they preach the character of the aims ofthe people from whom they came. It is a high duty with them to temper their enthusiasm with Christian prudence. Remember that in old times, if an evangelist gave himself up tO martyr- dom he secured the crown for which he looked, and he did not injure his cause or those whose interests he re- presented ; but now any man who so conducts himself that his zeal leads to martyrdom incurs also this danger— that he will cause the shedding of the Jood of his own countrymen, of the soldiers and sailors by whom _ his countrymen are defended, and who, for the sake of those fellow-country- men, and in order to avoid similar, or even worse, outrages in the future, wil! be forced to enter upon military and hostile proceedings in order to avenge their death and prevent such outrages being repeated. THE DILEMMA. It is a terrible dilemma. They can- not renounce, they cannot abandon, they cannot even be lukewarm in the mission they represent. On the other hand, itisa_ real danger that if they do not observe the utmost caution they may cause the loss of many, many lives, and they may attach t » the retig- ion whichthey desire to preach the discredit of being an instrument of ter- ritorial greed and a weapon in the war- fare which one secular power wages against another. I have urged what is not a pleasant topic, because I feel that it is one that ought to sink deeply into the hearts of those who manage missians. They {run the risk not only of losing their own lives—they would care ittle for that—but of producing ter.ible events on 2 gigantic scale; because their posi- tion is closely mixed up with that of secular powers, and because the secu- lar powers, in justice te their own sub- jects, cannot allow their deathto go unavenged. AN ORIENTAL DIFFICULTY. May I say one word more on the same line upon a matter which touches us very closely, and is seldom absent from our hearts ? and that is, the posi- tion which this country and those who represent its moral and spiritual forces occupy to those great Mohammedan TE <A Site —etn, “=e ee RINE populations which in so many parts of the world come in close connection wtth our rule. New I have pointed out how diffi- cult it is to persuade other nations that - the missionary is not an instrument of | the secular Government. It is infinite- ;ly more difficult inthe case of the ; Mohammedan. He cannot believe | that those who are preaching the Gos pel against the religion of Mohammed are not incited thereto, and protected therein, and governed in_ their action by the secularGovernment of England, with which they are contesting. Many warnings have reached me. Those warning are always exaggerated, and I do not attach much importance to them. But still, careless action on the part of British missionaries in a Continued on page 6.) ARSON@ PILLe'> wil cure Constipation, all Li ta, finn, Hay capa impurkies trom the bod To Cure Sick Headache 4 grecywhare athe best Live? Pit wake’ ur sent -ree tf mail. Sold by d for 25 ce or sent post- ts : CL I P nts ia TO BE LET. ~~: Immediate porsession of that Build- ing adjoining the Masonic Temple. Suit- able for offices ete. Apply to Mrs. D. McKinnon, McGill Avenue, Ch’Town. dy. lwk, kxcursions t0 Pictou The most pleasant way of Spending a@ hot day. Return Tickets good for day of issue, will be sold on steamer “PRINCESS” fo. one dollar and fifty cents each. Fare will include Tea on return rovage Steam«r leaves half past nine local Keturrs about nine in the evening. By order F, W. HALES, Secretary Steam Navigation Co., Ltd. Ch’town, July 7th, 1900. DR. CLIFT Cures CHRONIC DISEASES and RUP- TURE, Office at Mrs. Stumbles, corner Prince and Kent Street, Charlottetown, from tetuiday evenizg tc'}vercay a. m. every WwW eek. a> Prince Edward |sland— Illustrated is the title of an interesting little book on Prince Edward Island profusely illustrated with iilustrations from photo- graphs. For sale at a!l bookstores 25c. Sent on receipt of price to any address by writing the pub- lishers. The Examiner Pub. Co, Charlottetewn, x es Insurance. Fire, Marine, Life Risks taxen Al! British Companies. low rates. HYNDMAN & C0 AGENTS Telephone 67. “ll Wil The kind you like tend to keep it so. todo it witn. We have the some dandies. , style and color. i or doabie breasted, A RAMSAY ~~~ {i Our clothing trade is booming and we in- And we've got the stuff clothing you can find in Ch’town. See our children’s b!ouse suits; we have See our lines of boy’s tweed and serge suits, the kind that gives a boy trouble to wear it out, that’s the kind we keep. And men’s tweed suits of every description And men’s serge suits which we find are ncreasing in favour every month. a splendid !ot of them in blue or black, single DOMINION ATLANTIC RAILWAY: and Steamship lines te Boston via Yarmouth. The Popular Fast line be- tween Nova Scotia and Boston via Windsor Junction and Halifax EXPRESS TRAINS leave Ualifax daily (except Sunday) at 6 35a. m., for Digby and Yermouth, making connection Wednesdays and Saturdays at Yarmouth for Boston, THE ROYAL MAIL STEAMSHIP “PRINCE GEORGE" 2400 Gross Tonnage. 7000 Horse Power, the fastest and finest steamer plying bet ween the Maratime Provinces and ton, Leave Yarmouth Wednesday and Saturdays for Boston. on arrival of Express Train from Halifax* a Returning leaves Boston Tuesday and Fri- ay at 4p.m°* Pamenees arriving in Halifax next day 5 30 p. m., by Express ‘iain. For all information, guide book, folders, etc which will be sent free, writeto F. H. Arm- strong, general passenger Agent Kentville, N. e. P. GIFKINS; Gen. Managerl Kentville N. S., May 26th, 1900. FOR SALE. _ 20 Building Lotstor eale 50x1C0, will be sold cheap. Also two Dwelling Houses on Highland Avenue, together with our whole stock of Crockery Glass vare and Groceries, etc, P, MONAGHAN, Queen Street. NOTICE. Haviog retired from business would all who are indebted to me make immediate | payment at the Medical Hall Queen Si. barlottetown. 8. W. DODD. i to wear. finest line of saying that. We have shoes, KL 4 So Go Piast TO THE OUURIS TEA MONDAY, JULY = {6th INST. and be fully convinced that your every whim and desire for pleasure, will be more than rewarded. The object is most worthy—the collecting of fands for the erection of a stone churcb, the foundation 0} which is now receiving the attention of the contractors and workmen. The usual smusements will be far. nished, and the inner man carefully provided for by a competent and numerous staff of officials who will take vou right in hand on arrival, end not let you go till you ery stop! Train arrangements appear below but carefully note the day and adjust your outings aceordingly. I f you have never seen Souris, then come and see the smartest town on the Island. If you have already seen Souris, then come again and renew your acquaintance, In all and every case cOme to the Souris Tea. Following are the train arrangements an d fares; aspecial train leaving Charlottetown at 7.15 a.m, standard time, will run on the following schedule Leave Charlottetown 7,15 a. m. Standar d time. St Dunstan 7.20 Cemetery 7.25 Roy. Junction 7.39 York 7.45 Suffolk 7-5] Bedford 8.00 Tracadie 8 07 Mt Stewart 38.20 St Andrews 8 24 Douglass 8.30 Lot 40 8.45 Morell 8 50 Marie 8. 55 Midgell 9.03 St Peters 9.10 Ashton 9.21 Selkirk 9.30 Rollo Bay 9.38 Bear River 9.44 New Zealand 9.51 Harmony 10.00 Arrive at Souris 10.15 Leave Souris 605 p. m Passengers from stations between George- town and Mount Stewart can go by regular morning trains returning by regular morn- ing trains on ei ag A 17th. FARES SO URIS Charlottetown to York 85cts Suffolk to St Andrews 75 Douglass to Marie 60 Midgeli to Ashton 45 Selkirk to Bear River 35 New Zealand to Souris 165 Georgetown te Lot 48 Rd 55 St Teresa to Pisquid 75 MICHAEL McCORMAOCK, Sec’y Souris, July 6, 1900—tI t. Dy pat Sat, mon, thar & wkly; dy x , Sat, tues, fri & wkiy & Her. Hor Sweaty Swollen Sore Aching Tender Tired Heet Try Foot Elm for cale at acdonald’s Drag Store Nieut Ber i Nurses’ Recisier. . nes Hi s That Means Buy Them at RAMSAY'S, See our lines of children’s and misses Oxfords forjsummer wear. We find that the majority of persons like to wear an Oxford in summer. largely of them, So we buy We can sell you anice fine Oxford in childreu’s sizes 7 to 10 for 55e, And in misses 11 to 2 for 70c. In Ladies 3 to 7 for 75c; these are not the best we carry by any means but they are the best values in the city, we are safe in See our men’s Dong>!a Oxford at $1,35, you can’t match it. We cau save you money oaffyourj boots & HURAMSAY & CO (lena viet ic SE Mi a LF) a “I a H ‘ ee ae Peep Sie aaa ee ae Fs ai aM Pag a Bat na ta era i Fas ae A Se . ota A - eee pe a HO SST FBR, 2 ORR . oe _ peg init oy SR eee