f LANGUID . children are sick children. Their inactivity and sober faces are notin keepin; with robust childhood. They lack vitality and resistive power, and are very susceptible to colds and contagiousdiseases. Scolls Emulsion brings new life to such chil- . dren. It enriches the blood ie pestores health and activ- ity ; it gives \ igor and vitality to mind and body. 7} and $1.00. all draggists, BOW NE, Chemists, Torente | FLOUR * When ylo want a . parre l give us a call: we sell of choice flour, all the leading brands and guarantee every barrel we sell. Whentin need of one call and let’s quote you prices, SANDERSON & CO Victoria Row Grocers. on us Plant Line BOS TBi: TO BOSTON Commencing June 29th, 1900 a S.S. Halifax Will leave Charlottetown at NOON on FRIDAY, ard §. §. LA GRANDE DUCHESSE j Every WEDNESDAY at 9 a. m. for Boston via Hawkesbury and Halifax. Passengers |-avirg Cher'ottefown via Pictou, make close connection at Halifax from Boston Tuesdays and Sxturdays. TheS. S. Halifax takes Freight and Passengers for Hawkesbury and Halifax. Tickets for sale at Stations P. E. I. Railway. F or ticl bpp'y 3 oformation ts, rates and all W. W. CLARKE, Agent Charlottetown H, L, CHIPMAN, Manager Apl 24¢f. Most cereals require a double boiler, and at least 20 minutes ccoking, while Ralston Breakfast Food is prepared with ease and dispatch in a single boiler in five minutes The vigor and strength imparting prop- erties of Ralston come from Gluterean Wheat. the whole berry of whichis milled into Ralston Breakfast Food. ACEC ee a DPHLOD- OPP POPP DP DO DODD > <> = South Africa and the East- <> <> <> <> ‘ <> «< hedad« : = . = OPO PSOP DD OOO 89D | THE HEATHEN CHINEE. The relations of the Chinese re ligions to the three main systems of the West have been so differently set forth by different writers that one hardly know s what to believe. One thing is clear from the testimony ofall his torians: it was by land and not by sea that the gospel, as well as Islam and the faith of Moses, entered China. here are some who would have believe that for their earliest germs of civilization the Chinese were indebted to the Accadians or Highlanders who are associated with the culture of the ancient Babylonians. Scholars have used elaborate arguments to show that the civilization of the Chinese and that ‘the Babylonians had a common origin, that the characters, the calen— dars and the primitive scierce and philosophy of both peoples had a com- mon source. However that be, any connection that could be thus estab- lished, must have long antedated the upgrowth ofthe native sects. The doctrines of Fo or Buddha began to be disseminated in the first Christian century and gradually became the most popular religion in the Empire. The sect ofthe Rationalists had been established long before by Lautze, born 604, B. C. Confucius, born B. C., visited Lantze in his old age. Mencius (Mengtze) was born B. o 400, and died in his 85th year, leaving as a legacy a treatise on morality, personal and political. which is highly prized.. Atwtat time the Jews en- tered China is not kncwn, but their existance there has long been well es- tablished. At Kaifung-tu in Henan, they were found in large enough num- berto attract attention asa distinct people, and were known as Blue-bon- nets from the cap they wore when us ol O59, worshiping in their synagogues. They were by many considered a sect of uumedans. Over the tablet to :mperor, which is de rigueur in all Chinese temples, the Jews had an in- scription tothis effect: “Hear, O Israel ! the lord our God is one Lord. Blessed be the name of the Glory of His Kingdom for ever and ever.” As to the time of their arrival there dif- ferent conclusions have been reached. Some hold that they entered China from Babyion during the period of the Captivity. Others prefer a later period. A like doubt involves the first coming of the Molhammedans, but there is less difficulty in their case, as many Moslem communities have been in contiguity to the western borders of China since the early conquests of the Prophet’s followers. The arrival in China of the first Christians is supposed co be fixed by a memorial tablet discoveredjn 1625 at Singan-fu in Shensi. Lhe “docu ment commemorated the diffusion by authority of the doctrine knovn as the “illustrious instruction,” and bore a date equivalent to the month of Au- gust, A. D., 639. Evenin English the style is not only Oriental, but Chinese. Learned men, like Father Kircher, S. J.; Dr. Ligge, Dr. Bridge man, Father Semedo, and Dr. Wells Williams have expressed no doubt of its authenticity. At first it was claim- ed that the ir ing Cheietians had ' .s wat aold this view siill, but the general con- viction is that they were Nestorians. Punthier considers the Christianity of its authors very vague. He says that both Olopen, the priest whose name is mentioned in it, and his companions as well as the Buddhists, who flocked into China in the same century, were {attracted by the generous protection accorded by the liberal Tai-tsoung. He looks upon the doctrines set forth as a medley of Buddhism, Christianity and Confucianism. Father Gaubil observes that there is no mention In the Chinese histories of the introduc- tiun of Christianity at the time indt- There’s not another dish so delicious for breakfast that contains as much-nutrition as Ralston Breakfast Food. FOR SALE BY JENKINS & SON tLe Cormer Gree ®t t#Sole sqerte. NoLeod, Morson & McQuarrie Barristers, Solicitors, &c. Urr icr—Brown’s Block; Souch Side Queen Square. CHARLOTTETOWN, PEI. LOANS NGOTIATBD cated by the tablet. From time to | time reference is made to the Chris \— { wee cured of Bronchitis and Asthma by MINARD’S LINIMENT MRS. A. NLIVIG3TONE. Lot 5, P. E. 1. I was cured of a cevere attack of Rbeu- matisem by MINARD’S LINIMENT. Mahone Bay. JOHN MADER. I was cured of a severely sprained leg by MINARD’S LINIMENT. JOSUHA WYNACHT. Bridgewater. THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, JULY Ln ea en — tians of China until the middle of the 14th century. Marco Polo mentions their churches near Nanking. Like the Jews and Mohammedans they had become Mongolized. Corvino’s mis- sion forms a fink between the earlier and later attempts at evangelization. He died in 1330, and Nicolas de Beutra succeeded him inthe see of Chathay, but to little purpose. In 1581 Matteo Ricci took up his abode at Canton, but the Spanish and Portu- 1ese merchants were opposed to his Even St. Francis Xavier had been disappointed and died without effecting much in an islet southwest of Macao. But Ricci was determined to persevere and assuming the costume 1 Won favor 1 Pl mission, . ’ SOO! of a native priest he with the people, though Confucianists opposed After adopting the dress sed him. of the literati, he succeeded in his third attempt to settle in Nanking, where he lectured with great accept- ance on scientific subjects. A native of Shanghai, named Siu, baptized as Paul, helped him to translate Euclid into Chinese. Paul’s daughter, Can- dada, also proved useful. Finally the Emperor took Ricci by the hand. Ricci died in 1610, at the age of 8o. In spite of occassional prosecution other Jesuits carried on Ricci’s work, and it was really from the rival Dom- inicans that the evangelization thus accomplished received its most serious check. The Jesuits had shown a cer- tain tolerance to Chinese modes of thought, and especially to their vener- ation for their ancestors, and this com- promise the Dominicans would not re- cognize. ‘The result was that the Em- peror who had welcomed the Jesuits as servants, declined to accept the Pope’s legate who arrived at Pekin in 1705, and in 1706 he issued an edict forbidding any ecclesiastics to settle in the Middle Kingdom. Mgr. Tournon, the legate, who had been made a cardinal, died in confinement at Macao, and through another Pope sentanother legate (Mezzabarba) who for a_ time seemed to thrive at the Chinese court, the edict of Yungching in 1724, and astill severer one in 1736, formally interdicted the teachmag of Christianity. Nevertheless, Rome did not falter in allegiance to the com- mand: Go and teach all nations. A century later eight bishops, 57 Euro- pean and 114 native priests, and 303,- 000 converts had, according to the An- nales de la Foi, represented the success of the mission. Ty ‘hat time the Protestant churches had also pushed forward their pioneers. The Rev. Robert Morrison, of Morpeth, was sent out in 1809 by the London Missionary Seciety, and in 1813 the Rev. W. Milne followed. These devoted men did a great work as lexicographers and translators. The Americans followed the example some years later, and to one of them, the late Mr. Wells Williams, afterwards a consul, we owe a well known _ history | of China. Some of our readers may have heard Mr. Williams when he lectured in McGiil College, under the presidency of Sir. J. W. Dawson, to a itifully small audience—the lecture having been, in fact, extemporized. Of the actual results of Christian missions in Chinait is impossible to ittain a trustworthy knowledge. The success of missions, like all success in persuasion, is as much due te attractive personal qualties, con- joined with force of character, as to he skill in argument that carries conviction. The loyalty of which [ivingstone’s tree is a_ perpetual witness, is as much a triumph for a great-hearted, loving, enduring man as fer the gospel that he preached -nd lived. Doubtless there have been noble men and women engaged in the Chinese missions and the werk (the medical work especially ) has been its own best advocate. But the success, if judged bythe number of those converted to any form of Christianity, is small compared with the untouched millions. We do our missionaries a terrible injustice when we treat the kinsmen of those whom they would bring into the fold as something hardly human, Practi- cal Christianity is what bears fruit with shrewd aliens, like the heathen Chinee, or religious laissez-faire. It is the preaching without practice that does the mischief.—Gazette. — ———_j THE EMERGENCY RATIONS. Devlin’s Stuff Was Worthless and Thrown Away by the Canadians. A member of the stuff of the Montreal Star recently ran across &@ member of tre TURE. week. 0.Y0U W 5 re would not eat their contents and eo they were thrown by the wayside. powder was unpalatable even whem eaten 1D food. show my people what the Government gave us to live on when unable to secure a y other kind of food.” The beys of th~- firat contingent had been supplied with an Eoglish emergency food, and had mot seen the Canadias ars ticle. ‘Lhey were, therefore, unable to expresé an opinion cosc*rn'ng it. = WMolehbn Phch o parthes and remcve im ‘ties crom the and bowels, use of the best blood er known. Put gpin glass via Thirty in a bottler taany physicians, Parsons’ Pills d Book roe EB domncos b Oo heaton. Moos Insurance Fire, Marine, Life All British Companies. low rates, HYNDMAN & CO AGENTS Risks taxeo Telephone 67. we of the cans were opened, but the boys | pe | The great majority were destroyed unopened. The ‘he form of porridge and was also entirely valueless as a (iseue-produciog I am teking a box home just te 18, 1900 DOMINION ATLANTIC RAILWAY: and Steamship lines to Boston via Yarmouth. The Popular’ Fast line be- tween Nova scotia and Koston \|via Windsor Junction and Halifax EXPRESS TRAINS leave Halifax daily (except Sunday) at 6.35 a. m., for Digby and Yermouth, making connection Wednesdays and Saturdays at Yarmouth for Boston. THE ROYAL MAIL STEAMSHIP “PRINCE GHORGK INUS Uhh 2400 Gross Tonnage. 7000 Horse Power, the fasiost and finest steamer plying between the VMaratime Provinces and Boston, Leave Yarmouth Wednesday and Saturdays for Boston, on arrival] of Express irain from Halifax’ Returning leaves Boston Tuesday and Fri- day at 4 p.m?’ asseners arriving in Halifax next day 5.30 p. m., by Express ‘i?ain. F. r ailinformation, guide book, folders, etc which will be cent free, writeto F. H. Arm- ee gereral passenger Agent Kentville, Co P. GIFKINS; Gen. Manager] kentville N. 8, May 25°h, 1290. NOTIOH. Haviog retired from business wouli all who ace indebted to me make immediate payment atthe Medical Hall Queen St. barlcttetown. 8. W DODD. NOTICH. Ie Ie hereby given that any per-on found fishing without permission or otherwise trespassing on the stream or property at Moore’s Miil, Milton, either below or above the mill, will be prosecuted without dis- tinction. dy 2 aw tf. Rxcursions {9 Pictou ——— The most pleasant way of Spending a hot day. Return Tickets good for day of issue, will be sold on st-amer “PRINCESS” for one dollar and fifty cents each. Fare will include Tea on return voyage Steamer leaves half past nine loca Returns about nine in the evening. By order F. W. HALES, Secretary Steam Navigation Co., Lid. Ch’town, July 7th, 1900. DR. CLIFT Cures CHRONIC DISEASES and RUP- Office at Mrs. Stumbles, corner Prince and Kent Street, Charlottotown, from Saturday evening toTuerday & m. every better still, did you ev Canadian Mounted R fies ard found that be bad with hima can of the famens “Emergency rations” supplied by the Dominion to the Second Centingent. Wher asked as to the value of the stuff, he laughed and eaid : “Why we had to throw it away and get an English article, as it was utierly worth- jess ag an emergency ration. A pumber A man who wears a straw during the ho looks better than if he persists in carrying aroun We have an immens we ever had, and np to the pr many as we did any other year m out every day by hundreds and we want to We're rushing the ft one in the store. keep on rushing till we have sold every Think how much better you will feel, and come and get one. R. HW. Ramsay &C Dominion of Ganada PROVINCE OF Prince Edward Island City of Charlottetown. ’ Before Francis Longworth Haszard, E-q., the Stipendiary Magistrate for the City of Charlottetown. Take notice that His Honor the Stipen~ diary Magistrate for tbe Citv of Charlotte- town, has by virtue of the power and authority ic kim vested by the statute of the Geners! Assembly of the Island, in- stituted,— An Act to Consolidate and Amend the several Acts Incorporating the City of Charlottetown, ordered and appointed that Wednesday, 18th July, next, be the day set down for bearing all appeals made to him from the preceding Valuation Assess ments of rates imposed or authorized by (the City Council ofthe said City, and vat on such day and daily thereafter, un- -uch appeals have been beard, at ibe beur of 10 o’clock in the forenoon, fn the Police Court, in Charloitetown, sfore- eaid, all euch appeals will be heard and finally determined by him. Dated this 5th day of July, A. D., 1900. ROBERT VANIDSRSTINE. Collector for said City. | Flour. 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 heve not touched the top notch yet. We ware fortunate in securing severa! hun- dred bbls. early, and we are now offering them for sale at @ 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 veisewhere. Every bbl. guaranteed first-class or money refunded. Beer & Gott. For Sweaty Swollen Sore Aching Tender Tired Feet Try Feot Elm for sale at Macdonald's Drug Store Nurses’ Recis1 2B. Nieur Betu 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 'xiracted Without Paina. Berlin Dental Parlors. CHARLOTTETOWN. ORI i I A RAN A aE ~ FORSALE. 20 Building Lotstor sale 50x1C0, wil) be sold cheap. Also two Dwelling Houses on Highland Avenve. together with our whole etock of C: chery Glas yvare and Groceries, etc. P. MONAGHAN, Queen Street, Zins. e od. ——— a NT COMPORT OULL FIND TT ik HATS, t days feels better and er see them yourself? esent time have da heavy felt hat. Did anybody ever tell you how nice Ramsay's straws are, or o steck of them this year, twice as Many as sold more than twice as this early in the season. © ~ oe