Should Have 'WEE ' ' J J*-ni-rf -_ THFI A`R‘DIAN '__\'2¢».~.i:~_i .ct ` li e;\_»1_'i}\\-;\_\-,_ Mr.Schreiiierniaili: :1 iiiixrsiiige whicl Vas to tinge his future political career. lis wife isa sister of fllr. Reitz, for- iierly President of the Orange Frei itate, and at present State Secretary oi ; ~ i c.a~-iirv, li vziiisi l‘c rcineiii. . ` i 1- C; iiioiigii that .1 ical cook t. v ? itiitkc g.».»Cl lii t-:ill i it ` June at 7.30 nl £§i§»»r,1g»~f-f’§§'¥7t“1”"y _-.~v.-ann# f'~‘~ of which has just been received, - ~ -- I ‘ e ad vztuce and Will UB 8Old H! the old price for cash- alsk for Pl-loo fl U-._llillllll___l ill This was bought heforg th _ &_ t ._ T0 ACGOMMODATE THE PUBLIC 9 - -' ii . . - . ° '_ N u rs es R eg' I it i tlfii or of bitterness added to his Persons wishing to engage a nurse can do so ‘oy applying at cape colony. .im-riiie iiiief vis-it io the Ore' Capctown Parliaiiieiit last October. X irses can register free of char-g@_ k ~- - '--- _ - culty during; the past eight nionths and more. As a Miiiister of the Crown he detcriiiined to at-t with loyalty, but as ai , The latest and best aseortmantw leader of the Dutch Afrikaiirler party no of 15:: books in the city. The freshest and beet assort- ment of confectionery. Don’t miss seeing those souveni shells of places of interest on P. E Island. . A full supply of views of P. Island- ii a German missionary in South Africa.. R' H, M A N , ‘Ly-ndall--a name his sister, Olive Schrein~ _ ,can City Hotel Corner Open flC\7 l.. m, to l0'p § if assumes volted from him, and there would have er, introduced into ‘The Story of an Afri- erl Nova loolla. and Boaton vin Wlldeorlunctlon ani Halifax. . AINS leave Halifax dail [ex ” mptsundavl at 6.30 p m.. fOr Digby -and, Yar- i mouth, making connection Tuesday. \Ved neodays, Thursday and Saturdays at Yarmouth f°1' 15051011- lesserones under the open_ sky. For he T HB ROYAL MAIL Srssiisnirs , "fn", surge" “Q "Fung Arthul’ Downing stood high in the first division 240061065 To igge, 7000 Horse Power, the fastest and finest teamers plying between the Maritime Provinces and Boston. days, Thursday and Saturdays for Boston on arrival of Express Train from Halifax. Wednesday and Friday at 4 p. ni. Passengers arriving in Halifax next day, 5.30 p.m., by Exoress Train. For a'l_ information, guide book. folders, etc., strong,General Passenger Agent, Ke'\tville.N.S P. GIFK!.\’S,oe.i'1 Ma .ager. Keutville N. S. June 15 d 4m. Special Rates Parties from the city, of four or more. who desire to is nd thc day in Pownal, will be conveyed tiiire in the morning, given dinner and tea at the Florida Hotel and returned in g egning for but $5.25 eiach;hC08Ch kwtll llltfi W Pirtiesan a u éwec Oil m receiving two himny notice, other spedni arrangements can be made st nw' gnéjwv ' Proprietor _. town one of the finest _educational insti- tutionsln the British colonies,Mr. Sclrrein-', D0lIlil0ll ATLANTIC RAILWAY- °' of .___ ‘ college he carried with him the chief And Steamship Lines to Boston via scholarship-one of £%Da year-awarded Yarhoutll. go The Popular Pans Line between East- u Mr. Schreiner. Cambridge he chose, and , Expggss TR _ hisname was enrolled at Downing College n 18’79.Fi`1rthei- honors lay beforehim-the greater ones in the examination rooms, on the Cam. ` ` . . A d 'dave Y-rmunh Tuesday, Wedne-_ \ ship, thecolonial undergraduate conclude fi. ing out first in theliegal Tripos, and being acclaimed Cha.ncellc»i~`s legal medallist. Returning leaves Boston Sunday, iuesday, H » of friends, for Schreiner was a niost popular man at Cam bridce, and Downing' which will be sent free, write to F. H. Arm- elected him a Fellow. er had eaten his dinners at the Middle 1 , ._ Temple, and won the two hundred guinea r on e I was better* studentship. Directly after he had obtain- and after takiiisgil about four bottles my coug , ed his degree with honors, he was called ‘ to the Bar, and returned home to the bottles to-prevent a return of the trouble. Ihave C 'riff "“'“°"°“°'°"°" PREMIER --xg' Bo ‘It FI ' ., W rs r H _‘1é:r;R ( A ‘i 50-petown, ‘Sweet Repose,` has been the L’ iiiv I DVB °SQ$"` Y` the highest grade. \\`c also I ` _ have :ho nes: liest grade ii, A lTl1EHOI). lv. P. bChI‘Cingr, C., be. » ~1'i|i¢on`s Pride." -1 Qiirioaf l, ‘ $- #kilns JMR. Cape Colony Parliament. . kan-n-1 ‘There was Mr. Schreiner, the Premier, aliuost boyish iwith plump, smooth cheeks and a da.-nk miistache. He looks capable, and looks as .if he knew it; he, too. is con- versational, aliiiost _jerky in speech. but eason.` Iii these t.ei~i-.i.is»did the lute 1\lr.(l. W. Steeveiis sketch the Prime Miiiister of This capable, boyi`.~li-looking politician has had to play apart of supreme dith- policy of aggressive loyalty was possible, therwisc his influence would have been battered. His followers would have re- een a general risingof the Cape Dutch. \Villia.in Philip Schreiner was the son' is mother is an Eng-lish lady, nee l\Iiss Earmf . _ AN ANGLO-Arnxcim EDUCATION. At the South African College in Cape-‘ went to school, and at once gave proof his great talents. When he left the' a student proceeding to an English niversity. » Thus fo-England, w_l1if.let§Ati_lla. boy, came owed~in his college boat what timé brilliant careerat the university by com- is high success gave pleasure to a. host `\Vhile still an undergraduate, Schrein- Then he went on circuit, which in that colony of magnificent distances and rare fu]stmE,]dS,_ t° the cleansing 9f the Fiiggged railways meant travelling miles by the ~‘ . SCHREINER lid not appear. oms and thought. I. ntil he becami I ittorney-General in t-heRhodes Ministry ` _ .0 case of any iinportaiice in the coloni I he Transvaal. M1‘s.Schreiiier is it lady fmuch culture, and their house iii i c:ntre ofthe higher talents in the colony. fame Prime Minister in October. lbw. at the head of the Bond Party, and in oppos- ition to Mr, Rhodes, whose Attorney- l ‘ w l ‘amebef _ U l_ _ ‘° ‘V _ _IW I- , TonoxTo,Junc 28.-Sir Charles Tuppei 01° “ ‘“‘ “"1 ” m “ “U ‘ey on his return from Enizliind in the lattei of August, contemplates organizim. :HTL ind personally attendinrra series of po .ii the Dominion. ~ Que., States:-“I was troubled with kidn ticaldenionstration, beginning iii Nova Scotia and extending to Ontario. Three will be held in Nova Scotia, one each in \' ew Brunswick and P. E. Island; three -ach in Quebec and Ontario. In additicn so theforegoing, monster outdoor meet .ngs will be held whenever practicable 3 Mr. Patrick J .McLaughla.n, Beauharnois ic. w. siisvisNs,| _reneral he had been in the previous ad- iiinistration. At the time of the Janie- have been that badl coul-l not sleep s.; scn raid Mr. Schreiner quarelled with Mr. I Rhodes, up to then his pers onal friend I 1 and political colleague in the represent- ation of Barkly \Vest. He then attached I '1`°l§, es Sf_9m U0 be d!‘iV€¥\ Ollli 0 After HiS Brief Visit i0 1116 ape, and at once began to Practice. f°“”d "° ”°°°’S"Y f°" °°¢ki“K a11°¢h=f Climate.” himself to his other particular friend Mr. Hofmeyr. the clever Bond leader. When Sir Alfred Milner conducted ne- gotiations with President Kruger last I summer the Bond Premier. overrating his iriduence, believed himself capable, of be,- ing a treaty-maker, but Mr. lKruger'S ul- timatum shattered the ambition. Mr. Schreiner then foundliimselfina position in which he was bound to be misunder- stood. He concurred in the policy of the High Commissioner, but led a party ready to break into open rebellion at the least encouragement. o he had to work with supreme tact; had to bear odium and to acquiesce iitly in the misunderstanding of his inward motives. \Vheu the true history of the politics of Cape Colonythrough- ozit these troublous times comes to be written it will he found that Sir Alfred llilner, Her Ma_jesty`s _representivc in South Africa, had no firmer support- er than the Bond Prime Minister of Cape Colony, Mr. \Villia1n Philip Schreiner. S he silé . .J “Doctors failed to reach my case and advised me to try a. i... higher air ” There is no greater irony than a recom cndatlon of change of climate to those whose circumstances make change of climate impossible How many a suf ferer in such acase has wistfully watched the Bight of the south seeking birds, and Cried with the Psalmist, ‘ Oh that I had wings But suppose you can fit the lungs to the climate instead of fitting the climate to the 1un§s. That is what has ri found possib e by those who have used Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis- covery. It so urifies the blood, remov- , ing the clogged) and poisonous conditions favorable to disease, that the whole body is strengthened. With new strength comes new power, and disease is resisted d thrown oi. There is no alcohol, whisk or other _ fo . Y toxicant contained in » Dr. Pierce’s Discovery I feel that I owe a debt of gratitude to you r preparing such grand remedies for chronic seases especially, which the doctors failed to reach writes I B Staples Esq of Barclay, Osage Co Kaus I am a railroad agent, and ur years ago my work keeping me in a warm oorn and stepping out frequently into the cold ir gave me bronchitis which became chronic nd deep seated Doctors failed to reach my ase and advised me to t a liigher air but, for- uuately for me a friendyalso advised me to try ` 3 Dr Pierce s medicines I commenced taking your Golden Medical Discovery. and by the time I had taken the 5 st b 1 _ entirely g _ e. Tins was A vear ego ...gi ` liter; an again ,last winter I took abou three Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets are wer- By 111 dealers in medicine. campaign for temperance among Catholic was outlined. Dia!-rhoea and Dysentry are too Refuse any of the dancers or worth` T' . _ _ ` V nal success in curing `Dir\rrhoeo, Dyson- tery,Cra.mps»Colic,-Cholora Moxsbus-, Sum- er Complaint, andall bowel complaints of young and old. What Trade We Have We'll Held and What We Haven’t We’re After ID people have given it their endorsatfo 1 :as the only reliable and safe remedy for these dangerous and distressing diseases. though, who hope to profit by the merit and popularity of Dr. Fowler’s Extract of Wild Strawberry. They put up a so called “Stawperry Compound,” and some tirnessucced in selling it to druggists and , the genuine. Even the wrapper is yellow , in the very elect. A you dont want to experiment or take chances as to results, refuse any and every d be offered toyou,and insist on the old andre- " r lia disease and dyspepsia for 20 years and nights and suffered terrible agony. I tried all sorts ofiziiedicines butgot no relief unti _began using Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills. They made a new man of me and he old t bl y system. One pill a dose,25 centsa box We have 'long thought it regrettable --_--3*., Appointed for the Third Time. Lord Leven, Governor of the Bank of England, has been appointed Lord High Commissioner to the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland for the forth time. ,l-lik* THE GREEN SICKNESS Girls who lack sufficient nerve force to develope into healthy womanhood become pile, weak, n_ervous‘ and irritable. They have chlorosis or ‘green sickness” and can only be cured when the nerves are re- stored and revitilized and made rich by using' Dr. Chasefs Nerve Food, the great restorative iii pill form. It makes pale. weak wornen and girls healthy, 1-ogy and nlunip. _ l\ote increaS€ 111 weight while tiking it. l Rebuked For Liquor At Fairs. Catholic societies cf Chicago which per mit liquor to be sold at picnics and fairs recived a severe :irraingement from speak- ers at the meeting of the Cook County Board of the Catholic Total 'Abstinence union at Handel Hall recently, and a 9 Dont 'l§ip_erime1it, dangerous for you to trifle with untried remedies. less diarrhoea compounds that may be olferediiyou instead of Dr. Fowler’s Extract of Wild Straw- -berry. » _ . - 1-1-1 Dr. Fowler’sExtract of Wild ,Strawberry thepast half century hashad phenome- Both the medical profession and the ‘ There are some unscroupuloiis persons, A nd general merchants representing it as Color, like Dr. F o\vler`s, so as to decieve .- If you want to be on the safe side, if inrrhoea mixture or compound that may ble genuine Dr.Fo\vlei-'s Extractof Wild T KIDN EY DISEASE AND BACKACHE ey lillll IIOIOIUICIII lhese Prices will Ti kle Economy ' 3 pieces, only 34 in Print Cot 10 pieces, only 36 in Print 4 doz Ladies Black Sailors, 4 doz Ladies Black Sailors, date Ladies Crash Skirts, cheap at Ladies Crash to make Skirts That 8c Under-vest Su urday That 10c Undervest, with or Misses American Pique in All Wool Se for 40 in Black Cashme 40 in, Brocade Black 36 in New 3 doz Men s Q dollar Tm See our window, See our window There s s few of the Theres s few of 20 doz new Hot Biz or bust we are soaked in the soup-not ifwe Oli? We nearly forgot our Sum§r &k~ ll hundred in ox-waggon and mulecart. But to the young barrister this was high holiday, for his early home was a mlSSi0l1 tation in the wilds of Kaffraria., where r S Pi .~ ' “'85 W1 ‘Y li ie new est best fabrics for , ~» ~ ‘ i -L hen the sun is fpgiuing a1i\l1ooii'in:§ei?l]tgh;se rain coats are S nkigtoshes and top-coats combined. gghcter-tight but not air tight-keep you dry but not stuffy- Thiiyire everything ~_’ff’5;‘f.-,»‘§'0°-'Q0 $12.00!.-Jas. Psion & co.-22 d&w. , » - d z ti ' to get i,i;~,;;'=;i,“:.S.‘,;i’.“.;i.‘“‘..2‘;. iz..“;.'.'ii... .... :h havin _bo make a. profit.-Jas. Paton Sc Co.-22 ci;&w. i Carter’s Seeds Grow be shown Saturday. 4' Our second floor is 3 Ill ,_ __ ' ’ _0 anmsw. ~i.j.f_. _ 9* 0°' 22 d‘i‘"“f 0‘Leary does thingS 511317 fight-*Q3 d&“’ Meds Rain,-Coats.-Go out when itfs ttheui to be-they are 81111”-Uffee Our prices are riszht _ b€0f\\1Se Of the The smart fashions' for little chaps will of the d ‘- rs art, $1 00 $2-0 ' I I _ .___ ‘T SEALED rnunnns addressed io nie ° <1 fi ii d “T d f - 53335621 i3.‘?é’.k.$$.‘r.‘i»fi°..iii i.i‘}.‘é£i.§5 at this omce until Friday, the Nth of July next. inclusivel , for the construction of-,a breakwater at Canoe Cove,\Lot 85, Queens (West) County, Prince Edward _ sland, according to a plan and a specification to be seen at the office of Jas. B. Henan. Resident Enizineer, Chai-lottetown,on ap- plication to the postmaster at Canoe Cove, and at the Department of Public Works, Ottawa. _ _ _ Tenders will not be considered unless made on the forms supplied. and signed with the actual signatures of tendercrs. An accepted bank cheque, payable to the order of the Ministerof Public \Vorks, for one thousand dollars ($1,000.00), must accompany each tender. This cheque will be forfeited if the party decline 'the con- tract or fail to complete the work con- tracted for, and will be returned in case of non-acceptance of tender. The Department does not bind itself to accept the lowest or any tender. By order. J OS. R. ROY, Acting Secretary. Department of Public Works, Ottawa, 22 June, 1900. N ws ers inserting this advertise- mcnqt wliillihut authority from the Depart- ment will not be paid or it. June 30 d 2i. _f’ .l A F DR SALE. “lE\Yl..AlB8” 1-_-_.1 'lhe late Residence of Malcolm McLeod, Q. C., Charlottetown Roy- alty, c -ntaiuiulg twenty and three quarteii acres. A to _ PP y - D, C. McLE 3D,- Solicitor Ch’town, Jane 20th, dxf ._ and medicine dealer will give you what .ing Strawberry, and every honest druggist you ask for. - Prayer for the Missionaries. - The Protestant missionary society in London, Boston, and New York held union meetings last week to offer prayers for the safety of the missionaries in Ch ina. The New York meeting was held in the assembly room of the Presbyterian Build- 156 Fifth Avenue. The Rev. Dr. Brown. one of the secretaries to the Pres- byteriim Board of Foreign- Mission, pre- , sided. A -- ini.i.w. cniisrs I -9 iiimiiiiiii cuiis...25°- is sem dimer to me diseafea parts by the Improved Blower. Heals the ulcers, clears the ak one of the missionaries in peril from the We bought more colored shirts’ In Boxers in China, is a Beloit (Wie) man. |eg¢¢ 5||k ffgntg men s wgfking' shifts glnn 1| ,Fb`;>1`0"e1`a ‘1‘;f;1é“*"_€;t‘; centlirycf ‘EE quired for our ordinary trsde In Uddit-ion to thrlhrge purely; ' W1 8 WDP G _ ~` _v..iZ§.f°ii`”.f§i of ii..-eg.. iii..i...- ii. err... ,v~ 1° “fly was 2 cases Shift# were *Md Btecently he has been stationed at the Con- cancelled Rather than take them hack mu gregational Hospital at Shan-tung, near to Us at a b|g redu¢ti°n We believe we have now the largest stock ' al’f€l"S f0l’ Wan-<-|33 er city To dispose of this stock we offer c D Flannellette Shirts 17c 25 Omeary __23,d&W_ y V Black Sateen Shirts Were you at the last Orange Tea ?-28 l Our Hercules unluundried White Shirt! Pekin. K Where wiii you be 12:5 Jul 2 Ai' d&w. _ And to-day finds us giving you better goods for less money, more to choose from, quicker and better service every way than ever before. 60 Ladies” Tailor Made Suits, sizes from 32to 40. Crash Skirts size 44 for 90c, worth $1.-L5.-Jas. giii iii; puts e perfectly 0,; other i &r.°§s"iluca IMPERIAL Petroleurn. II"A il I 5 _'-1- ~-»-~ ~ »»- Ili iii iiiinl m .af-dl wx T see” s ii. xr - an p &. “M” ""w~ \. passages, stops droppiréfs in the ` Q éthai-trgathand gel-manan y euros _ _ rr and ay Fever. Blower ` Mmm; free. All dealers. or Dt. A. W. Chase A Medicine Co.. Toronto and Buffalo. ~ f OFF REGULAR PR|GES?~,, Mission,-y pr, Arthur H, smith, This is the inducement we are olfering for your patronage ~ l X The Rev. Dr. Art-};;H. Smith, who is Why such big reductions 'P You may ask We will tell you frank Paton St Co.-22 d&w tf. , , i . J '