THE D.uILY EXAMENNK, UhARLOTTREIWN, FEBRUARY 13, 1.900 I do not believe there js a case of dyspep- sia, indigesticn or eny stomach trouble that cannot be re lieved at once and rmanently cured by my DYSPEPSIA CURE. MUNYON. At all druggists, 25c. a vial. Guide to Health and medi- eal advice free. 1505 Arch street, Phila. ARTILLERYMAN’S GALLANT EXPLOIT. A driver in the 7th Battery, Royal Field artillery, in a letter from Chieve- ley camp to his father at Richmond, modestly relates the part he played in the rescue of the guns at the Tugela‘ He says: “I think 1 amas lucky a man as there is living, for I was in the midst of the thick fire and never got a scratch. I am proud to tell yeu that 1 am mentioned by the commander-in chief for a Distinguished Service medal. It happened in this way. All the 14th Battery got killed or wounded and lost their guns. The 66th Battery also lost four guns. Well, they wanted | ' some of us togo and get them if we’ could. I asked to go. When we start- ed we were under shell fire, but none setts QUEUNNNTER EUEEUEURENEEOEUEOENY™ Silver waie for the Table—— Durable Table Ware is the only cena Atay wu find in our _— ot us got hit. But in galiuping out of Bis OBE ary ek: ar og ‘ a the line of fire the horses got their legs ; wv » > ao oe shou . ow oe oF over the trace, and so we had to stop quelities we offer. ’ in a big ditch under cover. At last we got the horses legs free, and then we had the order to gallop upto the guns and hook in, COMMENUED BY GEN. BULLER. “We had no sooner got out of the ditch than the Boers opened fire with their rifles and killed nine horses and two men, and wounded five men. The lead driver and the wheel driver of my team were shot. The horse I was riding was shot in four places, and my other horse was hit in two places. When I saw the lead driver knocked off his horse by a bullet I got off, put him on his own horse, unhooked him | and let him gallop away without get-| ting wounded any worse. Gen. Buller | happened to see me, and said I behav- ed most splendid. He said he hoped 1} should always be as lucky as to come out of such a heavy fire without getting hurt. He sent down to our battery | for our names and numbers and the, major told me he was proud to have such a man under him.” u mich: gather many ar ticles from this stock that would greatly aid in beautifying your table, or that would make very acceptable gif:s. Baking Dishes Hot-Water Jugs Cake Baskets Spoons and Forks Call and inspect our stock, the as will meet your views of economy. W. W. WELLER Jeweler and Engraver. CUD PSMMMMURCR! PUTRLOLELSRSSGGREEESE: f if > be a> MM ld AUS TLUUT Hea Arrived Thursday! 10 doz men’s fine rib bed all wool worth 1.25 a suit to-day for $1, 20 doz wool fleeced lined worth @E.50 a) eens ee Knee mad, suit, for a few days at 1 per suit, nueeseueeanecuacseeyaceemecaseoeecenerueeaneeaeeaseeasegnegssnngoy | 3 We SOPARERPERUP INTE GUPLORDDUDRECARGRRGUDRGODRESCRARRRRERERGSORGESTOMRCACORARROREGRRRDORRRRORGRRRRRRRCROSONREE SAGs “rg nm Pte. H Morris, 3rd Battalion King’s Royal Rifles, says: “As man after man in the British regiment jumped into the shot down or drowned. tired wounded men kept coming into camp for hours. One man had been shot no fewer than six times, but still managed to crawl into our jines. The colonel of the Connaught Rangers, who was reported amongst the killed, ap- peared in camp hardly recognizable. He was bespattered with blood from head to foot, and he was cheered as only British soldiers could cheer him.” Ik METHUEN HAD PUSHEDON Mr. Alfred Kinnear, News war correspondent - $ Pewee the Centra! with Lord | river with the column, | turn home invalided with a severe at | tack of enteric fever. tle of Modder R iver that we ing the flying enemy. ee ee : : Lord Methuen was controlled by his IS a senuine ,man considerations for his troops, | liens x : but most of us have thought, and still} BD: p- See window. | think, and if the Boers were physically 1 | strong enough to bolt and construct a e entrenchments our fellows were cap- ; ‘ ' ) able of following them and preventing ; | : Ai | Spytfontein. Had we pushed on that | | morning after that bivouac on the I ' tlefield of Modder we should have eaten | <tee— | our Sunday’s ‘bully’ in the , City.” | ONLY CAMP RUMOUR. ik ga i : ~~ ~ : | As to the rumoured differences For — . Rei mn | tween Lord Methuenand Gen. Wau- anKECIS, chope, Mr. Kinnear gives them no a Redeem ‘he Time credence. “I think it in BY? | degree unlikely that Gen. W auchoy ve should have absolved himself from re- sponsibility in the dying words, ‘Don’t ' Blache me, lads.” The man or men Y who heard him were never found, like Now 14 your t:me to purch.' the man or men who called ‘Retire, . the highest | S enenenenaenenennaIIennE ing authority of two colonels on this histeric night march that the disaster arose from the brigade losing its way, from units getting out of touch, from delay in restoring the formation, and from the impossiblity owing to the darkness of marching in open order,” WORSE THAN A MINE DISs- ASTER. Corp. Priest, of the Military Foot Police, Line of Communication, South Africa, writing home, says: “We have some awful sights. An officer and two sergeantsdied from their wounds, andthere area good many | men with only one leg and one arm. Six Boer prisoners (wounded) are with us. I have no fancy for being sewn up in a blanket and thrown into a_ hole.” I another letter he says: “Here at Wynberg hospital we have about 1,000 wounded, and some awful sights, worse than any ‘coal mine disaster. We have not been called upon to take part in any engagement at present. I do not know how long it will last, but when you get this letter there will be a great change around here. We _ have to sleep every night with our revolvers underneath our heads.” ROMANCE OF FIGHTING M Av CHARACTERISTIC STORIES OF THE BRIGADIER--GENERAL, Hector Macdonald’s career is too | BESPATTERED WITH BLOOD. |hard, regula Describing the battle of Colenso, ' fearless eyes. river to gain the other side they were | When we re-- Methuen’s force, has been interviewed | by a Westminster Gazette representa-| were for putting a bullet through his | tive. Mr. Kinnear crossed the Orange} head, but a Boer with an appreciation but had to re-! of pluck intervened. Asked why Lord | and we | Methuen did not follow up his initial, him prisoner at all hazards.” ce } I have | een oe? of opinion since the bat-; Macdonald has _ just that should | genius which have pushed up that victory by follow- | soldier from the good one. Dear Diamond ¢ om plete enre. well known to need reputition. From 'the beginning, when he walked into Glasgow, some say barefooted, to his /Omdurman days, it is nothing but a | splendid record of strength of purpose and personal heroism, ‘In appearance he looks just like the vigorous soldier he is—moderately tall, broad of chest ' (though ofnotsufficientbreadth to carry ‘all his medals), and with a square up- }right and downright look about him. His face is typically Highland in its r contour, and the straight, As one of his country- men said of him, “Macdonald’s face, it strikes you, could in a tensemoment, ‘when the march was on, or the battle going, become a perfectly cut square, a challenge to every side, hard, almost rentless. ‘The cheek bones are prom- inent at the base as well as at the top ; they suggest the strenuous, determined, indomitable man. You think of the tramp of armed men who have no sort of idea of turning back.” Macdonald has never forgotten Ma- juba.. Though taken prisoner on that unhappy day, he remained to the end |unbeaten, for when, after a desperate resistance, he was at. last unarmed and 'a couple of Boers ran at him, Macdon- ald met them with his na aked fists, and his assailants went reeling — back. Finding him so hard to tackle, they “No,” he said; ‘this is a shall spare him, a brave man, Let us take Mr. holds that touch of the great Undoubt Bennet Burleigh distinguishes I am aware that | edly he has the capacity for taking in- hu--| finite pains. The grind of work he has Sire,—I was for seven years eniferer from Bronchial Trouble, and their concentration in the kopjes of | ¥°": ‘d be so hearse at times that I could scarcely speak above a whisper. I got | no rehef from anything until I tried your vat- |MINARD’s HONEY BALSAM. Two botiles gave relief and six bot:les made a I would heartily recom- |mead itto anyone suffering from thriat or lung trouble be- J. F. VANBUSKIRE, Fredericton. | fn a4 I py sae trey nM! ea alata Va a eS epee roe ES Per a ei Pres Pe ase «a nice Oak or Walnut Clock, as we ave selling at a big discowt, at the Mod- err Jewelery and Fancy Goods Store, Siinnyside, | Jury & Co A beautiful Valendar given | free with every clock. them | Camp rumor in such variants as imagi- They (the words) never got beyond a nation or currency gave the story. The gossip of a ‘row’ between Methuen and Wauchope, apart from the natural amiability of each, is rather disposed of by the fact that the ill-fated incident aN (SLM of the 1 and brigade, which caused | CHARLOTTETOWN . | the ck tothe British advance, Wasa: ral sequel to the operations of the previous day. I have the attest- John T. FicKenzie, THE TAILOR & 2 gcse ae A WAR IN SOUTH AFRICA. Interesting Particulars of the Struggle Between Great Britain and the Boers. been through in the Soudan, making riflemen from mud,” probably no one but himself knows. It is to him and to men like him thatthe new Egyptain army Owes its existence to-day, and the results were for all the world to see at Atbara and Omdurman. He is a stern disciplinarian, sparihg no man, himself least of all, but he is adored by every black Soudanese and brown “Gippy” who ever followed him into battle; for he is a leader after their own hearts. Asto the affec- tion with which his fellow-officers regard him, General Hunter’s charming little message to the Macdonald banquet n London—‘My bestlove tocomrade Macdonald”—speaks for itself, In spite, however, of the warm liking he inspires in those above and under him, it is on record that some of his dusky Soudanese once mutinied against him. Macdonald’s method of dealing with the outbreak once again illustrates theman. His regiment had of necessity to make long forced marches under the fierce desert sun, the conditions were so hard that the men became mutinous, One day dur- ing the march Macdonald overheard two or three of the native soldiers say ing. “Wait till the next fight and I will take care that this slave-driver ofa colonel does not come outalive. I myself will shoot him.” Macdonald recognized the men by their voices, called a halt, and sternly ordered the culprits to step out from the ranks. Facing them, he cried. ‘‘Now you are the men who are going to shoot me inthe next fight. Why wait so longr Why not do it now? Here I am shoot me—if you dare !” The rebels grounded their arms in sullen silence. “Why don’t you shoot ?” asked their colonel. ‘Because you don’t seem to care whether you die or not,” and that re- luctant answer explained the secret of Macdonald’s power over half-savage soldiers. There was no,more grumb- ling, and the same men, and others like them, followed him | devotedly through the battles of Gemizah, Toski, Afafit, Ferkeh, Atbara and Omdur man. Many stories are told of his ways of dealing with his excitable ard child- like Soudanese battalions, and in the annonymous “Soudan Campaign,” just published by Chapman and Hall, is a new one. “Afterthe Abu Hamed fight, Colonel MacDonald had soundly rated the men who began the independent firing widest orders. Well, one night at Berber, Colonel McDonald while sleep- ing, as usual, in the court-yard round his hut, was woke up by a black soldier prope rly dressed in drill order without arms. When asked what he wanted, he said: “My battalion is very sorry that you are angry with them for firing without orders at Abu Hamed, but we know best what to do: we have been fighting since we were boys, we know the best way to turn them out of a place ; so just you leave things to us, and we'll pull you through !’ ‘The black then turned about, and was out side the courtyard before Col- onel Macdonald recovered from his surprise and exploded.” Though he has been through so many actions, though the scream of shell and the whirr of the Maxim are | mere commonplace to him, Brigadier- | General Macdonald is rather a retiring man, and when once asked what it felt like to bein the midst of battle, he quietly and characteristically answered, “T don’t think you feel anything in par- ticular.” A brave man McDonald’s record proves him to be, but that not enough for the present military situation in South Africa. No one doubts the courage of our officers out there, but some of them have blindly | walked into Boer traps The soldier of whom Bennet Bur- leigh wrote this 7 panegyric is the ie eit e ; ck ee ee ee ee oe Re Mack Pn sues EEE : ~“\ a in itselfis ! sort of a man wanted in South Africa : | “Had the brilliant, the splendid deed | of arms wrought by Macdonald been | done under the eyes ofa sovereign, or | in some other armies, he had surely been created a general on the spot.” As commander of the fine Highland Brigade which so recently and so sad- ly lost the gallant General Wauchope, Macdonald will have a large and splendid sphere of action before him. PAINS, : ; RL bbict MATIC Why Do You Suiier When an Appli- ecaiion of Griftitis’ Menthol Lini- ment Will Take Out all the Pain in a Few Minutes? It Penetrates Muscle, Membrane and Tissue to the Very Bone, Here is the Proof, Mr. Robert Collett, 70 Ellbott-street, To- ronto, writes: I am sure if the poor rheu- matic sufferer only kuew of the virtues of Griffiths’ Menthe] Liniment there would not be so much suffering from this terribie disease, I had been suffering for several weeks with a painful attack in my should- er. Half a bottle of Griffiths’ Menthol Liniment removed every trace of my trouble. I have also found it exceedingly good for sore throat. Sold by druggists, 25¢ and 75c. NOTICE _ All parties indebted ts this Company for Light or Wiring for the year eodin December 31 +t, 1899, are requested to ca and pay their “everal amon t+, on or be- fore the 20th F+brears, otherwise their | light will be discontinued, without turther botice P. E. INLAND ELECTRIC CO, JAMES Waopxi, Manager. Feb 7, 1900—+od td SUANYSIDE DENTSTRY, RR em tars. Telephone connection. ———_—_—_—__— wae. 2 name an ae ASS ETS—$277,517,325 36. stimates. 27—Sat & Mon ]mo ANNUAL INCOME—$55,006,629.48 INSURANCE IN FORVE — $971,7i1,997. o Qe All Canadian Policies payable in gold Befo re placing your insurance please eall or write f» cntracts for plumbing tch. A large staff of peat pipers an: ALL WORK G Get our prices before closing contra *ts petition prices. Address,— ° Mas eee ek CIF | i on tw’ : | "af etiedltal etenemnne ce qe FV SET Oey ¢ tp Dees 5 ite sesiseseshegenes: at Ses “as “*, 2 -S “sat - = s. a = ie ‘ AN ie: 3 si %% WANG te x SMe SY NY NL SN NEE ee ¢ ; a8 aS Ay aie MG Gs Fist TBP GAO AS and hot water heating undert aken aed_completedwith¥ 1 p'nm hers en aged. UARANTEFD. as weinsure yon firat BP. Ae MacLE AN, onic Temcle Building, Grafwon 3., aS NA se A s% . OfEce in New Prowse Block | tirst door to the right up | DR AYEPS THE WORLD'S GREATEST COMPANY The Mutual Life Insurance Co of New York RICHARD A. [IcCURDY, President cless work at com +. % & JOHN WeEKACHERN. A GENT For —— i an Photography — aa Finish “ind Ne wes a Artistic Pose, —— ic Scenie Effects, visit the studio of 4 _. GE COOK Cor. Queen and Grafton Sts., Ch’town.