Se ee OT pe "Sea — Consumption ss contracted as well as in- herited. Only strong lungs ainst it. sposed toweak are proot a hose recovering ynia, Grippe, hitis, or other extuaues: ould take is {S ® Scolls Emulsion It ceeiohes he blood, strengthens the lungs, and builds up t entire system. It preven ts CO isumMption and cures it in the early stages. 5° and fr.ce all druggists, SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, Toreuta. White Caramels and jnowflake Chocolates ~t- Can be had at any following firs: class T. J. Morris ». L. Looper W. Pickard & Co, W. A. Hutcheson W. F. Carter Stewart o Gates Sanderson & Co. J.D. MeLeod & }. H. Uason, Bron¢ ing illne —_ ace £ > Si ; y= AL ——— — ore Plant Line TO TO BUSTON Commencing Sept. Ist 1900 S.8S. Halifax Willleave Charlovietown at NOON on FRIDAY. Paseengers lJeavirg Charlottefown on Wednesday and Sati rday mornings make close connection at Jalifax for Boston. AUTUMN EXCURSIONS. Special Return Tickets now being is- sued at Reduced Raies. For tickets, rates and all information apply to W. W,. CLARKE, Agent Charlottetown. H. L, CHIPM Manager Apl 24¢tf. Eye Tax. Greater demands are constantly being made on the eyes by our advancing civilization. The most perfect adj istment is called for. Life is often a failure through pee or Sight. The eyes are the bread winnerSe We can give you the best Aon possible. G. F. HUTCHESON, Watchmaker & Jeweler. _ Matchless Blend Tea the best 25 5 cent | Tea on Earth. | If you want to use the best 25 cent tea you'll have to use Matchless Blend Our sales of this tea have been some thirg aac S. They have in- creased every week since we first be- yan to sell it—and they’re increasing yet. Try h: te} less ajét) é2 Remember we are sole agents. You can't get the bert 25¢ tea anywhere Jenkins everemenneeemsrsaes bento) eee FROM THE BOER SIDE. ME WAR HUMORS AND REVELATIONS’ London ‘Daily Mai Correspondence) [very war brings in its wake distress and misery untold, but of all wars a Boer War is most prolific in unaffected numMor, he Boer’s contempt for disc ipline and authority is proverbial; neither he nor his superior officer understands the art of war in that sense, and so fatally can his individual influence be exercis- versely against those command- nie so strong is his clannishness and close-knit his family ties, that it would be a part icularly yventuresome ield-cornet who would dare to play the Dr aco. } Ca Vv Ing lhe earlier days of the to Natal saw scenes which Republican icnic of shame would have been ing if they had not been painful | degrading in a peop entire- y lawless and dest good ieSs iicense, le not tute of uslities. At Dundee a troop of loading up thirteen pi Gn Gen- eral Lucas Myer remonstrating with them against such wholesale brigand. age, they bluntly told him he might ‘loop naarzyn mo’er’—a rough ‘taal in junct ion intimating that he stake go and be hanged. is I doubt whether until quite recently many Boeis took the war really seriou- Siy. One evening in Jan uary last on a spur of the giant Umbulwanha, over- looking the Neutral Camp, at’ Lady- smith, I came upon a Utrecht outpost A raw, callow youth of not more than sixteeqy years, was this ‘brandwacht,’ ard he asked me to help him interpret the mearing of a written order down from the head laager, which was laboriously spelling out. raper said in effect that English spies and Kaffir runners were continually creeping through the Boer lines to Buller at Chiveley, that extra vigilance was imposed, and that ifat the third chailenge no satisfactory answer was given, there was to be no further _par- ley. The outpost were to shoot to kill. RUMOR AND TRAGEDY @F OUTPOSTS.J The pass-word that night (our friend told me quite candidly) was ‘Mauser’; : Boers anos! were sent he The and he said he meant to carry out his instructions to the letter. Presently his keen eye described”a movement in the bushes. A figure was approaching through the gloom. The cutpost challenged three times and got no answer. ‘Werda!’ bellowed the outpost for the fourth time, adding in a high state of excitement and anger: ‘If you don’t shout ‘‘Mauser” at once I’ll shoot you dead sure!’ (‘as je nou nie gauw-gauw “Mauser” roep, dan zal ik jou zeker schiei!’) By this time the figure was upon us; it was thac of a shaggy haired old far- mer, who indignantly inquired what his own son (for such it was) meant by offering such unfilial remarks. I explained the Commandant-General’s orders, but the old man was not te be appeased. Whatdid he want with passwords and threats. <A nice state of affairs if he couldn’t visit his own child after dark without all this non- sense and falutin’ regulations. Incidents such as these go to explain the success of the two night surprises by the Ladysmith garrison on the Boer guns at Lombard and Vaal Kops, dur ing the latter of which expeditions, by the: by, Mr. Henry Spannier, a sex- agenarian speculator from the United States, who had joined the Pretoria town commando, was accidently shot dead by a Boer marksman, The facts of the episode were suppressed by the Pretoria censors; but all knew that his inability to talk Dutch and his rallying cry cn Vaal Kop, ‘Come eon, bo}s, here there are, just here?’ u.tered in English, in the rush and g'oom of the night, cost him his hife. Of course the Beers preferred to believe that the success of these daring coups was the handiwork of traitors, and Lieutenants Tosseland Walker, of the Pretoria Police, with two other Englishmen named Cooper and Milne, were placed under arrest; but we, with inside knowledge, concluded that the re- verses were due only to the crass care lessness and imprudence of the som- nolent young persons from the country at the outposts. A SECOND LUNGTUNGPEN. More prudent and circumspect was _ —. — ee Gentiemen,— While driviag down’ a very tteep hill last August my horse stumbled ard fell, cutting himeelf fear - fully about the head and bojy. I*used MINARD’S LINIMENT freely on him and in a few days he was as we!) as ever, *J. B.A. BEAUCHEMIY, Sherbrooke. Je & Son Charlottetewer — THE DAIL’ EXAMINEK CHARLOTTRIOWN OCTOBER 4 19¢o the action of a certain Vryheid veter- an, sent with his fellews to seize the’ Armstreng guns Colonel Long was ' | forced te abandon en the south side of | rac t e Tugela on that fateful 15th of De- Cc mber. This was a great shaggy creature, a giant in stature, with a 2 untenance weatherbeaten and | gnarled, in a patriarchal framework of white h.ir, that streamed unkempt all over him. Such aman as Dan’i Peg goty might have been. He had been despatched by Emmett, Botna’s brother-in-law, to help fetch the un- protected gums. and the Tugela river being ‘very wet,’ and more than nor- mally, he had di vested himself of al clothes. Heh ad, in short, adopted the ‘altogether,’ save for the bandolier, slung across his torso, and his rifle in his hand. Then followed the alter— cation with brave Colonel Bullock (forced to surrender by a = ote from a Mauser’s butt-end) ind the capture of the Devons ina denga. Being told off as escort to the captured khakis, and unable to recover his clothes, he present ed a side-splitting picture, as he trudged quietly by their side, his her- culean figure towering above all the company. It was only a shade less comical than that of a tall, bony, grey-head who, having looted Allison’s splendid farmstead, near Ladysmith, and appro priated young Mr. Allsson’s ‘things,’ might have been observed for days after careering exultant through the laagers on an absurb little pony, attir- ed (the Boer brigand not the pony), in an opera hat, a dress coat, and dress waistcoat, no shirt, pumps with boks, no socks, and a pair of dress trousers, which, by reason of being al- together too short, ) jae spanned the knee. EVERY SOLDIER HIS OWN GENERAL, What would be said in the service clubs ifa trooper could transiate him- self at his own sweet will fiom an in- fantry garrison stationed at Cairo toa heavy cavalry regiment fighting in the Soudan ? What would be said if a ‘go- as-you-please-stay-if-you-like’ sort of ‘system’ prevailed, by which a Dorset Light Infantry officer, tired of active service, just saddled up and hitched himself on to an army medical corps in the rear? Or, if there was anything to be made in that quarter, joined the staff of the field canteen? Or nomin-— ated himself Batman-in Chief to Lord Kitchener ? Yet similar thing fre- quently occurred in the Beer camps. I have known aman nominally <€- tached tolthe Johannesburg commando go to his commandant, Ben Viljoen, say he was slck of Natal, and that his brother-in-law, the general at Dordre- dht, or his aunt’s cousin, the field cor- net at Modder River, had sent him an urgent message to come down at once. Ben Viljzen might protest; but he would be powerless to interfer; if he denied the renegade permission to leave, the latter would take train all the same. Protests in these cases were fuvle, there was no.camp machni. ery to enforce them. I have also seen the abject terror of a Rand magistrate, Mr. D. J. Schur- man, commandeered for active service Save Your MONEY. To save your money, by getting more for it ask your deater iu meaicine to show you the mew 50 cent size bottle of JoHNSON’sS ANG DYNE LINIMENT. It contains over three times as much as the old 25 cent style, which is a great saving to those who use this valu- able tamily medicine. The superior quality of this old Anodyne has never been equaled. outs mae oneN MENT Fifty years ago this menth, Dr. Johnson left gith me some Johnson’s Anodyne Liniment. I remember him distinctly, and could tell ae just how he was dressed on that day. I have sold Johnson’s Liniment ever since. Can truly @y it has maintained its high standard from thattime to this. No medicine today possesses ths contidence of the public toa greater extent JOHN Lb. RanD, North Waterford, Me.,Jan., 1891. 4s a family remedy it has been used and in- gorsed for nearly a century. Every Mother should have it in the house for many common ailments, Internal as much as External. Oar book en INFLAMMATION free. Price & and 50c. 4 3. Johnson & Co. Boston, Mass = eee THE UNEXPECTED HAFPENS F Ch’town was OTTAWA today von wculd have yeen Sorry yeu were ct cover: ered fcr a sree emcurt. I bave gcca comparics anc san qucte ycu low sates. E. H. BEER late in the campaign, lest he should , be laagered in a camp where a Johan* n-sburg ne’er-do-well, whom he had ently sentenced toa term of im- prisonment, had risen f om convict to assistant-laager-commandant and a la =) military dignitary withal. Imagine | tie field of retaliation and revenge in | such desputic hands. The late General Joubert, when the ‘Nolkstem’ accused him of ‘unmilitary humanity’ outside of Ladysmith, got into a towering temper, and said h: knew all about the tactics ‘Wellington, Bonaparte, Alsace-Lorraine, and thcs2 other generals would have adopted, but he probably knew his business a | 1 tle better then th y,’ MONTREAL, Makers of the c2iedrated Albert Toltet Soaps. @ , h Te 5 A Delicious $ 9 T 17 © ® LuLDINEG é % # ee © € and then refreshing sieep-~there : 5 is nothing vm t for any baby. 9 @ Always use the ‘‘ Albert . Ps > 3 ¢ BABY’S OWN $ DADI DS 3 3 SOAP : 2 SOA : ° . © and your child will have a fine @ e complexion and never be troubled rs © wi th skin diseases. o © ‘Y*e National Council of Wo- © % me..of Canada have recommend- 3 3 ed itas very suitable for nursery 3 ? wse, > $ The Albert Toilet Soap Co., ° x ° > a. dO OSS HOOD $0O60000000 eeu 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 gooas and provisions. Ve Can Help You There* We have the best of everything in that line What we want is your trade; can we have it ® JOHN McKENNA, Queen Street, AN | ng g good money get gocd clothing in re- The k kind of clothing we sell is standard made— it’s worth every pe nny you put into it, it gives gocd service and looks well as loug as you wear it. The beginning of thie month epens up the fall trade for which we are thoroughly prepared. We have received en pairs pants trom 75c to $4.50. -)9 Men’s Suits from $3.50 to 315.00. 12 5 Boy’s Suits from $1.09 to $7.50. 390 dozen Men’s U nderclothing from 40c to $2.50. turn for it. | Tep Shirts from 25¢ up. 17 ‘39 tan" , + | Wit) shake up the balwee of our stock of summer (wader ;clothi, _ at half price : : if saving $’s iss h bby of your's, come in, well encourage 4, * 1 A WACOONALD » C9 Where high worth and low prices meet. The undersig ned offers for sale taa bargain the following: One 40-Horse Power Engine and Boiler. 14 Driving Pulleys with Shaft and Belting. One Rip Saw and bench with carriage. One 30 in. Saw, One 24 in, Planer—One set hvistiug blocks, One Matching and Moulding Machine, Fifty-one Moulding Knives, One Band Saw complete. One Buzz Pianer. One Swing Saw compiete. One Turning Latte and Shaft— One Vice Two Emery Wheels—One Jig Saw. Three Circular Saws and tables. A]l in first-class order. |MATTHEW & MCLEA. . Summer Suiting, RRB RR WS Our importations of clothes for spring and summer is aow omplete, and we invite inspection of the Lazzozt su2 cobbiest tock of suitings, overcoatings and trouseiztiz, to be seen in his city, Correct style, perfict fit and ceet workwranship ruaranteed, Always on hand,a full line of gante’ furnishings JOUN MLEOD & CO vireceing the Repair Mark eRe Hartfords bave had a large sale 4n}Charioté:town. We are stil Look them over—Write for catalogue. 2222222 2222222222222 National Wheels 3 Carnivals, Scotsman, 20thCentury, £.& D.. Columbia above daily supplies—SecondHand Wheels. Wight & Ub eo marae ee ee ee 0 dase tenant mene linn at smear coe 9 ttowss snipe a i rn eR A i NB RED ie me I GT NR RE 6 UT I a RES : - = iat oe eS