=: ee oe mene aia ote 18 SIGK HEADACHE Positively cured by these | Little Pills, | They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, Indicestion and Too Hearty Eating. A per- ' fect remedy for Dizziness, Neusea, Drowsl. | ness, Dad Tastein the Mouth, Coated Tongue | Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They | Reculate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. Small Pill. Small Dose. | Small Price. Substitution THE DAix¥ EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, JANUARY 39 1900 WAR IN SOUTH AFRICA. __— Interesting Particulars of the Struggle Between Great SOCIAL LIFE IN NA.-. TAL: Pietermaritzburg a Gay) Capital Before the War —All That is Chang- ed Now. A writer in an English paper dating from Maritzburg says: I used to drive with one lady round the barracks among the Tommies’ wives. She . kept a little bank forthem, and collect- thee fem of the Cogs | ed their money each week to put by See you get Carter's, | fora rainy day. Ask for Carter's, Insist and demand Carter’s Little Liver Pills. i. ¥3S COCOA GRATEFU!. ®@® COMFORTING Distinguished everywhere for Delicacy of Flavour Superior Quality, and Highly Nutritive P:cperties. Specially grate- ful and comforting to the rervous anc dyspeptic. Sold only in > tins, labelled JAMES EPPS & CO., Ltd Homoopathic Chemists, London, England. * BREAKFAST e SUPPER EPPS'S GOGHA —— Raisins Raisins 4 CHOWN .\YERS———sum, —SELECTED Finest of stock. 1 14 and 28 lb. boxes. Also all kinds of groceries at the very lowest prices. Come and be convinced. i. T. PEARDON Visit our Store Where you will find a large stock o: tue follow.ng to select trom, WATCHES io gi li, silver and nickel. JEW ELRY in rings, chaine, broocbee, etc. CLOCKS in arble, wood and gilt. Silverware In ibe optical line, epectacies, eye glasse , opera glasees, etc. CH TAYLOR Sunoysi le, Queen Square. —_— VO Ezszecute A great workchop, such as expert Watch & Clock Repairing Gilding & Silver-plating Engraving —— Repairing & Xenovating Fine Jewelery Phe latter includes 1 large class of work, which formerly had to be sent «way for repairs, which we now ¢uarantee to do im the best manner and promptly: Soliesting your favours. G. F. HUTCHESON, She knew every wo- manand child by name. Her little 'son Dolly was simply the pride and pet of the regiment, and though only five used to be allowed to take the reins and drive his mother in his dog- cart. In India, the following year, he rede in a children’s steeplechase. I paid several visits to country houses outside Maritzburg. They were all delightfully situated andthe owners very hospitable, but quite different to the Cape coloniai houses, with their surroundings of bamboos, banana trees, palms, and hedges of the pretty litle shrub with pink waxen flower called Christ’s thorn.” Vegetation everywhere is wildly luxuriant, Zand there is plenty of grass, of which Cape Colony is so destitute. One house I went to, belonging to an English country family, was furnished with all the furniture ofan old English country house, andthe eld oak and family portraits seemed like a Dit of eld Eng- land dropped into the far-off land. This gentleman’s daughters, two of the belles of Maritzburg, which, by- the-by, swarmed with pretty women, married two officers of the Dublin Fusiliers within six months of their arrival in Natal. Avery delightful jaunt I had with my government house friend was to Howick, a pretty little village 14 miles north of Maritzburg. I had my choice ‘lof going there orto Durban to visit the fleet, which had suddenly appeared there to everyone’s astonishment. As fleets were no novelty, and Howick was, I went to Howick, and was well repaid. The falls of the Umgeni river ina single drop go down 370 feet. Between Howick and Maritzburg the railway ascends nearly 1,300 feet in 14 miles, so the gradient andthe curves can be imagined. I viewed the fall both from the top and from lower down, and it was really a magnificent sight. The whole neighborhood was very mountainous, and abounded with waterfalls and cascades. Howick it- self is quite a fashionable resort. in /summeras it is much cooler than | towns nearer the coast. The principal social event that took place was the ball given by the gov- ernor, in honor of the queen’s_birth- | day, on the 24th of May. In the morn- ing a grand military parade was held, | which I viewed from a dog-cart. If it had not been for the numerous Zulus around I could have fancied myself 'at Aldershot. I was highly amused at 'a Zulu lady, who started across the | parade ground just as the cavalry was | about to charge. The cavalry had to | stop their charge in the middle. While | she walked in a very dignified manner |to the other side. The Zulns are a magnificent race, both male and fe- male. I never saw more superb types |of humanity as regard figure. They | took an enormous interest in this pa- | rade and turned out in great numbers | adorned profusely with bangles,, beads, _of which the men wore necklaces, and | seathaie. the latter in their wool. The : | ladies each wore a short petticoat and ariety of work in our | a sort of toga arrangement, with elab- | orately embroidered borders of beads, and their wool was plastered up with clay into the prevailing style of head- I know MINARD’S LINIMENT will cure Diphtheria. JOHN D. BOUTILLIER. French Valley. I krow MINARD’S LINIMEMT will cure Croup. J. F. Cunningham Cape Island. I know MINARD’S LINIMENT fis the best remedy on earth. JOSEPH A. SNOW, Norwoy, Mr, Qt SEN STREET. Jeweler & @piician. | Britain and the {dress worn in Zulu society, chiefly in a long, struncated cone, starting from the crown of the head. ‘The dress it- self was made of calico, saturated with oil, and then rubbed all over with clay. Some of us captured a few of these wild fowl just outside the hotel gates as they returned from the parade, and bartered with them with signs for their various ornaments. The evening of the governor's ball distinguished itself by the electric light going out just as we were in the middle of dressing and at my hotel there was a grand scramble for candles. Capt. and Mrs. W.—and myself arrived at government house and found the avenue all in darkness, though lined with men of the gth Lan- j cers, as was the ballroom itself. The latter was lighted, certainly through the ingenuity of Lieutenant Victor Brooke, the ubiquitous and universally-liked aides—de—camp, who proved his value in an emergency by sending for two huge railway lamps, which were stuck up on pedestals, and lent a brilliant light to the ceiling and upper part of the room, but left the people and the floor in utter darkness. The governor and his wife stood inon a dais under one of these, he in ftnll court costume of white satin breeches and coat heavily embroidered with gold, she very beautiful in white satin and a tiara. There were at least 800 present and thanks to the misfortune with the electric light all stiffness vanished in the dark. However, it (the light) suddenly turned on about midnight, rather to some people’s concern Among the dancers I noticed Lady Charles Bentinsk, who had just come out as a bride, her husband being in the gth Lancers. How very many of all that gay throng are now in the midst of the horrors of war. This was my last gaiety in Maritzburg. Two days afterwards I left for Durban to spend a few days there before saying “good-bye” altogether to South Af- rica. THE ‘{MAGERSFONTEIN SLAUGHTER. It will be remembered that a corres- pondent of the London Morning Post, wrote from Magersfontein that the Highland brigade were so demoralized by the sudden fire poured into them trom the Boer trenches to the edge of which the Highlanders had unknowing- ly advanced, that they broke and ran. Here is the very different story of an- other correspondent, who was close behind the Highland brigade. The correspondent is S. C. Von Tuger Simoniski, the Montreal Herald repre- sentative, whose letter published in the Herald on Saturday, was the first to arrive in Canada :— The men were fairly caught ina trap. From the Boer trenches, not two hundred yards away, from trenches, tier upon tier, from rifle and machine gun, there poured an awful storm of death and destruction. Our men were still in their close$tormation, present- ing a mark that the poorest marksman could not fail to hit. There was no time to deploy, Ina flash every{man lay down, some to rise no more. The men in the rear began firing in all directions, and many a poor fellow was wounded by bullets from the rifles of his comrades. For five long minutes the Highland brigade was prone upon the ground, a Struggling mass ef humanity, in places four andsix deep. Then two com- panies of the Black Watch alone heard the order to charge, and whipping out their bayonets, they sprang like demons upon the first trench and left nota man alive in it. Mad with anger, and crazed with grief for their be!oved general, Wauchope, of Omdurman fame, fe!l among the CHARLOTTETOWN - John T. [icKenzie, E & THE TAILOR & ; Boers. first, they thrust their bayonets right and left. Every man in those two cumpanies deserves special recognition. "Tis such as they that have built up our vast, Empire. But they simply withered away before the terrific fire from the other trenches, drawing much of the fire that otherwise would have deci- mated the whole brigade. This all took place in the dusk of the early morning. They fought like heroes. Had all the brigade heard that order and obeyed it, what is virtually a severe repulse, yes a defeat, would have been turned into a glorious British victory which would have wiped out memory of Majuba hill and 1881. But unfortunately, someone, as is usual on such occasions, gave the order to retire, and utterly demoralized leav ing the ground littered with dead dy- ing and wounded, the Highlanders fell back, leaving the two companies of the Royal Highlanders unsupported and compelling them likewise to retire from the trench gained’ with their heart’s blood. Then again the whole brigade caught it, for the men were still “en masse.” From Simonski’s account there ap- pears little reason to blame Methuen. The Highlanders had marched several miles in the darkness, such darkness that the leading companies marched with a rope carried across their front to keep the men from losing line and touch with each other. The force ex- pected to meet the Boer pickets first, and then to open out for attack. But the Bocrs, expecting the attack had drawn back the pickets into their trenches. The Highland brigade had no skirmishers or scouts in front, and just as the darkness began to break they found themseives in solid quarter column, right under the Boer position. The blame which may attach to Methuen can apparently be only such as may pertain to an order to infantry te attack a strong fortified position, without previous or simultaneons use of artillery. —_——_ Apretty little story of General Gatacre was reported by a Queenstown paper the other day. An orderly had ridden into camp with despatches from a con- siderable distance. The General when he received the despatches noticed how tired and fatigued the bearer was. “Go and lie down in ny tent,” said Gatacre, gruffly but kindly ; “I'll go see to your horse. Pte. John Murphy, 3rd Grenadier Guards, says : “Oh, its extra to be out in the wars. It’s then you see every body praying. The biggest of villiars come to it when they see the first fight. Seeing poor fellows shot at your feet, ‘| it’s then the thoughts come into your hearts.” “It was a trying time,” writes Pte. William Moon, at the front with Lord Methuen, describing the Modder River battle. “Every minute you could hear some poor soldier crying for help while not one, but a great many, lay dead and dying all around us. To as many as I could I gave all my water, for that is the first thing the wounded ask for. It was asight which I shall never forget in all life, and I think God that I am spared to write this letter to you. More than once we said to one another that death would be a relief to us.’ A Jury et Women Who bave tested the merits of Dr A. W. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills return the vcr- eict thatfor backache and kidney disorders there 18 nO preparation in any way equal to this great discovery of Dr A W Chase, Amer- ica’s greatest phvsician. This great kidney cure is sold by all dealers at 25 cents a box, and has proved most effectua! asa remedy for the manyi lis to which woman is subject. P. E. ISLAND SAE So gleaming | all OSB Se C6 & 24864 move ata lively rate. Age. At our store you can always depend upon getting | Just what you ask for Instaple as well as faucy groceries we are the acknow- ledge d leaders in Ch’town, Have you ever traded with us? Ifnot, begin now: Age is more a matler of feeling than of years. Illness makes one feel and look old before »* one’s time *» #* # The elastic step, steady nerve, bright and # cheery appearance of the constant user of Abbey’s Effervescent » Salt proves that perfect health is the true cri- terion of ages we SANDERSON & CO GROCERS ase and 6oc @ bottle. Afl druggists, ] Buy Your Clothing Cheap ae——WHEN YOU CAN The balance of our large stock of men’s youths’ and boys ULSTERS, OVERCOATS AND REEFERS at clearing out prices, We don’t want to carry a single coa over if we can help it, and are prepared to gell them at any sacrifice, Don’t wait any longer. Buy when you can buy the cheapest. Children’s Clothing, Separate Pants, Suits, Ulsters, Over coats and Reefers, any size you want and sold at prices that will open your eyes. R. H. Ramsay & Co. THE MODEL STORE. SSR SESESES BOSS SE For Lunch, - For Supper, When Sleighing, When Skating, After the Dance, After the Theatre BOVRIL... BOVRIL is Delicious and Instantly Invigorating. ess » Po./0 Is all we ask for an ulster that some of our merchants advertize to be worth $7.50. We have better qualities at price that should make then A few pounils of ulster is worth a ton of cough drops. All wool beaver overcoats reduced from $12.00 to $9,00 Blue beaver cloth overcoats, our own make, $7,50. Far caps 25 per cent disccunt, Boys all wool sweuters 52 cents, Siz2s 26, 28, 30,32, 34 Buy one and keep the little fellows warm going to schoo’, D. A. BRUCK