| w ork. Work forms the greater sart of the successful man’s life, and it takes good health to do it. Abbey’s Effervescent Salt taken daily gives the perfect health that accomplishes much. It orevents disease and cures diseases already developed. # #% ase and 6ec a bottle. All druggists. a° \TEFUL COMFORTING Distinguished everywhere for Delicacy of Flavour Superior G@uality, and Highly Nutritive P-operties. Specially grate- fui and comforting to the rervousand dyspeptic. Sold Golvy in }-lb. tins, labelled JAMES EPPS & CO., Ltd. Homeopathic Chemicts, London, England. : BREAKFAST SUPPER F PSS COCOA 4 yom . “a cw SH ‘ se = Ae Zam C3urtE Dlirring Things There is aiways an unusual stir in the kit- chen this time of the year. anc for that stir to be brought tua — et s © fas WEAR sucessful issue gocd materials are ex<utial. Quality in the finished pro- due is impossible without quality of ingredients. We insure your prod- act by insuring the qual ivy of the goods we seli you. John J. McKenna Queen Street TEE yUESTION IS OFTEN ASKED, CW 18 THE ASCENDENCY OF ROYAL OAK SOAP accounted ‘for? The answer :3 simple enough, viz:—Be. saure there is none equal to it ‘or intrinsic merits, firm ness, purity, combined with great iasting and cleansing pro- periies, S<nd for } remium list. J, D, LAPTHORN & C0., Charlottetown Soap Worke WANT HOUSE KEEPERS To’come in and look over our groceries. Our stock is fine aud fresh and guarantecd to be ati sfactory. We keep every- hi ng in our line that is neces- Sary . FOR HOUSEMSEPING The prices—well, that is wuat we want you to see when you y +y 4 xu are looking at our goods. Chir lowness® will surprise you. MORISCOLL and HORNSBY ‘QUEEN STREET - can invade i Bloemfontein. but it is better to mect such unpleasant- THE DalLY EXAMINER, 2 nme Vii i ii ‘tiers of t . be Struggle in South Africa. Situation Plainly Set Forth lhe Mailand Enipire says: “If two smali States, such a» are the Transvaal Republhe and the Orange Free State, British territory with 1m- putiny, destroy Briiish property and shoot down British soidiers who are eudeavoring to defend British towns ; and if Britain cannot drive them back | again behind their own _ borders and there compel them to sue for} peace, it is folly fur the British people to lay claim any longer to being one ot seven great powers ot the world. Ot; course, Britain when she gathers her | resources will drive back the invading ' Boers and will dictate terms of peace to the Governments of Pretoria and But in accepting the} Canadian contingent she is gathering her resources, and taking the steps necessary to assert and maintain her position. It has always been claim- ed for Britain that she possessed vast reserve power, aiid that no smail part of it lay in the colonies. We are now demonstrating this to be true, while, all those whom it is likely to concern are wetching the operation from the neut- ral galleries of Europe and America. But if the colonies are not to come to her assistance, and if because of this the British flag is to go duwn under some terrific and well timed as- sault, we should be tace to face with the condition indicated, and our power ful protector would be no longer able to protect. Then, says Le Cour- rier du Canada, we might look for “in- vasion, annexation, absorbation, an- nihilation.” Certain it is that on the morrow of the collapse of the British power, Canada would continue her in- dependentexistenceonly on sufferance. Our good neighbors to the South might not invade or annex, but is it likely that they would hear us out very pa- tiently on the Alaskan boundary ques- tion, or the Atlantic fisheries dispute, or any of the other matters over which we disagree? Then could we depend upon such friendly treatment from, say, Russia? Ard if the United States had to throw about us the protection of the Monroe doctrine to keep Russia or any Other outside power from ab- sorbing us, would the Americans never think of proposing that we might come into the Union which guarded us? This is not a pleasant discussion, ness in the field of academic debate than on the rugged plain of stern real- ity. There is no manner of doubt that British protection has made of Canada for the last century a very garden of the gods—a hill of peace. We have gone about {our business of sowing and reaping and sowing again, ot bui!d- ing and making and selling and buy- ing, until we have actually come to think of war as a mediaval practice, too brutal for our consideration and intended mainly to enliven history and embellish literature. We have been a national peace society, wondering mild- ly why the backward peoples of Europe did not lock upon us and learn how to make plough-shares without a_pre- liminary sword at all. But at last we are shaken awake. We live in the world like the rest of the nations. Take away our British buckler and we must learn to protect ourselves as they have to do. But it is better{far to/keep the buckler, A little hard thinking will convince the most ardent pro-Boerite of this staring truth. Fave = i— _ The practically unopposed occupa- tion of Dordrecht, in Cane Colony, by a detatchment of General Gatacre’s forces is an event of promise. The simply what they seem the event would mean that the enemy has begun to retire in Cape Colony as he did in Natal. It maby be to cccupy a stronger position, but even it that 1s the ca:e it is still well. An army retiring is never in the spirits that animate an oncoming con- fident host. Regarding Lord Methuen, the head- master of the Clayesmore school at Enfield, England, writes to the London Outlook, as follows : “It was about ten years ago that I first met the Hon. Paul Methuen, as he was then, at Toynbee Hall, White- chapel, and subsequently invited him to visit a Boys’ Club and Gymnasium at Manchester, and address the work- ing lads there. Methuen was at the time over head and ears in hard work in town, yet he travelled north on a’ cold winter day, visited the Club in the’ evening, and after supper returned by ' the night mail, not reaching London’ until early the following morning—all this to show friendship to a number of poor boys. Many of the officers of the northern district wished to meet him, whilst my guest, but his mission was to the boys, and resisted every | othe distraction. The lads gave the) hero of ‘Methuen’s Horse’ a character- istic Lancashire welcome, and listened | with deep interest to his account of the “Retreat of the Emperor Napoleon from Moscow,” and the story of that wonderful Russias campaign of 1813. “Lord Methuen has frequently since supported with the utmost generosity efferts amongst working boys. He is cf the best type of English nobleman, doing his charity simply, wisely and in a full and quiet sense of the duty of service for others.” BRAIN FAG Is the result of Overwork and an Exhausted Nervous System. Dr. A. W. Chase's Nerve Food creates New Brain and Nerve Tissue. Business and professional men, accountants, stenographers, teachers, students and al] brain workers know only too well what it means ta have the brain so tired out that concentration of thought is almost impossible. One-fifth of all the blood in the human body fs found in the brain, and unless the blood is pure and rich the brain becomes exhausted for want of proper nourishment. Dr. A. W. Chase's Blood Food creates new brain and nerve tissue, and produces rich red blood, ‘‘ the vital fluid * of the body. All brain workers quickly recognize the merits of this great food cure, and after a few doses enter on their work with new energy and ambi- tion. Brain fag is unknowr. to persons whose brain and nerve have been invigorated by the use of Dr. A. W. Chase's Nerve Food, which is fur pale by all dealers at scc. a box. Dr. Chase’s New Book, ‘‘ The Ills of Life and How To Cure ‘Them,” sent free to your address, Edmanson, Bates & Co., Toronte Removed The Printing and Bookbinding estab- —lishment of— JOHN COOMBS has been removed to the large and spacious rocm, over E. H. Norton’s, (next Prowse Bros,) Business office down stairs-—where he will be pleased to meet all his old customers, and as many new ones as vill favor him with a call, place is locally important, and is in | advance of what have for some time | been the British lines. If things are | Novel and Suitable | aa TS Rew ODOD Holiday rresents ODOD Oe 2ED OS — O——. } O Sterling Silver and Enamelled Gcods Our stock of watches, rings, chains, | bracelets, brooches, &c, is complete for XMAS TRADE. Ba Orders for any epecial line of goods, or article to be engrared should be; left with us, and will receive carefu} and prompt attention. ' ' { CH TAYLOR ; 4 Sunnyside, Queen{Square. Special Attention. Tohn Ccombs,’ Privter and Bookbinder. ESTABLISHED 1887 LEITH HOUSE Telephone 174 P. 0. Box 826 82 to 38 Queen Street Having secured the agency of the fam ous “Silver Spring Brewing Sherbtrocke” P. Q., 1 am prepared to eupply ale and porter of uneurpassed quality at prices that cannot fail to please. Write for prices and be prepared for a genuine sur- prise. A. MACDONALD i ChankLUTTETUWN JA oul eectiahabidemeetemeninmabinmedindatineens ¢ Transvaal the m ost unobtrusive manner, and with | Saved Two Cents, Mr. Pneer— You expect to be In San Francisco next week? By the way, you know where my aunt out there lives. I have just written a letter to her. Would you mind delivering it some day as you pass the house? Mr. Pueer’s Friend—No; but I might forget it. I think I'll Just put a stamp on it and drop it into the first letter box. Mr. Pneer—All right. I don’t care how you get it to her.—Chicago Trib- une. The Great Debate. When the uncertainty bad become well nigh intolerable, Science ventured to go to the Serpent directly. “Is it or is it not a fact, O Ser- pent,” asked Science, “that you swal- low your young when you are attack- ed?” “Well, I always try to hold my own,” replied the Serpent modestly, it is true, but evasively withal. And so the bitter controversy wages oa.—Deiroit Journal. America’s Position Among Nations. An English traveler who has recent- ily veen in this country remarks, in making a comparison between the principal great nations of the world, that “holy Kussia is a formidable idea, Great Britaip is a picturesque and pregnant iden, but the United States is a self conscious, clearly detined and heroically vindicated idea, in whose frrther vindication the whoie world Is concerned "St Louis Globe-Demo- erat ANOTHER NAME ENROLLED Growing List of those who Testify toDodd’s Kidney Pllls Nii- treal. eee e MonrreaL, Jan, 2.—The list of those who bave received benefit ‘rom the yreat medicine, Dodd’s Kidney Pille, is steadily growing in thiscitv. Since Mr. Ri bert Thomson’s name was published, Mr. M. Mullin, of 4 Elgin Street, has stepped for- ward and submitted bistestimony His case was Rhetmatirm which though now generally recoguized as a kiduey dis-a-e is not always treated as +uch, Propie waste a lot of money trying to drive rheumatism from the sv+tem. If they would ali foll.w Mr. Mullin’s ex~ |ample they would be eaved much pain and +xpense. Says he,‘* 1 have had Rheumatism for some time and could get no'bing to cure me until I used Dodd’s Kidney Pills. I have now iaken three boxes and om cured.” man ates have 10 on Wom uu than Fashion’. claims dates. stronger 80iv@ men’s — ae Soren A Jury et Women Who have tested ‘he merits of Dr A. W.¢ base’s Kidrey Liv-r Pills return the ver- eict thatfor backache and ki:ney disorders there is nO preperation in any way equal to this great discovery of br A W Chase, Amer- ica’s greatest phy. ician. This ureat kidney cure is sold by ali dealersat 25 cents a box, and hes proved most effectual asa remedy tor the manyi lis to which woman is subject. _ It sometimes nappens that while aman is Watehing nic enemies his friends get the best of him. complimentary removes one brow. to his loving wife it more Bapprcx. June 11, 1897. C.C. tt10naRDs & Lo. Dear Sirs,—MINARD’S LINIMENT is my remedy for NEURALGIA. It relieves at once. A. 8S. McDonatp Credit is toa man what virture is toa woman. | Good Work— Lowest. Prices— | _Sert that they were cured by MINARD’S Minard’s Liniment Cares Burns & ——1> «<2 ___ Silent neighbors make a desirable neighborhood. ———~—< > a RHEUMATISM SURED. Jokn A McDonald, Aroprior, Ont. Jas. McKee, Livnwood, Unt. Lachlin McNeil, Mabou, CB. C B Billing, Markham, Ont. Jobn Mader, Mabune Bay, N 8, Lewis 8 Butler, Burin, Nfld. These well Eoown gentlemen all as« LINIMEN1. 7 eee vi Time moves on at the same old pace— no matter whether your watcn is rup- Ding or not. 4 Startling Confessicgs ‘RY 4, 1900 inard’s Liniment for sale ever’ where, Every time a man says eomething | S wrinkle from her, & Tortoise Heaters ——~ ce a “Oooo eee ae oh, ene ee OD ar Is th t most ideiy used Tea on Pri { rivce Edw ird Isla d it Leads Al) Cthers Don’: be pu off c genuine can ea-i!s b> obt«ined, «sk vonr greeer for BEAHMIN, i HASZARD CANADIAN GENT own en »ih s> cabled matches when the Dec 23— y A, - Wis ” TO Hizghtan? Ranges ' fdewel Ranges Jewel Staves Heatihg Stoves Y a Tortoise Heaters See that you get the Tortuise with a dne top piece. Fennell & Chandler . a | [899- (900 2 We Cordially Bxtend ==> = <~ BOOS + &* eh BEBO #480 eese “—_-The Season's Greetings Toour friends throughout the city 4nd country. Wholesale & Retail Grocers SANDERSON & CO Cd ARLOTTETOWN Sv? Peeesr Rubbers all styles and = sizes fall and winter wear — for possible prices, at McQUAID’S, LOWER QUEEN STREER Boot and Shoe Store. suitable tor the lowest Our Laree Stock of winter Overcoatine and Suitines... IS NOW COMPLETE AWAITING YOUR INSPECTION: JOUN MWLEOD & CO TORTOISE H EATER | Island: Crown oe $17.50 Sampson Cook, No, 8 Hii th Show that 25 per cont. of men an svffer the tortvres of itching piles, ¢ tion proves that Dr. 4. W. Chase’s Uiniment | has never yet failed to cnre itching plies, and | all of these men and womer could end their | suffelings at once by using it. Scores of | thousands have been cureu by this tr atment | Every body can becured in the same way. women Investiga | i The man with the pall is mightier -hen the man who gc ts pulled. ; $13.60 a PROM $7.50 UP 2am SS This price for 2 weeks Simon W. Craktbe Warker’s Corner STOVES & HARDWA 84