ee ee ee ee ee THE DAILY HAAMINER, CHARLOTSETOWN, JANUARY 27,1960 310K HEADACHE Positively oun by these Little Pills, They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, Ind tion and Too Hearty Eating. <A per- fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsl- ness, Bad Tastein the M aa ated Tongue Pain in the Side, ‘TORPID LIVER. They Reculate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. Small Pill. Small Dose. Small Price. Substitution the fraud of the day. See you get Carter's, Ask for Carter’s, Insist and demand Carter’s Little Liver Pills. crPSS COCOA GRATEFU!. @ COMFORTING Distinguished everywhere for Delicacy of Flavour Superior Quality, and Highly Nutritive Properties. Specially grate- ful and conmrforting to tho rervous and dyspoptic. Ecld onlv in 3-Ib. tins, labelled JAMES EPPS & Co., Ltd Homeopathic Chem! sts, Londor, England. * BREAKFAST e SUPPER EPPSS COGHA Raisins Raisins 4 CAOWN |AYERS om —SELECTED Finest of stock 121 14 and 28 lb. boxes. Also all kinds of groceries at the very lowest prices. Come and be convinced, J. T. FEARDON Visit our Store Where you will find a Jarge stock o tne following to select trom. WATCHES in gvld, silver and nickel. JEWELRY in rngs, chains, brooches, etc. CLOCKS in marble, wood and gilt. Silverware In che optical line, epectaciee, eye glasce-, opera glatece etc. CH TAYLOR Sunoyeide, Queen Square. e~ heed A great variety of work in our workshop, such as expert Watch & Clock Repairing Gilding & Silver-plating Engraviag —— Repairing & Renovating Fine Jewelery The latter includes 1 large olass of werk, which formerly had to be sent away for repairs, which we new guarantee to do im the best manner and promptly: Solie:timg your favours, G. F. HUTCHESON, Quesy STRERT. Jeweler & Optician. &. INTER * ine § ESTING PARTICULARS ABOUT Tk = oe E TRANSVAAL WAR, DUNDONALD. VW some men s and reflec tiie ad name oft d in t of general ofh who are now doing ood service 55 \ Th name in such com el ble evidence of the vincible patriotism of = t have furnished the founs builders of our empire. In I circumstances a man whose randfather had been sentenced to n the pillory would prefer his to keep silence on the subject. Lord Dundonald would net, we elieve, object in the least to having | the story of Earl Thotmas’s trial and sentence repeated from the housetops. Some of us, indeed, can recall the hero’s death and the occasion for the | “splurge’ that it furnished to the news \ downs. paper and periodical press. Between the pillory and Westminster Abbey, there seems to be a great gulf fixed. A career that evoked such sharp con- trasts of British sentiment must have marked by abnormal ups and That Thomas Cochrane, tenth Earl of Dundonald, «was really and truly sentenced by an_ English judge of highest standing to be set for an hour in the pillory as well as to pay a fine of 41.000 and to spend a year in prison is one of the melancholy facts ot modern history. ‘That he was ac- corded a hero’s burialin Westminster Abbey is no less certain. ‘The date of his death was the year in which the Prince of Wales visited Canada. He was then in his 86th year, and how clear his intellect remained to the last was shown by the publication of the second volume of his autobiography wi hin the same twelve months. Thomas, Lord Cochrane, the eldest son and heir of the ninth Lord Dun- denald, was born at Annsfieid, in Lan- arkshire, onthe 14th of December, 1775. His father was rich in knowl- edge and the love of it, but so poor that he could not raise enough money to give his successor the education suitable to a manof rank. Through the influence of his uncle, afterwards an admiral, he entered the navy under favorable circumstances. In 1795, he was sentto the North American sta- tion, and Beamish Murdock says that he and Captain (afterwards Sir George,) Prevost, were at Halifax to- gether. He is right, though he con- founds the uncle with the nephew— for they were both there. In 1800, he was given command of the little sloop Speedy, with which, weak thing though she was, he performed wonders Ina thirteen month’s cruise she took up- wards of fifty vessels ; 122 guns and 534 prisoners. ‘The beginning of that misunderstanding with the Admiralty which was destined to have such grave results afforded him, in 1802, an en- forced leisure and it was characteristic of the man that he used the interval to make up for the defects of his edu- cation by attending classes in the University of Edinburgh. In 1803, he was again in active service and for six years rendered, benefits to his country which have long been grate- fully acknowledged. In 1809 he volunteered to undertake the hazardous duty of firing the French fleet, block- aded in Basque Roads, (Isle of Aix). He did his part with his usual thor- oughness, but lack of support from his superier, Lord Gambier, limiting the success of his gallant exploit, he com-— plained so bitterly that Gambier was forced to ask for a court-martial. The issue was adverse to Cochrane. For four years he held no command—his sole sattisfaction being to criticise the rottenness of Admiralty adminstration from his seat (jointly with Sir F. Burdett) for Westminister, in the House of Commons. ‘This naturally made his relations with the Govern~ ment anything but pleasant. Early in 1814, a most critical time in British and European history, Lord Cochrane was appointed to the command of the Tonnant, his uncle’s flagship. Within a fortnight later, while London was on the qui vive of expectancy and the been I know MINABD’S LINIMENT will eure Diphtheria. JOHN D. BOUTILLIER. French Valley. I kvpow MINARD’S LINIMEMT will cure Croup. J. F. Cunningham. Cape Island. I know MINARD’S LINIMENT is the ‘ best remedy on earth. JOSEPH A. SNOW, Norwoy, Me, ‘who succeeded to the title stOCK excna most sens } Git »a whi of emotion 1S ied by thean n ff Napoleons deat and entry f the allies into Paris. At -o’clock a m., on the rst of fFebri On if-named Colonel de Bourg, uniformed as a staff cfficer, and asserting that he was just from France, door of ig a Dover inn, and formation | just outlined. Of course, ich news affected stocks very ously and } its untruthfulness was di: covered hoce was reasonably intense \dignation. | T¢ The result of the inqui ry instituted was fo connec Lord Cochrane, Mr. | Cochrane Johnston and Mr. Butt, in an | ¢ ostensibly suspicious way, with the “hoax” or “fraud” petrated. Lord Cochrane was never a cautious man nor did he put a curb upon his tongue. He had worsted his had indeed grown rich with prize money,) but his unspairing invective were bent on woisting him. Lord Ellenborough has been included in the number and has been blamed for | the harshness of his sentence (in which | the rest of the Kings Bench was with | him). But Cochrane admitted that, if he had done what he was accused of doing, the sentence was a just one. To most men it would have meant ir- revitable ruin, He had beena G. C. B, ; he was disknighted. He was dis-- missed from the service. He was ex-- pelled from Parliament. Out of defer- ence to public opinion he was not placed in the pillory. In spite of his escape from jail, and appearence inthe Heuse he was re-imprisoned and | served out hissentence. The years of Lord Cochrane’s exile have printed his name in capitals on the pages of Chilian, Peruvian, Brazilian, and Hel- lenic history. In 1831, he succeeded his father and his rehabilitation is as- sociated with the Earldon of Dundon- ald. Hedid not geta new trial, but obtained a parden under the great seal, which he accepted with reluc- tance. In 1841, he was made vice-ad- miral of the Blue, and in 1848 (his G. C. B. restored), he was, afterfifty years, sent againto the North Atlantic. In the interval his son as Lord Cochrane, had served with the 66th in Canada, and afterwards, in the 18th Royal Irish, in the East. The present Lord in 1885, became a cornet in the Life Guards in 1870. Hehas now his part assigned in restoring the pax Britannica in South Africa, and the eyes of the em- pire are upon him and his colleagues. — Montreal Gazette. Wept Like Women. A marine of Her Majesty’s ship Powerful serving with the Naval Bri- gade in Lord Methuen’s Division has written to his parents at Rochdale from Modder River, dated December, 14, 1899 :— “I have only just got your letter from Massachusetts, posted in August. It has been to Wei-hai-wei, Shanghai, and nearly round the world after me. We have had a two days’ fight about eight mileslup at Spytfontein, since 1 wrote on December 4, and though we shelled them frightfully wecould not shift them, and retired for a couple of days’ rest. The Boers are in trenches high as houses, whilst all in front of them are masses of barbed wire high as a man. The Black Watch caught it in the battle and had about 200 kiiled and wounded. Their dead were buried yesterday, and the funeral was very sad and impressive. The bagpipes played ‘A Sprig of Heather’ as each body. wrapped in a soldier’s brown blanket, was lowered, and the Highlanders cried like women. The majority of the regiments here are | Reserve men. ‘The Highlanders are a | splendid lot of men, the Gordons es- ; pecially. oners, and they are a big strong lot of | men of all nationalities. We buried | two Scandinavians yesterday. I sup- pose you heard about Graspan. The CHARLOTTETOWN | into our camp | advance in the ranks,as they have been that had been per-| country’s enemies again and again (and | says: raised up a crop of foes at home who |! largely helped by foreign military ad- aT re had the ged the hill and were on th as the blue jackets and small parties rthiumbherland a . vt] TLOUIMNDeTIANGS, ana INOTth- We p of ines brunt of it. mat! Y orks, Nx mptons came up. The at night and praised us | ympathized with us for our | | ; ne | general Cal _ 11 1 ‘ ; ; We nave got tents here now and th forward » foul look oreater I can > with now, and, the ugh | ee for Christ uo my duty with a good “i art now th am here. It isa fine thing, is a for drawing mental ene dro Op] yped and all hands mix together. The officers work along with the men. \ll officers have to carry rifles now and eCagern have ked | ust do | at I ive ser- | All| to = home vice men together. a } Os ace ; and aistinction picked off so much.” The CapeTown correspondent of the London Times, telegraphing Monday, In view of the exaggerated ideas current that the Boers have been visers, it is worth while quoting the statement of a gentleman who has just arrived from Delagoa Bay. He says ‘that the Boers are at a loss to know what-to do, and that the advice tender- 'ed them, being based upon opposing ideas fof tactics, is valueless, and only leads, ‘when adopted, to loss of life. It appears that during General Joubert’s illness, General Schalkburger wired to Dr. Leyds to send men able to shoot straight and experts to make explosives and to work mines, but not useless ad- visers. From what I saw myself of the Boer forces at the outbreak of the war I know that the Boers have a profound distrust and contempt for European | military methods ; and with the excep- tion of Commandant Albrecht, they have practically no foreign officers, even in the artillery. The Transvaal-- ers, however, acknowledge that they have learned several useful tactical de vices from the Free Staters, especially in making entrenchmerts in least ex- pected places and at the foot of kopjes instead of no ridges. ee “A Gentle Wind of Western Birth” Tells no sweeter story to humanity than the announcement that the health-giver and health-bringer, Hood's Sarsaparilla, tells of the birth of an era of good health. Ht is the one reliable specific for the cure of all blood, stomach and liver troubles. Never Disappoints How angry it makes a man to see any cne he haces feel good natured. - NEW MAN Whst Vernon Bromley Says About Dodu’s Kidnoy Pills ‘for Rneum- )lite tiem, Toronto, Jan. 23.—Vernon Bromley, clerk of the Gilbert House here, and # well known man about town, has entirely recovered ‘from his attack of Sciatica. The rheumatic taint has been eradicated from bis sysiem permanently by the use of Dodd’s Kidaey Pills. “T had beena martyrto Rheumatism and Sciatica for years,” seys Mr Bromley. “T have alwaye been against any patent medicine until I read uaorefutable state- ments of cures of this dreadfu! disease. I hesitated, but everything else having failed, I got half a dozen of Dodd’s Kidney Pills. Ibave now used twelve boxes al- together, and am cured. Dood’s Kidney Pills made a new man of me.” We have a lot of Boer pris- wife when business is duil. John T. [icKenzie, & THE TAILOR & After the first baby arrives a man finds it more difficult to get sympathy trom his +e e+e Minard’s Liniment Relieves Neu- algia. P, E. ISLAND |move ata lively rate. Cer ——e THE (GOMBINATION THAT ee _ a CRSA, ag AO 1) Sa ee eS te Fed | gl Every ™ OTHER | 1a hei it in the House, Croup | 28 Coughs Pes lislaee if . Cramps gc We ti. Cholera AL ! e 4 oe sieht \ gy Chills — or - Gores Liniment s8e Waris ecmanae on Sugar. sw Will cure many common ailments which may occur in every family. It is strictly a family remedy. For INTERNAL as much as EX- TERNAL use. Originated in 1810 by-an old Family Physician. Could a remedy have existed for nearly a century, except for the fact that its virtue and excellence have won the public favor to a remarkable degree? You can safely trust what time has indorsed. Send for oar Book on INFLAMMATION, mailed free. Sold by all Druggists” ‘VPes i in Two » Sond Price 25-and 50 cts. I. 8. JOHNSON & C@., Boston, Sass SCE TPT @9 Sei GF LLECOR Buy Your Clothing Cheap ae——WHEN YOU CAN The balance of our large stock of men’s youths’ and boys ULSTERS, OVERCOAT 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 sell them at any sacrifice, Don’t wait any icnger. 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, GSRSESSO BSSSSS ee THE WORLD'S GREATEST COMPAN} The Mutual Life Insurance Co. of New York RICHARD A. [IicCURDY, President ASSETS—$277,517,325.36. ANNUAL INCOME—$55,006,629.43 INSURANCE IN FORUE —$971,7:1,997.79 qe All Canadian Policies payable iu gold<aGp Before placing your insurance please call or write fo stim ates. JOHN MWeHKACHERN. AGENT 27—Sat & Mon lmo- $3.75 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 them A few pounds 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. Fur caps 25 per cent discount, Sizes 26, 28, 30, 32, 34 Buy one and keep the little fellows warm going to school, Boys all wool sweaters 52 cents,