THE DAILY EXAMINER, CAARLOTTETOWN, DECEMBER 18, 1900 WITH THE BASUTOs. § FAT BABY 7 oe os Who Cooks tish Goverance. (London News.) ture fills outand surrounds the | } | : : : When the Eighth Division was little ones with, to protect their | skirting the borders of Basutoland ] ; -.1. | thought it would not tender parts—the same with| | * knows there isone sure way | time to cross the border, aud if pos . . } . . ‘ : to reich a man’s heart, and .s S ) i cae is not. sible to interview one otthe chiefs. that is by always having a kittens and papyes fat My opportunity came at last. QOur)| micel S ae e uC. to do » e ’ TT CO] al Oo ‘e « ae . | ‘icely spread tame. evuce| tender. Fat they must have; | general decided to give his weary men | this you must have ¢ nol ; a few days’ rest, so getting into saddle erroct ries, canned goods ang and fat they must be. at Willow Grange, 1 rode to Ficksourg | provisions. 'and there crossed the River Caledon, r H ! If your baby 1S anyway short | whose yellow waters, like an orange | W S Can e p : ek c at ‘ , | ribbon, divide Basutoland trom the j of his rights, give him Scott's Free State. Av this point the river You 7T here la! of dodlive 1 runs between steep banks, and when emulsion ¢ COd-tIVer Ol. l crossed it, was about deep enough We have the best Of CVEF¥-| won ced youn little to tepid pus Mie. to kiss my horse's girhs, though | thing in that line. What we) gcorre BOWNE, @hemista Torvete. could well believe that in the flood want is your trade. Can we have it. JOHN McKENNA QUEEN STREET. Season it becomes a most formidable turient. made on both sides to faciliate the | passage of traders, biack and white, but even there the ford is so consii- TIME TABLES. (LOCAL TIME) Arrival and Departure of Trains cesstully dispute the passage ofan in- and Steamers. —_ vading army with a mere handful of | : | men. TRAINS. Ralston 7 sian i Once over the river one soon felt eoee Express leaves for the west........ 7 35am 7 : ; i. ; Express arrives from the west.... 9 20pm) the lafluence of Jonathan 6s Black Accommodation leaves for the Prince, The niggers, naked except réa ast 00 ONE des, dads ceunebeaueen --4 lop mj) for the lion cloth, swaggered along | Accommodation leaves for Cape A BREAKFAST FOR 30 Traverse... . sevee 6 CO PM!) Accommodation arrives from the WEE 6. 60 ba + éseneene esecccees Accommodation arrives from the PEOPLE IN A TWO, POUND PACKAGE One cup Ralston Breakfast Food cooks enouyh for five persons---there are six full cups in every package. Sliced dates and Ralston Break- fast Food make a delicious desert. | Our ‘Little Book of Raiston Re- ceipes”’ tells of ether dainty dishes. A cupon in every package secures 2 copy. For sale by JENKINS & SON CORNER GROCERS. NIGHT CLASSES PICTURESQUE c. B.C. 5 Sessions per Week Prince OPENED ON Edward Island Express leaves for the east...-...- 8 cocoa m Express arrives from the east.....- 10 COam Accommodation leaves for the | Accommodation arrives from the our Queen. Their heads sit upon east... con ereeeserevcsecenens 4 5°P™) their necks with a bold, defiant poise, STEAMERS. | eg rb - full, ae and i : eae cular, thair chests magnificent, broa TMS HILLSBOROUGH |and deep, tapering steiitly toward the Leaves Prince Street ferry wharf for South | waist. Their arms and legs are beauti- | Port every half hour, fully fashioned for strong swift deeds. Strip an ordinary white man and put ‘him among these warri-rs, and he would look like a human clothes rack. ‘They watk with a thick, spriogy step, |and gave me the impression that they | could march at the double for a week without tiring. | best on horseback. To see then, bure- | backed dash down the side of a sheer j | | j } | horses over, and then climb the op- | posite bank when the face of the bank |1s like the face of a wall is a sight | worth traveling far to see. i ; Monday, Nov. 22, 1800 at 7.30 p, m, | Thorough instriiction in Book | Keeping, Business Pen~wtanship, | Arithmetic, Commercial Law,Short } hand, and Typewritinu. Intending | Bookstores students are asked to enter atonce,/ An illustrated book on P. E. Isl- dr as soon as possible. Terms, etc.,/an@. An interesting souvenir for on application to tourists. L. B. MILLER, Principal. r WHAT TO DO WITH THE BASUTOS. 25c at all }that I know nothing atali about, but 'I do know a horseman when I sce him } tor 1 was bred ina land wheie nine | tenths of the buys can ride. But no where have I seen a whole male popu lation ride as these Basuto warriors, i } } i iride, and the best use England can | S 'e.ch side of her head by bright green Magnificent Africans Under Bri-'| be a waste ot | An artificial cutting has been | tuted thet the Boers on the one side | and the blacks on the other could suc- | | nostril, the swing and spring of every | movement all speak the fighting race. And their women; what of them ? 'Fromthe back of the head to the | back of the heel you could space a lance shaft, so straight are they in their carriage. Their dress is a bunch of feathers and the third of a silk pock- et handkerchief, with a copper ring -around the ankle and another around the wrist. They do most of all the daily toil, such as it is, thengh I know of no peasant population in any other part of the world who get a living as castly as these folk. The men allow the wemen to d» most of the field labor, but when the grain is bagged the males place it in single bags across the back of a pony, and so take it to market. They walk beside the tiny ite ponies and balance the grain slung crosswise on tne animal’s back, and when the grain has been sold or bartered they bound on to their ponies ind Carreer madly homeward, each one trying to outdo his neigkbor in deeds of recklessness in the hope of | winning favor in the eyes of the dusky maidens, They are mean in regard /to money cr gifts, and know the in- trinsic value of things just as well as any peddler in all England. Judging the “nigger” merely as a human being, ‘irrespective of sentiment, color, and so forth, I can only say that in my es tinaation he and his are far better off in every respect than the average _with arms in their hands, and grinned | White laborer and his family in Eng. with insolent familiarity into our faces, |!and. There folks have plenty to cat. 10 goa m) They may have an intense respect and | little to do, and are very jolly. They _an unbounded love for che British—] | Would be perfectly happy if they only “a... a ee Me oe 1 50 pm/ have read scores of times that they had a Sufficient number of rifles and -have-—but I beg leave to doubt it. | /arge enough supply of ammunition | Physicially speaking, they are a superb | enablethem to drive every white cutis dedi cheek osieted 3 copm race of men, these sable subjects of /™an clean away from their borders. A BASUTO BRIDE. When I arrived at Jonathan’s village that warrlor was away with a_ band of his young men, so that I could not see him, though I saw his son ata wec- 'ding which was being held when I | reached ~ But they {are at their | the scene. I was taken through rows of naked, grinning savages, of both sexes, to be intro duced to the bride and_ bridegroom, whom I| found to be a pair ef mission converts. pair the rhock nearly shook my boots er il, had been fired ather out ofagun. It would not in front by about three inches anc the bodice was laced up by /narrow bands of red silk, like a foot. | daller’s jersey. | 1 wii |--mel in su: mer. ' TTT Ike Of then is to turn them into Fé MOY TOYS i. mounted iniantry. Give them six | a8 hiost Reliable /months drill, and they will be fit te | |face any troops in Europe. if never | iUSIC BOXES MUSICAL TOYS Place to have your repair work one is the place that tahes the most in- terestin your needs. We strive to accommodate al! who leave any work with us, by pé@ompt attention and |carry the fighting brand oa every |lineament—the bold keen eye, the Yprominent cheekbone, the hard-set mouth, the massive jaw, the quivering a : }@ quick despatch of same. We have Make excellent pregents for | the reputation of being **O. K ” on children. Here’s your chance |! repair work. Give us aicrial and ba ain to secure them cheap. Our be convinced that what we say is | | | | | whole stock to be cleared out true, What Makes the Home? at big discounts. Come in| a ayy sisneadi tite snare \e : ie a 4 Not the house, howev be; pe oa, as _ yee ae lf BRUCE STEWART net its furniture, pictures and appoint- a ve “api ee : ats Snel ments. The wife ard mother makes the Graphophones at very low | & CO home, and to speak of going home prices. | = means to go back into the shelter of the mn — ss ther’s love and care, i . Founders, Engineers, Machinists and ~ e , . OPE N EVERY Boiler Makers. Stearw Naviga- And | when pg ee oe AyON) sae a Shiel. Chiniiottn mother’s strength, the home-life suffers. EVENING a ae The food is not cooked as she cooks it. town, P. E: }. Tele Everywhere the phone 125. lack of wifely supervision and motherly thought- fulness is apparent. What a change, then, when this wife and mother comes back to take her old place in the family, Thousands of women who, be- cause of womanly ills, had been shut out of home life and home happi- ness, have been enabled to once more take their place in the family after being cured by | Dr. Pierce’s Favorite -Prescription. It | establishes regularity, dries weakening Styie, Quality and Price SALE | Genin, hone indataation an wioere gnmex. MILLER BROS QUEEN ST. Charlottetown’s Leading Piano \istablishment. ATTEND Haszard & Moore’s = AMONGST AN ARMY OF COHPETITORS { We can compete with any in | | tion and cures female weakness. It makes weak women strong, sick women well. “I commenced taking your ‘ Favorite Prescrip- tion’ and ‘Golden Medical Discovery’ about the roth of last December. one year ago,” writes Mrs. Eliza Wright, of Mountainview, Howell Co., Missouri. *I have been very slow about writing to you, although I am thankful I am here to-day and have the privilege of saying I thank you a thousand times for your kind ad- vice. I can truthfully say that if was through yeur kind advice and your medicine and the will of the Lord that I am living to-day; I am in better health than I have been for three years. I have taken one-half dozen bottles of each medicine. I am able to do my washing Immense Stock of Books, Doils, Fancy Geods, Games and Toys. See our newly Imported XMAS STOCK Liberal discounts to everyone oe... Watches. Jew during the big holiday trade. S, 4e elry Store open until 9 o'clock and Novelties. | evenings. G. H. TAYLOR, Haszard & Moore SUNNYSIDE. Sunnyside. in ing and milking. woman.”, Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets cure con- stipation and its almost countless conse- quences. They do not react on the system nor beget the pill habit. In fact, I feel like a new i = |saw them do any fighting, but they) | i | aad a gentle little fist that would have | | There are many things in this world | ficial orange blossoms, which looked In her short woolly hair she had pinned a wreath of artt- ike a diadem of snow on a midwinter nudhesap. Down her broad back heir hung a great gauzy lace veil big | ugh tomake a fly net for a cow It was not fixed on to her dress, nor to her wreath, but vas tied 02 to two Itttle kinky curls at the fashion of a ibbons, a‘ter prize | itiy of rhe draught order of a county fair. Her hands were encased in a pair of white kid gloves, man’s size, ind a pretty big man at that, for she scared John L. Sullivan in his palmiest lays, When | was introduced to the new- ly-shackled matron she put one of those gloved hands into mine with a’ simpering ail of coyness that made /me feel cold alr over, for that hand in | i the kid glove reminded me of the day I to-k the first lesson from Lau: ence |Foley, Australia’s champion boxer, |a dhe had an eight~ounce on (thank heaven) on that occasion. In_ her right hand the bride carried a fan of splendid ostrich feather, with which she brushed the flies off the groom. It was vast enough to have brushed away a toy terrier, tc say nothing of flies, but it looked a toy in that giant | fist. A BRAND'FROM THE BURNING. The bridegroom hung on his bride’s arm likea fly to a sugar stick. He was a tall young man, dressed ina black frock coat, light trousers braced up to show that he wore stocks, shoes, white gloves, and a high crewned hat. He } for four in family, and all my housework, cook- | carried his bride’s white silk gingham |in one hand and an enormous bunch 'of flowers in the other. He tried to ‘look meek, but only succeeded in look- ing’sly, hypocritical, and awfully un— ‘comfortable. Attimes he would look |at his new spouse, and then a most |unsainily expression would cross his |foxy face; he would push out his great ithick lips until they threw a shadow }al round him; open his dazzling white 'reeth and let his great blood-red toague ;:oll out until the chasm in his face | _ ooked like a crumbled deormat, fuld- ‘ed his hands meek-y over his breast, ‘and comforted himself generally like /an advertisement fora mission society. ) THE SAME OLD SUIT. | From him I glanced to his “pa,” |who had given him away and seemed ‘mighty glad to get clear of him. “Pa” 'was dressed in pure black from head When I saw the pair the | ’ to heel—just the same old suit that he had worn when he had struck this planet, only more of it, He was guiltless of anything and everything in the share of diess, except for a large tring of horn, which he wore on top of his head. He did no: Carry any para- sols, or fans, or gewgaws of any kind in bis great muscular fists, One hani grapsed an iron-shod assegai, and tne other lovingly fondled a battle-axe, and both weapons looked at home | where they rested. He was not just ithe -ort of father-in-law I should have /hampered for if I had been out on a | Datrimonial venture, but I would jrather have one limb of that old | heathen than the whole body of his “civilized” son, for with all ‘his faults |he looked a man. Achum of mine -who knew the way these people had, advised me to pur snuff before being presented to the bride and bridegroom, and I had act- ‘ed accordingly. | A NAUSEOUS BREW. } | A little later one of the brides- ‘maids, whose toilet consisted of a | dainty beaded necklace of beads and | a ccPper ring around one ankle, invit .ed me todrink a draught of native beer. Thebeer was ina large cala- bash, and I fe't constrained to drink some of if. These natives know hew to make love and they know how to make war, but, as my soul Jiveth, they don’t know how to make beer. The stuff they gave me to drink was abont as thick as boarding house cocoa; in color it was like unto mitk that a very dirty maid of all werk had been stir- ‘Ting round i na soiled soup dish with an unwashed forefinger. I: had nei- ther body nor soul in it, and was as \Insipidas a policeman at a prayer ‘Meeting. Some of the niggers got gleriously merry on it, and sang songs and danced weird, u | der irs influence. peal to me in that ‘not educated up t } | _POIN A Few Reasons Which are Rapid- ly Making a New Catarrh Cure Famous. Stuart's Catarrh Tablets, the /new Catarrh cure has the following advantages over other catarrh rem- edies: First: These tablets contain no cocaine, morphine or any other in- |jurious drug, and are as safe and | beneficial for children as for adults: But it did not ap. way; possibly I was O its nicities. TS OF EXCELLENCE. The bride, a full.blooded ne-/| zress, was dressed in a beautiful white | /catin dress, which fitted heras if ix i chiff, plunge into the river, swim their | : \is recalled that many catarrh reme- idies do contain these very objec- tional ingredients. Next: being in tablet form, this remedy does not deteriorate with age, or an exposure to the air, as liquid preparations invariably do. Next : The tablet form not only | preserves the medicinal properties ‘but it is so far more convenient to carry and to use atanytime that it is only aquestion of time when the tablet will entirely supersede liquid medicine asit has already done in the medical department of the United States army. Next: No secret is made of the composition of Stuart’s Catarrh Tablets; they contain the active principle ef Eucalyptus bark, red gum, blood root and Hydrastin, all eliminate them from the blood. Next : You can not cure catarrh by local applications tothe nose and throat, because these are simply lacal symptoms and such treatment can not possibly reach the real seat of catarrhal disease which is the blood; for this reason, inhalers, douches, sprays and powders never really cure catarrh, but slmply give temporary relief which a dose of plain salt and water will do just as well. Catarrh must be driven outof the system, out of the blood, by an in- ternal remedy, because an internal remedy is the only kind which can be assimilated into the blood. Stuart’s Catarrh Tablets do this |better than the old form of treat- j;ment, because they contain every \saf2 specific known to modern science in the ‘antiseptic treatment of the disease. Next: The use of inhilers and pensive,while a complete treatinent had at any drug store inthe United States or Canada for 50 cents. .. MUSIC.. Herbert A. Tanton (Late of New York.) —TEACHER OF— PIANO, ORGAN and VOICE CULTURE. Voice culture a specialty. Studig—Tanton’s New Buidding, George Street, Chariottetown, FP. E. I p —i2 io ‘15 Ww 0, a2--- { | chase a horn of nlucky dances un- this is an important point when it | harmless antiseptics which, how-' ever, are death to catarrhai germs wherever found, because’ they spraying apparatuses, besides being inetfective and digappointing is e3- | of Stuart’s Catarah Tablets can be | Great ABSOLUTE | SECURITY, | Cenuine Carter’s ‘uittle Liver Pills: Muet Bear Signature of | FOR HEADACHE, FOR DIZZINESS, FOR BILIOU FOR TORPIO LIVER, CURE SICK HEADACHE. McEachen & McCabe, BARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, NOTARIES PUBLIC, &c Offices—McDonald’s Block, Char- lotte Street, SYDNEY, CAPE BRETON, N. S$ Special attention to Collections and Real Estate. HOUSES and LANDS rented, bought and sold for clients, and 4 monies invested or borrowed as | Clients may require. John J. McCabe A JGMcEachen EWEN MACDOUGALL General Agent, Commission Merchant and Auctioneer. | OFFICE AND WAREPSOMS | 73 GREAT GEO. ST., | Charlottetown, Pr 2k eS Box 333. Reference, Bank of Nova Sootia.. | | GEO. CARRUTHERS, | M.D.C.M.L.R.C. P.. London, Eng. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON | | | Office and residence—Kent Street, , Opposite Mark Wright's factory. | Office hours—8 to 10 a. m., 12to2 | P. m., 7 to8 p. m. | Telephone communication. H. L. Dickey, M.D. (Late of London Hospital.) Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. Ifours— 9.30 to 1; 2104. Eyes tested arti fitted with glasses. DR. J. H. BRADL® PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. ‘Graduate McGill University | OFFICE AND RESIDENCE. | Taose lately occupied by Pr. Hand- rahan, Nerth Wiltshire. n%-w3m see DENTISTRY SIDE Office in New Prowse Block First door to the right up stairs. Telephone connec- DR. AYERS W. DD. ROSS,B.A. ATTORNEY AT LAW Attheoffice of A. A. McLean, Q, C., Brown’s Block, Ch’'towa TERBDERS! For Hardwood Timber Land. Sealed Tenders addressed to the undersigned and marked “Tender will be received by the undersigned up to 12 o'clock noon, on Thursday, December 20th, 1900, for the pur- chase of 100 acres of Hardwood Timber Land, near Selkirk Station, Lot 42, formely owned by John Dingwell. It is one of the few re- maining tracts of heavy timber land in the Frovince. It is well watered by an excellent spring at 'the southern end. A main road boundsit both north and south. About 12 acres of it are fit for clearing. Terms cas | j ——— ; : 1 | | } | h on delivery of Deed. E. WALKER, P. P. dl2 d&wtith Rollo Bay.