use lei m ll wen my To the Bazaar in aid of t-he New Cathedral will find at F. J . HORN SBYKS Book and Stationery Store A great variety of useful and ornamental Articles, cheaper Dolls, Games, Toys, in great variety. Books from the best authors. Pictures Cut Glass Butter Coolers, Water than cheap . framed and unframed, Bottles and Decanters, Japan ese Vases, Tea Pots, 5 o‘clock Tea and Chocolate Sets and a lot of goods too numerous to mention. F. J . HORNSBY. P.S.-—Japanese Paper kins in stock. Nap Waiter Your Needs. in Life whether ll you OIPCUIIISlZaIICGS. The Standard Life Offers policies imformation. Standard Life Ass. lll/CTHYNIJMAN, Agent for P. E. Island. Queen St, F’... . ‘cccccccc ccccc cccc ccccc* Business Evolution It isatorlun that has horedimry moot of honesty, indust ani Perseverance, but these are not of themselves sufllcie t to lneule tbchighest success. It mat“ Open tothe influence of environment-enclose sym- Doth! with the_ spirit of ro- Irees-and quick to apt modern ways and means. We are ever on the alert for the beet tools, and tn gdgpt modern methods. in order to go our customers the very t satisfaction on work en- trusted to our care. Give us a trial and see if wdoe not speak truly. a illlllllll llllllll l ii. W‘ ---’.l'KBKODERR... Engineers and Machinists. Steam Navigation Co's Wharf. Charlottetown, P. E. 1. Phone 1'25. *OOII IOOQOOOOQOIOOOIOO 11W i)’. Insurance, are wealthy or in moderate _ just suited to y0u,write for THF GUARDIAN. "H.4'llf'l'I11l"l‘"W“. llll MlllllllNll lilllllllllllll MONDAY SEPTEMBER Z. 1399. THE BCER ARMY. L1‘ eneral J oubert, the Commander in Chief of the Boer forces, who is also the Vice President of the Trans- vaal, is credited with the statement ghagin the event of war he will have 50,000 armed men to command. This statement is absurd on its face. But it is to be observed that he claims only about 20,000 of these are to be furnished by the Transvaal, a less number by the Orange Flee State, and the reu ainder from the British Provinces of Cape Colony and Natal The entire Dutch population of British and Dutch South Africa does not exceed 400,000 men, women and children. The Dutch population of the Transvaal and Oraitzgc State alone does not exceed 150,000 souls. It is upon these that General Joubert must depend-a population not more than 50 per cent in excess of that of Prince Edward Island. But the limited Dutch population referred to can furnish an unusually large proportion of fighting men. Old men and boys of sixteen will hold places in the ranks side by side with the stronger men of middle age. And it is to be observed that the Boers are expert riflemen and horsemen, and that all, or nearly all of them will be mounted warriors. These men have proved in the past- that they possess great endurance and dogged courage. They devoutly be- lieve in the justice of their cause. They will fight on the defensive, as men who fight for their homes and firesides. They are confident that having defeated British forces in the war of lS8l-2 they can do so again. They will be led bv the same General J oubert who met the British at Ma- juba Hill, where the BLB!‘ loss was so trifling and the British loss so crush- hing. Every Boer child is familiar with the story of the victory for which their devout pare its still return thanks to the God of Battles. Their version of the battle of hlajuba Hill is this, in substance: i General Colley took his 600 men to the top of this small and precipitous hi ll and exultingly challenged us. "Come up here, you beggars!” In broad day- light 150 picked Boer volunteers climb- ed irom terrace to terrace, dodging be- hind bowlders. and gained the top after five hours’ climb with the loss oi only one man. At a range of thirty yards these brave men began a deadly fire from be- hind the rocks, and when a second party gained the summit and threatened to flank the English a wild panic spread among the latter. General Colley and many other ofli- cers were killed, and the survivors fled in confusiomdropping and rolling down Ibo hill. pursued by a storm of bullets that seldom missed. When the casualties were counted it was found that the Boers had killed 92 Englishmen. wounded 134. and cap- tured 59. The loss on the Boer side was one killed and five Wounded. After all it was a small afiair as a battle, but great in its results,because when Britain made peace after this defeat and gave the Transvaal its in- dependence the Boers naturally con- ‘cluded. that they were conceded to be invincible. This impression still pre- vails in the Boer mind and will oper- ate as an inspiration to them when i AWEDDING GIFT should * be beautiful, and it’s sk also desirable that it should . w... 1 ' . i" ‘tr-a ~41!‘ ..‘~_ .n.. \. d? be useful. In our furniture stock you fig,‘ can fipd articles suitable for 7h‘ . llltddinga gifts that combine lasting w: beauty and usefullness, no ‘ P: 4. ' c matter the price you wish to w: , _ .. I $5225 Pa)", you ll find something O0 g2 MARK will HOME here to give lasting pleasure to the recipient. GHT & C0 MAKERS. agllll they face their English for-e iu battle. One crushing defeat at the outset of the coming campaign would, of course, change all this, but-it has yet to be administered. ti} Yesterday at the Liberal conven- tion held in Eldon Mr. David P. Irving was unanimously chosen as a candidate to contest the Belfast District, made vacant by the resigna- tion 0f Hon. H. C. McDonald. Irving is a prosperous farmer resident at Vernon River. This nomination, following the appointment of Hon. D. A. McKinnon as Attorney Generaf, must awaken considerable political interest in the Belfast and Murray Harbor Districts. Local politics had been rather dull for some time past, but are likely to be more brisk for some time to come. Tomorrow,Tuesday October 3, the first of the great Anglo-American yacht races of the year will take place‘ The second race is set for Saturday October 7. Other races will follow on successive Thursday's and’ Saturdays until one boat has won three times. All races will start and finish at Sanday Hook light-ship The course in each case will cover 30 miles. The first race will be l5 miles to wind- ward or leeward and return. The set 0nd race will be ovl-r an equal sided triangle of ten miles to a side. Tliere- after the course will be succesively first straight and then triangular un- till either the Shamrock or the Col- umbia is declared the winner. Tae Mazet commitee now investiga- ting the afiairs of New York has put on the witness stand a number of the elected judges and asked them to tell how much they paid for their positions. Four of the judges stated that they had paid $10,000 each to Tammany, while five others admitted having paid $5,000 each, and one other $1500. As to the propriety of these payments there was a. difference of opinion. Five judges thought thly At Last ! A Remedy has bccn Dlcccvcrcd that will Pcrmancntly Qurc Omtarrh- This is not merely the words of the makers of this remedy, but the amertlon is backed n by leading physicians and the honorable therelsanabsolutcguarcuteetocureinc , packagea or inoneywillberctundcd. We alsosen atwo weeksjtrial uantltyh-cctoany fl’ from this yet-cue Ea eséatarrhCux-e is a new diloov" hen: a prescription perfected America's most opt u ‘ no in treat- healing“ pomadc, ’ ' minus‘ com undo of Iodlnccnd , Hal olll. lnserptliad up the nostrils. The beat ct the body meltsltandthevcryactot lrectblnlocrfiel t it to the diseased It reachelaloothee and heals ev o! the mucous membrane, curing invaria y all nose and throat and eatnees. Mr. Jioeepli forms of oatarrh o! the all forms of catarrhcl Little. the well-known mill owner ot- Port 13.0., writes: “Japanese Catarrh Cure com e cured mo o! catarrh, which had troubl me 25 ears, dui-ln which time I had spent over O1. on rem es and specialists Toronto and San Franclloo. About two earl ago I lixboxeeotJa neeeOc Oumandsinoe completing treatment have not tclt the slightest symptom o! my former trouble. I can highly recommend it. Ballet came from the first application. We always ly in the mill tor cuts and burns, and coneldel ‘s'3la°l.‘°it’£t;lla' "H “Wsllfitl. y oen Enclose 6 cent stam . Ad The srlflthl k Macpherson Co, For sale by George E. Hughes. Mr. I _ might add a pure heart in a sound 0m Bell llllll llllll lllne Recently advertised. we '5 ,1); make and put up an excellent f"; ;_‘ g j\ Quinino Wino _ ,_; Equal to the‘ best. As an JAPANESE cnifin tun: cunt? ,1 ‘ monies ot hundreds o! cured ones. And more, - ’ f -. most makers. ' Beers Square. 0n Wednesday the 4th lCb Toronto- ' OCTOBER 3 LBW. ought not to be asked to contribute while six others thought it reasonable and proper that they should thus contribute toward the "legal” ex- penses of election. Of course. the money paid to Tammany by these candidates for judicial pOsitions is spent according to Tammany methods. In the interesting interview with Mr. W. S. Stewart, Q. C., a report of which appears rlsewhere in this issue, ' it will be noted that he appears con fident of victory for the Conserva- tives of Manitoba at the coming prov- incial election. Mr. Stewart being himself an active Conservative may have met some sanguine supporters of that party on his trip and formed his opinions from those he heard ex- pressed by them. Premier Green- way has not lost hope, however, and for a good wbile past he has proved to be a hard man to beat. Whatever Ingersoll might think of Moses the sanitary section of the scientific world continues to hold the ancient lawgiver in high estimation. The yBritish Sanitary Congress met recently at Southampton, on which occasion Sir William Preece, the Pre- sident», said that “Moses despised dust, and would have approved of our modern dust destroyers. Leviticr s, was a treatise {on hygiene by the greatestsanitary engineer the world had ever known,one who taught‘ that the first principles of health lay in pure air, pure water, pure food, pure soil, pure dwellings, and he body. These were necessary sanitary conditions as laid dcwn in the Mosaic code, and they are the sanitary con- ditions of the present era.” appetising tonic it has no ¢ . superior. . >. > ‘t We sell it at 75c. per bottle, _ f I 25 per cent cheaper than I,’ A a c, r f r ~4 4 ‘l f l. ll. Rllllllll. Plll. B. The Square Druggist _ p Spnnyside. ~_.\ ‘Q If. i .4 ‘ A- \,\\ " ’ ‘ -\~? V1 v1 v1 \"- v‘ t; \-' v‘ \_.\ A< W’ w? ,5 FURNITURE, I am instructed by Mr. Edvard Martin to sell by auction at his residence day oi Oct. at 11 cflclock a. m all his ilflll-“ebflld Effects. comprising Parlor. Dmiflg 100m. hall, bedroom and kitchen furniture. Also 8 tong nut coal. Terms Cash. . R. BEAIRSTO, - ALL l“ Y ha” them hem?’ 01‘ “gill. laced and butt-onedso can surely suit you eye The prices we know are right. His work, ‘ & Go Monday, 0st. 2nd, From 8.00 p. m. lll Ill F. PERKINS s. Sunnyside, ‘Charlottetown. Positively no goods cold on that » TE P551 llilill xsOFa.» v ‘r:- l‘ ___m 30 ld- Auctioneer. t h d r ——— w l-"i- 0 anh VlfTe think they are the finest collection 5 ,_ p“ V, _j @9118 9W1} Or F all and Winter Suitings and Over -\ . ‘ We invite inspection, ~. I ' J2" ' i l __~~~// l? ---.|om| llacLEflll t . d, \, w ’ m‘ rainonscnannorrnrown . B jfi ,1- , , - goeceooocoecoeeeeecoeo . ‘ §_ i I, - 1/1 \., 4 e Have You Made we . 1/? /-,-> .. g U Y c miclgl f,‘ ,, \ d~if s g p our Mind , k _ ,,, \ @ What kind of a boot you will get for an wear. a Swill: » l " ,,/; §y-- @ cannot crowd all our different styles of boots int ' t’ I e tasfizrnr" “l” i: "d I s... Bring in your (lhndren and have them @ , an suc a Price. The rest is easy 85* RESIII comfoitabiy" titted. lVe were never in @ M Q U A. I D ’ ‘i h)???» such good .-h:ipe t0 do it as nowSpring LOWER QUEEN S ‘ i heel boots lift‘) con-idered the best in BOOT AND SHOE STORE ' TREhT. l Eyes girls‘ and q-hiltlren sizes. We @‘ @@@@@ @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ The Imperial 8t John. IVE.