NiSh Wo: ‘k, Work forms the ¢g yreater r : part t the successtul man $ Mii, and it takes 47 : gc ealth to do it. t . Abb Yo Etfervescer t » ' > , ¢ . ‘ > € Ga ly orve > oa » im 14) he ; 1¢ f tect health that f » pn inna on t, T A te’ ; 1191104 LA . a4 ' ; events disease and f pre ¥ cl > {SCAaSE ang «” $¢.. 208 » Loonies cure wseases alt develooed. 2% HF & gation Co., Ltd. STE AMERS,... Northumberland & Princess Leave as be low every day (Sua# da\s excepted) From POINT DU CHENE (on arrival) of efiervon train from St. John) for Sum- j [ we Y 2 xe, i ee] z —_ attlefield orrors of the E in the [Y ny death, des | battlefield. Wounded to many English pairing of tim: ly re nsvaal At the time, this was received by the British press as an exaggerated esti mate, and it was only after careful cal | cul and after consultation with ition, the men best able to form an opinion, that I accepted its approximate accut acy Events have proved that it was | within the mark Three years ag for » the Transvaal Un der-Secretary Foreign } ; | = r refug arriving here, mr ' Affairs as rré iert fror Durban otficers and men h id died, crib ing sured me that the Boer strength was Ce dent on urban, | : 1g as . »>1 9000 1e 4 any A. bring news of the battle \ WORD OF FAREWELL ; ts i.’ men armed with rifles. Dr. : : LYQaUS more recent estimate 1s Cc “/ ae ( and of the situati : : “ a Mate 1S 5,000 e situation in to their loved ones or else pressing to ! burgher: Ree iiase oe a Pretoria and the Trans- 4) ; ee ie number and strength H . ' o their lips some lines rece ived from { of the commend bw t-te ae v. “> j } ' . . . _ | ‘ i bhiadl PdiGs OY 1} tne eld i enrich Auer, who mother or father, wile, sister, bride or | prove that the British ante-war cal rced 1 I< } ny hy} oO - “— PERRI ALTILO-W Caicu orced to.eave Johannesburg intended. I myself ran across some of } jations creatls undervalued the B s husban it 4 ‘on eelicls : p Sebeaires B° eee NAGCTVAIUCG 1c oer HuUsvdal d of an i Neil i) We these flying mes if es, cha ed by t} e oa Co d fl th ce pk ; i uspected of british sym . a 2e One , ‘ sn re ee é ere cannot be less playful DTeeZt ne or two seemed than 60.000 men in irm ' 1 , ute 0,900 5~—no: mean : pie” stained with tears—all had blood spots | irmy of sharpshooter . icy th > Pre . + . . J Jide Ak } Se jucer there were about r,¢ ¢ on them. Several were beyond de—| I use the aya | i‘ * 13 nd wounded on the battlefield I vine aad € the word sharpshooter with “s 'd ciphering A hospital nurse told me] jntention. The idea | i oe when ve ssea_} Ot ° : . ; Pesiaiensad. Metoly Ie ICs mas gone aproatr We Woen We pass ' that he found many dead Englishmen {that the Boer can no longer shoc ober 21, in the afternoon. I shall can no longer shoot and I haven't Picture to some stretch- , : r forget the. sight, E i ; ‘ } : nm ia second since (nen. urseil heaps ol bodies, 'ed out. beyond their own length, it | seemed, as if they had giown longer with the infnity of torture. Others if in dying they had been hand, and in Charlo Lelown Steam Nav- | St an aoe eee friendly mrrcide, connecting there with express | ; for Charlot: etown. ftw SUMMI RSIDE (on arrive! of of wounded and expiring men, who g train from bar'ottetown (f0r| oroaned and sighed for help, or for bern Pout Due Chene connecting with day ter’ for St. Joba. Connecting at Moncton with train for! Cenada and at 8 Jobn with steamers cf ! rternstional Lipe and D. A. BR, steamers in? lware tor [United States and ne : Hie ae . uw £1OTOU (on arrival of day train fron, Halitan) for Charlottetown. t.om CHARLOTTETOWN, seven a. m., lor Picton, (connecting there with day ‘rain for Cape Breton aod Balifax, at Halite with C. 4.&.P Line for Poston. lhreagh tickets to be had at Grand Trek Canadian Pacific, Intercolonial! and P FE {. Railways, and on the Company’s 4 #18 connecting lines in United I. W. HALES, C.’towa!P £1 SxogeTaR PLANT LINE. a EXCURSIONS (CHARLOTTETOWN TO BOSTON AND RETURN FOR $11.00 Good for 30 Days: Commencing Oct 3rd, the well known §.S. Halifax leaves Charlottetown every Tuesouy nt noon for Boston, via Hawkes- bury and Halifax. irom Halifax— Every Wednesday at 11 pm. Passengers ticketed via Pictou on Wednesdays. frm Boston every Saturday at noon Tickets for sale at Stations on P EI Raiivcy. For tickets, rates on freight an a}] infermation apply H L CHIPMAN, Supt, Halifax. W W CLARKE, Agent oe $3 City of Ghent PIKFORD & BLACK scene ere en en Pee 'd 5 a ee 8 ¢ y s J . 7 bin ot Po me ; ee a, ae aE eR TL S. S. City of Ghent will sail from Chak lottetown every Friday até o’cloc during the season of 1899 for “alifax, calling at Summerside, Port Poit Hawks- bury, Arichat, Cans, Isaac Harbor, Salmon River, Sheet Harbor, returning will leave Halifax every-Tu sday at 6 p m making some calls. The stear.er has excellent passenger accomodations. Salvuon amidships. Specia iow freights will he piven this season Further infurp .tion apply to W W CLARK. Age iastuugs, Ch’ Town May Z/ ti > | living grave rosethe gurgling wailing ! grass. their anxiety had perhaps caught hold ot their own limbs. “There were rows of Boers who died S. | kneeling in the trenches in a natural position. Several bodies I found standing bodily upright, leaning against trees or other impediments that had! prevented them from falling. They were all shot in the head and} their faces were blaek from powder- | dust the beginning of putrefaction. THE WAIL OF THE DYING. “Many of the horse carcasses were already shapeless masses, grasses hav— ing swelled them. And all over this death to come, while the red saliva ran from the mouth and while their hands and nailg clutched at the earth and cat | an, that one might be a minister-| ing angel and dispatch some of these unhappy ones by a beneficial dose of poison! I caught myself running away, howling and blubbering, from the side of a Boer who was vainly trying to stuff back his protruding entrails. There a brave rifleman had bitten of his tongue while seized by spasms. I saw three or four men die within arm’s length of me One suddenly rose, jumped high in the air and fell back | dead. “Outside the hospital tents I found Boers lying on cots, fidgeting round with their arms and murmuring, ‘What’s the use ; let’s retreat and back atthem.’ Here was a WHOLE ROW OF SHARPSHOOTERS disposed in excellent order, with their officer in the center, evidently struck by a volley as they were obeying a command to shoot. An overturned bat- | tery there, the piece of ordnance buri- ed in the sand, parts of human and horses’ bodies, mingled indissolvably, swimming in a pool of blood. Many of the dead had their faces turned in the direction of the sinking sus, Their spirits were sinking atthe same time, I reckon. “Over the flying hospitals hung the awful smell of chloroform. Saws were buzzing there over bones, knives sharp ened and draughts concocted in the open air. The sentinels and outposts shot vultures by the dozen without driving all away. Thank God, the hu- man hyenas of the battlefield were missing, though there are not enough people in this. neighborhood to yield these outcasts that in civilized Europe abound. “One of the English sanitary officers showed me a basket full of letters which his men had gathered on the = “ SOC0SSSS SOSSSOOTSESSE CE SSESS (Mail orders promptly attended to) GET THE Khu a S “S “> Gr ~S “a ry T >| r. URE { LWO PIC S => eo &@ J eeo- &> Ii: is now time for you to renew tor the Family Herald and Weekly Star. You want to cbtain taose two splendid pict ures, If you renew through me you will be saved the trouble of writing a letter and the cost of registering it—and you'll get | man stretched on their under their head and a photograph in their uninjured hand. Maybe they had been dying for hours, having just strength enough to make themselves comfortable and take the picture from their pocket. An old campaigner of the Irish Fusiliers was discovered with his hand raised to his mouth, the hans clutching the medals which the dying had torn from his breast. A young lieutenant of the rifles near by had his dying lock riveted upon a rose- back, knapsack | straight ; but this applied to the bulk ! of the burghers is a fallacy. | colored billet doux with gilt margin. | It began: . ‘My darling——,’ Five | weeks ago this ‘darling’ promenaded at the side of the beautiful writer in Bel- gravia “The number of dead and wounded Boers was at least four times that of the English, but these Boers had wast- ed no sentiment in making their exit outof the world. No letters were found with the dying and wounded ; no photographs. The Boer strikes no attitudes ; his heroism is blunt. but un- picturesque,” THE ARMY OF THE BOERS WHAT ARE ITS STRONG POINTS AND ALSO ITS WEAKNESSES. Is the Boer a first-class fighting man ? He has yielded to a superior intelli- gence and, perhaps, a deeper determ- nation at Glencoe and Elandslaagte ; but in no engagement has he proved himself a contemptible foe in courage or in tactics. Mr. Douglas Story, editor of the late Standard and Diggers’ News, discusses the Boer as a fighting man in the Lon- don Daily Mail. He says: The strength of the Boer forces ts an unknown quantity. Shortly before the outbreak of hostilities I recelved a cable giving the Field Cornet’s returns at 52,000 men capable of bearing arms. VIOLENT HEADACHES Accompanied by Indigestion and Constipation cured by Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills From Bath, Ont., comes the particulars of @ remarkable cure effected by Dr. Chases Kidney-Liver Pills. Mr. Jos. Gardiner was for'fflly years the victim of indigestion, cone stipation, and violent headaches. Nothing seemed to have the desired effect until he be- an the use of Dr. Chases’s Kidney-Liver Eis, and they effected a complete cure. Mr. Gardiner writes : «I have been troubled for over forty years with indigestion and constipation, would go for two weeks atatime. At intervals I would be taken with violent headaches. I spent dollars and dollars in vain, and was finally ad- vised to use Dr. Chase’s Kidney-Liver Pills, and must say that they are the only remedy that gave me permanent relief. I would not be without them for anything.’ Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills, one pill dose. 25c. a box. At all dealers, or Edmansos. Bates & Co., Toronto. Sires Plea Sure to show vou our line of goods suits able for Christmas presentation Our etock is larger than ever, and our prices will surp ‘ise you. See our — Loonith Chains, Chain Bracelets, Brooches, Rings, etc We will be pleased to have you call the pictures just the same R. L, COTTON AGENT P QO. Box 84.... Charlottetown. eee wes . eet @ @ @ @* @64 O28 a © Dees Bes 22688 O72 @]@Os § SOG 248 B28 OO 68 SSSSVVSVSSHP 2B Ger and will save you money. ‘W. N. TANTON JEWELER Great George Street, 3 doors from Grafton St....0» RD > Uitlander critics—-and published comment has been alraost wholly con- fined to these—have judged the the who into Johannesburg and_ the mining camps along the Rand. But these, are no more representative of the nation than the Hooligans of Black- friars and Lambeth are typical of the* great mass of the people throughout the length and breadth of England. The great mass of the nation is to- day, as in 1880,a people of simple habits—gazing wide-mouthed at a train and fearing the wrath of God as chastisement for a street-lamp or a telephone. One sees them upon the veld, trippling lankily on South African ponies, caring naught for anything be- yond their sheep, and acknowledging Li Boer srOU drifted race have W eaklings VICTIMS OF THE WEATHER. Georgian Bay District Thankful for Dodd's Kidney Pills. Kincardine, Dec 4.—Tbis month has been the worst in years io the Lake Huron and Georgian Bay disiricts, Victims of rkeumatiem who probably keep a closer tab ov the climatic variations than otber, people are all loud in their assertions as to) this season being a record breaker for dampness and raw biting winds. If these good people instead of keeping tabs on the weather would follow the example of, Herbert Brown, of Watson and Malco!m’s Furniture Factory, Kincardine, they would be conferring a blessing upon them~ selves. Mr. Brown eays, “I bad been feeling very bad with backache from my Kidneys, (Lumbago, a form of rheumatism.) | have taken three bexes of Dodd’s Kidney Pills and the pain has left me.” i Those having the greatest sorruws to bear are not the ones making the greatest fuss over them. HIS OWN FREE WILL ol Dear Sire,—I cannot epeak to strongly of the excellence of MIN.sRD’S LINI- MENT. It 1s THE remedy in my house- bold for buras, sprains, etc., and we would not be without it. It is trnly a wonderfv] medicin>. Joun A. MacDonAaLp, Publisher Irnprior Chronicle. ~~. ++ -7o- eo The ema!lness of some characters is showo when a man or woman will cheat sale Minard’s Liniment for everywhere, An English paper advertises for “pay~ ing lodgers.” Are there any landladies anxious to secure those who do not pay ? Minard’s Liniment cures Dandruff. A candidate never discovers the good poiots -of his opponent until after his defeat. DR. A. W. CHASE'S GATARRH CURC ... 2c. le sent diret, to the etveased _ by the Improvnd Blower. ealz the ulcers, cl ars the air passages, stops drop ings in the ‘ throat and permanantly cures Catarrh and Hay Fever. Blower frees, AM dealers, or Jr. A. W. Chase Wadtelne Cao VTore-ta and Buffalo. —_——- OOO The masculine mischief maker has no equal, Minard’s Liniment Relieves Neu- algia. A married man would have more money in his pockets were they as hard to fiad as are tLose of his wife. Startling Confessiogs Show that 25 per cont. of men and women svffer the tortures of itching piles, Investiga tion proves that Dr. A. W. Cbase’s Uintment has never yet failed to cure itching piies, and all of these men and “omen could end their suffetings at once by using it. Scores of thousands have been cureu by this tr atment Every bedy cau becured in the same way. Minarad’s Liniment Cures Burns & Scalds el ed ee ee ae ee no authority save God’s, the Veld Kornet’s and the Predikant’s. (Continued on page 8.) SHARLOUTTETUWN DECEMBER 7, 1699 Ore’ sy ae ee oar. PT TOOT pe a EL saison a eee r ee C0 /|\ ve ae a | Rad t 3) ; ig f , f, bi (rire { | re ‘ ‘i e\ \ Yes, prejud an opinion before , as ¢P, A trial WwW! is simply forced to : S ; t} of the best possible % Yee ing special knowledge SP of their naiu ad 1 thoroughly ground e e/ and} I rthan any one man be and one stick can i Crs “Py EArehe saf rf . ~ as THE QHERWIN-ts b kvked F403 % it A They ure not patent p: t sim- ply the best paints that unusual re, akill | experi- ence can produ ‘Paint i its’? will make J ing easier. It issent free on requ THE SHERWIN-WILLIALCTS C 4% a 4 TES ‘ PAINT AND Co! . . Canadian Dept., cas 21 St. Antoine S.ireet, Montreal al i bs ee Wit For Sale by S W Crabbe I et en ee ee wae Bln 3 That Hang-on Cough only needs to be attented to in a proper and thorourch manner to be eredicated entirely from your system. Liniment rubbiny’ a: d flannel wraps about the chest K SONS Ast potanic and throat are good enough but they are not sufficient, they don’t go deep enough. The root of the disorder is pulmonary weakness—build that up with Adamson’'s Balsam and your Cough is Cured. 25 Cents AT ALL ORUGGISTS. strengthen it , §—- _ _ MEN'S LINEN COLLARS T J BARRIS, FRONT. BACK, = | ALMAYNE - - 23 2 KITCHENER + - 2? 2t FORDYCE - - $ 2t MEYRICK - - -~- 3% a London House FOR YOUR BENEFIT READ THIS LIST Stanfieid’s Unenrinkable Underwear, suit.....+. .++++-$1.80 Wisk Pi dnend Maths 65, ids div 00 v0'0e 8 000 4e eee eee Grey Ribbed, all wool suit...see sees coce covvevenes 1.00 Medium weight, cotto: and wool suit.....s+seeeeeeee 400 Heavy Knitted Top Shirts....c+.se+ ceeeeecervecees 40¢ Lined Kid Gloves.cesccccsccccvcvccesccsces 60c Perrin’s Mocha Lined Gloves..ccesse -cecccceccccees 1 OO YG We have many other bargains that we would be pleased to show you. D. A. BRUCE CLOTHIER AND FURNISHER ->eeeee >. Our Large Stock of winter Overcoating and Suitings... IS NOW COMPLETE AWAITING YOUR INSPECTION JOUN WLEOD & CO Great rush at P MOV- 1 AGHAN'S, Queen St. He 'is selling crockery, g:ass- ware and groceries at reduced prices. ~ meaeaay gi 7 i EI is THE a