‘ fom Nea er than . . A always sure of perfect qu: ity and fit. ) We use only the best ‘ brands of Galvanized Steel Plate, and in addition to our many stock lines will make any special pattern to order, Our Corrugated Expan- sios, Conductor Pipe is ahead of any other pipe made—it sllows for contraction and expansion and comes in 19 feet lengths without cross Metallic Roofing Co, umire: MAsVracruRERS, TORONTO. | White’s Caramels and Snowflake Chocolates <> Can be had at any ore foilowing firs: class T. J. Morris i : \ os , et HAAMINEK, CHARLUT’TERPUWN, FEBRUARY 15 <2 O eemenI ; ~ SR Ree NR ee LR arta de ey mre ' = AE A > mm. Vary \ XX. © 3 : ‘ a j 1 on e Y By os . * 7 + ehh yr i , ‘ Fede odh 2 ; 4 $3 ; y ‘ i ~ 14 Searet ET ae CVn aim 4 We NN i / i BD J"; Wreott’ Sippy. * ¥ Abe Uae ew bee Aw < ee Piet] * t ~. TONY 2a ‘ 5 AY (het y f bas f if NWA ws * x ay Wk . ties aur : ¢ 7 4 . : ea : ia <a ¥ e i ." rho: 4g te 4 ‘, Aly ey tit gs A Ness se \ ihe ! Ws - Pat’ RAM Pitan ere aad Ol F? i ¥ I Se? Tee A Seis q » Oi yf fe) Bey a Wwe i th ‘poo ‘ : Oy Peyypy) Se ee x wy “ hana he yf / Fe ah i Nae ty EA | tN i ie ih ath. ER De | lt? { i ; ‘AY Wi al 1 ea Vie | NY ARGU Lip ; fad h Ht uy : f Ad fy "a We ** “ : \ ny 7¥ 1. i? See ag on gD } Ja , ro : =~ = ’ { i Hy Ah SR if ‘| * \ . ERA NH i ly \ i in | ih NP ‘ : | a \fh Sea hd al . LT.-CUu. >. B. STEEL. THE MAN WHO HAS ACCEPTED COM- MAND OF STRATHCONA’S HORSE. THE COWBOYS AND THE POLICE. Respected aud teloved by the Men of the Northwest Mounted Police, With Whem He Has Associated on the Closest Terms fer tiv Pa feiurty Yeurs—Sketch a. Mis Career it is not Coe. 8.2551 pointed to cona’s Horse, surprising that Lieut.- Steeie, who has been ap- the command of Strath- should be respected and beloved by the men of the Northwest Mounted Police, and by hundreds e ex-members of the force, who. are scatiered throughout the Territories. the larger idron will ’ i and from Whom nunmiber of the among 4 western Sogou i near- “teele has been as- &h L. Hooper W. Pickard & Co, W. A. Hutcheson W. F. Carter ! Stewart & Gates Sanderson & Co. ) J.D. McLeod & | R. BH, Mason, The Scotcu Wuisky chosen by the Red Cross Society, Lon- don, for use by the invalide? troops and hospitals in South Africa, is the famous WHITE HORSE CELLAK” brand of MecKie & Co., Distillers, Lim- ited, Islay and Giasgow, one uf the oldest firms in the trade. On intimation of this, Meesrs MacKie, with usual generous. ity, presented 200 cases free of charge, and shipped them by first steamer to the Cape. One of the family isa vol- anteer in the Imperial Yeo- manry, and on his way now to the Cape. It is heped that | jhe may give a good account of himself. THE ABOVE MENTIONED BRAND 1S FOR SALE AT 7 JOHN McKENNA’S Queen Street, | « WOUSEKEEPER = To come in and look over our groceries Our stock is fine and fresh and guaranteed to be ati sfactory. We keep every- hi ng in our line that is neces sary. FOR HOUSEKEEPING The prices—well, that is wuat we want you to see when you are looking at our goods. Cheir lowness will surprise 117 a UEEN STREET fey. be gardens of this little railway town & ve & eee grapes and other fruits Geveloping. ee Seti - Seg The plains here are uwnderlaid by slate ties or shale. _ This part of the country Pe Tag Oe is Said to beloiig to the paleozoic per=- } ogee meat, a. | ic el J he dry | ed of river cuts my JA through the plain, but it is nine Fe PE S$ since ny water ran into it ae 7 4 te yy YYZ Our first day at De Aar was not a Cy Bs « WWE | plcasant on A strong wind swept MEE es Ay, BWAEEGo, 1 plain all day, carrying clo of WY 2 ty yy, Lp blinding red sand before it, and occa- ae stonalls waves of. hot air would 3 ' strike one, like the breath of a fur- , | nace. But on Monday it was calm agen though sometimes we could } See a solitary whirlwind travelling } the plain carrying a column of dust high in the air and scattering it sky- j Ward. Although the days are hot here yet the nights are very cold. The LIEUT.-COL. STEELE | eatveng from Cape ‘Town is well sociated wit i men on ter:ms of } guarded by soldiers stationed at in- ‘ | st r » | tervals along the road to prevent inti { h: ts men o what Boers firing on trains or Gestroying eir comrat like | the track. From the train window ‘ r ‘ ‘ e ¢ -rirjes | We could see the Kafiir huts, some i in ou i service | only 315 feet above the ground, but Cana liitie army of regulars. with from 14 to 15 children round It is here that men live under the | the door, clad mostly in sunshine— same tent, undergo the same hard- | of Which clothing there is an abund- shios, face the same dangers, until | ance here. It is in great favor with they know their fellows as city-bred | the aborigines. men never can It is when ten have Fried Ostrich Ergs, to rely for their very lives on the “This morning 7 saw an ostrich egg courage, foresight and jucgment of being fried for twelve soldiers An their leader that they learn his true } ostrich’s egg weighs three pounds, is value, and no higher compliments equai to 24 hen eggs and costs about can ever be paid to Col. Steele than a shilling. The railway here is a the undisguised admiration felt for sauce (3 feet 6 inchés): the him by all the men who have served Work for Mounted Section of Canada’s Second Contingent. schools and at the British cial College, Toronto. During the Northwest rebellion in 1885, Col. Steele commanded the cax alry and scouts of the Alberta field force, under Major-General T. F Strange, and was present at the en- gagement with the enemy at French man’s Butte. Major Steele commanc- ed the mounted force that defeated Bie Bear's band at Loon Lake, and saw much active service later. He , married in 1890 Marie Elizabeth, eld- | est daughter of the late Robert Har- wood, ex-M.P. ed A MEATY LETTER. A Teronto Policeman Tells of Frying an Ostrich Egg for the Meal of twelve Soldiers. “‘We travelled night and day after leaving Cape Town until we reached De Aar, situated about 147 miles from Kimberley and about 75 miles from the Modder River. The day we landed in Africa corresponds to our Ist of June, and we can see in the offers of these South Africa if under him, and the men to go to can have him for their For 30 vears Col. Steele has endur- ed the strain of frontier life, and kas on innumerable occasions given proof of his qualities as a soldier and as a leader of Time and has carried his life in his hand, ing mobs' of infuriated and bands of rebellicus the. commander. again he fac- wien men. white Indians. Brief “tatemeut eof His Career, l.ieut.-Col. Sumuel jenfield Steele Northwest Mounted Police, be gan his military career in 1866,when he was appointed ensign of the 55th Battalion of the Simcoe Foresters. lie qualified at the Toronto Military School under Lieut.-Col. McKinstry, Her Majesty’s 17th Regiment, and served in the Red River expedition in of the 1870 under Wolseley. In the year 1871 he joined we?’ Dettery, %.C.A4 and took a first-class certificate. In i873, upon the organization of the Mounted Police, he joined that body as ‘Troop-Sergt.-Major. faking part in the march to the Rocky Mountains in 1874, he was promoted Regt. Sergt.-Major in 1575, inspector in 1878 and superintendent } in 183885. From June, 1882, to No- vember, 1885, he was employed as a Northwest magistrate on the line of construction ; s 7 t the wounded from the Modder River of the C.P.R., except during the three months’ interval caused by the North- west rebeiiion. Col. Steeie was also a Commission- er of the Peace and a Commissioner of Police in British Columbia during the construction of the railway in that province, commanding the de- tachment of police doing duty there at that time. Col. Steele, who took such a promi- nent part in the Northwest rebellion of 1885, is the fourth son of the late Captain Steele, R.N., a native of Gloucestershire, England, who repre sented Simcoe in the Canadian Assem- bly, 1841-44. Major Steele was a son of Captain Steele’s second wife, one of the Macdonald’s of Glencoe. The ; born at subject of the sketch Was Medonte, Ont., on January 5, 1849. He was educated at the public narrow engines are tested to stand a pressure of 160 pounds to the square inch The engine-driver gets only about 1] shillings a day. “There is an excellent water puri- fier at De Aar station, imported from Germany, from the top of which one cau get a good view of the town and plain and surrounding kopijes. ‘The boys are all anxious to par- in the fight expected this fear that we will not There is a ticipate Wweek, but Wwe he allowed the privilege. CANADIAN TRAIN FROM CAPE TOWN TO DE AAR. military hospital here, and another being finished. There are many of fight here, with hands or arms or legs or feet bandaged up, some stretched out on their cots, others limping around the hospital. When Wwe Were coming up we met at Beau- fort a train of six cars taking down the wounded. ‘To-day (Tuesday) an- other train carrying 93 wounded went down the road. The Essex Regiment came up from Cape Town and detrained here. All the Toronto fellows are well. Tom Wallace of Woodbridge is Col. Otter’s orderly. McGee, Mechum and Hendrie and an- other one of ‘‘C’’ Company, have been put on the Maxim, 16 Degrees Fahrenheit. “The temperature is only about 116 dgress Fahrenheit. I forgot to mention that the richest Boer in De Sere to cad L9C0 tat te Bae MAKE THIS MEMO. IN YOUR BOOK BEFORE LEAVING HOME . thn tet Meee ee a Whitewear First.” will save mcaey The WHY ? for you. That’s “why.” We'll let the whitewear tell the rest of the story. “See Perkins’ Line ot cotton, the designs, the stitching, the whole “‘get up” of our whitewear is correct in every particular. : The prices have been so fixed that you'll appreciate the Because the stock contains the kind of Whitewear that values at a glance. It Pays to Buy at F, PERKINS & CO'S SUNNYSIDE. Owns farms of 100,000 to 200,000 acres are not uncommon. “Toronto is certainly the leading city of the Dominion, if it is not such a historic spot as Montreal or Quebec, it still leads in military, for “C'’ Company has shipped three cofor serets. to other companies, and Cor- poral Darch has been transferred to “G” Company as a sergeant.’’—Ar- chie M’Coll, 2nd Batt. R.C.R.I., SS., South Africa (formerly on the Toren- to Police force), in a letter home. «anata ciaipaabiaiaedcieaesiebinuie 32,000 acres. Up the country | q The Sardinian’s Run, The run of the Sardinian, whith carried the first Canadian contingent to South Africa, from the hour of leaving Quebec to 12 o’clock noon of each succeeding day was as follows: 200, 268, 189, 260, 267, 236, 239, 244, 347, 246, 228, 238, 240, 231, 246, 251, 236, 248, 241, 222, 241, 237, 226, 224, 2296, 225, 280, 228, 210 and 206 to Cape Town, a total of 7.030 miles made in 30 days, or an average daily speed of 234 miles. The oldest Presbyterian congzega. tion in America is located at Snow liiil, Md. Apter g caused by Piles ls Quickly Ended when Dr. A. W. Ghase’s Gintment is applied Besides the intense agony caused by the itching, burning sensations of piles, there are other symptoms which produce restlessness and at times excruciating gains known saly to the victim of piles. What would one give to be free of this terrible disease? And yet there is a cure—a@ positive cure—which does not cost much and is not painful or difficult to apply. Dr. A. W. Chase's Ointment is, so far as is known, the only absolute cure for blind, itch- ing, bleeding and protruding piles. It gives relief at the first application and affords a per- fect cure in the most aggravated cases. Mr. Isaac Foster, Erieview, Ont, says: “3 was troubled with itching piles for two years and could not sleep at night. I was halfcrazed and tried everything. Finally seeing Dr. Chase’s Ointment advertised 1 tried it and found it pee. After a second application I found relief, and one large box cured me, Have never been bothered since, and I can re- commend it to all suffering from the same trouble.” Dr. Chase's Cintment is for sale by al deaers, or Edmanso~, K.tes& CL “iy 2ate Aar is the merchant Friedlander, wha | Tan 5—dté We Wich Our Customers —ONE AND ALL— A Happy and Prosperous NW We also desire to thank them f their very liberal patronage during t h past year, making st the most success- year we have yet had. That our efforcs to please has been appreciated, is evident from our rapid increase iu business. We will strive to merit still further your continued patronage. W. N. TANTON JEWELER treat George Street, doure from Grafton St.e.... HILLSBORO RINK AFTERNOON SKATING Tuesday and Friday, 2.30 to 5.30; Saturday, 3.50 to 6, with band unti] further notice. EVENING SKATING Mcnday and Thursday 8 to 10. Band in attendance. Coupen Books now oa sale, 5 skates forone dollar. B. C. PROWSE. E.H.B EER, ; Managers Cfliice To Let. or studio. Jus: ‘vacated by Miss Chisholm, in Morris Biock. Apply to J. & 1. MORRIS, M BARGAINS 20 PER CENT OFF ALL HEATING STOVES oes 5 EEMe sss Genuine Tortoise INCLUDED. Dodd and Rogers The Hardware People. Important—«.ay Announcement We hereby beg to sunounce to our cuctomers that we have sold our Grocery Business to Mesers R. F. Maddigan & Co, snd would solicit for them a continuance of the patronage so liberally extended ta us in the past. W. GRANT &CO In connection with the above we tak [ this opportauity of ioforming the custom~ ers of the above firm, and the public enerally, that we have in atock a full ineof general groceries,which will be seld cheap for cash. Free delivery of goods to all parts of the city. Telephone connection. R. ¥, MADDIGAN & CO. Q St,, Ch’tows Jan 18, 1900—dé&w meee . ihn "agi estes a ae Seeger eA + oe ene ong ae a shad i. tne te ; / | ee SPE aa ee a Seren are ae i by eld Ae ne eae eis geet ae MI ARE ae i A le se etnias te ioe Re ne lamenting mr na ep - ~ aol non . ra th iy ' it { : : ‘3 i ; ; -) & ts i mf ; ' ' t : | } £ : : | . : 4 . ‘ é * H be ® ie i id 4 ou geben F cm ve %: > aw