THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, DECEMBER /}14, 1900. - rogress When an from a Mole into a Mountain, then it may be said to have at- tained its Zen Why This A tallor ots are pialn : : made of It a coat ~ p ~ 1 ~ t } ++} rtrectead witho esigs : stomarv with the tailo , and We Could Double | Industry has Developed ith. mou i ce. Progress 3 made Overcoat is offered you at $5 the same cloth by & merchant tailor. ut the trials of trying, fitting and rs. vo al with your head dewn, see le cal l st as good fitting Over hay ind vou surely save £5) twenty years ago our Trade in Two Weeks if we Could only Wake Everybody up in and see oO Uisters. the Loser Enough to Come ur Overcoats and If you Sleep on you’re Ss. MEN’S CLOTHING DEPT. The Largest on the Island. Prowse Brothers. Progress. CHILDREN’S COTHING D LPT The Largest in the Provinces. Don’t pass us when you want furs of any good kind. Prowse Brothers. In Boys’ Clothing. We Know of Nothing on Earth that has Ad- vanced Faster than the Making of Boys’ Clothing. | Ps You may buy a suit from us or an Ulster, or an Overcoats for one- third the price of custom werk, and it } ; | Fits Better |Every time. This isa fact which no sane man would contradict after seeing our Clothing put on a boy. We've three thousand Suits. | - | Reefers. We've five hundred Ulsters and And listen, we’re selling this Boys’ Clothing without profit. | wait till he’s a man for our profit. | We're always on the alert; we keepabreast of the times and note { all changes in styles. Our motto is up-to-date, and we've got every thing j ' bright, new and breezy in the little boy’s way. ‘ Well th Now, we Guess that Boy of Yours Wants Something. You'd Bet- ter get it Before Xmas; he’ll | Like it Better. “a LADIES! We're selling ours away below the regular price, and that was low enough. A TALE OF DEATH. How Boers Treacherously Shot Down Canadians. — Corseral Darrel Ince Warren, form esly tieutenant of the Governor-Gen- esal’s Body Guards, and now with the Royal Canadian Dragoons in South Arca, writes to his tather from Bel- | fast, under date of Oct. 9, as_ follows: “You see we are no longer at Won- derfontein, which place we left on Sanday two weeks ago. Two weeks Before leaving there we had a sad time of it. [ received orders to take theee men and a Cane cart and go off tothe hills, about four miles away, aad bring in a load of oat straw for te troop horses. Scize of us while srputing had seen this straw and a few days before in the shed of a Boer fem-hous:. We started off, with Troopers Thorntoa and Spence, mount- @t?, and acting as advance guard, and as my horse was pretty well played e@ut, I decided to give him a rest and ride in the cart with the driver, whose mame was Ratcliffe, from St. Cathar- imes,and a former miember of your wegiment, the 2nd Drazoons. Spence was Petersborough, and Thorton from Soronto. \Vearrived at rhe house sately. It was situated in a large val- key four miles fromcamp, and after getting our cart loaded, we went on wou: a quarter of a mile up the valley te some Kaffir kraals to purchase ehackens and eggs, which Mr. King liad given Spenge orders to get. Then wz started for camp. When we had gone about half a ale we came to a creek, the botton of wich being very rocky, Ratcliffe and Bigot out to cross, just at that moment we noticed three men, mounted and g@amding in behind some rocks up on dhe side of the hill. As soun as they aww that we had seen them they beck- eed to us and called us to come ever. I at once recognized them to ie Boers. But Thornton and Spence who were ahead, thinking them+to be ear men, rode toward them, and then the Boers fired. Thorntcn and Spence mamediately returned the fire, and then galloped up the valley about 200 yards, and dismounted to fire again. Spence, poor fellow, only fired one set, and thena bullet went crashing theough his brain, Radcliffe and I zum up, leaving the horses and cart in tie creek. Just as we got near Spence through the body. Thornton and I opened fire on the Boers, but could not get a good shot at them, as_ they were under cover of the rocks. After firing a few rounds Thornton attempt- ed to pull his horse in toward him to get him out of range cf the Boers, and just then a bullet struck him, entering the front of the Jeft shoulder and going out below the right shoulder blade. Well, I thought it was all over with me whenI saw those three poor fei- lows all stretched out, and one of them dead. The Boers stopped firing a few minutes after Thornton was hit, and I then crawled over to him and bandaged up his wounds. Fortuuate- ly, they did not bleed much, external- ly atall events. Ithen crawled to the creek, got him a drink, and fixed him up as best I could, telling him I would try and get over to the nearest outpost and get help. Poor Radcliffe had died in the meantime. I then managed to creep cut, and caught one of the horses, but the poor thing had also been badly wounded, | horse, which I brought fro. Toronty, ; ; glasses, given me before leaving home, are gone, the Boers it was a close shave for me. the Loys They are Builder, of Brantford (since and I had hard work in dragging him alone. I ctawled about two hundred yards, pulling him after me, and then mounted and went as hard asI coud] make him go, for the outpost. I ar- rived there safely, and one of the fe!- lows named Robinson, of Toro: to, of- fered to go back with me, and another one went to a farm house and got some Kaffirs to takea waggon, witha mat- tress on it, down for Thornton. Rob- inson and I got back just as it was getting dark, and found Thornton no worse than when I had left him. We waited about an hour and then the wagon and mattress turned up, but as we found his wounds were still bleed- ing we thought it would be dangerous to move him, and we decidedto re- main there all night. Wesent the wagon badk, but kept the mattress for Thornton to lie on. We put in a terrible night with him, and early in the morning we could see the Boers hovering around like a lot of vultures, They kept drawing closer and closer, but, fortunately for us, just as they were getting within range, our ambulance came up and consequently putastop totheir sport. Thornton and thetwodead bodies were put in the ambulance together, and started off towards Belfast, while Robinson and I fourd our way back into the camp as best we could. Thornton is will recover, I think. Weare all getting and Anderson, of Hamilton (since houre here for quite comfortable in it, and I think we now in the hospital in Pretoria, and! pretty anxious to see home again. aed Thornton Radcliffe was shot ‘ You ask me in yours, how the Cana- ... dian horses are holding out. Wei, i ment in cases of complicity in the am sorry to Say, there are only abbut rebellion or damage done to the ten left, but while we had them, they the railroads. The Government wis were the very best. At Pretoria we: bound to leave large discretion to had to get a new lot all round, our; the military. The second object, that when pacification was accom- plished a crown government would , : instituted. The third object y it Kroonstad, naving been! oy: ’ ; ; gave om. as - 5 was ultimate self-government. ick from the time we left Capetown. ek Since arriving at Pretoria wchave been; ‘ Cleanlinesss is next to -Godli- using Argentine herses, and have had j ness.”” Dirt and depravity go hand three remounts each of them, so you in hand. Thisis just as true of the see they are not much good. horses being completely used up. My | be . Yet they inside of the body as the outside. are well fed, and there is good grazing, ’ onstipation clogs the body and clouds the mind. Constipation means that corruption is breeding in the body, poisoning the blood with its foul emanation, befogging the brain with its tainted exhala- tions. Constipation is the beginning of more disease than, perhaps, any other single disorder. The con- sequences of constipation are legion. Headache, pain in the side, short- ness of breath, undue fullness after eating, coldness of the extremities, nervousness, indecision, lassitude, nizziness, sallowness, flatulence, and a score of other ailments are direct. ly caused by constipation. Cure constipation and you cure its con- sequences. The quickest cure of this evil is by the use of Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. They are small in size but wonderful in result. They cure permanently. They contain no injurious ingredients. The use of them does not beget the ‘‘pil- habit.’’ Ask vour druggist for them. the grass being green and pretty high. You will be sorrv to hear that my have got them. They got me intoa tight corner, and in my hurry 1 dropped them, and thank my stars they did not get me, too, for I suppose you would like to hear of in our troop. Well, there are only five of us here now who have come all the way through so far. killed) ; Walker, of Toronto ; Loose more, of Toronto (since wounded), killed); and the officers, Col. Lessard and Lieuts. Sutton and King. Walker, Loosemore andI have built a little ourselves, and are will remain here until we go home. Three days ago we had alittle fight with the Boers here, and I think we managed to kill a few of them, but we had seven horses killed and one man You pay thepostage. Dr. Pierce gives you the book. The people’s Common Sense Medical Adviser, wounded. He was McCarthy, of the Governor-General’s Body Guard. He was shot thréugh the stomach, but will recover, I think. 1008 pages, 700 illustrations, is sent free on recept of stamps to defray cost of mailing and customs. Send 31 one-cent stamps for the paper bound book, or 50 stamps for cloth bound. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N, Y. Our immense stock of ladies’, gentlemen’s and boy’s watches gives you a complete range in quality and price to select from.--- G. F. Hutcheson. a 2 <i °° ar — BRITISH AIMS. Set Forth by Mr. Chamberlain. In the House of Commons a few days ago Mr. Chamberlainsaid that the Government had laid down three objects : First, to end the guerilla war. It would not surprise him if the Boers had destroyed more farms than the English. Never in history had war been waged with so much humanity. The women had only been deported for their protection. The native population was answerable for acts of proved outrage of women and children, and it had been shown that in no case had a British sol- dier being justly accused. The farm Purchasers of Xmas gifts desiring them engraved should make an early selection to avoid disappoint- ment.—G H Taylor Jeweller. 2i English mince meat at Beer & Goff’s oan } burning was greatly exaggerated. Lord Roberts had only sanctioned New skelled almonds, dates and the burning of farms asa punish- figs at Beer & Goff’s. : 4 The undersigned offers forjsele atjatbargain the following: One 40-Horse Power Engine and Boiler. 14 Driving Pulleys with Shaft and Belting. One Rip Saw and beach with carriage. One 36 in. Saw. One 24 in. Planer—Gne set hoisting blocks, One Matching and Moulding Machine, Fifty-one Moulding Knives, One Band Saw complete. ple: One Buzz Pianer. vel One Swing Saw eompiete. One Turning Lathe and Shaft—One Vice, Two Emery Wheels—One Jig Saw. Three Cireular Saws and tables. All in first-class order. MATTHEW & MCLEAN Perfection Bifocals These are the new lenses for seeing beth at a distance and near. They are made as perfect as Sct ence can make them. Orders for them fitted in gold silver or other frames, or your own frames, if suitable, filled in rotation. When you call ask to see the new EYE PROTECTOR Just the Thing to Face a Snowstorm With. E. W. TAYLOR, Optician CAMERON BLOCK