— THE DAILY GE. OMES WISDOM yume From childhood amecto.ripe Old age aan . a nn? yson Dyoovne LINIMENT as, Baan used by generation generation Form of inflammation ks be ea wéW88 for INTERNAL and EXTERNAL use. #68436 M y old couples relate tha’ ever since they were beys and girls toge <er, JOHNSON’S ANODYNE LovMent has been used and grown = favor with oe ’ family ills from infancy to old age. have used John=oe » Anodyne Thavs been thea oe tha e i — ae dale tare ie : elt have found it Supesien 60 y fend for our aon ‘ © Randers beares Se i le ” years for Johnson’s Seenree iS ot. pha guna iealwaye a ne touge tole day. Waalenr L- ort ae in Tae Bee L 8. malled, fre. Sold by a al reggie ” . ee ee colds, a ete Taos. CLELA sen aman i A GOOD PARLOR SUITEAT A MODERATE? PRICE This is what you get i,, our sclid Walnut $24 Cotton Tapestry Suite. "This suite has spring seats, is trimmed with lush, and finished up in good style-—The cash discount of 5 Dp. C makes‘ this suite $22.80: NET. “7 We would jike to show you this suite, if you want something]}good at a small price. John Nenrvson ee LELEL EE ELSES PA ; Remnants PD V2 ts oS Prints, Dress Goods Muslins, DK Flanneletces 9% *); Ribbons, Silks, 4) Laces. : y4 ¥ eis - T. J. Elarris, LONDON HOUS® sae bea Red eas Wien I Does the 20th Century Begin We'llnot Discuss that Qusetion now We are starting this year in good spirits and great hopes of making this sur banner year in the Merchant Tailoring and Furnishing Trade The success of 1899 bas more than filled our most sanguine expectations, Which wakes us feel like spurring ourselves to greater achievements, Our facilities for better buyiog increases with every year. Aci ncht Téo'best. manufactierd aie approaching us to sell us their goods direc These advantages we will this year share with our customers Jn oresr i get the best Suits, Overcoat s, Trousers, etc,, turned out under the magic Co : An artistic cutter, in the person of Mr. Sextus McLeirsy, and a picke theroughly trained staff of workmet. Youu must come to headquarters at GORDON & Men’s Stylish Outfitters.....- McLELLAN HXAMINER a INTERESTING PARTICULARS ABOUT THE TRANSVAAL WAR, The fGorsedd Sword. UNSHEATHED FOR THE FIRST TIME FOR CENTURIES. WELSH BARDS AND THE WAR. (“Daily Chronicle” The Chief Bard Positive of the in- stitutional Order of Welsh Bards, Gwilym Cowlyd, to wit, having come to the conclusion that the war in South Africa is merely a phase of the war against all falsehood, iniquity, and error, eternally being waged by all true Bards, and thatthe time has come when the sanction and ben- ediction of the hoary institution over which he presides should be given to the forces of the’ Queen, on the 3oth ult. issued the following :— The Truth Against the World. Oh! Jesus Repress Injustice. “He that Slayefh shall be Slain.” ‘The Swerd of the Lord and Victoria. This is an invitation and request to be present in Gorsedd,on the Mount of Songs, Gair Ionydd, at 10a. m, Jan. 6, 1900 (Old Christmas Day ), to Unsheath the Swordof Eternal Bardism—as the Sword of the Lord and Victoria—against all falsehood, iniquity, and error, and to signal and proclaim the sovereignity of Truth and Righteousness through- out the Earth: “For on this Moun- tain shall the hand of the Lord give rest, and Moab shall be trodden down under Him, even as straw is trodden for the dunghill.” God and ali goodness.—(Signed) Gwitym Cow Lyn. Owing, no doubt, to the tempestu- ous state of the weather in North Wales on Saturday, very few of the Gorsedd Bards answered the Chief Bard’s appeal, but there was a legiti- mate quorum, among them, being Penfro (vicar of Glan Conway), whose duty it was to perform the dread cer- emony of ‘Unsheathing the Gorsedd Sword.” The rendezvous was in a lonely spot, involving a walk of four miles over the hills which form the noithern terminus of the Snowdonian range of mountains above Trefriw. In pouring ran anda_ gale of wind, the faithful {cw patiently trudged, filled with the enthusiasm of their mission. ()n arrival at the trysting place, the Bards marched solemnly to the Sacred Circle on the ‘“Mount of Songs,” close by, Cowlyd and Penfro taking up their places close to the Maen Log, in the centre of the Circle, whereon the Gorsedd Sword, sheathed, was laid, in readiness for the unique ceremony about to be performed. After the usual invocation of the Divine blessing on the business about to be transacted, Cowlyd, prayed that the Reign of the Prince of Peace (whose natal day it was), should be consummated in the defeat of all the forces of Unrighteous- ness, ‘Then following the immemorial practice of the Gorsedd, Cowlyd bare- headed, with the great Gorsedd Ban- ner flying behind him, asked the question always put at the commence- ment of the Gorsedd Ceremonial, “A Oes Heddwich?” (Is there Peace ?) For unnumbered centuries, the answer has always been in the joint voices of the officiating Bards and the public present, “Heddwch” (There is Peace). But on this occasion the solitary voice (that of Penfro), responded, to the ef- fect that there wasno Peace. Prompt'y Pem{ra drew the Gorsedd glaive out of its sheath, this being the first time in the course of cen- turies that the blade has been wholly bared. After a threaterting flourish of the sword, Penfro stood still, weapon in -hand, while Cowlyd proclaimed :— Be it known to all the Loya! Bards of Wales, and the Arm Bearers of Righteousness throughout the Earth, that the Mystic Sword of Truth, Peace and Justice, is Unsheathed in the Eternal Gorsedd of Gair lonydd. Special. | Simultaneously the Gorsedd Herald sent rolling round the mist-hidden hills and thence figuratively throughout the whole earth) three warlike blasts. Fol- lowing Cowlyd’s proclamation of the existence of astate of war, the Gorsedd Bards left the Sacred Circle (wherein Peace js supposed to reign eternally,) and, pausing gt each stone in turn, Penfro perambulateg the outside of the Sacred Circle, and striking the earth three times with the Gorsedd Sword, on the outside of each stone, pro- nounced the formula, “‘ A naked blade against all falsehood, iniquity and error throughont the whole earth. God and ail <Joodness.” Then Cowlyd, bare- headed, invoked the blessing of the Almighty on British Arms in South Africa, in the war against all falsehood, iniquity and error, and announced that | OMARLOTTETOWN, FEBRUARY 1 1900 the Gorsedd Sword would never again be sheathed till the triumph of the forces of Righteousness over the hordes of Evil. In the roaring gale the company then dispersed’ over the hills. —— IN THE DIAMOND FIELDS. ‘Kimberley proper is built around a hole big enough to hold the entire white population of South Africa. This is the excavation above the Kimberley mine made when diamonds were mined from the surface. Nowadays shafts are sunk and levels formed, whence the blue ground is blasted out and hauled to the surface in elevators. The dia- mond is different from other precious stones in that it is found in soft clay, while the amethyst, ruby, and emerald are embedded in quartz. ‘This makes the diamond easy to conceal in the mouth, nose, and by swallowing, and every year the De Beers Company. gets from the workmen $2,000,000 worth of stolen goods. ‘The inclination to pilfer these precious stones is so intense that the crime is severely punished. In South Africa the first commandment is, “Thou shalt not steal diamonds.” What rape is to Georgia, is I. D. B. (illicit diamond brigand), to South Africa. For murder a man may get ten years ; for having a diamond found on his person that is not registered twenty years. At Cape Town is a great convict station called the “Break- water,” where sons of prominent American families and English aristo-- crats join in lock step with Lascars and Kaffirs. They have all violated the first commandment. In Kimberley 1,000 negro convicts sort the diamonds under the muzzles of Martini rifles. They are kept inaseparate place. The other black boys live in a five-acre en- closure known as the “compound.” The De Beers Company controls the diamond market of the world. Of the five mines, Kimberley, De Beers, Du Torts Pan, Bullfontien, and Premier, the first two are situated in Kimberly, and are the only ones worked now. The diamonds produced in all the rest of the world would not supply the city of Philadelphia. The value of the South African product thus far has been $600,000,000. The supply seems inexaustable. “Two other localities are rich in diamonds,—J oegersfontein and Koffy- fontein—both in the Orange Free State. At the former the famous Joegersfon- tein £xcelsior, weighing goo carats, was found in May, 1893, and the out- put j,of that field last January was 15,189 caratg, valued at $150,000. The corresponding output at Koffyfon- tein was $11,000 worth. The propor- tien of diamonds to earth extracted is greater at Joegersfontein than at Kim- berly’.\— Ainslee’s Magazine. A sergeant in the rst Balloon Sec- tion, writing to his relations about the fight at Modder River, observes :I shall neyer forget the sight, I had some narrow squeaks; the bullets got as close as my coat. The troops were fairly exhausted with heat. I would willingly have given any money fora drink. A major came to me and beg- ged a drink from our section ; he said he had not hada_ bite nora drink for two days. I have not had my clothes off for six days now, ‘and have to lie down anywhere on the sand or ‘rock with rifle and ammunition by my side We captured four Boers with their commander. One of them asked me forachance. I gave <him one and he was just going to fire at me when I dropped him. We are living on bis- cuits and tinned meat, which seems a luxury, Sometimes we cannot get anything. I was up in the balloon re- connoitering this morning, and could see the Boers with the glasses bringing in stores and forage. -I1 have been up inthe balloon several times, and I could see Kimberly quite plain. The ciptain has just called me to his tent and given me asmall bottle of Bass. I nearly fainted when he asked me if I would take it. The members of the Portuguese le- gation Cfficially deny the stories printed by the London ‘Daily Mail*> that the Boers had crossed the Portuguese ter- ritory into Rhodesia, and that artillery had been sent from Lorenzo Marquez, whose governor had asked the Portu- guese Government for reinforcements. The Portuguese authorities state that the country in that vicinity renders such a thing impossible. According to a private letter from Sir William” MacCormack, president of the Royal College of Surgeons, there is excessive ill-feeling between the army medical officers in South oD LE Re aT A base hospitals, some of the former urg- } | ing the sole employment of male order- lies. On the whole, however, es- pecially at the front, the medical ar- rangemeats seemto be giving the greatest satisfaction. An interesting story is told of the late Duke of Westminster when on his death-bed. When unable to speak, he signalled for a sheet of paper and pen- cil. He then wrote on it that he wish- ed a cheque for a thousand pounds to be sent to the Officers’ Families Fund. The wish was carried out, cheque has been received at downe House. reached the handsome sum of twenty- | five thousand pounds, and already three thousand pounds of the money has been expended on various cases. Lans- } A curious exception to the general | patriotism which prevails among the | nobility of all classes occurred the other day. When the Gloucestershire vol- unteers respectfully asked Lord Sher- bourne for a rifle range on his estates they received the reply that if the peo- ple ‘of England wanted rifle ranges they must pay for them. ed in. the Clark & \Q,, Some 2000 girls cmp]; thread mills of Messis. Paisley, have agreed to knit socks for the suldiers at the seat of war. The firm are to supply he wool for one pair each, but many otf the girls will pro vide a second pair. Colonel Cotten Jodrell, M. P., com- manding officer of the Crowe railway engineers, has issued an_ order inviting the names of 5° men and 2 officers i in South Africa. [hese men must be engine drivers, engine, fitters, firemen, plate-layers and blacksmiths. A requiem mass for the souls of soldiers who have fallen in South Africa was conducted at Brampton oratory. Cardinal Vaughan was pres- ent. The celebrant was Father Bow- den, his assistants being Father Corry and Father Hall—all three officers of the army. The admiralty has ordered that, as soon as the days lengthen sufficiently to allow of work being carried on with- out artificiai light, overtime shall be further extended on all the ships in course of construction, refitting and completion in Devonport dockyard. ————_2 Joctors said incurable But the Notary, Mr, Lemire, was cured of Kidney Disease in two monihs by Dr. Chase's Kidney- Liver Pills. It is only when. thororgh!y convinced of the superior merit of a remedy that public mep will give their sanction, Mr. E. Hi. Lemire, Notary Public, 692 Notre Darne Street, Montreal, tells of his re markable recovery from a severe attack of kid- ney disease. When doctors had failed, Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills saved bis life. He writes: ‘‘I give this statement, first because it is only just that the merit of Dr. Chase's Kid- ney-Liver Pills should be made known, and again in order that others may profit Ly my experience. For years | suffered with kidney disease which dactors pronounced incuratie. Thanks to Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills, which I have used for two months, 1 am com. pletely cured. They heiped me from the first, and the cure is now prriect.” Dr. Chase's Kidney. Liver Pills act directly on the kidneys, and trough their cor:bined influence on the kidneys aad hiver, eure the most complicated diseases of ; inte delicate organs, One pill a dose. 25 cvnts a box at all dealers, or Edmansc ‘a, Bates & «Jo... Toronta Visit our St-re Where you will find @ large stock ot the follow ng to select trom, ete | WATCHES in gold, silver and nickel, JEWELRY in rings, cbaine, brooches, etc, CLOCKS in marble, wood and gilt. Silverware In ihe optical line, glasses, opera glasses, etc. CH TAYLOR Sunnyside, Queen Square, Raisins Raisins 4 CHOWN ‘AYERS en Finest of stock SELECTED [1 14 and 28 Ib boxes, Also all kinds of grocene. at the very lowest prices, Fpectacier, eye Come and be convinced and the | a j The fund has now MUNYON’S GUARANTEE, G6trong Aszertions as to Just Wha?z ¥ the Remedies Wili Do. —_——- Muryon guarantees that his Rheumatism Cure will care Dearly all cases of rheuma- tism in a few honre: that his lyspepsia Cure will cure indigestion and all ston troubles; that his Lidney Cure will cure 90 per cent of all cases of kidney troubic; that bis Ca- tarr} will curs eatarrh no matter how long stunding; that hia Headache Cure will cure any kind of headache in a few minutes; that his Cold Cure wil quickly break up anf form of ¢o0l4 and co on through the entire list & remedies. At all drnugyists, 25 « 2 vial. If you need medical advice write Prof, Munyom 1505 Arch st,, Pllla, free The signaiure on any article is the siamp of ius value, IN MUSIC right quality i# more essen - tial than all else. You start right if you have an instrament of proper Charaeter — YOU WILL be safe if you have one of our instruments—we guar- anton them all. WE WILt be pleased to hare vou call and examine — you dan’ have to buy, ‘Millec Bros, (Jueen Street. Connolly’s Building. SUG AAdAAAAGMAALLAS L444 Ad 0k shad Abdesic DR. GORDON ALLEY PHYSICIAN & SURGEON (Graduate McGill University) wuusnulas ; i § sepa pra EFT EpNeeN nT NNN > AUS cS4l) GALAN LALA Office and Residence- Dorche: ster Sirc et Office Hours—9 io 10, + M., lt: 3 nd 7 tu 8, p. m. _ Prompt attenti on to 0 Conniry v calle, The Inland } Navigation Company (LIMITED) ee een of Txe (Limited) psi aira) in Mr. x corner. of sr Jottetown, on usry next at 3 The annual general meeting InJand Navigaticn Com pny, wili be held in the roon ¢: John McEachern baillin Queen and K ng Streets.’ Thursday the 22nd of F, o’clcck, p. m. L.C. OWEN, Secretary. eod td a SUMS DGvTSTRY, ie AS 7 S Aye BS Office in New Pro w8e Block arst deor to the tight up tairs. % . Telephone connection, DR. AYEPS + mze2cute A great variety of work in our workshop, such as axpert Watch & Clock Repairing Gilding & Siiver-plating bngraving —— Repairing & Renovating Fine Jewelery The latter inc! ides 2 large class of work, which f. rm rly had te be sent evar for repairs. which “we now guarant to do in the best manner and promptly, Solic.ting your favours. J. T. PEARDON Africa and the female nurses at the | 1G. F. HUTCHESON, QUEEN STREET, | Soweler & Optician. wu wratapaniantlliemanaaais tp Whnatedsaien oan te. aati Aen nine elasneEaee-