9 v4 4 + % 4 “2 ‘q CARTERS ITTLE IVER PILLS SICK HEADACHE Positively cured by these Lite Pills. They also relievs Distress from Dyspepsta, | Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A per | fect remedy for Dizziness, Nzusea, Drowsi ness, Bad Tastein the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER, They , Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. Small Pill. Small Dose. Small Price. Substitution the fraud of the day. See you get Carter's, Ask for Carter's, Insist and demand Carter’s Little Liver Pills. cPPS'S COCOA eee rie @® COMFORTING istinguisssd everywhere for D Dallency of Fiavour Superior Quality, and Highly Nutritive Properties. Specially grates ful and comforting to the rervous an<i dyspeptic. Sold ouly in }-lb. tins, labelled JAMES EPPS & CO., Ltd. Homoopasthic Chemists, Londor, England. s BREAKFAST 3 SUPPER EPPS'S GOGGE Raisins Raisins 4 CHOWN | AYERS. ——SELECTED Finest of stock. In 14 and 28 Ib. boxes Also all kinds of groceries’! at the very lowest prices. Come and be convinced. J. T. PEARDON Visit our Store Where you will find a Jarge stock of tue follow ng to select trom. WATCHES JEWELRY etc. CLOCKS in marble, wood and gilt. o gcll, silver and nickel. n rings, chains, brooches, Silverware In che optcal line, spectacies, eye glasce-, opera glacsea etc. cH TAYLOR Sunnye de, Queen Square, Vio Execute A great or of work in our workshop, such as Expert Watch & Clock Repairing Gilding & Si ver-plating Engraving -—— Repairing & Renovating Fine Jewelery The latt«r includes 1 large class of work, which formerly had to be sent away for repairs, which we now guarantee to do in the best manner and promptly: Seliciting your favours, G. F. HUTCHESON, Queen STREET. YIELDS 1éte., he was called Jeweler & Optician. THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARTLUTTETOWN, JANUARY 25 WAR IN SOUTH AFRICA. wes Great CAPTAIN C. A. HENSLEY ieee HIS LIFE FOR QUEEN AND} COUNTRY. (Halifax Herald.) At the very opening of the war Cap- tain Hensley participated in several | fierce fights with the Boers, and dis= guished himself by his bravery and coolness in action, and had many nar- row escapes—his comrades being shot down all around him. This was not- ably the case at the battle of Talana Hill on October the 2oth, a thrilling ac- count of which appeared in The Hali- fax Herald of January 15th. He passed unscratched through the earlier actions of the war in Natal, enly to succumb to mortal wounds received in the fierce fighting which took place on Saturday. Like Lieutenant Wood, he was every inch a soldier, and his death, just when the tide of suceess was turn- ing to the British side, will be a great disappointment and a seurce of deep sorrow to those in Halifax, who knew and esteemed him so highly for his many fine qualities of head and heart. Deep and wide spread sympathy will go out to his bereaved wife and par- ents and relatives in Halifax, for the fact that he died a soldier’s death do-~ ing his duty to Queen and country does not lessen the deep sense of bereayment which death always in- volves. SPEARMAN’S CamP, Natal, Jan. 22.— Captain Hensley, of the Dublin Fusi- liers, fell mortally wounded while lead- ing his mem to seize a fresh point of vantage. NATIVE OF CHARLOTTETOWN, Captain Charles A Hensley, the son of Mr. Albert Hensley, of Halifax, was born in Charlottetown September 1865. His grandfather on his father’s side, was the late Commander Charles Hensley, R. N. who, after his retire- ment from the navy, resided for some years in Prince Edward Island. On his mother’s side, his grandfather was the late Stephen W. Deblois of Halifax, well knowm as the senior partner in the firm of Deblois and Merkei, West India merchants. HIS SCHOOL DAYS. While a boy he resided for a shert time with his parencs in Wolfville and attended school there. Afterwards he became a student at the Collegiate school, Windsor, where he remained for four years. Then he entered the Royal Military College, Kingston, tak- ing a three years’ course. At the close of his third year at college he was of- offered and accepted a commission in the imperial service, and was appoint- ed lieutenant in the Royal Dublin Fu- siliers. This was in September, 1885. Four years ago, while with his regiment in India, he was promoted to the rank of captain, THE YOUNG SHIKARI On account of his skill as a hunter of wild animals and a slayer of tigers, in the regiment, “the young shikari,’"—the Young hun- ter. He was an exceedingly good shot, his fine marksmanship having become well known before he left Halifax. An exhibition of a tiger’s and twe panthers, heads, which was recently made in the windows of Coieman’s fur store in this city, were trophies of his prowess in the Indian jungle. THE FIGHT AT TALANA HILL. Describing the night at Talana Hill Captain Hensley said : We argued about their being Boers, and I said to Bird, our commanding officer, “the first thing we know will be the sing of a shell into camp.” I had hardly got the words out of my mouth when a puff of smoke came from the side ofthe hill, and a shell I knew MINARD’S LINIMENT will cure Diphtheria, JOHN D. BOUTILLIER. French Valley. I krow MINARD’S LINIMEMT will cure Croup. J. F. Cunningham, Cape Island. I know MINARD’S LINIMENT is the best remedy om earzh. JOSEPH A. SNOW, Norwoy, Mv. { burst on the road about —_ Britain and the 1000 =yards short ; bang came another, this time right into camp, but hurt no one, and it must have been a funny sight, as we all ducked ; at least I know that I did. The men had fallen in by this time, and I gave my company the order to double out and lie down on the ground away from the tents, as they served as targets to the ¢némy, and drew the fire. The shells were coming in pretty thick then. No sooner had I done this than every company in the battallion did the same, and formed quarter column which was of course worse than being near the tents, so I moved again. I have found that in the time of fight, where one goes the rest will follow, just like a flock of sheep. However, the order came to deuble into a nullah} mered them a bit, as it was suicide to | some 300 yards to the front and under shelter and there to await orders. Old Father Murphy, (R. C. C.), came rush- ing out of his tent, not knowing what was going on, and the plucky old chap ; came along with us, uatil A LOT OF WOUNDED were brought back, when we helped to! and Well our guns an ; face. look after them. swered back in fifteen minutes, Interesting Particulars of the Struggle Betweon and | , the Gre was like, I made a man put his , whilst we in the infantry, that 1s in the ' g7th, 6oth, and ourselves, (the Leicest- ers being kept back to protect the camp from a flank attack with one battery), advanced through the town, and got into a river bed parailel to the Boers pesition, and about 1,200 yards trom it. Our guns then moved up closerand engaged the enemy. The shooting was magnificent, and at the end of half anhovr a shell from one of our guns burst just under a creasot gun the Boers had, (a Maxim Nordenfeldt), the men called it the barking gun, as itsounds just like a dog. Well the shell burst immediate- ly under it, and I happened to be look- ing that way through my glasses at the time, and it seemed to rear right up on its trail and turn over backwards. We left the river bed as I have said at 7.25 a. m., four paces between files in quicktime. Iwas one of the lead- ing companies. As soon as we came out of the river, the BULLETS BEGAN TO BUZZ. We had a green field 400 yards across, as open and flat as a cricket pitch, to march over, before we could get any cover. Half way across wasa barbed wire fence, and the Boers had got the range of that and made things pretty hot. Wehad to cutthe wire. I had a small pair of cutters and was cutting and trying to cut the wire, stooping down, my color sergeant standing just behind me_ holding the wire, I_ think, when a bullet hit the toe of my boot and another man dropped close by. So Imade them all climb over the top and then we went ata steady double tothe edge of the wood, 200 yards, where there was another wire fence witha small stone wall on the far side. We lay underthe_ wall for five minutes, the man on my right was SHOT THROUGH THE NECK, and the bullets were whizzing all about us. When we found it was the beastly hill which was enfilading us, we made arush through the wood,andit was most weird, heating the bullets zipping through the leaves of the trees, On the far side of the wood was a Jow stone wall and we lined that and opened fire for the first time at 600 o1 zoo yards. We remained there for some time and then the word came to advance. I was the left company, and the two lines of advance were on the left by a nullah, and on the right a stone wali, which protected them from the Maxim on the right hill, and most of the eoane was dead from the top of the hill. ‘Those who went up along the wall formed up under cover ot it, it being three feet high, and ran parallel to the Boer position, about 100 yards from it and protect- ed partly by a bend of the hill. had the bad luck to get under the nullah, hada bad time of it, as it proved a regular death trap. The Boers evidently had thought it would prove one of the points of our attack, and consequently told OFF THEIR CRACK SHOTS, the Middleburgh burghers, to watch it, so that when anybody showed himself fora second, about him. The cover was bad, and only effective when one lay flat on his stomach. We made rushes one at a time from one little side nullah to an- other, I had made a run forward, andaminute after, Perrean, one of oursubs, cameup. The artillery were | to them my best thanks, first as vice- We | ; And Eight Years Tortured With Asthma. Kept in an Airtight the bullets fairly sang, iin an 19C0 LEI EE CE BE TS ae eT IT SS Ti ! SOE MA PPT ITY % 4 — SET OPE LPP Fe RA, al ‘sui From satel j<ato ripe old age “%- since 180, « ANS Maroon: NIMENT a = eres a te a "55 Boers. giving them beans on the top and | : | Svhas been used errean said, "we are giving them Majuba today,” when whizz came a J) . generation bullet just past my head, over my| , ae er generation right shoulder. I thought I was hit rie Reaad “2 an bad tical Relie @S Every Toit of Inflammation staggered back, saying “My God! gag quae for [INTERNAL and EXTERNAL use. oom they’ve got me.” He had been shot | clean through the left shoulder, but | Me: y old couples relate tha’ ever since they were beys and girls toge uer, JOHNSON’S ANODYNE LiniMENT has been used and grown afterwards it proved tobe a clean wound | and not very serious. He was very in favor with them for feat family Se ills fm infancy to old age. plucky about it, and said :“I wish they mre than Sty yours Hoy fas fertly. eae ee oa wssoa's Anodyne Lininent had let me alone till I got to the top.” poor be ag ty ye found ivalwaye & reeaae superior te any other. My I had to go on at once to make | Hiton Costa Bout INV LAMA fire Waastar i HE Carini, Me. ROOM FOR MORE MEN Sond for owe Bisen, Price $6 and ar’ 1B ORMEON &s Me od, Bestons Mane However, intime we got to where the | nullah stopped and there was nothing | for it but to wait until the guns ham- JOHNSTONS FLUID BEEF! attempt to cross the open in the face of that awful hail of bullets. I got up once to see if there wasany nnillah in front, which we might make a rush for, and though I was not up for fifteen seconds the bulletscame whizzing round like | bees, and one hit just in front of me knocked the mud into my) Just to show you _ what SS baliheh tis Ua ave. -aeaikabnectie vk, J. F. B. contains all the nourishing propertics | three inches high on the edge of the | of Beef. , . nullah, and before it had been there | a ; : : a three minutes, there was a hole init. | J. F. B. is invaluable in the Sick Room. : While the salvo was still on, [| J. F. B. is most palatable and invigorating. c made another rush and got under cover | of the wall I first spoke of and walked | up along it and joined the rest. Mur- ray, the General’s A. D. C. came along and said to me, “I am the only one leit. of the four who dined together last | ~ 7 Cee night,” and then he told me the general had been wounded in the stomach. Sherston, (brigade major), shot dead, and Colonel Beckett, chief 6f the staff, lying wounded over the wall. He then said,“let’s see if we can’t get to the top.” We scrambled over the wall, followed by some sixty or seventy men, and then they began blazing at us from the right hili, they could not see us rom the top, BUT THANK THE LORD the Maxim was out of action. Just as we got under the cliff, eee was a cry “Come back, come back! the guns are going to shell the position,” and you bet we ran for the w aul again. Of course there were a Ict of wounded lying out- side of the wall, and these we tried to “aS J. F. B. is inexpensive. took four of us to carry him down to a Colonel Carleton called out, “Who's for} ARLARGEST SUPPLY of Plumbers & Steamfftters Goods,on ths Island. utely forsaken by the Boers, except place of safety, as he weighed fourteen the top?’ and of course there were : dead and wounded, but they were still get under cover of the wall. Ifounda eeeaanenkeeee ps% eee esl SM 2 SE SEM Me BS poor chap of the 87th, Connor, the ad- 5 stone. Poor chap, he died next day. It proved to be a false alarm, for the shouts of ‘‘Rifles,” “87th,” and “Dub- i lins,” and away we went all mixed up, | firing from the right hill. However, a few volleys soon stopped that. There jutant, lying hit in three places, and it guns opened on the right and left of us. PLUMBING AND MEATING, for the top, which proved to be absol- were NOT MANY DEAD lefton the top, but it was strewn with kit, rifles, ammunition, etc., and the rocks splashed with blood, showing that their loss must have been very heavy. KIPLING AND TOMMY. Rudyard Kipling has written the following characteristic fetter to the British Guiania branch of the Navy League in recognition of a contribution to the war fund: “Bravo, British Guiana. Seeing what they have had to contend with lately in the sugar line, they have done commonly well. Please convey } Centracts for plumbing and hot water hea ing un dertaken aed ‘completed wits A large staff cf expeat pipers and plumbers engaged. ALL WORK GUARANTEFD, Get our prices before c losing Addres:«,— despatch, cotiracts as we insure you first cless work at come A. MacLEAN, Masonic Temple Building,*Grafion St., Ca’s OF president of the League, second, as | Pettion prices. perpetrator of the Absent-Minded Beggar, and third,as a fellow contri- butor to the big jack pot which we are boiling up on Thoraas’ behalf. Have you seen Brazil and Trinidad come into the Pgame” UNLY EIGHTEEN YEARS OLD Room for Months. Was Cured With Clarke’s Kola Compound. Mr. L. O. Lemineous, C. P. R. Winnipeg, Man., writes:—*t My son, who ts just eighteen years of age, has been a ter- ribie sufferer frora asthma for eight years. Iinndreds of dollars I spent on doctors and remedies during these years only brought femporary relief. For months he was kept airtight roo6m. About the first of September, 1898, we purchased some Clarke’s Kola Con pound. He took in all seven bottles and has since been complete- ly cured. It has certainly been a_bless- ing to him.”’ Seld by all druggists. En- close six cents in stamps for free sample, to the Griffiths snd Macpherson Co., Lim- \ted, 7S: Church s‘reet, Toronto. engineer, ee PF SHAH ISeksnneeedneracdil® | a a