THE DAILY EXAMINER CHARLOTTETOWN, APRIL 26, 1900. cor meee. are dangerous; they weaken the constitution, inflame the lungs, and often lead to Pneumonia, Cough syrups are useless. The system must be given strength and force to throw off the disease, pcolls Emulsien will do this, It strengthens the lungs and builds up the entire system. It conquers the inflammation, cures the cough, and prévents serious trouble. soc. and $1.00, all sts, SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, Toronte, “~se S ~ @2 Oe 4] 2 2 Oo Oo Bring back anything not dene properly ; | ( ( Bring back anything not done right _ Its our business to turn out work right, and if we are informed that any work we have done is not Satisfactory we are only too glad to make it satisfactory free of charge. {ts our business to please customers and we always strive io do so as far as it lies in cur power When in need of anything in our Jine remember : “THE MODERN” Founders Engineers & Machiniste and Boiler Mukere. x~*. 2.2 @* @ ® & Brace Stewart and Co’y. Steam Nav. Co’y’s Wharf , Ch’town, P EI ; Phone 125 “=e 2 > @® @~~ @ @ 4 64 * © @e ee ~ = ee 42221 ee — — _— — a Don’t Neglect Your Watch {f you allow your watch to run too long without cleaning, or with damag- ed parts it may be woraso badly as to distroy its usefulness asa timepiece; better have it examined by your Watch Doctor and if in need of re- pairs he will advise you accordingly and perhaps save your watch. WE BOAST on our repair depart- ment turning out first-class work only. WE GUARANTEE ALL OUR WoRK; if you have not given us atrial it will pay you to do so and we will be pleased to see you at Great GEoxrGE STREET. W. N. Tanton v eweler SIGN OF THE Bie Warten. Kmpty Bottle’ Wanted — — 10,000 Dezen. The Halifax Breweries Co., Ltd., will pay the highest cath price tor empty ale avd porter pint bottles at their office Queen Street or at the Brighton Brewery FOR SALE OR ——T0 LET Tnat nicely situated resid- ence, with out buildings, on the Malpeque Road, une mile from Post office, with 9 cr 32 acres of land, u> desired, Apply to J. T.PEAR DON. SD —— ae REMOVAL E. H. BEER Insurance Offir amine Wark Wright & Co’s Showrooms NORTE SIDE QUEEN 8( Y22 All Kinds of Insurance. Nore—I am prepsred to place all tla-eescf FIRE INSURANCE at rates ‘bich dety competition. You can save «ovey by calling on me i). H. BEER, Genere| Insurance Ag est Feb 12. | the main body of }on our advance. WAR IN SOUTH AFRICA. HOW KRUGER ESCAPED. General French is trying to intercept Boers in their re treat at Popular Grove, was foiled by a few riflemen A Daily News corres- pondent describes how this came about:- About 6,000 yards from the square kopje at Dreifontein, a three-inch Creu- sot anda Vickers-Maxim opened fire A great many shells were thrown. We, however, suffered no loss, and P. Battery opened in an | attempt toe silence these guns, whose chance of escape seemed very slender. | “But here an exciting and unlooked | fur change occured. French, once more realizing that extension on his right his dispositions, suddenly discovered | on a ridge before him a party of about fifty Boers sharpshooters, who not only drove off the general and staff, but forced the retirement of the whole right wing, barring a squadron of Household, with two Maxims, some mounted infantry with a Maxim, and a | squadron of Remington’s guides post- | ed in broken ground on our right and ° ahd under sharp fire from the kopje we had neglected to seize. as beneath contempt, and then, finding what an effective fire they could direct, and misunderstanding General French’s order to shell the ‘ridge, the battery , limbered up to retire, French aed staff had luckily escaped without injury, ex- cept a horse shot. He himself dashed down ahead of the battery and correct- ed the error, but our advance was stopp-d for an hour and twenty minutes We suffered nearly fifty casualties and, more important than all,the enemy was moving while we were held, and got off with his guns and stores. A most gallant stand, most brilliantly ex- ecuted. We had the chagrim of watch- ing from the disputed and ridge the distant retirement of the Boer convoy. Not till next day did we hear that President Kruger had been present at the battle, and that we might have captured him and brought the war to a tudden end but for the ill-starred con- traction of our right wing, which in dealing with an enemy of such mobili- ty as the Boers, was on much too short a radius, and which had _ no justifica- tion in any efforts on the. part of the enemy to break through our centre, who, on the contrary, throughout the day consistently rallied on his left, actually outfanking our contracted right between nine and ten a. m., and again atone p.m. Wednesday even- ing the cavalry division camped on Dreifontein at the rear of the enemy’s position, and across his line of retire- ment, which was marked for miles by the jetsam ofa hurried retreat—bags of flour, mealies, bran and odds and ends of all sorts.” PRETTY STORY OF ROBERTS. On the eve of his departure for South Africa, Lord Roberts received a letter, written in a boyish hand, and signed with the Christian names of three children of evidently the same family. The surname of the family was not given, says the London corres- pondent of the Birmingham Post, but the little ones had written their letter on father’s notepaper, with its printed address. They told Lord Rob- erts that they regarded him as one of the biggest men in England, and hop- ed he would beat the Boers. ‘We shall pray for you,’ they added, ‘every night when we go to bed.’ When Lord Roberts got to Modder River he sent a delightful reply. He did not know the surname of the little trio, but he wrote the Christian names on the en- velope, and sent it to the address giv- en on the letter paper. ‘I hope my dear little ones,’ concluded the great LORD a Getitlemnes;—While driving downs very steep hill last Auguet my horee stumbled and fell, cutting bimself fears fully sbout the bead and body. I used MINARD’S LINIMENT freely on him avd io @ few days he was as well as ever J. B. A. BEAUCHEMIN Shrrbrooke. was the thing to effect, gave orders to | that end, and riding himself to make | P. Battery re- ; garded a target of forty or fifty Boers ° —_—_— soldier, ‘that you will always remember me in your prayers,’ anc that sentiment can be read in association with the opening words of his telegram an- nouncing the British entry into Bloem- fontein. a | MY BONNIE BLUE-EYED JEAN. (Montreal Witness.) I’ve a bonnie blue-eyed girl, Who is always ina whirl, | She can never rest a moment, from the dawn until the dark, She will laugh and she will play, She will talk the live-long day, | She is just a wee bit tot—a little ani. ’ mated sperk. She says, ‘Fader, I love ’oo, And I love my moder too, And I love dear Dod, and Jesus, and my broder up in heaven, And I love my doll in pink And my dollie that can wink, But I think I’d love them better if they only just were livin’. ’T will will d:v to ’oo a tiss;’ There is no higher bliss, Than the love-begotten kisses of my bonnie blue-eyed queen ; They are sweeter far to me, Than the wealth of land and sea. She’s the image of her mother, she’s my darling lassie Jean. She’s so knit into my heart, That her pain gives me a dart, And her joy to me is gladness, well- ing up, and bursting out. I would press her in my arms ; I would shield her from all harms; I would drive all i!ls before her; I would put her foes to rout. I will give her in my prayers, To the God who ever cares, For the bairnies He has lent us; I willleave herin His keep, He will guard her day by day, When she’s romping in her play ; He will watch her as she_ slumbers, and protect her in her sleep. May the God in heaven above Wind His mighty arm of love Round my bonnie blue-eyed lassie, and preserve her to us long. And when earthly life is done, May we dwell beyond the sun ; May we blend our hallelujahs, in the realms of deathless song. (Rev.) ANDREW MacNas. Lucknow, Ont. President Steyn has issued orders to the Boer forces to hold tight to the grain districts of Wepener, Ladybrand and Ficksburg,from which they draw jheir supplies, and also to prevent the British forces from getting the rich supplies now in those districts. The Tadvyvsmith cerrespondent of the Lereen standard says: “There is good re: son to believe that the Boers’ raids are intended to cover the enemy’s withdrawal from Natal in order to hold the Boers in opposing the advance of Loid Roberts. The Ladysmith correspondent of the London Daily News says: “The Boers in Natal are already commenced a guerilla warfare. Both the Trans- ASTHMA FOR 35 YEARS. Doctors Said They Could Only Give Him ‘Femporary Relief. Clarke’s Kola Compound Cored Perman- ently. R. D. Pitt, Esq., Kamloops, B.C., writes: — For thirty-five years I have almost con- stantly suffered with asthma and difficult breathing. I spent a fortune og remedies and doctors. At last my doctor said I might get temporary relief, but would al- ways be troubled. When first hearing of Clarke’s Kola Compound [ tried it. The first bottle did not relieve me much, but after taking four bottles I was complete- ly cured. I can now breathe as naturally as ever and asthma does not trouble me fn the least.’ Clarke’s Kola Compound not only relieves, but permanently cures asthma. Sold by all druggists, or the Grif- fiths s& Macpherson Co., Limited, Toronto: To LET The north end of a house situated on Prince Street, conta’ning nine rooms, suit~ sble for a boarding house‘or private resid- ence. Apply to THOMAS McQUAID Qucen ~ FOR SALE OR TO LET. ‘‘Watermere,” the bouse of the Hon. George W. Bowlan. Possession given th: first of May next. D. C. McLEOD. Ch’tcwn, March Slst, 1900. ft. Interesting Particulars of the Struggle betwecn Great Britain and the Boers. yaalers and the Free Staters are com- pelling the natives to bear General Buller has ordered all ithe farmers between Ladysmith and th Drakensburg range to retire to East- court.” arms, The National Zeitung, which fre- quently prints officially inspired | articles, has an editorial advising the Boer peace delegates not to come to Berlin. It says that Germany will maintain the strictest neutrality, and a visit hy the delegates would conse quently have no result while a state of | war continues. ; ‘[wo wives of Gordon Highlanders | have given birth Edinburgh to a son jin one case and a daughter in the |other. The so is been christened | John Frederick Roberts Hector Archi bald Macdonald Thompson, and the girl Francis Antonia Lacysmith Halla- more. Earl, as Secretary cf State for War and the Colonies at the time, was respon- [os “J | Innes, of the Royal Engineers, Can- i Kimberley and sibie for Napoleon during his exile on the island. Many of Croker’s and Sir Hudson Lowe’s letters on the subject were addressed to him, ‘The Boer peace commissioners are understood to have been disappointed by their visit to The Hague, bui to be determined to visit Berlin and Paris efore going to Washington. Much excitement and conjecture nas been caused by the signalling of a 'rench warship in Prosperous Bay last (hursday. The vessel was first seen lose to the shore in Sandy Bay, south f the island, where it remained until lace in the day. It then steamed in the direction of Jamestown and has not been seen since. General Cronije, with his wife and staff, have been liv- ng in a nice little country house. | ater they will remove to a larger one. (he transport Lake Erie has arnved with 394 prisoners, including 34 offi- cers. ‘lhe health of the prisoners is good. In the course of a letter recently received from Colonel Kekewich, com- mandant at Kimberley during the siege, the following passage occurs: ‘‘How well Canada has done for us. I had a dear little chap with me, Mc- adian, quite the best of the best. He worked out all the defence werks of was my stiff officer most of the siege, and wherever he The fact that Lord Bathurst is to be | the Governor of St. Helena, where he will have charge of Gerieral Cronje, is | everywhere, and f expect we shall went inspired confidence. I can never forget how much J] owe to him, The Canadians have been doing grandly _ 8 meee ne teem cme, G You can uy ‘ Eave Troughs and ' from us—cheaper than you can make them, and you’re slways sure of perfect qual- 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- sion Conductor Pipe is ahead of any other pipe made—it silows for contraction and expansion and comes in 10 feet lengths without cross Condactor Pipe scams. i - * Why not write SSE for our e and Price List ? oy hS 6 4 Metallle Roofing Co. uimiee Sz MAPUFACTURERS, TORONTO, an historical coincidence, inasmuch as | hear more of them before the war is , Lord Bathurst’s ancestor, the third | over.” By desire of the Queen, the youth- ful son of the Duxe and Duchess of York will be christened Patrick. The MINSTRELS The members of the League of the Cross intend putting ona GRAND MINSTREL SHow ” - Duke of Connaught will probably be ai one of his sponsors. IN THE 177 ttle 8 There is a general impression that Lyceu Mm 4 all ii 3 a after the war is over the Duke of York, ie of Dodd’s Kidney Pills are | and perhaps the Duchess, will pay a j j ie ps sae The box is imitated, / round of visits to our principal Colon- Monday Evening, April oth. ¢ outside coating and shape of the | ies. They would certainly be accorded ui fakent pills are imitated and the name—Dodd’s | an enthusiastic welcome. The Queen 25 Shining Faces -25 Kidney Pills is imitated. Imitations are | has recently expressed her keen regret —AND— dangerous. The original is safe. Dodd's | that she cannot visit Australia. “If I ; : Kidney Pills have a reputation. Imita- | were twenty years younger I would! Four of the Funniest Men in Town tors have none or they wouldn't imitate. | go,” was her remark. : So they trade on the reputation of Dodd’s ° Latest Songs = Local Hits Kidney Pills. Do not be deceived. There A d oe aa is onl one DODD’s. Dodd’s is ; rere ‘OS, W 1c as een erec e S s odataad Dodd’s is the sas aie ~ = the a of aan Ig Good Specialties ful about— ornwall, in memory of the late Major- r General Sir W. Penn Symons, who Watch For The Parade At Noon 9 died on October 237d last, from D-O-D-D2S wounds sustained in the battle of Glen- coe, has been unveiled by Lady Admission 25 and 35c. Tickets am Symons. The reredos, which is of!sale at Reddin Bros and A. W. KIDN EY carved oak, bears an inscription stat- | Reddin’s Drug Stores, and Mitchell's ing that it is the affectionate offering | Bookstore. of the tenantry and parishioners. Botus 0. J. MITCHELL, Fleming is the parish in which General April 25th. Secretary. PILLS Symons’ estate is situated. We have for the last two weeks been opening our new spring stock of Boots and St««> ana now we have one of the finest stocks to be seen in the city. As in all other lincs «ir boot and shoe department is stocked with only the latest and best gcods and of course th: prices are cut as fine as we can shave them, See our fine Oxford shoes and straps in one or two straps, stylish goods, moderate prices. Our lires cf Men’s Fine Boots cannot be excelled. We have a splendid Chocolate Dcngola 7 Boot with vesting one top, of the handsomest boots we have ever sold, See it, f ‘ae Buy Your Shoes Cheap You Might as Well fh a R. H. Ramsay & Cc MODEL SHOE DEPARTMENT.