pe Swe me SE a eee ee ae OE , a 3 Pn ore — walla. ati - —— Fe ah eae SICK HEADACHE Positively cured by these Little Pills, They also relieve Distress from Dyspepela, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A per- fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsl- ness, Bad Tastein the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels, Purely Vegetable. Small Pill. Small Dose. Smal! Price. Substitution the fraud of the day. \ See you get Carter's, Ask for Carter's, Insist and demand actor S Little Liver Pills. PSS GOGO ts a js. @ COMFORTING Dis inguisted everywhere for Delicacy of Flavour Superior Quality, and Highly Nutritive Properties. Specially grate- ful and comforting to tho rervous and epepeptic. Sold only im 3-lb. tins, labelled JAMES PPS & CO., Ltd. Hom@mopathic Chemists, Londor, ee a * BREAKFAST SUPPER EPPS'S COCOA TENDERS! —- FOR— indian River Church, Tenders are asked for the construction > avd completion of St. Mary’s Chureb, up to the Bc Mareb, next, to be addessed to the uoversigned and marked on the ont- side “Tender for Indian River Catholic Charct.” P ans and sperifications can be seen on Mor iay, 5:h February, next, at the Bietop’s Place and at the office of Mr. W. C. ‘terris, Architect, Ch’town, for ten day-; afterwards they can be sen at the Paro biel House, Summerside. A certi- fied bank cheque of $506.00 will be required to accompany each tender, whch will be returned if tender be not acce; ted, and forfeited if tenderer fai) to ace-:', if called upon. The undersigned does not bind himeelf to accept the lowest or any tender. D. J. GILLIS, P.P. Jocian River, P. E. I., Jan 26th 1900, Here ld. PARLIAMENT MEETS FEBRUARY 1st. od Ir view of the approaching eession of | the LD minior wil] be sent to new eubscribers daily Thre+ Monthe for One Dollar. "HE GAZETTE FOR THREE MONTHS FOR for Appres3s Orpers, RICHARD WHITE, Man. Dir., GAZETTE PRINTING CO., MonTREAL. "RINK AFTERNOON SKATING Tuesday and Friday, 2.: 5.30; Saturday, ; with band until further notice. EVENING SKATING 3.50 Mcndsay and Thursday 8&8 to} 10. Band in attendance. Coupon Books now oa sale, 5 skates forone dollar. B. C. P ROWSE, ly E.H, 3 EER, a J Parliament, Tae Gazerrs | 30 to} to G&! OUR BREW. ‘PRAY, OF WHAT STUFF ARE YE MADE.” I. lid England gave the body o’ the brew, Dear England! Mother Englannd! The best part of it, Aye the heart of it. The generous liquor from her own | breast shew drew ; Twelve hundred years and more That liquor was in store, Warming the heart of England, Mother England ! And she held no measuring can— Tho stream unstinted ran When England gave the body o’ the brew. II, Alfred, Knut, the Dane, and William with his Norman crew, Brito, Saxon, Viking, With Pict unto her liking, Borderer, Thane and Yeoman, Pikeman, Sailor, Bowman— From stuff like this the seething Jeaven grew ; Quaker, and Cavalier, Covenanter, Buccaneer,— Oh, from these she’stilled the body o’ the brew ! IIl. From whatsoever quarter the healthy breezes blew, From the ship-deck, moor, or wynd, from township, berg, and dorp, The took ’em as she found ’em, sturdy strong and true— Raleigh, Standish, Drake, and Oglethorpe, Adventurous John Smith, he of goodly memory, Spottiswode and Penn, Bacon’s rebel men— Oh, from such was made the body the brew. Calvert IV. What more? A gallant strain From the Hidalgo of Spain, A heart-throb from the gentlemen France, (With a rosette, or a ribbon to his shoe, glint like fighting steel in his glance) ; And the Dutchman, oh, the Dutch- man, yes, Myhneer ! You gave our broth a temper, pun- of Anda gent, rare, With your Stuyvesants and Lesilers, your f/al/f Mon crew! Russ, Italian, German, Pole— A tang from every soul That has striven, laughed or suffered the whole world through :— These have added thyme or rue, But ’twas England gave the body o the brew. v | What more? | A strength and passion, sublimated, blent | From canyon, peak and | mighty continent. | The red blood of the Red Man —dy- | ing fast but dying free, | The sap of awful forests, the breath ot inland seas, The foam of endless rivers roaring, to the sea— From things hke these | We get the biting flavor of our brew (But E ngland- gave the body— Mother England !) VI. pouring, , a acu . 4 Ri : i Ss ae a eee " . ° . We do well to boast the liquor, | sh ulders; his jawbones are prognath—| vineyard. Its a war against fanatic None poured is richer, thicker. | ous ; his eyes, small and cunning, { semi-barbarians, ruled by an autocrat aes ae _ i a ee na 1. Now, all who will may take us, | twinkle under shaggy brows. lhough | dete: mined to crush out in South Africa Hold to us, or forsake us, grim and taciturn, he can laugh atjevery modern principle of freedom It’s one to us, SO only we have you, times~——usually in derision—and his } For the dream of the ambitious Boer, Dear England ! Mother Englan di! laugh isan uproar. Kruger is twenty [supported by a fighting peasantry, Who mixed and gave the body o’ our w brew. Dae OER ae ee ae rae fy |—M. E. M. Davis the Leslie’s Month- 4 : to A ° « iy i 7 . 4 J ” oa i esi XR Am IE Der rr ' ‘ wa0ltiwase: Pita Cure rauaita aun its Gaia OY eee ees | THE FIGHTING BOERS. Much of the sympathy \merica is due to the’ democratic title that country has assumed. The’ Transvaal, however, is not a republic, It has a Constitution, or Grondwet, but the Volksraad by a rosolution, or Besluit, can suspend or repealfany part of the Grondwetjthat may interfere with legislation at hand. And the Presiden ‘is the power above and behind th aroused in} Hengist and Ethelred, Bertha and wise | plain of a! SARL Sy ee Volksraad. ment are presented by him. He “het hoogste gesag des Jands’— greatest authority in the State. bidding the Volksraad can at any time ' determine that any matter pending be- ‘fore the High Court shall cease to be considered by the court. In 1897 the High Court refused to defraud an | American mining man of a number of claims which he had legally acquired, _whereupon Oom Paul summoned the | Volksraad; the Chief Justice, Mr. Kotze, was summarily dismissed, the | sittings of the court indefinitely sus- pended, and all the rights of the American ignored. None of the rights of the Uitlanders are safeguarded. Homes are invaded and searched on the slightest pretext the accounts of business houses are ex- amined, and tribute levied arbitrarily. Before the development of the mines. the Transvaal was bankrupt. To de- | fray his travelling expenses to London 'and return a few years ago Kruger had to escort to a forced loan upon a foreign banking firm in Pretoria. The first arrival of Europeans was, accordingly, warmly welcomed by the _ political Boers, for this incoming of capital and energy saved the country from collapse. As soon as enough mining acre was disposed of to make the Government rich,Oom Paul and his henchmen set | about to discourage further immigration He knew that the mine owners had in- vested vast fortunes in preparing to develop their properties, and that they could not afford toabandon their pro- | jects. Government monopolies were accordingly started, competition was throttled, and excessive rates fixed on commodities indispensable to a mining camp, such as dynamite and whiskey. Upon all articles which the Govern- ment does not supply by monopoly it has established an exrobitant import duty. The avowed purpose has been to freeze out all but the heavy investors, and to tax these to the limit. Hardly a cent of the prolific revenue gained by these high-handed proceed- ings has been expended upon Johannes- burg, whose. affairs are, in the main, administered from Pretoria. The sanitary condition of Johannes’ hurg is a horror; its streets are foul and upaved, and, as very few of the 1S the Boers live in the metropolis, the typhoid epidemics that frequently devastate Johannesburg are com- Anything that thins out the Uitlander population hailed the Boers as a friendly ve osition of Providence in behalf of the Transvaal. The. water supply is inadequate, and what there | is Is contaminated. by 40,000 residents of Johannesburg praying for municipal improvements was presehted to Oom Paul dur: ng my residence there. his coffee, puffed his great Pipe, spat exc essively into a huge porcelain dish, and laughed immoderately. “If the Philistines do not like the land of my people, let them depart in peace,” was his only reply, In reality the Transvaal is no more of a republic than Turkey, Dahomey, or Baluchistan. Oom Paul could, with- out violating the spirit of the Grond- wet, change his title to Sultan, Khan, | Ameer, or Maharaja. Though Joubert commands the | fighting Boers, the real leader, the | masterful soldier, as well as statesman, OQom Paul. Joubert is more enlight- ed than Kruger, and for that reason less completely represents the people. | Joubert isa radical, and would wel- come an alliance with England. Oom | Paul is a sullen giant; his voice isa | roar, his big head is set on powerful is At his | placently ignored by the Government. ' The President si: ped THE DAILY WAAMINER, UHARLOTFETOWN FEBRUARY 3,§1900 nee et ant WAR IN S6UTH AFRICA. Interesting Particulars of the Struggle Betwecn Great Britain and the Boers. All measures for enact- times a millionaire, though one would 1not suspect it, judging him by his clothes or the frugal manner of his living. His home, on Main Street, Pretoria, is a single story building, half hidden by trees. The one evidence that it is the home of an unusual personage is the presence of armed sentries in white helments and blue uniforms, who march to and fro on the sidewalk. A little garden leads to a wide veranda, where a half dozen Boers in frock coats of archaic cut, and with huge slouch hats pulled over their eyes. sit in dignity, calmly smoking great pipes. ‘These are the President's aides-de-camp, who receives visitors and usher them into the executive presence. The president is not com- municative, but when he speaks he thunders his words rapidly, as if he were firing volleys. His habits are not pleasing. In this country he would find it exceedingly difficult to avoid the anti-expectoration laws. But one who, a few years the African barbaric diplomat, \ago, was an ox-runner on desert. It is an interesting chapter in history little inland state lying south of the Equator in distant Africa, has been able for years to block the ambitions of England. Behind that mask which lends itself so readily to cartoons—a head and face and unlike a gargoyle torn from a Dutch spirit of mastery before which the world has stood amazed. He has planted himself like a granite boulder, blocking the path over whichthe Empire builder, Cecil Rhedes, has sought to stride from the Cape of Storms to the Mediterranean. Oom Paul and Cecil Rhodes—these are the two heroic fig- ures South Africa has produced. Both, of course, have their detractors. “When Cecil Rhodes comes to his end,” says Mark Twain, ‘‘I want to be there to get a piece of the roap.” Kip- ling, on the other hand, regards Rhodes one of the great figures of des- tiny, and characterizes Oom Paul as a “sloven savage.” Stead says that, in the Roman sence, Rhodes is supreme- ly religious, believing the British to be God’s chosen people, and himself, the Anointed of Heaven with a Divine commissson to paint as much of the map British red as possible, and to that end ‘“‘to exterminate blacks and Boers, Portuguese and pygmies and other Eresid ual refuse of the human | race, | But the present conflict in Africa }s far more significant than a contest be- A petition signed ; tween the Colossus of Cape Town and | } the Giant of Pretoria. Nor is ita re- petition of the fiasco of 1895-6. It is }not a mere quarrel concerning the rights of a few thousand aliens. That condition is, of course, involved, but the fundamental issue is whether the world is large enough to permit an ig- | norent band of indolent vagrant hunt- |ersto hoard vast and fruitful lands | which they will not develop. A law of | nations and of evolution is a test—the the survival of the fittest. There is no room in the earth the British say. for hermit states, and the nation that buries its talent shall lose it. Even China, they point out, after centuries of isola- tion, has at least perceived the hand- writing on its Wall and has ordered that historic barrier to be torn down. Shall Africa become a new empire tor the spread of modern civilization, or shall a few thousand half-savage plains- men be} permitted to arrest the march of humanity? That is the question Britain is attempting to answer with her guns, It is nota seizing of Naboths | fs is 4 CHARLOTTETOWN ‘ . SES RTT Te TRA is, Jonn T. Tickenzie, THE TAILOR & E P. E. ISLAND iG =| a : 7 scarcely expects elegance in this semi- that a crafty, half-civilized leader of a beard, looking not cathedral—is an intelligence, a cunning fc | and Nova Scotia Bak a from the Cape to the Zambesi, which, either independently or in alliance with some European state—possibly Russia —shall within those borders dominate the Anglo-Saxon forever.—Harold Bruce in Leslies Monthly. At The Barber’s. The red plush chairs were a)] full,and the two genilemen in the corner wait- ing to be shaved were beguiling the io- terval in a very earnest conversation. ‘Jt was the most elaborate menu the lodge has ever served,’ said the gentle- man who had taken his collar off. ‘I would bave liked to have been there,’ said his friend. ‘Well, I should say so. It was first- class right through. Variety tono end. Sumptuous isn’t the word. ‘You know I had an _ invitation.’ ‘What!’ ‘I had an invitatiow but I couldn't use it.’ ‘You dont mean to say you missed it on account of some other engagement?’ ‘No, it wasn’t that, I simply could’t go, that was al].’ ‘Why?’ I daren’t.’ ‘Get out ;bow do you mean?” ‘Why, my digestive systera would have been upset for a week, ifI had.’ ‘Did you ever use Dodd’s Dyspepsia Tablets?’ ‘No.’ ‘I wish you had told me about this before.’ ‘Why?’ ‘I could have seen that you went to that dinner al! right.’ ‘How could you?’ ‘My dear boy,do you know thata Dodd’s Dyspepsia Tablet would have prevented the slighest symptoms of distress.’ ‘A Dodd’s Dyspepsia Tablet?’ ‘Yes, taken afier dessert. Why al) the fellows were taking them, and I tell you that dinner needed something like that.’ ‘What do you call them—Dodd’s Dys- pepsia Tablets?’ ‘Yes, they acton the food in the stomach and ensure perfect digestion. Fermentation is prevented, and heart- burn, headaches, biliousness and all unpleasant after effects ot a banquet are dispensed with.’ Next,’ said the barber, and the man without the collar rose tocojlapse into a red plusb chair. But he left his friend deep in the contemplation ofa new idea. George Washington born ebruary, 22 1732. sale Minard’s Liniment for ever "where, es PNP Wa ee AY. FARMS FOR EVERYBODY IN CANADA'S GREAT NORTH-WEST “A Land Illimitable With Illimitable Kesources.” Goyernment Free Grant of 16( Acres of Bona’ Fide Settlers. For Maps, Descriptive Pamphlets Transportation Rules, ete., Write ta A. J. HEATH, D. P. Aj, O. £. R., ST. JOHN N. B Important —=cxey Announcement We hereby beg to announce to our cuctomers that we have sold our Grocery Business to Mesers R, F. Maddigan & Co, and weuld solicit for them a santibGau of the patronage so libera!ly extended us in the past. id W. GRANT &CO In convection with the above we tak this opportuuity of informing the custom- ers of the above firm, and the public generally, that we heve in stock a full lineof general groceries,which will be sold } cheap for cash. Free delivery ot goods to all parts of the city. Telephone connection. R. F. MADDIGAN &Co. Queer St., Ch’town Jan 18, 1900—d&w We have some \ ay iwins in stoe'x. , They are nice medium sized Red Ap ples, suitable for family vse cr fo retailing. We have also a few Pippins left. apple for bbls of Bishop | are a splendid { family use and are much The yi cheaper than the Red Apples, Fcr sale by the peck or bbl at SEEN & QOFF GROCERS. é } (is of a South African confederation ‘Your Kind Attention to our December 31g Account wil oblige us, HASZARD & MOORE SUNNYSIDE. © PHOENIX of Hartford, FIFE INLREKGE Gp, Cash Assets Over, $6,000,000,0) A share of yonr patrowsge is selicite). for this old Reliable Company , PLEASING CONTRACTS, GENEROUS SETTLEMENTS, LOWEST Riis E. H. BEER, Gxnnar Sroneu Srazrr Aathoriged Agent for P, 8.7 Aleo repreeenting other, Fire, Life and ccident Insurance Companies. LISTEN—~ At our store you can always depend upon getting just what you ask for. Instaple as well as faney ledged leaders in Ch’town, us? Ifnot, begin now. GROCE RS RACES | —-AND—— HOCKEY MATCH cinerea, DING enhactnee Wednesday, Feb'y 7th SOURIS vs CHARLOTTETOWN Admission 15c. Children 10c. Gallery a1 and Band Sta rd 26 Visit our Store Where you will find a large stock of the following to select trom. WATCHES in gold. silver and nickel. JEWELRY in rings, chains, brooches, etc. CLOCKS in marble, wood and gilt. Silverware In ithe optical line, glasses, opera glasses, etc. GH TAYLOR Sunnyside, Queen Square. Fpectacier, eye Rais — 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 groceries we are the acknow- Have you ever traded with * SANDERSON & CO Ho Ga _ ae a oe oe ome “~a =