— an r DAILY er ws BXAMINERK, CHARLUTTETOWN, MAKCH 23, 1900 tence es r : ms oes « ic cltiie ; eT Le ee EDte pone ts sh he RG oe, wb — Bt SO 3. pei e™ SABES ZS Te oR sap j GAME MAYY Vo - ~ ' ' —— 2 = —. my Fares ud /a Ses ee = ae ras PP gaa | — tae za se = sod ates “4 a e (=o F S a Ss eA Pr, re | ine ~~ a x . “ou e oe om r 0 os “ . . H/ * eee ~~ a“ 2.2 OA oc 4 hie? - 7 rr . 4? asta 1 = See a “7” . Bs AS) Witte ap - Mf. ve gee wie: Ye. a : a a “ORs ae ae . e ~~ . ed ans wie, © a ot BON Sg ALIN OY ee SEK ony . 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Mother and Queen, from the golden West, : We offer in love at the foot of thy throne, All we a@n give thee, our dearest and bes, Flesh a our flesh and bone of our boe,— Take them, Queen of the brave and fre, They «ome in their love to die for | thee. Mothe and Queen from farm and mrt. From dank and factory hill and piain, They jather in love for a noble Heart, To ligten its sorrew and bear its pin,— Take them Queen of the brave and fre, They >ome in their love to die for the. Mothefand Queen, our homes were bight And pire as the air of the’sunlit north But ters have darkened the woman’s syht Since the day that the brother and son went forth,— Take them, Queen of the brave and free, Whe come in their hee. ove to die for Motler and Queen of hrone Ladyand Lord of the Tanoumakest our far-! the spotless sea and land, 2rn sons thine wn By tk tenderclasp of a woman’s hnd,— Take them Queen of the brave and fre, They ome in their love to die for thee, Mothe and Queen, f, gid West, From te rivers and | cHdren roam, We giv thee our Cearest, om the strong ains where our our bravest an best. Take thm, Queen of our heart and hoe, Asking jo bounty favor or fee, They cme in their love to die for tne. i FrepDERICK GEORGE Scorr. » I9OOo. Mar bh BEITS WROUGHT CHANGE. | HE BROE THE BACK OF fHE BOER CAMPAICN, Londa, March 17.—Mr. Spence Wilkinsa reviews the war news for the past wee for the Associated Press as follows “The reat secret of war is person- ality. Napleon said :-- - 1\withe big thing is not men — “i man,and the sudden change in the -tateif the South African war is © 'o thpresence and the power of On manLord Roberts. merenears ago I spent many weeks , as his guest on my last t LS tion of the Indian armies. were shipped him. The disasters of the winter gave him his opportunity, and now the world sees what he has made of it. “When Sherman through Georgia, he asked General Grant for an old chum, Cavalry Officer Wilson, I think, and when Wilson came he sat up half the night talking to Sherman, who before retiring said : ‘I'll tell you where Grant beats all the restofus He don’t care a damn for what he can’t see the enemy doing, and it scares me like hell.’ “Roberts is like Grant. He is too big to be disturbed at anything, and he quietly does just what he means to do. Accordingly his movements have knocked the Boers out of time. Dreifontein turns out, by the losses on both sides, to have been one of the hardest fought actions of the war. It has finished the Free Staters and the Free State. “Roberts entered Bloemfontein on Tuesday and the result has been the Free State resistance. “The railway was opened without | ‘ killed or wounded) and 1,109 wound- ‘ed, a total of 1,729. difficulty to the Orange River. The rebellion in the Cape collapsed, the Free Staters turning round wholesile. Meantime the Transvaal Boers solemn- ly declare that they have made Biggars- berg impregnable, but Buller has no need to run his head against Biggars- berg. Lord Roberts by advancing to the Vaal river would turn Biggarsberg and the Boers then must be between two armies. “The ‘Transvaal Boers may fight on in the hope of foreign intervention. an operation = RISKY Piles when Dr. A. W. Chase’s Ointment is a surer, cheaper, easier way to cure. Cruel, barbarous methods belong to the dark ages of the past. There was atime when o surgical operation was considered the only possible cure for piles. Notso now. Occa- sionally there is still found a physician whe adheres to this dangerous and expensive method, but to every one who still believes in using the knife, ninety and nine recommend the use of Dr. Chase’s Ointment. Dr. C. M. Harlan, writing in The American ournal of Health, said : J ** We know that ‘ Dr. ae eS eae, f meets all the requisitions of the highest stand- ard of ect tent it will be held in high esteem wherever it is — and consequently endorse it to every reader.” ; "7 y force of merit alone Dr, Chase’s Oint- ment has won its way into this wide, wide world, until it has made the name of Dr. Chase familiar in almost every home, and won for . venerable discoverer the title of Ament test Physician.” oo Chase's Ointment has never been known to fail as a cure for piles. It matters not whether blind, itching, bleeding or protruding, Dr. Chase's Ointment i$ an absolute and per- cure, Chase's Otntmert is the discovery of the authes - Chase’ , Whose portrait and u of Dr. Chase's Recipe Book, whose portrait iain oe IT’S TOO To undergo | though | en ¢ with him in India, accompanying him | They have no other chance, as either our of inspec- | British army cutnumbers them or they I saw for ' myself how two hundred thousand men Since his return from India there have been influences Striving to keep him in the background, cannot escape, being between two fires, except by perpetual retreat. But, I can see no chance for them except through itttervention, I expect the Transvaal Boers will fight until the last, as their animosity to the British is deep rooted. “Intervention hardly seems likely, set out to march | as the British navy is an unknown quantity and the British determined. The fate of Mafeking is uncertain, All recent reports show that despite the great hardships the garrison will hold out ; that the besieg- ers are growing tired and timid, and that relief movements are in progress north and south, but the news is in- definite. The situation is summed up in the Associated Press’ latest despatch that the relief of Mafeking may be ex- pected at any time.” nation quite The official statement shows that by far the bloodiest fighting of the war was at Spion Kop, in Buller’s attempt to reach Ladysmith, during the week, Jan. 17'to Jan. 24. The loss during the week’s fighting, waich occured largely on the day the troops held Spion Kop, aggregated 263 officers and men killed, 347 missing (mostly And yet even after this terrible loss on the British side the Boers dared not attack the British in turn. How could they hope to win a war by merely sitting still and waiting for attack? The next deadli- est battle to Spion Kop was of course Magersfontein, where 171 officers and men were killed, 692, wounded and 107 missing (practically all killed or wounded and captured), a total of 970 —in one day—in fact mostly in half an hour. Yet again the Boers dared not take the offensive. THE SIN OF WITCHCRAFT. RUDYARD KIPLING WRITES OF THE CAPE TOWN OFFICIALR. The first word from Rudyard Kip- ling since he went to South Africa printed in this week’s issue of Harper’s Weekly. Mr. Kipling cables a long account of British disloyalty, which he calls “ The Sin of Witchcraft.” The burden of his complaint is that British civil officials in Cape Town wink at semi-treasonable acts, and to quote his own words: “‘ The Government will | take care it does not pay any one to be loyal.” He says: ‘The loyalist on the border has his house ripped inside out by the Boers, or rebels, or both ; the disloyalist farm is respected and in’ return he supplies the enemy with food, horses and information. His risk js small. He may possibly—but not if his friends can stop it—be arrested on a charge of treason. He may then be se nt down country to be tried by a sympathetic jury. He hopes, and not without reason, to have his farin re- stored to him after he has undergone PRO Es Ungroonded Flats ae, 3de, 4c, de Grounded Flats Ot, 70,80, 106: ws 540 $26, 26, GoJo .. .... Grounded Gilts Sc, 9c 10c, l5e 20c¢ 9x18 Inch Bord $0, 0, 108 0% i. Y3¢, United States, and Canada, so that in information about decorating homes. eer eremamees on Gustine tartan Wall Paper! M\ILOPDYR DEP‘ R’ MEA = FINENESS 3000 PAT FERNS IN STOCK The G. A. Holland & Son Co. ESTABLISHED 1843 ttt Nett teas nanan, MONTREAL, *e 7 © *e - Yx18 Inch Borders oe ee se ee ers, * *-e sen we a ee a aL rN Tre Special prices on application for Japanese Goods, German Flax Hangings, French * ‘ 3 ; English Washable Papers, Burlap’s and American Pressed Papers, | We send saw ples of wall paper by mail, free of charge, to any part of America, upon request | Or rooms to be papered, colors preferred and limit price, We import our wall papers direct from the best manufacturers in Great Britain, France, dealing of all through our mail order department, at a Our heavy buying, and 67 years business record in choicest patterns, which we in turn give to our customers. When sending ermples, we enclose complete instructions how to calculate number of rolls required for also full directions for ordering. If required we will also eend a handsome iilustrated wall paper booklet wit ee seen a with us, the genius of the world’s wall paper art is broug Minimum cost, Embossed Gilts 120, Lie, 20c, 25¢, 300, 35e, 400, 50c, | | 201] —-9x18 Inch Borders. .- OS, Se, 1s ties, -. Yard | 30 Inch Plain Ingraing | .. Yard Ide, 17c, 25, 30c,40¢ .. .. Ro}l | | Borders to Match 9x18x21 inch, + eee 7¢, 100; lic, I7e ., Poe e Ce ee Room Mouldings te Match al} Papers 2c, 3¢, 4c, 5c, 6c, 8e .. - per foot Stating style of room Germany, Belgium, Japan, ht to the homes Canada’s great commercial centre gets us larger discounte, each room, bh valuable We guarantee prompt shipment of all orders same day asreceived. Qur close prices cover Exprese € ti.oes over aud saves in qddition in most cases 20 to 40 per cent. Pea taeny [l/ustrated Catalogue of our other departments in Games, Toys, Dolls, Fancy Goods, Baskets, Purses, Musica 1 Tn. The G. A. Holland & Son Co., Canada’s Wall Paper Importers, 2411 St. Catherine Street, MONTREAL, Canada. j ; etruments, Sporting Goede, sent to any one on application, enclosing & 3 cent stamp for mailing same, — s sme absurdly inadequate punishment. ‘‘ Meanwhile the loyalist’s piano is lying wireless on the verandah ; photo- graphs of his house show the rooms as | though cyclones had met to wrestle there ; his flocks and herds are gone and the baby linen is lying on the dungheap. He and his family crawl | into Cape Town in overpacked trains and get what consolation they can) from singing ‘‘ Britons Never Shall be Slaves, on the platform. Then do Messrs, Kruger and Steyn enter into} correspondence with Lord Roberts as | to the atrocities committed on a vir-| tuous population by a brutal and licen- tious soldiery. There is one way out of the horror and one only. The men who have befouled the colony are known. They goabout. No man| ays a hand upon them. They have become careless in speech and this is important, indeed at the proper time those men can be made the means of saving the colony. RE ET NE PT A TS “ nanan $$ — Dear Sire,—I was for seven years a sufferer from Bronchial Trouble, and would te so hoarse at times that I could scarcely speak above a whisper. I got no relief from anvthing until I tried your Mina ltD’S HONEY BALSAM. Two botiles gave relief and six botiles made a complete cure. I would heartily recom- mead itto auyone suffering from threat or nog trouble J.P. VANBUSKIRE, Fredericton. FOR PASSENGER and FREIGHT RATES and STEAMER SAILINGS to the Cape Nome Gold Fields,’ FOR SPACE IN TOURIST SLEEPER Froin MONTREAL every THURSDAY at 9.45 a. m.,, FOR ALL INFORMATION end FARM LANDS IN THE CANADIAN NORTH WEST, For opening for GRIST MILL, HARDWOOD shw MILL. CHEESE and BITTER FACTORIES, Prosoectors and Sporismen, write to SR weer ee AOD PARLOR SUITE AT A MODERATE PRICE This is what yon get i, our solid Walnut $24 Cotton Tapestry Suite. This suite has spring seats, is trimmed with ush, and finished up in good style—The cish discount of 5 p. c. makes this suite $22.80 NET. N %s ut 4. J. HEATH, D. FP. A.C. PLR, St. John, N. B. ' i3 We wonld like to show you this suit > x: want something good at a small price. John WNewrs 2s White Wear Ladies’ and Children’s opened to-day Night Gowns, Skirts, Corset Covers, Drawers, Aprobs. J Harris, LONLON HOUS i —— Se i samy ed ee maces saps ee Pe fii on tare a ommaeracae ne 7 int drepidegens SS aecee ere Sra seem sere wires See eS See ee . capeatcacaa aap fe ee ato = 2% eT ar sae . cree tteementeesemnrestiane Shas or Shagpeae ceeee ee Soe: a _ Pe a 32. gee ae * = eae ae easy ~elnaag AE ae a ae « eae aan kg Ul ¥ a eld