— 4 | ' - —— a ~ + ‘ree Treatment — ' Fer (iatarrh, Asthma, ee itis. Influenza, Colds , ——— ee Y rl I ive probably re ad of the new Catarriozone method of treatement and s wonderful cures of these diseases. We want you to try Catarrhozoue and be coa- \ jof ismerit. Fora shortt mn ' wil 1 to readers of this paper, free, & 5: oucfit, sufficient in most cases to per be unen Iv cure Send vour address aod deal lose 10 cents in stamps to cover the gost of mailing. N. C. Poison & Co., Kingston, Ont. The sprinkling of railway lines with oil is valuable in that rain does not peue- trate the oiled outer crust, and that vege- tation along the lines of the rails is dee- troyed. ST A TD Photos of oar Island contingent for sale at Johnson & Johnson’s down-town drug store and at Tae Examines office. Smal! size, 35 cents; large size, $1. ener It is alwave better to be right than to be inconsistent. Are You BiliousT A slugwish liver falls to filter the bile from ae os . and @ben the polsoacus matter goes thro wh the boty in the circulation, the whole system is tainted and derangsd. This ig caliel biliousnes: and ean be c »mpletely cured by Jr. A. W. Chase's Kidney-Liver P\ lls, which act directly on the liver making it hewlthy aad active. One pill a dose, 25 conts a box. Tae cheapsst medicine in the world, a TT a — THE DAILY EXAMINER Subscription $4 a Year 35 cents a Month. THE WEEKLY EXAMINER Subscription, $1 a Year. Payable in Advance. Postpaid to Any /Adcress Yue Dairy Examtner is on sale every day of publication at the folluw- ing plaves :— Alberton---G S Mattart. Bradalbace--R Nicholson Ch’town-- Mason’s Newstand, Geo Carter & Co, Queen St Haszard & Moore, Grafton St, CJ Mitchell, Queen St, W M Coffin, Grafton : t, D Chappell, Prince St, Johnson & Johnson, Kent St, Capt T White. Pownal St, F J Hornsby, Victoria Row, avdigan-- Heath Norton. Georgeto wn—Hon PD Gordon. 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Box 154. gee WHOLESALE 190 doz Galvanize Pails, % : : ame 40 Tons Barb Wire 2 4 10 “ Paris Green 40 “ Bar Iron 8 “ Sheet Iron 15 “ Paints 500 Boxes Glass 100 doz Shovels 400 doz Arcade Files 2000 Kegs Cut Nails 1000 Kegs Wire Nails a 250 Boxes Horse ‘Shoe ‘Nails 250 Kegs Horse Shoes _ 1000 Rolls Building Paper } —ALSO— SHELF HARDWARE Fennell & Tilt) ie ne me ON SUNDAY SCHOOLS \ ) ih Address, by Rev, I. M. Witl co nbe at the Church Con- vention. Afternoon meeting umerside March 21.) [ have been asked to say something hy way of introducing a general discus sion on this subject. I will endeavor remarks under distinct heads, and say something brief and suggestive about each with the hope that each point may be taken up in consecutive order and fully discussed. rHE TEACHER'S OBJECT. There is no work, no undertaking, no project, it seems to me—nay I am sure—which demands a clearer, surer, and more definite grasp of purpose or object than this work. We are liable to confound 8. 8: instruction with the purely intellectual instruction of the day schools. We urge, we tempt, our scholars to put forth effort,—by emula- tion, by premiums, by special care and acumen to make a good showing—but in what ? re Let us ask this question: In what? I fear the bulk of our Sunday School teachers have a totally incorrect idea. And the results of that account for the widely-diffused ‘‘exteriority,” as it has been called by a great teacher, which characterizes the religion of most people to-day. We might as well bring up our children on the lines of agnos- tic sophism or ethical culture. We are feeding the children with husks— not wilfully, but ignorantly. Let me explain: The purpose of the S. S. is not intellectual. It is, par excellence, spiritual. As it has been expressed: “The true end and aim of the Sunday School is surely to lead the lambs of Christ’s{flock tofthe Shepherd.” This is the point. The Christian life is an in- terior matter, and the children must early be taught that religion is a per- sonal matter as between a personal soul and a personal God. In other words, to be a Christian means to live a life of union with Christ, because He was in baptism made a member of Christ, a child of God. I admit this tobe a theme deeper perhaps than the child-mind can grasp ; but this is the love, this is the philosophy that can make that type which it was Christ’s avowed aim and purpose to create. “I am come that ye might have life,” said He. And it is the tfe in each individual which is going to tell towards achieving that masterly ideal and sublime projecc of banishing sin from this world. If you can teach the lambs of Christ’s flock, by whatever means, that He can take away the sin of the world, not the sins, and that this is done in each indivi- dual heart—in a hidden life,—purified in conception by early impressions such as only a toved teacher or a mother can give, and lived out day by day, month by month, year by year, uncer careful and watchful tutelage ; if, in a word, you can impress upon the chiidren the significance and _propor- tion and proper place in the lives of the three great factors of God’s uni- verse, viz: God, myself and all the rest of the world; then we might have them growing up as the Ohrist-child grew up in the Nazarene Church, the Nazarene Parish, the Nazarene Home, (1) as to themselves, ‘in wisdom and in stature” (intellectually pure, physi- cally pure and (2) ‘in. favor with God, as to spiritual life”) and (3) “in favor with man” (as to clean and honorable reputation.) This then is the primary and all important object of our Sunday School work. THE TEACHER’S IDEAL. What then is the qualification of the teacher? Intellectuality? No. When our Lord, as we were beautifully re- minded by the preacher of last even- ing, was examining Simon Peter for Holy Orders, mark you how He proved him. It reminds us of those last tests to which medical students are put at the final stages of their exami- nation for diplomas. They are to be practitioners ; and so they are tested on those points which mean practical, immediate success in serious cases. We too are practitioners, we workers in the Kingdom of Christ. And our first and most momentous cases are the dear lambs of Christ. Mark you, therefore, I say, the Master’s final test of St. Peter. He went to the root of the whole matter: “Simon, son of Jonas, lovest thou Me more than these?” He saith unto Him, ‘ Yea Lord, Theu knowest that I love Thee.” He passed. “He saith unto him ‘Feed My lambs.’ ” I hesitate not one moment to say that any lower ideal than this for our S. S. teachers would be a calamity. Sisters and brothers in Christ, do not we know, as being of the initiated, that what is killing the life and the in- fluence of Christianity in the world to- day is this same ‘ externalism,’ because we, like Martha, have not learnt what ’ [ aoe Be rte , PSoCliiCc[e, No A JLY EXAMINER, wnmaARLOITETOWN, MARCH 24, 1900. DREEET RECT er tae é PRT et wre ee TMT T ty Tee rT” ati eae : +E. cine aterm a alt ahi tal The R oS — ; FOOTE da wal Mencia tha a i eoniums, for its splendid helps to perfect health. THIS WONDERFUL SPECIFIC wins daily en- jvork in dispalling pain. It gives perfect relief in 6 hours, It drives outthe causes—cleanses the system—paves “the way and ——s SO RTT Pe Rey ater to Senn A tet a rs wie nililaionca at Dea T TL Bader} ti The Great South American Rheumatic cure ushers it in—the days of suffering from this relentless disease in all its phases need not be prolonged. POPE er : ——— myer ecm : ar Pp 2) RO ere : Te “ai Laser ; i 88 bed ve ff 4 S | mates South American Rheumatic Cure, can really appreciate the blessing it has proved to mankind in relieving pain, dissolving and eradicating from the system all the foreign matters, the irritating acide, the vnnatural eub- Rheumatism. powerful aad never failing A the worker than he is about the work. His kingdom is advanced rather by what we ave than what we do. This is where Martha failed of the Master’s approval. She represents a type of fussy workers. It was lately said, “ Zeal is the new cloak which covers the muititude of sins.” “Thou must be true thyself, If thou the truth would’st teach, It needs the overflow of heart To give the lips full speech.” I want no teacher whose heart is not in the work, and your scholar will dis- sect your character as a spectroscope dissects the rays of light. ‘‘ Beware lest ye offend one of these little ones.” I have no faith whatever in the influ- ence and the use of ateacher who does not possess this first qualification, of a knowledge of what the Christian life is, and what is the value of Christ’s proposal to regenerate a world. I have every hope of that one whose prayer, spoken in secret in that hour of meditation and supplication and in- tercession which every ideal teacher will inevitably work icto the warp and woef of his or her common life, will be “Speak to me, Lord, that I may speak In loving echoes of ‘Thy tones.” So much for ideal. PRACTICAL QUALIFICATIONS, (1) Power of control. Perhaps it is unfair to expect everybody to be com- plete in this, but in the practical work of a teacher ‘Attention, and how to secure it,’ is one of the main principles of pedagogics. Even God requires attention when He teaches His great lessons, and willhave it. Without this power of control all other gitts are practically useless. A noisy undisci- plined class is a reproach te the teach- er. Napoleon said, “ There are no bad regiments ; but there are bad colonels.” How is this gained? Let me tell you as an old teacher who never failed with a class in this matter yet, and who has had interesting trials; begin, by gaining the love of your pupils. You will smile as yeu perhaps think of a certain Tommy Jones or Johnny Jenkins whom you knew as incorrig- ibles and who had no soft places what- ever in their constitution. But I re- assert it, win the love of your class! Do it first by self-control, patience, kindness, anything but ill-temper and savagery. And I say this, after ex- periencing many rebuffs and humilia- tions, that the boy whom who cannot win to you as your slave by earnest, faithful, prayerful interest in boyhood, isa vara avis. He is found, indeed, but so rarely that he doesn’t count. (2) Punctuality and regularity. I group these, they are twin sisters, even though one perhaps weighs a little more than the other. Your pupils will demand one thing of you, not by auto- cratic mandate because they are the opposite of a constituted authority, but by a no less potential pressure, which all of us feel, when we come in- to contact with childhood under privi- lege or responsibility, to be God-im- planted in the child to keep us true. That one thing is comscientiousness, I need not explainit. I need only say, Only those who have beea its vic- tims—whether for a shorter or longer period—in ite miider forms or in its more acute forms, can really have any correct conception of the excruciating agony that comes to the sufferer from Only those who have been its vic- tims and have been cared by that mest remedy, stances which through cold and expos- ure collect in the joints and musctes, eause swellings, stiffenings, inflamma tion and oftimes cripple and incapac - itate thoee who have been so unfor- tumate as to be caught in Its meshes. South /.merican Rheumatic Cure is & epecific tor Rheumatism and Neural gia in all its forins, It ia not an ex- periment, It is compounded on the most scientific principles known in concentrated essence of the best and mest potent ingredients reeognized as beiog the moat searching and healing. The formula ie the outcome of years of study on Rheumatism in all its forme; ite cautes snd medicines that are cal- culated to give the quickest relief and are most promising of a permanent cure. That the highest results have been attained by the South American Rheumatic Cure that have been at- tained by any remedy of modern times is attested by the splendid testimony, the thankful words, the encouragement and faith shown in it by the hundreds and hundreds who have over their own signatures told how it has healed those who have been bed-ridden for years-— those who have through its use “thrown away the crutches”—those whose stiffoed joints that were affected by every whim of the weather — those who bave suffered the deathly pains and pangs that are incident to the in- flammatory aud neuralgic forms of Rheumatism. | modern medical scienee. It is the pend upon any worker to be true. If you lightly be unpunctual or irregular for any consideration whatsoever, your pupils will assign lack of conscientious- ness in you as a cause, and you will lose their respect, besides disarranging the school generally. LESSONS. There should be thoroughness of | preparation on the part of the teacher. This is truistic.. The secret of spell under an orator is the orator’s prepara- tion for his effort. Inspiration is a mischievous delusion in a teacher of any kind. You cannot empty out of a vessel that wherewith it has not pre-| viously been filled. Any speaker who affects divine afflatus in order to be deified as a Mercurius is a pious fraud. A teacher must at all times be com- pletely full of his or her lesson after faithful and accurate study. I do not advance this to make your work more difficult, but, on the contrary, to make it more pleasant. There is nothing which is calculated to give one a feel- ing of exhilaration and complete satis- faction like what one experiences in the consciousness of a work well wrought, like preparing your lesson. It is the secret of interesting your pupils and making them love your lessons. The only book in evidence during your lesson should be your own Bible, and I would like in advanced classes alsc a blackboard to impress points. Your lessons must have continuity of course. Let it be your aim to lead your children up to the higher know- ledge of God and the great doctrines , of our holy religion, “line upon line.’ ‘ For this you will appreciate the Lesson Helps provided by specialists. 4 THE IDEAL SUPERINTENDENT. [ There are at least two personalities connected with this institution which are practically indispensable to the bene esse of the Sunday School. One is the Superintendent. We all have our ideal of the Superintendent. But to some schools he is, alas, only an aspiration, a desideratum and nothing beyond, i.e. he is not found in the parish. This is for the most part be- cause, perhaps, it is so difficult an office to fill, It has many and many a time fallen to the lot of women to do this, and the names of such are always spoken with veneration and re- gard. Yet weall acknowledge it to be more appropriate to men. If there be one man let him be a Superintendent. } There should ‘be two men at least in every Sunday School. Hence every Sunday School should have a male; Superintendent. What is the type of man required ? (1) He must possess strong vitality, ability and energy. (2) He must be able to keep in touch with the bound- ing exuberance of youth and at the same time belong emphatically to the order of vertebrates. (3) He ought always to be well acquainted with all new notions and plans of Sunday School work. (4) He must be method- ical and business-like in details. (5) He must have a little knowledge of music. (6) He must be enthusiastic. I do not say that every man will rise ~ me ~ . om, oo a — ——— [ing books on the priestly ideals and the ideal pastor. feel like a nervous man who _ has bought a Family Medical Book. Immediately does he sit down to read it through and in due course comes to the conclusion that he has got pretty nearly every disease described in it. This then is the ideal, if you please, and [ might now add that he should have a memory for faces and names, (Christian names), not only in the §S, S. but on the street as well. He must be a bit of a catechist. It must also ai- ways be assumed by him that he is subordinate to his rector. I have heard of a clergyman ina S. S. Conference thus describe his superintendent: In one particular he forms a striking con- trast to Satan. We are told that if you resist the devil he will flee from you. Resist my superintendent and he will fly at you! He must be a layman al- ways, Says one, and a business man al- ways. You know what I mean. A business man is never a gentleman of leisure. The two most effectual super- intendents I have ever met was a judge of the supreme court of his province, and the biggest merchant and the busiest merchant of his county. The latter was one whom I induced to take up the work, and yet he was spoken of to me as being a man who on account of the multiplicity of his business cares was signified to me as one who would probably fill an early grave. He must impart exact business-like ways to every department of the school. He ; must be ready for self-denial and have a“ spirit of holy zeal not tinged by de- + -€ for personal distinction so much as ive of Christ and solicitation for the s uls of the growing generation (; vena man who has a grasp of the | ctofthe human race being a vast }' rennial living organism, passing t ‘rough ages of development, and you l..we useful man, the man of greatest possibilities as a worker that you can find. All honor ®to the business man who gives up his Sunday afternoon to do Christ’s primary fundamental work, after a busy week. He may, however, be blessed through his opportunity for change of work. If in any connection the poet be proven right in saying that absence of occupa- tion is not rest, it is in connection with the typical business men of this fever- ish age. But in spite of ‘this let us honor and value him tor his work. The Ideal Rector—in connection with his position as real head of the S. |S. work in his parish. He is the other personality. “150 years ago a tiny seed dropped by the Great Sower into the heart of one of His humble servants, and since then under the Holy Spirit having overspread amongst Christian communities of English-speaking Anglo-Saxons, the ideal rector will esti- mate at full value this agency whose raison @ etre it ishis tool ate to question and use it to the best advantage He will be present as often as in these days ef overworked ciergy he can. He will be in such touch with his teachers that will be so many telephone wires in his hands to reach souls and families etc. Andheisa fortunate man if he can have the organizing skill or attrac- to this ideal. And when you hear him RO PPT Ley ie sali wom Dane aa Cie A oe great merit, aod sufferera need only to put to test what others say of it tg prove the claims of the great South American Rheumatic Care, pain may be dispelled in an hour, bat 18 ooly a matter of days at most till the most siubborn cases wil] Vanish, and ip the place of pain and sufferin there’l] be a joyous and lasting freedom J. D. McLeod of Leith, Ont., Saya: “I have been a victim of Rheumatiem for seven years; confined to my bed for months ct a time; unable to turn my- self, have been treated by many physic. ians without any benefit. I had ao faith in Rheumatic cures I saw adverti but my wife induced me to get a boitle of South American Rheumatic Care from Mr. Taylor, druggist, in Owen Sound, with pain, took the first dose the pain had all left me. three bottles,and to-day I am compleie- My | ly cured.” at : all Kidney disorders. He!ps in four te Words cannot too strongly express its 4 six hours and heals permanently, LS, LE LS TR ee I personally always | ly as a catechist. Years of At that time I was in agony Inside of 12 hours after I i continued untill had used South American Nervine is a power Fe in restoring wasted nerve force; cures ol nervous prostration, stomach troubles IB | and general debility. a. system aud builds up the waste places, I It cleanses ‘he South American Kidney Care is a Pa liquid Kidney specific; eures Bright's 5 Disease, Diabetes, Bladder troubles and fe aoe The ideal rector will shine especial He will have the greatest lever in his hand that he cap useif he learns an adeptnessin this art _ Old Dean Comber said “Sermons & never do good upon an uncatechized congregation.” ‘This is a deeper truth — than appears at first sight. Our con- # gregations, owing to the neglect of § careful accurate instruction in the prin- ciples of Caristian doctrine, owing that | is to neglect in early days of disciple: ship to have been fed with “the sin cere milk of the Word” do not get the good from hearing sermons which is anticipated by the exhortation | in the Baptismal service, “ye shall call upon them to hear sermons.” Nobody can de this work as well as the clergyman. If he cannot, nobody, is able to supply the great lack. He has authority, wisdom, knowledge and professional status to back him up. The excellence of the catechetial method would be sufficient matter for a long and interesting paper. G. Her bert said, “ At sermons men may sleep and wander, but when one is asked a question he must discover what he is,” (The older meaning of discover—‘“lay bare.”) I remember the days when I was taught the basal principles of my churchmanship and (what is the same to me now) of my_ spiritual life. I know what Herbert meant and appreciate it. ‘Throughout the ages as well as to-day there is] nothing in§ didactic%science that has Superseded the Catechetic method! Moreover, it appeals to us, because it is the Church's traditional inode. A great door and effectual is opened tol us in our Sunday Schools. Let us not allow it to invite us in vain. eee . OOD NEWS comes from those who take Hood’s Sarsaparilla for scrofula, dyspepsia and rheumatism * Reportsagree that HOOD’S CURES —_ a ee The lielief of = | Ladysmith The book “Phe Relief of Lady: | smith aod How it was Celebrated | in Charlottetown” will be on sale in § the city bookstores this (Satarday) §) evening. It is a souyeneir of that” historic and memorable event which sheuld be in the hands of all. See it at the Bookstores. { PRICE 10 CENTS. _— : To LET The north end of a house situated om Prince Street, contatning nine rooms, sult — able for a boardingjhouse-or private resid ence. A u to a