i : a — CALENDAR FOR MARCE, 1894. N ‘ 1 I S } r NV 5 Llig water of 8 28 ‘ 9 ‘7 9 53 yj 10 27 | 50 | ll 0 +; ll 3 o ’ morn , os ot] ? 2 «4 b 0 37 7 l 16 ; , ' — . 119 . 2 ' > ; - h rivi’ | ry i lin UV! iL : bs Al ‘ hee of MPANY, in the 1 Street SUBSCRIPTION ANCE ‘ £4. « 2a i 1 ‘ 1.3 me ! f Canada or the ant ATES i rdere xs the charge is wertion, and 2? Rute ards are “pe ‘ ar j : ! s i ess | aid fi 3 and lei I ! e isppea : ad rtise h Fairs, Bazaars, f «f [ s will be inserted wit! rt ar rate of 10 cents per ‘ . . ei ~ ad Z Is 2 ne ~ rt un k i he that mive sers We i pape I : As i 8 t : k g “ I H. Mas Ps e ‘ a yttetown J. Meir e Maipeque Road Cc. # Low I g Park Road ' “t t ~ j 5 « 2 s s @ N Sta P.E. 1. Rallway and aon Pails ae | a I ksto Sun m<r * Ha ¢+“vane, S H I Pawn g ra Li. Fe tet ul ‘ G.™M ~ \ a e* => =a » Weekly E The Weekly Examiner s iss i « ry Friday morning ym the pablis : ities {t is made up of matter w! ; . the I y editions, and ie a fret a8 weekly ewspaper nteresting an ibseription for Tne WEEKLY Exam. i a : f Canada or the United States me dollar per year. Ad rtising rates on the same scale as given hove for Take Dat_y EXAMINER. + ee + Physician and Surgeon. Grado the Medical Department of the Uai rwit the ¢ New York, late Me nda lent Staffof Belle- vue Hospital and a New York t g-in H , New York (1 V OFFICE North Side Queen Square E POST OFFICE King and Queen ROBERT BEAIRSTO MISSION MERCHANT AUCTIONEER. ERENCES. CO AND GOOD REI Queen Street, C perlattelown Ju i reet, I Robt. Balloch & Co., TEA MERCHANTS, aC a REPI ENTED IN € ANADA BY J. A. MORRISON, HALIFAX i | 7 a e Greatest Ly Bb heumatic and Neuralgia Cure | Of the Age fe as | e ph pee HOV SEHOLD R MANUFACTUF ED ON |THE HA KER MICE COVED: ie a ST JOHN.N.B. a PAIN 'GURE wy 1 >| of —— HE DAILY EXAMINER. TERMS : Four Dollars a Year “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Euripides. NEW SERIES' CHARLOTTETOWN, P. % ISL:z ND, SS — THURSDAY, wy a 2 Sr eas Oe ess ott) wl i i aM i | Pui ; eta) \\ Cut out Coupon on Page lI. 1 Se ee THE AMERICAN $8.00 Typewriter. — This is a well-made, practical machine, writing capitals, small letters, figures, tuation marks (71 in all) on full width paper, just ‘like a $100 instrument. | its kind ever offered at a px ypular price for w hich the above claim It is not a toy, but a typewriter built for and capable of REAL work. the large machines sometimes become in expert hands, it is still at least as rapid and has the advantage of such simplicity that it can be understood and mastered We cordially commend it to helpful parents and teachers everywhere. Zlance small all. Writes capitals, marks—7I in Writes just like No Shift Keys. No the type direct Prints on flat surface. Writing always in sight. Corrections and insertions easi Takes any -vidth of paper or to 8$ inches. Libbon. Packed securely in handsome case in registered letter, money order or certified check. glad to answer all inquiries for further information as to this machine and also the letters, SLOO machine. Easy figures and order. Capital and easily ly made. envelope up Takes to understand—I: | Weighs only four po ids—most | Compact, takes Prints from | Built solid and iower mastered. More “ margin play” which do mest of and expressed to any address on receipt of price We guarantee every machine, It is the truthfully not can be W hile as ‘arned in 5 i ortable. TO om, ret , 1; 1 up but little simple ; can t out case key board ailke- the the. work. for good letter-press copies. and IRA CORNWALL, General Avent forMaritime rovinces. D. B. STEWART, Agent, Charlottetown. dev20 LOYAL CIRCLE OF FIRE INSURANCE. ™ —_—_- = Your patronage by the fol is respectfully solicited :— The The The United Pire Ins. Co The Phenix Ins. Co. of These Companies comman lowing great Fire Companies Royal Ins. Co of Liverpool, London & Lancashire Ins. ¢ Co. of liveprool of Manchester. Brooklyn, 1 ENORMOUS MONETARY | KING'S INTEND GIVING A » Musical & Literary Enteriainment | 2 ST, PAUL'S SCHOOLROOM, —OX-—— STRENGTH, and are noted for their prompt and liberal | Thurs aay Avril 5.) settlement of losses JOHN MAC janll EFACHERN, AGENT FOR PF. E. ISDAND. Dont Talk! but call and inspect our New Parlor, Room and Bedroom Suites, Cliirsa, Ta'e Bedsteads, and odd pieces of Furniture. Dent Listen ! but remember that we sell the Cheapest, are dctermined Furniture Store goods guaranteed. JOH Charlottetow vn, Jan January A, 1894. Fliace THE ALBERT TOILET jan6—ev sat tf and to give the best Island. Quality N NEWSON. a Cake of B‘BY’S OWN SOAP in your linen | drawer, and it will impart to your clothes the delicate aroma of fine French Pot Pourri in a modified degree. The longer you keep the) Soap before using it thé better. Beware of imitations. SOAP CO... Movtreal, SOLB MANUFACTURERS. Drawing | bargains | . , ‘YY ro rect ‘ | every time at JOHN NEWSON’S, the Cheapest | on P. E. No trouble to show goods | | of | Reme the date. Particulars law (sat) ? feb24 —" De You Recognize It ? | | This is the hee! of the GRANBY RUBBER. | Look for this pattern on the heel wlaen It guar- j yon buy a Rabber or Overshoe. | antees a perfect article. Granby Rubbers _ Wear Like Iron. Ask your dealer for them. mehl i ———<= TOLET | The brick store on Queen Street, lately ; occupied by E. H. Norton & Co. Apply at office of trustees Connolly Estate, | Queen Street. and pune- first of t made. rapid as as the pen, ; almost at a minutes. . $8.00, are _ Yost. later | eod tf—jan25 .. ae ER ‘in the form most accept.! | prefession, iN OWLEDGE Bri ngs comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when riyhtly used. The many, who live bet- terthan ochersand enjoy life more, with less oxpenditure, by more promptly adapting the world’s best products to the nieeds of physica al being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid | laxaciva principles embraced in the reiicd;, Syrup of Figs. is due to its presenting 3 and pleas- ant to tie taste, the sefreshing and truly Its excellenee _ beneficial properties of a perfect lax- ative ; eectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, hea’ Jjic3 and fevers aud perianentiy cr constipation, It has given satisfaci millions and met with the approval of the medical because it acts on the Kid- neya, Liver and Bowels without weak- ening them and it is perfectly free from } every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug- gists in "5c. bottle , but it is manu- aewee by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every pa’ kage, slso the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not woent *ny substitute if offered. W.R. Watson, Dr P E Island, Charlotteowa iymwtf ry uggist, Halike te Dutch Process CA me No Alkalies —OR— . Other Chemicals ex are used in the preparation of W. BAKER & C0.’S which is absolutely pure and soluble. . f : + BE aes 4 It has morethanthreetimes Sh eld the strenyth of Cocoa mixe t with Starch, Arrowrvot o¢ Sugar, and is far wore eco- { nomical, costing less than one cent @ cup i { small letters! | | It is delicious, nourishing, anc. BAsiLi« DIGESTED. hme Sold Ly Grocers everywhere. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mass | PERFECT MANHOOD! Ordinary works on — sioicgy will not tell the doctors can’t oe you wishto know. Your SEXUAL POWERS are the Key to Life and its reproduction, Our book lays bare the truth. Every man who would regain sexual vi ‘gor lost through folly, or develop members weak by nature or wasted by disease, should write fox our sealed book, “ Perfect Man- hood.” No charge. Address (in confidence), ; DAUGATERS | ee ERIE MEDICAL CO., Buffalo, N.Y. LINIMERT ynike ANY OTHED As much Yor INTERNAL as EXTERNAL nse Im 1810 Originated by an Olid Family Pnysician, Think Of It. Years, Sna'sult weds, Gens Years, and | ration after Generation have used and blessed It, Every Traveler should have a oe his sutchel } Nervous! | Rheumatism. Eve ry Suffe rer &: Staten” ry eadache, Diphtheria,Coughs,Catarrh, Bron chitis, Asthma, Uholera-Morbus, D: ‘cea, Lameness, Soreness imBoe yor ‘Lixibs, Stiff Vente or | will find in this old Anodyne relief and speed aes Every Mother ine eats Sore Throat, Tonsilitis, Cole ci Cura, *Fruinea avi Pains liable to occur in am ~ oe wlthont notice. Delays may a a - co bewes a mer | Complaints like m Fr ; tles, 22. bs press Dai “8 Jonheon a .. Boston. Mass | AFTER HAVING BEEN KEPT ~_ UP ALL NIGHT ae ; With that COUGH, if you do not want to repeat the experience, buy @ botile of the OLD STANDARD REMEDY Gray’ s Syrup of Red Spruce Gum The best Cough Cure in the world, Sold everywhere 24 cts. a bottle. KERRY WATSON & CO. Propnictone MONTREAL. - o NORWEGIAN PSTN Baa: Coa Maha =" 5Oc. and $1.00. Ny taste iin onina: te big bottles —— ——— MARCH 22, 1894. LETTERS 10 THE EDITOR. escape detection ! “YOU WRONG you WRONG ME EVERY WAY; ME, BRUTUS.” Six,—After reading the letter of your correspondent “Brutus,” the first thought that came to me was: Brutus, thou art like the fish which seeks to escape attack by dirtying the water in which it move-; or, like the man who, having conim/tted a crame, puts his toes into the heel= of his boots and walks off, think ng therel.y to But the blool-mark is on you, “Brutus.” “Our edueational ryaten;,” says “Brutus,” “haa hitherto embraced every course from the kin tergarten to the uni ; versity.’ Once upon a time txo men | one said that he | through the moon. | outcome of private venture; | Prince of Wales avreed that each should make as far as possibie from. truth; had a Statement wherenpon | drive na long y epi ke “Yes,” said the other, “T remember it well, and went around the moon and clinched it!’ Was this individual “Brutus”’ Whatever kinder- garten work has been done, is solely the and any in- study specially course in the has been im- | struction in branches of regarded as a university College, : parted, so far as I can ascertain, before the i regular hours for opening that institution. | | or the cause of education, ' tion? The work is wholly gratuitous on the part of the professors. Our school system recog- nizes neither kindergarten nor university. “Brutus” proceeds :—“* What benefit do we directly or in higher eduea- I claim that there is no such bene- | fit from it.’ Will “Brutus” admit that the more highly educated an individual is directiy, derive from this ” | the greater is the mental discipline he has | undergone, and as a consequence, the bet- ter qualified he is fur imparting instrne- tion ? Taking this as granted, does not the country derive a direct benefit from those who, having studied the more ad- vanced course in the Prince of Wales Co!l- lege, go into our schools as teachers ? ut “it is a rare thing,” says “Brutus,” *to find one of these students in the teach- | that two negatives in | are improper. | these students are almost invariably found ing profession.” It is a rule of syntay, the same sentence But it is quite as “impro- per” not to have one negative when there should te one. The statement made by | *Brutus” should read : “It is a rare thing to find one of there students not in the teaching profession.” In fact the rule is in the teaching profession; the exception is to find them not there. True, they re- | main only a few years; but this is chiefly they are | no other province in Canada provided this i ! | ignorance of the matter. } cost to himself and with owing to insufficient remuneration. While in the service of their country they render measure for measure for what they have received from it. Ayain, “let it be remembered,” says “Brutus,” “that higher education. To this I need say nomore than than that itis a confession of utter Again, “‘the patent is deluded into the idea that without attendance at college his boy can not be fitted to take 2nd or 3rd class license.” “Brutus” has a!- lowed his feelings, hostile to the college, to obtain the mastery over him. Indeed, one might conclude, from the unqualified rashness of his statements, that he has no proper conception of the moral power of truth, or the moral weakness of a—. He is well aware that the examination papers set for entrance to the college are the_ re- | quirements exacted for «a third-class_| license; that attendance at the college is compnisory solely with the view of the student’s being trained for the work of a teacher. “This very regulation,” says “Brutus,” “should at once be repealed for the simple reason that no normal training worthy of the name is provided at the Prince of Wales College.” The reason is “simple,” but it is reason without sense. (Granted that no normal training is given at the College, is that an argument against the training of student-teachers? He is re- garded as the most successful farmer who raises the largest crops with the least ex- pense to himselfand the soil. This method of farming can be arrived at only after re- peated experiments, or by adopting the im- proved methods of those more experienced. So the teacher, who does the most efficient work with the greatest ease to himself and comfort to his pupils, is justly considered the most successful teacher. But the young teacher must acquire a knowledge of the art of teaching, either by a long ex- perience, amid frequent failures, or from the experience of others. By the latter he obtains this knowledge with much less infinitaly less to his pupils. It is, therefore, wisdom to learn from the trials of others. One should know much of the thinking and doings of others. We are in a progressive age. on The serf of his own past is not a man; To change and change is life, to move and never rest.” Under proper training, student-teachers are taught how best to ‘adapt their plans to mental peculiarities, to discover moral characteristics, and, in fact, to understand the whole individualism of his pupils. This is no mere schoolboy’s work. If, then, our Normal School is not doing its legitimate work—and Iam free to admit that it is not—what remedy ought we pro- pose ? Certainly not the closing of the — institution, but demanding that it shall henceforth perform the especial work for which it exists. Place it upon a proper basis; remodel, if you will, the whole machinery; what is inetlicient or imperfect make perfect. Upon the Normal School’s doing its legitimate work must largely depend the future status of our schools. The result is the reason why some things should be let alone and why others should be done; and results are the strongest kind of reasons. But the proto- type of “Brutus” is the boy who took a horse to market, sold him for a cow, the cow for a mule, the mule for a goose, the | goose for an egg, and then ate the egg. ‘ 1894. | | March 20, | ee oe Wearing Low Shoes. | Wearing low shoes inthe fall simply invites acold. Ifyou take cold, then take Hawker’s Tolu and Wild Cherry Balsam ; it is a sure cure for coughs, colds, Hoarse- nese, Bronchitis, etc., Sold every where, only 25 cents, —_- > -—— A New Cure For Dyspepsia. — “To all dyspeptics I would say, ‘give your phy- sician a rest and consult some good bicycle dealer” Three years ago I was a great sufferer from dyspepsia, and my cook grew ‘hin trying to find something I could eat. Now the cook is still thin, but it is from trying to find enough for me to eat. I ride a Columbia. Verbum far "—Dr. G. W. Whitsett, Greensboro, N. 8. Now is the time to get your supply of crockery as we are selling off cheaper than ever to make room for new goods to arrive as soon as navigation opens. The cheap crockery store.—W. P. Colwill. feb 6 dy&wky 3wks, USE SKODA’S DISCO VERY , the great ae | sional and business met Single Copies Two Cents VOL 33.—NO. 211 STAMP COLLECTORS, — THERE ARE ALREADY OVER 5,000,000 OF THEM. — The Enormous Value of Some Collections One of Them Worth 8500,000 — The Cost of Some Single Specimens — Stamp Collectors Not Fools. Five millions of postage stamp colles- tors, among whom are their Royal High- nesses the Duke of York and the Duke of Saxe-Cobury, have caused phils ately to ad vanee in popular favor by leaps and bounds, says the London Tele graph. So great is the competition for rare issnes that £340 has been paid for a single speci men. Postage-stamp collecting is no longer A mere pastime or hobby, it is a science, as philatelists say, and, at all events, they | make of it a very serious pursuit There are still people who hold to the belief that the passion for preserving post age stamps is nothing but a mania, ex cusable during boyhood, for it is supposed to be useful in teaching lads geography | and the extent of the British Empire, but when men devote their time to foreign, colonial or English isenes they are frequently lookei upon as harmless imna tics, to whom the old adage may be ap propriately applied: ‘‘Fools and their collecting money are soon parted.” Philatelista, however, are possessed of consi lerable | common sense, and much method under lies their madness. Ia truth, stamp collect- | ing has developed an important feainure, for, 88 a correspondent pou:ts out, it has | become the recognized medium of invest ment on the part ot thew inds of profes who are content | to forego immediate dividends upon their capital iv order to realize compound inter- est at a high rate, Members of the Stock Exchange—from a love of sprculation—barristers, doctors, | army officers very largely, and the clergy | to some extent are to be found gravely and systematically collecting 3 to day. Mauy of them possess c etamy rllections numbering tens of thagsands of speci nena, and some of these areof great value, | and are duly insured at Lioyd’s It is | probable, however, that no British phila- | telist can vie with Von Ferrary, of Paris, ; whose treasures are said to be wurtu £100,- | O00. Important collections have been | made in Australia, and it is stated that | Toronto, Ontario. ‘As Well as Ever | After Taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla Cured of a Serious Disease. “YT was suffering from what is known as Bright's disease for five years, and for days ata time I have been unable to straighten myself up. I wasin bed for three weeks; during that time I had leeches applied and derived no bene- fit. Seeing Hood’s Sarsaparilla advertised iu the papers I decided to try a bottle. I found HOOD’S Sersapanila a relief bcrore I hat finished taking half of a hx tle. I gotso much _ a from taking the rst bottle th t I deciced y another, and since iaking the seco ad ’ ottle feel as well as ever Icidi amy iit ido. ERRETT, Toron rte, Ont, Hood's Pte are prompt and effic jent, yet id by all druggists. 25¢. TRIP ROUND THE WORLD easy of action sLODDARD’S PICTURES. during the iate bank crisis more than one No more be autiful Photo Engraving» house of business saved its mercantile | 2°¢ issued than Stoddard’s Portfolio o* credit by raising money on rare postage | Views of Famous Places and Scenes Phe stamps “which were held by the part-! pictures equa) the finest photographs ia ners. detail Hew very extensive the interests of Charmingly written explanations and stamp ‘coliectors have become in London is demonstrated by the fact .that there are value of about £10,000 more at publicsale. | These figures are significant when it is re eoltected that stamp anction sales are com- | paratively of recent introduction, and that | they are entirely supplementary to the methods of distribution and exchange which have. been in operation since stamp collecting first became a fashionable hovby | in 1861. Best Dog ‘to Reep. ~ I have often been asked to advise as to | the best dog to keep, and in answer I have | always said that everything depended upon | whereaund how the prospective dog owner | lived. ‘To keep a large dog with a heavy | coat in a town house always strock me as } cruel, Large dogs neod exercise, elav they get tuo fat and then fall iil. In town a fox terrier atiii-the.sluggish pug are tc be pre ferred, or any of the littie_toy dogs. In the country any kind of dog may bekept, the selection depending upon the taste of the owner. The pointer and setter are both most companionable, and if there is anything to shoot in the neighborhood | descr? ption s eau nv eac h photograph Th pictures are nearly forty firms engaged as dealers in the | are 8x10 in size, Single | City and West End. Last season two phot peepee of the sam subjects would auctioneers in the metropolis turued over | CO“US! 00 each. Thiy are bound up in nearly £15,000, and a third firm is sup- ; Covers, and are exactiv the same size as posed to have dealt with stamps to the | oi famous World’s Fair Portfolios. Sample copy may be seen at this office This series of pictures is issued in 16 parts. Each part will contain 16 phot» zraphs at the least. The price for each part is 10 cenis, and an Examiner coa- pons must be sent with the money. HOW T0 GET THESE PICTURES. Stoddard’s Photographs Parts 123 & 4 Now Ready. Cut out this coupon, and send with 10 nts to THE EXAMINER OFFICE, and the P art wanted will be delivered to you. Or- de rs from the country filled by return mail, CHARIS for postage The Examiner Pub, Co, March, 1894. they are most valuable. All of the span- iels, on account of their intelligence, are interesting, and the mastiff isan invalu able watch-dog for a farm or country place. But any purely bred, well trained dog, where there is room for exercise, will earn | his keep in a thousand different ways, not least of which is that affectionate loyalty that remains always true, though the dog | be subjected to neglect, discouragement and even active abuse.—John Gilmer Speed in St. Louis # Republic. ‘Told « of ¥ Ellen Terry. Here is a story illustrating the ready | & ¢ tact of Ellen Terry, the actress. She had roniised to introduce # man to Mr. Irving, | be © mt had forgotten his name. On the vre- | text, aa the story 8, that she and Mr. Irving had had a little dispute about the way the man’s name was spelled, making a bet about it she got him to write it ona " slip of paper. Of course that saved her. If Miss Terry did this she was more for tunate than another clever woman about whom a similar story ie told. She, to when she had forgotten a name, said that | 3% she wished to settle a dispute about the spelling of the name by. having it written out for her. The man then gravely scrib- §) = bled his name. It was a name that is not ss = spelled in more than a dozen different | g¢) ee ways. It wae Jones! § J Bad for Secrets. * One of the most striking phenomena of | the Adirondack region is the carrying power of the human voice in still weather | upon the lakes, great and small. Persons ashore easily hear the ordinary conversa- tion of others who are so far out upon the | lake as to be undistingnishable, and as a | great many Adirondack visitors habitually violate the law touching the slaughter of deer, all such offenders are extremely care ful uot even to whisper a word that might betray their guilt when rowing upon the lakes, "Popular Fallacies. That to be great is to be misunderstood, That ladies pay no attention to the ballet. i That a warm heart ie better than all | riches. That a poet cannot appreciate a lobster salad. That Vasesr students never think of | matrimony. That rhubard is never eaten by the elect | | of men. Avernge Age. Kasper says that of clergymen, 42 per cent, reach 70 years; farmers, 40; mer- chante, 33; soldiers and clerks, 32: law- yers, 20; teachers, 28; physicians, * Enough to Cauée a Strike. In the days of the Emperor Diocletian, a hou-e painter's wages were sixty cents a day, while a schoolmaster received only sixty cents » month for each pupil. More Fire-Proof Material. There is a fire-proof covering for walls, | composed of asbestos sheets, softened by | steaming, embossed by rollers, and dried | or painted or otherwise dec orated. } : de eee Puttner’s Emulsion contains neither | | Quinine, strychnine, nor other harmful | drug. Its ingredients are wholesome ani- | mal and vegetable substances, and it may | be taken indefinitely without dangerous re- | sults. ee weee HE STRONC POINT about the cures by Hood's Sarsaparilla is | that they are permanent. They start from | the solid foundation —Pure Blood. © USE SKODA’S DISCOVERY the grea | Blood and NerveRemedy. Blood and Nerve Remedy. will parts cost 10 cents each. | also be sent for each part wanted, FR 22) ore TH MAGIC CITY. This series of World’s Fair Photographs be published in 16 parts. Single Coupons must d no charge will be 7 READY. AND or bring it in person, to THE Ex- and the Part wanted of THE MAGIC CITY 3. COUPON FOR s The Magic City World's Fair Photographs * <? AFLP, OF By with ten cents in silver PARTS 2, will be delivered to you. gar Cut out this coupon and r Orders by mail will receive prompt attention, an made for postage. AMINER, ‘The qaidal Publishing Comp’ y, CHARLUIIELOWN, Nervous, Tired, Weak. That most dreaded disease, typhoid pnewme. nia left me with 1 &@ COGecu, BSOre throat, tired and nervous. I could net sleep nights. To add to m many troubles, ) last winter I had : ai ff La Grippe. ft a ACetE 9 seemed [ wouk! rene ntere not live wntil spring. I tried FATHER AND SON TOOK Skoda’s Discovery. many remedies, but got no relief until I took Sko- da’s Discovery. My little boy has been sickly for several years. Ile too has taken Skoda’s and now he is as fat, rosy cheeked littte chap a2 you would like to see. Elmer E. Albee, 23 Picasant St., c Lewiston, Me. SKGDA DISCCYERY C6., LTD., WOLFVILLE, N.S. For sale by all druggists. Trade snp plied by W. R.jWatson; Charlottetowa P.B.L ginger Se ee gS 5 rn ne aaa es means ae ae Vise mains = paca a aosllaees