A A eaten Bl THE DAILY EXAMINER. * This is true Liberty, when Free Rorn Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evairipgs, enema anaes Sine_ze Copres Two Crunts Tens Priv ’ ATK 4 YEAR — WEW SERIES. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1890. — me VOL. 26.—NO. 144 RM ES, egtimonial Prem Duluth, Minnesota, | Dna Vas | iia ve tease i yout mui HEALER Ll wish te «xpress my citade to 3 : testiinaential, which “A on us, i Kit Wii! Agsiat you in sailing Hay my hand seve ely with hin ~—o — ep st, l pplied ul MAGIC He ALER 2 : ‘ three ‘ppiica to go YOorR, ANG Ih three tions | Was A avs (h “CHARES I. HORRISON, Commission Merchant ANG AUCTION HER, ivent for St ‘orks, St. Joha, N.DB. , '* . . , ' General ag Prince Edward Island for, “Plea Washivg Machines & *‘ideal’ Ci urns | | ‘haninttatawn hariottstown, P. B I, Uct j ' MR. HL. HEARTY, | 106 Queen St., @rgavist of the Methedist Brick | Church, in the art of | [U7 ILGE take a few pupils eingipy Those desirous ot ut . eaIDY jessons may ascertain terms, etc., at the rest- lence of Mra \\ liam Kenne ly, Hills! are ugh} Square. lmeol—otlO | . iieetiemeneciventiinceiaina’ 1 Bowling Alley. _ subseriber s fittel uppa ROWLING ALLEY ind SHOOTING GALLERY} : : n hie Warehouse, pposite Railway Freight Shed, Water Street, which will be opened to the pub.) ler the tirst time toils evenil g. at $. ven i m. JOUN JOY. 7 } +f PB. ISLAND STBAMERS, Summer Arrangements. HE well-known LAW- RENCE” and “PRINCESS OF WALES” will make DAILY TRI Sas under. Sunduys ex- opted : waving Charlotietown at rix o'clock in the morning for Picton, cornecting there with stearaer “Egerton” at 10 a. m. tur New Gias- gow, and thus with Morning Train for Cape Weton and Fastern Pointa. Also at Pictou atip. m. with lL. ©. R. for Halifax. fing Picton avout noon, on errival of Morn- ing Vrain frum Halif>x, for Charlottetown. ving Summerside on arrival of Morning Train from Charlotretown for Poisat éu Chene and connect there with I. C. KR. Trains for Moncton and St. John, tor Canada and United States. Leaving Point du Chens on arrival of Mourning Train from St. John and Moncton for Sam- merside, and connect there with train for Charlottetown. By order. Steamers “Cr. F. W. HALES, Secy. Ch’town Steam Nav. Co. (Ltd) inleS . cad te iciieliliieisteenenimenenen nf] sv aI FOR {ZOUGHS 7eR ' , . ~esee Os... 374.0 YEARS IN USE. au PRICE25°PER BOTTLE & AAO MB att Seas Be 2.2, S35-Ty eee “4 ° SOURIS LOTS “OR SALE) aeeer two beautifully situated Lots ad- isiniug the Court House, 100x190; aleo tro o' hers, Bane Size , on the bill opposite Dr. These Lots command & beantiful view, and are desirable sites for Private residences, Price low. Apply to JOHN COOMRES, Chariottetown, ©. C. CARLTON, Souris. Melntyre’s residence. Or to eetl4—eod a Sing fnatan The Leading Custom Boot aud Shoe Molo f + yi Maker of the Province, I NOW READY with a good selection of wy; LEATHERS snd TOPS for the Fall and inter trade, and woe!) respectfally invite om whe require a tirst-clacs Boot er Shoe to “spect our stock an price vpefore aci their in ne et ee — our fouls are gurantee i not to equeak, B18" to it we}) and eoufort able, ot idery always filled up to time A full line a own make kept copstautly on hand. RE the highest, prices the lowest. “PAIRING of ali kiads promptly attend. Je J. H. BELL, Upper Great George Street, oe ; Ch’town, Sept. 6, 1890 3m Zaw (thu sat) | teed perfect in operation. WOh | we peed say nothing ; is the hest place in town to buy. With Wenderful Wire Gauze Oven Decrs. Ts ABOVE CELEBRATED STOVES AND RANGES are now made in 22 szes fer all kinds of fuel, ineluding 11 sizes for Soft Coal. Prices run from $24.00, with Fittings complete. Every Range or Cook Stove sold is guaran- We can refer intending purchasers to hundreds uf families who are now using * CHARTER OAKS” in the C.ty and Country. DODD & ROGERS. Charicittetown, Nov. 1, 1890—dy 2aw (mon sat) wky AFUL THE BAZAAR STORE. New Goods! i eae ‘ New Goods! XROM THIS UNTIL XMAS we will receive a shipment of Goods every day, and will} j always have something new to show you. Our Fa’l Stock ef Window Blinds arrived | to-day, and you should eee them and hear the prices—lower than the lowest. Large and? beautiful Pictures (Framed and otherwise) always on band. Framing done to order at lowest prices. Twenty-five samp'es of Moulding to choose from. About our China and Glassware you have only to see it aud hear our prices to be convineed that this TOYS! TOYS! TOYS! We want to make the heart of every Child in Charlotte- town glad with some new Toys never before placed in this market, For want of room we are going to sow our Toys, Dells, ete., on the second floor, «hich is now being handsomely fitted up. Get your Xmas Toys, etc., be fore the big rush comes on, BOOKS! BOOKS !—Ali the Standard and late popular issues of the day always on hand. SCHOOL BOOKS AND SCHOOL SUPPLIES—We keep on hand all the prescribed works for Schoul and College AT THE LOWEST PRICES. ‘This accounts for our daily increasing trado. Orders from all par’s of the country promptly tilled. Special Liscount to Teachers. Books of all kinds (if not on hand) ordered at once. We call your attention to our new stock of MUSICALINSTRUMENTS Violins from 60 cents to $25; Accordeons from $t 00 to $12 00. Cel! and examine our new stock, and don’t go without hearing prices, be the rush ever so great. BAZAAR CO. Guecn &treet. f A i. vs ; : ~ Jounston’sFiuip BEEF — in a concentrated and readily digestible form. —— ————(x -—- -——-— A STRENGTH-GIVING FOOD FOR INVALIDS FOR CHILDREN FOR ALL WHO DESIRE —AND— | —OF— To linprove Their | . CON VALESCENTS. ALL AGES. | PHYSICAL CONDITION. novl—-dy & wky “NEW AND LARGE STOCK sinning UP Gieieieaite Watelies, Clocks, JEWELRY & SILVERWARE, sical Fl Anan :+ oH. TAYLOR'S NORTH SIDE QUEEN SQUARE. Oct 7—dy 2aw w Zook Were: EFORE ORDERING YOUR FALL SUIT, OVERCOA1 or ULSTER, cali and examine our lmmense stock of NEW CLOTHS, in Tweed and Worsted Sailings, Beavers, Wel- tons, Naps, Friezes, ete. and Patterns of TROU f Latest Desig ns A full line of L and variety any SERINGS. Our stock excels in quality ina we have heretofore shown. ; Es Largest Assortment of Cloths in the ee ———(3)— We offer you the Call and see them. JOHN McLEOD & 00, ee “CHARTER OAK” COOK STOVES AND RANGES,“C"*““"Bs'ins's st Stee, Tue chief end and aim of education is the development of the moral attributes of man into obedience to the revealed will of his maker, thus elevating his faculties up tu a belief and dependence on his Creatur as the Moral Governor of the universe. lor the intelligent understanding of this subject of morality, it will be necessary to ‘draw the line between the mortal child of ‘humanity, which is the subject of educa- ‘tion, ana the immorta!, which is high above our control: and further, 1 beg to state that in quoting from the sacred writings or divine laws, | merely make use of its ex- ternal application to our external, moral and intellectnal requirements, as it is not within our province to dispense its hidden realities, which pertain aloue to that which is represented by us. . . t In speaking of education, then, we bear , in mind that we are dealing with human beings endowed with reason which, if pro- perly trained, is sufficient for subduing, re- straining and governing the inherent evil, propensities of their lower nature, as well as the appeti @: and impulses which, though ' necessary to their existence, must be kept within bounds. These impulses and ap- petites need to be guided and restrained from very infancy; for it was through ap- petite, both mental and physica!, that evil first eutered the fair and innecent creation, in the infancy of our race. So we pareuts and teachers must do this for our charge, in sympathy for them as travellers setting cut ou the j suruey of |.fe, to fortify them against evil in themaelvyes; because their faculties are immature and unable to discern between good and evil; and we thus form govd habits, believing that when trained up in the way they should go, they will not depart from it when they are old. Childhood, then, is the time to implant the good principles which are tu last through life, as then the mind is not ham- pered with prejudices : this has been called the faith period, becauss what is given is implicitly received and assimilated inte the uature—a fact which should be carefully considered in providing the food fur the /unfermed intellect. Why is it that in the cultivation of mor- jality we act as if there is no need of exer- cisiug the reasoning faculties of children, while in other studies they are brought face to face with facts ard problems which strengthen the mind ia their solution / Why do weso persistently provide easy and imaginary models for their imitation, so easy that no faculty is brought into use but those of memory and imagination; while we know that imitation of virtue in our fellow beings is not enoagh for us in active life ? it is true that what is dealt out to chil- dren as good reading has 4 show of mer- ality, bat as much of it is ficticious, it has uo foundation; and though for a time it may act as @ stimulus, it svon loses its ef- fect, and bke any other stimulant, creates an appetite for more sensational food; thus shutting out the real and the substantial and fostering an imagiuary morality con- trary to the laws of reason and revelation. We meet with no chiid who cannot be-' lieve the wonderful chapter of creation, and but few who cannot understand some- thing of the laws governing themselves as part of that creation, when trained to ob- serve cause and effect. Children can be taught that these laws are not arbitrary, but made for their protection and benefit, providing for their futvre well-being through the discipline of the present. No child who is taught to observe the opera- tions of nature can fail to learn thatthe law of self preservation is written with the fin- ger of God on his own faculties and senses; when he sees that lower animal bodies, and even trees have power to repair their dam- ages. Yet, sad tosay, when one is left under the paralyzing influences of continu- ed dissipation of miad and body, he may after weary years, wish to commit suicidal annihilation in defiance of that law. This should incite us by every lawful means to make our pupils happy, to foster in them a habit of glad content, to fortify them against the gloom and rebellion now so common amung the young. If our school is, as it should be, mocelled after the fa- mily, we copy from nature, whose rule is that love shall be the element and atmos- phere, in which the future men and women shal] live, move, and have their being; and as each little stranger is lovingly welcomed into the family circle, so shall we welume each pupil into our domain, with pity, if not with love. So universal is the law that love shall fourm tha basis ef family ties, that the bonds are seldom undertaken without a profession at least of the genuine senti- ment; yet teachers, who so largely take the place of parents, are not questioned as to their love for children, nor trained to understand the arduous nature of their work, What is more helpless or ignoraut than a new-boru babe; yet, such is the love implanted by our Creator in the great heart of humanity, that few listen unmoved to its wail of suffering, or depise it for its deficiencies, Still, that same child, a few years later may be met with harsh- ness and severity when sent to school. Now this is certainly not due to natural _heart- lessness on our part, but rather to our ignorance, consequent on our lack of train- ing; we are expected to help on the edu- cation of human beings, without being our-: selves taught anything of even the physi- ology of the structure, or of what it con- tains, or of hygiene. As far as obtaining license is concerned, a teacher is not supposed to know how many bones and ligaments he injures with blows of his feruleon a p»pils hand; or how the delicate organs contained in the head can be destroyed by even physical abuse‘of that part. Much less is he taught to discriminate between the mental powers of the several children under his care, so that they shall be safe in his hands, When in college he is kept too busy pre- paring for examinations to think about his own health; consequently he does not know how to take care of that of others ; City to select from. ROGERV BUILDING, UPPER QUEEN STREET. Charlottetown, Sept. 26, 1890. so proceeding slong the lines on which he himself was taught, he is apt to neglect ‘these weightier matters. The question has been asked, if the mental faculties are only temporal, i. e., lasting for a time, why so much importance is attached to their education ; as well may we ask why the human body should be such a masterpiece of mechanism. and re- quire such varied and continued culture | when it is so short-lived ? The question of, the nature of the intellect we may not be able to solve ; one thing we know, that the ‘human mind has, to us, a beginning and an ,end, being at first as weak and infantile as the body itself, then gradually expanding im vigor, which it isaintains for a time, after which it weakens by degrees as the declining life loses its power. This feeble- ness of intellect in early youth demands serious thought, and should present a very ‘forcible appeal to those in charge of educa- tion, to insist on the intelligent training of all teachers to understand the physical ‘and mental needs of the child, and to be able to supply them, just as its physical weakness appeals tu every right-minded man and woman. The patrons and directors of our school system, by bestowing this higher education on our teachers, could produce and foster the true parental sentiment in al) our schools, and thus prepare the way for the very greatest success in the building of character. In the building of character, in ourselves or others, we must not work merely for a name, nor even do as those first builders we read of, who, by means of the clay and slime of earth, vainly sought to accomplish a double purpose, tame in this world and a prospect of heaven ; for they proposed to the floods and tempests so sure to come after- wards, any more than did that house which was founded on the sand, the ruin of which was 80 great. (TO BE CONTINUED ) Chronic Coughs and Colds, And all diseases of the throat and lungs, can be cured by the use of Scott’s Emulsion, as it contains the healing virtues of cod-liver oil and hypophosphites in their fuliest form. See what WS Muir, MD, LRCP, ete, Truro, N 8, says: ‘‘After three years’ experience I consider Scott’s Emulsion one of the very best in the market. Very excellent in throat af- fections. Sold by all druggists. 50c and §, SCOTT'S | E HYPOPHOSPHITES of Lime and Soda $ in a 4 Scott's Emulsion socio 7 Best Remedy tor CONSUMPTION, Scr-fula, Bronchitis.Wasting Dis- build a tower whose top might reach to heaven. In our building let our aim be single, and let us foliow, if we can, the! example of that greatest of human teachers, who, though versed in all the hieroglyphic lore of Egypt, was still not qualified to build up the character and wield the des- eases, Chronic Coughs and Colds. ! PALATABLE AS MILK. wrapper. Avoid all imitationsor substitutions. Sold by all Druggists at 50c. and $1.00. SCOTT & BOWNE, Belleville. Scott's Emalsion is only put up in salmon = tiny of his nation without direct inspiration from above. communion, he was commanded to rear 4 tabernacle that the Lord might dwell As a first fruit of this Divine’! Johnson's Stomachic Aperient, sndilclt isin among them to preserve and guide them through the dangers of the desert. Though this tabernacle was built of earthly mater-' ials, and therefore temporal, that is, to last only for a time, yet he was given patterns of things in the heavens for its -construc- tion, and the workers were endued with the, spirit of wisdom, of beauty and skill from above, that their structure might be fitted to represent and shelter their inner sanc- tuary or repository of holy and precious things.. And so must our building be. We rear the outer (not physical but mental) structure which contains and clothes the immortal while in time. The child of to- ‘day bears the impress of divinity as clearly as did those of that time, and needs, as they did, divine guidance and preservation in his journey through life—needs a reserve force of divine law and truth stored up in! the golden ark of his inner life, the citadel’ of his heart, to protect him from the vain speculation now s0 common in opinion, so that the blessing may descend and rest on him, a shie!d by day, a light by night. | Weare encouraged and invited to use, out of the storehouse of the great master builder, whatever we may require for plan and specifications for our building ; for we. find in his records that when Wisdom had builded her house and furnished her table, she sent out her maidens to invite the sim- ple to come and partake of her repast and be wise ; showing this as her foundation. ‘The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom.” It is evident that some came and became wise, for further on, in the same record (written by King Solomon) we read this statement :— ‘*Every wise woman buildeth her house, brt the foolish plucketh it down with her hands.” EVERYBODY'S PILLS, ——FOR—— Indigestion, Constipation, Bilious ness and the many ailments con- sequent upon the sla h action of the Liver, Kid- ney and Bowels. PRICE 25 CENTS PER BOX. Sent by mail on receipt of price. Sample ee on application. Prepared only by ARTHUR 8. JOHNSON, Corner Kent and Prince Streets, jy]8—2aw wy Charlottetown. SHERWOOD FARM FOR SALE, EAUTIFULLY situated on the alty Road, fronting on the doom teak and running back to Sherwood Cemetery. The Farm, containing about 50 acres, is in a high state of cultivation. Commodious and comfortable buildings, with a first-class orchard, make this a very desirable property. For particulars apply on the premises to SARAH STEWART, nov12—dy law 2m Administratrix. NOTICE. — N AND AFTER MONDAY, the 10th of Taking then for our model the palace of; rear the grand structure of human character is the fear of God—for it is written in the Word of Truth that the fear of man maketh asnare. The building of character isa work of such vital importance that all departments of education, from that of the mother to the to the university,are insufficient of themselves. to complete it; and yet, of such a nature, that any one who has to do with a child can, and does help to make or mar the work. This places teachers next to parents ‘in responsibility, as itis in echool he gains his first impressions of social life outside and its demands on him. Jf the building of character were the chief aim of Educationists, and if all teachers had the will and ability to help forward this great work, the benefit to society would be incal- culable. It is humiliating to think of the large amount of capital, labor and even life, now spent in the preservation of whatever man holds dear in self-protection from his fellow- man, who, if he had been trained into habits of industry, honesty and self-control, might have been a blessing instead of a curse to all about him. Is the school to b’ame for this? Certainly, for its share of it; for we must confess that many have in badly conducted schools, begun their downward course; and it is a'so pain- fully evident that education, as dispensed in even this enlightened age is not able to cops with crime, but while apparently approaching perfection, is made to subserve the worst passions of humanity, which proves that mere literery and scientific attainments only qualify man to pursue more successfully, his his object in life whatever it may be, and are of themselves powerless to prevent evil. But if we endeayour and labor to establish character in our pupils, why should we fail? Why do we fail though conscientious in our work? The reason is obvious, we aim too low ; our standards are too low; our pupils and we, work on a plane beneath and un- worthy our origin and destiny. Their aspir- ations and ambitions are directed to and hounded by man’s, the approbation of some one no better than themselves; the censure of some one or more, not so pure and innocent as themselves. These persons may be their parents, their teachers, friends, school-officials, clergymen, or it may be public opinion by which they are goaded on, and shaped into character, and which they are taught to dread or propitiate. All this, so far as it November, 1890, the Steamer ‘‘ South- Wisdom, the only foundation on which to! port” will leave for West River at 3 o'’ciock, /p.m., on Mondays and Thursdays of each week. By order. nov7 a 1 & A. Cl Try a Pair of the D. & A, COR- ‘SETS, and you will breathe easy. If you once try them you will be convinced that they are WELL MAD®, EASY FITTING, GOOD SHAPE. For sale at PERKINS & STERNS, Cheap Dry Goods Store. nov4—tf NOTICE. AM PERSONS owing Mrs. R. Young, who have not received legal nutice, will please cali at the *‘ London House” and have their bills receipted by Miss Wright. All erders for Millinery lett with Miss Wright will receive ny careful attention. MRS. R, YOUNG. oct18 HORSES BOARDED For the Winter. LEAN, warm, ventilated Stabies. Care- ful attention. Horses handied for speed. Colts broken. Feed and exercise as desirei, Terms moderate, For further particulars apply to J. T. WINANS, 46 Great George Street, Charlottetown. goes, may euftice to keep children imside the prescribed lines of conduct while at home, | and in school; but will not stand the test of Stables in rear on King Street. Telephone octl!7--dy 2m eod sie Scape nageemeRE pm ee ~ a