FOOD MEDICINE Scott's emulsion of cod-liver oil is equally food and medi- cine. A little of it sets the stomach ne easy fi OK 1 at work ON S¢ eC that is me How does it “set the stomach ly atwork?” By making strength: ‘ngth : by turn- ing the oil into body and life - trv, if you like -hemists, Toronto, Caramels and THE DalLy EXAMIN#tK CHARLOTTETOWN OCTOBER EDUCATIONAL COLUMN. EDITED BY INSPECTOR M’Cormac. NUGGRTS, I. Under the leading “Book Re- view ‘are given some valuable hints on the teaching of Primer classes. It is of the greatest importance that right method be followed in the teaching of the lowest classes. ; II. Give all your classes some sup- plementary reading. Pupils get weary reading over and over again the text books By Selecting interesting ar- ticles fram magazines, or newspapers and haw%mg your pupils read them aloud the quality of the reading will be much improved. III. An extended popular plebiscite on the “hundred best books” for chiidren was taken recently in Eng- land. ‘the result placed “Robinson Crusoe” at the head of a list by a nine. tenths vote, while Hans Anderson’s “Tales” stood second, and “Alice in Wonderland” third. Such is the ex pression of what may fairly reckon “the common sense of most”, and its soundness will be chailenged by few. IV. The manager of an immense Snowflake Chocolates =n Can be had at any foilowing first class T. J. Morris BD. L. Hooper W. Pickard & Co, W. A. Hutcheson W. F. Carter Stewart a Gates Sanderson & Co. J.D. McLeod & R. H. Wason, Plant Line BOS TON TO BOSTON Commencing Qot. 16th 1900 S.S. Falifax Will leave Cnarloitecown at NOON on TUESDAY. Passengers leaving Charlottefown on Wednesday and Saturday mornings make close connection at Halifar for Boston. AUTUMN EXCURSIONS. Special Return Tickets now being is eued at Reduced Rates. E Por tickets, rates and all information apply to ore W. W. CLARKE, Agent Charlottetown, WH. L, CHIPMAN, Manager, Apl 24¢f. Misty Vision Comes \ .dvancing years, but can be cleared , 1 = nel c by properly fitted glasses Spectacles are our specialty. When we fit them, faction. free. CHESON, & Jeweler. r HuT atchmake) Matchless Blend Tea ousiness declares that it costs his house $20,000 a year simply to correct errors in invoices and other papers— mistakes due to poor writing and poer English, for which employes are responsible. “Some stenographers need but the idea to turn out a perfect let- ter,” said he, “while others area means of grace because the try the patience.” The money lost because of ignorance and carelessness in that single house would pay the salaries of a consider- able body of teachers in primary schools whose pupils are supposed to learn how to write plainly and speak correctly. No business man can af ford to have his establishment consid- gradnally, though unconsciously, ts the ; does the brother d> >” “Where does power of each letter acquired, and the ability to recegnize words readily is merely a matter of time and _ practice. (7) But, from the first, certain words which it is necessary to use in forming intelligent sentences, are learned at Sight. These words, however, are also, at the proper stage, subjected to sound analysis, (8) For a few words that are phonic anomalies, such as one two, eye, said, whe, rough Xc the sight method only is employd. (6) The words employed are such as the child has been accustomed to work at home and new words are introduced gradua- lly and with great care. Messrs McKinlay have in press Infant Reader No I and I Reader and often and other books of the Series are in preparation. I have nu doubt but that the series will be are of the best issued in Canada. II In the Introduction to Primer Part Ian given many valuable hints to teachers. I take the liberty of quoting a few of them them here. ‘‘It is not best to use a book at first, possibly not for one, two or even thsee months. Use the blackbeard, and, after af time, charts if suitable one’s are provided. Began, in all cases, with a few conversational lessons. Oral language has a meaning for the child at home, and its use should be contin- ued in the school-room, until the child talks freely with the teacher will thus discover what interests the child at home, and the child will learn to transfer some ef the home thoughts and home feelings to the school. Let the conversation lessons begin with the study of a picture, the picture, for inistance of a baby, a hen, a horse, a cat, a dog, &c” and lead the child to talk frankly and unresevedly with you about what the picture represents and suggests. After half a dozen or more conversa- tion lessons tne board may be used, Ne & cere eee oe aceon Dominion Election Act was in the bill as it was intro- duced by the Government of which Sir Louis is a member; and the Patriot declares that it “practically destroys the secrecy of the ballot :” **In the Province of Prince Edward Island,if any person de- sires to vote, whose right to vote is objected to on the ground of want of qualification, and if a candidate or any agent of a can- didate or (in the absence of such agent) any elector acting in the interest of a candidate, objects in the presence of the elector, the deputy returning offi- cre in addition to placing his initials on the back of the ballot paper, as provided by section 70, shall also place on, the back thereof a number corresponding that placed the voter’s name on the poll book. so to opposite i WARURRNRRRCORORR IR RCAORUROROR RURACORRONCRCRCAURURURURIRRURIR = Terr vs a Sir Louis Davies and the Secrecy Of the Ballot. x mer treteefe tretecte tactece tnetacte tects treats tactnete retache trtvAetndinde ‘wttnde trcteche tnctacds tuctncbe tetnbecinch ~ xn RR RR RRAR RRA AA This section of the eerie ee ctactecertacty sweets Sadtarts trethete tactncts tueterbe Sactactestertacly theta facta otactaet tc Pett ee lt SNANAAANRARARAR NRA ~ Here fare sub-sections 5 and 8 of section 96, safe- guarding the secrecy of the ballot, with Sir Louis ee Davies’ attempied amend- ment In italics :— Sub section 5. No candidate» officer, clerk, agent or any other person shall communicate at any time to any person any in- formation as to the number on the back ot the ballot paper given toany voter at a_ polling station, except to a court or judge lawfully requiring him so to do or attempt to ascertain at the counting of votes the num- ber on the back of any ballot paper ; but this provision shall wot apply to ba'lots marked in acoordance with sections 67 and 74 of thts Act.” Sub sec. 8. Everyone who violates any of the provisions of this section shall be guily of an indictable offence, and liable toa penalty not exceeding two hun- dred dollars, and to imprison- ment for any term not exceeding months, with or without hard labs in default of pay- hard labor, in default of pay ment of such penalty. ¥t 3 z z : ® 2 z Six 7 7 7 7 z Z ¥ z ‘ 4 z & ¥ ¥ v ¥ 2 * F 7 7 7 z 7 ¥ é z 7 * € z c ” [Ny AAP Parag Wa Phe NNN NNN NINN NINN NAN ER NEN RN wi POP e ryt PEEP PE OS EEE PSST PEPE E Pe PEE Pre ee ee eee ety ce ree ple gbdbeed PR PD BN NE PI SY OY PIP PP ey | > _ nee Soe ered a post graduate schoel for fundi- mental work in reading, writing, and arithmetic. BOOK REVIEW. I The Empire Reading Series, Prime Parts Land II, Halifax: Atk W Mckin- ley. Messrs A & W McKinley have just issued from their press the Prim- ers of a Series of Readers called “The Empire”. The plan of these is a simple and natural are. (1) The picturse of an object is used to get the name of the object. (2) The written is printed word is asscciated with the picture of the object, and becomes 1 f the object. (3) The spoken word or name is analyzed into its elementary sounds (4) These sounds are expressed by their symvols, the written or print- ed letters of the alphabet. (5) The the best 25 cent 2 on Earth. | If y to use the best 25 cent ; tea yor to u:e Matchless Blend Our f this tea have been some thirg marvellous, They have in- ercased every week since we first be- ¥Ru Lo and they’re increasing yet, Pr; a pound of Matchless Rem mber we ar sole agents. You fant get the be:t 25c tea any where ee, a Jenkins & Son Charlottetown, are then given. and the child begins to build words by means of those letters or rather by means of the sounds which the letters represent. Thus, ——_ Gentlemen,—While drieiaz down a very bill last August my horse stumbled ard feil, cutting himeelf feer fully atou:the head and bojy. I used MINARD’S LINIMENT freely o2 bi s teep J. B.'A. BEAUCHEMIN, Sberbrooke. i and later the charts. j Primers | i enon the known as indicating the spoken name | | { letters, in which all the letters j j +} os o" ’ ”~ ~ ” | sounded, the first and last letters mn i | t ‘ i ' ' ' < . 7 } and in a few days he wag as well as ever, | The lessons may be modeled afier those given in this Primer, but much worst be suppliec by the teacher. It isof the utmost importance that. in the early stages the work be done very slowly and very thoughly, with frequent repetu- tions of previous lessons, In all the ‘essons of the first three or four books let through drill, both in the sight and the sound words, be giv- board before the reading is attempted. Forifthe pupil is fre- quently meeting with words. which he coes not recognize, his reading is al- most sure to be stammering, drawling and expressionless. .In the analysis of words into th sounds, begin with words of only th: ir ce alice ife ‘ peaerge y ..| consonants, and the middle lett r a sounds obtained from words nsed as | cid wien! he names biects are employed to|~ 2% ~ tag the names of o 1 "Tl _ of feach children to read as build other w ‘ 2 ames ; € build other oa (0) hee . ds Setersong speak—to tell you what th the le rs ¢ represent > sounds ba a jae } l¢ eve Bevan ee SR TCPICsent tee "_. | written or printed word say. But do not read for them. If youdo thcy will merely imitate without making the slightest effort to understand, or to express the meaning of the words. 'Tf vou must read for them, read the whole selection and it will be less easy for tl to copy than if you read a By-means of < single sentence |. of que:- icns get them to tell what the print- For example, in the “My brother works today a! street.” ask them to ed woids say. sentence, the end of this ead . he | street, and naturally the emphasis will | bz put on th2 words ‘My brother’. . the sentence for the purpose o! | telling who works at the end of the | Follow with the questions, “What ‘of its commercial and technical edu- cnet a el II 19¢0 the brother work ?” “On what street?” “On what part of the street ? &c., &c. Let writing and drawing be begun as €arly as reading. When a new word is learned, have it written. A SPELLING LESSCN, Radil, raisins, ravenous, razor, rebel, receipt, recipe, recital. recollect, rectory, reflector, rehearsal, reindeer, relics, relieved; 1emembrance, rene- gade, repaired, reprieve, reproach, rescind, rescue, rescuing, reservoir, re- tail, reveille, review, reverie, rhapsody, thetoric, rheumaiic, rhombus, rhyme, ricochet, ripples, route, rue, rhubarb, rutilant, ruthless, EDUCATION AS A NECESSITY. One of the signs of the times is the rapidly growing recognition of rhe ne- Cessity of thorough education in all branches of practical work. The ne- Cessity of training for the professions has been recognized tor centuries; but it has been assumed, especially in this country, that success in practical pursuits depended on natural sagacity and farce. in Europe, where competition is keener and natural opportunities are not so great, people have Leen, learn- ing very rapidly in the last two gener- ations that the man in business needs education quite as much as the man inthe professions or the arts. Ger- many, so long the home of scholar- Ship for its own sake, so easily the educational leader of the world, with- out lowering the standard of her in- ventions, has been supplementing them with a series of technical institu- tions directed specifically to teaching men how to apply science to business. England has felt keenly the compe- tition of Germany during the last two decades; and it has been a matter of discussion in the newspapers, of notes of warning from English consuls from all parts of East and South Amer ica, and of anxious deliberation in Parliament and out of it. The rapid growth of Germary as a commercial nation has bzen due, as the English believe, to the supericrity cation, sat education is of recent Origin; but with their immense ex perience as educators andwith their Keen perception of the opportunities which we offered to modern Germany, the Germans have developed their education cn the practical side with great rapidity and with characteristic thoroughness. Through their techni- cal schools the Germans have been able to avail themseives practically of their resources in the way of scientific knowledge;}through their commercial schools they are training themselves tor the specific work of business in all parts of the world. To meet a com- petition which is essentially education- alinits origin and character, the English have been organizing techni- cal and commercial education. A number of institutions have been opened in different parts of the coun try during the past few years; and the establishment of the new University at Birmingham, the great manufaciuring metropolis of England, marks another stage in this movement. If the ob ject of this institution were to substi- tute a purely practical or “bread and butter’ spiritual ideal prevailed bridge, ideal of education for the which has so long at Oxtord and Cam- it would be looked upon PQA CAReA2eeeeeeNae = Whee Natienal Carniva's, Scotsman, 20thCentury, £. & D.gCciumbia with di trust and misgiving; but Birmingham does not mean to com- pete with the older universities, The new institution will not develop a new ideal of education, but give opportuni ties uf education along practical lines for practical men men who cannot secure the advantages of the eide and more genereus culture. Mr. Chamberlain, who has taken a great interest in the enterprise, says that it IS proposed to create at Birmingham a school ef universal learning, but it 'S easy to see that the new institution is devised by practical men to werk along practical lines. Philosophy, the classics, mathemathics, history, and physics will have but a small place in the teaching field of the new insiitu- tion, but the applied sciences medicine sengenry, pub.ic health, wil concentr- ate the great bulk of the leading en- ergy and force. Srecia' atten‘ion is to be paid to the departme .t_ of commer- ciol ebucaticn commeicial law, geogra- | phy, political economy as it relates to commerce, and the modern languages. This is a broodiy utilitarian conception and if it were aggressive, it might seem to j-opardize the higher interests of English civilization, but it is appar- ently the working down of education from the higher to the lower branches, in recognizition of the fact that not only the man in the arts and profes sions needs education but the man in business as well.—The Outlook. WHAT IS EDUCATION ? Herbert Spencer tells us in one short pregnant’ sentence that the tunction of educaticn is to prepare us for complete living. A true chord is touched by Sydney Smith when he urges the im- portance of happinesss as an aid to education. He says, “If you make children happy now, you make them happy twenty years hence by the mem- ory of it.” Equaily wise are the words of Sir John Lubbock : “Knowledge is a pleasure as wellas a power. It shall lead us all to try with Milton to be- hold the bright countenance of truth in the still air of study.” Gero. J. M’Cormac. Inspector of Schools. Eve RY Sou SER H ave it in theHouse For common ailrueuts which may occur in every family. She can trust what time indorses. For Internal as much as External use. Dropped on sugar it is pleasant to take fer colds, coughs,croup,colic, cramps and pains. I t.ave used your Anod yne Linimentintrea eur infan’ (only six momths old) forcolic,and little three year old daazhter for summer com piaint x44 bowel diseases generaliy, and found #@ lo beetcellont. Joum L iNGALLS, Americus, Ge N’ NoDYNE "450 ofcyNs LiNIMENT Relieves Every Form of Inflammation. Originated in 1810 by an old Famil Physician. No remedy has the con dence of the publie toa greater extent. Sur book on INFLABIMATION free. Price ‘Sand 50c. I. 8. Johmeon & Co., Boston, Masa, arsons’-Pills iver Pili wade” Positively cure Bilicus geass, Sick Hoauacho, all Liver and Bowel com. piainta They expel im purities from the blood oelt-are women find gelief from using them, rteo 260. L& JONBRON & CO., Boston. Mase vireceing the above daily Look them over—Write ior catalogue. Kepair supplies—SecondHand Wheels. Mark Witsit & Ub. QABQCQAARP 22222) ee cme PBS \V/ Pure and Fragrant The “Albert” Baby’s Own Soap Is specially recommended by mary family physicians, for nursery use. Beware of imitations, some of which are dangerous and may cause skin troubles. ) ALBERT TOILET SOAP CO, Mfrs. MONTREAL. ¢ A Sn ary meena A So AO Se. peo : = ——=— - SUNNYSIDE DENTSTRY. Offce in New Prowse B' ole irst door to the right om. stairs. Telephone conmection, - DR. AYERS PICKLING VINEGARS. X X X Malt—48c per gal. Best English Malt—72¢ per gal- French White Wine—60c per gal... ! XXX White Wine—48e per gal. Cider Vinegar—40. per gal. Special low prices for large quantities, Also all kinds wt Whole and Ground Spices, Tumeric, ete, for pickling purposes at lowest pricss Pr. HK. Island Commercial College The attention of those «4 wsir> om thorougia aod practical preparation for am active buviness life is called to the ad wm tages offered by this College. Bookw ' keeping, Commeroia) Law. Ari'hmeise-, Penmanship, Hoglish, Corr >»pondense, Business Methods, Shorihand, Type« writing, etc,, are “Aught io the mort direes and practical manuer. Special sientiow is givento locating graduates in paoxd business positions. New term oper MONDAY, AUG. 20:h inat., at 9.90 m. Seni for prospettus. P.O. Rox ISAAC OXENHAM, Sy *» he Fe ee} ae ( Hartfords bave had a large sale &? thariotéstow.. Wel] ire! til Principal and Proprietor Auc? j&w— tf. ‘ ‘ eee = Pink SGuee ee SSS —— GRO bew-: ema at Beer & Goff je I AN NB A NE AREA SREY A A NEF aT RK A A a gS alk Seer EME (Re Tee a mm : ne Z - : ani te > PE fi a TM clio at ea Fear eee annie aimee r ree “sates Ae IES 4 rey os . Cee ery ae é an. - r re “ 1% Lg lip si ae