at ae es ee na GRE nc oR PGS A RR ag One a a i‘ ome. ML aly a 5 OURS Alla PRET oa Ci. Seg ti AEE EE A ERAN hai AE a gg Sil A RE ya oa ima len meteor eee THE DAILY EXAMINER lasued every afternoon from the omce of the Examiner Publishing Ce. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. (IN ADWARNCE) Ome Year, - - = © «© = © = = $4.0 bo Months, *- * . “2 © © « 2.00 Three Months, - © . © © © = 1.00 | Qec Month, Se @ » st ees ® 0.35 Sent post paid te aay past of Canada or the United ion THE WEEKLY BXAMINER is issuel every Friday morning. It is made ep cf matter which has appeared in the Daily, and is a first-class news r, con- taining all the lates: pews, bscription $1.00 a year, The Teacher. One cause of the low standing of the teacher's calling is lack of extended professional training. Professions easily entered are not usually highly respect- ed. The medical profession has been eited as an illustration. Not long ago, when one could be a physician without special training, the profession was not very highly esteemed. Now, when ex- tended training is demanded both by public opinion and by law, the profes- sion is respected as one of the highest. In like manner the teaching profession would undoubtedly increase in favor were training of s high order demand- ed. In fact, we find the respect for the profession varying 1n different countries and in diffeMent ,rades of the school system almost in direct ratio to the education and professional training re- quired of candidat.s.—Forum. Loose clothes and lowny cushions bring only a negative sort of comfort to the woman who is suffer ng with some disease or derangement of the organs distinctly femine. Some cleties and some position make the pain and the discomfort seem less. Perhaps the nerves are most-affected and this in turn disturbs the digestion, Nothing will ever comp etely relieve but aradical cure. The start of so called “female complaints’ may be avery slight thing indeed. It may be that in the be- ginning some smal! hygienic measures wouid stop the trouble. Certainly at this time a litile bit of the right medicine would stop it. When the trouble becomes worse it is harder to cure,biut still it can be cured Dr. Pierce’a Favorite Prescription will positively cure any trouble of this charac- ter. [t may be absolutely relied upon. It affords lasting relief to a woman » hose natural modesty hes kept her from con- eulting a physician. Send 31 centsin one cent stamps to World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Baflalo,N. Y., andreveive Dr Pierce’s 1608 page “Common Sense Medical Adviser,” profusely iliustrated. Economy The Royal Baking Powder is more eco- nomical than cream of tartar and soda for raising biscuit, bread and cake. First, be- cause of its great leavening strength, which makes it go farther; second, be- cause its work is |~evenly perfect, so that no good materi- als are wasted; third, because it makes food that is more nutriti- ous and wholesome, economizing health. Government Ana- lyst Valade of On- trio says that Royal Baking Powder should be used in every household. ROYAL BAKING POWDE 2 CO., NEW YORK. For Your Benefit-—_— We have purchased an extra stock t Cedar Shingles at a specially l.w price | We Offer 375,000-.-+- All grades, above our usual low stock Remember this lot is to be sold at a pai~ cicularly low price, and they are as good shingles as we ever bandled. If you want any, now is your opportunity to buy. Phone 181 James Barrett, Connolly’s Wharf. A VISIT 70 THE MAGDALENS Their Population, Indus- tries and Requirements A LAND OF CLEAR SKIES AND BEAUTIFUL TEMPERATURE. A Primitive yet Noble-Souled People —Description of the Isles. | Just at this season of the year, no more enjoyable outing could be planned than a trip to the Islands to the north of us known as The $Magdalens. Manyatime have we heard of those Islanis when a youngster {in the East as about the last place 0. earth to be selected forasummer resort. Cold, bleak, barren, impoverished rocks they were designated, upon which a certain class of human being: dragged out a miserabie existence simply because they could got get off them ;— or because there a favorable sitnation was afforded for the prosecution fishing opera- tions to which some must certainly devote their lives. Tothe young,Catholic clerics too, they have been, held up as a terrible place of exile, well calculated to bring out the most Apostolic virtnes or serve as a sort of limbo for the expiation of almost any ecclesiastical indiscretion. Occasionally some Stray votary of pleasure has come way Canadian archipelago and raved about its beauty and the real pleasures there to be enjoyed in summer; but few there were to give the story credence. The victim of such false impressions, and how many of them always beset us, what was our surprise and delight, then, when business and a needed change of air conspired to ago, to find a place of such beauty and charm and repose as wonld defy the pen of a poet or the brush of a painter to ac- sky, green bounding wave, high, grey, blue aod red cliffs laved by white breakers in» terchanging regularly, verdant meadows and gently ascending mountains, equally verdant tothe very summits and dotted over with nerds of sleek kine; cosy, com~ fortable and always well-lined cottages, surrounded by gardens, stretching in an almost unbroken line from end to end of the Islands. Great and small factories perched posts of Eotry, Grand Entry, Byron Is- Couuiless white~winged clipper fishing smacks careering away into the distance until they are no Jarger to the eye than the milk-white ‘ganet with sable tipped wings and eagle mien, which ever bears them company; the Lalmost é¢x'inct pinky, which to the uninitiated is represented as reversible, the more pretentious coaste:; the graceful, fleet and wellsmanned “ Cape Anner” bearing away seaward afier securing the season’s bait or riding at anchor in Pleasant Bay; the countless sea birds circling in the ‘ circumambient air gathered in myriads upon the numerous sand bars, swimming stately in the great lagoons or splitting the wave in search of their prey; the round towered lighth suse standing sentinel on every promontory or the more majestic church with its tall, cross~crowned spire, ever pointing poor exiled ‘man to his home in Heaven, and holding out to him the blessings of the tedemption all go to make a picture well calculated to charm the eye, and eatiate, in so far as natural beauty can, the huan.soul itself. AS it is true that the most beautiful flowers often bloom on the most barren places of the earth, 80 it i# aleo trne that a kind Providence generally bes'ows more real and satisfying natural charms and purer joys upon an isolated people than upon those whose lot, according to the world, is cast in pleasanter linee. Our own somewpbat secluded Island Province is back to the world out of this out-of~the- | bring as to the Magdalens, a few weeks | curately depict. Here we have everything | that goes to make the perfect scene,—blue | upon some convenient cliff or grouped | systematically upon the great fishing out- land, or the furtherst North Bird Rocks; | The Officers Quarters on Board a Man-of-war. WHERE ALL HAVE THEIR SOCIAL BEING, Nava\ Etiquette on Board a Fight- ing Ship. The wardroom ona man-of-war is the living place of all the older officers of the ship, with one exception, the com- manding officer. He lives by himself, has his own cabins, his own mess, his own servants. Naval etiquette and cus- tom have established this habit of isola- tion for the man on the ship who has command of all the rest. The reason is undoubtedly to be found in the very fact that he represents extraordinary power. Under these circumstances any attempt to forget the superiority of his rank by means of a common cabin or messrcom for him and his subordinates would ‘only result in embarrassment on both sides. This does not mean that he may not be sociable, for much depends upon the man. Butit is safe to say that any show of effusiveness among those who live abaft the mast must come from his side, if he wishes it to be general. The situa- tion is a delicate one. In the freer air of the wardroom we find from 10 to 20 officers living togeth- er, the number varying with the size of the ship. Theirages may range from 25 to 50, and they are of all ranks above that of naval cadet, and of all corps. Engineer officers, line officers, medical officers, marine officers, one pay officer and one chaplain, may all be included beautiful and fertile; the Magdalens are more beautiful and still more fertile. Many would not supply us with a more perfect connecting link with the mainland than the rather broken and necessarily un- satisfactory line of the daily steamer, al-~ leging the physical and moral superiority of our people as a result of our eplendid | isolation. There may be something in \ this contention, too; and if anything in it as to us, certainly much more as to the peo- ple of the Magdalens. Whether true | not, however, we must not fail to dec are here that the inhabitants of these northern | islands are a fine-looking, well-developed, | and robust race, thoroughly God-fearing, | moral and contented—a people as pure as | the air they breathe. Just one unmistake- able proof, en pessant. We have tie authority of the Cureof La Magdalene for | the statement that such a thing as an il-' leg tmate birth hasnot occurred in his par- | isi within the memory of living man, The average Magdalener is born, lives outa lengthy existeuce, and sinks into! av Lonoredand hallowed grave, without seeing any more than the outlines of the great world abouthim ina dim glimpee of Cape Bretom or Prince Edward Island, taken from the highest peak of his native hills, or, nearer, from the deck of his staunch fishing smack as he tempts farther and farther the wave in pursuit of his fiony plunder. The stately steamer comes and goes ou her weekly visitation, is perfected from the old Albert to the Beaver, and from the Beaver to the St. (Continued on page six.) in the wardroom of a large ship. These men live in staterooms arranged about a common space, which is known as the ‘‘wardroom country.’’ This assumption of a space of prairielike dimensions is comparatively truthful in the cramped quarters ofa ship. In this ‘‘country’’ exists the social life of the wardroom. Here these men of varied callings, yet allof the sea’s following, live, move and have their social being. A day spent in a wardroom by a land- lubber would reveal many interesting diXerences between naval officers and their brethren on shore. To begin with, they are more cosmopolitan in their speech. The men in our wardrooms are gathered together from all parts of the Union. Local discussions find but an uninterested audience, or even a derisive one, so that a naval officer gets accus- tomed to speak and think of all the. 45 states as belonging equally to him. Out- side of his own country he is so great a traveler that very few civilians can keep up with the way he skips in conversa- tion from China to Peru or to Tasma- nia. Other characteristics that are SICK HEADACHE Positively cured by these ‘ Little Pills. They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A per- fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsi. ness, Bad Tastein the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER, They Regulaie the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. Small Piil. Small Dose. Small Price. Substitution the fraud of the day. See you get Carter's Ask for Carter’s, Insist and demand Carter’s Little Liver Pills, wall WILL.W. FRANKLIN Commission Merchant O'Dwyer's Cove, St, John’s N. F. P. E. I.{Produceja Speciality. Prompt Returns and Ac’s Sales. WARDROOM. '@ : $% 1 Z ES Z Men's °,", “ 5 ys chirts * si * SS Neglige shirts, black satine ‘> shirts, flannel! shirts, flan- 5 neélette shirts, gingham shirts v5 laundered and unlaundered e shirts, in white, flannelette and natural wool. Men’s Neckties Four in hand, clubs, knots, ascot puffs and bows, Men's Socks Black cashmere half hose, BAA x ¥ SINGS wi bla*k worsted half hose, also ey, grey and heather mixed ,olf Kd hese and rock maples. ‘SF or J a * Men's Uaderwear oF oF Men’s balbriggan shirts and SF drawers, men’s Llama shirts e and drawers, men’s natural « <3 wool shirts and drawers, °F, . ° Le: ‘ sf wen’s merino shirts and draw SS ers in light summer weights; ts also a large range of light Fe medium and heavy weights, all kinds, all sizes and prices 3 Fr =F °F =P °F + oof avy THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, AUGUST 13 1{{8. LIFE IN A 'serges in blue and black. HIGH CLASS DRESS GOODS. F, Perkins & Co. SUNNYSIDE. OO so seen anasanaaas a OscrscscassescnssssQ@®@® IT PAYS TO BUY ATSPEXKINS SL1oths We have a large range that comes under this head. Moncton Tweeds. We are the unly ones in this city that carry this ceiebrated make of cloth, We have a good range of Canadian ['weeds; also, English and Scotch Tweeds, worsteds and In fact this department would take a whole news- paper to tell you all Table Damask Bleached and unbleached, ranging in price from 15c per yard up; also table napkins from 65cts per doz to $3.50 Bedding White, pink and blue spreads, sheets and sheeting, pillow cotton in circular and plain. LFS GSE EES. SESE ELAS) PALER T PT Ie HGS Gis 30 quickly noticeable are his simplicity, his cheerfulness and his heartiness. The wardroom is constantly resounding with laughter. The men in it are healthier than men who live in houses. They get up earlier in the morning and go to bed earlier at night. Most of our wardrooms are bustling with officers at 7 o’clock in the morning. A glance at the breakfast table shows the senior line offiter presiding, and the other officers placed near him according te rank. At the other end of the table is the man who has been elected by his messmates to direct the catering of tie mess. Between this early meal and the breakfast proper, which comes at half past 11 or 22 o’clock, there is not muck life in the wardroom, for the daily mii- itary routine is full of drills and exer- cises which keep most of the officers om deck. There are drills with groat guns and with small arms, drills in clearing ship for action, drills in handling am- mtnition and many others—all of them ) rooted im the one idea that you must preserve your own life by destroying that of your enemy. As soom as an officer returns to tire wardroom from one drill and begins a conversation or perhaps hums a song be is interrupted by the bugles on deck and must buckle on his sword and returm to another drill. At every call to quarters all officers must report themselves ready for duty. The chaplain and paymaster, having much less to do with drills than the other officers, are nsually the first te be back in the wardroom, where there is other work for them. The medical offi- cer has gone forward to the sick bay to look after his patients. When the midday breakfast comes, there is the first breathing space for a little leisure and relaxation. But the drills for the day are not yet over, and at 1 o’clock the bustle is resumed throughout the ship. A sudden call may come for collision drill, or fire drill, or battalion drill. If at sea, a floating tar- get may be dropped overboard, and for an hour the ship be shaken from stem to stern by the discharge of guns. From 3 to 5 o’clock in the afternoon there is generally a respite from work, and the wardroom begins to show signs of be- ing a home. Some in it are reading or writing, others are smoking or playing games or loafing. Still others are in their rooms taking the seaman’s after- noon Nap. and exercises come again. By 6:30 o’clock there is a feeling that one can sit down and dine without fear of interruption. The mess es a whole is now gathered together, and the meal is generally a thoroughly enjoyable ard delightful affair. After it is over there are cigars, games, music, or the rigkt to withdraw within oneself without ex- citing remark. By 10 o’clock most of these sailors are in bed, but even now the drills may not be over. At midnight the bugles may sound, and in two min- utes all the ship’s company be rapidly making ready for an enemy.—New York Post. - eet ened te, But at 5 o’clock the drills $0 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE Trace Marks DESIGNS Copyricuts &c. Anyone sending a sketch and description may qubebay ascertain our epimben free whether an invention is Ibably Communica- Pcie tnd a ree. Patents taken threwgh Munn & Co. receive special notice, withovi-gharge,inthe _ Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cir enlation of any scient fie rnal. Terms, $3 a Mii four months, $ by all newsdealers. [0,28>8readsav. New York branch Office. 625 ¥ St. Washington, t= 2000 COC OC COED » CvVCeovo OF *» $ MONEY TO LOAN. On Farm Property also on Real Estate within the limits of the city ; in sums of from two to five hundred woue doi’ars at a reduction on current rates of interest. J. H. Reddin, Solicitor Cameron Block. VOCE DOCOOOGE < 00000046 sone Just Received a pice assortment of BLOUSE SETS the newest designs in sterling silver and _ rolled plate, and selling very low, 626 W. N. TANTON Opposite Crabbe’s Hardre Store. B. D. McConneur J. Marion Memb. Can. Soc. C. E. 4. Memb. Can Soc. C E D. and P. L. §. Memb Amer. W.W. Assoc. MCCONNELL & MARION CIVIL ENGINEERS ROOMS 308 TO 3:1 NEW YORK LIFE BLDC., MOWTREAL Water Powers and Warer Supply System« (proposed or existing) examined and reported on. image and Municipal Works generally. Surveys of every description undertaken. ‘HENRY R, LORDLY C. E As Mw Can. Moc. Cc. E, Graduate College of Civil Engine eriag Cornell University. Sate meanest for General Work, Specialties: Hydraulic, Sanitary Engineer- ing and Bridge Designing, Offices at Charlottetown and St. John. Island correspondence addressed to | yharlotetown, Oe meme, | | | | | | Maen Pant Line. '0 Boston COMMENCING MAY (Cth. rhe favorite 8: S. “HAUI- FAX’ .will leave Charlotte- ‘own for Roston Every Tuesday, atl p. m. calling at Hawkesbury and Halifax. RETURNING leave Boston every Saturday at noon. Passengers leaveing Ch’*own Wednesday morning via Pic tou, can make close connec- tion at Halifax with S. S. “HALIFAX.” Sailing Wednesday evening at 11 .m. Tickets for sale at stations P. E. L Railway. For further rates and all informa- tion apply to H. L. Chipman, Canad- ian Agent, at Halifax, or to W. W. CLARKE, Agent, Ch’town, The Ch’town Steam Nav. Co > : 17 pa i AY ~ J ad y ry ‘ —<t | STEAMERS..... Northumberland & Princess Leave as below every day (Sundays Excepted) From POINT DU CHENE (on arrival of afternoon train from St. John) for Summerside, connecting there with express train for Charlottetown. From SUMMERSIDE oo arrival of morning train from Charlottetows) for Point Du Chene connecting with day traia for St. John. Connecton at Moncton with train for Canada and at St. John with Steamers of International Line and Raiiways for United States and Canada. from PICTOU (on arrivalof day train from Halifax) for Charlottetown. From CHARLOTTETOWN, seven a.m. (loca!) for Pictou, (connecting there with day train for Cape Breton and Hali-~ fix, at Halifax with C. A. & P. Line for Boston. F. W. HALES! Ch’town, P. E, I. Secasrary Quebec Steamship Go’y, Ltd. “STR. CAMPANA.” Sailing Sailing rom Montreal from Charlotietows at 2 p. m. about 6 p. m. Monday 6th June "Mouday 30th May Monday 20th June Monday 13th June Monday 4th July Monday 18th July Monday Ist August Monday 15th August Monday 29th August Monday 12th Sept. Monday 26th Sept. Moaday 10th Oct Mondry 24th Oct Monday 17th Oct Monday 7th Nov Monday 3ist Oct Calling at Svommerside, Perce Gaspe Monday 27th June Monday 1ith July Monday 25th Jaly Monday 8th Ang. Monday 22nd Avg Monday 5th Sept Monday 19th Sept Munday 3rd Oct Mal Bay and Father Pvint. Delighstul summer trip for tourists. Passenger accommodation unsurpassed, Freight carried at competition rates. Eggs band- led withjgreat eare. CARVE BROS Ly, Agents McGill University, Montreal 1898-9 Matric ilation Examination, preliminary to the varions Courses of Study, wil! be held as under: *Faculty of Arts (including” the Donaida’ -xpecia! _., ©ourse tor Women. } Faculty of Applied Science } Faculty of medicine. . SESSION Thurs, 15th Sept Faculty of Law ‘ o*. ec « » Tues. 6th Sep Faculty of Com~arative Medi- cine and Veterinary Science, Sat, |7th Sept *The Revised Curriculum inthe Faculty of Aris comprises courses in Classics. Enolish, Modern Language 8, History, Philosophy, Mathe matics, Ph “¥stCs, Che m ; stry, Botany, Zv00logy. Ge oloay. These courses are open alae to PaRTIAL siUDENTS «without Mrtric- ulation, tin the Faculty ol Applied Science the COUTSES in Civil. Mechanical, Electrical, and Mining Enginecring, Chem istry, and Archi- tecture, are also open to PARTIAL STU- DENTS withor t Matriculation Examinations for 20 FIRST YEAR EN- TRANCB EXHIBITIONSin the FACULTY OF ARTS, ranging irom $60, to $200. wil! be held on the 15th September at Montreal. St. Jobn, N_ B,, Halifax, Charlottetown, St. John’s, Nfid,, and other centres: The MoGiLt NosmMan EcHooL will be re- opened on Ist September. Particulars of Examinations, and copies of the Caleadar, containing full informat'on as to Conditions of Entrance Courses of Study, Regulations for Degrees, Exhibitions and Scholarships, Fees, etc., may pe obtained 0B application to W. VAUGHAN, Secretary, wed & sat a & oo few oe A iw yr ee