sa eae ie crs a> roa ic gn — 4 ; ya 3 i slg eal i —— BITTLE | ew 2] PILLS SICK HEADACHE) lositively cared by these Little Pills, Yh-y also relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, Endig:stion and Too Hearty Eating. <A per. Gert xmedy for Dizziness, Nzusea, Drowsi. mess, od Tastein the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain ia the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. Smal 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. ‘BPS'S COCOA ‘RAT EFUS. @ COMFORTING ‘ist anguished everywhere for ielicacy of Flavour "Superior jnal ity, and High! Nuiritive Properties. Specially grate- && and comforting to the rervousand dyspeptic. Sold oniy in }3-lb. tins, labelled fFAMES EPPS & CO., Ltd. Homeopathic Chemists, London, Engiand. REAFAST SUPPE a ? poe PRICE PHAN! ob Bet a Guehe = ed ove ee een PARLIAM' NT MBETS PEBRUARY {st ut Im view of the approaching zession of the Dominion Parliamen:, Tae Gazerre wild be sent to new eubecribers daily for Three Months for Ooe Do lar. Aporass Onpers, R] CHARD WHITE,"Man. Dir., GAZETTE PRINTING CO., MonTREAL. @AZETTE OR THREE (MONTHS FOR REMOVAL E. H. BEER ~HAS REMOVED HIS~— Insurance Offic - — Bark Wright & Co's § NOLTH SIDE QUEEN 8‘ ‘).2)) 13 ji8s Ail Kinds of Insurauwv. Noze--I am prepsred to place all eincoes cf FIRE INSURANCE at rates which defy competition. You can save moaey by calling on me E. H. BEER, Genera! Ineurance Agent. Feb i: SUNNYSIDE DENTSTRY, KR Of€cc in New Prowse Block @irst door to the right up taize Telephone connection. OR. AYEPS GASH DOWN | CASH DOWN ce _- ide > | RT ERS! VER |« : i a THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, FEBRUA‘Y 26, 1900 Edited by Inspector McOormac. iGETS,. 1, “Before school” is better than “after shool’ worl ; Sis << 2. “Fine sense and exalted sense, saye Pope, “are not halfso usefal as common sense,” 3. The true teacher makes study a pleasure, but never a punishment. 4. How long has it been since you have ad carefully a genuinely professional boek ? 5. “There is no profession 40 exacting, none whieh breaks men down go easily as ) that of faithful teaching ”? 6. Are you acquainted with the school laws of the province ? 7. No two children can be run through the eame machine, if they be truly taught. 8. Each has his gift. Our sails are organ pipes of divere stops And various pitch; each with its proper notes Theliteene the self*same breath of i Though poor alone, yet joined are har- moby, 9, By the aid ofthe teacher, the child of the presebt is trained into the man of the futare. 10. For the school te do the best work, it must be held in ‘igh esteem, the attend- ance must be regular, and hearty co-oper- ation be accorded the teacher. 1l. The prenunciation of Freoch ia our schools is not as good as it should be. More reading aloud would improve this defect. 12, If there is any subject more than anotherthat ean be neglected without effort, it is penmanship. THE HOME AND THE SCHOOL. The Mayor of Chicago, in an address to the women of that city, recently said: “How many women are familiar with one of the greatest forces ip city life, the great army of school teachers? How many mothers know who these people are that bave the bringing up of their childreo,— whetherthey are the proper persons for the work or not? How many know any- the training of their little bs ys from the time they kies them good bye in the morning until they are greeted ai night with the question, ‘how did you get along at school, dear?’ That ien’s the wav todo. The mothers ought to knuw something in particularabout the teach~ eis.” ing about PROBLEMS IN ARITHMETIC. A merchant sells calico for 20 per cent less tuls ‘esr than last year; this year beselle {cr 8 cents a yard; what was last year’s price? Ane. 10 cents. : 2. Aaud B run amile. First A gives B a start of 44 varde,anod beats him by 51 e.couds. At the second heatA gives Ba s.ert of 1 minue and 15 eeconds, and is beaten by 88 yde. In what time can each run & mile? Ans. A in 5 minutes: B in 6 minutes, If a tree 38 feet high be repreeented by a drawivg 1} ioches bign, what, on the same tca'e, will reore-ent the height of a heuse 90 f et high ? Ans. 3 21-38, Divide 150 in tosuch paris ibat one of them diminished by 35 shel! be equal tothe Other diminished by 145. Answer 10y and +0. A chimnry 20 in. by 28 in. outaide meafuremenis bas 25 layers of brick, avd the width of a brick isthe thickae-s of the chimney walle. How many bricks 8 in. by 4in by Zin are therein tne coimeey, making no allowance for mortar? Aas. 250 bricke, 6. What sum of ready money wil] ¢.acel an indebt*dress ot $625 due in 4 mua, 20 days hence, money bring worth 6 % per annum ? Ais. $610.75. 7. The floor of a pudlic ha!) 80 feet by 45 fees is inereased 12 per cent io width and 8 percent in lengta. Fiadthe yer esnt of inerease in fluor »space. Anewer 26 24 25 per cent. 8. If there is a epecific duty of $1.25 per gallonon varnish, enian addi:ivnal duty of 45 per cent ad valorem, what will be the cot io ao importerin New York, ot 52 gsliors co-ting $2.10 per gallon in Londun and delivered free from freight eharges ? Ane. $223 34. 9. A cotton broker sold for « planter, cottow amounting to $3,860, and gave the purcharer five per cent aircount for cash, yuk GIRLS cer PLUMP while using Dr. A. W. Chase’s Nerve Food. ‘There comes a critical time in the life of every woman when the bud of girlhood is unfolding into the full blown fewer of womanhood. Mothers at this time should carefully their daughters’ h far this is a time whea many a girl falls viet te insidious diseases i aso Less of flesh, hea , pains in back and The highes’ for scrap iron, lend, iy brass er any old aliéy ot Esdale Foundry. ‘T. A. McLEAN, Charlottetown Peete ee Ye ee * meee | If the broker retained 24 per cent commis~ sien on his cash receipts, and paid freight and storage amounting to $51.26, how much should he have remitted to the planter? Answer $3,524.06. 10. Pind the size of a square containing the same area as a rectangle 84 yards long and 48 yards wide, Answer, 63.4 equare yards, 11. $1,400 is left to two children, 11 and 16 years of age respestively, to be in yeeted at 10 per cent interest, so that each will receive an equal share at hie taajor< ity ; what amount must be invested for each ? Answer $800 and $600. 12. When gold is worth 120, what is the value of a dollar treasury note? Answer 73 1-3 cents, Swe PROBLEMS IN ALGREBA. 1. A farmer having two farms of equal size, sold 158 acres from each and 100 acres from another of the same size,found that he bad 1400 acres remaining. How many acre: did each farm at first contain? Answer 600 acres. 2. I have 190 pieces of silver, aad find there are six times as many half«dollar pieces as dollar pieces, aud twice as many dimes as half-dollar pieces ; how many dimes bave |? Anewer 120 dimes. 3. I bought a horee, saddle and bridle for $206. The horse cost foir times as mveh ag the saddle, and the saddie cost $28, more than twice the costof tne bridle. What wasthe cust ofeach. Ans- wer 5. $60; 8. $40; B. $6. 4. John is now 24 years old and Henry ig18. In how many years will their ages bein the proportion of 5to 6. Answer, 12 years, 5. Divide 100 into two parts, so that if One part be divided by 6 and the other by 4 the sum of the quotients will be 20. Ans. 60 and 40, we NTS MTR 6. A’sage is equal to twice B’s age ; 20 years ago A’s age was fur times B’s age. What are their ages? Aa3. A690 years, B 30 years. 7. Iffrom 3 times a certain number we subtract 8, half the remainder will be equal to the number itself diminished by 2; whatis the numer? Ans, 4 8. A droversold from a flock of sheep one half, and 2 more, he then seld half the remainder and 2 more, and then he had 22 left; bow many had he at first? Ans 100. 9. A steamer plying between St. Louis and Quiccy requires 26 hours to make the round trip; if the boat runs 10 miles an hour against tLe current and 16 miles with it, whatis the distance between the two cities? Ans. 160 miles. 10. A merchant gains 14 par cent. on his capita! ; when he finds that he has $5,436 ; what was his capital? Answer, $7,400 THE IDEAL CLAS3 RECITATION, An ideal recitation would beoae con- dueted by «s wide-sawake, enthusiastic teacher, vigorous iu mird and body. I weuld be conducted Jargely upon tke in- dividual plan, and when questions were asked, they would be addreseed to pupils without regard to their position in clase, or avy way by which the individual could tell,“Iam to be asked the next question.” Nor would the questien me- thed prevailthrougboot. Instead, a topie would be suggested and a pupil required to enlarge upon it, or a discussion would be provoked and indulged in. Thia recita- tion would be partly cral and partly writ- tes, and each member of theclass would stand or si} naturally and easily, obeying every signal er command promptly, quiet- ly and politely, giving the answer in com- plete sentewces framedin his own word-. ebiainiug permission of the teacher in every instance before venturnisg any ob- servation. During the recitativou a great deal more ascuid be learned than is found in the worde of the aveigued text Or the re- e’tation is «failure. Thronghoot ali, each pupi! ebould be kept interested aud enthu- aa-tic, without noise or flurry. Thie ie what a would cai! aa idea! recitation. THE ARTY OF PUNCTEATION. Punctuation ofien leads to the detection of gram matica! and of rhetorics! errors, aad, for this reasov, if for pe ether, should net be neglected. The object of of punctuation ist» shew the relatiovehip of words aed of clauses, aud to make their meavirg tobe undersivod clearly. The wo\ion thst punctuation prints are em- ployed fer the purpose« of elocutioa is an entirely erroneous one. The primal ob- ject of the points is to make the gram - mation! divisions. Unless thie otj-ct is kept in view and is acted upon, grave errors are Jinble to ensue; and not enly wil! the priociples of elocut.on be violated conttently, bot the meanings of the sen- ternces used wi'l be frequently lost or mis« naderstood. Remember that punctuation is entirely indemendent of elocutioa, aad act upou the remembrance. Teach pupils to properly pnnoctuatea!! their writien work. There are many cases in which a change of peints completel, alters the sentiment. In proof of thie, the story ie told of as English stztesman that freed himeelf from an embarrassing position by taking ad~« vantage of this fact. Having charged an officer of the goveroment with dishoneaty’ the statesman was required by Parlia- | ment,usder a Leavy penalty, publiely to retract the accusation in the Heuse of Commons. At the appointed time, he appeared with a written recantation which he read aloud as fellows: “ I said he was diehonest,it is true; and I sm sorry fer it.” This was satisfactory ; but what was the surprise of Parliament, the followiag day, to see the recantation printed inthe papers thus: “IT eaid he was dishonest ; itis trae, and 1 am sorry for it.” By a single transposition ef the comma and ofthe semi-colon, the ingesieus slan- dever represented himeelf te the country not only as not having made any recantes tion, but evem as having resterated the charge in the very teeth of Parliame :t. TWOOCOMPOSITIONS BY A LITTLE GIRL. A few weeks ago while examining «cme v TRS TE RR Aa OT ET eS PS Gets fF under my charge, I founi tiose two com- positions written™by a little ten year o'd girl ; BOYS. ¥ I do not kaow very much about boys aa | 4 fj f : “ 5 Seam , 7 never had the misfortune to havea brother ih £ : \ H but what I do know woul! l * ehacs * ingtothem. When | ial [ ul ay i. ther are known by t+ dirty faces aud Bat when they Jeave off wearing bands, skirts aad appear witb their first pini- they remiail me of young roosters. But after a few years wien they begin to go with girls they appeur with leng pants and a white collar up to their ears. GIRLS. | IhGs Girls are much nicer than boya, they have long cur!s and softer skin and rosy ebeeks. Some havea few freckles, while the boys have pimples. Girls would rather have freckles than pimples. Some are very proud. Girl’s work is not so hard as boys. They help their mothers in the house to sew, to knit, and some learn to play the piano. Boys use bad words. The girls donot. Some use slang. They do not like bad boys, but like good boys. G. J. MeCormac, St. Geerge’s, Feb. 17th, 1900. +e Proviveo For.—Hen. James McShane hae received the appointment of harbor master of Montreal at a salary of $3,000 a year. Hore. Licayses Raisep,—The Quebec Government is credited with an intention to raise the liquer license fee for hotels to $1,000 Orpers Fer Har.—It is said that or- ders for hay of 3,000 tows each have been received in Canada from the British War Office for December, January, February and March shipment. ne A Hsavyrwsicut.— A Montreal man named Phileas Desjardins is the father of & baby boy, age sevea months, which weighs 52 pounds. A four year old;brother does not weigh asmuch. The -child is strongaod healthy. The father weighs 150 aad the mother 130 pouads. NOTES AND COMMENTS. —Ic answer to a question as 10 whether the Colonial Governments wi!l bs con. sulted before proposing the scheme ofa permanent reorganization of the forces of the Empire, Mr. Wyudbam, Parliamen- tary Secretsry of Staie for Wer, said it had already been proposed, and the Im- perial Government would await, and, if need be, invite, an expression of colonial Opinion ou thatand kindred questions. THE MOTHER with a nursing baby has two lives to support. Her flesh, strength and vitality are taxed to the utmost, and must be maintained or both will surely fail. scotls Emulsion. will keep up the mother’s strength and vitality. It also enriches. the baby’s nourish- ment, and supplies the ele- ments necessary for proper growth and development of bones, teeth and tissue. . ent $1.00, sii dreggiom, SCOTT'S BOWNE Chenin Toceute. The Inland Navigation Company (AMITED) The eonual general meeting of The Inland Navigation Company, (Limited) will be held in the room (upstairs) in Mr. Joho McERachern building corner of Queen aod King Sireete,Charlottetown, on Thursday the 22nd of February next at 3 o’clock, p. m. L. C. OWEN, Secretary. January 30th, 1900. eod td. Only One More Month —— Our celery will only hold out about one month. Some of the wise ones are order- inbg @ quantity to be kept in reserve for tnem. We nave held on to the best for the last (the famous English Red Celery.) In this respect we resemble children who keep the most dainty part of their lunch to the last and at the rate it is going the time will soon come when there will nat even bea last. The moral to the above is quite plain;o0 need to read between the lines it is enjoy it while it lasts, We aleo have Hubbard Squash, Cod and Islaud Cranberries, Spanish & Cesadian onions, Brusselis sproute, red & White cabbage, carrots, beets, parsmips, turnips, beans, peas, parsley, etc. Lettuce and mushroom ipfa few days at Gays Stalls Market. composition work in one of the szhoels J. J. GAY & SON, Now you Ladies Nacques Good at $5.25 better at $3.85 “¢ 7.25 <= s«4 88 “ eee “« 6,83 “614,25 os 9.49 These are not last years goods. TT, Sheeting 28e sheeting 72 in. wide l6c 30c °* manu .* oe 35¢ a . © ae l6¢ Pillow Cotton 13hc Its cheaper to get three sheets here than to get three in the wind, Table Linens 40 in wide worth 25c for 124c 45 in ’ 26e “ 2c 54 in 7 40c “ 30¢e 62.in * 63c * 45¢ Luxury is cheap at these prices. Cotton Towels 12x18 Towels 242 each. 14x30 Towels 4c each. 18x35 Towels 6c each. 18x30 Towels 8 each, Keep your face dry forj24c. Pu 6c ees ee f U then the centre of civilization, may say ALL ROADS LEAD TO PROWSE BROS , the centre of attraction for Bargain Hunters. Undarclothing Men's 63ce wool linders 38c. 6 79¢ ‘is 85c 66 sé 1.00 ‘. Warm friends tor day, (} il rT Once it Was Said Next week we will take stock, this week we will give bargains that will open the eyes of the most hardened bargain hunters. Here’s a few, but there are others. 50c. 59e, (4c, a cold~ Mens Gaps Cloth Caps 50c now 34e “ 7de * 50e. e 1.00 “ 69¢. ; Fu: Caps 1.75 “ 99e. = Keep your ears warm and you’re all warm. —_— — children’s Reefers Winter Reefers $1.40 for 94c Winter Ulsters $1.75 for $1.15 Winter Ulsters @3.50 for $2.34. Winter Ulsters $4.50 for $3 00. Defend your against the cold. Linen Goods 18x24 in Towels 5c each, 18x24 in Towels 74c each, 18x40 in Towels 10c each. 22x42 in Towels l5c each, These goods at prices quoted are for little purses; satisfaction every time or your money back, if otherwise. Buyiag here means spending money right. PROWSE childrea marked marked marked marked . —. help BROS |