J. B; MACDGNALD’S, - a en apenas co nae ett PON A tN a HE KXAMINER. M¢ VOL. 7% — ” CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, 6 5 St ed Sg. SD Bi eS nnn * f) UEEN STREET. Readymade Clothing, . Custom-made Clothing, Shirts and Drawers, White and Colored Shirts, Hats and Caps, Worsted Coatings, > ———:0:-—— For For For For For For For Tweed Suitings, For Searfs, Ties and Collars, For Silk and Linen Handkerchiefs, For New, Stylish and Cheap Goods, Go T J. 8. MACDONALD’S, Oct. 11, 1330. Queen Street. aw | "hE = UALITY OF MY CRACKERS AND BISCUITS IS NIVERSALLY ACKNOWLEDGED TO BE THE BEST IN THE MARKET, Lvasmucn AS THEY ARE ALWAYS FRESH, ECEIVING THE GREATEST CARE AND ATTENTION in the MAKING of THEM, and WARRANTED to K cep FOR ANY LENGTH OF TIME. TRY THE FOLLOWING KINDS Bosrox CRACKER, QUEEN DROPS, PrALIAN FINGERS, COCOANUT JUMBLES, Sunranra LEMON, CARRAWAY TOPS, Gracky ELLS, ICED ARROWROOT, Usion MIXED, SUGAR JUMBLES, PraLiaN RATIFIES, VICTORIA SNAPS, Tux BISCUITS, GINGER SNAPS. JOHN QUIRK, City Steam Bakery, Prince Street. Charlottetown, Oct. 7, 1880. Qtr K © THE NEW CANADIAN BEVERAGE! KAOK A, The Only Satisfactory Substitute for Tea and Coffee. -Highly Recommended fer Reguiar tse at Ordinary Meals. THE VERY BEST ARTICLE FOR DIETARY USE EVER DISCOVERED. oj°i—-_--———- :0:-——— - QE injurious effects ‘which the continuos use of tea and coffee have on the human system are well known. ‘The most emment physicians advise thei patients to abstain from using either. Owing to the taste for these beverages which has been universally acquired, it has been found necessary to find a sub- stitute. Various substitutes have been tried, but Kaoka is the only one ever discovered which has been found to periect'y answer the purpose. Unlike Tea C and Coffee, it contains neither Theine nor Cafleine, nor any other poisonous principle whatever which can even by jong use, prove hurtful to the weakest coustitutions. It is especially recommended for sick persons and children. Families using white bread habitually should adopt Kaoka as their regular drink at meals. They will then have supplied to them the elements which, when taken into the system, go to form bones, nails, teeth, sinews and brains, and which have been separated from the fine flour of which the white bread 18 Thousands of persons who have been afflicted with Dyspepsia, Ner- sick Headache, &c., have been restored to altogether, and drinking with their The elements from made. vyousness, indigestion, Sleeplessuess, perfect health by eschewing tea aud cvitee i meals nothing but Kaoka. It contains no * chemicals. which it is mage are wheat and sugar, nothing more. j e For sale in pound and half-pound packets at the “Crown (revery, South Side Queen Square. ROBERTSON & CAMERON. Ch arlottetown, October 1, 1880—30 ins eod IK TS ESTABLISHED 1{82%5. CANADA CORDAGE FACTORY. OHN A. CONVERSE, MONTREAL. ANUFAOTURER OF CORDAGE of Every Description, Rope, ; Reniseiion, &e., &c., equal in quality to the best American. Jan, 7, 1880, Tarred Manilla Hawsers, Lebster Marlin, Tarred Hemp Rope, Houseline sw Prices on application. Ce Cad =! CF Ps ee eh I K ces of the includimg ail sizes Manil 4 ee a, ‘A King can mak’ a belted k sight, i A marquis, duke, and a’ that, > wine 7 7 . 2 but an honest man S&S AVWOONK WIS Mipviis, Ciuid faith he maunna fa’ that.”’ 4N ES#AY BY MISS MARIA LAWSON. i dee { heft re thi Teacher's Convention, 18s. A ro HONEST Man's THE NOBLEST! | WORK OF (« | truih iu this age of Rings, of Defaulters, of . and.small ¢ seein {that honesty, like many sweet and beauti- ‘ful thines, was becoming a little old-fashion- led? Have we not come to look upon it as (a rather inconvenient virtue,—one, the practice of which will provoke the smile of the wise of our generation, and cause us to Shams, great Voes it not scruputous neighbours ! : lineer many losses at the hands of our is not the apostolic @injunciion to ‘ Provide things honest in ithe sight of all men” less regarded in these {days than in those that are past } Perhaps ithe nearness of the evil makes it appear fyreater, and that the faults of our ances- jtors have a tendency to fade in the dis- jtance. { suppose that no one ever thought | , ie lived in the Golden age. However that may be, no one will deny that we have far too much dis- honesty in this, our day. The news- full of the « fraudulent | papers — are transactions of corporations, and of the dis honest failures of merchants. Our govern- ments are being continually,and as a matter of course, charged with dishonesty. In- deed, so many aad so grave are the charges of fraud and double-dealing brought ayainst our legislators that it has given rise to the common and most mischierous opinion that no politicicn can be an honest man. It will be an evil day for any country when those positians which, above ali others, require to be filled by men of the strictest honesty and the most sterling integrity, are eccupied by rogues and charlatans, and the morality of a country must have fallen very low, indeed, when in a self-governing community such a thing is allowed to AMMA? LA} pen. Again, is the standard of honeaty among our merchants as hich as it should be? it is said by many, I do not know with what degree of truth, that there are very few honest men, using the word in its strictest sense among them; that most, if not all, | traders are compelled to resort to artifices, }and to use means which, to the uninitiated, seem very far from being honest, not to say honorable. May not this be the reason why, when great temptations come, 80 many whom all the world had looked upon as men of integrity, commit deeds which send into the felon’s dock or drive them from their country to spend the rem nant of aruined life in banishment all that made lifedear tothem? But, bad as this is, there is a worse feature still in the ca No thoughtfal with the fact man who, by giving’ up his all to those to whom it is due, submits to a life of poverty, falls far lowe: in public favor than the dishonest debtor, who, by cheating his creditors, manages to keep up appearances. How many of the men or women who have formerly known the two men, will honor the former for the threadbare coat, which is a badge of integrity, and see in the elegant carriage or handsome house of the latter an evidence of diskpnesty ? Too often the occupant of the carriage receives the bows and smiles of the crowd, while the wearer of tha seedy garment is conscious of many an averted face or haughty stare. Such things ought not to be. have them observer can help being struck that the un- fortunate few instan- dishonesty ; more than What has all only taken a prevalence of but I dare say I have cited enough to make you say, * this to do with schools and school teach- ers?” Wecannot change these things if we would. We have not the power to con- vert the dishonest citizen, merchant, or politician into an honest member of society. We cannot prevent his wife or daughter from spending that which be- lonys, not to herself, but to the servants, ereditors or emp!uyers of her husband er father. Ne; have an influence, greater or less as it may be, upon the leg- istatars, the merchants, the tradesman, the wives and daughters of the future. Per- f none, except of parents, can it be «d so truly as of teachers, that— ‘© Our e¢hoes roll from soul to soul, Ac@ vow ferever and forever.” bnt we and honesty. or on that oP deceit and fraud } ‘he child’s first. experience of the world ’. There he must | others have rights as well as he. ; ; i 19 tie sex ing, in some sort, te himself. « Here, he tinds that others have property with which he has no right to meddle Here for the first time he enters into competition with his felléws, and learns to measure his strength with theirs. He must be kept from tyrannizing over those who are weaker than he, or froin over-reaching those who are stronger. Those teachers who think that all they have to do is to fill the minds of the boys and girls under their charge with a certain amount of what is called book-learning, make a great mis- take. Ifa boy is dishonest, 1 am very much inclined to think that the less he has of this the better for himself and the world. The apt scholar, who advances rapidly in his studies, but who, at the same time, gains a knowledge and_ acquires a taste for those little tricks and stratagems by which we learn to deceive one another, p.’—Have we forgotten this | less | froin | is our infaence tu be on the side of honor | learn that! Q At home i ue has looked wpon everything as belong- | — INDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1880. rould have 'olaying in the farm and the house. igratniate ourselves, and with good reason, {on the fact that the teachers of the present | day are Jess severe, more sympathetic and eee ee been much ficlds or in doing errands labout the } Letier employed We con- | NO. 125 aie me that in our system of giving merit marks, we may put too great a temptation in a child’s way. I appeal to teachers who have used our school registers to say | whether they always feel confident that the | pupils have taken the ; 7 , > c ‘thoughtful than these to whom our fathers | ; rye . o \ i went tos thool The atrecities of Doethe- 1. we flatter ourselves, can But are we careful » we refrain from cruelty, we try in every way to promote the principles of honesty and uprightness amenyg our children, and that the best means are taken to check, at the very out set, the slightest tendency in the opposite direction !? 1 will now proceed to speak of some of the ways in which IL think the evil of dishonesty shows itself in school life, and of some of the means @f checking it, hop- ing that what I drawing forth the opinions of wiser and more experienced teachers than myself. I will only allude to the subject of theft. In a well managed there is very little of this; the teacher is at ali | Vigilant, the offender is soon fuund out. I would only ask here whatis to be done with the boy or girl who, after being de- tected, persists in a course of dishonesty / Is it better to bear with such a one in the hope of ultimately deing hia or her some good, or is his influence so bad and the an- noyance he causes so great, that we must have recourse to that last resort of teachers —expulsion ! never enough ) iy ~~ {VOY 8 fia | be repeated. that, while school for if Next to this is tlie evil of truancy. This is a growing evil in our towns. in some , of course, the blame lies at the door of the teacher who makes the school a place to be hated. But in many instances boys find the freedom of the street or the fiel® more pleasant than the restraint of the best regulated schoolroom or the control of the kindest teacher. There is no demoralizer like truant-playing. The lad whe once commences it soon becomes a confirmed liar and an _ insubordinate, troublesome scholar ; while the evil ways that he learns on the street make him a dangerous companion for his schoolmates. In other cities I believe they have truant dtticers. Lf all parents and teachers did their duty, these should net be needed ; but almost any remedy is better than none. { think if some had the power to give the young men a week or two of hard work in the field or werkshop, it wonld go far towards curing them. Cages One of the most prevalent forms of dishonesty both in the world and in the school, is that of | shirking | work. Contracts are breken and wark neglected, or only half done. Few men or women are over-conscientious in the water of giving a fair equivalent in work for wages received. Here, 1 think, onr in- fluence can be exerted for good. If we take care ourselves to do our work faith- fully, to waste no time in school hours, to show that we are anxious that our work shall bé well done, that whether hard or easy, whether we are well-paid ov ill-paid, we shirk nothing which it is our duty to do,—our example will tell. But neither precept nor example will take the place of training. Let.the child be taught that he is sent to school to work—that it is due both to himself, his parents, and his teacher,that the allotted task shail be faith- fully performed, and then let the teacher see that it is done. I think it is well for the teacher, in setting a task, to take care that it is well within the capabilities ef the class. iuet it be short and easy. It is better that the clever pupil should finish his work in half the allotted time than that the stupid one should be so overwhelmed with the difficulty of accomplishing what he has been required to do ithat he has no heart to set about it. 1 wonld just say, by the way, that | consrder it much the better plan fer all young children to be set to learn their tas school if for no other reason than this. ‘he teacher has complete con- trol of the surroundings of the child who is studying. He can see that every child has a fair chance to learn his lesson, and is then in a position to judge whether or not he has done his best. ; 8 if} One of the greatest tempations to dis- honesty in the schoolroom, comes from the tendency which almost all children have, to copy. Ido not know of any-fault which is so hard to conqner, especiajly ina graded school where a large class is set to do the isame work. The clever industrious child | works the exercise, and his more stupid or more frequently, his more indolent neigh- bor. will obtain the benefit of nis work. | The result is that the Copyer besides acquir- ing a dishonest habit loses all his self reliance, and becomes a drag on the school. lt ishard to convince achild that it is ‘really wrong to ebtain help from his neigh- ‘bor and still harder to persuade the helper ' that he is doing his friend not a benefit but lan injury, by allowing him to copy his |work. Constant watchfulness and a little | wholesome severity, are perhaps the only ‘cures for this evil. Self reliance is the sworn foe of dishonesty. The man who is ‘confident that he can earn his own living is ‘not easily tempted te pick his neighbor's | pocket or forge his friend’s signature. The ‘child who can work his own exercise, wil ‘not ask his neighbor to heip him. Another | way of encouraging honesty, and its parent |honour, is by not allowing any child to put ‘the blame of his own faults on his neighbor's shoulders. If a scholar dees wrong, be should be taught that he and he alone, ‘must shoulder the responsibility and bear the punishment. Is there not also a danger number of marks / awarded them. Nay tan we even feel ‘sure that in the stress of scheel work, we ourselves are able to award each child his due. Does it not often happen that on hearing a scholar’s average in the evening 'we know that it does not give a fair repre- sentation of the day’s work ? say may have the effect of | Has not that child been taking a lesson in dishonesty far more injurious ts him than the knowledge he has gained has been beneficial. In a large school where it is impossible to look over each register, the mischief done in this way is sometimes, [ fear very great Yes, but some of our best teachers say that is the fauit, not of the system, but of the school. If there were a healthy publie opimion among the children, there would be no cheating. True enough, J too hope there is a day coming when we will need no locks to our doors, and when our prisons will be closed forever. Butwhowill saythat therefore the merchant of to-day should expose his goods to the thief or the banker allow his wold to glitter before the eyes of the robber Would either gentlemen be conferring a benefit on society by doing so! 1t appears to me that the teacher who gives his schol- ars a chance to ch2at him, adopts very much the sime plan as the shopkeeper did who allowed the halfpenee to lie around in apparently unnoticed corners, in order to test ihe honesty of his errand boy,—with this difference, that while the latter was sure to detect the thief, the former, is almost certain to be imposed upon by some one at least of his scholars. [ have but touched upon some of the temptations to, and a few of what I consider the remedies for, dishonesty in school life. In the mat- ter of merit marks I speak with great diffidence. After all, any promote the virtue means we use to of honesty among j our pupils, will be of little avail unless we are thoreughly upright, truthful and honest ourselves. if we in any way try to deceive ovr scholars let us not flatier ourselves that we will sueceed. Children, guileless as they are—perhaps on account of that very guile- lessness—are sure to detect deceit or fraud in others. If we make them ae- complices in eur attempts to deceive our friends or the public, let us beware. Deceit is easily learned, and he who teaches his scholars either to make others believe that they know more than they do, or to conceal their ignorance by a show of superficial knowledge, will be sure in the end to be found out and despised by his pupils, while by destroying their confidenee in him, he is taking the very best means to make them dishonest. Let us then, with frank, truthful earnestness, en- deavour to do our dyuty—arduons as it always is, very difficult as it sometimes must be, so that our scholars looking upon us will see examples of that honesty to which the Great Master gave the highest sanctien, and for which He gave the fullest precept when he said: “‘ Therefore, all things whatssever ye would that men shoulk them.” do unto you, do ye even s0 unto Remedy for Hard Times. Stop spending so much on fine clothes, rich food and style. Buy good, healthy food, cheaper and better clothing; get more real and substantial things of life every way, and especially stop the foolish habit of running after expensive and quack doctors or using 80 much of the vile humbug medicine that does you only harm, and makes the proprietors rich, but put your trust in the greatest of all simple pure remedies, ‘op Bitters that cures always at a trifling cost, and you will see bet- ter times and good health, Try itonce. Read of it in another column. - She Notices. —ee = <* Special A FEW copies of Kemshead’s Chemistry for sale at Netmes’, Sonth Side Market House. fo 15 Ay Tue Bust of Sir John McDonald and Hon Alex. McKenzie, for sale’ at the Family Grocery. R. K. Brace, Curw Mail Line Navy from Rubin & Hani’s. [se 18 New CLAsstes just received at Bremner Bri Bruck & McKenzie are showing a fine assortment of Enghsh and American Felt liats. Must be sold. tf—ect2 CuAMBers’ Latin Grammar, Smith’s smaller History of England, Hamin’s Trigonometry, at Bremner Bros. © AN elegant asssortment of Bibles, Hymns, Ancient and modern, Kirk Hymn Books, Prayer Books, Text Books, Poets, Gift Books, Toy Looks and miscelianeous litera- ture just opened at Bremner Bros. [07 lw eod iy you want your stoves, and stove-pipe fitted up, leave your orders, with C. F. Harris at City Tin Store, upper Queen st., and they will be promptly attended to. (sept 22, tf.) sweer Brier Cigarettes with crystal mouth- pieces, at Rubry & Harr’s. {sel8 Go aud see the Elephant at Boreham’s Boot Store. 825 lm oaw * ‘Tne cheapest and best Note paper, Envelo pes, Velvet Photograph frames, Toys and Dolls of every description at the Agricuitural Store. —R. May. (sep. 21, tf) ‘Tue best fine cut smoking tobacco in the Province is ‘‘ Prince Arthur,” and only sold at Rupin & Hakrt’s. {se 18 Smoke Rubies, fora mild and cheap smoke, from Rupin & Harr. {se 18 Tue Ladies are all delighted with Bore ham’s fine Walking Boots. 825 lm oaw 3 , arias 7 ai oe ae: aie fo pa ; Se Sia ia apa aaa a fi f J oe j f {NAO CR AE 5 5 y i] a /