=. THF DaiLY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, OSTOBER 10 1898 THE (AILY EXAMINER Resued every afternoon from the office of the Examiner Publishing Co. oe - RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION, (IN ADVANCE) Year, - - + + 2 «© = © « $4,00 Moasths, - 2 oe ee ee Months,- - - © © © «© «= 10 ome Month, - + = = © © e© @ 0,35 Sent id to any part of Canada or he Unhed States. THE WEEKLY EXAMINER is lewued overy Friday morning. It is made of matier which has appeated in the Daily, and is a first-class newspaper, con- taining all the latest news, Subscription 51.00 ayee. J. J. JOHNSTON Real Estate Agent Real Estate boughtand cold on Commission, Estates Managed. Houses Rented. Rents Colleeted. Stamper Block Coarlottetown, P.E. I. PROPERTY FOR SALE FOR SALE.—On Upper Great George Stt near Tierney’s c -rner, house and Jot 8) x40 ft can b» pure .ased for $w).00, Apply to JJ Johnston, Kral Estate Agent, Stamper Biock} harlotteto wn. FOR SACLE,—Plot of land, 93x38 ft, on up- per Powna! -treet. excellent location, price $140.00, IS Johnston, Real Estate Agent, FOR SALI)—Three acres vf landin Char- lottetown, common, near residence of Arthur Peters, Esq. will be sold cheap anion easy terms, JJ Johnston, Stamper Bluck. FOR SAL E—about four (4) acres of landin the City of ( harlottetown, can be d vided in totwenty building lots, a genuine Bargain, J 3 Johnston, Stamper Block FOR SALE.—In the business centre of Chariottetown, a targe three story house with lot $432 ft; also excellent ou’ buildings, a suitable place for a first class boarding house, Wi)| be so'd chear. Apply to J J Johnston, Eeal Estate Agent. POR SALE OR EXCHANGE—A double tenementhouse on ‘‘hestnut Street, now in eourse of erection. Will be completed in one month. Willbe sold cheapor exchanged for property in # nother part of the city. J Johnston, heal Estate Agent. POR SAL!Ii— Heous* and lot on uoper Pow- nal Street, near Euston Street. Price $350.00 J J Johnston, Stamper Biock. FOR EXCHANGE.-—A three tenement hous,, situa'e on Euston Street, newly built, brings ia a \arge rent, will be exchanged for a suitable place in another vart ofthe city J J Johnstoi, Real Estate Agent. FOR SAL'—A two story double tenemen- house on Bishop Street, each tenement eon- tainssix rooms and large yard. Apply to J J Johnston, S(amper Block, Houses To Let. > en “T~ Dwelling hous? and shop on ijower oie at, house eontains eight rooms. Large warchouse attsched; everything in first cass condition. Reat $170.0), rent of house alone $100.00, Avply toJ J Johuston, Real Estate agent, Ch'town, TO LET.--On the corner of Prince and Water Strests. a house containing 13 rooms. This place is convenient to railway and boats Rent mederate. Apply toJ J Johnston, Real Estate Agent, FOR SALE OR TO LET. —That well known business hotelon Richmond “trest nearthe market, Thishotel contains 2 geod rooms and shop, all in good re air, good stabling for 20 horses, with large yard in conneetion, will be soli at a bargain on easv terms, or leased for a termof years. Apply wJJ Johnston, Real Es'ate agent. FOR SALE OR TO LET.—rhe large brick buliding si! uated near the corner of Queen and Dorchester Streets and containing 14 rooms with shop «nd office. This is one of the most substantia! brick houses in Chorlottetown and will be sold on easy terms or re ated cheap JJ Johnston Real Estate Agent. The large hallin th» brick build- Yueen Street, This hallis 65x20 hed in first class styls, with easy om Queen Street, a splendid lo- eation for a society hall. Rent very low, J] J Johnston, Real Estate Agent. TO LET.--On Kent Street, between Queen and Graat George Stre-ts.a carriage black- smith’s shop. ne of the best stardsin the ‘ity. Rent $3.00 per month. J J Johnston tizal Estate Agent, "O LET.--A house situated near Dundas Psolanade, containing lirooms aud large modern arched hall, This house is new and » autifully situated, and toa suitable tenant the rent will ba moderate. Apply to J. J. Sohnston, Real Estate Agent. Houses Wanted. cee TO LET- ing, On 132 feet, is flais approach fr WANTED TO PURCHASE,—A house in (harlottetown to cost about $690.0" dourie ‘enement |iouse prefered. Apply to J J John- ston Real state Agent. D TO PURCHASE.— A house with arn situsted in a publie part of the pay about $500.00 cash. J J Jobn- oer Block. D TOPURCHASE.—A hous? con- taining 7 or8 rooms situated in a respectable naict of the city or suburbs) House must be in good condition. Will pay a reasonable price. Apply to J J Johnston Real bstste ~ at. vANTE ‘h with ~ each ab Itcal Estate Agent, WANTED TO*RENT.—A farm of land for oeriod of five years. Farm to comprise any- nere from 50 to 100 acres, Will pay from ‘5.00 to $109.00 per year. Apply toJ J John- ~ on kea) Estate Agent, WANTI vard and city, Wil ->ton Stam WANTI D TO RENT.—Two sma!l houses asmal! shopin connection Rent out $5.00 per month, JJ Johnston | have several applications from parties for houses to rent rop?rty holders having \ want hoases to let can have them rented oy ipolying at ms office, J.J, JOHNETON, Real Estate Agent, Stamper Blocks, Ch’iown meetings at Port Hill and Irishtown.— Published by request :— It is hardly neveesary for me to say that the subject atloted to me is not a popular me and that it is rather difficult to offer auy suggestions ov the matter withyut in- jaring the tender feelings of some one. We are all apt to be a little touchy and deen it almost an infringement on our much boasted of individual liberty to be digtated to on the matter of what we should give to or withhold from the great cause of Christianity. We regard itas a question whichescn one should settle for bimself or berself, and which, in order to be settled fairly, requires a knowledge ofthe financial and social standing of the individual] and the thousand and one so-called claime of society, e'c,— upon the same, We:l this short paper is not intended to interfere in any way ¥ che freedom of thought or action of any one—but simply to point out a few thou- ghtson “Christian Giving’’—that may be beneficial to bo'h giver aod receiver— if put to a practical use. First, let me point out our daty to giv —as being two fold embracing Is', duty to God—2nd uuty to ourselves. It is a duty we owe toGod for common gratitude demands that we giveto Him something in return forall He has giventous. If there is anythiog we detest io our fzilow meo—it is the spirit of ingratitude. How soon do we withold our tavcrs from them if we see no return for our beveficiencea— and when we consider the Ipfinite love of God to the world in bestowing on us that unepeakeble gift of His only begotten som — wheo we consider that he is God—tbe only God -Lord of Heaven and earth— hand—guiding the destiny of natieos and of individuals -- with unerriog wisdom and accuracy—when we consiaerthat all we have and areand bope to be through time and eternity isfrom- Him, and thavevery moment we are partaking of Huis mercies-—when we consider all this can we conceive of avytbing more ut- grateful than our failure to recognizethe duty we owe toGod to give something to Him jn return for ali He has given ue. The grave, which is always receiving and never giving back, is not too strong 4 like~ ness of the indiyidual who is daily and hourly drinking ot the rivers of pleasure that flow unceasiogly from tbe loving hear» of the Patherun High and fails to recog- nize bis duty to give a portion back to God. Not that it ean be counted as & payment off holding the universe inthe hollow of His } ‘ CHRISTIAN GIVING. spoils, and Jacot aleo in showing his grat- -— itude forthe blessings whieh his faith A paper read by Mr James B Millman of | claimed, promises to give back to God one [rishtown, before the Church Conventioa | tenth of all he received from him. These appear tobave bee voluntary offerings based probably on a knowledge of God’s will in the matter; but when the children of Jsrae! were given their inberitance in the land of ‘unaan then ti'the-giving or the giving of one tenth became an established law as we read in Leviticns—27.3@. “A)! the tithe of the land whether of the seed of the land or of the fruit of the trees is the Lord’e, it is holy unto the Lord, and again in Dieut. 14.22—*Thon shal: truly tithe all the increase of thy seed that ithe fleld bringeth forth yearby year. Two or perhaps three sorts of tithe are mentiov- ed—the fiest was for the Levites for their matntenance and they in turn gave a tenth of the tithe given them by tbeir bretbern— The 2nd was for the Lord’s feasts and sacrifices and cben their was a the end of every ‘bird year a tithe to be given fur the poor to be eaten by them at their own dwellings—During Hezekishs reign we find kim cmmanding the people to give the portiox of the Priest: and Ley tes that they might be encomreged in the law of the Lord. The resml: is seeo in the words of the cheif priest to Hezekiabs in answer to bis inquiry concerning the heaps—Since the people began i bring the offering into the house of the Lord we bave bad enough to eat and have lef? plenty—for the Lord bath blessed the people and what is le fc is ine great store Later when the national) /ife was declin- ing and the practice of tithe offering was discontinued we read’ cf tne solemo question asked by Jebevah through hie prophet Malachi, “ wilka man rob God”— but ve have rcbbed) Me—and if the people say wherein have we robbed thee— He answers—“In tithes and cff-rings. Then follows the awfulbwords “Ye are cursed with a curse, for ye have robbed Me even this whole wsatioa”ihen the words “Bring ye all the ushers into the store-bouse that toere wav be meat ijn my house and prove me now here with saith the Lerd of Hosts, if wil} not open you the windows of heavea and pour you out & bleveing that there sbadl nos be rouns to veceive #. The cow of tinbe giving is not binding wpon us to day, as won the Jews of old, Christian giring @es not rest upon @ hard aod fast won law but it reste, upom privciple, upon eve, we live under a higher dispeosation than did the Jews, and: because we do so our re- sponsiility smd’ obligations: are gyearter. But though tithe giving is no®bindang upon | us a3 law, yet wecannot belp, vbsnking | that the system, if adopted today, wonid j the great debt we owe to Him. Could we grain Ofsand in the balance against the mighty iodebtedvess of man to God, but the world’s cannot suffice. God, in His great- ness, StOOps tO man’s Weakness and accepts the tiniest offering of love, and writes over it His words of approbasion,“well done good and faithfw) servavt.? Then “Christian Giving” i¢ a duty we owe to ourselves. ba our Lord’s sermm on the Mount He said “ive and it shall be givea unto yow— good measuze pressed down —shaken together and repuing over shall men give imto your bosom, Sor with the same mensure that ye mete witha), it shall be measured to you again” aud along the same line St Paul says: “Be wkich soweth sparingly, shall also xeap sparingly, aude he whieh soweth bountifully shalb reap also bouutifnlly. From this we gather that not not oaly is it aduty We ome to ourselves to give, but also to give liberallp im order to obtain a liberal reward. And although it may seem av inferior motive that would induce us to keep tbe reward in wiew—and it certainly is, if there is wo other higher movive—yet we read that Mores bad respect unto the srecOmpense of the reward—and if our Saviour himself touches on the matter of reward, as the verse just quoted s2ems to indicate, and if His faithful Apo-- tle also points out that the reaping shall be in comparison tothe sowing, surely it is not 80 very wrong for us to keep the eod in view and also to have respect unto the recompense of the reward, know- ing that what we lay out “ sball be paid us again.” God is nota poor paymaster. His word is full of instances of the lib- eral rewards given by Him to those who honored Him ani His cause; and even the cup of cold water given, out of love, to a thirsty soul is promised a rich re- ward. Then we should give cheerfullly ; as the apostle puts it, “ Every man according as he purporeth in his heart, eo let him give; not grudgingly or of necessity, for God Joveth a cheerful giver.” And surely it is much more pleasant to give cheerfully than otberwise,— more pleasant to our- selves, more honoring to God, How can He whoso freely gave Himeelf for mau’s redemption accept a reluctant gift with an approving smile or permit His bless~ ing to rest on either gift or giver? When He said “it is more blessed to give than to receive,” He surely meant a gif: of love aud cheerfuloees,—not that given “grudging!y or of necessity.” should give systematically and propor- tionately. In support of this we bave the apostle’s admonition, “Upon the firss day of the week let every one of you Jay by him in store as God hath prospered bim.” How many of us __ give, not in proportion as God hath prospered us, but in proportion § to . what our neighvor gives. EHitber our | pride willnot allow us to be outstripped by Mr So-and-so in the matter of givicg or we content ourselves with the thought that we give as much as he, and so are exempted from any further effort to give according as God hath prospered us. To the ancient Jews, God laid down and established a law on giving that was both proportionate and tystematic, a law that when followed brouglut a blessing to the nation and when neglected brought the op- posite of thie. We read of Abraham who when returning from the slaughter of the king’s met Melchisedec, Priest of the most give, nations, yes world’ wowld be as a) ‘our Chumohes and parishes, Then we | be of ipestimaple value for thenpopoegation } of the gespel aud for the mesatensace of |, Bat. how sad jit is thea so many refuse to adopt ana syx~ ‘tem—refase to newognize the eaime of the ceurch «pd-bes ipstitucions ; sand in: mak - og. Calowlattone Sor the necessary expanses of the years we ithey come and: gay first arive (0 pay the lewful Claims of wéir fellow~men,. strive to procare all the necessaries of ite with a good many lmxu- ries thrown in, aad then if anythiog:i# ieft piovely produce i ia ibe name@ofi *C Yinie~ than giving” an@expect to be placed vide by siae with the yoor widow veho gavwra!! spe bad-—ewen all her livimg. Is-thix following the imipecion of curr Bieaned Maeter—“tireely ye baye received— freely give ?Y And .now,, in. ceaehusion, iet me urge-1p- op our @uurab people the necessity far a revival ammoug us im this matterotgiwag, Tbe ueeds ofithe aarth are mamr uockare inereasing atime rolls on, Many of: our J parishes ae at presess receiving help foum tne mother oghures. With tne close of the century this grap’ will be -withdrawa and: we-willibe throws upon Oer omn. ne- sources, We regret this in a .aanner, and yet it isn real assistance tow the endiof developing the navwral qualitice-of a child to always treat Mas an infant. The Canadian Church should be self sustnin- ing; Her imianewshould be surely pact. It 18 not teaur eredit nor yet Sor our veal welfare that we have been reosiwing ‘tom the motherland, ihe money that shomld be expended ia, seuding the good. news of sal~ vation io heaibem lands or in. suppartieg tone church) in plages where supgort is meach more nesded, Avd not only should the Caadian church be able to support heraelf im main-~ ta.ning tbe parishes, colleges and imetitu- lioné-already organized, but. she shonld } al-o-have a very alive missionary zal in folowing cologsization through the length and b eadth of this great land. The in- heriteace of the Jews in Canase was scarcely greater, .or their possibilitics g2auder shan is oure today ip.thhis “Canaca of ours.” Letus then be up—and doing, les u@sr use ourselves andi awaken to the great Opportunities that are |yiag in our pathway on every side, the opporiunity ot lending a hand in the shapng or ‘he destiny of England’s great colony. Kag~ } lend stands today at the head of the class 26-the world’s greatest tationsa memi- wal tothe faithfuln ss aud energy cf the’ church that bevrs her same and which ‘bad a part—an important gone in putting | her forward as the most active wissionary pat oo in the world. ALL HEADACHES m whatever cause cured in half an hour by MOFFMANS HEADACHE POWDERS. 10 cents and 25 centgat a)! “~~ oriatg, a You may need a watch—one that can be relied upon. If so, we can show you some special good values in either Gold, Gold Filled or silver. Alsoa cheap line of Nickel Watches for the boys, G. H. TAYLOR jo _ High God, and gave him one tenth of need North Side Queen Square, ; ' ' } 4 4 -— Fall O'Coats Black, blue and brewn o’coats for men or Fall and Winter Ulster Brown wine fawn and grey uls‘ers all sizes fron» 22 that will fit a bov of three up to 46 breast that will fit the biggest man on the Island for $46.50. 5.00. 6.00. .700, 8.00, 9.06, 10.00, BL 00, 12,00 13.00, and 14,00. Hall and Winter Suits Mens Jeaxy suits im imported Scotch Canadian and Island tweeds Scotch serges English worsterds from $5.60 up to 18.00, OUR $10.00 | Scotch Serge suit is a Corker apd would cost $18.00 im any tailor shop in the eity. Don’t be foolish and throw away $8 but. drop im and see this suit be- fore you buy. FiT-REFORM™M Sce our $10 Fit-Referm O<coat blue beawer made and trimmed as well as cus- tom made owr $12 15 and 18 is such that you eannot find elsewere in the city, We have just opened the first shipment of fall and: winter swits 75 per cent of those goods are- made of the Scotch and English cloths UY DERCLOTHING Winter Underclothing from 40e a suit u No doubt. about the quality no doubt about the assortment, no doubt about the price, If you are sure you want underelothing we ean show it to you and sell it to you for ilessmomey than anyhouse in the trade, PROWSE BROS. The Wonderful Chean Men =” , youths $5.00, 6.00, 7.00, 8.00. 9.00, 10,00! | Harbor, Salmon River, Sheet ; returning will leave Halitaxe , : 3 Plant * $ > : ead | COMMENCING MAY (0th, / The favorite 8; §S. “HALL 4 |FAX” will leave Charlotty. ‘own for Roston 7a Every Tuesday, atl pm ‘calling at Hawkesbury a | Halifux. “' | RETURNING leave Boston every Satu e% neon. * 4 Passengers leaveing Chow - Wednesday morning via’ Pig — tow, can make close ; tion at Halifax with S. S. HALIFAX,” : Seiling Wednesday evening at }] i ae ; * iis ee a oa 5 ¥ . mi : Tiekets for sale at statiens P, B Railway. For further rates and all inform tion apply to H. L. Chipman, Gang ian Agent, at Halifax, or to W. W. CLA eg 4 “STR. CAMPANA? * Sailing Sailing rom Montreal from Ch mx at 2 p. m. aboutO p.m — & Monday f0th Oct Monday 3rd Oct Mondry 24th Oct Monday 17th Oct — Monday 7th Nov Monday 3st ¢ of Cailing at Summerside, Perce Gaspe § Mal Bay and Father Puint, Delighit ul — summer trip for tourists, Passenger accommedation unsurpassed, Freight — carried av competition rates, Eggs band- led with great care. s CARVELLBROS — | Beaver CoOARLOTTETOWN and LIVER DIRECT SERVICE It is proposed to sail the “LAKE WINNEPEG”, 3500 tons b- From From Charlottetown Sept. 20 Oct. 27 Nov. 26. The above steamer is fitted storage, und has modern imp for carrying live stock. A Excellent accommodation for past For éreight, passage, staterso¢ other information apply at the of N. RATTEN PICKFORD & se! - _ HALIFAX & CHARLOTTEVOM SEASON OF 1898. — 8.8. CITY OF GHENT will sailfram Uharlotietown every Friday at 10 &@s during the the season of 1+98, for sallice at Summerside, Port Port Hawkesbury, Arichat, Canto - Toes day at 6 p. m., makiog same ‘The Steamer has excellent passenger scoonke modation. Saloon amidships. Speci! — will be given this season. or further information apply @ W. W. CLARKE, Ageat a, Ch’town, May 13, 1898 ~_——. Ea. la Will be opened ot the P. BE LAND COMMERCIAL COL on Munday, October 3rd And will be continued th & season on Monday, Tuesday an@ © day evenings. Same courses as in dey classes. Apply at once. ISAAC OXENHAN, vee 227 dy tf