T r H r f' J ‘_-ig fra? or l we ,s ‘vs-1-~n»> ~~~-_» ~ ,_ _ ' ' “ ` ""` 'f "T ¢-~ _ s'*+__§_'_'l};f~;5-"»§.‘>!°*` __ _._ ‘ . _..--.__-_.__.,_ -,_ - . -_.an-___ _ , V _-. _ f...,=";_: r~':_`:cf -'n17_'_;_\;:“ '_' -_-._.`.;.‘__._`“;_‘..{»a3_;-_’_é..,_5';`~",". I..-.;»“'€_v__§;_ l` , . r was summon; _,_ ~» _llll Pl3SlNE SHIPS i How These Passing Ships of Human Life May Be Rescued From the Shoals and Storms and Stress of Living--‘Human Derelicts -The 'Safe Harbor of Peace at the Close of the Christ- ian’s Life. _ Entered aceordi gms t fP ll , ada. in the yea? 1903, sy gVill\i;n:!l!;;§§f$fG;=- WDW- N U10 Delft of Azria illure. Ottawa. Chiwso. July 19.-Tho glorloo of the sea and its moving panorama of white sails furnish a theme for tho preacher at this season, when thc multitudes are leaving the heated cities for seashore and lake. The text is Psalm civ., 26, “There go the ships." » I always feel sorry for one who has not been lullabied to sleep by the low m0*-“U18 50118 Of Y-110' 988. Fascinating is the seashore on account of its endless variety. The ocean's beauty ll D¢VB!‘ twice the same. Sometimes its colors are a white foam or a light green or a dark emerald or blue and black. Sometimes its surface is covered with broad highways of gold, when light of the rising sun gilds' lt. or with that other highway of silver, when, in the 'midnight hour] the Bush of the moon' is reflected up- on lt. Sometimes the sea. will do; _nothing but smile. Like a gold,-.,n_ haired baby, its cheeks are dimpled and wrinkled, as though it is trying to keep back a hearty"laugh_ It wm look as harmless. as some innocent lake cuddled up in the huge lap of 9, crooked backed mountain. Then the sea gulls, as white doves of penoo, .Will hover over it. l But. eff-¢l_' 9-ll._ one of the most ab- sorbing diversions of the _summer f0l11'iSl'-8 living by the Seashore is to watch the passing of the ships. For over a quarter of a century my pri- Vi1°8° W8-I to lpend every summer by the Atlantic coast. My 'father's country home was near the end of ' ns Inland. at n mon town oollou ' -~ Hampton. There, upon tho dunes, I used to lie hour after ' OW. watching the great tteamers the craft heading toward, ew York Narrows--~or_starting upon their long trips to thef dist¢1t has-._; I-» of the world( fused to watch them just as the psalmist did when '- dried out in thefiords of 'my "There go the ships." How, _ Voyages are. with their - idents, their calgns _ and C ‘ r iw,” ‘ an nm? of`IoIoil ihleli !'__clt` as "well as among the arehipel be provided for thehungry "of li Whoeantolleakelookant _ _-_ fmt calmly sleepin; ln whether the voyage of its life lwill be like the ship skillfully steered safe into lm-bor or like tho snip an-oloso.“ ly na-viitated that strikes the sunken _tho stern. _Yon will also nm the C ella-UDB Of the City in which that ves- lmhst.o£_it is _Spent in loading and rock or by collision with another' Shi? _le shattered and sink into the 401113? of the sea? Let us see this __ morning what those points of re- * semblance are-what kind of a ship each human being ought to be, what I kind of cargo he is carrying and to- _ ward what kind of a port he shomdl be heading. The ships! The ships! There 8° 1-he Ships! There go the ships! _ p human vessel should be dis- tmguished by some dag. Going down to New York harbor and examining U19 Shipping. you will find the name of each vessel clearly marked upon eel is registered. And if upon .the lllgh seas two _ships approg,ch_ 'ewh other, one _captain will put the trum- Pet to his lips and call: "Ship ahoy! Ship ahoyi ~ _What shi is that 9." p I , Then the other captain will call" ’ back! "The Kensington of Antwerp, _ bound for»New York! What B'hipVis,‘l thot? ’ The meaning of all this? Simply that when a’ ship is register»_§ ed in a certain country that Govern- i ment pledges itself to protect that ship. British ship is under British protection; a French ship is unger _ F1°°D~0h Protection; a Germanship is under German protection; an Ammi- can ship is under American proteol tion. Therefore, if a nation dare to lnolest any foreign. ship upon _gho high seas, that nation must answer ‘l for the insult to the nog which is Uyinggbove the stern of the outrag- ed v`ess l. 1 }S`Q.ch humqn vessel always carries i lf valuable fargo. Have you l l¢<>l>ve¢._1o consider” Why n grool ~ Cuns1~d.or- white sun- u-nnsouontio steamer spends as much time by her Spell as in traveling the high seas? 1 __f»$: l-Wg _of that time `ust be ` given to cleaning up the ship, but _ unloading the_ cargoes. The _massive `_ walls of a building rests upon deep ` £ounda.t’¥ms.~_ _ The huge masts and upper decks of a great steamer must _ llundrmg. ___.,iu ~ on _.lQay‘nie3.ll deathaaliheto passengers and .crew and deatrruction to all the freight. _ Does not each human craf-t.._.cerry a valuable cargo? What about the mon- ey which is entrusted to a man's care? Ifthecashlerolla think ab- sconds and the bank has to close its door who suffers? ls ist hot the poor widow and orphan, the old man rwho has trustfully placed in the bank the savings of a lifetime so ohat he can have something in his .dd age and money enough to buy him a casket and a grave when he is dead? What happens when a hu- man craft founders and sinks into the great sea of sin? Does it not nearly always destroy many human lives which are dependent ,upon its existence? What became of nearly all the ships' crews and passengers which were sunken at sea? Those ships not only went down, _but they took most of their passengers and crews with them. Oh, I know life- boats and life preservers are provid- ed by law on every boat to guard against accidents. But, as? a._ rule, they do but little good. By the time the hurricane has completed its work the lifeboats are splinterred, and by the time the tornado of sin has wrecked a human craft it not only destroys a father and a hus- band, but also all those whose ex- istences are dependent upon his life. Let us, as human crafts, beware how we allow ourselves to sinlgjinto the sea of sin and destroy thosef loved ones who are standing upon our up- per decks. _ _ The human vessels should be will- ing to “stop and help those sister crafts which are lifting their signals of- distress. Why? Because distress and need give a man an inalienable claim on the help of his brother. Nowhere is that claim recognized so surely and so promptly as on the high seas. A sailor on the ocean _Will never turnfa de_af’._ear'_to a booming 'gun or gut his eye tp an inverted flag or. ` a wnlto nogdkorohiol or oloul fluttering over a "raft or a derelict. No sooner doestho lookout cry, “Ship on starboard bow, and l_ be- lieve it a wreck!" than the captefiii and, the mates and the boatswalns andthe common sailors will turn their anxious faoes, toward the black object floating upon the edge of the horizon. If thereshould be but one ii ri the fore _ _ __ are crowding abr When the'“¢\ioatf-‘lteai =*'\f°`¥ sm1~1edr.°ut_ offhar.whs_rl the llllttle tugs shriek andpui! and grunt. The multitudes wbo“have 'come to bid their friends' goodby ywawe their handkerchiefs The river _boats sa- ‘lutn the huge ship `a`s'8he_ slowly moves down the bay. But after ' awhile the surrounding ships _`b'o"comb lessland less in numbers. Then if _ __ then 1' ‘tl1efwalls'of_youf you are sailing upon the Paciilc,__or even upon the Atlantic, you may go days and weeks and not sight anoth- er craft. .lf you are on a_ sailing ship you will get head winds, as well as those from the stern. 'Then you, as ~a sailing master, will have to tack and beat up against those head winds. You will have but one pur- pose-always working ahead toward' the harbor, always pressing toward the one destination to which you wish to go. The voyage _ of the Christians' life is very similar to a Sailing ship’s journey acres the seas. _ ‘ f Similarly, in reference to its soli- tariness. When we start out we have _plenty of friends. But if we deter-. mine to do rlght,if we are set in _our purpose to follow the course which Christ- has laid out for us, we shall _ find that our friends will often leave, _ us, one `by one. " . Similar* f ln aveference tothe head winds ~andx-side currents which- -have to be fought against. It would not he so bad if in the voyage of life _tho Human vessel ~ and to make leo' .ionmey alone, _and that was.-_ all. _But no sooner do our friends ,begin 50 leave our sides than thehurri- canes of abuse and the under-currents? of slander begin to work -againstns. _ I When as noted reformer. at the_end of his life was _given a great popular demonstratim of approval and pro- sented with a beautiful gold watch ,he stood looking’-at it withembar- rassment. Then he said. with ' a lsmile, _"Friends, 'if it hadbeen f 1 brfckbat or a bad ogg hurled at me _I would know~_w,hat to _(lo. but this beautiful watch in m hand"abso‘- ,lutely takes away my breath." Ahfr my Christian! brethren. ~witli _such ilonellnesg »_whic_h -must be _‘endured _and with, such hurricanes of 'abuse ,1'h1.tt!5_ Y 6 1 _ [from Italy, art treasures as wel! as mi ‘hiP- I ¥1¢VBl”Yet he!-f¢l_0f lilly. __ °n 9’ t °‘ '_ “ned Do you expensive furniture and clothes. _I *fav*-dn ¢=6ml>¢lli1is“‘hiS °§ll°\`°'¢° $0, '°°'°‘“ °"°“”"" V - ~ lt x-eq f “_ Au that th t "{”0f"l¥¢9\iB~-Gllrlitlhn... stlhebecilgwhdisgdlolhllgg __l:\.v?:o do under such oondi‘;.io:e‘a; 3;! a long cargoesfof ooalfto X697 "°l“nl»°°!`9 8-#fl 0V01_’Y me' mqnfh'--’ - 9'” Xen in__mot1on. _One is amazed at the 50”, 111° mlllned °"‘?'_TY___;_‘7§_§}§I mg.; 1 °' f°"'..:'.r:l;°".”'”f°“~_ “‘°“..i"~‘»i"..f~ee.. _.. -ie' ‘“““ _ _ _ em H.car-l __-_.Dyk _. _t il _ - __ rlu at iigmbgnlng of ‘my h° aaron-the Atlantic. The great stom- ` l` 51' C 019 1 di5'"`°!li`1_'_ och! of the furnaces seein to be in- hi* 53°!! bl'°fl1l‘°U. Gi 5¢¥19.1i`l*°»"°"3i'”'u‘°; “puny L latlable. Their hunger is never sat# “PUD UN? ‘Q8-i'f;'Y1§° h¢?_tl:°99f;71h;" g?£”r!e»`}6'f_£‘g iggg _Rohn _ _ ' d' trees no__ _w 'r- _ ° ken are shov;ln;`the ;t?n £3? els di'sail:ei‘-?illi‘f0k `a;d"h'owl 4!‘9"lU*¢5¢ *hi-1** _- W t _ land swee u the streets of a' "'t»'7'9df.i_H__-I dsyfout-»-Butha-ahaiit1j-he. l>i>, _she 8-' - _ _ ` ` ` a dark, funnelshap- “ _ * . _"32 f' "-1 .'_~ 1' ‘f'..L’..__°».§_.’-_f_9 __ __ . _ _ .pooolo-sew =» _ duet _ere not to bo numbered by tho la air -sn' s an1;roko..nn¢l._.oo-_,n1g1l_t'{ Then' but by tho. hundreds. 'rho guoyee su-oats and buried ed. at ours was ails gvgfqkg gmgmg gkyipg t,hg_ g undef the debrig, did lli0":j1lBt '0llt8ld8 01-NGK, _ .v _ ,' . _~ _ QQ __ f I P f als Reason WHY 21,; °,‘f;“ 1 Pllnce llul!s!l,i illicit- l ' _._ _ l _ _"_ and dark side, i _ z . Christo ~!\»r Bishop Recommends Dod.i’o ‘morally diseased l llllll lllllllllllllllll lllll sslllll»l905~ Upon ln' the Manliml Provinces _-l - "` _ ~1 l l- _ 4 ,r To be held on the grounds of the Ch’town. Driving Park, and Provincial Exhibition As- sociatlon*'at Clftowh on Tuesday, Wednesday, Thurs iday ‘audi Friday, 22nd, 23rd, 24lh~3Il(l 2501 |903- _ The largest prize list yet. UVCI lll M13.; Live stock, dairy i poultry entries close `1 all other entries closébn Two Days I-Ioirsc Racing Wldmday and lllmm. 23rd and 24tI| Supl-5 The fastest classes ever std$ _ _7 'f the Island. 5.? .t $1.350-00. .l-N »P_~UR5E§ The very lowest -Ex more oodl_Po_-s¢ng¢i~=}’_on__ _ boat andlailwuyég A ` ' ” Special ettre§:t_ions_ _int f1'_°11¥ rho efon<1sfnol f°_11<=l~ There are father. ;;;y___siste_1`_°`s! 1 Yee, there lthey all are." tlieltears of joy m,n,ny@°|.s_._ro1led_1oygn”_in cheeks? 'That is the and the wayrtho Christ'¥a`n`v`6`y`R‘e!'“ishall enter.. ~ < %tEBM The old cop.. the~h_ii!bor of peace. The p - s of my-rachel-o-_-chin-aa.iuhicEr_§..#P...!=\lir b° ‘ ' ' omluhoocl-_.fa-Ho_»____s¢l._p»d__b°t$__ I meh; ° '¢°fm- ap' _ _-.L _ _ __’_.."__ I _ - had upon lctgre com but ‘thhlt will sfmount to nothing memorative and again story. ' He had After a l»_ this wonderful the far east was homo: ay_in__1i1S imperative on high.; a divine Aloicel “T b I _ _ nt gl _ _ ._ _ __ get wulnnn l to v "j""'es'.' _H9 “all our will come do'wn=to~meet naf=.f0h._§ow many. many, many deqrl ‘ are there! aoonunnlé _qpriémflgivv °° the HG ` 1 - '”`; days-_!_r°.le _banks _I _der _if we will know butldwnetthmkt literaidy true __-Ido. can see our own t is w for the just a lit- that great Bet, mark ~yo_\i,-. one wont upon tilamtvclcelrii their We" °! shining above. sea was calm and the sails The back! ly did this at Captain i dinmand to shi and sailors he was but Paoli* and woman il gill some sin up- oflife v°y9»3‘fU to-day I 07 it is God that for a of life is only meet we sail ‘_ Pig' is .5 time. no fgéttei' liowit' be ~ _ _.QI F lf. ffintfhifil YW forever- reckon- Nover allow 7°" _ star ova' _+ _ __ not be on,e_of__tli'e"`i A _ 7 _. A *Q _ _ _j../__,~.f. .‘~ ,t__i=ein_’s§1 onee.=~#I»wondol-_ill they will; ;’cry"'w!_ien‘ we"wave A-back. The_\_Bibl6 iq.yi"tnero»’ -an~;flno.emro in heavlin, 1" f ' ' '_ .lmcgtotomon ; ‘lf 'JA ° dear anddcltro_v- DV* frolll yoW_ _ _ _ . 13; (IF _ 1", _"`l“"d°;'~*‘_",»‘y 5;' _ ' -_ - N' '*~ 1-.l.~’.\»!‘ ,u 'f 4, 1 ., - ~_, _ _ __ ._ ‘ ' ' ~ 1 -~- ~~;Qu"<.{i1l be -i Summer iéiillérwsef, 1 .summer coats and keep you cool exeép 'ng 1 e _ _ _ _ 1 Z > @8188 use, nor If you can to he “MQ” :ffl -- "a» .4 l Ai ills ~ l v J '_ _ U _ P islmecessary _ ____ Weevei=1i= elileeile ihioghv iles may gf Hqg toil? g Icrng '~"~'* =“-»_‘~_c¢un_~ When you P*_== Ffnlcaia C’“f'm ' Patics § *”°R°_6st meets ..,- ..v~.~»a~»o-.._,_,’__' tollgllm sormuw rm o . . . . . _ ‘ Bolloa Hoo T°nev= _- - Roast chi- - 25c r~»° is L 4; ‘ldl ...i ' _ '°°'v~ 'Q51 C C o I Ill 'Qi :Il I on “1 needalmnchgotothc in cormZ."'fl l5cpcrlh. 3 15c lb __ ‘ _...sm __ V* IP *Mk ml' bf;:iJ_ I- -io 5¢m.§il’l¢ Prices T* ,r6li?PRlETOR ‘i----:_ --1:i....~a.. Q1 WVE'VVII-:I-I f }Yf7 We haven. '-1 ». A; “»-mi i xl I