the Standard Article FOR USE |N ANY QUANTITY many ...,...,,...,_ -I 1=§if`f‘; ciiy. rece`ved by the direct fix in While Lead "5 Iiuiil Bin-reI|'| First Class..... . . . . . . . . ,.$io.5n Second Class .. _,_ _ ,_ ,, ____ _3_95 Return, First Class . . . . . . . . . i:.oo Excursion rate good for 30 days. “ye ,.3 ii you with holh - S. IIALIF/\X leaves (.Tii:irlotieio\\'i\ P"i“~'“"b .li-`f", ,Mud Huw amy ifrniiiy an ".»m\i'.».~iinwimsiiiiiw, ~ ~_."i" i _. .I . noiclilefor igiflish \\f`liile HAL" Ax ‘md nolllox' 4 Lifad if-ll hc” I' - Returning lczives il()S'1`ON Tiicsilays Bruce wan Q co. ziluoon. ccessors to A_ may fn co. ' T- NICOU- , . Ciiurluli -t iwn _ _ ,_ i i Agent, Charlottetown( ' ' -Q ‘° -2<1*f'h6'"- ' -."1 heap Groceries During the next twenty days the ceries and all shelf goods of.l3S. » ly & C0 will be sold out at greatly duced prices. Housekeepers will do ell to caliand share in the bargains hicli are being offered. io - i3drwtf mill' W i _will never- _yield .her poiiition; but M v V ~vv1' »\_/\, , f oc '\/\. Organ Recital § On The New V Organ First Methodist Church ` I cnantoriiziown Wednesday Evening. ilciober 19, 1910 ~ AT ago o‘cLoci< SHARP by ii. ii. wnsi-:u>oN, Mui. nic. icsnniii, r. ii. c. o Orgaiiist Metropolitriii Church, 'I`oi'onto Ontario ' soi.oisi‘s V Soprano, Mrs Covey, Halifax, N. S. Miss Hazel Breniner, Cliarlotteiown. Baritone, Mr J. VV. Berry, Cliarlottetowii. Adults tickets, 25 cents. Cliildrcn's tickets, i5cenls. For sale at all ilic City drugstorcs. io-d8,ii,i3,i5,i7, & ig- ' _,-\,\,\“»\_x\ g_._ X ».._-__,\_ -__f._ V.__ .W \ ~V~_(-\` /» /\/\_/\.'\/\/\/\/\.f\/‘_/~_,“_. .,'~_/\/‘_ ‘ r -\ - f- A fx/'\./\.*\,f\/';/\/\.r\f:.-__,-,'z/\/rs -cm-\.-uxe o r ",~_rv~./xnxe- _lil i-i__ ui uuui uiu (Continued From Page One.) shame? But, we must remember, we do not reiect their mlinistry-we ac- cept them for what they claim to be about. her, it would-humanly speak- ing#-end all hope of re-unionl with the 400 millions of Catholic and 0:- `thodox Christians, for they would never recognize any ministry, other than that conferred by the.b-ishops of thechurch. It is said, that Rome events move quickly' in these timesl Rome is in troubled waters; she has lost her hold on Italy* and France. and she is in dangeroi losing it in Spain-, Portugal and South America. It may he, that she will yet have to set her house in order, repudiate those, ac,cretions tothe Faith, once delivered to the Saints, wvith'which' she h-as become encumbered, and re- turn toa m-ore primitive purity of doctrine and worship. There is"noth- ing too hard for the Lord; and He will bring re-un-ion in His own good time, if we work and pray and wait for'it; but true un'ity will not come by sacrificing any essentials of the Christian faith, and, Apostolic Buc- cession is an essential; the very be- ing, the existence of the church de- pends upon it, nndit.is only the im- lportance of this doctrine that makes the position of our church in ony way defensible. Were it th-at we only claimed Episcopal Orders to be liet- ter than Prcsbyterial Orders, or Methodist Orders, then for the sake of unity and t-he greater good, we ought to ‘he ready to sacrifice them. The denominations are superior to us in some ways: They are better or- ganized, they have better discipline, they are more zealous in the cause of missions; we might gain mu;-h by uniting with them. But it is not a question of comparison, it is amat- ter, as I have said, touching the very existence of the church. The fact is, that until 400 years ago, no form of iivilinatioik, eglceptt tgihat liy liilshopsl, was ever ca o in e ciurc ; ant we cai-no-li depart from Catholic rulc, without endangering our position in Catholic Christendom. It has been claimed that Apostolic Succession is thc Casket, which contains all the doctrines of thc Catholic Church- destroy the casket, and the jewels become scattered and lost. Take the third basis' ofthe Quadrilateral, the two Sacraments, ‘as ordained by Christ Himself, Does Protestant Christendom today quench ortbellieve, that there are two . acramen s, gen- erally necessary for salvation? Take two Protestants in the same congre- gation, one_ who has been baptized and one who"has refused baptism as being unnecessary, and ask, all oth- er things being c<[.ual, whether the lattcr's salva}tion Mis cnda(~;1gered_ lily; the stand he est nn, an you wi he told no, it makes no diderence, baptis is a non-essential. And it is the salririe with the Holy Communion, it is a memcglriail stiilrfvilcab iitttingly ob; served b te ai- u, ii i is no bin-ding iipon all, and tibe :init wgio `has n-ever partaken o t e or ‘s Slipper is no worse off than those who- do. -The Sacraments to many are only oilitward foiéms, cogvcying no s ir tua grace, an may e use or rgjected, according to one’a taste and fancy. The same is true with the Creeds. Because Protestants do not recite the Creeds' in their ser- vices, they are practically unknown, and such doctrines as the Incarna- tion,the Descent into Hades, the Re- surrection, and the one Baptism for the remission of sins are repudiated by many, who are considered quite orthodox. Our church, because she ishtrue to he ast, must remain for t e pres- hnt iin isolation; but in lier isolation sho holds out both l1aI\‘dS. U19 One YD' wards Protestantism, and the other towards the disunited branches of the Catholic Church. It may hc many years before thésel iirégds nat; ras cd; but, case 0 , GY W iii; gprasped eveliitiially, and then once more a united' church _will raise ii united worship and profess a com- mon creod. Let mp concludecwith some words of the Bishop of bica- go, recently given at a Laymen's Missionary Conventionz- _ , “You have no right to give up any- ` "thing that has ever received the Di- “vine 'sanction and the Divine appro- s ' ~ lt` . If the “nappy-go-lucky-sl ip-it-on-a press-and-let-’er-go” kind of ad- vertising you a.re using is doing you some good doesn’t it seem reasonable to suppose tha.t°“something differ- f ent”--bright, convincing, thought-out and mailed regularly “direct” to your list will prove of much greater values i (This is intended only for the man who feels the bullet strike him). 3; I ly study Printing! I make 8. feature of. preparing printing that is profitable. That is,I make it profi- table to my patrons. I study types and effects- io- insure attractive ar- rangement, .and I believe you’il ap- preciate how I handle your work. Froimlcard to a. cataloguei want to ii; urs on your work. ' ‘ be registrnted subject to the condition _ 9 ‘that if he fails to pass the physical” lllz amend stint Telephone an examination given after such registra- _ l _._-1-1 i '°" pear for auch physical examinations . .. .`.¢n»sfn'n-ii»in,r., ,..ar-=_i. -I 'Qs “val It is not what we_can give up "in the cause oi unity, but what we "‘can give. I have a horror oi that “kind of unity that would be based "on a sort ofresiduiim. I am not "attracted hy unity on the basis of “-an irreducible minimum. I do not "want to belong to a ' church of min- "chnrchofmaximums: Maximum be~ “licfs, maxiums duties maxiums "dom. There are things we can give "up; hut nobody is asking anybody “to give up anything of value. We "can give up pride; we can give up "our ecclesiastical conceit; we can "give up our denominational jealous- "ies; we can! give up our inherited "prejudicea; and, perhaps, by the "grace of God, we can give up some "of our ignorance." n Pinsicni. 'rnsr Fon ru'ruRa Bos'mN orrv iianonlans. test for city laborers for future re- gistration for the labor service of the civil service commission. It reads as lollows i On and after the first Monday of |Dacomber, 1910, all applicants for re- gistration ior the lator service of the rity of Boston will he given physical examination. Applicants will ua exam- ined by nie Physical inspector. S practicable, before the next date cs- tablished by the regulations for re- lgisn-snon, foiiowing nie este ui an pllcation, If not examined before such rczlstraticn date, an applicant will tion date, his name will -be removed other applicants. . No man who fails to appear at thel physical examinations when notified will be certified for employment, hut he will receive a notice to appear at the next physical examination. lf he la-ils again to appear his name' will bl stricken from the list unless for cause shown the commission shall ot- m__.-...._.____. ._,.»; .._._,.- .___ .___ _ _ in ‘order of date oi, filing applications, 54011 Of U18 PHYSICHI inspector- will im- influence of, or ‘smelling of, liquor, provided, however, filing renewals of :pair preecnt _or future usefulness. ‘will also be rejected. oia applications win be nounen to np-' Ghfonw drlnkws. or nies who wil1| Every mini win nm. he required to pear for such examinations ahead ui ‘Wear “t the °x“ml“°"°“ lmdef 7-h° Dl’f»\‘0illlS Hffcliilfh. by a £0512 in lift- -Bolton and shouldsriug a sack ln; to ihiu _\y_iil_.be seventy-five poiind'i°§¥iQl\i.` ,lleh .fail- r`¢1°.°F°f9- herwise order. In general to: defects. eating liouc/rs and drugs. -" » jection on physical examination: liig. 1- (2) Amy disease of heart or lungs; or paralysis. <5, ' ~ ' ' -pi e., Itlli joints; loss of limb, linger or WHULE UUUNTY IS . , ‘ ruins /.iicnrs l RINGING WITH IT Wiaislitl /M "imums. I want to belong to.a, The physical examination ,will relate (a, Measurmeuts, weight and height. (li) Sight and bearing, and physical (c) Habits as to the use oi intoxi- _(d) General bodily condition, a-ndi ‘ -1 previous condition of he-alth. ' *(6) "Strength and endurance. » _The following will be cause for ‘re - - _»“' (1) Serious defects of sight or hear- ” Serious d°formit1es in s n zrsat toe, so as to impair present or luture usefulness; marked flat foot. (4) Hernia. . 1 (5) Severe ,varicose veins, of ul- cars. the lathei of Babyls Qw_n Soap that-softening, soothing effect . Q _ Pure oils and .,- Natural flower perfumes give to so grateful to sensitive s ins F or almost half a century the standard toilet ancl nursery Soap of Canada. . <6>_such other defect,