. ` oauuic Dells. ~ Moatclm All Early _ Morning Maile _ ' W n' mo n' njv rouunnn wi . _ ° ' ‘T _ w1lflgIi‘§l'.Y.NowaoaaLnnLYi isinl ____, _ CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE‘_.EDWARD_ ISLAND, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29, I9I0, , _ {,,’_°§0’§,§§,°§f§§RB§\?'§§iL”{N*2X$§§E| - .-1. ~ . , V - ~~ .i .r . in imEii|cAis moulin oiiii-:AT coi=i-"ni in EGYPT .WEEKLY SERMON. i Boi ho\1EmENi snimoii Bv REV. HARRl§0N s”§ii?E§PEARiiN _ _ --__-ii, rf.; n, ' 1 -<-» ~-Colonel Roosevelt 'was right," 110111125. and the' Boy Scouts of Amer- "And He was put in a coffin in .to the agitated mind, to find some ture of life, some first boolo, some (Copr '1909 by Bradley Garretson (‘ true in modcin life Trusts _ _ , - _ f _ _ _ - - J. _ ' _ _ _ (1 ggr. 4 General Baden-Powell in speak-lice are working l- lei, E ypt." .Ge 1 ho .-26v. niet p t wh r th till e Genesi in th mu - ~ m Fm n lboYs’_ clubs, juvenilll; cti)i1li‘l-ll,L;.u::ll1ia.i~llies go reads thgslist lrathetic words in llisit gui? spiritg Bag-air? lute? Ealllnlzllill l real eilding 1iiase‘l‘linsom;)rl,il5ii‘=sll'1l:llJl:E » Ltd.) / ppratwns l~mv~e been wm)ed_the lam mg on the Scout movement in New York, “when he said in his letter of aeceptanco as vice-president of the Buy Scouts of America that ‘we need to put back some /of the wild man in-to the city l:oys.’ Still, you do not have to put aa much spirit and go into your boys as we have to in- la ours in England. Buy you may very well f'in'd room to teach them chivalry, discipline and helpfulness. you would do well to slland a little Ore of your money in developing associations, pu-blic schools. Sunday 'schools, church clubs, Y. M. (J. A_, _Young _Men's Hebrew and Cath-olic associatioillfi Playground associa- »l¢l0f1’S. b0yS brigades, social settle. ments, social workers’ clubs, minis- terial associations, medical societies, the National Guard, United States service and the press. lt is non-sec- tarian, the religion; life -of.the boy being lcft to his scout master and the institution with which he is con- the book of Genesis, respecting the vast activities which have thrilled disposal ot the body of Joseph after and excited us in their sublime and the eventful life -of 110 years had ,resistless sweep. reached its close. Am-id the splend- Then it is a book that raises the ora ol 'the palace the aged pilgrim loftiest expectation. “ln the begin- culnily and patiently lays down the ning God created," etc., not chance burden of his earthly career, anld or same blind -and mindless force, with the radiant _recollections of a but God! Surely with such a glori- well spent life' and the commelda- ous initiation, with such a hand to tions of a far extenlling empire, this start this splendid mechanism of liure and noble personality passes to worlds and human life, nothing but the never ending rest of the good and the most lroslierous and triumphant beyond our imagination and beyond all our fears. Because the explana- tions do not c~ome~at once we arc restless and impatient, and we seek to wrap our unexpected sorrows in the sad dr-aperies and crapes of some Tis as easy as lying. Hamlet, Act III., Sc.2 Lying began with thc beginning of the human race. 'lihc Garden of Eden was not free from it; and as§ m deep; mysterious gloom. Standing, beside that ooflln in Egypt we cau- , .-»..__;_;..._,_. ,. . , mill? . ‘-n|_m . . . pirates have landed together and the _honest men are paying the piper. Are .there no successful honest men? Yes hundreds! but the platters and schcniers arc still in the majority. in ordinary' trade lying is so mm. fm has increased and multiplied, ly-:mon that`al1 expect it. Evidently it ng has notdccrcascd. lt is a poliitiwss no better in b'hakcspoare's day. not repress the "sexing that this can__of ki-ui-ship in the race; black a_n;l;"lt" (lying), he says, Hbeeomes nom, ,,0t_ is ,wt_ and ought not to be the.w_hite, yellow and 1~e»1l,_sa\'i:i;-oland civ-ltrndcsmcn." The buyer is generally lized-all men are liars. There arc quite as -much to blan-o as the Selle spirit and building character, teach boys scl-f-reliance, initiative, to do good turns to people." Then Sir Robert congratulated the Boy Scout Movement of America on having brought about such a combin- ation of movements and leaderships such as to bring together _Ernest Thompson Seton, Dun Beard and the Y, M, U. A. and other societies into one national unsectarian movement to better boys-a mov-ement which is not so much an organization in it- Eell, as Mr. Seton said in introduc- ing Sir Robert on th-is occasion, "but u method of.Work for all organ- izations to 'adopt what can help them to reach h0Y5~" The Boy Scouts -of America have already issued over 2,000 Scout mas- ters' warrants to men in 44 States and two dependencies-Porto Rico and the Pm1ipI__mes_ These men __e_!li_o(_lled by every man to be a good tears. met with the str-nngcst interruptions present fully_ 100,000 boys. Local nected. I-t -is neither military nor un- fl-m1l1l2Hry,ii1st simply non-military. The first edition (5,000 copies) ofthe l3oy Scout Manual- was cleaned out in 20 (lays, and a soconflof 7,500 quickly exhausted. ln, Canada there are fully 40,000 DOYS in scout troops. These have been recently reviewed by General Badcii~I’owe1l in Toronto, Montreal, Vancouver an-cl other points. Colonel Roosevent-, in his recent let- ter accepting the vice-presidency of the movement, said: “The excessive development of city life in modern industrial civilization, which has seen its climax here- in our. own country, is accompanied by a very unhealthy atrophying of some of the essential virtues which must he embodied by any man who is to be a good soldier, and which especially ought; to be cm- citizan iii the time of peace. 'lli' true. outcome of all the fair and infinite And yet, what-a. strange and unex- complication of forces can but be the pected ending to such an exceptional result. But it is just here where the and marvellous booki sense of thc unfulfilled expectations It is very striking, that this first creeps ovcr us. Failure, disappoint- book of t-he Bible, and this oldest ment, unrealized -brilliant dreams record in the world, should in its seem to meet us at every turn. To ilrst words tell us in grand and begin so auspiciously and so granld- simple language, of the creation of ly, and to en\l with a Uoflln with all the visible universe, and that its-its associations so touching and so last words should leave us standing sad, is something wc are not for a beside /a lonely coflln in the land time prepared to receive. Such a where dust and glory lie in one commingling -of the glorious, the di- common grzv-r. vine and great with what seems so Wit-li suili opening and such el poor, so unwelcome, so deep and pit- close we L: -r. repress the feeling iful in the humiliation, is enough to that thc cr has suffered some stir within us si momentary reliel- strange _.rr lmost tragic iiiterrup- lion. tion, and :.. iw penning the match- And yet these pages of Genesis re less story ne has fallen from that fleet an experience which is -by ni which is glorious and sublime- to u means rare in the world of today. scene of liathctic tend-ernless and of How many a cloudless begin-.\n`-g is, From thc building of the earth and 'both -in human lives and in thc events cnd of a. movement whose beginning I Uur authorized conceptions of the H light shall visit that silent solitary tomb with interpretatiolis that Shall t the \vcai'y years. And we arc notlg scenes of this closing- book of Genesis, we are drawn and pushed forward to u loftier and a. lufger theme. 'l‘h'ere is an l-lxouus, und tiicn thc voice of prophets brave und good If ure heard. Sweet songs of the Psalm- 1’ .st charm us by their solemn and teudci' music, great, glorious gospels " iuinounce their comin and with their scout or spy may have to lie in uct- tands out as ii single example of 9, Divine ehuruetep lead Us tu expect boy '.'/Im could not tell ii lic.But lic that the Iutllrc will bring us some was ii-it .grouu up when the chci'ry,i expiaimtious, and that when thcjlf plans of (infinite ,wisdom and lovelfl shall lic unveiled, some resiiri-ectionisill i-'.»\\'0r in lifc.nftci‘wui~ds. | lhzspitc the coniniou character ofil his moral disease “God and goodl iuu a liar. ls thcrc no occasion onli- i disaiiiioiilted in the sllrrcme rages of 'wiimi n deviation from the truth iss wiivf-ure. in f-his mutter. We are notlexeusable ? Aristotle sew that there H allowed to remain amid the funeral W layed by ndiiiirnls and generals tolli aiu an aflvaiitugc over a foe. A li nd word to goin his end. liut dis-`b iS t . movenicn aims at counteracting, t cumniittces are at work in ovcr 300 thcsc unhealthy tendencies.” the building of a tomb, is a contrast forth into the world' Blooming luis :lit-se-its me ------'-'-'~'"-'f-jf-'-`-‘-‘~‘-'-'-*f*~'-'f-'-‘-`-‘-'f~"`-- about as great as we can possibly _ ( DICKENS Lhl-T FAMILY my l100l'l5 ln Am€l`lCH than the g00d- imagine. It is hei'e, however, in this times and flaming swords have stern-l ALMO ST DE STITUTE. ~ » - rless and dramatic ri s that We manhood and hli 'hted ur oscs andl blessed, that the most eloiucnlt 1 been mnematwnal wpynght between palsy find conclusions rllpegewith lea- plans are amen; the Dthitligs witlil-llllllasc fails uttcrly to dcsci‘ibe.l ous that all men nee-(1 and suggest wliii-li thc world has grown familiar. lt is a long _liilgi-image from GciF‘ therefore, is two years distant. Plans been a man of very large fortune, in- ive of truths rich in indestructible But we soinchow fccl that the lone-ly on-is Lo ltovolntious but it is apatli- emoi-ics, and bright with inspiring Collin in l-lgylrt though it may cloi¢c!\vay which lends the pi-rplcxeil und nil never dying hopes, the book by its dark, grim fis\|i~e,.j|ll|nil-ing elim; lim, |i.,_t;_~;l-el.l<,l, .il This book of Gen-cs-is is pre-eniin that is not the ond. We cuiiiiot re- lil-easui-as compared with which ntly a book of liefrilllllntls-»H0l`G Wr-'coiiciic ourselves to accvlit this as eartli‘.-i costlicst gems are but com- Thrce children and seventeen gran-d-:press the fact that I have received have our first .vision of _an unfolding the final coiisiimniiiiion to which all mon dust. chilllrgn of the greet, novelist Sul-vlvelllmldgome Sums for advance sh"e,,ts_»- universe, the dawning life of the the great cvcnts in this hook were iii- lanet, the commencing of the grunt tcndcil bn move. Standing by the (ind that the curse, the ilarknes-s,‘thc human procession, the llrkif- DB-g8 ill emhnlmcd _body of the lininii~c(l liatri-lfllillll-es, the triumphant wrongs and , 1° . . '~ . -= .li?..".i?.'ii"`.i....§‘ .fIlIi.§”ii’.'. i££“.?.'.l ?§`.°“..`.`L.“..'fi.`.".';-°‘§iS1if.’ “3§.”§Zi'§`f§"$§l {‘»1’é‘§l‘Z§.‘.‘§l.lf...‘l‘ ‘ii“.'.§°*ii?g.lL`i°.»°.°.-“"Tl.l’.i 0' J' H year has hee" prov ded fo] Fong' and d`0ul`h We haw not at appicst condit-io-ns. No darkening our sense of right assure us that the lege city of God.” The thunder has-l ., . _. _ _ , _ ,_ _ sorrow, no cr of pain, no reign of roccss is not finished, thut a book llllill llwn [mm the am~i,g-htcd hills the othcis are described oy a wiitei by his lm__»,-lisli publishcis, we venture tears have a__Vyet_ ,hmg their Shad; like this is a prediction, that other ,nd a deg,” g],,,.iD,,S calm has come ws over that l-air opcniing scene. bool-ii will come ami fill the gi-cat at lege Fl-e,gmentai~y views give he morninl__>; is cloudlcss and blusbes empty spaceswliich still remain. pllwe to tile Jw,-lceted mill-ook and W1 ll\0- |Pl`0mlH¢ Of H l)l`lH'llf- fl-lid AIN] \\'ll€l1 We l"3m°ml’e1` the VCT! iiiairy ri cofiin which seemed like humored remark, ‘that if -there limi strange shifting of the scenes in these ly guarded thc gates of pearl. Lost'of moral victoriious scenes so great] I .. It was in 18 2 that Charles Dickens _ l saw the‘light, and his centenarypl?-lliilflllll I-wil Y-110 S\‘-MBS l Sllolllflillavc S for its celebration, however, are wcll stead of a' man ol nioilcrate savings, m adviiiicsd, and one bright idea. by alw-nys supporting ii vcry expensive :1 which it is hoped to make the cvcut public position; nor have I evcr been memoruiile: is being widely discussed. 'so ungcncrous as to disguise or sup- 0 to-day, most of them livin-g in hum-l On one occasion he received .£1,000 P ble circumstances, So lar reducedyfor a single story, written' for the are they that a Government cnsion Boston Ma ra*/ine. “Our Youn t three of the grandcli-lldren. Some of hand definite figures as to payment h in the Strand as earning a "precari- to say that this was much -better than ous livelihood," and the su-ggostionlhe got for an ordinary short story. ,OF has been made to raise a fund of sev-l '1‘hc truth is that Dickens siiflereil , _ , _ K _ _ lic silent, magnificent heavens, to and movements _which have gone ministry and power. Earf.h’s ;»lea`v.ci,t - ‘ lises have been ivcistcd a thousnndsoin as thc ' - ` ' ' ' eral tliousaud pounds for these child-;more from pirutical newspapers than W ren and grandchildren of Charles from unscrupillous publishers of lliokcns. |books. These papers did not scrulilc The proposal is that Dickens' lovers iii over the world should contribute ii lnznny a bool: in token ‘cf their gratitude to h-im. Stamps will be put on sale at bookstores all 'ov-er the world next year, and will -be sold matter. Dickens felt -bitter ovcr this to rather freely .edit his books, cut- l, ting out passages they did not ap- 0 prove, inserting others, changing w names i-iind otherwise garhling the rn oiitrage, and wrotct, "I am bent on u brilliant day. But as we lia.s~s'from title- of this first book we are C_0m- full stop in thc lives of‘men will ap- l page to ling-e. strange fliSC0`1‘ilS dis- forted and hope spreads her wings pcm- only as 9, ln-lol piinetiiatioii’ turb that deep sweet harmony, fierce for a wider flight. It -is the book of mm»l¢ ln the uglwmd march oi thc rc-l ontcntlons are now abroad. the Wall Genesis, thc bo-ok`of beginnings and generated soul. .- . f human sorrow is heard far and not of endings. Time is an essential factor to all ide, iperished hopes, rendiing tu- How frequently we have gon? great explanations. _Sixty-six books ults and opening graves rise rapid- astray in many a. trying hour when pass beforc us in the scripture'-before ly before us as the sacredi canlvafi is dismal failure has come, and when the full story of redemption is told. nrollerl before H W0\1d0\‘l“§ Wofld- hopes lluve D060 Fllfleli’ and Flllhless' lLet us have the courage to read to at a penny a piece. Every man who owns one of Dlckens‘, hooks,-will bc invited to purchase a stamp' -and stick in on thc hook. The mon-ey thus col- lected will be handed -by the Dickens F@llU“‘-‘illil>. an-(l a fund provided forl When Dickens died lie left a modcr- striking at the piratical newspapers with the sharpest edge I cfm put up- li on niy small axe, and hope in the 3 next session of Parliament to stop m their enirancc in-to Canada." i . _ ,_ ,» - _- ~_ - endin to some great end. we have been called with scarce a . ml the evil man to the end! twenty bciitficiaiies. It is estimated ate fortune, and the sale of .us lib- mg 'fgglsetwho ghave seen the foam m°ment,S wammg to Stand besme Els? :lbw say which destiny we de_ nd heard the rush and roar of Nia- some coffin holding in its cold and Sim Herod in his Daleee red-handed ara, it is said to be a great relief solemn grasp the form we have priz- and cmel_ with John pinlng in the 0 get away into some quiet green ed beyond all earthly good, we have dungeon is not the end; to stay there eld where the DOOF 5l1“11“0‘l elif |1185’ paused and felt that we were at the is worse lnllnleely than sitting do_wn| e “lated from the thlmder of the end when in fact the t-ouching scene by the "Collin ill Egypt" Bild S9-Y1“l=l ighty writers So in the reading of ’ h t1.tem_ this is all: f that tln-rc are 24,000,000 copies of rary and collection of mementoes T liickfns’ works extant, allowing for added considerable to it. A writer a loss tlimiigli wear and tear. It is in the Nc\v York Sun is, therefore, 5 quite |~lain, therefore, that if a moved to enquire. What became of H stamp were attached to each of them the money? The answer is that b the suni of $500,000 would be raised, it is gone. That it was not m It is a book mari-fied by H FGBUBSS ly blasted, when worthy movements the end_ lf we stop with Genesis wc etivity, no matter \v-here we look. have been pitched by wicked hands me only on the threshold of a vast cene after scene of stupenilolls into sudden and deep humiliatious, _,md womll-OHS theme, and we shall ovcmcnt is held up to our asfon- and death has smitten some great miss by our impatience and folly the 5 sh-ed gaze. Stilrs, BNHS. SGH-S. lll/ing and noble lilll, 01' Y0l1ll‘5l1<»w the E00-1 made to icloiu- und bios iost, und liiiiilly uc icueh the closing book with its i_-cvcl-ations; Here in this book of endings we but if --lily a “~ land. ter' ter, can I borrow it a bit? 833”§_“‘"’f"";‘° (P'°vid°“°e) vs' It’s the paper I was raised °“» *='“‘1 frheieeveslhsre isa iheirisicy horns, eve an the very look of it phia' to the prairles an-d th-c corn, Galvin (Buffalo) vs. Detroit Daly (Cleveland) V9- Phlmde1` Takes 11,9 back across the molmwlns How still upon the .ground they lic _ _ _ _ _ esp _ », 1'"-iii-.ll‘.i\ 885-Cla»I‘kS0I1 (lfhlcabol V5' P"°Vi‘ Same old title. same old lieadlilwb-,F-arewleil: dear leaves, since die you dence- . . ` same old type I “Sell Vi’ k“°W"‘ u t l '|'»'~ll\i'l Fersiison (Philadelphia) vs Pro-_Like the bl_mk_ it keeps a___mm_ing_ And _:Sims your ______r__t _mes _n thi? _mst without malt-ing thc slightest ackfnow- i lf‘d'1(\nicut, financial or otherwise, to ment. C0U\l“`iSl“g 0 VH- Chin' And I-11 i-ess i¢.~ every coma, with ff,f,,":,';,,',|_°°°' ea cc" M so _ - my Oni wi hire alixhi- sh is fi t I sum with Mrs. 1904-Yvllus (Boston) vs Pl\llUfl°lPlll*- It will seem llkc meeting long-lost Dlwlfl ihogftleaamnlifhg th:-.re one day T°““°l‘m .(B"st""“_l V5 ohm-53°' friends and talking till the morn\ when the King and Queen came to_ 1905-Mathewsori (N.Y.; vs Chi_¢8i:0- Of the little town out _vondcr in the lunch. While there she -affected a allcc- H0iil¢Y (mllla-l VB St- Ii°“l5' . prniries and t-he corn. lal style of dressing in shot colors . smith (Chicano) vs Detroit vein-n in colored ehifinns, which anne Dlnacn (Boston) .vs. Clrlcagio. ___li~,-nm the Newark News, to be lnown as "Newhouse frocks. Lush (I’hll&-) V! B¥'00l¥ly~n~ California, with 5 population of 1.- nobert T. Sweeney, formerly Bm‘0»ll_ ts in telilchinwthim jrnt h-iw lon: the E190?-Pl_B|'|°f (l30Bl0u) vs Clnci-noetl. 729,548 is well supplied with medical carrier, pleaded guilty in B ("l‘l°*W»"’ ` M9000! (Pi¢f9l>\1¥’8‘) VS Bl‘CUklY‘1'l schools an-d doctors, It has ten court to the charlie Ol Plimllng 575-' 1908-Young (}instcn1 vs New York. schools and 4,313 doctors, 1-xcliisivelrf. 000 worth of mites from the malls. average audience can >~i'a_i‘ "l_"f H' i0-111 ' from the subject thry w;.=h .o hu? I" ""2-""l bo ambitious beginners, t Like all sin lyini: hns its origin lu, lcliisluioss. Mon dcsirc wialtli; they ‘ set out lion-cstly to nblziin it, but] tor an-d adopt shoidy methods. Tlicir’ first fnl:~:t-lioods may bc liarmiciss eu-l ~o‘nifh',"'iliic“'in"f.ni-i¢=nii--they are urns- !'" sell into a iiinclstriiin of unti-utlis.lf. fortunes th-at arc but colo.-asill ~mo|in-;(- suinc in the search after powcr. 'Theft- yrinng poll-tician begins his cnrecrrs us thc champion of tho rig;-his of ni-au.ly He flnils fuctions in the slut(-. Tlici, wer are similar to thosc in thc bat- b tlc for wealth, Lying is chief among <1 they listen to the _voice of the temp- A r. is full 0| the p,,we,._ [,,.,,se,,c,,_ wi# sober nations, but_thcrc is no nutioniln his selfishness hc is looking for dum and g,,,,,ln,,,,S 0| Almighty Gui of trlitli-,clit-rs. (.|cor,'.gc Wusliiiigtuii ,li¥1Fi:uiiis,'un(l prices are raised only to be lowered. False stamps are put on l-(Wills. food is adixltcrated, and all u order that the seller may be able cc r...-1: in thc way of his now hat-lto inect the buyer'5 craving for i:t. lit probably gi-lined his iiniver-grlicilliiifss. _In every-day life the chief cause of ici; in rownrfiirc. The child commits ii ofl`c|i(r<». l-lc fcari-: puuisliment ; ly- iiit thc old darkness and roll uway men hate ,l liar." ludccd, ilctc.-it.atiun‘iiii: is such nn cusy way of escape wr ever the r;1\>\>u1 mid my>>t¢rv of'isnot ii-nuteii to good men. All incnvl' ' he iiifrrcliniii, fours to lose a< custom- r; u. little ciiiiimcntioii on his part crvcs his turn. 'l'he wifc fears the ngcr of the lii:s!:nn(l; the hus-band cre lics and lies. l-lis '_‘noble lie"irl_i~rii<|s liurtini; his wifc’s fcclinixs. All excuses a_ cfer_tu,i_n (glass. t_lhot__ kc(i_ilii-i'_lio to save tlir-iiisi»l\'i:.~: or others from Ill!!-y Slical iiscy o soo ic ic un-.r irerous lunatic. False signals arc dis-'rrciizc of ii little coi:i'u_-gc would have ufl'r‘riii:. In every in.-:tance the ex- rouglit grentir iiu~o,l>iiics_-i, or if not uliliincss, blc:<.=e\lne1~s, to use Car- ylifs di.-itiuctiou. Tho world would' s infinitely bcttcr and happier if men case and war ure abnormal coiiili-lirouid follow George Herbert/s ad- ions. 'vivo : ‘liars to bc true, nothing can need a lic ; ‘ fziult wliicli nceds it most grows two thereby." Noi-' it stlilfnf two; to conceal he first lic it is usually necessary to 'l‘hcre are in America many stiiicly t--ll m:in_-/. Lies are trcnicndous breed- re: of Iii,-s; ilu-.y uri: us prolific as the nicnts to tho fntiini' of li(-s. it is tlicllliisfriilinii mlrliit, but faitmore diffi- ult to (iff:-tr