.. . ion ‘r ‘4 _ 1st. 4; nu“ g1 en rev s a o Our new stock of Children’s i l. Suits are now ready. . We have marked them very close in order to sell them fast. The largest assortment in the city. The best goods made at prices to sell fast. run spate-nun on" ‘ New Suits for FIE-EC VV $15] TIE-IE VVQNDERFL asset neoeescg cTlre Great llnwasherlg A thing of the past. Wllle there ls Lite, tleere is Soap- i RENIARKAB LE Disappearance of all dirt from everything by using llll nswann e Purity, Health and Per- fect satisfaction. Cleans, Scours, Scrubs, Brightens everything. Itis a friend that will wear itself out in your service. Take no substitutes. Sold everywhere. r @ Q Q Q @ Q @ e6 Q @ Q @ @ Q @ Q ll. lllllllllllll lllll. Charlottetown Soap works. I g iii‘ ./ 74} - (PERRY caves’) A Sure and Safe Remedy ln every ease and every klnd of Bowel Complaint ls It can't be made too strong or too emphatic. It is a simple, safe and quick cure for Cramps, Cough, Colic, Colds, Neuralgla, Dian-hing, Group, Toothache. Two sizes, 25c. and 50c. Keep it by you. Beware of imitations. Buy only flw Genuine-Perry D048’- m git; LOSTS, FOUNDS, Err: Pleasant home wort: for men 0'." a-omo-uyday 01' evening. N0 m“ vgprcing or experience “Udell; plain in<trncti0ns and work rnailrd on JDDlicat-n.» f“,- I, grtion, Addrc s Memoria 00-. London, Ont. 5, 00d. 1m- i LET-Tho l rge r0 m now 015M596 b!’ Lnngworg}, a degornrive art; room. Applyu) Mlifllgia I 1Q W’. c. T. U. Rooms. WANTED. t f P.'.E. Island Accid refill-lit.‘ rigiudiiiz moron]: iDISEASE clause and other benefits. Pre- low. rge commission. (Ammo? . Wcpudonbted. p tgntpvrplligflllgtl; ilrqyBoqcai-eof . nu 4&1“ s .8 in prayer before an REY. 1'. DE W111‘ TALK-LII. TALMAGFS SERMON. Proverbs i. 20: "Wisdom crieth with‘ our. She attererh her voice in the streets." We are all ready to listen to the voices of nature-Abe voices of the mountains. the voices of the sea, the voices of the storm, the voices of the stars. As in some of the cathedrals in Europe there is an organ at either end of the build- ing, and the one instrument responds musically to the other, so in the great cathedral of nature day responds to day, and night to nighLand flower to flower, and star to starin the great harmonics of the universe. The springtime is an evangelist in blossoms preaching of God's love, and the winter is a prophet —white bearded-denouncing woe a- gainst our sins. We are all ready to ' listen to the voices of nature. But how few of us learn anything from the voices of the noisy and dusty street. In the first place the street impresses me with the tact that lite is a scene of’ toil and struggles. By 10 ok-lock every day the city is jarring with Wheels and shufiling with feet and humming with voices and covered with the breath of smckestacks and a-rush with traffickers. Once in a while you find a man going along withlolrled arms and with leisure- ly step, as though he had nothing to do. but, for the most partners you find men going down these streets on the way to busLness, there is anxiety in their faces, as though they had some errand which _ must be executed at the first possible moment. You are jostled by’ those who have bargains to make and notes to sell. Up this ladder wiru a hod of bricks, out of this bank with a. roll of bills, on this dray with a load of goods, vdigging a cellar, or shinglinga roof, or shoe- ing a horse. or building a wall, or mending a watch, or binding a book. Industry. with her thousand arms and thousand eyes and thousand feet, goes on singing her song , cf work, work , work, while the mills drum it and the steam whistles fife it. All this is not uecause men love toil. Some one re- marked, “Every man is as lazy as he can afford to be.” But it is because necessity with-stern brow and with up- lifted whip stands over you ready when- ever you relax your toil r0 make your shoulders sling with the lush. Going down to your place of business and coining home again I charge you to‘ l ok aboui- see the signs of poverty. of wféirlclltfdilfiSfi, of hunger, of sin, of breavement-and as you go through the streets and come back through the streets, gather up in the arms of your prayer all the sorrow, all the losses, all the sufferings, all the bereayements of those whom you pass and present them all sympathetic In the great day of eternity there will be thousands 4 of persons with whom you in this world never ox- -r~ , - - . W , __ a sm ....a'i‘;ia..:..marr term...“ gs" SALE-Mrs. John ‘lrainot Kin don Pownal Rt who Gena blletenement - ' PM“ - otth Late .- f‘ ~ Quaeeu Street. ~ water. 0118b" 99°- » mod . A E. Palmer - BltorEJames er. ChTownliql tn ahugqd QBQIOIC who will rise up and Ttrl-ET ‘°°““‘°'5‘§3.$.Zi°“§$ (ii-alums _ “.2 "‘°°°""°' w r Tldmaralnfi r retail I h1g1». call you blessed, and there wi'1 be a thpusand fingers pointed at you in heaven. sayingg-That is the mamthat is the woman, who helped me when I was hungry and sick and wandering and lost and heartbroken. Phat is the m-in, that is the woman.” And the blessing will come down upon you as Christ shall say: "I was hungry, and ye visited me. Inasmuch as ye did it to these poor waits o1 the streets, ye did it to mo.” Again. the street impreses me with the fact that all classes and conditions oi society must ccmmingle. We sometimes culture a wicked exclusiveneaslntellect despises ignoranceltefiuement will have nothing to do with boorishness. Gloves hate the sunburned hand, and the high lorhead espises the flat head, and the trim hedgerow will have nothing to with the -wild copsewood, and Athens hates Nazareth. This ought not so to be. The astronomer must come down from his starry ievelry and help us in our navigation. The surgeon must come away from his study of the hu- man organism and so‘. our - broken bones. The chemist must come away from his laboratory. where he has been studying analysis and synthesimand help us to understand the nature of the souls. I bless God that all classes oi people are compelled to meet on the streets. The glittering coach wheel clashes‘ against _ the scavenger’: cart. Fine robes run against the peddlex-‘s pack. Robust health meets wan sickncssllon- esty confronts iraueLEvr-ry class of peo- ple meets every other cloass. Im - once and modesty, pride and humilgy, purity and beaspliness, frankness ind hpyocrisy. meeting on the same block. In the same street, in the same city. Qh, that is what Solomon meant when he said: "The rich and the poor mot to- gether. The Lord is the Maker of them all.” ‘ ' ti!" I like this democratic principle ct gospel of Jesus Christ which recognises the tact that we stand before God onque roams-monuments IN a Use NERVOL Onea nag grpretit pot, aura" a some... "M Princeliilrlvhrd lslanrllllagazina ....NOW ON sAL-_E.... At all the Bookstores and at B. H. rllasorvs News Stand. CONTENTS OF APRIL NUMBER I l Hon. G. W. Howlan, Frontispiece. Our Entertainments, Our Entertainers Dunk Speaks, A Poem, by Professor Gwen Two Departures, by Hon. Senator Ferguson De Roberval by W. L. Cotton, (Illustrated with Portrait of the”Aut- hcr ot De Robervai. A Dream Face, A Poem, by May Carroll InsulaFelix, Il, by M. L. W. F. (Illustrated) The Bastile of Charlottetown, by A, Irwin. Side Talk with "Sports,”‘ by “Jimso” The Skerry Vote Lighthouse Illustrated with Portraits of the Islanders wrecked on the Labrador The Autobiography of an Umbrella Notes and Queries, Correspondence; etc. The P. E. Island Magazine, a. P. o. BOX 69s, Charlottetown, P._ E. I. Gm‘ Oniz.—The_ Prince Edward Island Magazine is for r-ale throughout the Island at the following places. Price 5 cents :- Georgetown-Hon. D. Gordon’s. Summerside-Sueall 8r. Bear-latch and D. K. Curries Souris-D. Sutherland’ . Mt .- Stewarb-Gordon Douglass’. Montague-F. S. Macdonald’ . Alberton-G. S. Muttarfs. Tignish-J. A. Brennan's. fifillfiflll Great h A y p» Ami! TBDHABWV. DODD, “Eim- ma». sues Ian w cnir§§°ii§d3ai§m Ichlfid! I and the same platform. Do not take on any airs, whatever position you have gained society; you are nothing but man, born 0t the same parent, regener- ated by the same Spirit, cleausedin the same blood. to lie down in the same dust. to get up in the same resurrection. It is high time that we all acknowledge not only the Fatherhood of God, but the brotherhood of man. ‘ ~ A Again. the streetimprcsseg me with the tact that it is a very hard thing fora man to keep his heart right and get to heaven. Infinite temptations spring upon us from these places of public concourse. Amid so ‘much afiluonce, how much temptation to covetousuess and to be discontented with our hum- ble lot l Amid so much display, what templatibn to vanity l And so man saloons of strong drink, what allure- ment to dissipation ! In the maelstroms and hell gates of the streets, howmany make quick and eternal shipwreck l Oh how many have gone down under the pressure, leaving not so much as the pafo‘: 0t canvas to tcll where they perished ! They never had any peace. Their dishonesties kept toiling in their ears. It I had an ax and could split open the beams of that fine house, per- haps I would find in every heart» of it a skeleton. In his very best wine there is a smack of poor man's sweat. 0h, is it strange that when a man has devoured windows’ houses he is disturbed with indigestion P All the forces of nature ariragainst him. The floods are ready to drown him and the earthquake to swallow him andrthc tires to consume him and the lightnifngs to smite him. _But the children of G‘ d re e n every street, and in the day when the crowds of heaven are distributed some of the brightest ol them ‘will be given to those men who were faithful to God and faith- lul to the souls ‘of others amid" the .1 - Prairies themselves the heroes 0t the street. _ p‘ . “Again the street impresses, me -with tire that life is lull of pretension and sham; What subterfuge. what double dealing. what two; lacedness! Do ' all peopro who wish ‘you good morriing reallvhope lor you a happy day P Dc all ihepeople who shake hands love each other? Iserthera not many; wretched stock ct goods with a brilliant show window P Passing up and downythe streets to your business and your work. are you not impressed with the fact that society is hollow and that there are subterluges and PIBIGIIslOIJS P 0n, how manv there are who swagger and strut and how iew people who are natural and walk! While fops simper and fools chuckle and SlIDPIrCODS giggle how few people are natural and laugh l The courtesan aucLthe libertine go down the street in beautiful apparel, while within the heart there are volcanoes of " passion consuming their life away. 1 say these things not to create in you in- creoulity“ or misanIhrr-py, nor v0 l for- get there are thousands of people a great deal better than they seem, but l do not think any man is prepared for the conflict of this lite until he knows this particular peril. Again, the street impresses me with the fact that it is a great field for Claris- tian charity. There are hunger and suffering and want and wretchedness in the country, but these evils chiefly con- giegale In our great cities. On every street crime prowls and drunkenness staggers and shame winks and pauper- ism thrusts out its hand asking for alms. Here want is most squniid and hunger is most lean. A Christian man going along a street in New York saw a poor lad, and he stopped and said, gMy boy, do you know bow t9 read and _ ,_. ' W‘? April Showers. Wash awavgthe filth and waste that have accumulated during winter. In like manner Hood’s Sarsaparilla expels from the blood impurities that have been disposed during the season when thereihas been but little perspir- ation and, perhaps constant confinement in impure and-vitiated air. 1t is a boon to tired‘ mothers. housekeepers. teachers and-others who spend their time in- doors. ‘ It gives the blood richness and vita- It cures allspliflt’. " ‘ can I: ' e You y. should begin hkillgili . Mm lity," fitting itto nourish and ' 1 thenorvemmpselefisand all the ' t‘, ‘"9 enigma hjmorp and ‘ ' a y. write?” The boy. made no i i“ " The nan asked the question lwie-Q~ggfl thrice. “Can you tread sod WritePWanH then the boy answered with g 1gp, splashing 0h the back of his handl H9 said in defiance: "N0 i nor write neither. God sir, dolfli w”: me to read and write. l)idn’t h-eJ take awav my father so lung ago [hem m- member to have seen hilmaiidrha t; ,, Ihad to go along the streetsiic I something to fetch home to~ eat for 1.". talks. and didu’t l as soon as I could carry n basket, have to go out and pick up cinders and never have n?» schooling, sir? God don't want me 1o read, ‘stint. I cant read nor write neither.” these poor wanderers! They. have<no= chance. Born in degradation. as they » walk, they take their first. step up. road to despair. _ Let us go tor-uh in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ to rescue‘, them. Bcwardlest tnuthousanils destitute of -your‘city‘; in the is‘... " day, rise up andwurse‘ your seupul“ andyour heg eat. Down to work ! Lift them up! , __ ' ' Lastly, the street impresses me with the factthat that all the, people are looking forward. I see expectancy writ- ' ten on almost every face I meet. tWnere; i you find a thousand people walking straight on, you _ "rather. _ _ llard .- " The] know 1351 Q1] I llllfl’ woman who sufielris as... weatnfifnxdodis‘ eaae-inawomanywa happy, helpiul, amia le wife arid Ph icians tell yonngunen weakness and disease of the feminine chi! Jeegeetting organism make women, sickgl , nervous and despondent in s ite of the of nat- ural dispositions. .' Pierrcew Favorite Prescription makes these. organs strong, healthy, vigorous and elastic. It db for. wifehood and motherhood. It allayslu- flammation, heals ulceration and soothes pain. It tones and steadies the nerves. It does away with the qualms of the period ' of-expectancy and makes baby's advent easy and almost painless. It frees mater- nity of peril. It insures the newcomers health. Dr. Pierce isan emhinent and Skill; ful hysician, who, during i_s thirty years expgrience as chief consulting physician to the great Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute, at Buifalo, N. Y., treated thousands of women. He will answer letters from women free. ~ Very many women who have become happy, healthy wives and mothers through the use of Dr. Picrce’s Fayonte Prgscnp- _ tion have permitted their experiences, names, addresses and photographs to be printed in Dr. Pierce-w Common Sense Medical Adv-‘ser. This great work used to cost $1.50. Nowit is free. Itcontams 1,008 pages and‘ over 30o illustrations. Several chapter: are devoted to the reproductive" physiology of irvouzcn. For a paper-cov- Bayfleld street. tare! fidlw Suits are now . will interest anyone wants Clothing. care to dress well see ouir a y get up from their huh-ls and "km-es, to; I l 3cm cancer writ only find one man _' ~ i I and ca». . enlllcsmplso fireman 511* ~~‘.. .3 -1_.-' Applicstlvfld. reams; will be received an Saturday. 1100B. " t; the e- f‘ the- sale; or. .. At Fulfil, Hr dermal». llch waisted‘ FOll siia ~ aii dwelling ho it‘; A comtr stable __ _ g Possession - y. Apply t 0 Mch l5dtf. y Brick House on P. ICC: with large grounds and roomy buildings. r House has hot water furnace“ heaters. Apply to s. o. 110011;? -F. W. L MOD Execs, F. W. Moore Es ered Copy send 3i onrvcent stamps, tocovar customs and mailing only, to the World's Dispensary hiedical Association, Bnfilo. N,.Y. Cloth binding. 5o stamps- ltlrlrslarrggslarlrrv 8P8 l3 .1 » ~- that they (Hie first 75o. or. 81.00 The t. mdiriddltkwv! 1m ‘ ‘_ _, ._