t:"..:'..=b..:....._E if jj_’,.___ on earth and in gun,‘ thgggeomed N de, manta, victor over physical . distrcpses. wand :\ whole or whole week or whole "cm" ‘"9" h°’°d'“‘7 d°P'°'”°“°' "ct" l i PROP! BITION. THE TUNNEL. EQUAL RIGHTS. couurnv belore PARTY. MUNICIPAL REFORM- ——.1 The Burning Guardian Issued svery Morning by THE GUARDIAN PUBLISHING Co rsoarrnnmorncsm-ran Cameron Block BRANCH OFI"ICE—-Central Street. Summerside.-8. M. Gauss. A30!“- The Onlv Morning Paper in the Province. Delivered on the Breakfast Tables of the City, and all over the Province by noon. - Ta;-mi-one Year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $4.“) “ Six Months . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.00 “ , Single Copies . . . . . . . . . . 2cents Weekly Edition published on Thursday. Terms-Per year, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81 25 “ When paid in advance, . . . . 1,00 (6 Single copies, 4 cents. Semi-weekly Edition, published on Tues- days and Thursdays. Terms-—Per year . . . . . . . . . . . .. 31-59 “ When paid in advan-'9. 1.90 “ Single copies,3cenlS. Advertising rates furnished on application 3. D. HICCQ, Editor and Managing Director. J- P. HOOD, Business Manager. §TAI:MAGE’S SERMON Thirty Minutes in Heaven. There was silence in heaven about the space of half an hour.—Rev. viii., 1. The busiest part in the universe is heaven. It isthe centre from which all goodinlluencesstart; it is the goal at The Bibb- which all good results arrive. represents it as active with wheels and wings and orchestras and processions mounted or charioted. But my text des- cribes a space when the wheels ceased to ‘-The V0108 *0 ¢kIiEI".’l"h‘e'riders on the white “rained in their chargers. The roll and the trumpets to snow} ‘fifd doxologics were hushed and the proces- sions halted. The hand of arrest was put upon all the splendors. “Stop,heav- en I" cried an Omnipotent voice, and it . stopped.» For thirty minutes everything cclfihl stood still. “There was silence in heaven for the space of half an hour." From all we can learn it is the only time heaven ever stopped. It does not stop as other cities for the ‘night, for there is no night there. It does not stop for s sweeping freshets. What then, stopped it for thirty seconds? Grotius and Pro- fessor Stuart think it was at the time of the destruction of J erusale in. Mr. Lord thinks it was in the year 311, "between the close of the Diocletian persecution and the beginning of the wars by which Constantine gained the throne. But that was all s guess, though a learned and brilliant guess. I do not know when it was and I do not care when it was, but of the fact that such an interregnum of sound took place I am certain. “There was silence in heaven for the space of half an hour.” And first of all we may learn that God and all heaven then honored silence. The , longest and widest dominion that ever ex- isted is that over which Srillnrl was Queen. For an eternity there had not been a sound. World making was a later day occupation. For unimaginable ages it wasa mute universe. God was the oulyBcing,and,as there wasnooneto speak to, there was no utterance.’ But one silence had been all broken up into w-vrlds,snd it has becomes noisy universe. Worlds in upheaval, worlds in congelaticn, worlds in conflagration, warldi in revolu- tion. If geologists are right (and I be- 4 lion they are) there has not been a mo- ment of silence since this world began its travels, and the crsshings audthc split- tings and the uproar and the hubbub are‘ ever in progress. But when among the supcrnals a voice cried, “Rush 2” and for half an hour heaven was still, silence was honored. The full power of silence many of us have yet to learn. We are told that when Christ was arraigned “He answered not a word. T That silence was louder than auythundcr that ever shook the world. Oftrtiinss, when we are assailed and misrepvesanted, the mightiest thing is to say and the mightiest thing to do is to_ do nothing. Those people who sreslways rushing into print to get thsmsolvssset right scecnpflsli nothing but their own chagrin. lg Do right and leave the results with God. Among the grandest lessons thh. world has ever learned are the lessons loll ps- tlence taught by those who endured sn- complainingly personal or domestic or social or politic l injustice. an-gang} than any bitter er mrcsstic or reveugeful’ answer was the patient silence. - 'l‘hs—fs-3 mods Dr. Morrison of Chelsea scscm-i plished .. much by as. silent 5! ll“ P00 Ind t0fi!00- H0 ofhasven and receive the whilea that for twenty-live years snubs an eventful sud ' is ficsthst itcsafld alnsl’. " jsfnvhs‘ ' ./' TIIE GUARDIAN, HA year for celestial considemtiou. If Grutiss °"'" 5i“ “"1 d‘’“"‘ “d h‘'’“' was right and this silence occurred at the Md“ “ll” through our Lord “one was so M"-“I “Id an prolonged ,3,“ in the presence of all the galleries, saintly, the inhabitants of heaven could not have ‘“‘¢*‘li° ‘md Divhle ! After chants : "These are they who came out of great tribulation and had their robes washed and made white in the blood of the Lamb.” time of the destruction of Jerusalem, that done justice to it in many weeks. fearful besiegement of the two fortresses of .lerusa‘lem—Autonio and Hippicus—- had been going on for a long while, a Roman soldier mounted on the shoulder of another soldier hurled into the window of the Temple, a tirebrand, anl the Tom- ple was all sflame, and after covering many sacrifices to the holiness of God, the building itself became a sacrifice to the rage of man. The hunger of the people in that city during the bcsiegement was so great that as some outlaws weré‘ passing a doorway and inhaled the odors of food, they burst open the door, threatening the mother of the household with death unless she gave them some food, and she look them L-ideynnd sh- -wed them that it was her own child she was cooking for the ghastly repast-. Six hundred priests were des- truyed on Mount Zion because the Tern- ple being gonethere was nothing for them to do. Six thousand people in one cloister were consumed. There were one million one hundred thousand dead, according to Josephus. Grotius thinks that this was the cause of silence in heaven for half an hour. If Mr. Lord was right and this silence in’: during the Diocletian persecu- tions, by which eight hundred and forty- iour thousand Christians suffered death from sword and fire, and banishment andl exposure, why did not heaven listen throughout at least one of those awful years! No! Thirty minute»! The fact is that the celestial progssrnme is so crowded with spectacle that it c to afford only one recess in all eterniv y and that for a short space. While there are great choruses in which all heaven can join, each soul there has a story of Divine mercy peculiar to itself, and it must be a solo. How can heaven get through with all its recitatives, with all its cantatas, with all its grand marches, with all its victories? Eternity is too short to utter all the praise. In my text heaven spared thirty minutes but ‘—t will never again spare one minute. In worship in earthly churches, when there are many to take part, we have to counsel brevity, but how will heavgryget: on rapidly enough Ea let tl39.e:ié’i.undred and forty-four thousand get through each with his own story, and then the one hundred and forty-four billion, and then the one hundred and forty-four trillion’. ‘ Not only are all the triumphs of the past to be commemorated, but all the tri- umphs to come. Not only what we know of God, but what we will know of Him after everlasting study of the Dcific. If my text had said there was silence in Heaven for thirty days, I would not lave been startled at the announcement, but it infimtes thirty minutes. rat is "half-hour. ' That half- hour menti sued in my textis more widely known than any other periotiin the cal- endar of Heaven. None of the whole hours of Heaven are measured of, none ofthe years, none of the centuries. Of the millions ofsgcs past, and the Inllllulll of ages to come, not one is especially mea- sured of in tlia-Bible. The hs!f~h:...nr of my text is made immortal The only part of Eternity that was ever measured by earthly time-piece was measured by the minute-hand of my text. Oh, the half- hours I They decide everything. I am not asking what you will do with the years or months or days of your life, but what of the half hours. Tell me the history of your half-hours, and I will tell you the story of your whole life on earth and the story of your whole life in Eternity. The right or wrong things you can think in thirty minutes, the right or wrong things you can say in thirty minutes, the right or wrong things you can do in thirty min- utes are glorious or baleful, inspiring or despcrate. "The most tremendous things of your life‘ and mine were certain half- hours. The half-hour when in a person- age of a country minister I resolved to become a Christian ‘then and there ;thc half-hour when I decided to become a pratcher of the Gospel ; the half-hour when I first realized that my son was dead ; the half-hour, when I stood upon the top of my house in Oxford street and saw our church burn ; the half-hour in which I entered Jerusalem ; the half-hour in which I ascended Mount Calvary ; the half-hour in which I stood on Mars Hill ; the h ~lf-hour in which the dedicstory prayer of this temple was made and are the chief times of my life. But how will you spend the first .half- hour of your heavenly citizenship after you have gone in to stay? After your prnstration before the throne in worship get there at all, I think the rest of your flrst half-hour in heaven will be passed in faithful. I have a strangely beautiful book containing the pictures of the medals struck by the English governmcntin hon- or ofgr-at -battles; th_eee.medals pinned over the hesrtretnrned’ heroes of the army, on occasions, the royal I-as =osv-n>-naea‘»:-r- I in: ; the lesion of Honor, Crali. the . Waterloo medal. In your hunt in some way you for the urthly in whlcli, the, .*_.E;‘, _- ,~;35't ’. u\ look into the maiter can doubt that there are many articles now regul.u'ly on the My subject, also imprcsans..m_Q !!'it_h=tho~ I" _, _- -»-~‘yy "‘¥dm not stop for bankruptcies, for its inhabitants never fail. It does not stop for impassable streets, for tharearc no fallen snows nor about ten or fifteen other half-hours,‘ of Him who made. it possible for you to » receiving your reward if you have been - ' Take the celebrates those victories Jesus Christ. Tulle it While all heaven Thy saints in all this glorinus war Shall conquer though they die. They see the triumph from afar, And seize it with their eye. .—-——————3——---——- Pointer for Advertisers. .-—¢- No one who will take the trouble to market which might be iulver'.isc:l with good profit in a general way. Sumcr-f them have gained a ninde-rate sale on, their own merits and vrithoutpushiug, This condition of things seems to be satisfactory’ to the proprietor; possibly because he does not realize how profic- ably advertising would be for him, possi- bly because he does not know how to go about it. In either case he needs waking up. Well-written advertisements are more than fifty cent news. Assertions can be made and sustained that there are cases on record where there has been more real brain matter expended on the making up of an advertisement than in the construc- tion of many pages which rest under the dignified name, literature.—[South Bead 1nd,) Tribune. Never fix the price ofanything so low that you can't allbrd to advertise it. Circulars hit only once, if at all, and are then consigned to the waste-basket. Do .'t advertise spasrnudically——keep at it. Your particular line of goods may not he wanted to-day; they will be sought- to-morrow, or the day after. Dou’t run the same card from January to December. Change occasionally. Don't get. into a rut. Have some vim. People won't and can't guess that you have a good thing. 4 A _ Success msaus thought. It costs no more to ‘publish good matter than poor. Prepare your matter carefully; malre - it attractive; dun’t crowd; let your catch lines he bo‘d. Great fortunes nude by advertislu Napoleons are often referred to. But who has counted the moderate fortunes, the c0'mlor'tal>le competencies, and the steady sources of income that are to be credited to newspaper advertising? To dispence with sdvertisio 3 would dry up commerce and turn back civilization.- GREAT CLOSING ‘OUT some 7 ti iStampor’s Ilorner. _.._. Big Discounts. R.K.JOST. “IF. have In stock a full line of . all the best Cough Vedicincs now U1 "3’ O O B 00 '13s 02 no.0 N Charlottetown, P. E. 1. season 1362. VVE are Qptv busy preparing for our 4 Thirteenth Season in the Seed Business. 3 ' ‘ Making a specialty of Seeds, and con- llwing nu!‘ attention to the Pruvincenf Prince Edwardjsland, we other to Farm- ers and Gurdurérs only such Seeds as are suited to our _ il and climate. « Our large trade with all parts of P. E. Island, supplying the largest Farmers and Murlcut Gardfihers, hiss given ugau imj. imtc knowledge of the heat ovsrieties; while, what. is’ of equal iinportancc, we have the klll)Wll,{(lg€ ul the countries which J‘r'n<i|lce tlm:-us arietics, and the growers who may be d ;ntled llpull to produce ' _ perfection. We have a Hf testing Seeds. Lrestcd will do well to I from week to Wuek as ings to say that all should lmow. Our Bed C‘ iii:-h1892, will be ready ut the of Is . Send nam apd=‘]:i’d,é_Q&a ‘ ill mail a copy é o . -. Nu ueedéof ding money--away to foreign firms. .. We"c-in supply Seeds fiscally good, miflh better adapted to our imste, fully as49'_low, or lower in prices *and without anytrislr of delay or loss. Address 3*; a Geo. CA{RTER& Co Se eds men -; (lharlottetown. Ch’town. vet, to -4 it. I. I‘. ran SALE. E olfeigfor sale by pri- vate cnntract the , Sohr. “%Restive,” 75 tons measurement and 7 years oldfinow lying in Pictop, N. S. This vessel a large carrier and at good ‘ sjtiler, and is in good condition», For particulars gpply to A. it. WRIGHT, EPHRAIM READ, Assignees Estate Jos. Read dz Co Summer-side. Jan. l:6--d lmo. tional Classes, LARGE, ‘dwell-liéhtcd, comfinfabl-3 "-1 Y. M L Peters and Magazines cagybc seen :— IYIAGAZINES :—-Amaican Garden, Am- ateur Work, Blacl-zwnod, Iharr bets’ Journal, 1'asscl|'s Family journal; Century, Cnntgm. porary, Fortnightly, Einetcenth Century, Chautauquan. Eclectic, Good Words, Har- per’s Magazine, North ‘American Review, Outing, Popular Science Monthly. Review of Reviews, Sunday at Horny, Scribner, ILLUSTRATED wnzxusss Harper’: in the market, including such well- known and tried Remedies as-— l"cllows' Sn-up, Ayer’s Chzrry Pectorsl, Allen's Lung Balsam, Syrup of Red Spruce Gum Sharp’: Balsam, etc , etc. Also, I Wine of Beech Trc‘ , Cresaotc and Elixer of Tcrcbcnc. which are highly recommended; Cod Liver Oil, Emulsions cf difl'ereut makes, and Pure Norwegian Cod Liver Oil, on draft and in bottles, rluwans, 4 STOVEPIPE. ELBOVVS, wnnwons. HE undersigned has on hand all kinds 0 TINWARE, STOVEPIPE, ELBOWS é'c., wholesale and retail. Also, isprcpsned Iofit up WATSR PIPE n Houses, with Fsucctsforusein the Kitchen or other Rlgstotms, at . Orders atmy , ' be _ u inc. . 4 FY00? Y .f'4'l‘cruuIuoderate, M. STEVENSON, . 1379 St flbnuflflfl H I 1'. ‘April rensls Spring Trip on Liverpool. THE CLIPPER BARK mu 3.9:-:aIt£ 7'00 Tons-nncisrss, T Hewly Metaled and Classed A1 at ALE- lfcI.30D. Commander- will be on the bcrthto ‘receive cargo, about the 'stof )fsrch.and will sail l‘son--I.IVER- or of April, Freight at through the dilfircnt Railway poijitson the : their a‘pply in London to John nion Court, Old Broad _ list your: as victor‘ 5lio".’Str.eet:—-in I5vei:poe1.—,to Pitcairn creams,-5: out of in. couch a two o’clock as hoe» pg John ' ‘ victor. gvcrlho 5» 1 to the owners ‘oimi .ahreis.f. c 3915- 9- on v < um... cease POOL Fol. CHARLG'l"l'E'l’OWN; about the ' I.-m£..saos:.a.-co.f . A . ‘Weekly, Punch, Penny Illustrated. Queen, .Grapbic, Grip, Illustrated London News, =Domlnion Illustrated,» Yfbnlhfl Compani0n' Young Men’: Era. _ .EDUCA'I‘lON~.-SI. PU_BLICATIONS:—- Educational Journal, Kindergarten, Popular Educator, Canadian Ma c of and Industrial Art, Edgcatin 1 Tmeg, Edna. rlion. Tcsl:lIe(s' Institute, 3 Under the terms or afiil' _' ‘on between the C. A A. aud‘thc Y._‘»M—.'C ~A.. all msrnbers holding full membership are entitled to the use of the Gymnssiu Information regarding ' / Educational Classes on application to t ' General Secre- (try. 4‘ ‘ ‘ ' i Tickets admitting to Gymnasium. Rcadi and other Rooms, $5..» year,‘ Reading Room alone, $2.00; Boysdndcr :6 years n ace. h_t1fpw=e- i . . . _ You are cordially invited call and look throuesh the institution. ‘,7. always see]. c. A.-hm-‘rr, . GN|¢l"l -‘ecrctarvv l810_:};892 i8n’< one-'~ NGLISH mwcs ma: .'l'on.s'r REQUISITES-’-S ' soaps, Hair Brushes, (_Zomhs,.Clo3hi‘. shes, Tooth Brushes. Vinolia . .Eu Iish, lfiencli and Aural " Perfu -choice odors. ’ " ‘ Physicians’ Supplies-T‘:g:fiaméu‘f;, sy. n'nges, all kinds. Abdominal’ Supporters, Trusses (the _ ‘ ' . Bandages, Cru cs, 61:. 4 ‘ Patent Medicines and ' ' our line cheaper than anv‘ _ 4 the trade. Pius‘ ro sot-r svssv / Pink’ rm. Tusaccos-—All kinds. .11‘ ‘- Cgsrets, cipes carefully prepared with chcmic’alsim'porteddweet° ' of Parke Davis of Bros., and other leading ’ . —.:~ Hons: sun CATTLE Msnterié Agent for Parke Davis 6- st their prices: _4 5 . -c We_un' port Iarzeiy and resale or rctail on the most reasonable ’ 4 3.. i_ « S Gm :*?fiU$H.ES-S 'l-n-‘?3- d=u*é'w.- 4 . — - },’>_. ,'«.<:;—_.: ‘H 'V./ _A 15p4fee1s; .-K" 5-. ' RLOTTWNIN Reading Room, ‘where the following» , Scientific American and Supplement, London. ,Hall: Crcass-A large ~ Pl: P’ if "' ‘ '°‘°" ..'~t.:t'......*~. —.r-—.-—-.——-j._..._...A.-.. __t‘-E‘ EDWARD ISLA WE HAVE ALL THE LEAIIINGL .. ‘AT -rr;-1.1.: LOWEST 3". . .'~-..r, Charlottetown. Jan, 2. 4 'VVe§a.re selling. tha.n ha.1.f price. For real solid c rock bottom prices try us: We will — antee to give - better satisfaction money than any House in til}! I I A .—....—-1 O off'iseve1‘a;1.lol:€eut .4 (Ex. Bssrk’t Brenna.) 500 Boxes Coltc Tin. 99 Bales “Adam's Mars" Best” Gslv'd Iron. 75 Ingots Lamb and Flag Tin. ' l 20 Pigs Lead. n5 Bales Black Sheet Iron. 15 Bars Copper. 33 Cask: Linseed Oil. IN STOCK. 325 Coils Pure Manills Rope.‘ 25 Bales " _ “ Mgrlloe, I0 Cask: Rosin. lo " Turpentine. 50 Cases do. ‘ 5 Casks Lacquer. —— 1'0 Anlvs ..... 25 Bales lIannsaIl’s Salmon Twine —— A1‘ can -- ndiépul_e_d_ Fae s ‘Vhmave advertised in all our local pspres for many years that we have thc largest, the cheapest, the best assortment o CV0‘-‘kefi. China and Glassware in P.E. Island and that we sell more of this class of goods than any other House in this Pzovincc. This has never yet been contradicted We have now in stock, and to arrive. 6ooo Plates 2600 Cups and Saucers, 3oo Pitchers, 600 Bowls, tzoo Tumblers and Goblets, over a hundred Dinner Sets. 130 Tea Sets, 0 Chamber Sets. Hanging and Stand Lamps. A very large assortment of Fancy Cups and Sunsets; Fruit Sets. Glass Table Sets; very nice Vases. Those Goods must and nil.‘ he sold cheap at the cheapest C Store W. P. COLWILL Nov. ta» dé-w Iy The T_e_l9nh0ne 003’ 4 TOLL LINE ‘STATIONS. Annandalc, . Stewart. on . . Bmlalbme. Montague South sue Brush Whllf. Murray River. . ,Bcllc Creek, ‘ _ Hurray Harbor North 9 _ hglsrray Harbor South, lrlorell ' ‘ gsrlottctown, ‘ ’ nvflld North Rnxicc, J... .’:='.*;:*‘*'= . _ cquc. cw ssgow Cmilsan. 0 cu; ' KW Peaks‘: Station. Emerald, Pownal, ‘ ' Eldon. _ Pincttc, Frcct ‘ lg, Slat » on ugustus‘, Sununersldc, » 1 ' Stanley, ,3. . Georcetovnn Scum. .- 4!-Iuntcrkivcr. ' SouthPort_._ . hind’: Hills, V ' but so Station, xsllcyfiellg, 3 15'5". “O01!-33¢, D fid . Webster’: Corner,- lfalpeqse, ‘ Wood Islands. Ron ’.l1\'_c.lJ4s,44.«l-i Manager. Tolrosluce Shippers reliable information as to the 4 state our Breton Produce Warkct, and as to‘sisc»and assortment of ca. gees, is obtainable by application to * _ ' _(3_ou:i!Iissi:)n Hergha North ".vduov...C.‘>*f '3-j*_44!7. ‘cl 7 A musics Plomzni SGH ONERSUPPLIES Lowest Market Prices Bqml fiuains UNTIL woo +i.;.......- rm, Accident, .. , ,4; ilillcgant Ill .l ble in Constmofibn, I i‘ h in Tone, Acknowle ed by - the best Authnrit es, One GreatPiano ofcan Tbs 7 Thousand , E good accounts o. g ven of them. _ Catal es mailed free on appfi n“ THE. WILLIS - ('IlRI§’6UC»C'.,CiUW'Is« ~ _ N early Fifteen. In use, and In '2’ Eastern As ‘ ‘ : V I capirficllfgilife Union Assurance Soemty, I asacrs, ovsll * -— . FIRE INSURANCE ‘ CAPITAL. ALL ‘THE * LEADING I Sold on the Instsllmc ti 1 It ’ .......... 2.. ::.*.“...°'.';..'°" M rwrite tor our Illustrated (Tstalogues. MILLER B