7 RVeeVerrtrr eye * *, + 7 q bd a Job m& & Ab URES, avis, LONDON HOUSE, QY KEN STREET. Job Printing of all Ki at short notice. Rillhead-, Letterheads, N@jeheads, Pampb- eta, Posters. Dodgers, etce” Teuws :—Frve Dottans « YEAR. ~~ gS “ This is trne Liberiy, when Free Born Men, haviag to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evairives. Siena ae of ner . Printing, and prom, » ers, THE | EXAMI. Fa q Depart- ment is pe. yar @a.. Drget it. Stxete Corizs Two Cxnres NEW SERIES. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND SATURDAY, AUGUST 6, 1892. VOL, 30.--NO. 63 = ———— — es Calendar for August, 1892. MOON'S CHANGES. Pall Moon, Gk GOR. «ccécscesccce 7 33 morn Last Quarter, 15th day........... 213 morn New Moon, 22nd day............. 6 35 morn First Quarter, 30th tee vbeas oes 9 S morn Pesigres, 12th day ....6....se08 6h. morn = = = = ea Day | | High Water. of | Day of Week. - Month. Morn. | After. wesc i j | h. m. | h. m. i Monday 339) 4 6 2 Tuesday 433 | & 0 3 W ednesday 5 47 6 25 4 Thursday 7a 7 37 5 Friday 8 11 8 4t 5 Saturday 9 10 9 36 7 Sunday 10 1 10 23 s Monday 10 44 ll 3 9 Tuesday ll 22 1) 39 10 W ednesday | 11 56 econ 11 Thursday |} 013 | 030 12 Friday 0 47 oe 13 Saturday 1 23 1 42 4 Sunday | oe 2 27 15 Monday . wo 3 27 i6 Tuesday 4.7 4 48 7 Wednesday } 6 40 6 32 i8 Thursday |} 733 7 53 19 Friday 8 29 8 25 2 Saturday 9 20 9 46 21 Sunday 10 4 10 23 22 Mouday | 10 41 10 59 23 Tuesday ll 16 ll 32 24 Wednesday | it 47 os oe 25 Thursday 0 3 018 26 Friday 0 33 0 48 27 Saturday e288 1 2) 28 | Saeed j i 38 1 56 2 Monday 214 2 35 30 | Tuesday | 2 57 3 23 31 | Wednesday 3 50 4 26 ST, GEORGE PHARMAGY, ——-HEADQUARTERS FOR— FISHING TACKLE. oma A RE Tne Flies, Reds, Reels, Lines, Casts, Hooks (with and without Gut), Landing Nets, etc. —THIS IS A CUT OF— OUR NEW STORE Come In and See Us ALL GOODS —ARE GOING AT— LOW PRICES ~ ~TO— CASSEL BU Y BRS WEERS & CO., WHOLESALE & RETAIL. Ch’town, July 4. eS — = = —— — = = : = — — E HAVE Nv FIVE-YEAR-OLD STOCE | at a 3} per cent. discount, nor do we adver- tise to sell our seocs at that discount, but only { ask a fair and hunest profit on a new and excep- | tionally good stock. Our RODS are very fine, and worth the price asked for them, FPF. De. DAVIES. may!3 PENNYROYAL WAFERS. ) ! painless discharge. No aehes or pains on a proach. Now used by over 30,000 ladies. Once used will useagain. lInvigovates these organs. Boy of your druggist only these with our signatore across face of label. Avoid substitutes, Sealed particuiars maile?) L te st i. 1.00 *) porte aie tale s , COMPANY, Deraorr, Mica. For sale, mailed, by Gt. E. HUGHES, at Apothecaries’ Hall, Ch’town. dw ty—saptz3 i JAMES A. MORRISON, Hi ALIF AX. WARREN, CAKEDBEAD & 00., TEA MERCHANTS, London, -- Engiand, -——AND ALSO—— First-Class West India Firms, etc. SPECIALTIES: Tea Sugar and Molasses. Careful attention given to consigninenta of Prinee Edward Island Produce. REFERENCE--Bank of Nova Scotia. OFFICE—Pickford & Black's Wharf. Halifax, August 13, 1891—dy & wy Several THE GREAT International Tunnel Route, Reaching over ita own tracks every City, Town and Manufacturing Centre of importance in ONTARIO and QUEBEC, And forming a Continuous All-Rail Highway between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. The Grand Trunk Railway has opened an office in Ubarlottetown for the yale of tickets to ali points in Michigas, Minnesota, Dakota. Mon- tana, Manitoba, the Northwest, British Colum- bia, Colorado, Arizona, California, Chicage, St. Louis, Kansas City. Omaha, St. Paul, Wiani- peg. Ke., Via Levis (Quebec) or Boston and the St. Clair Tunnel. SPECIAL EXCURSIONS Ty San Francisco and Intermediate Points: St. Paul, Portland, Ore., and Puget Sound Points, with only one change. LEAVE MONTREAL -« very TUESDAY, at 1.50 p. m., and every WEUNESDAY at 9.25 & m. 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WE ARE NOW SHOWING NEW GOODS IN ALL DEPARTMENTS, Staple and Fancy Dry Goods, Carpets, Curtains, Upholstering Goods, Furniture, Mantles, Millinery, Ready-made Clothing, Ladies’ Boots and Shoes, Stationery, China, Glassware, Crockery, Kitchen Utensils, etc., ete. FINEST ASSORTMENT IN CANADA. N. B.—Mail orders promptly and care- fully attended to. HENRY MORGAN & CO.., Colonial House, Montreal. ap22—tts tf become listless, fretful, without ener- gy, thin and weak. Fortify and build them up, by the use of SCOTT'S EMULSION OF PURE COD LIVER OIL AND HYPOPHOSPHITES Of Lime and Soda, Palatable as Milk. AS A PREVENTIVE OR CURE OF COUGHS OB COLDS, IN BOTH THE OLD AND YOUNG, IT 18 UNEQUALLED. Genuine made by Scott & Bowne, Belleville. Son” Wrapper: at all Druggists, 56c, and nent CILLET T's ™ “ # » , x $* Scar eae os - POWDERED / (907% LO. LYE PUREST, STRONCEST, BEST. Ready for useinany quantity. For making Boftening Wate-, Dis niecting, and a hundred uses. A can equais 20 pounds Sai Soda. Sold by All Grocers and Druggiste, BS WW. GILLETT, Toronta: THIS BAKING POWDER WOODILL’S GERMAN Is WELL SUITED for FAMILY USE and has been employed IN MY OWN HOUSEHOLD for many years. Georg? Lawsa, Pa. D., L. L. 0. E. I, C., G. B. & IRELAND, August 1, 1892. Church Music. Tue subject of Church Music is undoubt- edly a live one, as it is of the highest im- portance. The use of vocal and instru- mental music in the services of God’e house needs no justification from my pen, aor yet from that of any other, since it has been consecrated by all the ages which have intervened from the time when David chanted the praises of the great Jehovah in the Temple to the accompaniment of harps and other instruments of music even to this present hcur. ‘To music, in large part, we owe as well the dignity as the solemnity of our public worship, and hence the necessity for making the music we employ, and the manuer in which we employ it, alike suit- able and becoming to its purpose and in- tention. At the last Church Congress in England Church Music received a large share in the deliberations of that august assembly, and I am sure it will please Islanders to know that the most valuable paper read on the subject was by the Rev. C. Hylton Stew- art, of New Brighton. This paper re- ceived the special commendation of the B'shop of Waketield, who desired to see it printed and circulated widely. The experience of many years as an or- ganist and choirmaster and cleric in Eng- land and in Canada has naturally brought me a great deal into touch with the subject of Charch Music, hence my troubling you with this somewhat lengthy communica-; tion. The Church Choir has ever been, and I fear will never cease to be (so long as it exists), the most fruitful source of all the worries and anxieties that vex the parson, though I can give no adequate reason for the anomaly unless, indeed, it be true of its members, as tradition avers (though falsely), of musicians in general that they cannot long agree either with each other or with anyone else. I suspect it would be nearer the truth to say that the majority of the young (and older) people who join our Church Choirs do so as if they were con- ferring a favor on somebody or other, for- getting the fact that it is a high privilege to have a share, however humble it may be, in the services of God’s house. The choir is an expensive luxury—if it be a luxury;—it represents a large expen- diture (if not always in money, then in nervous foree); its concerns are constantly disturbing the peace of the congregation or well-nigh breaking the hearts of the par- son and the choir-master. Furthermore, it has now hecome the fashion in some quatters ior the church choir to give per- formances of a nature so elaborate and un- desirable that the stupefied congregation has either to stand and listen with amaze- ment, or else sit with grief and dismay while they sing. Finally, to complete the picture, the papers of the following day aunounce with admiration that the solo singing in such and such a church last night, under the direction of Professor somebody or othet, was remarkable. The church, then, is no longer a house of prayer and praise, but something mvure akin toa concert room. The question has often arisen in my mind, Are church choirs worth preserving ? I answer, ‘‘No, I think not.” Those who take a deep and true interest in the sub- ject will agree with me when I say that the music in our churches should be ;: (1) Con- gregational; (2) Hearty; (3) Unisonal; (4) Reverent; (5) Congruous; (6) Holy, i. e., tending to holiness. Congregational singing in church should be our first care. Where choirs exist they should lead, never usurp, the singing, as is too frequently the case in our churches of to-day. We of the Church of England rightly rejoice that we have our prayers and praises in common, i. e.. shared in by minister and people alike, We should see to it that this rejoicing in relation to the last is well founded. How shall congrega- tional singing be obtained? I reply, abolish the choir. This somewhat drastic suggestion will, 1 have no doubt, startle your readers. Never- theless 1 say again, you can never attain to an ideal congregational singing so long as you retain the choir—especially if that choir be mixed. The tendency of choirs in the present day is everywhere towards dif- ficult music, which, of course, most effact- ively prevents congregational singing, and hence the very idea of worship is destroyed thereby. Every exercise in church, whether of minister, of choir, or of congre- gation, should tend to the worship and glory of God, and tu this end they should be subordinated. Moreover, the members of our congregations have rights which we may not ignore. They have the right to sing God's praises whenever they repair to His House, just in the same sense as they have the right to pray to Him: and who is there amongst us who will deny them the enjoyment thereof? There is no sadder spectacle, I think, than to see men and women having to stand in church and listen to the performance of a choir—wishing, but daring not, to sing, or even to make the attempt, lest the choral rhapsodies of a handful of ambitious musicians be spoilt, forsooth |! If the choir is ‘‘to be retained and had in use,” it should be for purposes of edification and spiritual growth. Again, congregational singing may be ob- tained by establishing congregational sing- ing practice. This is the chief thing to be desired, though surprisingly few realize the fact. Let the congregation be invited as earnestly toa weekly singing meeting as they are tothe weekly praying meeting, Let the hymns chosen be such as may be sung to the good old melodies of the 17th and 18th cenruries, in which cur fore- fathers tock such undisguised delight and loved to sing ‘‘to the praise and glory of God,” and a change in our church music will soon be effected for the better. Pre- sent day music, though much, very much of it is so pleasing and sensuous, is yet, for this very reason, not nearly so well adapt- ed to the church services as the older and grander compositions to which I have just referred. Let the congregation be taught that they have theright tosiag, thatit is their jiy4 duty (nay the privilege) to sing, and there will not be very great difliculty in getting them to the weekly singing meetings. The organist and minister will both, of course, be present at the singing meeting, each in his special sphere doing his best out the new and better plan. Th m- bers of the disbanded choir throughout the congregation will give most effective assistance and in the best way. Lastly —Have nothing to do with anthems. They have their place in the various musi- cal societies around us, and in the social and domestic circle. They have no place in the serviees of the sanctuary unless they are known by every member of the congre- gation and have been taught to them. Then we want greater heartiness in our church music. I like that word heartiness ~—from the heart, with the heart. It ex- presses al] that a good man feels when he sings the **Old Hundredth” as an act of thanksgiving to Almighty God. If our congregations sang, the singing could not but be hearty and inspiring. Next, our church music should be unisonad. This, in order that the heartiness should be obtained. The bulk of the people who sing will sing the air or melody of the tune or chant sung, and this is both natura! and right. There is no one bold enough to assert that this could be improved or beautified by one ortwo here end there in the church singing an uncertain alto, tenor or bass which can have but the one effect of marring what might otherwise be a good thing. Unisonal singing is robust, vigorous and massive, and it has this great advantage when used inthe church service that most people can ‘*‘follow a tune” and in a short time acquire it for themselves. Thus if we would have a stirring hearty service, we are bound to strive after unisonal singing. Io relation to my friends and co-workers of the Church of England, I would like to say that 1 do not advocate the exclusive use of the Gregorian tones, though they are for the most part so well adapted to congregational singing. They are majestic, dignified, and some of them of unique beauty. Best of all, they are hallowed by the sacred associations of many ages, during which they were the only music that awoke the echoes of British and other cathedrals in the service of God. Furthermore, they possess the character and merit of simplicity—they are easily picked up and become very much endeared by use There is nothing grander in the way of church music than to hear a congregation sing the Psalm ‘‘When Israel came out of Egypt” to the famous J'onus Pere grinus, none more uplifting. The simpler oar church music is the better it wili be, and for Psalm singing, nothing simpler could be devised than the Gregorian tones or those chants by Anglican eomposers which most nearly resemble them, e. g-, those by Tallis, Boyce and Pelham Humphrey's. Unisonal singing, such as I advocate, may often be rugged, may be harsh and inharmonious. I will answer, however, for its heartiness. The success which followed the labors of the well known evangelists, Moody and Sankey, and the enthusiasm which they awoke wherever they went was due more to the singing of the simple ‘‘Songs” by the vast numbers who thronged their services than to augbt elise. What quartettee choir, owever finished their singing, could have evoked Rev. W. L. BROWN. THE CONQUEROR HAS COME! Heart Trouble, Dyspepsia, DIZZINESS, Muscular Rhenttathin CURED! Rev. W. L. BROWN, FOR YEARS A MEM- BER OF THE M. E, CHURCH, BUT FOR TRE) LAST TEN YEARS AN EVANGELIST IN THE CHURCH OF Gop. HE I8f WELL KNOWN BY THOUSANDS WHO WILL VOUCH FOR THE TRUTH OF THE FOLLOWING: GENTS :—I write to inform you that the TWO COURSES of SKODA'S DISCOY- EP-Y and LITTLE TABLETS have done wonders forme. I BETTER: hardly realize it, the change has been so marked. I contracted the Chrente Diarrhea) in the Army, and since 1865 I have beer a constant sufferer. In addition to this, I was troubled as follows: Ist a lame) Back and Hidmey trouble, Xd . Dys- —— 3d, Faintmess and an alt-gone| ee ings ae at of ach; 5th, Headache an izniness: aot fad tea ite in bed ford 30 da to ein bec r weeks at « THAN time; 7th, a Severe Meart Trouble that would cause my pulse to run at 98 for days aia time. I was treated by very eminent Physicians, but would be compelled te leaye my labors and return to my home weeks at a time— in fact] have had 15 fits of sickness! in the last 26 years, and several times have been given up to die. I feel that I am completely cured of of all my bodily diseases except the Diar- rhea, which is not cured but wy benefited, COLD i -shali take another course which I think will cure mé en- tirely. Yours with ors REV. W. L. BROWN. Atkineon, Me. THE ONLY MNDICINE SOLD WITH A GUARANTEE CONTRACT WITH EACH ROT- TLE. TRY A COURSE (6 BOTTLES) AT OUR RISK, IF NOT BENEFITED RETURN BOTTLES ANP GET YOUR MONEY. Pay ONLY FOR THE GOOD YOU RECEIVE. SKODA DISCOVERY C9,, Wolfville, N.S, ANNUAL so much spiritual enthusiasm, The complaint (heard on all sides) that our church services are dull and dreary is too well grounded. It would, I make bold to say, never be heard if; our singing were simpler, heartier and more congregational, To accomplish such a desir- able pur a London clergyman, pestor of a fashionable West End Church, has, for some months past, dispensed with the services of a choir and instituted congregational singing meetings, and with complete success. Many other clergy are about to follow (or have followed) his example. Then our church music should be reverent, such as will maintain the dignity of the service of God’s House and tend to the deepening of the spiritual life. Music that is jerky, fipp- ant and sensuous breeds uurest within the oul by pleasing fancy and tiokling itching ears. No place is left for that restfal delight which should fill the hearts of those who worship the Almighty. Sir John Staiger, no mean authority, considers that there is no comparison between the church music of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries and that of to-day, notwithstanding his having largely contributed to it himself; but nothing that bears his name is unsuited to the church, since his models have been chosen from Purcell, Boyce, Battishill, Tallis, Birch, Eldon, Aldrich and others whose ecclesiastic- al music will live forever. The stock of Ger. man chorals by Pleyel, Vu!pius, Rosenmuller, Luther and others is inexhaustible, and than these you can have nothing more dignified, more eminently suited to our church services, nor more musicianlike. In conclusion, I would have our clergy and organists everywhere exclude from their repertory of church music every tune which, when sung, does not minister directly to reverence aad holiness—reverence on the body and its attitude, holiness in the soul—that they should set nothing for singing in which the least musical may not have some share. Let all be taught that they are individually responsible for the music of the sanctuary and that they go not to church merely to pray, listen to achvir or t» the parson, but simply to worship God in psalms, and hymns and spirit- ual songs, in prayer and in the study of His Word. . Freperic E. J. Liuorp. P. S.—An open, fair discussion on the sub- ject of church music (not anonymous) would be most useful to us all I am sure. F, E. J. L. SKODA’S DISCOVERY, the Great German-A can m- oy, for Heart, Nerves, Liver, Kidneys, Blood. Guarantee contract with every bottle. Pay only for the good you receive. At all Druggists, 81.00 per bottle, six bottles $5.50. If you want to know about SKODA’S REME- DIES, send postal for ** Morning Light.” ondaliia The secretary's report presented at a meeting of the Dominion Millers’ Associa- tion estimated that the wheat crop for the coming year would have a surplus of twenty- two million bushels for exportation. _—~.>-— No smoker who has ever used the Myrtle Navy tobacco for, saya month, ever relin quishes it for any other brand. Ite flavor is rich and full, and it never burns the tongue or parches the palate. It is, in fact, the ne plus ultra of smoking tobacco. Mudstmme? Sa ——AT THE—— BAZAAR STORE E aie going to make a CLEARANCE SALE of Chinaware, Glassware, Plush Goods, Albums, Games, Tennis Rackets, Toy Waggous, Hammocks, Uro- quet Sets, etc. In order to “trun off” our immense stock during this mouth, we will quote prices unheard of before in Charlottetown. Don’t fail to take advantage of this oppor- tunity for getting a thousand beautiful and useful articles at a trifling cost. The RUOM PAPER trade is still boom- ing, and you can get better bargains than ever. Remember that we keep the best assort- ment of Combs, Brushes, Purses, Satchels, Fans, Photo Frames, ete., in town. Tooth Brushes from 6 cents upwards. Artists’ Paints, Brushes, Palettes, Can- vas, Plain China, etc., always on hand. Canvas stretched to order. DON’T FORGET THE PLACE : BAZAAR STORE, Queen Street. Ch’town, July 6, 1892-eod & wy Charlottetown Driving Park, FLOWER SHOW. IENDERS for Catering at the Flower Show and Races, to be heid on the Exhibition Grounds on 17th August, will be receivad by the enanee up to and including MONDAY. 8th ugust. A. B,. WARBURTON, jy30—30, ang 3 & 6 CAUTION. EACH PLUG OF THE Myrtle Navy i. & B. NONE OTHER GENUINE, jan2—dy & wky a ae ri ra es point lect ea = canal