* i in eek cs PAKS Weak Terms :—Five DoLLaRs a Saad, NEW SERIES. Che Daily Examiner is issued every evening by The Examiner Publishing Oo. From their office, corner of Water and 3feat George Streets, Charlottetown, This is true Liberty, when Free-Born Moen, having CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, SATURDAY, 6,500 TABERNACLE SERMON. | “The Marriave Ring. ” { | se " » ? | MOTHERHOOD, St Louis, Mo., March 28 —Rev. T. De- | Witt Talmage, D. D., of Brooklyn, preached to advise the Public, may speak*free.--Kvriripes. APRIL 3, 1886. out of a hundred of them, came from such an illustrious ancestry of hard knuckles and homespun And who are these people in society, light as froth, blown every whither of temptation and fashion—the peddlars of filthy stories, the dancing-jacks of political parties, the scum of society, the tavern- Sivece Copies Two Cents VOL. 18---NO, 112 wrong-doing on earth it shall go to a home of impenetrable darkness and an abyss of immeasurable plunge, is being de- cided by nursery sopg and Sabbath lesson, and evening prayer, and walk, and ride, and look, and frown, and smile. Oh! hew many children in glory, crowding all the battlements, and lifting a million-voiced Prince Edward Island. imthis city this morning, on his way home lounging, the store-infesting, the men of| hosanna, brought to God through Christian —RATES OF SUBSORIPTION— ae jfrom his Western trip, the twelfth of his low wink, and filthy chuckle, and brass} parentage ! a 7 series of erezmons on ‘The Mar- breastpins, and rotten associations? For} One hundred and twenty clergymen T. momths...... .... 6. cee eee eee eee ees $2.50 40 a riago Ring.”” its subject was ‘‘Mother- the most part, they come from mothers idle; were together, and they were telling their ree months....... poe nae s Rnwewaeneee 1 25 Bsn hood. and disgusting—the scandal mongers of] experience and their ancestry ; and of the ce eal ‘ican oes 50 Advertising at moderate rates, Contracts may be made for monthly, quar- | térly. half-yearly, or yearly advert'sements, op application. AUMANAC FOR APRIL, i886. MOON'S CHANGES. New Moon 4th day, 10th,, 18.1m., a, m, S, E. | First Quarter llth day, 4th, 31 5m, p, m, SW Full Moon 1*th day, 10th, 467, a m, N. Last Quarter 26th day, th, 3.0m,a. m. E. : te Be - ¥ > . : : L. E. PROWSE’S. WILL BE Se of this stock has SOLD CHES4P. 0 been bought at about 30 per cent. less than regular prices, therefore Big Bargains will be given in every line. For Style, Quality and Low Price we The eloquent preacher took for hia text, |1 Samuel 2, 19: *‘Moreover his mother jmade him a little coat, and brought it to | society, going from house to house, attend- ing to everybody’s business but their own, believing in witches, and ghosts, horseshoes (him from year to year, when she came up|‘ keep the devil out of the churn, and by a sacrifice.” says within herself, lwith her husband to offer the vearly|2°dless life setting their children on the | very verge of hell. The mothers of Samuel The stories of Deborah and Abigail are Johnson, and of Alfred the Great, and of very apt to discourage a woman’s soul. She oe heey and of St. Augustine, ae “It is impossible that | Richar Cecil, and of President Edwards, l ever can achieve any such graudeur of | for the most part, were industrious, hard- | working mothers. character, and 1 don’t mean to try;” as jthough a child should refuse to play the ‘eight notes because he caunot execute a i** William Tell,” Now, while I congratulate all Christian |mothers upon the wealth and the modern i . 1 : . This Hannah of the text |°8ience which may afford them all kinds of |differs from the persons I jusgnow named. | help, let me say that every mother ought to one hundred and twenty clergymen, how many of them do you suppose, assigned as the means of their conversion the influence of a Christian mother! One hundred out of the one hundred and twenty! Philip Doddridge was brought to God by the Scripture lesson on the Datch tiles of a chimney fireplace. The mother thinks she is only rocking a child, but at the same time she may be rccking the fate of nations, rocking the glories of heaven. The sane maternal power that may lift the child up may press a child down. A daughter came to a worldly mother and said she was anxious about her sins, and Di {Sun |Sun !Moon| High! Davs : ) ; . » ae : aia i |PAY OF WEEK| . n\sots | rises water|len’h, | Leave all other competitors behind. |She was an ordinary woman, with ordinary | De oDecrvant, = ee eine at a. me an all ae — om: lintellectual capacity, placed in the ordinary |*ildren’s behavior, her chi'dren’s food, her| mother said ; ‘‘ Oh, stop praying ! on’t ih mh mmornfaft'n -h m/ 5 44.6 23 Friday | 42) 26) 3|Saturday | 40) 26 26) 9 54) 9 45' 42 5 22}10 20! 45 8,12 39 ' ! PLEASE COME AND SEE i EK PROWS prapenanepoes, and yet, by extraordinary jPiety, standing out before all the ages to 'come, the model Christian mother. children’s looks, her children’s companion- ships. However much help Hannah may jhave, I think she ought every year, at believe in praying. Get over all these reli- gious notions and I'll give you a dress that will cost five hundred dollar’, and you may + 4 5 ‘ r . ’ 4|/Sunday | 38) 2715 49/10 53; 49 Hannah was the wife of Elkanah, pany 5 8 sone mapa a ml oend ae Ro ih ae ts Monda 37| 29| 6 17/11 27; 52 . ( ‘ | Was @ person very much like herself—un-} ¥0P¢ Mave morcy or . — ; ; Tunes 35) 30! 6 48 morn | as Sign of the BIG HAT, 74 Queen Street. | asain itil plain, never senind fought q| (unate as to have a lazy mother ! the gay circle, the gayest of all the gay, Wednesday 33' 32| 72310 2] 58 Ch’ m. March 90. '88 ‘battle or been the subject of a marvellous Again, Hannah stands before you as an| that night; and sure enough, all religious Chursday 31° 33,8 2/04013 2 1town, March 20, ‘86—eod wky ‘escape. Neither of them would have been |i#telligent mother. From the way in which| impressions were gone, and she stopped Friday 29 34) R 48) 1 1" 5-—_ ———_—_—_____—— ln genius. Just what you and I she talked in this chapter, and from the| praying. A few months after she came to 10 Saturday 27; 35,941/2 9 8) bmight be. that was Elkanah. | Way she managed this boy, you know she/die, and in her closing moments said : ard 2 z - Z : B. ae | The brightest time in all the history a was intelligent. There are ‘no persons in a] ‘* Mother, I wish you would bring me that Monday 2 3 ae Geeedl os ths tee Si; _}community who need to be so wise and] dress that cost five hundred dollars.” The td} Tuceday 3 aft 56) 5 o 16 | A N R 0 Va lthongh a ner eae ie = -gmeaona well-informed as mothers. mother thought it a very strange request, 14 Wednesday 20) 41) 2 8) 7 12) tl i pointing down to his birthplace. I think the| _ OC! this work of culture in children for} but she brought it to please the dying 15| Thursday 18 42| 3218 16 24! pointing own 0 his birthplace, t unk the ; : zs . tre: : si as fee > : 16| Frid 161 43143419 71 271 langels of God stooped at the coming of so|*his world and the next! This child is] child. Now, said the daughter, 17|Satarta 14} 48) 5 47/ 9 511 20 | ——__ AT --—- Lcemdidcial « prophet. r timid, and it must be roused up and pushed} ‘*‘ mother, hang that dresa on the foot of 18\Sanday 13) 48) 6 57 10 32| 33 | | As Samuel had been given in answer to} into activity, This child is forward, | my bed,” and the dress was hung there, on 19| Monday ii} 4a7i8 7 7] 36! 7 ex F) ’ NaS 3 |prayer, Elkanah and all. bile family, save and he must be held back and tamed down} the foot of the bed. Then the dying girl 20| Tuesday 9| 48] 9 13/11 49} 39, E43 W Ss hy I ied R iB q) ES 6 | Hannah, started up to Shiloh to offer sacri- |i@to modesty and politeness. Rewards for} got up on one elbow and iooked at her 21) Wednesday 8; 50/10 12/aft26) 42) |fices of thanksgiving. The cradle where|°™* punishment for another. That which | mother, and then pointed to the dress, and 22| Thursday 6} S2j11 12) t 5} = 46) a ek dea ithe child slept was altar enough for Han-| Will make George will ruin John. The rod | said: ‘‘ Mother, that dress is the price of 23 Friday 4) 53}morn| 1 48 * lnah’s Grateful heart. bet when the boy was is necessary in one case, while a frown of| my soul!” Oh, what a momentous thing 24) Natarday 2} 54,0 1 233) 52! ~ old enough she nadie. him to Shiloh and took | 4/spleasure is more than enough in another. | it is to be a mother ! 25) Sunday 0} 55) 0 45) 3 26, 55 ai or ae as Whipping and a dark closet do not exhaust} 4. Again, and lastly, Hannah stands 26] Monday 458; 56) 1 24 4 32} 58 ee wind, odibante odoin ~— all the rounds of human discipline. There| before you ‘the rewarded mother. For alli 27| Tuesday 57) 58) 1 55) 5 43/14 1 fiiasindid iitteedh: dank dies ennnadi have been children who have grown up and, the coats she made for Samuel, for all the 28| Wednesday 56:7 0} 2 29) 6 5l 4 ice un © Lord, and there, according tu ‘ 7 ‘ : 38 ' -|- . 5; Vv y t * fc > 215 . ’ 29| Thursday 54; 1 2 57/7 46 6 & previous vow, she left him; for there he ee wo por west ever having had prvvnee che. ivan tot a ios he ae ; ln O pan was to stay all the di of his lif ! eir ears boxed, j ne exerted o1 n, got a * Friday 4 52)7 2} 3 23) 8 33)14 7 LARGE STOCK OF SEASONA BLE ‘GOODS : deta a abe Sabian me Ste, ‘and Oh !how much eare and intelligence are | compensation in the piety, and the useful- oak necessary in the rearing of children! But | ness, and the popularity of her son Samuel; L. ARTHUR & CO. GENERAL Gommission Merchants, 121 ATLANTIC AVENUE, BOSTON, MASS. Eggs and Produce a Specialty. July 15—dly wkly CAUTION. EACH PLUG OF THE MYRTLE NAVY ry & B. IN BRONZE LETTERS. i Cocoa, China Largest Stock of &0 400 Pieces Grey Cottons, 220 Pieces White Cottons, 150 Pieces Print Cottons, aa White and Colored Knitting Cotton, —-——- 90 ——-—— Large Stock of Colored Dress Goods. Brussels, Tapestry eee -= —_—_—-———— J eee ee aan 0 | 48 Pieces Hessiavs, | 48 Pieces Table Linen, | {40 Dozen Towels. — ing, Black Costume Cloth, Xc. o—_—---———- and Wool Carpets. and Twine Matting. OM PAPER on PB & Island. PERKINS & STERNS. Years rolled on, and every year Hannah made with her own handa garment for Samuel, and took it over tohim. The lad would have got along well without that garment, for 1 suppose he was well clad by the ministry of the Temple; but Hannah cguld not be contented unless she was all ‘the time doing something for her darling boy. ‘* Moreover his mother made him a little coat, and brought it to him from year to year, when she came up with her hus- band to offer the yearly sacrifice.” 1, Hannah stands before you, then, in the first place as an industrious mother. There was no need for her to work. Elka- nah, her husband, was far from poor. He belorged to a distinguished family; for the Bible tells us that he was the son of Jeroboam, the son of Elihu, the son of were distinguished people, no doubt, or jtheir names would not tioned. Hannah might have seated herself with her family, and, with folded arms and dis- heveiled hair, read novels from year to year, if there had been any to read; but when I see her making that garment, and have been men- OILCLOTHS & DLINOLBEUDS. intucsisus toe pened be iets ton }pleasure. God would not have a mother ‘become a drudge or a slave; He would have jher employ all the helps possible in this 'day in the rearing of her children. But | Hannah ought never to be ashamed to be found making a coat for Samuel. Most mothers need no counsel in this direction. The wrinkles on their brow, the pallor on their cheek, the thimble- imark on their finger attest that they are ifaithful in their maternal duties. The bloom, and the brightness, and the vivacity in this day, when there are so many books on the subject, no parent is excusable in being ignorant of the best mode of bring- ing up a child» If parents knew more of dietetics there would not be so many dyspeptic stomachs, and weak nerves, and incompetent livers among children. If parents knew more of physiology there would uot be so many curved spines, and cramped chests, and inflamed throats. and diseased lungs as there are among children. If parents knew more of art, and were in sympathy with all that is beautiful, there would not be so many children coming out in the world with boorish proclivities. If parents knew more of Christ. and practiced more of His religion, there would not be so many little feet starting on the wrong road, The eaglets in the eyrie have no advan- tages over the eaglets of a thousand years ago; the kids have no superior way of climbing up the rocks than the old goats taught hundreds of years ago; the whelps know more now than did the whelps of ages ago--they are taught no more by the lions e: the desert; but it is a shame that in this day, when there are so many opportunities of improving ourselves in the best manner of cultivating children, that so often there ia no more advancement in this reapect than there has been among the kids and the eaglets and the whelps. 3. Again, Hannah stands before you as a Christian mother. From her prayers, aud from the way she consecrated her boy to God, I know that she was good. A mother may have the fiaest culture, the most bril- liant surroundings, but she is not fit for her duties unless she be a Christian mother. There may be well-read libraries in the and that is true in all ages. Every mother gets full pay for all the prayers and tears in behalf of her children. Thatman use- ful in commercial life; that man promin- ent in a profession ; that master mechanic —why, every step he takes in life has an ‘echo of gladness in the old heart that long ago taught him to be a Christian, and heroic and earnest. The story of what you have done, or what you have written, of the influence you have exerted, has gone back to the old homestead—for there is some one always ready to carry good tidings and that story makes the needle in the old mother’s tremulous hand fly quicker, and the flail in the father’s hand come down upon the barn floor witha vigorousthump. Parents x . ‘ . \ and ali around us voices of riot and blas-|love to hear good news from their chil- Black French Merinoes, Black Cash- John, the son of Zuph. ‘*Who were phemy would not come up with such|drer. Do you send them good news al- meres. Biack Cords, Biack Runs? ¥ eil- they ?" you say, Ido not know; but they | ecstasy of infernal triamph. ways? Look out for the young man who speaks of his father as the ‘‘governor,” the ‘“‘squire,” or the ‘‘old chap.” Look out for the young woman who calls her mother her ‘‘maternal ancestor,” or the “‘old woman.” “The eye that mocketh at his father, and refuseth to obey his mother,the ravens of the valley shall pick it out, and the young eaglet shall eat it.” God grant that all these parents may have the great satisfaction of seeing their children grow up Christians. Butoh! the pang of that mother who, after a life of street-gadding and gossip retailing, hanging on the children the fripperies and foliies of this world, sees those children tossed out on the sea of life like foam on the wave, or nonentities in a world where only bravery and stalwart character can stand the shock! But blessed be the mother who looks upon her children as sons and daughters of the Lord Almighty. |of girlhood have given place for the grander| house; and exquisite music in the parlor;} Oh! the satisfaction of Hannah in see- f : ; idignity, and usefulness, and industry of|and the canvas of the best artists adorning | ing Samuel serving at the altar ; of Mother i one t er enuine. jmotherhood. But there is a heathenish|the walls; and the wardrobe becrowded| Eunice in seeing Timothy learned in the Ri Oct. 20. BOSTON. SPRING ARRANGEMENT. THE PALACE STEAMERS OF THE INTERNATIONAL S.S. CO. Leave St. John for Boston, via Eastport and Port- land, every Tuesday and Thursday, at 8.00 a. m. Fare from Charlottetown to Boston, 36,50, 2nd Class ; $9.50, lat class. For tickets and other information apply to G,. A.SHARP, F. W. HALES, P. BE. 1. RG P. E. L?’Steam Nav. Co. or to your nearest Ticket Agent. Feb 8, 1886—eod wky REMOVAL, N ACMILLAN’S COAL OFFICE has been EL Removed to foot of PRINCE STREET, A Large Assortment of HARD AND SOFT Ch’town, Feb. 23, ’86. FLOUR! WHOLESALE AND FLOUR! RETAIL. ‘oO? Ye=>_— Every Barrel Warranted. Give us a call before buying elsewhere. jidea getting abroad in some of the families of Americans; there are mothers who banish themselves from the home circle. ‘For three-fourths of their maternal duties 'they prove themselves incumpetent. They are ignorant of what their children wear, land what their children eat, and what their jchildren read. They intrust to irresponsi- ible persons these young immortals, and fallow them to be under influences which imay cripple their bodies, or taint their |purity, or spoil their manners, or destroy TTAVING a Large and Well-assorted Stock on hand, we are their souls. selling CHOICE FLOUR very cheap to suit the times. We keep all the Choice Brands on hand, such as— Matchless, Kent, Victory, Forest City, Queen, Our Favorite, City Mills, bris. and half-bris, &c. — ALSO — CHOICE PASTRY, in half-barrels. From the awkward cut of Samuel’s coat ‘you know his mother Hannah did not make jit. Out from under flaming chandeliers, and off from imported carpets, and down ithe granite stairs, there has come a great ‘crowd of children in this day, untrained, jsaucy, incompetert for all practical duties \of life, ready to be canght in the first whirl of crime and sensuality. Indolent ‘and unfaithful mothers will make indolent ‘and unfaithful children. You cannot expect neatness and order in any house | where the daughters see nothing but slat- jternliness and upside-downativeness in {their parents. Let Hannah be idle, and /most certainly Samuel will grow up idle. | Who are the industrious men in all our occupations and professions’ Who are they managing the merchandise of the , world, building the walls, tinning the roofs, | weaving the carpets, making the laws gov- lerning the nations, making the earth to |quake, and heave, and roar, and rattle with | the tread of gigantic enterprises ? Who are ; with tasteful apparel; and the children be wonderful for their attainments, and make the house ring with laughter and innocent mirth, but there is something woeful-look- ing in that house, if it ba not also the resi- dence of a Christian mother. I bless God that there are not many prayerless mothers—not many of them. The weight of responsibility is so great th at they feel the need of a Divine hand to help, and a Divine voics to comfort, and a Divine heart to sympathize. Thousands of mothers have been led into the kingdom of God b the hands of their little children. There were hundreds of mothers who would not have been Christians had it not been for the prattle of their little ones. some day fn the nursery, they bethought to raise for eternity. What is my influence upon it? Not being a Christian myself, Christian? Lord help me !” Are there anxious mothers, who know nothing of the infinite help of religion ? Then I commend them to Hannah, the pious mother of Samuel. Do not think it is absolutely impossible that your children come up iniquitous. brows, and bright eyes, and soft hands, and innocent fhearts, crime gets victims—ex- tirpating purity from the heart,and rubbing out the smoothness from the brow, and quenching the lustre of the eye, and shrivelling up, and poisoning, and putrefy- ing, and scathing, and scalding, and blast- ing, and burning with shame and woe. Standing | themselves : ‘‘ This child God has given me} how can I ever expect him to become a | Out of just such fair| Scriptures. That is the mother’s recom- pense, to see children coming up useful iu the world, reclaiming the lost, healing the sick, pitying the ignorant, earnest and use- fulin every sphere. That throws a new light back on the old family Bible when- ever she reads it, and that will be oiat- ment to soothe the aching limbs of decrepitude, and light up the closing hours of life’s day with the glories of an autumnal sunset. There she sits, the old Christian mother, ripe for heaven. Her eyesight is almost |gone, but the splendors of the Celestial | City kindle up her vision. The gray light of Heaven’s morn has struck through the 'gray locks which are folded back over the | wrinkled temples. She stoops very much |now under the burden of care she used to |carry for her children. She sits at home, |too old to find her way to the house of God; but while she sits there, all the past | comes back,and the children that forty years | ago tripped around her arm-chair with their . 'griefs, and joys,and sorrows—those children are gone now. Some caught up into a | better realm, where they shall never die, ;and others ont in the broad world, testing | the excellency of a Christian mother’s dis- |cipline. Her last days are full of peace; and calmer and sweeter will her spirit be- /come, until the gates of life shall lift and ‘let in the worn-ont pilgrim into eternal ‘spring-tide aud youth, where the limbs /never ache, and the eyes never grow dim, ‘and the staff of the exhausted and decrepit | pilgrim shall become the palm of the im- | mortal athlete. Every child isa bundle of tremendous | possibilities; and whether that child shall | = Horsford’s Acid Phosphate, IN NERVOUS DISEASES. ? ithey? For the most part they descended \from industrious mothers, who, in the old | homestead, used to spin their own yarn,and|come forth to life, its heart attuned to the) | weave their own carpets, and plait theirown|eternal harmonies, and after a life of use- | idoor mats, and flag their own chairs, and|fulness on earth go to a life of joy in do their own work. The Stalwart men andj heaven; or whether across it shall jar| Dr. Henry, New York, says: ‘‘In nervous influential women of this day, ninety-nine eternal discords, aud after a life of disenves, 1 kuuw of no preparation to equal it, COA Las Kept Constantly on Hand, R. McMILLAN. Deo.%4—B3m vod & wky BEER & GOFF, OPPOSITE MARKET HOUSE. Feb. 25, 1886—2aw & wky ais emesis