H fi' ,. 'an .. . T. Lv. »`1‘1. 11”' e U. . 1 »... ~.' fe _ ` :H 1*' . .,,.i_ _'cU._‘_, nhl; »~1, he -iififf C1 _lt _.VI .|;; i .»‘l ll.-'_ , l in .-5 i ,-_l __,.,~ rl; H. . 5 v li 'l Pi *5 -*'51 fi.:- -:\.. wr ». ii ww.. l L 4 r ,Q :-=' 1°- 5,? v =.=~il?,‘ <1.;-. -i-F. .i€ ~i if ' .-. i. » . .. li" s " tv .1 -I _..-., .-\5 ...Q33 ily "tp 'ti if iz* if *il* in ' .,.;;=§§$;. iielil »= .iir by. i. z r iyiii. ‘é l N :ii »I.?=: ,iii i..:‘~»_ `. .lil ; i li; ,lf El If .., » » A hu wittr boiilei indispensable in every home. l'-lest is n_atnrc’s ture for pain. V -WelliakéaSpecialty of High Grade Rubber Goods the kind no th having Our fall stock is the most complete we have ever carried. All kinds and sizes. '1`he better kinds fully guaranteed. =-o IJ. G..lam|cson IPRUGGIST ‘ce-One-Half |, The World~ l wears glasses hut, not half of ' that halt vsear the r»ght glasses Wrong glasses are cfen ` worse than nm e, Ihey are a ` constant strain to the eyes. ~ Be on the safe side; lei us give your eyes a careful ex- amination. 5- G, H, Taylor -,.--1..... Jeweler & Opiisian Montague Black Fox fx I change . (brrc spondeuco Solicited 1 L. M. McKinnon, Manager Montague, P. E. I. . I' Z `DRowNnp is MoN'rru-:AL RIVER. . COBALT. Ont., Oct. 26-Whilst on a hunting trip, Thomas 0. Neal, an elderly man of this place, lost his _life in the Montreal River. He, with ,two companions, were travelling down tho ,Montreal River in a six- teen foot canoe, when it upturned. All got _on top of the canoe, but >Neal released his hold and started to _swim for shore. He was unale to _make the distance and sank. WHITE RIBBONERS AT ' ASBURY PARK ASBURY PARK, N. J., Oct. 29- Thousauds of- women wearing white ribbons emblematic of the cause thev advocate are gathering here to attend- the annualfconvention of the Nation- _al Woman's Christian Temperance Union. The proceedings will begin tomorrow and continue an entire -week. Among the participants will- bo several hundred foreign and other delegates to the recent world’s con- vention in Brooklyn. The convention sessions will he he.d in the Casino and will be presided over by Mrs. L. M. N. Stevens of Maine. MILITARY WEDDING ' IN THE CAPITAL WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct. 29- The first military wedding of the autumn ' season tool: place this afternoon, when Miss Dorothy Duncan Gatswood, daughter of Medl- cal Director and Mrs. James Duncan Gatewood, became the bride of Lieut. Earl North, of the Engineering Corps of the army. The ceremony took place in St. Marga.ret's Church and was followed by a reception at the home of the bride's parents. l soU'rHsnN s:nuoA'i‘ous ’ ' sr Nssnvrnnsi ‘NA9HVII»I»E. TENN.. Oct. 29.-- torato, and were the matter put to the test it would probably be found Prominent educators from all over the South gathered here today to. t take part in the annual convention of tho southern' Educational Auoois- and "let ¢|=°"° 0° 0"" “mln” ref The ' conv_ention_ sessions will c throodays. The jurisdiction over six- of old he is mistaken. There are many others with equal- B ly high principles and unquestioned scorn s bribe for their votes. take, and until we have the evidence to the contrary it is the viral every honest msn flood Qhsrlostsbwl Q- ling; gc lumnorlllo Alnonon. lands and llosslslu pr_lll1ip DIIIY OF EIEIIT 'ro nav, City Magistrstzrs Court, 9 a. m. N. B. 1 P. E. I. Sunday School convention, reopens. Zion Church. 9 8. lI\. Business Men’s luncheon, Zion Church: address by Dr. l!eElfrelh on "Boyhood and Moralsf' 12.15 p. rn. Apron sale and tea, Market House. Indoor baseball. Armour-ies. 73° P. m. ' THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3;, |913 I POOR OPIHI If After every election we hear a lot about bribery and corruption. The victorious party is invariably cor- rupt and the losers the victims of underhund methods seducing the allegiance of stslwarts. Whore there has been a considerable turn over of votes from one party to an- other, such n change simply means that the average elector holds nis political convictions so lightly that a bottle of whiskey will sway him politically as well as bodily one way or another. Anyone making an ‘ac- cusation of this sort against the free and elightened electors merely declares his belief that democracy is a failure and democratic government s. fraud. Iffo. bottle of whiskey or its equivalent will transfer a mau’s allegauoe from onomparty to another that mnn's opinionqli not worth re- cording ut the poll and he should not be entitled to the exercise of thc franchise. 1 _, In every constituency there is al- ways a certain convictionless section whose vote may be influenced by per- fervid oratory or the promise of something tangible, described eu- phemestically by Sir Wilfrid "as the rustling of the hay." But this is a small proportion of the electorate, at . least it is so in the Maritime Prov- inces whatever it may be in Quebec, or in the Northwest. The people in the Maritime Provinces are intellig- ent and, as a rule, high principled and it is hardly likely that any very considerable percentage of them would sell their honor and principles for n paltry bribe-be it whiskey or' a. five dollar note. It comes therefore as a surprise to find a responsible Canadian like the Rev. T. Albert Moore, D.D., of Toro- nto, gcn‘erul secretary of the depart- ment of temperance and moral re- form of the Methodist Church, de- claring at the Ontario Sunday School Teachers Convention that "OVER SEVFJNTY PER CENT OF THE ELECTOR.-\TE OF TUE DOMINION OF CANADA EXPECT BRIBES FOR THEIR VOTES.” We simply say it is incredible, Canada ie a church going country. At least seventy per cont of the pop- ulation ls Christian, and to admit that seventy per cent is corrupt is to confess that our Christianity is a failure; that more than half our church membership consists of hypo- crits and frauds. It means that churches are failures, and profession- al Christians unworthy of their hire. It means the world is getting worse instead of better; that temperance and moral reform are on the retro- grade. If over seventy por cent. of the electorate of the Dominion of Can- ada EXPECT bribes for their votes, then it is u safe assumption that a fair proportion of those that do not expect bribes will also be bribable. Thus we have according to the Rev. Dr. Moore, a community that is or may be, wholly corrupt, degraded below the status of the meanest South American republic, the elector- ste of which are at least prepared to go to war in support of their con- victlons. But we are fain to believe that the l`fev.- Dr. Moore has exaggerated. H-. has come across, in the course of his work, a great deal of what is shady and unprfncfplsd in political pro- inert Jute ii ui iii ment I should be N00 ready in 0lIel‘\u°'\ 511°* nine egg girolss. with an nver°l* membership of about I0 each Dur- ing the present season these' nine shipped a little over 60,000 doscn eggs direct to Montreal. The prions received wore, on an avtesv for the whole season. three ooutspcr dossn higher than then Dlid in the loyal market; this meant a clear uroht on this lot of $1.500 over what would have been realised in the home mark- et. ‘ .i s is B- undcrstood. This dillsrcncs does not arise through any fault of the home market. It is thefault of the y sy!- tom by which su kinds or ease. seed and bad. fresh and stale. big and little, are dumped together and sold at so mmgh pg; donen, The lIl¢l'€ll8nf. must protect liimself.H_s cannot a.K0r<|_ to psy for a case of o€B9» £011 P01* cent. of which must be thrown out. gh; game price that hs would pay for a case of all 80010889- ' This is where the ogg circle the advantage. The eggs are for ou a Quality basis. Every is stamped with the number of Circle and that of the producer. saleable eggs are charged back to the Circle and by it to_the producer. Inferior eggs are so sllrply discrim- nated against and so poorly Paid for that no member 0( a ¢ll‘°l¢ Wollld ill' cluds any such in his shipment. Every encouragement and evsrl' lu- ducement is held out for the produc- tion of good eggs; the members are specially instructed in the proper handling of eggs while waiting for market, also in the proper method! of breeding, feeding and housing. As a result of this there are really few eggs produced wzithin the circle that are* not of the best possible quality and they are still improving both in uuality and size. The, method followed is simple. Farmers organize themselves into a "Circle" or association, and al>p0iut President, Vice President, Secretary and Manager. "lbs mane!" l‘¢°°i"¢B the' eggs in a manner agreed H9011. either by collecting them from house has paid 288 the Un- centrnl- point. They are cased and shipped direct to Montreal where they are .sold on a strictly quality basis. The returns are forwarded to the Secretary whodlstrlbutes them among the patrons. _Definite arrange- ments for marketing are _of course made before shipment begins. Among the Circles now in opera- tion are those in Mont Carmel, Darnley, Grand River, Lower Bede- qne, Central Bedeque. in Prince County: Springfield and New Loudon. North, in Queen’s County; Brooklyn in King’s -County, with several others in process of organization. Those in operation louz enough to have' given the system a fair trial are perfectly sstisllcd,with the re- sults and are.alrsady making arran- gement forbetter poultry houses, im- proved breeds aud a general extension of the poultry business. ' .$1,500 of a straight gain in a seo- tion which represents but a very small fraction of the whole poultry ed. .The common sense method of marketing them is to sell them at their actual value. The egg circle system teaches how this eau bent ne and it should be developed. ~,,~ » . .-¢~I°°!~5°- .~. i ->‘ ' 1 ISIJME IN H|SlllHl§€ ~:-:-:~:~:~~:»:»:--;#»:-:i»:-:~:»:~;-»:-;~ t All Oldll' be inthe. they camo to School. They' the emphasis ortho sup- the teacher making preparation to teach the lesson. Bc- WQIB N°W¢ YU d° “°¢ “"5 U0 5° '“l"»- lievs him, that preparation for wor- ship was no less nocoasarythan Pre- paration for teaching. Worship was not the easiest expression of their bo- iug. The habit and the spirit of wor- ship wsre acquired only 'at the ex- pense of time, prayer. and sacrifice. The B. 8. Worker needed, therefore; to study carefully the things that would induce the spirit of worshill- The attitude of the Vader in H10 work of the Sunday School wont far in'deto&~mining the attitude of the school. And that led him to speak oi the plan for the worship of the school. From the moment that the school was called to order, the spirit of worship should prevail. Can you secure this without plan? Too many Supcrintendents went to the opening hour without any well thought-out plan of the service. Too many follow- ed thc stereotyped order whose only recommendation is that it was lB0l'€5\ to the memory of their fathers and of their- graudfathers. But. if they were to grasp the llic of that boy full of animal spirit, lacking in re- verence, yet a real hero worshipper, and train him to worship his Malloy, they had to be alive to some live plnu. And then there war the young girl. Her whole attitude was a ques- tion mark, aud her tongue was us- ually glving expression to the atti- tude. There was another girl beside her. Both had on new dresses, or new hats, or new shoes, or new hair rib- bons and neither could fully enjoy her own unless she had called the atten- tion of her companion to every. de- tail and excentrlcity of her attire. 'l‘helr problem wus to catch the ut- tentiou of that girl and direct it along Worshipful chqinels. And do not make the mistake that they had to drive the thought of that new dress or new nat entirely from tue mind of these girls. Such things were us much a part of their life as was the breath they breathed. Their pro- IIB -ev- to the lesson in which the class had illlt been 'instructed would help to_ retain the impressions of that lesson. A- good hymn that carried the thought of their lesson, rendered with a suitable tune; when they did that they were like s carpenter driv- ing home s. clinch nail and than turn- ing down the point- on the other side. Often times a. good hymn was the thing that would make a haughty will turn over to God"s side. The hymn was a cultivation of taste. Thle lad the speaker to touch on the crane that exists at the present day for ragtlme music; such a erase, he said. it was that one of the leading musi- cians in England .had been _led to throw up writing classical music and take to writing rag-time because he said` there was no money in writing classical music. Rag-time music was rag-time; there was nothing about lt. They as SUDQBY School oilicere had the power in their hands of counter- actiug that craze. I-le suggested that as they went back to their Sunday schools they should look up their tunes a little mor; and any tune that had any rag-time about it lfllt that into a secondary place, and give preference to any tune with long chords, large harmonies and deep meaning, as the more they counter- acted that craze for rag-time music the more good they would achieve. They should be very careful in the choice of music for their schools; they should he wary when they chose hymn and tune to see that they were not easy to parody; other- wise the spirit of the school would be killed. They should be wary also of fastening song tunes on to hymns. b ue wide they ture, brown F009 brown. . Somcthinl V017 °m° ‘N th’ "W pnmnsoo weaves in brown and blue. sy” phi; weaves in black, brown. a tau Green and 8"!- " gi uoosuaron _ wo have o brisht red diagonal eheviot, also blanket cloths in different shades. Pl`i°°* from $1.35 to $8.95 vcr `vd- V BD'I'l’INGS. ' _ r In suftings as in cloakings the rough surface cloths Pl'°'1°mi\\°*'°» Our sultlngs are all ll1lPi!'Bu°1\l 0! newness yet altogether practical. In plain cloths we have our celebrated I-Iygrade broadcloth in NSW- Tim- r en Gro Black also nmnnish Gllzlso novelty worstede in the lute!! shades, and the loveliost Epong Bou- esles weaves in light and dark Grcell. Nnvypnoyni Blue, Tan. Purple and Red. Heavy cheviots in Navy Blue just the thing for that knock suit and for the ' school Km. 819° mlm? others too numerous to mention from 9so. to $2.115 ver yd. We also have linings to suit all. purses. When a Woman buYB B BU" coat she knows that the life of the garment depends a great deal on the PAT G » Y. gorge; in Navy. Blue, Black, Brown,, 'wo' I novo' novels! sun ,slllss-srcivory ‘them in,Black, Navy ,jCnpcnhagon Blue, mack' -Mauve .nnd"BWhite w|m,_.: °“» . l F01’ full Bild" Vvfliliter satin faced sllkn have the endorsement of eh, hilllestmuthorltfcs of New York and 'Pa.ris. We have them = in Black, White. Navy, Brewer Tin. oi-on., Grey Taupe, Red,'~~De1ft Blue, P51, Blue, Pink, Light Green, ,Yellow and Cream. Our all-over laces are cxquisitg from 1984:. to ~8l.'lq per yd. We have ‘tho new Bulgarian_a1l~ovsr, also wi. oi-ed all-overs. We have cream all- fzii. ':.:~.':.:°;:~. :rv l-.taco edging in great varieties from 15 to 50 cts per yd. Insortions to :latch from 15 cts to fb cts po,- | , ._: As a finishing touch to that suit why not get s feather boa, or uma, :till a$;t\;i;atbou;;tg6 mul and stole rom - . o . . Lest you. forget wo'cordially in.- vits you to visit our store and ne, newest of the new -for yourself. ons 4 A281-10-25MEtf. Bud \\l'0°eds we have 54 1 .FL "L r' J Speaking with' regard to the influence of music on the character, Mr. West-f moroland said -that if they could get their scholars to sing sacred songs , to shut off each class by itself, as there was little or no possibility of im-pressing the mind of the child where one class in its work interrupt- and hymns persistently and worthily ed the otheh It would be 8 great it would draw their thoughts into a wing even to shut on the View oi fight 'fhannel and W°“ld help °° one class from another. He believed' model their character. In choosing that the class” were too man d the m“°i° in their °°“°°1'-‘ they he thought nine they mignl; no'mf;1:io '<1 n i in - shout ave the largeness 0 e “tu I d th t th h ld thing, tho poeontinliiy of tno thing ‘fm Bo,;e,§§§§r,‘;§,e,. §m,,,e;_'° BESEW, in *Mir minde- :snort it seemed to mm ought to bel made to link the lesson that was’ supplemental? Was not the church ,the first and only fundamental? If the- church was the outward expreg. sion of their relation to God, then Lthere was no home ,without what tba church represented to them, their rg- lationship to God, and he- was bold .enough to say that .without God there was no real homo, because in the homo-the relationship which mndg it a home was a partnership with God. The education of the child was first b the parent and then to house or having them sent to 'aj ' l V OCTOBER 30 Rev. Mr. Westmoreland was the' blem was to utilise 'tue new dress as! THE INSTRUCTION pr-{A5E | thins to de. and the viveeity of the struction that would onsnro stood S0 that it would sive an opportunity amount to aovoto to o sunioot in or- D E Y to select his music at haphazard. l-ie ject, He was awarethat in the cir- must come with that music planned cumstauces under. which Sunday to a definite end in the work of the school work was carried on, nothing Sunday School session. Then he more possible at present than one should plan his scripture readings so short period every week, and they as to appeal to the young life be- could not change these circumstances fore him. There was nothing that but he was mly pointing out what would so appeal to the young life of Sunday School teachers realized as the Sunday School as do many being true that on this account their things in the Bible. Let the Sunday best efforts lu most cases were not School worker have such a mastery resulting in that good which they of the Bible that he might easily and desired. There was a. serious danger naturally use it to catch and to hold indeed that their lessons given from cises. They were told to have u`him that the fact that one brief les- time for everything and to do every-,son one day in seven was not suili- thing at its time. [cient to give a child that knowledge To their prayers they must add of the Scriptures that they must en plans and to their plans they 'must deavor to give lt, ought to govern Bd!! Patience. Many of them were apt _to some extent their attitude in :lie to become discouraged if they did not .Sunday School and their rrcthods ,»;~;~;..;.._..;.._..;,,:,,;,,:,,;,,;,,:,,:,,;,,;,,:_ meet with immediate success. If the durin the-instruction eriod 'I w I y I _ D . t as did not succeed at first, try again; necessary to guard against the frag- and if success did not como then letimentgrynature of the lessons. given, it drive them to their Heavenly Fa- How could that be effected? In the ther for the grace to try, try, try first place every effort should be' MUSIC IN THE SCHOOL upon the mind of the child in ' any an instrument of worship. l'-le belicv-I ` given wday with the lessen that had ied that God likes beautiful things The next Bpeaker wa, My-_ R, 1-{_ 'P0911 given lest Sunday and on prev- and that he iiscs so see young gi|is`Qampb°1|| superintendent of Emma- 10115 S\ll1dBY3. S0 that the 639015 Of tssiiiy ond booutifuiiy dressed. He tion, who noon with the subject. the 1¢SH°De siren during 11 quarter or be1i€V€d T-haf* thel’ ¢0\1|d W0¥`“hllJ _G04 “Instruction Period." The actual in- *_* ye" 5h°“1d be °“m“\“tiV°» and the the better for such dress. liut it gave struction period in the Sunday lmP\'¢’G5i0I1 made 011 011° day Bl10\l1d the B1 S. Worker ,a problem to so g¢h¢,01_ mgting as it did only some he deepened by the lesson of the fol- 4U'¢°f- the W°l‘K °f his £01001 I'-ll” the thirty or forty minutes and occurr- 10WluB dey- One of the necessary abounding energy of the boy with bis ing as gi; did only once a week, was things in that case should be regular iuBiS¢0l1t demlilw 20 00 given Some- not in itself sufficient for that in- 'attendance Despite the fact that the iflunda School was v V other child from the class. They ought frankly to realize that the jn- structicu period standing by itself was not sufficient for the work that Ithey wanted to do, and they ought to endeavor by every means in their power, to bnttress that instruction period by all the outside means they _could secure, n-.id the Sunday school should bc regarded as a gathering together to give coherency and direc- tion to the week's studies. They should encoura e the _ ._ . I s pupil to tho business of the province is'some_ tin: [attention of the pupils to wor-I Sunday to Sunday might be so frag-; weekly study of the Bible ami make to .. ".12: “ui ...... . -.. ::::°;’.;2.“* °.;:;‘;.‘°;:°2.::;:.: R *ef ' ' or ~ _ to the possibilities of further deve- must plan on punctuallty and age knowledge' instead of being as it dent ‘;!l1di\llll _, c7¢-:»~e-:-» _next speaker. He dealt with the que;-E 1613-su samuia Andros ossorno.i§fi°" °f m“ei° in the Sunday soboor' the government or New Yo;-[_ 'At the outset, he asked: "What is the, mo-Morin Angelica Koomnon, is-. “He °f mveic in the sunday senoor- mous artist, born in ,switzq-11,. _,¢_ l any way?" Ha believed that it was us- _Dfed in Rome, Dec. 5, 1907. _ |011 ill many Sunday schools merely as 1803-President Jefferson was au- a moans of variation. as a filling up pngandnl and he has been thorized by Congress to take posses-ib°tW°°° 5° mlm” PNY". I0 much led like the prophet of old to he- sion or tho Louisiana 1;,"-|¢0, _ Bible reading, so much stud and y y so 1817-Henry I.. Dawes, the Mana. on, to prevent any monotony. Was lieve that he and he alone, is left c i husetts senator to whom the coun- U°¢ that thi’ WHY 1" Whi_°\1 571°! `il1-` inieiuni in rho ions io witnoss fo.-.try owos the ineroanoiion or zuojduded '““"° ’° W' Sunday Bhhool truth and purity. Like the prophet W°“th°" b“"°U“f b°¥`l1 in C\1U1il18¢0!1. w°"h'p7 L" "mn °°“'m°" Wh" hat the figures are at least reversed ent. of the electorate who would That is the charitable visw to ds must accept. BW GIICLB ntegrity among the Canadian clec- mend of the Army of the Gumbet- Wllld D05 land. i |01 their Mass. mod lub, 5_ 1903, music itself was. It was the msdiuin 1829-Roscie Tonkling, Amsricani by~whfch they expressed the deepest' ioeosninn, born. nioa April 1s,1sss. Instincts of their belonslz the meet iscz-ooo. noooorsns ossnmod coin- effluent medium that they had. Ther' that deepest instinct life without song; one lesson as deepnndc as ineflacsabls as possible. They should go to the children with the lesson well prepar- ed, with their energy accumulated, as it were, to uc expended in making the very best possible impression upon the minds of the pupils. That presupposed a gopd capable teacher and a class willing to learn. Suppos- iug these things, and' supposing the school to be rgsdv for the instruc- tion to begin, with the school bear- ing that quiet cheerful serious- nsss that was] so `necilsss.ry for the teaching ‘of thrlsssons, one thing which knowledge and experience could be poured in quantities limited wus a delicate thing which could be “Banded only by the giving to it of nutrlmeut in quantities which it could readily assimilate. 5 ' 'mnouon 'ms wsssx. I Mr. C. J. Reiley, Secretary of the gf. M. C. A., delivered the final Bd. re” in th° dl°°““|0ll. his sublect “U18 "'l‘hr0\\gb the week sctivitics." The business of the church he said ' rsmained:- there 'shogd bs a place where every teacher , uld‘t|iks boi-_ or his face to face and them, ‘With ulli the time be-’ corner ltons for the Soldiers and Sailors' Memorial Arch in Brooklyn. Utica. N. Born thats 1589-Gen. W. T. Sherman laid the 1899-First contingent of Canadian for the Bodr war sailed from nt of thsro 855 place for it was the *B* *O d°Vel0D Christian men and women, and through tbgm go Io @5080 the conditions of living as to make this earth a fit place for such , iwni , ' no- umt * _Slant _ and women to live in. 'rhey said ‘tivo interest nlslrs only bv the supply in noni; but iel manor wm"rsiI-issn Rt. Rev. Cortlandt Whitehead, bis- hol> of the Protestant Episcopal dio- cese of l_>ittsbur¢h, was born in New Y°rk City. oct. so, rua.; Hs groin- ated from .Yale Collage in 1868 and from the Philadelphia Diviniti School four years ls.ttr.- He was or- dained a priest ‘of the..Protsst-ant Episcopal Church in 1888 and :Penl- the three years following in Colorado. From that state hs i-'sipovod to Pen- nlylvauis, and for twolvsxyears vw rector of. the Church *oi Navltity in south Bmnononi. uitislzno woo consecrated bishop. 'ol~PlttIh\\rl\1- 1° sadiuon to nu _oiorioai duties Bishop tenend has always an had next to consider the and in " “ “'°‘° vm thru thugs: ao- si oem hills no in hopo to mental in life, and those were “tho :mono for haulwsm ”p9.d,.hss re-_ the br: 30M. the school and the church. solved. honorsry."d‘ f:R;dd,|'s.num- bould they rather not say that ber of the lush' “ ~:.¢|,¢_\m. there was one fundamental, and “'93 fig. ag For _the man with tender feet,,wl:o is _standlngx the gi-ester part of his rims, thug. bam i th hi . of he Qin ilu?-,iid t BR Regal Boots so no V