—_--- ~— = a _— eS <coustuanameneranaaiooaneaiiiie, io. a ae aon - Fivg DoLuarRs a YRAR. NEW SERIES. & je Wain Exanuuer #@ issued every evening by The #xaminer Publishing Oo. +, corner of Water and ' Tees — NOW THEN From their « flic Great George streets, Charlottetown, Prince Kdward Islaad. | a > yo RY SITRSCR >1 r . ‘ - ATS OF SUBSCRIPLTION— i —ae Ol PER Qn i MI CU 0 6 Ki wboc cbcetaccusoueet $2 50 Three months. ...... os uleewieleraa 1,2 ‘ 9 Qa mda , he ..scco sees hadi . 5 DY 68 eiryos FD Advertising at moderate rates, ty . Ft i) 7h Contracts may be wade for moothly, quar- terly. balf-yearly, or yearly ad vertwemenis,+ OD Apple ation. j ~ — WARBURTON & SMALLWOOD, 7 NOTICE OF CO-PARTNBSRSHLP. a fe. cloths into ———— Ol * The uniersigned a day entered wil SUITS i mh, : ain artnership, uuder the style and fir Warbuar.oa and Smallwood, Barrisiers, Attoraeyssat-Law, Notaries Public, dc, Ofice—Cameron Block, Qucea Square, . —. 4. BY WARBURTON, B.A., B.C.L. | C, R. sxaLLweon. re () aw The firm are Ayents for the Equitable | Life Asstraace Society of the United States, CLOTH, by the yard or piece, Vory Cheap. which does the largest basiness of any Life Overcoats, made to order, not called for lasurance Company in the world, © [ j > Dec. 3—law wky 3 mo L. ARTHUR & CO.) GENERAL instead of buying imported clothing. -PREMISES. No $3 Overcoais, Commission Merchants, 12) ATLANTIC AVENUE, . A. BRU CHARLOTTELOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, SATURDAY, JANUARY 30, 1886, There have been exceptional cases where lara a day and been happy, but he_nnder- FOR seat MSHINGS We are manufacturing charging only FIVE PER OENT. OVER COST! aad from $4.50 to $6 for. making apd (rimming Overadass 5 from $5 to $7 for making and trieming Saits with Good Trimmings and oe OOD WORE MANSHIP. We have on hand a few Suits end Os a ced SELLING AT COST. This ought to convince you that there is money lost if you don't purchase from us, ALL OUR CLOTHING IS MADE ON THE The Custom Tailoring, ae ii v E ha ve on hand one ease Cloths, one casa Gants’ Furn’shinga, sent by mistake, and sold to us atia big advantaye rather than retura them, % bof his series of sermonson “The Marriegs A a This is trae Liberty, when Free-Borm Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free. --Kuririss. — ee b TABBRNACLE SERMON. Noe noe Stxeiz Copies Two CENTS. ——— VUL. 18--NO, 58. » — parents have bad a monowania in regard to ¢-kes @ big contract wien with three dollars ‘*The Marriage Ring.” celibacy or forbidding relations every way TALMAGE'S PISCOURSK ON “CLANDESTINE right, Th rough sbsucd family ambi lop parents have sometimes demauded qualit- ™ 1 ey” ‘ \ MARRIAGES AND ESCAPADES, PREACHED LN * BROOKLYN YESTERDAY MORNING. cations and equipment of fortune unreason- able to expect or simply impossible, Caail- dren are not expected to marry to piease tolerably wel!, for it is odd and romantic —— Brooxuyn, N. Y., Jan. 24.—The Rav. a DeWitt Talmage, DD, preached to their parents, but to please themselves. . z2 v 2 ve, ’ sae - - ; u , f P fT i dey in the Brooklyn Tabernacle, the third Give good | morals, means of 6 livelihood, appropria‘elage and equality of social posi- Ring.” The hymn sung by the congrega- tien begins: 7 (of the heart. “My soul, be on thy guard! ‘Ten thousand foes arise, | And hosts of sin are pressing hard To draw thee from the skies.” and good sense, used to say to his children : Professor Browne rendered on the organ ¥°U shall never displease me.” the Sonate No. Lin D minor, by Guill-| mant. The subject of Dr. Talmage’s sermon was ‘‘Olandestine Marriages and ay Re . ; Me inanddies ” aaieich hn + and Miss Anna, the daughter of ex-Gover- : hx iw DD © V ai ew COA - S, as ae. oo peter: es hae sgt’ nor Pickens. As the ceremony Was about for the best welfare of a child. — 5 to be solemnizsd, a shui} broke through the make vehement and determined opposition, Lbread taken in secret is pleasant. But he ; Dnoweth not thatthe Geet are-there.” ‘The roof and wounded nine of the guests, aud preacher said: ‘*Phe garden of Eden wasa great orchard j ; ef fruit bearing trees, bestbale ud bushels lng 90: kes . sid, coe Sue Bouse. so0.axpiren, of round, ripe glorious fruit, but the horti- of hearts as that proposed, that the bomb- oulturist and his wife having it in charge, shoei] of outrageous parental indignation bankered for one special tree simply because ja, wounded and scattered and slain. it was forbidden, starting a bad streak in 1) 1, pand offered in marriage be blotch- |homan nature, so that chidren will now > a . ° . ) sometimes do something simply because ed by intemperance, if the life of the mar they are forbidden to do it. the human race is not easily unsnarled. Tell a company that they may look into iimy twenty rooms of a large house except She, and their chief desire is to see that ane, though all the others were picture galleries and that a garret. If there were | i4& region of mineral springs twenty foun- | tains, but the proprietor had fenced in one wel] against the public, the one fenced in’ Youle be the chief temptation to the visi-) “rs, and they would rather taste of that) an of the other nineteen. Solomon re-) has no visible means of support, and abandonment seems only a little way ahead, if the twain seem entirely unmatched in disposition, protest and forbid and rein- force your opinion by that of others, and put all lawful obstacles in the way; but do not join that company of parents who have ruined their children by a plutecracy of domestic crankiness which has caused more than one elopement. I know of a few cases where marriage has been under the red-hot anathema of parents end all the neighbors, tion, and no parent has a right to prohibit eae other, T : a union that seems deliberate and a matter and seek for divorce, or, 28 18 more pro- Rev. Philip Henry, eminent for piety '‘Piease God and please yourselves, and, in secret is pleasant. During ovr Civil War a marriage was about to be celebrated at Charleston, South deplored, because in most instances they Carolina. between Lieutenant de Rochelle are executed in defiance of parental wisdom BOSTOW, MASS. ee eee under the matlagement of MR. JAMES McLEOD, leads all others dor Al ,work. Prices iu this department will be found lower than ever. Our past record is sufficient guarantee to secure your future copfidence. : “Me large portion of our Neckwear has been manufactured t6-our special order, iro patterns that will be found the very thing you went. ~ an. | ized this principle in the text, and also disaster that follows forbiddeo conduct, he said: ‘‘Stolen waters sre sweet, | read eaten in secret is pleasant. But, knowth not that the dead are there.” | ‘but God approved, and the homes establish- ed have been beautiful and _ positively Edenic. But while we have adimitted there are real casee of justifiable rebellion, in ninety- Rgos and Produce a Specialty. | “Dom July 15—dly wkly ' t -FOR- DAY BRUG 72 QULEN SETREF?T. i, BR a BOSTON, tit Fall and Winter Arrangeme "Printing and Book-Binding. THE PALACE STEAMERS) — — —— | Printing. | INTERNATIONAL SS. GO. | 7 | Weare better than ever prepared to turn | Leave St, John for Boston, via Eastport and Port- | land, every Monday and Thursday, at 8.00 a. tn. out every deazcrit iton of Fare from Chariottetown to Boston, 96,50, 2nd é€las } ist L r > 22. For tickets and other information apply to Book, Mercantiie G. A. SHARP F. W. HALES, | : PE 1. Ry, P. E. L. Steam Nav. Co., —AND— vr your nearest licket Agent. Nov. 2, 183)-—eod wky i ox AERTS EAN R UAU | ION. PACH PLUG OF LHE as Peeser gs Faney Printing. as pecim na of our work.shows, ab the Pro-| ivinewtl! Exhibition and executed sinco, for| several of the leading business men cf the city, will abundantly testily. 1 ti | : a — | mar Our Styles are Original and Tasty, | Call and see our Specimens. | — | that will Satisfy All Book-Ginding, | Having lately imported a choice stock of} i Fine Leathers and other materials for Book- |binding ~parposes, we are prepsred with the best faciitties to execute al oudens for ‘Bindiag Magazines, Music, Works of... Art, Law Books, illustrated Papers, | «m! trapsom and stanchion. i Picturesque Canada, Xc., Xe., in the Highest Style of the Art, and at priges | jact of the marritge institution. Blank Rook Manufacturing, and Paper Ruling a Specialty. TP ‘nine cases out of a hundred, yea, in Ta this ror of sermons on “ The Mar- 999 cases out of a Pauniiiee. Uvewe aia riage Ring, I, this morning, aim a point- jicensed departures and decampments by ank shot * Clandestine Marriages and yy onlight, are ruin, temporal and eternal. pades.” Yonder eomes up through J; is safer for a woman to jump off the _nartows of New York harbor a ship jocks of the East River and depend on yinz all the evidence “of See e eens | Deine able te swim to the other shore or alt mark reaching to picked up by a ferryhoat, The posaibi- / Te ac iiast, FOFe-' lities are that she may be rescued, but the mast, mizzenmast twisted off. Balwarks| probability is that she will not. Read the knocked in. Lifeboats off the davit, Jib- ‘stories of the escapades in the newspapers sheets and lee-bowlines missing. Cuxptain’s for the Jast ten years, and find me a half bridge demolished. Main shaft broken. \dozen that do not mean poverty, disgrace, All the pumps working to keep from sink-' ghind »nment, polices court, divorce, death ing before they can get to wharfage. Phat and hell. ‘Stolen waters are sweet, and ship is the institution of Christian marriage, bread eaten in secret is pleasant. Bathe launched by the Lord granily from the jkmoweth not that the dead are there.” banks of the EK iphrates, and fl rating out Satan presides over the escapade. He in- on the seas for the admiration and happt- | trodaces the two parties to each other. He | ness of all nations. But Free loveism struck gots them to pledge their troth. He ap- points where they shall meet, He shows them where they ean find officiating minis- YOR -‘. tex or eqruige, He points ont to them the nee ship nesds fepere e aree plsng, ticket offices for the rail train. He pute beam, and sail, and bolt, and clamp, | them aboard, and when they are going at forty miles the hour, he jumps off and jit from one side, and Mormonism struck ‘it from another side, and hurricanes of libertinism havo'struck it on all sides, vatil n other words, the notioas of modern society must be reconstracted on the sub- And when i hawe ¢ it sale 7 sn hat ot - Mie = J [we neve guy back somewhere near what 1t }7. induced Jomah to take ship for Tarsioh, | wae on God built it a Paradise, et when God told him to go to Nyneveh ; bui earth will be far on toward resumption Of 5 pany ; ' : ln diculdal eondi@acat “i eeaeans | PS vided fur the recreanut prophet no better p= SEAAISWER! CONEINOUD. 9 you ask what | |nading-place than the middle of the Medi- }is the need of a course of sermons on this anean S a L ‘oa '~ | terranean Sea. -oh ~f : ) r sa | . . jsubject? The man or woman who asks; ‘The modern novel is responsible for many of these ahscondings. Do you think has a genius in getting people into trouble, he has no genius for getting people out, a. opus yy a —_—— é = : a a Banks, Merchants and others, can get Better this question is either ignorant or guilty | n “Unanialty | Work. for the same money at our Fstablish- Ne a ic} ° 2 be ; ~ 2 Color Work 8% SPOOlALY. eft iics atany ether betep in he Trade. |Aoced by tiany the most moral part of the (oat oa ane eed a . Eon | dered by many the most moral part of fhe’, jivht reading novels in which the hero and JOHN IS MA ar L.KED Dec, 26 ~Zaw w2m. COO XIBS, iS Queen Street, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E I IN BRONZE LETTERS. None Other Genuine. Oct. 20, FOR SALE. RIGHTON TANNERY, with its Steam, 1885-6. | ae | (Sundays excepted) :—- TRAINS DEPART.—FOR THE WEST. Winter Arrangement, N AND AFTER TUESDAY, DECEMBER Ist, 1885, Trains will run daily, as follows PRIRCE EDWARD ISLAND RAILWAY, 1885-6. | TRAINS ARRIVE.—FROM THE WEST. Eogme, Boiler, Sp'itting Machine, Stuf | tee States, there are two thousen! heroine get acquainted in the usual way j . . ' a / as atte | : 7 : . | divorces per year. And in Massachusetts, and carry on their increased friendliness lcaves them in the lurch ; tor while Satan | their eons and daughters, demanding their @ day he attempts to enpport some cne who has lived in a home that cost twenty thou- sand per annum. This has been abont the history of most of such conjunctions of simplicity and extravagance, the marriage of ox and eagle. The first year they get on and assisted by applause of people who admire outlawry. The second year the couple settle down into complete dislike of The third year they separate bable, the man becomes a drunkard and the woman a blackened waif of the street. “Stolen waters are sweet, and bread eaten But he knoweth not that the dead are there,” These truant marriages are also to bs i Most parents are anxious If they and kindness. it is largely because it isa match unfit to the bride fell dying, and, wrapped in her be made, and they can seo for their daugn- , white wedding robe, her betrothed kneel- ter nothing but wretchedness in that direc- _ tion. They have keener and wiser appre- And there has been many as bright a anion Ciation, for instance, of the certain domestic _ demolition that comes from alcoholism in a young man. They realize what an idiot a | woman is who marries a man who has not | brains or industry enough to erra a liveli- ‘hood for a family. No bureau of statistics ‘can tell us the number of women who, after Phis kink in tial candidate has been debauched, if he , |marriage, have to support themselves and ‘their husbands. ‘f the husband becomes ,an invalid, itis a beautiful thing to see a | Wife uncomplainingly, by needle or pen or yard stick or washing machine, support the home. But these great, lazy masculine louts that stand around with hands in their pockets, allowing the wife with her weak arm to fight the battle of brea’, need to be regurgitated from society. There are in- numerable instances in these citiee, where the wife pays the rent and meets all the family expenses, and furnishes the tobacco and the beer for the lord of the household No wonder parents put on all the brakes to stop such a train of disaster. They have too often seen the gold ring put on the fin- ger at the altar turning out to be the iron link of a chain of domestic servitude. Wiat a farce it is for 2 man who cannot support himself, aud not worth aeent in the world, to take a ring which he pur- chased by money stolen from his grand- mother’s cupboard, and put it on the finger of the bride, saying, ** With this ring I thee fwed and with all my wo-ldty goods [ thee endow.” lt is amazing to see how some women will marry men knowing nothing about them. No merchant or merchantess would sell a hundred dollars’ worth of goods on credit, without knowing whether the cus- tomer was worthy of being trusted. No man or woman would buy a house with en- cumberances of mortgages and liens and judgements against it uncancelled, and yet there is not an hour of the day or night for | the last ten years, there have not been | women by hasty marriage entrusting their learthly happiness tv wen about whose | honesty they ka w nothing, or who are j}encumbered with liens and judgements an | first mortgages and eecoad mortgages and i third mortgages of evil habits. No wonder | that in such circumstances parepts in con- | jJngating the verb in question, pass from the subjunctive mood to the indicative, and | from ihe indicative to the imperative. In | nearly all the cases of escapade that you | will hear of the rest of your lives,there wil! be a headlong leap over the barriers of paret- | tal common-sense and forethought, *‘Sivien waters are sweet, and bread eaten in secret is pleasant. But he knowth not that the dead are there.” We also depi re these fraudulent espousals and this sneaking exchange of single life | the heaiquarters of steady habits, there is' yniil with the consent of parents the day of | for married life, because it is deception, on ptery wear ofa oaths | marriage is appointed, and amid the sur- 6 Hvate oO . y i eat eechannc j 2 . . nimicdt frigid ish proptiotins,-has'in ove year| tien] “Gh, to |. ‘There must be Aight.end cm gon ~— ‘ year'taken ? Oh,no! There must be flight and 473 divo ces. In Vermont, swapping Wives! pursuit and nareow escape and drawn is uot arare transaction. In Connecticut) ganoer, all ending in sunshine and parental there are women who boast that they have forgiveness and bliss unalloyed and gorg- four or five times been divorced. More-|g5y3, In many of the cases of escap: de the ni ioat ¢ ‘ g ’ Ci } - R ject, a lax th phe fone ; woman by a cheap n »vel—ten cents’ worth o! voman Catholicism aamifs of nO Givores! gnadulterated perdition. except for the reason that Christ admitted as) These evasions of the ordinary modes of alawfal reason. But Protestantism is ad-| marriage are to be deplored for the reason mitting anything and everything, and the that nearly all of them are proposed by bad larger the proportion of Protestants In any men, If the man behave well, he, has a part of the country, the larger the ratio of character to which he can refer and he can divorce. Do you not, then, think that) say: “If you want to inquire about me Protestantism needs some toning up on this | ¢hore is @ list of names of people in the town subject f lor neighborhood where I live.” Nowthe Aye, when you realizo that the sacred jorves of escapades are nearly al! bigamists They They may be The victiins tilled extracts of villiany, moral dirt and Bewere of them, ‘ Stolen But he knoweth not that the Fugitive marriage is to be deplored be- fing Machine and other Plaxt is offered for} STATIONS. Ne: 2. No. 3. STATIONS. | No. 2 | No. 4 and divine institution is being earicatured ‘or libertines, or drunkards or defrauders, sale at private contract ke ie ee | and defamed by clandestine marriages and 6, first class scoundrels of some sort The above Tannery vas formerly operated | | AM, P. M. |). P.M. , A.M. | escapades all over the land, does there not pave no character to lose. by the iate Donald McKinnon, of the late eee ernie nc teteee 7. oa Sennen ease ss sheen ‘a 38 2 “S seem a call for such discussion? Hardly a q-essed in the height of fashion, may be ’ cmc, yom . ae lies . loyalty . LIOD..+ +0000... 4 212 toyalty Junction............ ae 7 : con ; . ; | : ‘ ate yoy o ae »» Of th es * ae North Wiltshire............. 817 305 |\North Wiltshire.......-..... 19 1°.4 45 | morning or “bisa paper te aA cologned and pumatumed and padded and itted up on the most modern principle, Hunter Kiver........ — 8 30 3 20 Hunter HIVGP.... cass esss ae i: a 8 30 josseasion, without reporting them, an 7 an has hitherto paid a large percentage on the Bradalbane.......... 9 U0 3 57 PIPGOOIUARG oes sido do 5.6500: ’r BS «> Sa f re é fift f tl r i liad 5 h | diamond ringed and flamboyant cravatted : in- County 9 09 7 | County | 42 36 there are fifty of these occurrences where | ynti] they bewitch the eye and intoxicate capital invested. To capitalists no better in- County Line..---++++ “at Of 40 OMNES LID 25s. ci sidds evs | 12 36 7 43 : ote fe tn the ¢ y : y , _ et y, either by Back or ErQctOWB wvvereceseeeeereres 9 23 t ee Ce are 12 23 723 | one is reported, because it is the interest of !the olfactories, but they are double-dis- ed for ar, “eee ey er by pau oe [A ahs ones: 2 * ‘ . Kensington ....+. aes ccs scone 7 05 all parties to hush them up. anufactory, can otiereda, ; ar 7 dp A. Et. 6 Ww 2 . : : Possession given immediately. | Summerside........---+ ; P. M. Summerside......--s0+61 {| 11 35 are, all hours of the night, climbing down | blasphemy. ° co a dp| 12 40 ; ar) 10 35 ' ladders or crossing over from State to| waters are sweet, and bread eaten in secret MARY J. MACKINNON, — | Miscouche. ceaacatecssobeerss : oo Miscouche. beetle eaten ie en’ 10 us State, that they may reach laws of greater! j, pleasant. | : Executrix. | port ec ne vel 203 | Sat Hee 9 07 laxity, holding receptions six onths after, gead are there.” Ob’town, Oot, 17, 1855 \Oiheers -. ADEE AE .= Pa EnEE = etorsasenchss +. 4) 7 54 marriage tolet the public know for the} . OOM A. +cecee..ccccnvenee J FEMPOCIMERIBO IEE s. . cc ccdsenssssiags 7 oO ne ' r — a | Albertom...+o....cceeees..+-- 4 20 UNO oi<s 0002p cachd: snags | 655 first time that a half year before they were! cause it almost always implies woman's Tinie ... ccc. -caen® 880-28 ar 61 ithignish....... teeth caged 6 00 united in wedlock, Ministers of religion, descent from a higher social plane to a =. SE - =! and justices of the peace, and mayors of | jower. Executors’ Notice. TRAINS ARRIVE.—FROM THE EAST. | | TRAINS DEPART.—FOR THE EAST. | it TEXHIE Undersigned Executrix and Fxecu-| os i} iS aallicaa ; | the coach box and the back seat of the inducement to clandestinit i tors of the vst Will and Testament of} STATIONS. No. 5. No. 7. |j STATIONS. | No. & | No. 8 princely landau in flirtation; telegrams ; © clandestin y- 4 é : {| i | very ; z cases it means the lowering of womanhood. the late Donald Mackinnon, of Charlottetown, | flashing across the country for the arrest Opsor his law: : Annan ana busines” under | a | | A. M. | 8 : bserve this law: a man marrying 4 tanner, deceased, carrying on business Charlottetown peeteees | oa | Charlottetown .......+--.+++ 10 26 of absconded school misses who started off woman beneath him in sceiety, may raise the name and style of “MACKINNON & Char iomae ok SE Royalty Junction........-... 10 05 ith full of bock d taki il! eee ce OD.” buschy notify oll pesedag tudebeen e/ Dany Sane \NBedford....«+-+- 9 32 with armfull of bocks, and taking ral’ her to an eminence that he himself may bie? alk 7 aT tee vm 4 Bedford........«: rssseerees] 3B | pe sanernny nan ities ii oo trains to meet their affianced ;—in the snow: reach; but if a woman marry a man be- € 2 Bi } Hi . i a them at hia tate office, in Grafton Street, , Mount Stewart,.....--- 10 | ax es i a a ; ar 8 60 drifts of the great storm that has recently _neath her in society, she always goes down | a having | dp, 4 passed over the country some of them, in Charlottetown, and all persons baving en cy eed | 533 | Cardigan. ......--+00+++++- 2 | 738 adh shed. _th 4 P deaal ; claime or lemands agrinst the said estate are Georgetown. i a A ar! 6 45 PS eee veteteees ss GD: 7 la A. M. re : ave pers ed—thousands oO es 8 ; there are no exceptions. hereby required to furnish the same, duly sak Mowart....f1.6+.--- 4 05 Mount Steward seoeees... Op , 90 in # marriage whose banns have never been high up that she can afford to plot for her attested. withia twelve months from this Morell........+...... eeeeees. £43 | Morell..eserFes.sereteteereees oom published 5 precipitated conjugality ; own debasement! There is not a State in date. Bt. Peters......-.---. es se :S ee nee noes 7 3 bigamy triumphant ; marriage @ joke ; the American Union that has not for the outs . at Charlottetown, the 2od day of ee ae [ =—©6 40 0 Bouris,--++++..+++* sen... GD | 62 | society blotched all over with a putrefaction |,.¢ twenty years furnished an instance of STORER, 1985. a ota MARY JANE MACKINNON ‘Trains are run by [astern stented ‘Time, Almighty God can arrest. Lxeoutrix. | — ¥ JAMBe COLEMAN, W. MoLEAN, b a # JAS. Ouse, | mene Snyertutenient, Rndtrey Often, Chertothatown, Nov, %, 1498—whty yrs ‘4 Ook Und law of ae ree ae : If the man was not of a higher cities willingly joining in marriage run-!pjane, or the marriage on an equality, aways from other States and neighborhoods; there would be no obj-ctions and heace no In almost all I to his level. That is a law inexorable and Is any woman so are sometimes authorized end made right dollars a day provided he keeps very busy. by parental tyreuny oc domestic sechiom, Well, many @ man has lived oa three dob on this subject, which no one but the the sudden departure of some intelligent at heart. We admit that clandestinity and escapade life with some one who can make three alliance, and see if their and that is a corroding and damning vice. You must deceive your kindred, and you must deceive society, you must deceive all but God, and Him yon cannot deceive. Deception does not injure others so much as it injures ourselves. Marriage is too im- portant @ crisis in one’s lile to be decided over, our boasted Protesaantism is, on this | jqoa was implanted in the hot brain of the} by sleight of hand or a sort of jugglery, which says: ‘Presto change! Now you see her and now you do's.” Better wait ‘for years fur circumstonces to improve. Time may remove all obstacles. The can- didate for mwital preferences may change his habits, or get into some trade or busi- ns that will support a home, or the in- exorable father and mother may be promot- ed to Celestial citizenship. At the right time have the day eppointed. Stand at the end of the best room ia the house with jvined hands and, minister of religion be- fore you t» challenge the world that “a they know of any reason why these two per- sons shall not be united, they state it now or forever hold their peace,” and then start out with the good wishes of all the neighbors and the help of Divine sanction, When you can go ovt of harbor at noon with all flags flying, do not try to run ®& blockade at midnight. In view of all this I charge you to break up this clandestine correspondence if you are engaged in it, and have no more clan- destine meetings either at the ferry or on the street, or at the house of mutual friends, or at the corner of the woods. Do not have letrers come for you to the post cflice under assumed address. Have no correspondence that makes you uneasy leat some one by mistake open your letters. Do not employ terms of endearment at the beginning and cloee of letters un'ess you have ‘aright to ueethem. That young lady is on | the edge of danger who dares not allow her | mother to see her letters. If yon have sensible parents take them into your confidence in all the affairs of the heart. They will give you more good advice in one huur than you can get from ‘all the world beside, in five yoars. They have toiled for you so long and preyed for you so much, they have your best interests At the same time let parents re- woman from an :ffluent home to spend her, view their opposition to a proposed marital opposition is founded on a genuine wish for the ebild’s welfare, or on some whim, or notion, oF