- = can Be! Mp me a THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, OCTOBER 21 1819 | |acts of self-sacrifice, being “each to | years until it becomes fixed, shrivelled and | VVVVV¥ VY V¥YVVVVY¥ "a ie . THEY ARE — .opLiED j rAsily * | | ? ee a | e | | Sal. STEELSHINGLES t o 5 ~- } a, A | A. Ses AS | | | " SEE THAT LOCK? | -EASTLAKES are the quickest laid Shingles obtainable, because of their Perfect Fitting | | | atented Side Lock | | ! | No other Shingle has it.) They are Fire, Lightning, Leak | | ffer you not ut a certainty of eco- oof—-and ‘ nomical and durable protection, with a fine appearance. Made either Galvanized or Painted. Write us if you’re building—we'd | as Sainte thoroughly understand | 1 : als . £ seaniuin ul reliability of genuin like you i the practic Eastlakes. { They never disappoint. © ROOFING CO., Limited facturers, TORONTO. METALL Manav ; >*THE~ Prince Edward Island Magazine ..NOW ON SALE.... St'sall thar "Bookstores and a RK. H, Mason’s News stand. CONTENTS FOR OCTOBER fon Se r Ferguson, Frontis A Period of Growth and Transition, by H Serator Fergusor The S Fr. W. L. M R \ y H. |! A Pa H ee y Jo} $s } vo 1 F; wer Fad . by Lat ih ° A, Lepage Jur Isiand’s Foe, by George McKenz Pr Edwar Island Surnames Mic-Mac Mythoiogy, by Jeremiah 5 rk, | B.A The Ethics furry, by J. E. Rendle Autumn Flowers, by Lawrence W. W: Two Pictures, by May Carr Jacques Cartie First Voyag y Rev. A. E. Burke, B. D. } 4 Thought—(a poem) by M. P. James Notes and Oueries, etc. oc & co} y—Send for sample The P. £. Island:Magazine, | P.°0, BOX 698, C iario:te:owa, P. E Victoria Cafe Great George Street... Charlottetowa, §P. E. Islan To Tu U tomers and Pr spective tomers :— @ Permit me to call your attention to the fact that l am better prepared than ever before tosupply your wants in Fresh Oys ters. Itis a fact that in erder to be euc- cessful in the Uyster ousiness one must be able to hand e them in larg? quantities. With this object in vier, I bez l:ave to solict your patronage, and can assure you of satisfaction. eT a I may say that my Oyater Parlor wil be con@acted in the wsual first class man- aer, where the delicate Bivalve may be ybtained in every style to satisry the tasie of the m ost exacting epicure. Yours J&e., JOHN P. JOY, The P. E.I. Oyster King W hite’s Caramels and Snowflake Chacolates <= Can be had at any of the following first,class store T. J. Morris D. L. Hooper W. Plekard & Co, W. A. Hutcheson W. F. Carter ‘riches of themselves | home. THE HOME. A Sermon by the Rev. Jas. Simpson. ‘I will therefore that the younger W marry, bear children, guide the house, give none cecasion to the adversary ¢ speak re proachfully."" 1 Tim V. 14. This Sunday by the general consent of our Bishops is being observed | throughout the Anglican Communion asa day of itercession {or Sunday Scho Is, nd i S] ritual thers have adv lus h onnes yn to br ng of reil gious training of children before yur respective congregations I suppose the most sanguine and nthusiastic believers in Sunday Schools will be prepared to admit that e\ so faithful and lars ever so atte } dq ( € >} h ) ' . ; \ . i rely L1udeg ite iO! tion of our children in the s belonging unto their eternai ) SAalval on. | I fear, too, that all those who have lo with the secular education of the musctconfess that the majority of theirpupils display a most lamentableig |} norance of God’s Holy Word.jThey may | tell somnething about the flood because | they have played with Noah’s arks, but beyond that the simplest Bible stories, either in the Old or the New Testa- ments, are too frequently almost un- known to them. Now if this be the case—if the | Sunday School cannot provide all the | necessary religious instruction for the child, and if the child shows a deplor- | able lack of knowledge about spiritual hings heme is to blame. It is then of the home and its training I would speak to you to-day WHAT IS THE IDEAL OF HOME LIFE ? Does wealth createit ? Do we say that home is truly happy and blessed where there is plenty of money, so that there | may be luxurious furniture and rich food | and numerous servants to answer every Alas! the revelations Court teach us that cannot make a beck and call ? of the Divorce Does mutual love satisfy the ideal ? | Do we not all know many love matches | which have proved failures ? It seemed ;}such a happy | husband and wife .Marriage, we say; were adapted to each other in every way, in mind and taste and character. There was suffi- cient means, there was everything neecessary for felicity, But after a while all was changed. Disenhcant-— ment, quarrels estrangement took the place cf former happiness because love unsanctified by religion was unable to respend to the repeated self-sacrifices which married life demands. IN THE IDEAL HOME LOVE AND RELIGION must go hand in hand. The prin- ciple of family life is from the Al- mighty Himself. In the beginning God saw that it was not good tor man to be alone, so he gave him a com-~ panion,a helpmeet not such a one as himseif—not one of his own sex pos- sessing the same disposition, the same bodily power. ‘‘God “(says an ancient writer)” took not the woman from the man’s head to be his ruler, nor was she made from his feet to be his slave, but from his side to assist him, and from under his arm to be protected by him and trom near his heart to be beloved of him.” She was not man’s double, but his complement, to fill up that which was lacking in his perfection. So we are told “In the day that God created man, in the likeness of God made He him ; male and female creat- ed He them ; and blessed them, and called their name Adam, in the day when they were created” (Gen V. 1. 2.) God, you see, called them both Adam, and it was not until after the Fall that the woman received a separ- ate name. When God brought her unto the man he said.” This is now bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh ; she shall be called Woman, be- cause she was taken out of man. Therefore shall a man leave his father and his mother, and shall cleave unto his wife ; and they shall be one flesh.” (Gen IT. 23 24.) Such was Home Life in its incep- tion. ‘The man and the woman living is a perfect union blessed by the Al- mighty and begetting chi 0 be beeen up in Lp pee pee Aba ition of the Lord. And from this model is taken that Stewart & Gates Sanderson & Co. Beer & Goff J.D. MeLeod & Co English Home Life which is the wonder and admiration of the world. WHAT A PICTURE IT IS, We see husband and wife exercising lan rs Me} Hieasures we can only conclude that the | | other a comfort in sorrow, a strength | in need, a counseller in perplexity, 2 companion in every enjoyment.” We , see the children taught about God and l that ical t : } His Holy Word at thei mother’s knee ; | we see the fapnily assemble together | dav by day for worship, we see the J : ing forth to his work, the father g* i mother occupied ; , in her household duties and 1 their children attending their,school ; we see the happy re-union at the end of the day, the evening meal, the lessons duly learnt, with aid, needed, from the parents, and when ie ft ry the hours recreation of social chat be ore retiring. We see, on Sundays, the family at . kneeling at God’s altar ieve the Holy Commmunion together we see the! ining In prayer and praise and tening to Gods Holy : 4 weiot 2iies Word we see the puret iittie home, the well spen aftermoon, the joyous evensong, and the evening happy and hallowed by the devotions of the day. And so on year after year, the chang- bringing their varied varied dutiesin their We see the children, in time, going forth to fight the battle life, or to torm homes of their own, called, perchance, Sout of the world to that everlasting home above, but absent in body, they are present in spirit, and theirmemories are still fond- ly cherished in the family circle, and their names still brought before God in the family prayer. Such homes may be found by the thou- sandin England to-day. Can the same be said ofCanada. A FACI seasons and aque of — or IS IT NOT THAT WE ARE LOSING OUR HOME-LIFE as France and the United States have already toa great excent, lost theirs? It is true, we have not yet, in Canada, coun- temanced tke divorce abomination which is the great destroyer ot family life. It is true,we have not yet, in this town, substituted residence in hotels or boarding houses or apartment flats for the home. I say substituted, because you cannot, uuder ordinary circumstances, have real home life in any of these. You are spared a great deal of trouble no doubt. You have not to worry about domestics,— you have no marketing to do;—your rooms are heated at so much a year and you Lave pot even to Stir a fire;--your meals need not give you a single thought until it ie \ \ | pleases God to call them, e render nousekKeeping undesirable or even the necessity of Wravelling about, care of & parent or relative, (ese and such | like obstacles may justify the tem por sry or coutinued adoption of some -oiher mode of life. adequate cause, { iselese, The sume process takes place in he minds of all those who refuse to do heir duty in that state of life into which it Of course, | speak here Only ina gen-~ ral way. | here are often caRrese which ? mpossible. Il!-bealth, narrow meant, the OR +b But those parents who, without avoid the burdens of housekeeping by retreating toa boarding house or an hotel always remind me of the hermit crab. FOR THE HERMIT CRAB Naturalists tellus, was originally Jike other crabs, thatis to say, its aucestors were more or less perfect crustaceans, but becoming weary ofthe vonstant watch against their many enemies, they took re~ in the empty shells of whelks. “For geuerations and generations, accord ingly, this creature has ceased to exe rcise itself upon questions of safety, and dwells in its little shell as proudly and securely as if its second«hand house were a for: tress erected especially for its private use.’ “Whether its laziness costs it any morel qualms, or whether its cleverness be- comes to 1t & source of congratulation, we i fuge do not know ; but judged from the ap- pearance it makes under the searching gaze of the zoologist, its expedient is certainly not one to be commended. To the eye of science its sin is written in the plainest characters on it’s very organiza- tion. It has suffered in its own anatomi- cal structure just by ay much as it has borrowed from an external source. In- stead of being a perfect crustacean it has allowedcertain important parte of its body to deteriorate and several vital organs are wholly or partially atrophied.” ts sphere of life also is now seriously Jimit- ed, aod byacheap expedient to secure safety ithas fatally Jost its independ- auce.” (Natural Law in the Spiritual World p 322.) However, this modern custom, of evad- ing the responsibilities of the howe, does not affect us here to any extent, and I only refer to it in the hope of getting you to | look upon your bouseho!d duties in a new light, of helping you to realize that with es (Continued on page 7.) OTHER Eve RY si 2usba For common ailments which may time to eat them, and then you step into the elevator and descend to the cummon dining room. And I dare say many a mother, wearied with the anxieties of managing @ household, thinks how very delightful! But delightful at what a cos? The sacrifice of the home. For is not the charm of the family circle breken hy such a life? Can children be properly trained amid such eurroundings? What fond recollections ia after years could possibly be associated with Suite 3, No. 14, 12let Street ? It only requires the children to be numbered instead of named to reach the depth of prosaic utilitarianism. And all those troubles connected with housekeeping, unpleasant as they often sre, are necessary forthe development of character. The practising of those little economies, | the planning to make both erds meet —the difficulties with servants—the endless | mending and making of clothes—the | yielding up of your wishes to the wishes of your husband or children—the constant self - sacrifices required, all belp to sireng'hen and develop qualities and power3 withia you which would be lack- ing had you not this discipline. You may emile at this and say you are quite prepared to risk it; oryou may re. call some acquaintance who had oncea sweet and amiable disposition, but who has succumbed to the Worries of house~ keeping and motherLood and become a reguiar shrew. And no doubt there are many such. Yet it is becsuse they have not taken advantage of their opportuni-~ ties : —because they have yielded to temp» jation instead of resisting it. that the [things which should have been for thelr wealth have become to them ati occasion of falling. | But onthe other band, have you not known frivolous girls, who at one time thought of nothing vut pleasure, but who have risen to the reeponsibilities of their married life and become staid, energetic and practical matrons ? Ged tries us to proye us, and He tries US BOC in Ways external to ue, but in things connected withour daily lives, “The trivial rownd, the common task, Will furnish all we need to ask, Room to deny ourselves, a road } To bring us daily nearer God.” And each temptation faced bravely, (and all the trials and anzieties of home life are temptations)—each temptation faced bravely goes to build up and develop the character - goes to make you more noble and Christlike. THE NORMAL—THE ORIGINAL WORK OF THE WOMAN was to look after the home. Modern } civilization with its varied needs and requirements, has, of necessity, found many other occupations for her, but stil! the wife~mother is (under ordinary circums stances) the truest, noblest Sphere of all. But wifehood and motherkood bring with them the manifest duties of the home, and if these duties are shirked be. céuse they are distesteful, or because they occur in every family. She can trust what time indorses. For Internal as much as External use. Dropped on sugar it is pleasant to take for colds, coughs,croup,colic, cramps and pains, T have used your Anodyne Linimentin treating our infant (only six months old) for colic,and our little three year old daughter for summer com. laint and bowel diseases generally, and found it beexcellent. JOHN I. 'NGALLS, Americus, Ga. ne ON'S, pe oHNS LNMENT Relieves Every Form of Inflammation. Originated in 1810 by an old Family Physician. No remedy has the confi- dence of the public toa greater extent. Our book on INFLAMMATION free. Price SE 25 and 50c. I. S. Johnson & Co., Boston, Mass. “Best Liver Pill made.” Positively cure Bilious- ness, Sick Headache, all Liver and Bowel com. laints. They expel impurities from the blood. ‘icate women find relief from using them, oe 25c. LS. JONHSON & CO, Boston, Masa —— eae New Cathedral —s~ | should call on us. ray Harbor District, at St. Mary’s Road, | —first schoolhouse west of Commercio! Road, on WEDNESDAY, OCT. 25:h. al oy: ov. 32%... - Cr ay em “8 US OS GS IN BS | | MURRAY HARBOR rear | ~~—— BAZAAR EXCURSION RATES —ALL OVER— P E Istanp Rattway Crowds of people coining to iowti during Bazaar Week, Oct. 16 to 20th During this SPECIAL week we offer SPECIAL inducement: to CASH BUYERS Anycne wanting Books, Stationery or Fancy . Goods HASZARD ND .... MOORE) SUNNYSIDE. Political w—/leetings ; I will address the electors of the Murs interfere with the pleasures of society the | « character must suffer. To neglect the use of any God-given power whether of mind, body, or soul mast result in the deteriora~ tion,the weakening and the final loss of that power, Indian Fakirs, you know, some- mutual love and affection in constant | > at 7 o'clock vited to attend. > Gleawilliam, on THURSDAY, OCT 6th. At Highbank on FRIDAY, OCT, 27th Meetings to commence each évening : Hone D. A. McKianon respectfully in- times holdan arm above their head for 243—déew wat ee tat A. P, PROWSE\% AX sattattattateneataateaten x SECRSERER CE NOENEERS Fine iN OXO We Have Them in All The Best Makes Fit-Reform Ov: rceoat, $10, $12, $15 and $18. WR Johnston Overc at, $10, $12, $15 and $18. H, Vinberg & Co’s Overcoat, $8, $10 3 $12 and $15 Cther cheater makes, $2.75, $3. $5, $6, and $7. All wool Ulsters, £f Jt $3.75, $8 and $19. Boy’s end ChLicien’s Ulstcrs Fy thousands. ters Fy ie We are headquarters for Undercloth- ing and Top Shirts. Ladies, don’t forget to see and Jackets the Jargest sortm he Wonderful Cheap Men nee cur Capes and best ase ent in the city. 0i90-——-— DROS RSE EEA E EREIE 5 Ci } Y 4 f