ss cs wl Ossi ia aa 5 a a aut, cll aM a ' ' ' | } } } | | ; e Bene Job avy Ville, LONDON HOUSE, QUEEN STREET. Job Printiag of all kinds at short notice — Billhead-, Letterheads, Noteheads, Pamph- jets, Posters. Dodgers, ete. ——— ee —— Tsams -—Frive Dottams A YEAR. — ° NEW SERIES. SS —— one STE teens = age = For neat, clean, tasteful Printing and prompt attention to orders, THE EXAMINER Job Printing Depari- | | ment ts peculiar. Don't forget it. * This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having te advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evsripzs. —— ———— SS ee A New Departure, Owing to the increasing demand for first-class Readymade Overcoats, from this date we will keep in stock a nice range of CUSTOM-MADE OVERCOATS and ULSTERS, ranging in price from $1000 to $25.00, JOAN McLEOD & CO. Charlottetown, November 26, 1892—eod & wky FiNE TEA Kerosene Oil. eee, es VERY FARMER who intends to purchase a supply of THA and KEROSENE OIL to put him throvgh the Fall and Winter Months should call at BEER & GUFF’S Store and see their prices and inspect their Stock before buying elsewhere. Their Teas have a reputation ali over the Country second to none for Quality and Fine Flavor. They buy nothing but the BEST AMERICAN WATER WHITE KER ISENF OLL, so that you can depend on getting the BEST QUALITY from them every time, and the price is now lower than ever before. YOU CAN SAVE MONEY EVERY TIME BY CALLING AT BEER & GOFF’S. Charlottetown, October 256. 1892—eod & wky nia ee . a BELL, The Leading Custom Boot and Shoe Maker, — ESIRES TO ANNOUNCE that he is now better than ever prepared tu supply the public with FIRST-CLASS CUSTOM WORK. Having recently place in the latest improved Machines and Lasts, including the Picadilly Last, aleo « good supply of excelent Stock, suchas No. 1 French Calf, French Kip, French Oil Goat, French Kid, American Dongola, German Shell, Cordovan, Eng- lish Osk and Spanish Sole Leather, and having the best workmen in the Province, you can rely on getting # first-class Boot or Shoe in any style or quality, for either Misses’, Boys’, Ladies’ and Gentlemen's wear, a¢ the most reasonable prices. Orders filled promptly. Repairing of all kinds neatly done. We keep a line of our owa HAND-M\ADE BOOTS constaatly on hand. your Boots at the old stand and have dry feet. oo J #. BEE. Buy Charlottetown, Octeber 31, 18292 —lm m wf GREAT VARIETY OF Felt Boots and Rubbers ——-SELLING CHEAP AT-—— GOFF BROTHERS STORE. Charlottetown, November 18, 1892—eod & wky SL AL LGC ALE NE ALS LM OMe. AOE aw — ~ noSk. YOUR GROCBR LOrF ; ’ The Celebrated jUCOLAT MENIER a Annual Sales Exceed 33 MILLION LBS. : gree, write to C. AL .ED CHOUILLOU, MONTREAL. terreee | w Leer. ~ eee ia ia The Embodiment of Strength. JOHNSTON'S FLULD ——— IMPARTS— BEEF Vigor. firmress healthfulne -Robustness, Lustiness, An invalusble means of developmg muscle, power of endurance, and general November 7, 1892. — — CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 380, 1892. LS —— — SSS eee Srvers Corms Two OCryrs VOL. 30.--NO. 136 MOON’S CHANGES, Pell Mow, Gi Gee. «. cts7erse:: 1] 25 morx Lsst Quarter, Ilth day........... 5 *8 morn |New Mate, 100s GNF. 6.50 iste s ee 8 55 morn First Quarter, 27th day..... ---- 6 4 morn Day | | High Water. of Day of Week. | ——-—— | - Month. | Morn. | After. obs at bh m 1 Tuesday ga? 8 23 2 Wednesday | 7 53 9 17 $ [Fidy = | 1022 | 1041 tiday < 5 <aturalay | 10 59 | 11 19 6 Sunday 11 39 | midu’bt 7 Monday ee | 0 21 8 Tuesday | 0 43 12 9 W ednesday | east i 10 | Thursday | 295 | 2653 il Friday oh i 22 12 Saturday | @€33 5 10 13 Sunday 5 44 6 18 14 Mondav i 2er Te 15 Tuesday Te Sere 16 W ednesday 8 24 | 8 44 17 Thursday | 9 3 9 22 ls Frida 9 41 9 59 19 ie | 10 16 | 10 33 20 Sunday 1052 | 111 21 Monday | 11 30 | 11 51 22 Tuesday Digg a 0 10 23 W ednesday 028 | 048 24 Thursday - 1 29 . 25 Friday | 2a | 2 12 26 Saturday 2 35 2 59 27 -unday ; £264.14 3 28 Monday 4 26 5 6 29 Tuesday 5 46 | $2 30 | Wednesday 72173 = J. J. JOHNSTON, Attorney-at-Law, Solic tor, Notary Public, &¢., Stamper’s Block, Victoria Row, Charlottetown; P. E. Island. (co! LECTIONS.—Will give prompt attention / to collections and securing claims in this Prov- ince. Will collect claims in aay part of Canada orthe Unitei States, thr-ugh the co-operation and aid of prompt and reliable legal correspon- dents All matters entrusted to me will prompt, careful and d ligent attention. £7 Money to Loan. Money lavestd. Nov li receive Im 2aw wy ROBERT BALLOGA & O0., TEA MERCHANTS, |Mincing Lane, London. REPRESENTED IN CANADA BY J. A. MORR1S04, HALIFAX RE-OPENING. THE CHURCH HOSPITAL, College Street, Halifax, N. S., TEMPOR sRILY closed for repairs and im- provements, will re-open early in September with superior accommodations for recertion of private patients, under the charge of Nursing Sisters of the Church of England, garet’s Home, Boston. Vass, The Hospital is situated in extensive open grounds, facing Walhousic College, in a quiet neighborhood, easily acce ssi le For terms and further pa ticulara apply to the ister in charge 3m dy law)—sept7 S. R. FOSTER & SON, Manufacturers of Wire Nails, STEEL AND IRON CUT NAILS, And Spikes, Tacks, Brads. Shee Nails, Huagarian Nuils, &c, ST. JOHN, N. B. novi—lyr Never ete an | : eS Bs Se) a D m 2! Disappoints! QUEEN Insurance Agency Jfise Next to Bank of Nova Scotia fabis—eod Calendar for November, 1892. rom St. Mar- JAMES DESBRISAY, AGEN 7 | higg ; Se oe ine” ONE ENJO Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys- tem effectually, dispels colds, head- aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pros duced, pleasing to the taste and ace ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 75c | bottles by all leading druggists. | Any reliable Cruggist who may not | have it on hand will procure it ‘ promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Manufactured only by the | CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO., SAN FRANCISCO, CAL, LOUISVILLE, KY. NEW YORK, N. ¥. W. R. WATSON, Wholosale Druggist, Charlotteetown. mwf jy3l | “How are you!”’ Nicely, Thank You,” “Thank Who?” “Why the inventor of scorns | EMULSIIA Which cured me of CONSUMPTION,” Give thazks for its discovery. ¢That it does not make you sigs when you take it. Give thanks. That itis three times as efficacious as the old-fashioned cod liver oil. Give thanks. Thatitissuch a wonder- 4 ful flesh producer. Give thanks, Thatit is the best remedy for Consumption, Scrofula, Bronchitis, Wasting Dis- eases, Coughs and Colds. Besure you get tne genuine in Salmon color wrapper; sold by all Druggists, at soc. and $1.00. SCOTT & BOWNE, Belleville. 7 ~~ -_ PURE ~ #% POWDERED J i EHR D0 7% CUAL. | PUREST, STRONCEST, Ready for veesinuny quentity. Yor making Boap, Softening Wate’, : stad cting, and a hundred cthet uses. A can equals 20 pounds Sal Soda. Sold by All Grocers and Druggi«ta, ze WW. Geis. Torrente CAUTION EACH iPLUG OF THE | Myrtle Navy MARKED IS -M. & B. IN BRONZE LETTERS. NONE OTHER GENUINE, i n2—-ly & wky The Telephone Company P. E. ISLAND. the Telephones would find talking much more satisfactory if they | would observe the following rules :— | tet, Speak with the mouth about four inches from the transmitter. : | 2nd. Speak in a moderate tone of voice, not too loud, aa et. | 8rd. Place the telephens 80 as to cover the car, ‘just as if you wished to shat out all other sounds. Do not press too hard ou the ear. I: is possible to talk and be heard when stand- ing back two or three feet from the transmitter, ,if you shout loud enough, bat it is not a pleasant | mode of conversation, is entirely ' unnecessary, and is a useless waste of wind and being very annoying to all within range of your voice. ROB ANGUS, Manager. ap? ry Inngs, besides We were three months at To:mentine in onuection with the teat borings for the Northumberland tunnel. They were the three bright months of our summer sea- aon, and time spent in explorations on shore watthe regular work of boring on the breezy wave was a daily revel in the beau- vies of nature. The peninsula of Tormentine is a projec- tion of the New Brunswick coast, extend- ing into the Northumberland Strait so as to reduce ite breadth from twenty miles to less han seven and a half miles. The part ex- tending nearest to P. E. Island is Jc urimain [sland, situated on the northern extremity uf the peninsula. This small island is div- ided from the mainland by a marsh of some six hundred acres in extent. It is dyked and produces a heavy burden of cord grass and other coarse grasses, and is parceled amcng a great number of neigh- coring proprietors. ‘The ‘*Marsh” is an exquisite natural meadow, waving with its rich burden of yrasses and jewelled with two eilvery lakelets in its centre, the happy resort of numberless tribes of wild fowl. Iu the early dawn, when the first soft sunlight steals over the dark cliffs of Tormentine, and every dune and grave of reeds casts a iong, misty shadow, the shy teal sport in flocks of the silvery surface of these placid lakelets. Later, black mallards and sea ducks and noisy groups of arch-necked geese seek the shelter of these weedy reaches fhe great blue heron, and the nightly bittern, and the noisy tattlers, and endless tribes of sandpipers, plovers, and curlews never forsake the ready borders of those lakelets while summer breezes bow the grasses or sutumn goldens the sedgy marsh. As you may well suppose, the *‘marsh” is a favorite ground for sports- men. One Nimrod tells of bringing down thirty-six dncks at a shot, but his fellow- sportsmen profanely question the accuracy of his count. Yet it is true that ducks and other fowl are very plenty here. Gunning Point is the northwest extremity of Jour- imain Island, extending far out beyond the shallow waters of Peacock Cove. Wher the wind biows streng from the north the flocks of wild fowl passing out of this cove are driven in great numbers on the point and are easily shot. Gunning Point is a lofty mass of red boulderclay, such ascovers Jourimain Island generaliy, and which was brushed vuut of the bed of the strait during the Glaciel Period, and now presents 4 steep eroded face to the sea. On its summit a blind battery is built, which on every windy day in autumn is occupied by a garrison of sports—men awaiting in leisure the arrival of the winged fleets from the sea. Referring to the boulder clay. it is quite interesting to observe here how the red clay of the Permian districts has been forced from northwest to southeast over on to the grey carboniferous districts, and also to note how the rongh grey boulders of Millstone Grit have been carried in the same direction upon the red Permian tracts. A: Lane's Quarry, near Bayfield, there is a large exposed surface of grey rock beauti- fully planed and striated by the motion of the great glacier as it accross the peninsula in its course to the bed of the Atlantic. General direction of the strie S. 85 deg. E. We found the red-wing blackbird in breeding season on Jourimain. It frequented the bridge over the marsh run, and its peculiar whistle and hovering, circling flight, so distinct from that of the common grackle, apprised us that it was 4 stranger long before we noticed the crimson doublet on its shoulders. Cuckoos were quite common in the wooded islets of the marsh. In June these islands were white with the bloom of choke berries, and the nodding racems of the Virginian cherry. Later they were fairly ablaze with the most magnificent wild roses [ evar saw. When autumn spread his golden- shield on the marsh, these groves were filled with the luscious fruit of the amel- anehica and brilliant clusters of wipter- berry, while the low marsh borders were all aglow with cranberries and crimson fox- berries. Blueberries were in unlimited quantity. We found quite a number of plants here which we had not observed on P, E. Island. Among these the way- faring tree, bush honeysuckle, shrubby cinquefoil, and poison ivy are conspicuous. Among animals, the cireit cat or skunk, the raccoon and the porcupine are common tere, but net found on the Island. The distribution of these plants and animals is of in'erest in connection with the last great geological movements of the district. Jourmmain Island is about a mile long and half a mile bruad. It is red sandstone formation, being composed of the lowest beds ot the Permian. We spent many 4 summer evening searching for fragments of fossils where the placid waves of the strait broke in murmuring ripples on its reefy shores. Nor was our labor unrewarded. Browa fragments of silicified pine wood of the ancient species dadoscylon materiarum —collecied years ago by Prof. Dawson at Gallas Point—are found drifting among the sands. Parts of the stems of tree ferna, bulky as pine logs and bearing distinct scars of the great fronds which these grace- ful trees once bore, and trunks of tyioden- dra which are so common on St. Peter's Island and so characteristic of the Permian, are impressed on the reefs of fine sand. stone; also fronds of the magnificent species of fern, peopteris arborascens, and the fan-shaped leaves of baiera and parallel- veined cordaites. One day as we launched a boat te go to the borings, Mr. Hendry picked up a nice branch of walchia gracilis This was an ancient club moss assuming the sizs and appearance of a conifer, and is very charicteristic of the Permian forma- tion. Of calamites there are the remains of not only the common small reed-like ones of the carboniferous, but also of the great calamite of the Permian which reared its fluted column along these ancient marshy shores to the height of ordinary forest trees. The outer Jourimain Island, we have ee ~ ae EE — -_ ee formentine and the Tunnel Bor-] said, is Permian, but the islets in the marsh ings. are outcrops of the ccarse grey sandstones of the Millstone Grit. Thus sharply is th: line between the two formations marked You leave the red Permian rocks on the western extremity of Jourimain Island, cross the level stretch of sand opposite the marsh, and_ entering Spence Cove, find yourself at once xmong the grey rocks of the Millstone Grit, which rocks occupy the whole coast from this to Shemogue. Indeed, the same grey rocks occupy the whole of the Tormentine peninsula except Jourimain Island, and « narrow triangular patch extending from Dobson's Gove to Upper Cape The Millstone Grit it mostly coarse grey or brown isle sandstone. but in some places, as at Mount Pleasant, there are dark red shales and dark slaty sandstones. The foasils of this formation are quite distinc: from those of the Permian. The Tormen tine pier was built with many thousand tons of this rock, brought by rail from Cobourg, and as it contained a good num ber of characteristic fossils, | spent some time on stermy days studying them on the pier. Mr. Murphy, the Cbliging contract- or, afforded me every accommodation in this work. Remains of Oordaites and Calamites were particularly numerous, and also fossil seeds of the genus Cardiocarpum Remains of huge trunks of Lepidodendra, ence as bulky as the timbers which the workmea were fitting into the structure of the pier, are an interesting feature of this ancient flora The rock bed that the proposed tunne! is to pass through is entirely in the lower Permian. These beds, as we have already seen, just touch the New Brunswick coas' at Jourimain Island, and stretching away northward under the waters of the Strait, underlie Prince Edward Island. The tun nel will enter these beds on Jourimain Island, follow them across the Strait, and rise through the superior sandstone beds on the P. E. Island shore. Eight test holes were bored on the Jouri- main side of the Strait. Two of these were on the island itself. Both penetrated the red strata and reached the grey carbonifer- ous base. At the first hele, 600 yards in land, the red strata were found to be only 32 feet in thicknees ; but at the second hole op the coast they were 132 feet thick, thus showing how rapidly the carboniferous base dips under the bed of the Gulf. In fact, the suuthern part of the Gulf is a great carboniferous basin holding wichin it the superficial new red sandstone formation, the upper part of which forms our fertile Gem of the Gulf, Where we penetrated the lowest beds of the Permian on Jourimain Island we found them to consist of brown estuarine or marsh deposits, reposing uncomformably on the old carboniferous coast line. This ancient marsh deposit, with its remains of Cale- mites, and Cordaites, Tylodendra and tree ferns, brought before our minds a picture of that ancient time when our Island rocks were laid down as beds of shifting sand and mud in the waters of the Gulf. Who shall count back and tell us in years the date of that time? The Gulf, surrounded by its palzeozoic hills, existed as it does to-day, but no P. E. Island was in its southern waters. All along its southern shores the low coast was bordered with extensive marshes, but no soft, rich grasses spread their luxriance over these ancient meadows, stiff leaved conifers and flinty stemmed calamites covered them with rigid uninvit- ing herbage. Inthe elow development of life through the ages, no vegetables brighter than the conifer hai yet been produced, and all the vegetable luxuriance of the time was antiquated and low-typed. These ancient marshes with their lagoons and muddy deposits extended far out into the Gulf, as we know from the rocks of Governor and St. Peter's Islands, where these lowest See that our Trade Mark—A MARINER'S COM- PASS, Is on each package. SKODA’S REMEDIES SHKODA’S DISCOVERY. The GREAT GERMAN-AMERICAN REMEDY for HEART, NERVES, KID- NEYS, LIVER and LOOD. Price, $1.60, € bottles for 85.50. If bought ati above price we GUARANTEE the 8 bot. les to bemefit or cure. GUARANTEE CONTRACT with each bottle. Pay only for the good you receive. SKODA’S PILE CURE tw the DISCOVERY emres Piles. Price SHKODA’S GERMAN SOAP. “Soft as Velvet.” “Pure as Gold.” That tells the whole story. The most high- ly medicated soap ever made. Try jus one cake. For tothet, or nursery . Price,25 ets. SKODA’S PLEDGETS. _ The Great German-American Spe- cifie for diseases peculiar to the female sex. We will give 81,000 for any case] we cannot cure that does not require surgical interference. One month's treatment, 83.00. SKODA’S GERMAN OINTMENT. | The Great Skin Cure, also for wounds, abrasions, burms, etc. A?’ a jcosmetic, makes the skin like veivet. Removes black ete. asif by magic, if you low - tions. Three ounce tubes in elegant) cartons for 50 ets. SHKODA’S LITTLE TABLETS. For Headache ani Liver Trouble. With the DISCOVERY they cure Bheu- matism. Mild, Safe, Efficient. Far supe- rior to any pill. Once used you will have no other. in a box for 36 cts. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. \SKODA DISCOVERY C0., Wolfville, N.S, Miss JOdqz, SYDNEY STREET EAST, S NOW PREPARED to take in washing at moderate rates, Also dressing, etc. Gentie- men’s suits washed, cleaved and repressed a specialty. Orders promptiy attended w. no#s 21 pd Colds, Hoarseness, Use Campbell’s | Canadian | Permiar rocks are «iso brought to the surface. Here aad there the marshes rose into alluvial islands, umbrageous with the frondage of tree ferns and the dark forms of Dasdoylon and Tylodendron. In the borings for the tunnel we penetrated large beds of clay shale interspersed with fine sandstones. The materials for these shales were washed from this low,marshy and mete | | coast by sluggish streams from the interior and the wash of the sides. inthe test hole on the shore we pierced a bed of shale fifty-one feet thick, bearing in it some fine thin sand- stones. These beds incline at first towards the P. E. Island shore, with a grade of four feet in a hundred, but at a mile and a half out become nearly horizontal. The bed just re. ' ferred to occupies the level ef the propose tunnel and will offe: much facility for ite, construction. We spent much of the time out on the; Strait taking records of the borings at the drill. | The cores obiained from the different borings: in the water were very uniform—alter- nating shales and sandstones. But the fording a monumental record of the physical condition of our Guilt in the dim antiquity of the closing days of the Palwozoi age. e dare not stay in a vain attempt to tell all these ancient records’ report of that remote They showed us the Gulf as it then existed, how its currents flowed, ita tides set, its rivers debouchbed, where storms swept ite waters or they rested in halcyon tide, What strange life ploughed its deeps and what monstrous forme hung round its foaming borders we saw a little of too. But the stor is too long to attempt, more than we have al- ready said. Uut in mid-Strait we enjoyed the freedom and beauties of sea life. ‘The wandering wild fowl, the teeming schools of the finny tribes, Cough | Emulsion. raave man, Only 25¢. por Bottle. MAIL CONTRACTS. TENDERS addressed to the Postmaster General! will bs received at Ottawa uti] noon on FRIDAY, 16th December next, 1°92, fof the con- veyance of Her Majesty's Mails on proposed con- tracts for four years from the leat January, 1893, over each of the following routes, vi£. .— Charlottetown and Railwey Station. Charlottetown and Screet Letter Boxes. Printed notices, containing fall information as to conditions of pro contracts, may be seen and blank forms of tender may be obtained at the Post Office at which the services commence whole assemblage was a beautiful stady af. | and terminate, or at the office of the subscriber, F. pe 8ST. C. BRECKEN, Aast. P. O. laspector. Post Office Inspector's Office, Charlottetown, P, E. L, 20th November, 1892-31 dy & wy i790. CLIFT, WOOD & CO., ‘General Commission Merchants, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD. the lowly forms of invertebrates and vast variety of bright slge that our operations sometimes dragged from the depths, often attracted our attention while engaged in the arduous labor of the enterprise. Frequently strong breezes opposed to the powerful tide in the strait raised seas that it required all the fortitade and skill of those engaged to combat or escape successfully. Or again, the placid beauty of some cloudless sunset sky, suffusing heaven and sea in such floods of flaming rain- bow dies, made you forget all the shadows of earthly woe in the peans of nature's periect praise. F, Bary. Look at the ladies’ corsets for 40c, regu- lar prices 80c te $1.—J B Macdonald's. - ‘ —ij Wwe have much pleasure in informing our cor respondents ic P. E. Island that we have rebuiit part of our premises (destroyed by the recent fire), and have now sufficiest STOKAGE and WHAKFAGE to enable us to resame busi- , ness as heretofore | Consignments of Produce will a. all times have | our best attention. CLIFT, WOOD & CO. nov25—law & wky NOTICE. w* are closing up the Black Diamond Line Steamers’ accounts for the t season, and any parties who have claims against sa: Steain- ers will please present them for adjustment before the 10th day of December next. PEAKE BRUS, & CO., Agents nov -lw