ee “ a, lla setter _ THE DatLy EXAMINER. _ friis is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evriripes. SInGLe Copies Two Cents. NEW SEES. The Daig Examiner s issued every evening by [he Examiner Publishing Go. From their offies, corner of Water and Great George Streets, Charlottetown, Prince | i Edward Island. : —RATES OF SUBSCRIPrION— \A7~ no gawengs eh oo oaks uuknssboc $2.50 | < Is fa it sy FR See Ne co scks, » 1.25 a ee hese ornisacso Ul i ~— Alvertising st moderate rates, | - ij 7 © a Soc? a Coatracts may bx made for monthly, quar-| terly. half-yearly, or yearly aive rtisemenis, | on application. eeeee eeeees ALMANAC FOR NOVEMBER, 1888, |) = Neve WoOoLel’® Robes, MOON'S CHANGES, First Quarter 3rd day, Oh. 52.7m., p. m., E. (below horizon. ) ci : : . 7 s oth Gloves—a larg Full Moon Ith day, 3h., 540., p. m., N. E. esi bolts (below hovizon. ) Se SS Bees ee =a Last Quarter 18th day, 6h., 27.8m., p. m., hw: Pek é atom bate (N. below horizon. ) | j | } am ? 25 ay. : . . » a New Moon 25th day, 3h, 6.0m., p. m., 8. W. Gur Uantle Bep: CHARLOTTETOWN, Sian Lamb, Beaver, reiment is P. EK. ISLAND, ” he tgegest siock of Fur Capes De Caceityy Far Boas, Muffs, Gtoves Jackets, tans, in Seuth >en Seal, Per- 4Strakan and other furs, Sicigh PA oN es > ts # Gae LD ~~. Shaw's Wraps, Clouds, Caps, Knit Tams, Jersey and * Variety of those govds. complete with a nd “hori duchets, Jerseys, Ulsters Sachets. ) S : 5 oh Ha i - . > S as¢ ° pay or weex!2"" Sun Moon High Day's assor (ute mt af bo sz i a rises,sets , rises water! len’h | Reolmans, ¢( hildren'’s h mh mmorn!morn h mi - A YY 88 Fi a fi} "T ff G8 ] Monday 6474 4111 51) 135 9 54 | . rt i “WAL BGS E RSE eadis 2, iuesday } .48' 39jaft 33; 2 21 51 | % Wednesday 50; . 383i 1 10] 3 1) 45) 4 thursday Si} 36) 1.43) 4 13 45 | a filme stock of Men's Gvercoaats from $4.02. ups Worsted 5 Friday | S38 33) 2 13) 5 22 42 and iwerd Suits, Boys’ Clothisg 6 Saturday St 34) 235) 6 31; 40) j 2 7| Sunday 56, 28:13 6&1 7 30 37 | ae id 8} Monda | 57} 31°73 51) 819) 34] , co 3 ae 0 Tectia? + 53| 29135819 0 a} ~i 4 P< i f a, Bd » os 10,Wednesday {7 0; 23, 4 26) 9 39 23! 7 aa’. 2 ae ge 4 1] Tharsday 1) 97) 458110 15, 26 _ a: — Sat 12) Priday 3} 26) 5 34/10 52) 23) aii il st 13 Saturday 4: 23) 6 18:11 29) 22} SULUBSDSO RS O i+! Sanday 6G 2417 Taft 8 13} ois Pf 2 lo Moa lay 7 22; 8 3| 0 49 Id os nS. i — V i 2 5 -4) & @: 16 Tuesday 8 2119 813 13 wat © ra ae Aa hes? oe “oe? Sees 17| Weduesday 10; 20/10 14 2 35 10} Ch’town. Nov. 22. 1986 18 Tuursday 11} 19}11 24) 3 24 s : eae 19) friday 13, I9jmorn; 4 40 6) ean 20 Saturday 14, 18) 0 35,6 3 4 21 Sanday 16} 1711401718) 2} ( T 22) Monday 17; 16) 3 2,8 19) 8 59: F & 2%: Paeshey Is) 15) 4149 8 57] ; 4 24 Wednesday 20 141 5 27| 9 53 54! 2.5 Thursday 21) 13) 6 36,10 34 52 | i i bi ‘ 20) F riday | 23) 13) 7 43/11 13) 50 27|Saturday 24; 12) 8 44,11 52) 45 ee 23 Sun day | 25) 11! 9 35\morn 47 29 Monday 26; 11110 28 0 32; 45 haa: gc 30/Tacsday ¢. |7264 911 8) 1 10) 8 43) oe | asl OLE WEATER ARRANGEMENT ONTEMPLATING moekin; THE PALACE STEAMERS |ATERNATIONAL S.S. C9. — Leave 3t. John for Boston, via Eastport and Port- iand, every Monday, and Toursday at 5.00 a. m. Face fron Chariottetown to Buston, 36,50, 2nd class ; 39.50, 1st class. For tickets aad other information apply to . A.SAARP, F. W. HALES, P. ee y & P. BE. L Steam Nav. Co, or to your nearest Ticket Agent. Nov. 15, 1886—eod wky A CARD. | closing for some time, I will MY ENTIRE — NOW dit Sud Indiseretions of youth, nervous weakness, early To all who are suffering from the errors and ebkdemnntti ES Now is the time to buy Winter Cloth'ng, low. We have Qe cteeenmentn xy extensive alterations in m3 store, earlyin the new year, which will necessitate my eros Il, Oboe STOCK jnahe Go0ks, OF large i | | asia | . VOL. 19.-NO. 151. [advancement ich vemodeled every t2ature of the being. In this instance, where we have ai opportunity of studying closely the mode of improvement, we find that it is not by chance or happy accident or peculiar develop- ment of any part, but by virtue of an organic law which produced successively competed animals of a higher and more perfect struc ture. We look around us, and every day we see new beings produced in the animal and vegetable world ; but always under the direction of definite or- ganic law ‘Ve look at the vast succession of beings, that, during past ages has appeared on world, and as we scrutinize the mighty ile of varied life, we see, in every individual creation, the same evidence of law and order and design, the same proof thst all has been produced according to « pre-arranged plan. THE GREAT SECKET OF LIFE lies in the fact that all .ts endless forms have been determined by the operations of a great organic law established by an All Wise Creator. Knowing that the advancements of the past have been according to estabiished law and order, we look with confidence to still greater improvements in the future, under the guidance of “That God that ever lives and loves,” And we know from the teachings of Vibil osuphy that there is more than poetic faucy in the statement that there is “One God, one element, FIRST IMPORTANT TERRESTRIAL FLORAS. 4 > ahny—- . Jae * >a FT Y Yr oe err , ~ » a MONDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1886. 6 LJ 3 BRWIiINT e& Db. > the Darwinian doctrine of chance variation in Lon = + | species. Here is a fossil Rynconella, from the Silurian. Since this little shell lay an- ' chored in the silent depths of the ancient se, | Bi Gi B ; f in the misty dawn of the earth's history, iY, Fran * bali O00 the Theory 0 | changes innumerable have passed over its Evolution of Species features. Continents have been heaved from r ‘the depths, and ocean basins sunk. The bed — lof the sea has been lifted to the summit of the ; |hivhest mountains, and mountain masses been | Address Before the Literary and borne down by the trickling streams and sctentifie Association. XK |sPreat beneath the still silent waters. The b “ }whole world has been revoluted. _ From tor- eae i On rid heat to arctic cold have been the changes (Concluded. ) y' > jof temperature. Innumerable new tribes Dadiiikelle oi .th: a oe |have come and thousands died out; and yet arwimteHs us that the striking beauty of tie Rhynconella, formed perfect at first, re- our Wild, figwers—those~ jewels with which mains unchanged to this day, and is still nature — her richest vestments—those found living in our seas. The same is the stars of earth's darker firmament that flash case with many other genera. In the Upper the light. ef hope aud love on her sad wander- ‘Silurian we have fishes, and they, are fishes of aeena formed by insects selecting the more the highest order. Placoid fishes, differing no heantiful blossoms for their visits 1. prefer- -more from existing sharks than these do ence to the plainer ones. If beauty ccusisted ' among themselves. Thirty years ago, Hugh alone in a glare of color, this steiy might Miller argued that the early appearance of have some speciousness in it ; but when we | these perfect fishes in geological history was recollect that beauty, especially that rare decided proof against the evolutionary doc- beauty which flashes on summer's floral trine, And the argument still stands unim- diadem, combists of an exquisite arrangement 'peached. Thirty years of the most active jand blending of colors according to the estab- scientific investigation have passed away, and lished laws of harmouy, aud 18 an etherial still the Onchus striate/ia is the oldest known quality the full appreciation of which even few | fish, and still it stands among the highest of human minds attain, to be told that its most 'jts class. In the Devonian or Old Red Sand- pertect establishment in the broad domain of stone we have a number of peculiar Ganoid the vegetablerkingdom has been effected by | fishes. Here, also, we have the the intelligent discrimination of insects, is so | clearly ineonsistent with what we know of the | mental ¢apacity of these lowly tribes, that not even our delight in philosophical dreaming wil induce us to acceps such a theory. | possession of the oldest fragment ae 0, thegheauty of _earth’s floral treasures wood then known. He reminded his opp depends en organic laws laid deep in the |nents that it belonged to no imperfect shrab, constigati@n of their own structures and, how- | }at was a fragment ef anoble pine tree equal Of variation to suit a thousand | ; 7 . changin Mircumstances, remains the same | ie 4 ? heaven-est&blished law of harmony. de on Norwegian hills imiral.” | ‘Phe veinesa of the violets deep blue ! o be the tnusts of some great Admiral. ; eye,” with a golden treasure in its depths; the | How does Miller's argument stand now ? a ust scouted pinky stars of the mayflower, whose | @s it did when first advanced. In the neigh- .nowy eentre seems a shadow of departing} boring province of New Brunswick we have winter; the linuic’s fragrant bells, the wild | the most perfect known example of a Devo oxalis pale, shade-loving bloom; the brilliant ‘nian flora. About a mile to the west of the orchids, with exquisite white and purple | town of Carleton, a series of black and gray shading, the pale-tinted bell of the convolvu- | Shales and sandstones, called the ** Fern lus, that tolls a chime of tenderness to the | Ledges,” slope down to meet the wash of the passing breeze, and the hedge-rose’s tlashing | roaring Fundy's tide. They contain numer crimson, that adorns its richly-verdant dress | Us perfect remains of a varied flora of Ferns, —are, eaeb and all, a perfect psalm of har-|Cordates, Lycopodites, Asterophyllites Cala- mony ! ‘mites, SigiMaria and Conifers, chief among the The gollen worlds of light, that flash in group being the great pine trees that, of old, in heavens blue, in their majestic circles of | the very morning of the world’s history as in light,—display the infinite harmonies of \the present day, clothed these rugged primary eternal law: the pale light of the most distant | hills with their dark and sombre foliage. nebulu, that hangs like an evanishing cloud Most interesting of all these remains lying on the horizon verge of the universe of God, }impressed on the dark sea ledges, are the comes tembling through the abyss of space— | beautifully preserved wings of insects, show- bearing the grand message of His boundless! ing the nervation as pe:tect as in the tribes reign! Each throb of the tide that swells on'that flash in our own summer sunghine. the surf-washed beach ; the thickening blasts The sounds of insects are produced by ot winter and the quickening pulse of return- |@ special apparatus designed for the purpose. i ; the pale, sweet bloom of the |The soft chirruping of the cricket and = shrill open veir; the regabetlash—ot- y's | cry of the cicada are provided by this means. diadem, and the golden light that burns on |S perfect bes heen the preservation of these the shicli of autumn; the beauties of the | Devonian insects, that the minute details of rainbow’s lovely form, building an evanescent , this musical apparatus is preserved complete. architecture on the brow of the passing cloud; |The insects belong to the modern tamily the rising charm of morning and the celestial | Ephemerida or May flies. dyes of evening; the lightning’s flash, | Miller's argument fora final cause is not aud the cyclone’s destructive power; the ' weakened but strengthened by the discovery thunder’s crash, and the soft, sweet swell of of the fuller detai!s of life in these anent De- musical notes, distilled like oders on the rav- vonian forests. They were grand and lovely ished senses, the dissolution of a theusand | forest scenes, where the wide-extending pine substances around us, under the laws tops made . of chemical affinity, and the formation of new compounds by the same agency ;—ever province, every feature, every detail of the physical world proclaims : * Light and airy arches, Yet awful as the consecrated roct Re-echoing pious anthems.” The glades were gay with waving fern of many forms, and creeping ground pines, and the hum and trill of insect life filled the shadows, while the sweep of summer winds o’erhead THE CEASELESS REIGN OF HEAVEN-ESTABLISHED LAWS. And are we to believe that the higher depart- ment of nature, the world of organic life, has been left to the aimless determinations of chance, and the unstable rule of ever-varying accident? No. Law reigns here as else- where: aud law means a law-giver. ‘** Made music not unlike The dash of ocean on his winding shore.” Insects are the highest class of the articula- ta, and their appearance at this early date, as also in the earlier Silurian, says little for evolution. Accompanying the grand flora of the carbon- iferous, “In the vast and the minute we trace The unambiguous footsteps of a God. Who gives its lustre to the insects wing, i And wheels his throne upon the rolling world. We turn now to the grand record of life in the past, engraven on the lasting monuments of earth’s rock structure. The evolutionist is ever complaining that that record is incomplete. Though incomplete, and with many pages|_ obliterated by the very hands that reared its | Its THE FIRST REPTILES APPEAR. Amphibious were the most common, but the higher forms of sauroid reptiles appear. la the mesazoic the reptilian class received perfect, indeed. singular development. fibric, yet every recorded fact remaining is | Great enalasaurs, 40 feet in length, ploughed complete in itseli and is the green seas. Crocodilian reptiles, 50 feet in length and standing 10 feet high, made 4 WITNESS OF UNIMPEACHABLE VERACITY, thickets along evei disivsaurs, 30 feet in terrible the shadowed coming up from the abyss of eternity to tell of | Tver border, Giant tecay, loss of manhood, &e., I will send a recipo ; aoe >PEDEOr NGE. This great @ RE 1 tF 3 » stately steps of Deity. ,There i he | length, rose their scaly forins in erect position, that willeure you, PREZ OF CHANGE. J his great i F Am yen G +f i the stately steps ol Deity. gThere is _ the Bul, er ae pom “1 remedy was discovered by a missionary in South os e = Fa bce ¥ ae single jawboae of a Bathygnathus, taken from |0? back and head extruding,and by their agility, Amertea. fend a se!t-addressed envelope tothe : 'e i i % i 4 i a wellin New London. Only a fragment! strength and ferocity, giving unwonted terror REV, JOSEPH T. IXMAN, Station D, New York City. The merest waif on the ocean of the past, |even to@ range | of reptiles. — Pterodaiitiles, whose breadth rolls through otifty millions of with leathery wings, 25 feet in extent, cast ae A N i ) — _ years! But it has a complete story to tell of hideous shadows as their dragon-like ferms itself. It belonged to the order of Dinosauria, | 5Wep* overhead. i, ARTHUR & CO., GEN HRAL Commission Merchants, 12] ATLANTIC AVENUE, POSTON, MASS.) Regs and Produce a Specialty. per cent discount. All the Cloths and Tweeds July 15--dly wkly f in, 'Giscount. co] GATHERINES’ HALL, A©GUST*: Gray, White and’ Scarlet ME ‘ DIOCESAN SCHOOL FOR GIRLS. discount. a Touly ‘th. Pp -esident. T > : } > ay v. Why. He A. Neeiy, DD Presiest, | Velvets, Plushes, Ribbon a Dein: Itch onae aneme Gent, th Terme, Gu ees} : © nit Hs D. aed pela offered. For circu- per cent discount. lars address the Principal. July 16—10 wks i nY “BARCLAY & CO, om All Cot'on Goods at a discount of25 per cent GENERAL | cen | The entire stock must be cleared before the first of the ’ New Year. You can depend on ever offered in this city. | xs AN _ Gods Sold tor Convissiyn & Shingiag Merchants tui Atlantic ivenue. Boston. ————— <——— NIGHT years’ experience in this market. 34 Over tifty th rusant bushels P. BK. 1. | potatoes received by us last fall, One a ‘ all satisfied. Vessels chartered for potato i. freights at short notice. Write for manrket e rmé jports QUEREN Ch'town, Ost. 19° 86—dy wy s@ Apecislties — Potatoes, Mackerel, Can- nei Lobsters, Ege. Jane 17, 86 -2mo eod AT A TREMENDOUS SACRIFICE. et All the stock of Faney Dress Goods and Dress Cloths at 333 Knit Wool Goods, Shawls and Mantiles at 33 -N-G at a disedunt of 334 per cent. } 1-2 per cent "oO '2 Flennels at 33 2 per cent } ee rT ae 29 ‘ id all Millinery Go All the stock of Men's and Roys Clothing. Gents’ Furnish- ings, Overcoats, R-efers and Suits at a discount of 35 1-2 per getting the BEST BARGAINS PAS only. —————— WACDONALD,' STREET. ; 28 at wv kd comprising the most perfect and highest typed} In the Triassic marsupial mammals first reptiles that ever appeared on the earth. If/appear. They are perfect specimens of the the secret of life is accidental improvement | sub-class; but formed an insignificant retir- and the survival of the fittest, how came it}ing race amid the brutal multitude of reptile that for fifty millions of years the class ofjmonsters.: It is the story of a chosen race reptiles has made no advance whatever ? Take | waiting its appointed time for rule. That another single fact. Go to the red shale cliffs |time came in the Tertiary, when mammals in of Miminigash,and as the lashing surf tears up|their most perfect forms appear at once in full the soft read strata and exposes the lovely |force. Theearlier Tertiary mammals wer form of ancient ferns, Pecopteris, Nenropteris, | huge, awkward and had comparatively small Sphenopteris or Cyelopteris, say if these|braihs. So perfect is the record of life ; are not as perfect in form and structure, in|served of this period that we have a very design and finish as any ferus that wave their | complete history of the gradual introduction fronds in the sunniest brakes of our own time. j of improved forms. Ofthe horse tribe, for Viere is your doctrine of evolution then, if }< xample, we have the following complet: in fifty millions of years, pregnant with the! scries from the earliess Tertiary times down | aizhtiest revolutjens in the class of ferns, the | the present :— ‘ } physical world and the world of life has not in the early Eocene, or eldest Terfary. we junpreved in the slightest detail under itsPhave the ‘Orohipyus, ail eae } intue: 4 toes on the hind feet and 3 _ toes The geological record is complete enough to,0m the fore feet. In the latter Eocene show us the general bearing of the story of|We have the Mesohippus,which had three toes life. We have here a diagram of the success- | ll round, but a very considerable splint re- ive ages of geological time. (Diagram re-|™aining of the fourth toe. * in ‘he wren ferred to.) It represents a period of time of|We- have the — Miohippus oe sae probably 50,000,000 years Seite. Of this |the oo; ad rly am In ..the a shile}Sepuplus spli one. the Paleozoie comprehends one half, while —— Pliocene, the Protohippus had but the Secondary and Tertiary equally divide the remainder. . Passing over the Laurentia animals, which are exceedingly doubtful, the most ancient : fovme Of life are ret with in the Primordial | #PP" aching ; es or Cambrian- strong singie toe, With \ Here we have represented “ali the great divisions ci iuvertebrates, hadiates, Mciusks and Articulates. Of the two lasi—the three clean toes on each foot; while in the later Pliocene, the Pliotippus had bat one toe with two larger eplints, thvs very nearly mewdern horse witu his nev! ‘i reduced splints. T OF REAL THE POL» INTY REST ji such a series as this is, that the improre | highest classes, namely, the Echinoderms and ‘ment has not been by acci-lent or in one part ithe Cepha&lopod’s are found, and in- | of the animal a'one; but coir lent with a | eects appear in the Middle Silurian. gevcral lmpiovement In its entire organization. W hitc the tees have decreased in number, twe | THE: EXCEEDING BFAUTY AND PERFECTION oe , : . forearm has been consolivated, the fibula | ancient forms at once arrests ourthas been decreased ami the teeth cow- they are as pecfect of their kind{pletely altered in structure; showing that lof these | attention. ‘as any that ever afterwards appeared on the| whatever alteration wes effected, it was! earth, and stand as lasting evidence against under the operation of a great organic law of | / Miller picked up alignite on the pebbled! | beach ot Cromarty Bay, and exuited in the; ; of truce fossil i neat with, . And one far-ow’ divine event, Jo which the whole creation r Aeay Vo SSO 5 i I ’ -_—~ 3 ) on “Aisne —e aD Be AFE (ts, SURE. mast PROMPT. AWONBERFUL REMEDY Adamson's Botanic Cough Balezu It is a8 pleasant as honey. Coughs, Colds, and Asthma, which lead to Consumption, have beer speedily cured by the use of ADAMSON’s BaLsaM after all other medicines have failed. fuiterers from efsher recent or chromic covrhs or bronchie! fections, fan resort to this great remedy, confident of obtaining speedy relief, Do not delay, cet tt at once. F°P SALT RY ALL PHRPGGISTS, Bottled at £&t. Stevens, N. B.. by tue proprevors, F. W. KINSMAN & CO., Druggists, o43 47 AVE... Ne TE i) WE HAVE OPENED UP A Retail Grocery Business GREAT GEORGE STREET, alongside of John Stumbles* Harness Shop, where we are bound to sell everything in our line at Bottom Prices, T“A, (different qualities, ) SUGAR. “sé “e RAISINSK 28) rey CURRANTS, HOLL ASS2s, Ni WPOUNDLAND Fish, and everything you want in the Grocery line. ALSO STABLING ACCOMODATION We are determined to give those who favor us with their-patronage entire satisfaction, and the best value for their money and produce, Come one, come all and inspect our Goods, temember the place is on Great ‘jeqgge Street, next John Stumbies’ Harness Establishment, Bees Wanted. JOHN EVANS & G2. GREAT GEORGE STRLEI Vet, 4, 1886-—3ime eod ST LAWRENCE LOfaL, NEXT TO CORNER WATER AND GiLEAT GEOKGE STREETS. W Ithin five minutes’ walk of the trains aud boats, post oflice, telegraph office anc publie buildings. Rates moderace pecial rates to anent boarders. | Nov. 10- pern rio. ROBISON, Propi wor”. G5 BIATER sStREET. Iwk ! = ae } ' ’ > AUS ia © (a¥a ia 1% foe Gs mat ’ \ ia ipa Weeiaan ye ANE aed ty Gog Bi [OR IBA Fig ce arpa tere if at PM gh > alle ~, + |. ie the | ets ' lives Get & fer ro eee en Be ites iw : cA sliiianeidialiiin } : Saonaan tipeali fas see : Grit \: SPL sh Bes won ae) | hated ty a arcuslc. > atlamamy y RETAILS EVERYWHERE. Cans, 8, 14. and 25 Cents Paper. 6, 12, and 44 Cents Nov 8, 1886. i oa ~~ a ) , = " a ‘or = (Notice to Debtors. ALL persons indchted to the undersigned ior Book Account, Noves of He .a or cherwise, are herehy notified that a! aimonnts of due, must be roid in fuil, on or “Sefore the loth DECEMBER ncxt, AL amounts unope*" ~ tho? Aeate will be sued rwithocurt respect to pers P,S.—ets taken at marke’ pric 2. A. wore & CO. \ pper Queen Stree Ch‘town, Nov. 17, 1386—4i wky @, hes? Every attention paid io the comfort of vests, - z 2 iva c= st + Oe “- , ae —- . =F = canal aaa eomarane ee ee cite i atin =o ee