at g MRI Sw THE HERALD, WEDNESDAY, DEC. 4, 1867. Sila ii aa ma = =e dina ticitiees ra. 2 Pe ee eee. app eel ctiniiinlepeinpii ditt Bitte a Monntonarmnmnmensinmenmrnennn equally sacred and inviolable. Tho right to hold pro- perty is a natural right; to bold this or that particalar) property, the property of the Trilsune, for instance, is) an acquired or vested fight. Does the Tribuae deny that, udless these vested rights are hell sacred auc inviviable, | society cannot get on, civilization lapses into savagun, and talis lower, for even savage ives resp: cach! other's hunting grounds? Hf, (in the course of events,) | certain vested rights operate injuriously to the general: ood, the most soviety may do, is, with the consent oi fate he so riclily deserved. the proprietor, to ransom ihem, or give full indemnificn- | tea, The Tribune in the ease of its owa vested rights,/Droit,” a grave journal, as trustwerthy as the would insist as earnessly on this doctrine as any one Bailey sessions papers,—Daily Telegraph, ean; and with what consistency then does it deny itan the Gave of the Pope or Sovercign of Rome? But we suppooe it of little use to argue seriously any questiva of public or private ethies with the Tribune, which is radical or conservative, helds the right of peor) perey sacred and iavivlable or not, is tor of agains: Lovernment according to its private interests or its per- soval caprives: but why should it be so bitter against Ue temporal authority of the Pope? Does it believe it in- jurious to the interests of the Lalian people? Suppose tly so, what then? Ik can in the well-kaown belief «f its ediwor be su vuly in this life. Whether «a man is a Vapist or a Calvinist, a Universalist or an Atheist, ean, itwenty hours of death. Correspondence, cing tn tt EE te NR AE sufferer, he kicked away the stool beneath him, and was daly strangled, bis victim being compelled, as in a hideous nigbtinare, helplessly to witness the> eonval- | —~- rious of his limbs and the distortions of his features,— ct ne Ml ty an EAST POINT LIGHT HOUSE. At last the woman Gontfived to liberate herself from her boads, aod her shrieks brought up the neighhors| Mu. Retry: and the police, The man was dead; and there is some! Dean Sax:—Permit an old subscriber, through. ty ong to: think that the miscreant should have your valuable columns, to call the attention of the| een his own executioner, aad inflicted on himself the ie powers that be,” to afew of the many defects in biog he gam _ _ 5 the above mentioned Light, Being veither an ex-| Ola pert nor experienced writer, I shall not not trouble| \you nor your readers witha loug preface, but pro- ceed with my remarks briefly,—** as brevity is the A Frianrrve Occurrence ix Fraxce.—French law 80u! of wit,” at the same time, be it remembered, enacts that a corpse shall be buried within four aad that I lay no claims to wit. : Based on excellent motives,| ‘The light-house has been erected at an immense the observance of this rule has been the cause of more expense, yet, I hesitate not in saying, that a signa! than one tragedy, All remember the electrifying dis- lantern placed on the East Point would be just as a by — gg gg be dlescribed serviceuble, for the following reasous: Ia doubling i eo eee eaea pee our’ the East Point the mariver can discern the outlines, while in a trance; how he heard the Iast service, the} x lamentations of his friends, the orders for his funeral, of the land almost as soo as he can the light, and jand how he managed to give signs of life just in time to in Some instances sooner, for | have myself gone by prevent his inhumation, A young lady, residing in the the East Poiut more than once during the months of commune of Plongeven, had not been so fortunate. September and October lust, and failed to see any ! almost too incredible for Daute ; aemeningas etim , e im bis creed, make no difference, for life iv short, and as woon as one dics be wings hiy flight to heaven aud en- ters into inconevivable bliss.” Suppose a ura is miser- able here, as there is no future reckoning hereafter and beatitule is sure tu all, one can always by a *t bare bodkin” ead his misery and cuter into happiness. The Tribune has uo reason for opposing the Papacy or any thing wlse, for the greatest possible misery of this lite je Nothing loss than the dust in the balance, when com- pared with the joys of the life to come, since The best to-day are as completely so As he who began a thousand years ago. Yet it argues ill for a country in which a journal like the Tribune can wield a wide-spread intluence, and we need not wonder that under its influence and that of similar journals, public morality is uadermined, and vorruption stalks abroad at noonday. It is undoubtedly true, that the Tribune may, now and then, chance to be on the right side, though when so, usually for a wrong reason, but as a rule ity approval of a cause is a strong a against its justice and expediency, This influence, as far as it goes, is incompatible with the de- velopment, even with the existence of Christiana civil zation, and would if not comnteracted b» other influ- ences, bring back a worse than I’agan barbarism; and hence it is that the instinct of Catholics has held them back very generally from supporting a party that can be controlled by the N. Y. Tribune and kindred journals. For ourselves we do not think the Roman question yet settled. For the moment the Garibaldian filibuster movement is checked, perhaps defeated ; but the Italian Kingdom, conceived in iniquity and brought forth in crime, will never rest, so long as it remains, till the Pope is robbed of all his gt possessions, and re- duced to the condition of a subject, We do not believe that there is » temporal government in Europe, if we except that of vd that is really in favor of maintain- ing the temporal suvereignity, even in the city of Rome. England, France, and Austria, are far more disposed to sustain the Sultan of Turkey, and the Catholic laity have so long submitted to be domineered over by an berotical and infidel minority, that they can be counted on to give the Pope nothing more than their prayers and declamations. But happily the Church does not depend on man, and whatever may be the wickedness or im ~~ of —_ o “ oy all catastrophes, and Bassert the jurisdiction of the divine governmen earth.—N, Y. Tublet. doe Whether the overthrow of the Garibaldians at Tivoli was due to the unaided skill and valor of the Pontifical forces, or whether some French battalions took part in the action, is not yet put beyond doubt, and the nervous eagerness shown by the English Liberal press to make vat that the Pope’s soldiers did not do it all, is so com- ical that it warns us to wait for further information,— One thing, at least, is certain, that whoever shared in the doing of it, the work was not done negligently. The Pope's soldiers have met the soldiers of the Re- volution, and after beating them soundly in a score of minor engagements have finished by iesly routing them in their collected strength and under the immediate commana of their redoubted leader. Joseph Garibaldi told his men he would take them to Rome, and that they should drive out the Pope's ‘* gargousians,” not at the point of the bayonet, but with the butt end of their muskets, When the enterprise appeared likely to prove not quite so easy as be had expected, Garibaldi told us all that at the pass things were come to it was Rome cr death; that be must have Rome or die, and that, per- haps, the latter branch of the alternative would be the bes! for all parties. 1t turns out, however, that a third course was open, Joseph Garibaldi has not got Rome, and he has not died, he bas runaway instead.—Llis vol- unteers have not beaten the Pope's soldiers out of Rome with the butt ends of their muskets, but the Pope's soldiers have huuted them out of the Papal territories. It would be a miserably mean triumph to make sport of the falsification of Garibaldi’s boasts for the sake of ridi- caling the ~< old crazy fanatic himself. We never have treated him as worthy of serious resentment. It is for the sake of the British public, and for the cure of their inveterate ignorance and folly, that we linger for a moment over this total collapse of their fantastic idol. And the work is not to our taste, We cannot afford to Isugh with unallowed satisfaction at the pitiable delu- sions of our own countrymen, True it is that they have richly deserved to be laughed at; true it is that the ob- stinacy of their bigoted prejudices has brought us into a very absurd and ridiculous position. Lven at this moment their newspapers persevere with stolid obtuse- ness in writing up the cause ot Italy and Revolution, and in insisting on sharing in a discomfitare which, il they were wise, they would bave taken care to avoid. They know nothing about the Roman question, they know next to nothing about the Italian Revolution, yet they cannot leave them alone. For their sake we bave desired that ove ony 80 ludicrous and go striking as to be sure to make a lasting impression, might happen to Garibaldi and the Italian Revolutionists. The wish is gratified, for wothing more ludicrous than the eon- teast between the reality and their prophecies can be imagined ; yet, as we said, it is almost sorrowtul to sec one's own countrymen louking so foolish. The authentic and authoritative history of the battle of Tivoli on Sunday, the 3rd of November, bas not yet deen published.—Zondon Tablet, . HORRIBLE CRUELTY OF A SUICIDE, The Eastern king offered a priccless reward to the man who should invent for him a new pleasure. ‘The latest chronicles of*crime would seem te lead us to the wouclusion that the heart of man, ** deevitful above all things and desperately wicked,” is capable, in its abominable madness and poy nea of inventing a new plan, The wretch why, at Derby, the other day, beat the soles off the feet of his servant-inaid witha wooden ladle, have been partially indebted for iia diabolical inspiration to the bastinado, and partially to the ** paddling” practised by the old South Cascinn nigger-drivers; but the torture had about it something infernally origmal. We English are excelled, however. am the conveption of crime, by our wore fatally fanciful bora, the French, One H , & Shoomaker, Viving at Villete, near Paris, has contrived, with the irverted ingenuity of @ wholly bestial but perhaps fair erazy mind, to inflict an entire'y new epecies of anguish u the woman who wat miserable enough to tbe his wite. Fors lengthened period he had been in the habit of beating and otherwisy brutally maltreatin tho —— wretwh. - man was A peobart, his prine’ tae against the partner of his hogeo was that abe F used him the means to procure drink ; and a faw days since, in hie endeavor to wring his booty from her by torture, he flung ber to the groand, put his kave on her chest, essayed to strangle her, and in guyes one of ber eyes out. He told her deliberately that he intended there and then to kill hiuself, and that ebeshould be spectatress of his death and * shudder at his .” Le tied her hand and feot, aaned her, 1g a knife, swore that if she dared to stir, he cut hor Next, he slowly and to hang bimeolf to a hage nail which fe P, -ratione, : J w ee * the pinioned Within an hour of her supposed death, the preparations 4; : : i he fand that I eg ine Rel hes ght, although beiag so close in to the tand that for ber funeral began, At midfight she seemed te be! guid distinetly see the light-house, but no light in lead ; at five o'clock she was p'aced in her grave; but ; * . | when the sexton's belper pie A to throw inthe earth, its Probably this might be accounted for as a spes jhe was startled by noises in the coflin, ‘Terrified at the les of * retrenchment,” the keeper cousideriug the ‘* prodigy,” instead 0 ascertaining the cause, he ran bights five aod bright, thought it best to save the ty the rector, who told him first to get witnesses and light.giving elemeats for darker and more buisterous _ to evek a era gg Five hours elapsed before ones. Another difficulty is, that the lightis a white the summons reached M. Ronger, a practitioner, On : ot : , inks. Als avvital he sala wae Meant | up and opened. It way OUe» Correspoucing with a vessel’s sigual light. 1 Loan Bill, and the consequent probability of obtaining! the Loan, coupled with the excellent crops and mar- kets of the past season, obviated the widespread finan- cal ruin so confidently anticipated, and the securing the Loan is the only possible chance to avert a crivis in the future, as well as to enable the Government to pur- chase the remaining unsold proprietory Estates, A loan of £50,000, or even a much less sum, cannot be obtain- ed in the Colony, and the provision in the act of last Session which allowed the Government to raise a local loan, was, in our opinion, a piece of superfluous legis- lation. As an objection to a foreign loan, we are some- times told that there is plenty of money in the Island” lying idle in the Banks, which might be obtained by the Government at six per cent. This is a mistake. Parties in want of money, and with ample security, cannot obtain the most insignificant loan at six per cent., seven and a-half per cent., or even ten or twenty per cent. as ‘Poor Richard,” and other money- shavers can testify, if asked. The uninvested money which is said to be lying in the banks, consists, for the most part, of deposits made by mechanics and men in business, in anticipation of future liabilities, and not, as asserted, awaiting investment in Government Warrants, |tity of Lands held under Leases, which It will be seen that the 445,000 acres, the assumed qu an- we ruppose may be purchased at the rates. we have named, would, according to the above scale of prices, in ten years, realize tne full amount of the Loan, Interest, Expenses, &c.; but in addition to this there are the 175,000 acres of wilderness land which might be set down for sale as follows, 10,000 acres worth per acre oes 40,000 do do at Os 10,000 0 O 125,000 do do at 108 62,250 0 O £72,250 0 0 The proceeds of the annual sales of these wilderness Lands would, it is estimated, be much more than suffi- cient to meet any deficieney likely to be occasioned by the default of purchasers in payment of their annual instalments, The annual interest of £270,000, at six per cent, would be £16,200; wile the rent now payable for the land which we estimate this sum would purchase, is £24,722; so that were the purchase eff-cted at the rates we have mentioned, the annual saving to the rent-pay- ers of the colony would be £8, 622, in addition to the value of the wilderness land, which we put down as likely to nett upwards of £70,000.” (To be concluded next week.) * CLEAR AS MUD.” od or other approved securities. So limited is the capital of; We sincerely trust that the Joint Committee ap- the Island that, if the a of Lands were resi- dent in Charlottetown, and offered their estates to the |Polated by the Ligislatare lust ression to take into Government for the ready money down, the means cousideration aud report upon the most feasible plan could not be raised m the Island to close the bargain ;'of improving the system of road-making but when those proprictors reside in Great Britain, it is). P hy i os bak hae 8 | ilnseieeg absurd to suppose that these claims can be bought out|!® operation in this Island, have succeeded in their * the ex while he wae purned to death, and a number of other persons severely in- no jess than 15 glasses of jured. The man who was killed was named Sauce,” end night, and the lanterns threw an uncertain gleam over: the graves; yet nu sooner was the coflin opened, than jthe truth became apparent. The poor girl was even then warm and alive, bot, alas, beyond the hope of re-, suscitation, She had struggled fiercely in her dreadful, contracted, body still warm. buried alive. Although his vigurous efforts to restore vitality failed, M. Rouger forbade a second burial until death should be beyond a doubt. h signs of violent movement, and the do not repeal a law which ren¢ dreadful as that of the poor Breton girl. FROM BERMUDA AND THE WEST INDIES. ——o R. M.S, Delta arrived this morning from Bermuda; mation of interest. H. M.S. Fawn, from this port, had arrived at St. George's, from Bermuda for Barbadoes on the 8th inst. The American steamer Quaker City, with 62 excursionists from the Holy Land, arrived at St. George's on the llth, having left Alexandria on the 25th October. From Joppa the steamer brought 42 persons who emi- grated from the State of Maine for the purpose of re- peopling the Holy Land and receiving the Saviour, whom they believed would come some time since. Only six- teen were left out out of 140 of the original colony. THE TORNADO AT ST. TILOMAS, St, Thomas papers contain accounts of the hurricane which occurred there on the 20th October, devas- — the city and its immediate neighborhood, dis- masting and driving ashore upwards of one hundred vessels, with great sacrifice of lifo. The town was almost entircly destroyed, and deplorable accounts are given of the condition of the place. The suffering con- seqent upon this calamity is very great, and business is in a very unsettled state, It appears that the Com- any’s steamers, since the havoc committed at St. prison; the tele Roegr were disordered, the feet) w ul Plainly, Philomene Jouetra bad been) cither be a revolving, flash, or # fixed red, It is really) wonderful that a clear-sighted i — the ~~ ers possible a fate so. bringing papers of late date, which contain some infor- jig money perforin their duties to the public, There HL. M. 8. Gannet sailed #8 & fault somewh cre,—vw hether with the keeper or have on several occasions baen osking for the East Poiat, and several vessels riding at auchor under the Point, or at times, to use a nautical phrase, * jogg- iog,” with their signal lights up, and could not, for the life of me, tell *“tother from which,” or the East Point from a vessel’s sigual light. To make the East Poiut light a benefit to mariners, the light hight. To make it either of these would remove the danger of mistaking it for a vessel's signal light. As far as regards the non-appearauce of the light at times, and at others, its glimmering like a star, I presume the Government can remedy (hose evils) without incurring much further expense, Whiat is the use of having a light house if it be ot properly looked after? It is, 1 think, the place of the Gov- ernment to do so, and see that officials paid by pub- light-luuse gear I am not at present prepared to say, Yours, very truly, A FISHERMAN, East Point, Nov. 29, 1867. Wednesday, December -1, 1807. THE ISLANDER AND THE LOAN. oes ———e —s On looking over the editorial article in the Jslander of the 15th instant, wherein Mr. Ilensley's Report is criticised, the dishonesty of the writer 1s fully manifest- ed. A greater bundle of misrepresentations we have seldom seen collected together. Under the pretence of homas by the Yellow Fever some months siace, have! received their coals, an! passengers and freight at the! Island of St Peter, about 20 miles to windward. There, was an excellent land-locked harbor. the steamship Rhone was at anchor ready for sea, with the bulk of passengers on board, Around her were the Solent, Tyne, and Wye, which vessels bad not yet com- pleted transferring their passer gers, &e., to the ill-fated ‘hone, Ati, p. m., as there were indications of a hurricane, j failed. After a few ineffectual atteinpts to clear the bay, she succumbed to the fury of the elements, drove on a rock, exploding her boilers, breaking in two, and consigning to a speedy death all ber officers, crew and passengers, said to be in number about 275. The Wye also attempted to escape, but was driven on the reefs, drowning all on board but 13 persons, who, on floats from the wreck, drifted to the adjacent Islands. The Conway cut her hawsers. and drifted to) sea, lost masts and funnels, nearly foundered, and was, driven ashore on the Island of ‘Tortola. The Solent, and Tyne rode out the gale, the former without damage, the latter with loss of foremast, Steward and Stew- ardess. The Douro, with the English mails. arrived at St. Thomas the following day, and, singular to say, had felt nothing of this war of the elements. A Spanish war steamer in the harbor 1s described as shattered and dismasted, having been driven on shore, she lost up- wards of forty ot her crew, ‘The Columbia, a very large vessel, went on shore a complete wreck, witha huge ship, the British Empire, blown right on top of her. On skore, the destruction of life and property is des- cribed as being fearful. A correspondent writing on the 8d Nov, says:—** Four hundred dead bodies have been dug out of the debris of ruined houses and stores on shore. Inthe harbor, althougha great number had been buried, numerous bodies were yet floating about,” The number of human beings destroyed will, in all probability, be found to reach 1000, Altogether, it is eared, this calamity in its destructiveness is without parallel in West India annals, at least in our day.—J/z. Express. Tae True Gextirroik or Inntanp.—A gentleman who has been on a walking tour around Ireland says :— ‘* The first remarks I have to make concern the peas- antry, the class of whom I saw more than any other in {reland. Their courtesy and politeness were something vee egg G As a pedestrian traveller with an imperfect map, and finding few mile-stones and no direction posts, T was obliged to make constant enquiries about the direction to take. But these were invariably an- swered with cheertul readiness, and only in two or three mstances, arising probably from ill health or some other local disturbing cause, did I ever receive what inay be termed a short reply, The peasant or farmer would often put himself to some inconvenience to answer one's questions, If viding, he would bring his horse to a stand-still, or driving, would stop the vehicle. A man would allow his team to go on regard- less of the trouble of overtaking them, and be surprised at receiving an apology for delaying him. boy going down hill with a donkey cart would slowly and with difficulty bring the animal to before receiving and answering a question, When you entered a peasant’s cottage or hut, the soul of its possessor in a short time raised One above thy insignificance of his dwelling. In dialect, also, the Herein very superior, his language being pure, simple, and easily understood, and swear- ing seems scarcely to exist as a perceptible habit, 1 regret to way that, as regards courtesy and politeness, the peasant class seemed superior to many of those in the ranks above them. Frequently, on Jeaving « hotel in the morning, did I reflect that in Ireland nature must have made some mistake, and given all the land and property fo men and women, but left the gentle- wan and gentlewoman poor indeed. eee A terrible accident occurred on the Cincinnat: Hamilton, and Uroad guage railroad recently, The express train due at Cincinnati at 6 o'clock, was detained at Lockland by a freight train coming srom the south, and while the express train was waiting for the freight to take a side track, another freight train came sooing Sons and ran into the rear of train before the man on the lookout could get jout his fing to stopit. The collision upset the stove in the ex- ese train, end set it on fire, and four ladies (three sisters named Morgan, of New Orleans.) and one gentleman was ' i ij In this harbor, { the Rhone got under weigh, intending to go to sea, but/now opposes it. He cannot plead in excuse that there serving the Colony and the interests of truth, by de- feating, if possible, the Loan Bill of last Session, the Islander resorts to a series of low subterfuges which characterise the knave and the unprincipled man. To show the inconsistency and dishonesty of the opposition of the writer in the Islander to the Loan, we need only refer our readers to the Islander of 1861, wherein the Loan is warmly recommended by the. same writer who is any change in the circumstances of the country or the nature of the Land Question within that time to warrant his summersault upon the question of a Loan. The only reasen of his opposition in 1867 to that which he supported in 1861, is to embarrass the finances of the country, and to induce the Canadians to offer a wretched bribe of some sort to relieve our present necessities, but to entail an endless misery on the Co- lony. The persistent efforts of the Jslander to misre- present and defeat the Loan unmistakeably point to the hope he entertains of seeing the Island confederated upon the $800,000 basis. If, by any amount of labor and misrepresentation, be could assist in accomplishing this design, the Ottawa Government would shelye him for the rest of his life in some fat office, the emoluments of which might be supposed to ease his conscience of any of those pangs which usually haunt the betrayers of their country. Themistocles, we think it was, who, when banished from Athens by his countrymen, pre- ferred afterwards to die rather than fight with his bene- factors against his country; but, in modern times, we have many instances where ‘' patriots” have sold their country for less sums than induced Judas Iscariot to betray the Redeemer of mankind. Many of these mercenary monsters ended their worthless lives by committing suicide; but of Confederation, it must be said that it has brought forth a broed of traitors to the land that gave them birth, or nourished and fed them who have bad all the greed and vileness of a Judas, a Castlereagh, or an Arnold, without the redeeming quality of even a cicatrised conscience, for were it otherwise, remorse would have driven many of them to self-destruction before now. Leaving this view of the case, we come to the arguments—if they can be called auch—advanced by our contemporary against the Loan. The editor of the Islander, with the smartness charac- teristic of a third-rate lawyer, seizes upon a rather loosely worded sentence in ons of Mr. Hensley’s let- ters to prove that the Act of last session contemplated redeeming bonds bearing only five per cent. interest. Neither the Act nor the Legislature intended anything of the kind, What they really did contemplate was the paying off the instalments upon the Cunard Estate, one of which fell due last July, and the other will be due next January. The Act also admitted of appro. priating any unemployed portion of the Loan in paying off Treasury Warrants; ard surely the editor of the Islander will not have the hardihood to deny that this was a legitimate way in which to employ it. The Gov- ernment would be the fools which the Jslander repre- sents them to be, if, possessing a portion of the Loan which they could not otherwise profitably invest, and upon which they were paying interest, they failed to redeem those floating warrants, bearing six per cent. interest. It “might suit the object of the Islander to see the Government unnecessarily paying two rates ot interest at the sawe tine—namely, Upon an uninvested loan, and upon warrants—but whenever the Govern- ment shall be found guilty of so stupid a policy, it will be time for them to give place to more sensible men. One of the greatest acts of folly committed by the late Government, was the purchasing the Cunard Estate, without first having provided the means to pay for it, and, considering the finances of the country, it was no idle boast of the Jate Leader to declare that the without the aid of a foreign loan. The instalments already paid the Cunards have curtailed trade and repressed eaterprise. Money is almost impos- sible to be had, so serious lias been the drain upon where, we should like to know, is the money to be obtained for future purchases and payments of lands unless from abroad? In the language of the Js- lander, of 1861, ‘there is. in our opinion, but one to purchase out the rights of the propietors, by meaus of a Loan from the Iinperial Government, ‘This was first pointed out by the Colovial Miuister, and subse- quently, toa certain extent, advocated by Mr, Coles when in office.” This was the honest conviction of Mr. Pope iv 1861, and lest anyoue should twit him for inconsistency in expressing it, he remarks that be ** is prepared to be told that we are chargeable with inconsistency, in advocating that which we ouce op- posed, Our answer is, that circumstances have materially altered. ‘The public mind was then comparatively tranquil, aud the great mass of the freeholders throughout the Islaud were averse to incurring the risk of being taxed to repay this loan from which they did not expect to derive any direct beuefit. Now, we understand that the majority of all classes ure anxieua that the pur- chase should be attempted, and it is expedient that tha question be submitted by Members of the As- sembly :o their constituents before the meeting of thatthe public mind is not equally agitated, and that all clasges’’ aro not a3 equally anxious now as in 1861 to have all the proprietory estates in the Is- luud purchased ? If he is, theo he is in opposition to uinety-uine out of every hundred persons iu the coun- try, but it he is not, what can be say for the triple in- cousisteucy of opposing in 1867 what he advocated ia 1861? Mr. Pope went even further than the present Government, tor he actually proposed a Loan of £180,000 stg., to be managed by an Imperial Officer (who by the way could not begin to werk it so economically as a local Commissioner of Lands,) and proved that it would be @ financial benefit by the following calculations :— «The area of the Island is about 1.340.000 acres— 600,000 aeres, we assume, are held by small frecholders, and squatters, who have acquired titles by possession —about $0,00) remain undisposed of in the Govern- ment of the Colony, and the balance, 660,000, is owned by the Proprietors and their Tenants—about 175,000 are wilderness, Supposing that 620,000 acres could be purchased at the following rates, vig :— 320, 000 acres at 7s 6d, currency, Der acre, 300,000 do at 10s do, £120,000 150,000 £270,000 at these very high pricos we contend that the pur- chose might be made with great benefit to the Tenants, and with every ** proper regard to the interests of the Inhabitarts of the Coleny generally.” The Loaa required would be £180,000 sterling, or £270,000 currency, which, under the Imperial guaran- tee, might be had at 4 per cent. Interest on £270,000 at 4 per cent, would amount to, per annum, £10,600 The cost of management would not, we submit, exceed £2,000 a year, 2,000 The loss of Laud Tax on 175,000 acres, 800 In all £138,600 which would be the estimated annual cost of the Depart- ment. Of the 620.000 acres, which we assume may be pur- are held under leases reserving Is, plus 1-9th per acre rent, which, in the whole, amounts to £24,722 per annum, the greater proportion of which will, if the Lands remain the property of their present owners, ina few years time, be annpally withdrawn from the Colony. ‘The 620,000 acres, if purchased for £270,000 might be allotted for sale as follows ;— Leasey axv Occerizy Lanne, 45,000 acres at 7s. 6d, £16,875 0 @ 60,000 do at 19s, 26,000 0 0 275,000 do at 12s. 6d, 171,875 0:0 76,000 do at lis, 66,260 0 0 These prices we would suggest, should be made payab!e with interest at 6 per cent, in ten equal instalments. ‘The Tenant now paying £6 11s 2d, per annum rent for one hundred acres, coming under the 12s. 64, would, according to this scale, be required to pay as follows, if he purcase on tet January, 1862: ~ wowovovoe | © S$ NM OAOroN t ian — se - Sl £ on grererrrs we , eeoeovorcv | & Bs PoNneronyr | a — ae ~ _ $3 adhd t ap ca laa © ane w s eocooooeco i=] ° : Zw Oowon Seo wise Nw RB eeRsSaaaae 5S ew = s ° A 6MSESS ESSE Sececocooosoo , 56 6 Oi 1919 HH HIG | © pee ooo 3% eecee 3 @68ceé Seshan GIES SST CSTs mSuvtsssess “RaESSSRSH5 Ssseeeeees SES eenenne ee ee ee et ee an Ssssessess ot et ed et ed et et et et Ten year's Rent at £6 11 2d would amount to £55 11 8d, present Government could not surmount the monetary thom in the face. Fortanately, the Royal assent to the Pale from Boston, at the rate of 125 6d currency per acre, the metallic circulating medium of the Colony, and course open to settle the Land Question—and that is! the Legislature.” Will Mr. Pope pretend to deny) chased on the average at the prices we have named, 445,000, object, for never, ** since the creation of cata” have the roads been sq iutolerably bad as during the past six weeks of the season just closing, ‘The damaged condition of our roads and bridges is more or less lowing to. the ususual number of violent wind and rain storms with which the Island has been visited this fall, and also, it must be confessed, in a greater degree, owing to the wretched aystem of patching jand boteh-work which has been in vogue in the Co- lony ever since it enjoyed a Government of ils own, Whether good roads can be made out of the mate- rial within the Province, or whether its resources will admit efthe importation of suitable material from abroad, are questions which we are vot prepa- red to discuss, but the fact remaius that at the very time when good hard roads are most required to en. jable the farmers to haul their produce to maket, they are in the most sorry aud wretched condition, —al- most impassible to man or boast, and suggesting ithe idea that if the earth's diameter were less than jit iv, some of our farmors with their heavy ioads of \produce might very often find themselves summarily pit to the antipodes by dropping through the holes in the roads so prevalent io the fallseason, An im- |provement is loudly called for, and we would faiu hope that the Committee of which tle Hon. Mr. | Haythorne is a member, will be enabled to sugyest : practicable remedy, Allimportaut publie works, such as the coustruction of oridges, breakwaters, wharfs, avd the improvement of harbors, should be leooducted under the supervision of competent archi- tects and engineers, and then and not till then, can satisfactory results beexpecied from the expeuditure jof large sums of money and private contributions. Bad, however, as are the roads throughout the country, the streets o! the city are in a much worse condition. Lieut. Maury, who sounded the depths of the Atlantic, might find all his scieutific knowledge at fault if he attempted to sound the depth of the mud in avy of the principal thoroughfares of the icity. If we take Queeo Street, for example, which is the Broadway of Charlottetowu, we find that there arc holes and ruts in it iu which a horse avd cart might be buried. In the spring, a coating ot dross ;from the gas works was spread over this street with jthe view of improving it, but the only improvemanc |visible is ia the color of the mud, which, in place of possessing that natural red appearance with which ;we are all familiar, now eajoys a peculiar sable hoo ithat defies description, ‘The City Fathers, or at least \the Street Committee, should be compelled to wade jthrough this Black Sea three times a day, and it ithey eSeaped drowning during the operation, they jmight be able to couvinge the citizens that by fol- lowing their example, a great saving could be effeet- ed in the use of shoe-blacking. DOMINION POLITICS, | | Ao ee a a A eee ee RR Tur St. John Jreonan contains the most reliable as well as the most comprehensive and satisfactory summary of the | proceedings of the Dominicn Parliament, of any paper pub- jlished in the Provinces, ‘The lion. Mr. Anglin prepares the summary himself with the utmost eare, and hence its re- liability, The penny-a-liners who report for tho other papers, particularly those of the Confoderate ** persuasion,” color their reports to suit their employers, and, as a matter of course, grossly misrepresent those to whom they are in- imieal. It appears there are no oficial reporters to the House, and so long as this is the case it will be diMeult for spectators at a distanve to form a correct estimate of the tone and temper of Ion, Members. We notice that the Hoa. £270,000 0 0 AMr. Howe has had to reprimand the Ministry for thoir evasive and dishonest answers to questions asked by mem- bers of the Heuse. Evasion may be coasi.ered a vory clever method by whieh to escape answering impor tant questions ; but political jugglery of that kind will not raise the charac- ter of the Minister who employs it, nor inspire the public with confidence in his honesty. 8o far, we have had no measures by which to judge of the Administrative talont of the Ministry, and we very much fear that if the Legislature 1s to be prorogued on the 10th of this month, we shall be left in the same condition, until it reassembles in February next. In the meantime st will bo satisfaetory to the tax- payers to know that Commoners and Senators he ve earned their $600 each, besides mileage and other expenses, This is about all the glory or prefit that has yet resulted from Union, and we think we may be pardoned for having thus far declined sharing in either. « Ansong the contemplated ad- vantages is the extension of the Canadian Stamp Act to Nova Scotia and New Brunswick; the prevention of dual representation, or, in other words, the prevention of one per- son holding a seat in the Goneral and the Local Parliament at the same time; and—mark ye—-lnst, bat not least, the non-extension of fishing bountles to the Maritime Provinces, How consoling this must bo to those fishermen who were buoyed up with the hope that Canada was going to extend to them a bounty equivalent to four dollars per tgn for the vessels employed in the business ! The Inter-Colonial rail- way is to be built by a Commission, and the reute selected isto receive the final sanction of the Imperial authorities, This great work is absolutely required, not so much a mili- tary adfair as to galvanize the “ Nationality’ by the expen- diture of four million pounds sterling; and if the Country had not enriched by it, the Grand Trunk Railway managers and the Canadian wire-pullers are very much belied if they will not fatten by the transaction, But we fancy our read- : i 410d of t) i the proposed difficulties, originating from that purchase, which stared leshemwe 00 on dy a * Sais wae te sue of lie dar im, (ers have had enough of Canadian politics for one week, and we will therefore drop the subject for the present. ‘