AN TS et ci is: li iis nian ib oh, SG ihe NN le RRC gi as, ice Five DoLLARs A YEAR. NEW SERIES, ‘ This is true Liberty, when Free-born Men having to advise . & aily _—— eS as ca as? SO a c ee £Xamitic the Public, may speak free,”—Evxirtprs, UHARLOITETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, SATURDAY, MAY 13, 1882, Srvare« Copies Two CENts. VOL 10.--NO. 145, fuk WAILY HKXAMINER Is ISSUED EVERY EVENING, Be ras Examiner Posiisninc Company, om THetr Orricr, Conner oF WATER Readymade AS I WANT T¢ .ND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, P. E. Island. SUBSCRIPTION : Charlottetown, RATES oF six Months, $2 50 Three Months, - . . l 25 One Month, U0 50 #- Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, : half-yearly or yearly advertise- ments, on application. spy JUST ALMANAG FOR MAY, i832. uarteriy, MOON S CHANGES, Full Moon Srd day, 2h. 18m. a.m, N. W. {below horizon. ) Chird Quarter 10th day,Sh. 22m,., a. m.,S. W. | New Moon 17th day, 3h. 20m, 3, m., N. E., | (below horizon. ) First Quarter, 24th day, Sh. 29m. p. m., 8, W | Nov. 1, 1881. FRESH — ad , | Sun Sun |Moon| High ! Days . DAY oO! ‘EX | vises \sets | rises | water |len’h. | Dp M j bh m jh m | aft’n, mern| 1 Monday 4 517 3) 5 45) 9 21) 2i'Tuesday” =| 49) 5! 6 | 9 58 3: Wednesday | 45] 6, 7 52110 35) § ai ; 4,Thursday, | 46) 7) 8 S5ijli 12 | 5. Friday | 45 s 9 5111 52) 6'Satarday | 43' 10110 42,aft 32) 7|Sunday ! 49) Dl 27| 1 16' 14 29 | 8! Monday 41) 12} morn! 2 3 y Tuesday 39 131 © 31 2 &6 ' 10, Wednesday 38) 15! 37| -. 11, Tharsday 37; 16) 8 5 4 Ct me £9 te 19} 34:3 29'7 9/15 12 23 Sunday 18! 351 4 36, 8 2) 29 Monday 30/ Tuesday 31| Wednesday | 0 md i 5 24) 12 Friday ) 35 17) 1 36; 6 42 13 Saturday | 34 18, 2 10; 7 iO a t, 4 al i4 ae 33, 19] 2 331 8 44) 14 44 ust Sceive T ls Monday | 32} 21:3 6) 9 3il | 16, Tuesday Sil 22) 3 44/10 16) ; 17| Wednesday 30, 23, 4 25.10 57) —BY 18|Thursday | 29) 24| 5 19/11 38 19 Friday | 27; 25) 6 16] morr| | 20 Saturday | 26; 26; 7 16) 0 18! F. LePAGEH & CO 21|Sanday | 25) 27; & 20: 0 57;19 09} eT 223) Monday | 241 28) 9 23) 1 23) : 23) Tuesday | 24) 29/10 25) 2 19) ‘PER NORTHERN LIGHT. 24' Wednesday 23; 30 11 26; 3 4; 25| Thursday 22; Bljiaft 26; 3 59) os | 21} 32) 1 27| 5 1} Catalogues on application | 27| Saturday 20, 331 227, 6 7} | Glasgow House, oe. oe Oo . | 53 QUEEN STREET. 18} 37) 5 39. § 50) 3 Q bea ese PROFESSIONAL GARD. LO PE MULALLY SHOEMAKERS } 26) Friday | 2 : —— ’ ROTARIES PUBLIC, Ac. A OFFICE~—O’Halloran’s Building, Great George Street, Charlottetown, P. E. Isiand. Boot Uppers, | } H. V. PALMER. JAS. W. MULLALLY. April 10, 1882. AND TNSUBANCE OFFICER | © Leg Fronts. Qucen Insurance Gompany, ¢. I. MORRISON, | OF ENGLAND. CAPITAL, TEN MILLION DOLLARS. Ch’town, April 14, 1982, City of London Fire Insurance Company, $+ | | | | a | CAPITAL, TEN MILLION DOLLARS Insurance effected on all kinds of property The Largest and Best Selected at current rates. Losses settled promptly and equitably. , N THE ISLAN ; F. KENNEDY, — General Agent. in : ca ; ‘Ces Office—South Side Queen “quare. At Gre ails FR« cuUuce d Pri¢ es, Ch’town, Feb. 3, 1852. bins W. C. BISHOP, | CALL AND GET BARGAINS. Parlor and = Brawing Room Suits |, CHAMBER SUITS, —-IN — RIP RET GS AND FORWARDING ACENT, Marines Insurance Broker, —AND— Walnut, Ash & Wainut & Painted, very cheap. | COEAITRS, A Splendid Assortment, cheap. ili General Commission Agent, Bedsteads, Beds, Mattrasses, &c., &c- er eee LOOKING CLASSES AND MIRRORS P. O. BOX 1 HALIFAX, N. 8, S Picture Moulding & Frames IRON SGEDSTEABS, Window Blinds, Rollers, Poles, Cor- nices, Venitian Blinds, &c., i | | ARTICULAR ATTENTION given to the Shipment of Lobsters and other Canned Goods, and collection of Custom Drawbacks thereon, Halls, Cargoes, and Freights insured in first-class offices at most favorable rates, Consignments of Produce solicited, and} aj) of which will be sold below cost for cash, prompt returns guaranteed, Correspondence solicited and promptly. Nov. 14, 1881—lyr St, Lawrence Hotel, a (F\HE above Hotel is now RE-OPENED, Laving been thoroughly repainted and refuinished in the best style. Being centrally situated and within three minutes walk of the Railway Depot and Steamboats, it offers inducements to the travelling public. Permanent and Transient HKoa:ders acco- — unsurpassed by any other Hotel in Estate of Late W, B, Allin. WM. E. HICKEY, Proprietor All kinds of orders promptly attended to at moderate charges. JGHN REWSON. April 8, 1882—3m answered Chiidren’s Carriages, lron Bedsteads. CHEAP, JOHN NEWSON. April 8, 1882—3m FP XUE Trastees being anxious to sell, will | s receive Offers up to May next, for a two! oo oe ee story Dwelling Cottage, with nearly half an| : Freehold Farms acre of land, opposite Mr. Gay’s prope: ty. 7 _ |Malpeque Road; also for a Warehouse feur| k OR SALE—Severable valuable Farms in| stories high, and a good cellar, opposite the | diferent parts of the country. Fur! police station. Enquire of particulars epply to J. W. PICKARD, A. McNEILL, Auct’r. JOS. KNIGHT. | Aptil 19, 89—tf April 18, 1882. Ch’town, Dec, 21, ’81, A Select Assortment of Flowers, Feathers, Velvetesns, Ladies’ Sacques, &e,, &e CLuRI a, 6 eee Clothing, Tweeds and Heavy Cloths, ) CLOSE OUT MY STOCK IN THIS LINE Some Expensive Ladies’? Cloth Mantles and Dolmans, and Mur Lined Cloaks, Sealettes and Colored Dress Goods. AT A LARGE REDUCTION, GPENED ANDY MARKED LOW, R. W. TREMAINE, 83 QUEEN STREET Christys’ Paris Silk Hats, Christys’ Hard Fur « Christys’ Soft “ 6 Christys’ Hard Felt « Christys’ Soft « “ Christys’ Tiats for Men, Christys’ “ “ Boys, « Ladies, TOGETHER WITH A » pe © Large Stock of Canadian and Amériean Felt Hats! CHEAP FOR casnt. G. DAVIES & CO.,, LONDON HOUSE. Christys’ ° Charlottetown, April 3, 1882. THE NORTH BRITISH & MERCANTILE Fire and Life Insurance Company, OF EDINBURGH AND LONDON, ESTABLISHED IN Igog. _ 0:0-—- — Paid Up Capital - - - . : 1,216,666.00 oo FIRE, LIFE AND ANNUITY BUSINESS ON TEE MOST FAVORABLE TERMS, | Losses Settled With Promptitude and Liberality. —— i Geen FIRE DEPARTMENT. Reserved Funds (Irrespective of Paid up Capital) over - $5,000,000.00 Insurances effected at the Lowest Current Rates. ‘0: LIE DEPARTMENT. Accumulated Funds (irrespective of Paid up Capital) over — - - $12,000,000.00 0 Bite Nine-tenths of the whole Profits of the Life Branch beleng to the Assured. O:v Protits of previous Quinquennium divided among Policy Holders, $1,158,500.00 mon Os New and Reduced Premiums for the Dominion of Canada. Copies of the Anaual Report, Prospectuses, and every information, may be obtained at the PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND BRANCH, No. 35 Water Street, Charlottetown. GEORGE W, DeBLOIS, March 15, 1832—~eod — GENERAL AGENT LANDLORDISM As it is in Ireland; as it was in rince Edward Island. To the President of the Charlottetown Land i Leagn é Drak Sir,—Some time ago I received a letter from your Secretary requesting me to write an article on ‘*Landlordism as it is in Ireland ; as it was in P, E. Island.” I regret that from unavoidable causes I have been unable till now to comply with that request, and I still more regret that the duty has not fallen on one having more leisure and ability for the treatment of a subject which has attained so great im- portance, that it is attracting the attention of the whole Empire, I may say of the whole civilized world—yet I yield to none in strenuous opposition to the hateful and unnatural system of land tenure—termed Landlordism, or in heartfelt sympathy with the unfortunate victims of its op- pression. | On this side of the Atlantic the results of education and the spread of intelligence are more rapid than in the Old World, and sre unobstructed by that intolerant con- servatism which holds fast by long existing systems ; and, even with the liberal portion of the people, shuts its eyes to the most pernicious state of things, if only it be of long standing, and antiquity throws an invisible cloak over every evil. The people cf this Island long ago saw that ‘‘unrestricted private property in land” was wrong in principle and lead to grievous injustice; they determined to abolish it, and by earnest, vigorous and unremitting agitation they accomplished their object, and Landlordism with us is extinct. | But the evils of the system here, though sufliciently manifest, were nothing in com- ‘parison to those endured by the unhappy ‘tenantry of Ireland. There the scarcity of land in proportion to a rapidly increasing agricultural population, caused such a de- mand that rents went up to famine prices, farms attained a fictitious value, and were ‘taken at exorbitant sums, which could not be realized from the soil except by the | most incessant labor and the most pinching frugality, and in very many cases even | these did not avail, and the farmer found ‘himself, notwithstanding his utmost efforts and strictest ceonomy, falling into arrears and snbject to the cruel process of eviction ‘for non-payment of arent which the pro- ceedings of the Land Court have since ‘proved to have been outrageously exurbit- ant. | In one instance only in this Islend could the hardships of the tenant be compared to those of Ireland—I allude to the | Tracadie Estate, where high rents, short ‘leases, and a needy, grasping and unfeel- ing landlord, combined to produce more ‘misery than Lever egain hope to witness. |A Tracadie tenant could be known any- , where, by his anxicus, worn and harrassed ‘countenance, with a furtive glance which, (as one of them graphically described to me when [ had the honor of sitting in the ‘Land Court as Commissioner for the , tenantry) had to keep one eye on the stump he was endeavoring to uproot, and the ‘other looking round to see that the con- ‘stable did not get a chance to pounce upon him, before he could start for the woods. But it is not to the harrowing details of the system that I wish to draw attention, it is to the inherent viciousness of the prit ciple that permits the monopoly by a few of that which is an essential to human exist- ence. { Landlordism is a relic of feudalism, be- gueathed to us from an age when force and fraud were rampant—born of despotism— ‘begoiten by robbery and rapacity, fed and nurtured by centuries of ciuclty and ,eppression, and maintained by the might that makes right, can we wonder that its ‘offspring should be misery and faniine, out- rage and undying hate. ' Strange, that in that age, if a poor man stole a cow or a sheep, he was hanged out ‘of hand, but if a rich wan with an army at ‘his back stole both the cattle and sheep and ‘the land on which they fed as well, he was | lauded asa hero, and in due process of time died in the full odor of sanctity. Thank Ged there has been a change of ‘sentiment since then, and [ devoutly and |hopefully trust that a still greater change |will take place, when the force of public opinion wil] put an end to a system, having ‘ita origin in robbery, and existing by legal- ‘iged extorticn. | From the soil all wealth originates—the |anufacturer may add to it, the banker and imerchant may accumulate, but the farmer ‘alone creates it, without the farmers’ sur- |plus, manufactures could not have existed. ‘A country becomes wealthy in proportion to the number of its inhabitants, ‘who find profitable employment, as ‘its agricultural resources become de- |veloped, capital accumulates, this capital \is used to start manufactures, which give ‘employment to the surplus agricultural population; thus one industry leads to an- ,other; tie whole of the people are profitably ‘occupied, and the country prospers and Le- comes wealthy. One source of Ireland’s |difficulty is that the surplus wealth taken from her soil is, to a great extent, carried ‘off by absentee landlords; thus, year by lyear, drawing away the capital which |should be invested in Irish manufactures, | but now gees to build up those of England and France, and which wou'd give employ- ment to the superabundant peasantry, who have either to emigrate or remain in num- ‘bers aliogether disproportionate to the ‘amount of ewployment,crowding each othet and existing in a state of semi-idleness and more than semi-starvation, It is the fashion te speak of the Irish peasant as idle and thriftless. This is the opinion of men who look only on the sur- face, and is formed from imperfect informa- tion. What better evidence in disproof of , this calumy can be required, than is found in the condition of the Irish cettlers in ‘this Province. In Hope River, in Lots 29 ee ee ee a and 30, in Covehead Road, in Fort Augus- tus and Montague, and other Irish settle- ments, can be seen, as industrious, thrifty and prosperous a body of men as any coun- try can produce. The Irish peasant is naturally industrions and a free worker; but the want of continuous profitable em- ployment have induced habits of idleness— not the least of the evils following in the train of landlordism, The Land Act will not prove a panacea for Ireland's troubles; but it may be of service in two ways; Ist, as indicating the existence of a clearer and more enlightened view of the question, and as an admission on the part of the Biitish public that an injustice exist; and, 2nd, és proving in- contestably that the tenant was paying from thirty to fifty per cent. mere for the land than it was worth—thus giving a fairer basis for future purchase. Bui it is not tho amelioration of the tenants’ posi- tion that is wanted; it is the absolute ex- tinction of the present system cf land tenure. In this utilitarian age all classes must do something for the common good—the farm- ers, the merchant, the manufacturer, the mechanic and the laborer are useful and necessary parts of the body politic; mem- bers of the learned professions may be deemed necessary evils; but they ave neces- sary, and all labor for the general welfare-—the landlord alene is a drone— unnecessary, useless and incubus— a leech drawing away the life blood of Ire- land’s prosperity, paralyzing her energies ~ inflicting upon her an endless train of evils. Now what is the remedy for this state of things? The proprietors’ title to the land is incontestible, ard his interest nust be purchased. England is 1 ble, first for alienating of the lands 6f Ireland and granting them to her favorites ; secondly by long years of mis-governipent, agera- vating the wrony she first initiated. Now she owes it to Ireland to extingnish the hatred and unjust land tenure. To carry this out a compulsory purchase bill must be passed, formed on the eame basis as that which has proved so suc- cessful in this Island. A loan grant- ed to the Land Court at a Jow rate of interest for the purchase of the proprietors’ interest, the land to be scold to the tenant on easy terms, the purchase money to be paid by instalments, as has been done in this Province ; a further loan to the Land Court for the reclamation of waste Jands, the work on which would give constant and remunerative employment te the peasants, who should be allowed to purchase the lands when reclaimed. Jreland, released from the deadly em- brace of the octopus of landlordism, baving such @ measure of self-government’ as the Provinces of this Dominion possess, would betontented, happy and prosperous, and instead of being a thorn in the side of, and a source of weakness to, the Empire, would be a tower of stfehgth. The Emerald Isle would become the brightest jewel in the British Crown. _ It may be said, and with much truth, it is easy to suggest a remedy, but how is it to be carried out? I say by agitation, vigorous, persistent, unremitting but peace- ful agitation—let associations such as yours be formed in every town in Ireland-— in every town in England, in every town - and villiage in America, let the “ sinews of war” be abundant; let every lover of Ireland open bis {puree, lift up his voice, weild his pen, but stay his hand—force ean never avail. Violence is worse than useless, as alienating the sympathies of those whose sympathy is essential to suc- cess. In conelusion, Mr. President, I must apolegise for the crude and hasty manner in which these few ideas have been ihrown together, and must plead as my excuse a multiplicity of engagements and constant interruptions. 1 ask you to look upon thia as the text of an article, more worthy of the subject, which at a future time I hope to have leisure to write and make, and if my feeble efforts shall avail to awaken an interest in the breasts, even of a few of the many whe now look upon Ireland's troubles with indifference, I shall be amply repaid by the thought that I have contributed in ever so small a degree to the restoration of Ireland-—the home of my ancestors—to her proper place among the nations. Yours truly, J.T, Jenxixs. Se a rae Saeed deen A conspicuous illustration of the St. Jacobs Oil as a remedy for rheumatism is found in J. A. Bonham, the well-known lawyer of Philadelphia, Pa., who thus tells his experience : ‘‘ About two weeks ago I was seized with what the doctor called muscular rheumatism in my right Jeg. The leg below the knee was swollen uutil I could hardly stand upon it. I had seen St, Jacobs Oil advertised, and I sent to the drug store near my house, on the corner of Nineteenth and Master strests, for a bot- tle of it. I rubbed my leg with it that night, and in a short time the pain seemed to go away. Next morning the swelling had shifted from under the ankle to the upper part of the knee. Well, I applied the Oil again, and the swelling in a short time went away, leaving a .ery slight pain. I didn’t use any mcre of the Oil, thinking that the attack was all over. About a week later it appeared again in the same place. The leg swelled so badly that, after coming down and walking several squares, I gave completely out. Well, I went home, intending to try some French miedicine, but I forgot to ges it, and having a part of this bottle of St. Jacob’s Oil in the house yet, I tried it again, bathing the limb thoroughly. Well, sir, when I got up in the morning the pain and swelling were both almost gone, and after one more ap- plication I was as well as ever, and from that time to this I haven't been troubled.” —— 3 oo Arxivep per 8. S. ‘‘ Copia,” in Halifax and now on way, 26 cases Latest Spring Fashions, selected personally by one of the firm, A large stock to follow, by 8. 8. ** Prince Edward,” “Ethel Blanche,” &e,—W, & A, Brown & Co, als pdon Goods, of _. 0 AE Ei EE ry "EE RTD “ i ge - J - =F ’ ~ * in re ae + ’ - 3 + Pee i SAN: eee A Asta Ab mT ARR Se ah St PP te 0 ee Se ee et ages © oA Oo” ees, Sha a Hemorr