cd ” — “ vy - er ° a tinal = me oa lle : cw eet a on _— - a ee - _ oem ge cme ae ae eee Pa > * ee om ” es a ” ‘fF o THE DAILY EXAMINER. jOLLANS A YEAR, “ This is true Liberty, when Free Born Moa, having to advise the Public, may speak a free.”— Evrremss. SineLE Copmes Two Cents. ae a ee @!ARLOTTETOWN, P. ED ISLAND, WEDNESDAY, APR a _ VOL. £9.—NO. 270. ———$—<$<$—$ $$ > : 7 z- ee : 1 ; .” sta 2 i =. A Pies Ju Sxaiaer fa C () > y ‘ ; ad, by 6 rh ubl shing Oo aa Bocul f Water and f* RR 30 days I will SELL AT COST, an immense lot of i . eue har.ottetowan, Isl and, it RIPTION— = ~ ws ye - » so Ahead & SOF WATS ili mpnths ...--sanecatenieie aan af ARSE ~ a So) se oe “ need otedee cs 6 Ua ; ; ol syoe A : ; , : : rate rates A.so, 300 WHITE AND FANCY SHERTS, some of which are slightly e Fas , Riis soiled, at half price. This is the cheapest lot of Hats and Shirts ever offered in | eam SS : : Contra sy O° mete for moothly, quar S - : - . Rca the city. n ; terly yearly advertisemen's, ) fie J i ou 4 = WANAC POP ae onl — ALMANAC FOR APRIL, 1887, | PRO Bh an buy Remnants and Ends at your own figures. A special bargain in MEN'S UNDER. MOON'S CHANGES. WEAR. Suitings ot every description. Scotch Tweeds and Worsted Suits made in latest First Qua is day, 9h. 40.3m., a. m., N.E. | style, and at bottom figures. VW New M Zist day, 4h, 42.7m.,a-m., E first Quarter 30th day, Gh., 47 D _ Sun Sun |Moon High'Day’s gy DAY OF WEES! viscaisets | rises | water| Jen’h h mh mymorn;mornth m j la 5 4416 23.10 50) 317,12 39 | 2 Xa 12; M51, 44) 43 2 10 26 aft 59) 6 10) 46) 4M .y 33: 27: 2131798] 5&2] > Duesiay 37) 29 3 3h 68h bd 6 Wednesday oo ww” 4 47; 9 22 59} 7/ Thursday ae, oni © Hii® SilZ F S Friday — 31, 33) 7 23/10 49 5| 9s Ly 29 «34 8 35/11 30 8 10 Sanday 27 35, 9 Sliaft 11 12} 11, Monday 25; 37|10 581 0 52) 15) 12 Tuesday 23) 33/11 59) 239) 18) 13) W ednesday 22, 40\morn| 2 28 21 14 | slay 20; 41! 0 52) 3 25 24 lb Friday 1s} 42) 1 36; 4 36 27 | 16 Sa ‘ i6 iS; 2 12) 5 32 30 i7 vday I 451 2511 7 1 33 18i Monday i 46} 3 Di 7 57 36 19 Tues.lay ll; 47) 3 47, 8.36, 39 2) Wednesday 9} 48\ 412 19) “42 21 Tiursd ay 5 OU 4 38) 9 S56; 46, 22! Friday 6} 52) 5 1/10 27) 49 2} Saturday 4; 53) 5:27)11 O 62 24 Sunday 2 o4 5 56111 3 54 WD Mon lay U oo) 6 29)morn 56 | 26) luesday i DS an 7. ee 6. G 59 27 Wednesday 57| 58) 7 51; 0 43/14 1 2%' Thursday 5617 O 8 42) 1 25 + 29,Friday — 54) 1) 9 41! 2 12! 6 . 7 2:10 46443 614 9 — lay 4 5217 Fall Sows Sa sey Ths Rtas Ss | eS CALL AND BE CONVINCED. | f <t\D. A BROOCH. Ch'town, March 12, 887—-eod & wky A A Ne TE Ee X HATS! HATS! N°? MATTER what competitors may say in their advertisements, it is apparent to the general public that the SoraSs DT BA RGA ENS can be had at our establishment. We have not the time to enumerate our bargains in Muffs, Caps, Gloves, Coats, Sacques, Robes, Collars, &c., but we invite you to call and examine them—satisfy yourself that our bargains are genuine, and our prices the LOWEST OF THE LOW, STUARTS NEW FUR STORE, NEWSON BLOCK, CHARLOTTETOWN. Ch'town, April 14, 1887. CHRLITETOAN BOOT. SPRING, - = - o ig@Gi- -* = SPRING. ii) SHOE FACTORY.) | i BOSTON. SUMMER ARRANGEMENT THE PALASE STEAMERS OF THE biT-R4ATIOAAL $.S. 69. Leave St. J for Bost » Fastport and Port- and, + ry Mon ; Wednesday and Friday at min? , Al ive St. John at 7.30 every Saturday Bizht for } OSTON DIRECT. | ; j ’ BOS) O” : . | Fare from Charlottetown to Boston, 96,50, 2nd | a5; @..40), Ist class. : i For tickets and other information apply to | G AS 1ARP, F. W. HALES, P ., oe P. KE. L. Steam Nav. Co. or to your nearest Ticket Agent. ' Aprii 18 ‘7—eod wks —an { ) ee ee — y E must thank our friends and the public generally for their ever increasing patronage since we have commenced business. Onur Boot & Shee Factory, in starting, had many difficulties to overcome, and we are glad that to-day those difficulties have been surmounted, and we are now well able to com- pete with the best Boot and Shoe Factories abroad. Some of the advantages purchasers have in buying from us are,saving of freight,ordering goods when you want them (not six months before), getting them without delay—which saves carrying a large stock which deteriorates on the shelves. Our leathers are bought directly from the tanneries, thereby saving commissions which many factories have to pay. We are more determined than ever to give the BES. OY SATISFACTION and to merit the whole of the Island’s patronage. We hope to see many new industries arise, thereby increasing the prosperity of the PERSE Y, GORE & CO. Ch'town, March 15, 1887.—eod & wky NOTICE. intending {to move GUARDIAN FIRE INSURANCE CO. CAPITAL - «+ - CARVELL BROS., ies ities eal March 26—2i wky Imo pat COA Seawe $10,000,000 AGENTS. | back to my own store first of April, f will sell | for the next ten days the remaining stock on hand at a sacrifice. J. B. McDONALD. Ch’town, March 21, 1887--dy & wky THe EXAMINER PUBLISHING COM- PANY 14Ving lately added to their stock | 7 of type and mat ‘rial for Joo Printing, are better | an ever pared to execute ordera for Bill Hea ls, Letter Heads, Handbills of all kinds, 4 Visiting or Basiness Cards, &c., promptly and ; Cheaply, in the best style of the art. sone Hy their oitic lass workmen are employed in and, as they import their printing Papers direct from the manufacturers, they are ®le to fill all orders on the most favorable terms. Tae continued patronage of the public is act Fespectfully solicited W. L. COTTON, Manager. Uh’town, Nov. 16, 1836. Ss ‘HE LIVERPOOL AND LONDON AND GLOBE l. ARTHUR & CO, INSURANGE COMPANY, GHNHWRAL yi at ni 7 : Gon Ui3St0 i ip B ISraown Merchants, | LTLAUTIS AVERUE, , MASBS. Bgg3 and Produce a Specialty. Jnly B—diy wieiy eee”): Assets, Ist January, [S86 . . . $36,606,822.03. 20: (ge FIRE RISKS accepted upon the most Favorable Con | ditions and at Lowest Current Rates. R. R. FITZGERALD, Agent, ‘Jan. 3, 1887. pe QrAN; es - < at AWONDERFUL REMEDY Adamson’s Botanic Cough Balsam. It is as pleasant as honey. Coughs, Colds, and Astiima, which lead..te. Consumption, have been speedily cured by the use of Apayson’s Batsam after all other niedicines have failed. Ructorers from either recent or chronic eoughs er broachial affections, can resort to this great remedy, confident of obtaining speedy relief. Do not delay, eet it at ence. FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGIS TA, Bottled at St. Stevens, NX. B., by the propri.tors, FP. W. KINSMAN & CO., Druezista, 345 ith AVYs., N. Y. i hereby given that an application will be made te the Parliament of Canada, at the next ensuing session thereof, for an Act to authorize and aliowthe Nova Scotia Permanent Benefit Building Society and Savings Fund, a Society established and formed under an Act ef the Legislature of the Province of Nova Scotia, Chapter 42, 12 Victoria, entitled “an Act for the regulation of HKenefit Building Societies,” to transact business as a Building Society and Savings Fand throughout the Provinces of New | Brunswick and Prince Kdward Island, as well | as the Province of Nova Scotia. and to loan money on real and certaia kinds of personal pro- perty, and to borrow money and receive money and deposits, with power to issue debentures and deposit receipts and other powers usual to Companies and for other purposes. Dated at Halifax, 5th March, 1887 JNO. W. PAYZANT, Solicitor of Applicant. March 22, 1887—2mos EL BORTHEMIN CAN: iB; -BObtEeS PACKAGES Ss PD rs a a FEAF VORA FO % 5 “9 Gabe Vink & - VAN ELE BAKING POWDER ELAVGRING EXTRACTS STS SS Be Leg ats STOVE-POLISH ~~ COFREE ey Se BS pts OR A CURRLEOW DER hie ask —— birth Wr ere POWDERED HERBS 4< = pe a 2 GOLD MEDALS ISIWER MEDAL ie eee NU kes es LL as v2 CURE COLO MANFG.CO> ENS ae ee Se eee ees Bee, CANADA AND WES? INDIES, ‘Tenders for Steamship Lines, ‘TENDERS will be received at the Finance De- pariment, Uttawa, up toe and including the Ist day of May next, from persons or companies, for the performance of the following steamship services, Viz.:— Ist. a line of mail steamers sailing from Halifax to Havana, thence to Kingston, thence to San- tiago de Cuba, the-ce to Canada; and (20d) a ‘Jine of mail steamers between Canada and Porto | Rico and adjacent Islands. Trips to be made by ;each line fortnightiy. Steamers to be of a size ; sufficient to carry 2,000 tons of cargo and to be jableto steam twelve knots an hour, averaging |notless than eleven knots an hour. The con- tract in either case to be for a period of five years, Tenders will be received forthe above services either separately or together, Tenders to be marked on the outside “Tenders for Steam- ship Service to West Indies.” The Government of Canada do not bind themselves to accept any tender. By command, J. M. COURTNEY' : Deputy Minister of Finance. Finance Department, Ottawa, 7th Feb,, 1887—febi9 law fil april 30 pre-paid on receipt of price, 50c. and $1. Address FULFORD & CO., Brockville, Ont. FOR SALE. Ten Shares in ‘‘The Examiner Pub- lishing Company,” each Share representing $1 in the Capital Stock. | *NHE undersigned offers for Sale TEN SHARES (all paid up) of the Capital Stock of THE in jots of one or more shares, to suit purchasers, The Lansdowne Evictions. IL 20, 1887. A Merrible Story. tell Th ( Montreal Star.) An attempt is being made to create a_pre- judice against the Governor-General on ac- diniiat count of his dealings with his tenantry in Ire- The whole country of Lambton, Ont., is land. He is deseri as a merciless land- stirred with excitement over a sensational |!ord who — his poor tenants out of their poisoning case, which, if eredence be given ne ae — ae but to half the terrible stories told in connec- aoe oo ay a ‘th ecause In these poor tion with it, will throw light-upon a. series | n> Prceot farm | prudtice isso » Will gat Uf low, they are unable to pay their rents. But of the most terrible and unnatural murders | when Canadian readers know the truth about ever committed in that part of the pro- the evictions on Lord Lansdowne’s estate they vince. The arrest on Good Friday of Mrs. | will see that they are being imposed upon and EIGHT PERSONS SUPPOSED TO HAVE BECOME VICTIMS OF A WOMANS GREED FOR MONEY. ens es Martha Jane Ryckman, on a charge of poisoning her sister-in-law,Mrs. Hendricks, has revived discussion of stories about the that their pity and their sympathy are thrown away upon men who, according to Canadian ideas, are deserving of neither the one nor the suspicious deaths of a number of persons, | ther. . relatives, which had previously been men- In the first place these evicted tenants are tioned only with extreme caution. Mrs. not poor men or mere tenants at will. They Ry ckman is a widow, about sixty y of | well-to-do farmers holding under lease, eae, Mha:hes lined 0b. Thediend = ‘ They live in comfortable houses and are in : ; ; the enjoyment not only of every comfort but number of years with her children. It is a| o¢ luxuries that but few people even in this significant fact that by the death of each of country have the privilege of enjoying. This the members gf the Ryckman family, about ‘is a description of the house and grounds of which there is the least suspicion of foul ‘one of these evicted tenants with whom Can- play, Mrs. Martha Ryckman derive some adians are asked to sympathize: ‘‘His (Mr. tinancial benefit. Eight persous in all are | Dunne’s) lodge is a two story building, which supposed to have become victims of Mrs. | would do credit to any nobleman’s park, and Ryckman’s greed. Their names are as foj-|the avenue up to the house leads through lows: Laura Ryckman, her daughter-in- 5°™¢ undulating grounds, charmingly wooded. lew. Mrs. Hendricks an old lady who lived with a small piece of ornamental water lying on the farm near Thedford, with her son |i & hollow. The house stands upon a oe ieee “x ar | plateau with flower beds in front. It is a Se Sarees, er death occurred “ast large building with an excellent drawing week and was followed soon after by that) ; - , }room and dining room and a conservatory of Gray Ryckman, Mrs. Ryckman’s son and | opening out into the latter. Upstairs there the husband of Laura. ! In 1876, Mrs. \are a number of excellent bedrooms and a Ryckman’s husband was taken suddenly ill; bath room and a lavatory with het and cold and died. Three years later her son-in-/water turned on.” The outhouses are all on law, John Haskett, also died under)the same scale as the mansion, and the fine suspicivus circumstances, leaving eonsider- |ld Irish gentleman who, until very lately, able property to his wife, who was |lived in it is the owner of race horses, one of os : : | which has the significant name of **Campaign.” a consumptive and did not long survive her | The oceupant of this handsome place was Mr. husband. Mrs. Haskett, when she died, | ; ; : * | J. W. Dunne, late Justice of the Peace. He left property to prisoner to use for the 5. u.. jincin, ' : . aves) : principal tenant on Lord Lansdowne’s (Mes Haske we gc ee oe | Queen's County estate. His farm consisted of Lrs. ett) lett. is ch ied abou | 1,281 acres of good land, and the rent which he eighteen months after her mother and Mrs. | convenanted to pay was $1835. The landlord's Loan| Martha Ryckman came into the property. | book shows that the owner had expended on Several bodies have been exhumed andjthis property within the last twenty-five prope y post-mortem eXamination has _ revealed | years $13,125. The property rented by Mr. traces of strychnine and arsenic. Other Danne consists of five farms. Halfa year's bodies are to be examined shortly. The Tent of three of these, $2435, was due in May prisoner and all her family were widely last. The sheriff was authorized to suspend known in the country. They have been |Proceeding, and receive payment of one half well liked and looked upon as highly re- | year’s rent with an abatement of fifteen per spectable and well to-do people The pe oo offer of = aes was made prisoner is a member of the Methodist ro. oe in sedi tects . re, church m Thedford and generally took an| Mr. Kilbride, the other evicted tenant, oc- aetive part in church work. The prisoner | cupied premises not so magnit.cent as those of is said to be very much downcast since her! Mr. Dunne, but very comfortable. He has arrest. two holdings under lease, making together 768 statute acres, the rent is $3500. e house he lived in is a large building of two stories, seesieieninieagietiinatiiad atte Les The Fight against Coercion. —— containing several excellent rooms. ‘There is a tennis lawn near it for the amusement of the The London corresspondent of the Mon- treal Star cables as follows on the 14th inst : jfamily. He was offered an abatement of | twenty per cent. by Lord Lansdowne, but he “The agitation against coercion is indeed refused on the ground that the same terms the people’s battle. The number and en-/| Were not given to the tenants on the whole thusiasm of the meetings is marvellous. The , estate. whole North country is up asin the hottest; [If all the tenants in Ireland weve like these days of the Bulgarian agitation. The meet- two gentlemen farmers on Lord Lansdowne’s ings, in the best sense of the word, are local Queen's County estate who refused to pay and spontaneous, fur the great orators are their stipulated rent and reject the liberal resting. The statement that a number of remission made by their landlord, very little English Radicals are about to conduct an indeed would be heard of the Irish Land Ques- anti-coercion campaign in Ireland is without tion on this side of the Atlantic. If Mr. foundation. After the second reading when Dunne and Mr. Kilbride had rented farms of the bill goes intv committee, the agitation equal value on the Island of Montreal and had will become hotter than ever. Mr. Chamber- refused to fulfil the conditions of their leases lain, characteristically enough, has arranged they would have been proceeded against by to be absent in Scotland, so as to escape vot- their landlord as a matter of course and no one ing for the second reading of the coercion bill would have dreamt of reproaching him. with next Monday night. He strongly supports being harsh or exacting. Not only did these the bill, of couse, and would unhesitatingly gentlemen farmers refuse to pay what they vote for it if he thought there was any chance had agreed to pay, but they did their best to of the Government being beaten. This not persuade the other tenants on the estate to being the case, he desires to avoid all the withhold payment of their rent until the odium possible. A significant fact is that Mr. landlord should agree to the terms which they Chamberlain's speech yesterday, for the first 54W Ut to propose. +4 time since he was made a cabinet minister, The tenants on the Queen s County estate was summarized in a dozen leading English ®opted the Pla~ of Campaign because Lord papers, both Liberal and Tory, instead of | Lansdowne refused to allow them a scale of being reported fully. Mr. Gladstone's speech ‘abatements identical with that allowed to his oa Monday night will deal with the whole tenants on the Kerry estate. But the tenants question of the Government proposals and/on the two estates are in very different cir- coercion. His speech at the Eighty Club, on | cumstances. Those on the Kerry estate are Tuesday night, will embody his latest revised almost, without exception, the occupants of views on the Irish question generally. The | Small holdings in a mountainous country, who, two orations will therefore give an exhaustive besides, have sutlered exceptional losses. The presentation of his pr sent attitude and the|tenants on the Queen's Cuunty estate occupy authorized position of the Liberal party. large farms and appear to be in much more There is talk among Liberals of the advis- comfortable circumstances. In making a dis- ability of intimating to the dissentient/ tinction in favor of the Kerry tenants, Lord Liberals that their faults in the past will be} Lansdowne did what was considerate and overlooked if they vote against the coercion humane, and, no doubt, if his Queen's County bill, but this will be their last and only | tenants were in the same circi mstances they EXAMINER PUBLISHING COMPANY. Wil) be sold: chance of reconciliation with their party. They are in astate of nervousness, knowin, that if the Government should be defeated while they themselves are in their present position the Liberal Union party would be ractically annihilated in another election. Therefore such an offer, if responsibly made, would be a powerfal temptation. —- —> <> - ~<a A Dangerous Cargo. The first nitro-glycerine that was ever shipped from Europe to America was sent by the way of Panama to San Francisco, It came through safely. The nitro-glycerine was rendered inexplosive by being dissolved in alcoholic ether, from wdich it could be easily separated at any time by evaporation. The only danger was that the air-tight pack- age in which it was shipped might burst in transportation, allowing the ether to evapor- ate. This happened with the second shipment ment in 1867, and the result was very disas- trons. While shifting the cargo of the steamer at Aspinwall, a box of caps was dropped among a lot of leaking cases of nitro glycerine. The resulting explosion shattered the steamer to atomsand killed 100 natives and many others. —————- <a ——— StaTist7(s show that more people die of consumptivyn than from any © cause. Slight coids are the true seeds of consump- tion. Beware of the slightest — Adam- son’s Botanic Balsam stands without a peer- Trial size 10 cents. dy wy lw —_—--———o <> o— During the session of Parliament, when the representatives of the people are as- sembled, there are constantly on duty 183 policemen in and about the two Houses. Of these there are 3 inspectors and 8 sergeants. The cost would be £17,- 000 per annum if the House sat_all the year | For further particulars apply to J. W. MITCKELL. Ch’town, Nov. 9, 1836. : round. If the House took holiday for a year, the cost would be reduced to £9,400, would have been treated with the same indul- gence. The Queen's County estate appears to be an exceptionally valuable one, and ove on which large improvements have been made by the landlord. Evidence was given before the Royal Commission that during the past twenty years Lord Lansdowne and his prede- cessors have spent in improving it one hun- dred thousand dollars. The addition made to the rental on account of this expenditure, of which the tenants have all the advantage, is $1500 a year, or only one and a-half per cent. on the cutlay. This is certainly not extor- tionate. The nature of the relations hereto- fore subsisting between the tenants on the (Jueen’s County estate and their landlord may be inferred from the fact that, previous to the presert agitation, there has been only one eviction on that estate for non-payment of rent during the last twelve years. Wethink that when the facts connected with the evictions on the Lansdowne estates are generally known, the people of Canada will come to the conclusion that the Governor- General is the reverse of a harsh and exacting landlord. We believe, moreover, that those who are endeavoring to lower His Excellency in the estimation of Canadians on account of his treatment of his Irish tenants, will do far more to weaken their sympathy for the Irish tenantry than they will to injure Lord Lans- downe. A sap case of poisoning is that of any man or woman afflicted with disease or derange- ment of the liver, resuling in poisonous ac- cumulations in the blood, scrofulous affections, sick-headaches, and diseases of the kidneys, lungs or heart. These troubles can be cured only by going to the primary cause, and put- ting the liver in a healthy condition. To accomplish this result ny and effectually nothing has proved itself so efficacious as Dr. Pierce's golden medical discovery, which has never failed to do the work claimed for it,and never will. saw —_——__—<»-——— Harts! Harsi—New spring styles now Gpenvil at the London House. apld ai y . a phere Ol Slee ag ae ae ee ed Perm. Se nee Oe ri om a a ra i” Se en eee ee See ee cette Reon a ga r etait ee om SS are de ties