i ill This is true Liberty, when Free-born Men having to advise the Public, may speak .’— EuURIPTDEs. free Sunes Copizs ‘Two Crnva, RIES HX AMINER Eb VERY EVENING, XAMiNER Pusiisnine Company, | t MM THRIR U’PRICR, CoRNER OF WarER AND UKEAT GEORGE STREETS, Charlottetown, . . P. E. Island. RATES oF Si BSCRIPTION Six Months, . . . $2 56 | | iaree Months, - - . l 2a i Une Month, . ° ° 0 0 j , | “8- Advertising at most moderate rates. | made for or y early Contracts may be juarterly, half-yearly ments, on apphecation. EDWARD T, RUSSELL & C0,, Commission Herchants, 2i3 STATE STREET BOSTON, MASS. May 19, 1882 i mnithiy : advertise- | | Ora PROFESSIONAL CARD. PALMER & MULLALLY ATTURNEYS-AT-LA¥, ROTARIES PUBLIC, OFFICE—O’Halloran’s Building, Great George Street, Charlotteiown, P. E, Island, H. V. PALMER. JAS. W. MULLALLY. April 10, 1882. INSURANCE OFFICE. (ueen Insurance Company, OF ENGLAND. CAPIfAL,PEN MILLION DOLLARS. City of London Fire Insurance Company, CAPITAL, TEN MILLION DOLLARS & Cc. Insurance eifected on all kinds of property at current rates. Losses :ettled promptly | ite :] 7 ere F. KENNEDY, General Agent. Office—South Side Queen Square. Ch’town, Feb. 3, 1852. W. C. BISHOP. SHIPPING —AND— FORWARDING AGENT, Maring Insurance Broker, —AND— General Commission Agent, BEDFORD ROW, P.O. BOX1 . . HALIPAX, N.S. ARTICULAR ATTENTION given to the Shipment of Lobsters and other Canned Goods, and collection of Custom Drawbacks thereon. Hulls, Cargoes, and Freights insured ip first-class offices at most favorable rates, Consignments of Produce soliciied, and prompt returns guaranteed. Correspondence solicited and answered promptly. Nov. 14, 188l1—lyr JUST PUBLISHED! “ Short Speculative Essays," BY ROBERT B. THOMAS, For sale at the Bookstores of Messrs. Bremner Bres,, Chappelle, Harvie and G H.. Hagzard. Price 50 cents. 8 29 lw St. Lawrence Hotel. FYVHE abowe Hotel is now RE-OPENED, having been thoroughly repainted and refurnished in the best style, Being centrally situated and withio three minutes walk of the Railway Depot and Steamboats, it offers inducements to the travelling public, Permanent and Transient Boaiders acco- modation unsurpassed by any other Hotel in the city. WM. E, HICKEY, Ch’ town, Dec, 21, 81, Proprietor NOTICE. AVING rented the premises lately oc- Hi cupied by C. F. Harrt, the subscriber begs to intimate to the public that he is earry- ing on the TINSMITH BUSINESS Orders. punctually at-| in all its branches. net tended to. A cali respectfully solicited. L. W. HARRIS, Feb. 8, 1882. Upper Queen St. Orten mane MILLINERY. ISS GALLANT begs to inform | | her | friends, and the public generally, that id sland. she bas commenced business in the above, line, at her residence, Upper Queen Street, | Having bad fotr years’ experience in the! establishment of Robert Young, Esq., she! feels confident ot giving g*tisfaction to ai who may favor ber with their patrovace, =~ wa fw! Broadcloth, Worsted, Scotch and Canadian A magnificent range of AMERICAN WHITE & COLORED SHIRTS, i | | Sey ‘ if , Remember the address; two doors above Ap thevarie’s Hall Corner MERCHANT TAILOR, Is now oflermg Cash Buyers the BEST VALUE that can be had in the market, ip ‘Tweed Suits. GENTS’ FURNISHINGS, Collars, Ties, Underclothing, English and American Hats. Uur Readymade Clothing is Manufactured on the Premises, fashionably cut, well sewed, and having good trimmings, Willi be sold as Cheap as Loperted. We invite you to inspect our Goods. D. A. BRUCE, Charlottetown, May 22, ’82. 72 Queen Street. — British Warehouse. W. & A. BROWN & CO. HAVE JUST OPENED 26 Cases of LONDON GOODS, of the Latest Spring Styles, SELECTED BY ONE OF THEIR PARTNERS, Marchester and Glascew Goods, alsoa Jarge let Carpets of New Desigus and of Excellent Value, to follow by Steamsiip “Prince Edward.” RECEIVED EARLY BY “NORTHERN LIGHT,” 28 Bales English Paper Hangings, 3 Bales Grain Bags. W.& A. BROWN & CO. April 2s, 18-2. “CITY STEAM BAKERY.” 0:0 fI\HE proprietor of this Establishment, owing to the increased demand for his Goods, has added new facilities to his Bakery, consisting of the latest and most improved machinery, |‘ ete., and is now prepared to supply the trade with Hard Bread, Plain and Faney Biscuits, &c., AT PHE SHORTEST NOTICE. ent 1000 Ibs. CHOICH CONFECTIONERY To arrive per Steamship ‘*‘ Miramichi,” from Montreal. Yes Orders by mail promplly executed. J. QUIRK, Prince Street, Charlottetown, P. E. Islaud May 4, 1882, For Scotch and English ‘weeds or Worsted Suits For Canadian Tweed Suits, For Overcoats of all Descriptions, FO RO | iN MACLEOD & CO’S, UPPER QUEEN STREET, TWO DOORS ABOVE APOTHECARIES HALL CORNER There you will find the largest and best assortmeout of Cloths in the Prices very moderate. The best workmans!iip and a_perfeet fit yuaranteed, : I —ALSO— A complete line of Gents’ Furnishings aud Pelt. Hats, cheap,&c. ec. CHAKLOLTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND. TUESDAY. MAY 30, [882 Canadian Irish Gatheties, How they have been Deceived by the Grits. 'SPRECH OP HON, JOBN -COSTIGAY, THE EFFECTS OF HIS IRISH SYMPATHY RESOLUTIONS, Better Feeling Prevailing ! Mr. Blake’s Hypocrisy Exposed !! In the course of his speech at the Ottawa Liveral-Conservative demonstration, Hon, John Costigan, the new Minister of Inland Revenne, and the leader of the Irish Catho- ies, said; * * °* 1 have feld you already that the Reform par:y Las two strings to their bow on many subjects, and there is, it appears to mte, a very great and very unncevseary fuss made by them in reference to a question which I have not yet touched upon. We sre tuld that the Irish people of this country should and will no longer support the Conservative party, and. that their true interests lie in attaching them- selves to the party of which the Hon. Mr. Blake is the leader. Gentlemen, l am my- self an lrishman—(Lond and prolonged cheering)~ and if as an Jrishman I cou'd belicve that our interests were not safe in the Conservative party, I should not hesi- tate fora moment to Jeave its ranks, but before making so important a departure, I am bound to ask what guarantee can the Reform party give that the interests of my friends wou'd be made safe in their keeping (Loud cheers.) I listened in the House of Commons to the very able and eloquent speech delivered by the Hon. Mr. Biake, and am ready to give him every credit for the effort, althongh not prepared to go so far as to believe, as some of his devoted friends have claimed, that it created a revo- lution on the other side of the Atlantic, and made impressions and produced effects which the efforts of O'Connell aud Burke and THE LONG LINE OF IRISH PATRIOTS had failed to accomplish; but while I am ready to accord to Mr. Blake every credit which he werits, [ must in justice accord still greater credit te the leader of the Gov- ernment and to the Liberal-Conservative party, witheut the support of whese repre sentatives in Parliament, Mr. lake’s speech would have been worse than waste paper. | am sorry to say that there are traces in the oration of the leader of the Opposition that he was not, on that occa sion, altogether uninflugneed by political considerations; he expressed his regret, among other things, that my resolutions were not strong enough. It is jerfee ly true, gentlemen, that they were not couched in such terms as to create hostility or cause them to be voted down by mem- bers, which probably would have better suited the purposes of Mr. Blake, who, it would do no very grave injustice to sup- pose was ACTUATED IN HIS POLICY BY MOTIVES more than hy atrne desire for the good of Treland. Irishmen in their struggle for Home Rule and self-government, in their agitation for their privileges which we fully enjoy in this country were fully satisfied with these resolutions. Nay, more, we had only to lock at the expressions of opinion by the Irish press and public in order to be assured that they were thankful for them. (Cheers.) Gentlemen, at the time ] maved ,those resolutions, I believed I was laying down the planks of a platform upon which Scotchmen and Irishmen in the country could siand shoulder to shoulder. (Loud cheers,) I could, had I chosen, have iad the cause of Ireland voted down— (loud cheers)-and the leader of the Gov- ernment truly said at the time that he was influenced as 1 was influenced, above all considerations, by the justice of the cause which we had at heart. As I have said before, I am perfectly willing that the Reform party should have due credit for their vote upon that subject. I am not willing that it should be permitted to go ail over the country uncontradicted that their desires or their influence in this matter were of paramount importance. It is not necessary to point out to you that THE POSITION OF THE REFORM PARTY IN PARLIAMENT SINCE ]878. has not been such as to enable them to take the credit of passing any resolution or any measure whatever. I noticed that the *-Globe” the other day had an article on ‘**Blake’s Irish Resolutions.” Well, now, they were not qnite his resolutions. Mr, Blake, in his speech, informed the House that he had prepared resolutions upon that very subject, and would have moved them in the House of Commons had he not been called away. Well, 1 am forced to this conclusion that, if Mr. Blake, with all his ability, had framed and kept in his desk a set of resolutions to move upon the Irish question without consulting a single Irish- man on the strongest side of the House, he did not intend to carry them. (Applause). He was trying to make capital out of it. There is no other interpretation. . . , . Perhaps he knew that our resclutions interfered with their political game, and that they were framed in a manner acceptable to men on both sides of the House, without any reference to politics at all. With regard to that question I have only one word more to say—that the reso- lutions were framed with the desire of get- ting an expression of the opinion of the people of the country through its Parlia- ment in favor of ivstitmtions similar to those of this country—(cheers)—and in favor of the release of the prisoners at. that time. They wére framed in a spirit.of fairness and modetation, and-with a sincere POLITICAL Charlottetown, Uct, 11, 188!, desire ta efizdi gome ret ard J believe it hag eXected good, aud that we huve pot yet’ seen the last I believe they have done good in this country THEY RAVE CREATED A BETTER FEELING, and have led many who never thought ov the subject before to look upon Irishmen ;more kindly and with more sympathy, and ito belive that if the same rights and pri- vileges existed in Ireland that we possess, | the Irish people would be more prosperous athome. I know it has had this effect. I have received letters already from. people ‘in lveland asking about our great North- West, and stating that they see so many | pamphlets that they are sometimes in doubt as to whether they shall leave their native land to seek homesin Canada. The resolu- tionshave brought this country to the notice | of the people of Ireland already ,and given it ;@ promincnee it never had before. The Jrish lock with warm sympsthy to this ‘country. ‘They uever expected such en /opinion would be ex;ressed in Canada, and it in the past they entertained a warmer feeling for the United States than for Canada, all that has gy -ne by, .and nothing has bronght about this change in feeling more than the passing of these resoiuti: ns by Parliament. (Cheers.) I must goa liitle further. I to'd you that I would not give op the old party until I knew what the new ones were. Let us see what the Opposition would do if they were in power. That is THE PTACE TO TEST POLITICAL PARTIES Tis easy for the Oppesition to make pro- fessions, J want to know what they will do when they are in power. In their cam- paign sheets the Opposition had given great prominence to the question of the disallow- ance of Provincial Acts and the preroga- tives of the local legislatures. Whet is the record of those gentlemen un that qnes- tion? I will teil you. The Conservative Government were in power before I had to bring forward the New Brunswick school question, The geatlmen who were then, as they are now, in Opposition, expressed the greatest sympathy, and said everything to encourage me. They said if they were in powerthey wouldsetile the question in ten minutes. I moved fruits of these resolutions. VOL li---NO. 7. Presbyterian Synod. i COMMISSIONERS ATTENDING THE SYNOD HELD IN CHARLOTTETOWN— ADDITIONAL NAMES AND WHERE STOPPING, J. L. George, Sherbrooke, W. W, Clarke, Euston Street. A. F. Thomson, Economy, T. C. James, Weyrauoth Street. D. U. Crockett, J. McPherson, Cumber- land Street. E. S. Bayne, Murray Hartor, T. C. James, Weymouth Street. A. Burrows, Truro, A. Lord, Brighton Road. K. McKay, (Ravkin House. ) W. Donald, Picteu, Maleolm McLeod, Malpeque Road. E. Scott, New Glasgow, Malcolm Me- Lecd, Malpeqne Road. E. W. Waits, Chatham, Rev. K. Mae- lennan, Manse. E. D. Miller, Lunenburg, D. Stirling, Water Street. S. Jobnaon, Chipman, Mrs. Maclennan, King Street. J. B. Logen, Kentville, Dr. Blanchard, Falconwood, Lewis Jack, Springville, J. MePherson, Cumberland Street. D. Sutherland, (Miss Findley). J. F. Forbes, Union Centre, A. Lord, Brighton Road. Alex Grant, Lake Ainslie, John Me- Eachern, (Revere House). R. McKenzie. Baéddeck, Themas Me- Kenzie, Water street. A. L. Wylie, Halifax, Robert Irving (Revere). Dr. Pollock, Halifax,Col. Gray, Royalty, A. McL. Sinclair, Springville, Capt. Cameron, Pownal street. Dr. Burns, Halifax, Rev. K Maclennan, West Manse. D. McDougall, Bay, Large (Rocklin House). M. Campbell, Strathborne, Mrs. Capt. Gillis, King street, D, S. FraveryMihone Bay, AT: Brown, Richmond, J. Cathrae, tebarus, Mrs. Watts, Newton a resolution declaring it was the duty of the} Wermonth ateebk: Government te advise Hie Excellency to disallow certain Aéts passed in amendment of that school law by the New Brunswick Legis.ature. These gentlemen voted with me toaman in favor of disallowance. I do not condema them for it; I did it my- self; I think it was the right thing to do, I wa: ted to know WHETHER THEY WERE SINCERE in it or not. Before eight months went round a cliange took place; they came into power. They had declared by their votes that it was the duty of the Government te disallow these Acts; we said, ‘‘it was their duty, it is your duty also.” They said, “Oh, that is quite a different thing.” What did they do? When the ques- tion was pressed home upon them, after Mr. Devlin, who represented the city of Montreal, made a_ very eloquent speech on that question, appealing to his friends to support that motive, and after several others had spoken, Mr. Mac- kenzie, finding that my motion would pass that night and he would be left in a minor. ty, adjourned the Honse. A caneus was held ; the gentlemen from my province who had pledged themselves to stand by my resolution swallowed their words next day and voted for a motion declaring that the Parliament of Canada had nothing to do with the question at all. (Cheers). 1 ask myself whether I can take the professions of these men now for more than they were worth at that time, There was another test of the liberality of those men. THEY TALK ABOUL BEING THE EXPONENTS OF LIBERAL IDEAS AND PRINCIPLES, When they were in power they introduced a bill affecting Prince Edward Island, by which they ehanged the franchise of that province. There were two sets of franchise, and they introduced a bill here to adopt the one which it was well known would very seriously effect the Catholic vote in that country. I appeakd to some of the Island members and asked them if they knew what was going on, but they were too faithful supporters of the Government to trouble themselves about it or ask them to change their policy. Fortunately when it went to the Senate, it was so monstrous, so unfair and se upjast for men calling themselves liberal, that it wasthrown out of the Senate. For my own part, I have no reason to believe that by going over to the Reform party the interests of the people to whom I belong would be any better or as well served as they are at present under a Conservative Government. (Cheers.) I de not ask for special favors or privileges for myself or in the name of my countrymen. We ask to be treated as other men—we ask for a fair field and no favor. Give us a fair chance in this country ; that is all we want or al! that we deserve. (Tremendous cheering). ome Tue barqnentine ‘ Olivette,” of Charlotte- town, P. E. 1, Captain Davis, from Saint Lacis, Spain, with a cargo of Salt, bound te Tignish, P. E. I., arrived at Halifax Thurs day, for repairs, having been in collision with an iceberg. She reports on May Lith at 5 p. m. in lat. 46 lon. 46.09, there being a thick fog with a light wind at the time, ran into an iceberg of about 80 feet in height. The ves- sel was going at about two knots atthe time She struck it bow on, carrying away jibboom, bowsprit at the knizht heads, starting paul- bit and cutwater. Afterwards was in the ive off Canso for eight days, but finding it im possibly to get there, bore up to Halifax to repay. a IsLanD Potarozrs—.Our merchants are making extensive importations of Island pota toes—-In sume sections it is said the farmers will be largely dependent on Island potatoes for their seed. — Moncton Times. sie cacaaaet Reapy Wriittams, of New Glasgow, has ehatienged Thos. Grant, to run him a race for $490, atTruro, the wipner to take the gate atlmissinug Tevei pts. Esavt fe tu run How- ards; of St Johy Ni B. i 100 yard rate gt Trarg og Jupe J4th, T. L. Si +, Lower LaHave, Charles Byndman (Revere). “—" «'T. McMillan, Revi Lt. Denis, Mrs. Raa- kin, Water street. PD. MacRae, St. John, N. B., T. C. James, Weymouth street. James Morray, Douglass Town, J. F. Robertson, Fitzroy street. James Sinclair, Folly Village, Dr. Mae- kieson, (Rankin House. ) , Richard Logan, Sheet Harbor, Mrs, Watson, (Revere.) ~ N. Ross, Prince William, Col. Gray, Royalty. A. Gray, New Annan, Upper Prince street. C, G. Glass, Spring Hill, Philip Large, Baytield street. W. A. Mason, New London, Col. Gray, D. Ferquharaon ; Royalty. J. I. McGillivray, Clifton, A. L. Brown, Weymouth street. f : Mr. Steward, Belfest, D. Macdonald, Sydney street. Thomas Duncan, Halifax, Col. Damn. J. M. Sutherland, St. James, N. B., George MacLeod, (Mrs. Rankin’s.) ELDERS. J. Matheson, West Bay, Ewen Mc- Dougal! (Miss Findley. } J. Murray, Kingston, W, Gordon (Re- vere. St. Meteoa, Murray Harbor, Mrs. Capt. Gillis. Peter Ross, Barney’s River, C, Robert- son (Revere. ) W. Dunbar, Lake Ainslie, J. W: Mor- rison (Revere. ) D. McCurdy, Baddeck, Capt. Cameron (Renkin House.) W. Roberteon, Halifax, A. A. Baldwin (Rankin House. ) D. Cameron, Springville, Mrs. Watts (Miss McRae.) F. MeMilian, Sheet Harbor, Frank Kennedy (Miss McRae.) C. Morrison, Folly Village, Rocklin House. W. Ross, Belfast, Miss McRae. ——— From Boston to Charlottetown P. E. ISLAND DIRECT. BARKENTING ‘EREMA,’ ALEX. MacL&OD, MASTER, Now oN THE Berry, Will Sail from Boston the latter part of May, and will carry Freight at very lowest} rates. For particulars apply in Boston to Mesars: Chas. Hunt & UCo., 156, state Street, or ber® to the owners, PEAKE BRO’S & CO. Ch'town, May 22, ’82—till date SODA: _ 60 Casks Washing “Soda, =~ 25 Kegs Carb. Soda, ron WE DENSA to. May 5, *82- 2w Saw pat . eae for the DAILY EXAM Ni \) the Cheapest and most Newsy Paper Published io P, KB, Island, e