oem iret, tei inenetatictcas ee 3 i annette tte gts a aii. ia e Sains yp £Xa — ae ee eer Lier, am % a ae This is ane Liberty, sili Prseban Moen, baving to advise the Public, may speak free.” —Luriripes. ee aati iad = —— OW «& WprTW. Y rw : . : di oT , : v deal a 4 ip dais NEW SERIES, CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, FRIDAY, AUGUST 14, 1885. VOL. 17.--NQ. 73. i ve lad ib r. , uet every evening, by fhe Examiner Publishing Co. rner of Water and heir office, orge Streets, Charlottetown, prince Edward Island, }rom SUBSCRIPTION : six Mont _. Se Mocthe, © > (me Month eo +V 50 eg Advertising at most moderate rates. Contracts may be made for monthly, half-ves r or yearly yuarterly, half yearly or } arly ments, ON a} pilcation. ——— ALMAKAC FOR AUCUST, I8g5. MOON'S CHANGIS, La + Ouart r 3rd day, 5h. 43m., p. m. New Moon 10th day, 10b, 2m., a. m. First Quarter, 17th day, 9h. 34m., a.1 Ful! Moon, 95th day, Ih. 15m., p. m. N Me ’ i h Ib M pay Wi : ta ly vater |} a — 1m uft'n , aft’n| | j/Saturday ¢ 477 25) 9 59) } 40/14 giSunday 8; 23/10 2 3} eo’ UW in 49 99} il AI 3 i) 3: Monday ae sa , i 1 2? 4/Tuesday } ol : jl 45 $ 3; 5, Wednesday : 19 morn) 5 47| 6, Thursday | 53) 18) 0 34) 71 ‘| | , } 5 : a1! 3 92 +| Friday | 54 16) 31 § 2 aisaturday 56! 15! 237) 9 20 g Sunday 57; 14 49,10 9) t'10 53 ]0; Morday 11' Taesday | 2’ edne aday 1D 13) Thursday 20,11 39) 35}/mormn 2) S 47\| 0 14! i{| Friday 3!) 66 «69 55" 0 52 yisaturday j) 4 fil 2) 1 82! 16 Sunday Po ! Zaft 4) 2 1613 17 Monday 7 Hl 4)3 5 j8 Tuesday 5 vie 0 4 67 it Wednesday 95 68 2 32} & 19) g@' ‘Tharsday | 10; 56 3 40' 6 33) 9], Pricay | 12) 64: 4 eT Sh $: Saturday 13 52! 3 2| R 29) : jsunday 34,- REO 37| 9 12} '4' Monday 16; 49 6 9 9 56 9; Tuesday 17! 47; 6 39/10 26 og;Wedirsday | 18, 45°7 Till Oj 27\Thursday 19 43) 7 35,11 33} 25\Friday 20; 41; 8 Ziait 6 29'Saturday 22! 40, 8 29] 0 40) 30 Sunday 23 389 611 7] 31; Monday 5 2417 36; 9 NOTES. Duke of Edinburgh's birthday on the 6th. Dog days end on the Ith. Landing uf al is ( sar (B,¢ ° 53) ou 27th In this month the mornings decrease miautes; the afternoons 59 mmates., The Daily Examiner advertise. $5) 2 O13 12) ee a j 33! or © ik O Ww or en ’ rhe - ~ 46} 42} 39) 36} 33 | 30: o”7 ae 24 21} 15| 47 THE RALLWAY THR TABLE, eee For the convenience of the ‘diate public, we have carefully arranged the f: lowing table of arrival and departure trains on the P. E. Island Railway, accor ing to local time :— Coing West. fit! bi DoD Charlottetown ............ 6@ 938: 4 Royalty Janction. cut en SH 4 North Wiltshire...........7327 1039 65 a ae 747 10585 § & bradaibane, ...... since ae at a ae SY MONO oh. cdi vec cece 819 1143 6G ee 829 1159 6 P M. Rensinston........ $42 1292 6 arri 907-3257. 7 Summerside, < depart,.....927 237 "SR. ey RT eae 1001 329 Ri gc te 1029 420 O'Leary. ..... in wa e'e neve tie ile eile 1205 657 PINT sc canscnctase 1242 7 47 From West. Ps Bis: sie II es 207 647 ce. ed 245 757 oe 329 902 re £20 1029 RE 449 1116 Miscouche................807 1144 ; arrive......@28 120 Summerside, < x ee depart......542 112 6 Ns cn aicesccccs 607 149 7 os. ca ee 622 212 7 County Line............... 622 227 8 Ns tnencada 638 237 8 Manter Kiver,..........+. 702 315 8 North Wiltshire........... 712 332 9 Royalty Junction.......... 747 432 9 Charlottetown............ 802 462 10 Going East, Ue ae DNIOGIM, . . saciuseweecumual 707 4 Nie caciec san kee Ak tan 4 Bedford, ... . iovdenleeeee 804 4 Mount Stewart. } APTEVOs oscces nee. oe ~ @GORARE . ant eeits 857 65 et AES 0 om 942 5 ST I We 1015 6 gS RRRERERERAR SHAT mie 1107 6 SE» ils cntic'nsedeesueaieuaal 1157 7 Mount Stewart..........00..0+0: 902 5 SL. «.<.s:¥i% conmeaenanaa 1015 6 UR. «55.405. cpdkddaale 1037 6 From East. .-_ 2 SN .. céiusieyen eae 6 47 SMOG... ..0s docsecedieadl 717 3 SDs wincs . cic lod cise 762 ; os os. onde ine 814 4 Mount Stewart, ) ArTiVe..... vee 42 ( Gepattccecnsont 847 5 Bedford (er ae 9 12 6 York creer ttessssesees 912 6 ess: bOs 0s08 bd cencbeeei. 9 26 6 es Nadewe ena cue ‘ reed = 7 ao $e0eeeene00e ben eocee 7 9 3 Mount ie ’ ye ee é 4 ta tag pe OE ET SO ES 842 5 cm | of | ee {* or 43 ann 28 Orr Creo ht ~ “« ~ A oH tO tw Dd mb uo ed m boo * mt SOS he OS mS to Sai Ol mss McLean, Martin, & MacDonald, Notaries Public, &c, Bk ‘ . i _ vroen ; KUWN'S RADI AK, ( HARLOTTETOW A, A. MACLEAN, L. L B,] D, C, MARTIN, HH. C. MACD< NALD, B. A. July 4 law diy wky3m her pres « N. + Os cok... GOOD ARTICLE CHEAP, Kherefore, Buy Staple and Fancy DRY GoopDs, CARPETS, Perkine GILCLOTHS, COTTON WARPS, W&e., &e. —FROM— ee. ape 3m Ch’town, August 7, 1885. Pe Pr ns oe ewes naga tee ! Self. Binding Harvester @ made. XPERI MES het | But a Well-Tried Practical Success. THE BEST Draws Lighter; OME oT 7 aa 234 ° 2 2 = Py 4 oO q TORONTO LIGHT BINDER! FOR ALL KINDS OF lank Bosks, oe TEE ste Ledgers, Day Books, SELLING VERY CHEAP. 100,000 100,000 of all the leading s‘zes, by the 100, } or 4 thousand boxes. FOOLSCAP, LETTER, & Pe eS WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. £ 6 -2 : cea : Staffird’s Jet Black Writing Inks, a Z Stafiord’s Copying Laks, i nots (In all siz2 botties. ) This is now acknowledged to be the best Ink for office and private use. HKlevates ALSO IN STORE : St. John, N. B., July 31, 1885, Carter’s, Stephens & Toiary’s |Writing & Copying Inks, To be Sold at Great Discounts. For full information apply to E. Kinsman, Summerside, Gen- eral Travelling Agent for P, B. Island ; Stewart & Farquharson, More Yoronto Binders now in use on the Island Managers of our Branch Wharehousgg, than alli other kinds put together. Milligan, Conway, or any of our Local Agents. TIPPET, BURDITT & C0., Cuts Closer; iin a Ee —— DO Throw your money away in buying Shoddy Boots. Come! come at once and buy a Good Solid Leather pair of Boots or BARRISTERS, ATTORNEYS - AT-LAW,| Shoes for Spring, at 9 Low Price } We want to keep all the money we can on the Island, so we are bound to give better value in our make than can be had in any imported Boot Ch’town, March 25, 1885. eX Fuk G. H. HASZARD, BROWN’S BLOCK, Queen Square, Gh town, May 18, '85.—wky BUILDING STONE. Therefore, buy from us. DOR*uY, GOFF & CO. Stone, taken from the same quarry as the stone for Falcouwood Asylum foundation, | McKINNON & McLEAN, July 16, ’85. G. if. HASZARD’S Journals, &&.,) ENVELOPES | NOTE PAPER, '« Sons, at Murray Harbor, have been eet pennnyflecs / Our Lobster Fisheries Sir,-—I need no apology for addressing you on ‘Our Lobster Fisheries,” This branch of our fisheries is far and away the {most important, and worth all the rest | combined, the value last year of the quantity exported, reaching nearly half a million of dollars, Nearly all the lobster canning ground in the world is in the waters of the Maritime Provinces and Newfoundland. And if this ibe so, it is a matter of the first importance ‘to do all in our power by wise regulations |to preserve this valuable industry. Now 'we are doing the very reverse-—we are | allywing our waters to be fished out! | Professor Baird, the eminent American | pisiculturist, pointed out years ago, that as | the lobster was a creature of slow growth, ‘excessive fishing would eoon deplete any 'water in which they existed. | The lobster canning business was first started in the State of Maine, I think by ithe Portland Packing Co., probably about 'forty years since. By excessive fishing the waters of that state were soon depleted, and jas the American Government tcok prompt ‘action to stop it, the Portland Packiug Co. | moved. up to the Atlantic shores of New | Beunswick and Nova Scotia. Thess grounds igeted an ample supply fer some years; jand others besides this company took hold |of the business, | ‘The Nova Scotian and New Brunswick | Atlantic shores, under excessive fishing, |soon began to fail, and the Gulf grounds | were resorted to. I was one of the first in {this Province to engage in this business. About fifteen years ago l added it to my | deep sea fishing and general business at | Heareey Harbor. At that time lobsters were so plentiful, that, after an easterly ‘gale, they were sometimes thrown up in ;winrows on the shore, and for several years we got more than we could put up of fine large Jobsters; we never thought of | using a small one. During the last ten |years factories have been put up all around the shores of the Irlind, and owing to the }excessive supply thrown into the European -inarkets, prices have ruled low ; but during |the last two years the supply has not ex- jceeded the demand, and prices have im- ‘proved. As we have the grounds in our (own hands we ought to preserve them. |When I first tcok hold of the business, about fifteen years since, on the averege, itwo ani a half lobsters filled a one pound ican. This year, when I c’osed any factory ithe first week in July, ittook from seven ‘to eight. Im 1882 —TI quote from memory— ithe average was four and _ three- ; quar ter lobsters to a* can; in 1883, five end a half; in 1884, six and jm qvarter; in 1885, sever and one- \third. Fifteen years ago Georgetown Har- | bor aud Murray Harbor were full of lob- isters, and the coast shores were swarming 'with them. At present there are none in ‘shallow water, and very few in the deep ,my opinion, short-sighted. ‘than LETTERS 1T0 THE EDITOR. |more sparingly ; we will get bet'er prices ; jand J hold that it will pay me and other packers better to put up only half the quantity we have been doing, and at the same time we will be preserving this in- valnable branch of our fisheries. Packers ho are anxious for an extension of time (with a view, I suppose, of fishing out their grounds as soon as possible), are, in If the fishing season is extenied to all of September, the effect of the extra catch will be to depreciate the value from 5 to 10 per cent. This would be most unjust to those who have closed their factories in compliance with the law, as well as tending to the destruc- tion of the lobster fishery. Your obedient servant, Dantet Davirs Ch’town, 13th August, 1885. The Trade Returns. ——-~ The trade returos for the fiscal year ended June 50th give au import valne of $112,731,114, and an export value of $89,305,882, showing a balance of trade against Canada of wearly twenty-three aud a half millions. This adverse balance is more than a million dollars less than in the precedivg year, and more thirty-three millions less than in 1883. The tendency, therefore, is towards an improvement. There has been no prominent pros- perity in business. Competition has been keen; prices closely cut, and profits small; but on the other hand, failures have been less frequent. Traders, as. a rule, have made ends meet—have learned and practised economy in their expenditure, and should find themselves at the opening of a new fiscal year in a generally sound position. The bearing of the trade of the last year upon the financial exchanges of the country is of little consequence at this time, because of the large amount borrowed abroad by the Government and the Pacific Railway Company, which will furnish an aban- dance of exchange for some months to come. Upon the whole the inference to be drawu from the trade returns is that business, broadly speaking, is righting jitself, and that while caution gnd prn- dence are still ess@ntial, avy change that may come will be in the direction of improvement. So says the Montreal Gazette. es Mourning in the Synagogues. HEBREW PRAYERS GRANT AND FOR THE DEAD — MONTEFIORE. In every synagogue and assemblage of | water of these Harbors. I don’t think that lany further proof is required that our lob- | 'siers are being fished ont, and I venture to ‘predict that if the present wholesale de- | struction of lobsters is continued, in five _years lobster canning as a business will not | be worth prosecuting, | Thereis a stringent Fisheries Act on our ‘Statute Book—very much a tran:cript of ithe American Act. Under iis provisions, } 'no person is allowed to capture and use \lobsters under nine inches in length. No | person is allowed to capture spawn lobsters carrying the ove. No p»son is allowed to jcatch lobsters before the 15th day of May, ,nor liter than the 20th day of September. ‘This act has not been enforced em her by the McKenzie Government or by Sir John’s |Government. Lobster fishing is a new in- | dustry, and I suppose it was not ¢ nsidered desirable to harrass it by enforeing the pro- visions of the Act. I submit that the time |has now arrived when its provisions shonld | | be rigidly enforced before our lobster fish- | teries are destroyed! By the law, lobster factories should close on the 20th of August. | Some of the kargest factories on the Island, including my own and that of 8S. Prowse Hebrew worshippers special prayers were offered for General Grant and Sir Moses Montcfiore. As the body of the great American had not yet been consigned to the earth the “Kaddish,” an address of sanctification and glorification of the Almighty, and which is only repeated after burial, could not be repeated for General Grant at the morning services. The Hebrew prayer ‘‘Hashcabab,” the funeral prayer for the repose of the souls of both great men, was given in every Hebrew shrine, the congregation stand- ing, and facing the east. ‘The Mourners *Kaddish will be given at the early morning service for thirty days in all synagogues, In the absence of most of the leading rabbies, memorial addresses were omitted from the services. After their return in the fall special niemorial services are to be held.— New York Herald sear eormeetims sii AM ti, ls The Brant Memorial. Mr. Percy Wood, the sculptor, has {closed for some time. The Inspector of | ‘Fisheries sent around printed notices in| | June Jast, warning us that the law would be} 'enforced, and as the lobsters fell off we 'much, both in quantity and size, about the | | Let July, we closed opr factories. | ‘Others done so since. At that time} ‘not over 20 per cent. of the lobsters found | in our traps were of the legal eize. } | Jam informed that certain lobster packers | ‘are now clamouring for an extension of the| ‘fishing season to all September, and are | | using ali the influence they can bring to! bear upon*the Minister of Marine jand Fisheries, and that they have brought | ithe influence of one of our Senators for the | second time to bear upon the Minister. I | jfor one protest egriust any extension of | | time. I consider it suicidal, almost liter- | jally, a case ‘‘of killing the goose that lays) ithe golden egg.” Lobsters retire to deep water to cast their shells early in July, they | return to shallower water early in August. | by the new and thin shells; there is no, meat in the claws, but the tailis foll. In! this state and until about the middle of | ‘September it takes about seven good eized lobsters to fill a van. same size on the Ist of June when they are fell of meat, will fill a can. tion is sound, we are throwing away 3-7ths They arethen ina sickly state, covered | just exposed to private view at London the Brant memorial, on which he has been long engaged, and to which the Dominion Parliament last session made a grant. The figure of the noted Indian chief is eight feet six inches high. He is represented in the act of speaking, and the pose is said to be at once impressive ‘aod natural. On two sides of the pedes tal are Indian groups, representative of each of the tribes inthe Six Nations confederacy. One bas-reliet represents Brant addressing his chiefs ;-enother a war dance of braves. The judgment of critics is that in the memorial Brantford will have a fitting memento of the brave Indian from whom the town derives its name. a, The C. P. R. That the Canadian Pacific railway when completed will be justified in hop- ing for a share of the trade of China and Four lobsters of the Y@pan with the east of North America, if not with Europe, is shown by the fact If my conten-|that at this moment some hundreds of Northern Pacific railway cars are await- of ou. lobsters by canning after, say, the ing ut Tacoma the arrival of a cargo of 10th August. lt must not be forgotteh that we have inearly all the lobster canning ground in {the world in our own hends. The supply lin Europe and the United States is barely lsufticient to cover the demand for fresh | lobagers,for such centres as London, Paris, |New York, etc. The price of a fresh |iobster in these places is from fifty cents to { OR SALE—One Hundred perch Building! a dollar. i + The consumption of this favorite crusia- | cean is pow enormous. It bas been stimu- lated by the low price at which they can be beught. Now, | say, let us supply them % . | tea by the steamship Isabella, for trans- 'portto New York, that route having been adopted in preference to the Union Pacific via San Francisco, as the short- est and most expeditions. While as re- gards the Pacifie terminus of the Cana dian and the Northern Pacific there is probably little advantage, our transcon- 'tinental line. possesses in respect of shortness of route advantages over its northernmost rivab that should enable it to ag least divide this important traflic. a ye” ee PO eae ee ee