; : THE DAILY EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETOWN, AUGUST 29 1898. ak gentiemen Car ¢é g stvie. fit, ru now get as te and confor ; ee s bought at home, as wa 30 i, oniv to be had int ger Sc “a cities. We refer to tl S ate! 4 Shoes. They equal if not rT pass, anv shoe made in Canada or the United States aT A fresh supply +é jast in. C ALLEY & CO, $4 THE SHOEISTS +? +) Le eS ow & @ 2 OO DS ie Sir ee o> We eT Fire Insurance Protects You avainst the carelessness of your neighbor, as well as the purely accidental fires. They may come tv you atany time. If freely insured in my companies you are pYro- tected. E. R. BROW Insurance Agent Charlottetown 2202200066500 0 80<686 escoce 3 Ibe PER LB S \bc PER LB Telephone 98, D. STEWART ECLIPSE BAKERY BAKES BEST BREAD. Roll . ee — More Care Needed. | in June has been rejected by buyers and must be sold at a heavy loss to the patrons f the chee-e factoriss. This should not be. ne case sit has been the fault of tie ‘e maker, in others the fault of the managers of the factory and in it has also been the fault of the busipess eve ry case p atrons. Sour milk, tainted milk and partly churoed milk are all unfit for cheese mak- r, and no good cheesemaker will allow nto his tactory. Unfortunately milk comes to the factory well cool- ed down itis pretty hard to detect many of the taints, Only upon heating do they become noticeable. To do really good detective work a quart sample of each patrop’s milk should be heated in a hot water bath every few days and the flavors carefully noted, all bad flavored milk should be rejected and the cheesemaker and the dairy superintendent of the district shoula make a careful examination of the premises from which this bad flavored milk came, with a view of having the trouble corrected. ” OT T—F¥xXwg — —— Another Liberal Doubter. tnem whe} Mr. George Bertram, Liberal, M. P.; of Toronto, in an interview with areporter of La Presse is reporied as expressing the followica opinion on the prohibition plebi- acite : **My Opinion is}jthat‘prohibition will be earried in Oxtario by a very large majority but the great-question is to know just that the rights ofthe provinces are. Sup- poring that Quebec aione amongst the provinces votes against prohibition, will it, or will it not, be obliged to bow to the willSof the other provinces ? That is the kernel of the whole question. The pro- vinces have incontestible rights, and I do not see bow the the majority of Provinces can impose their views of the minority.” Destructive Hail Storm. Winnipeg, Man., Aug, 26.—A despatch from LaSalle, 15 miles south-west of the city, says thatthe worst hailstorm ever ex- perienced in this district occurred this after- noon,destroying all the standing crops. The storm covered an area five miles wide. The stenes were av inch in diameter, and fell thickly. Many windows were broken. After, the, storm the the hail could be scooped up, ‘as the ground was completely covered. The grain that was cut, about half the crop, was not injured. No bail is reported from any other district. LOCAL NOTICES. Received by express this morning a choice lot of Ontario fruit in greengages fancy plums, pears, tomatoes and blue grapes at Sanderson & Co’s. Do you want anew hat? If you do and you want the latest, we have them. New American hats and caps just opened.— Prowse Bros. 195, 3i. Sliced corned beef for sale by the pound at Beer & Gott’s. 199, 2i. See the children’s tams in our north window—25 cents.— Moore & McLeod. The @o-operative Farmer and Dairy- | man says: “ We are sorry to learn th: t | | considerable maritime cheese made early | FALSIFIED HER AGE Even in Kussia, it seems, despotism does not go the length of forcing a woman to tell her age or of punishing her for stating it inaccurately. A cer- tain Princess Eugalytcheff was recently tried at Moscow and sentenced to life- long internment in the province of Olo- netz for embezzling 140,000 rubles. After the proceeding in court had come to an end and after the noble lady had retired to the country for her somewhat prolonged rest from urban gayeties and temptations a too careful official discov- ered that among the papers in the case was the princess’ certificate of baptism, and that she had changed the date of it from 1847¢0 1867. Instantly this grave crime was brought to the notice of the authorities, and the convicted embezzler was summoned to meet the charge of falsifying an official document. Then a i curious fact was disclosed, and a sur- } prising amount of light was thrown on Russian society. The Prince Eugalytcheff, who was cited as a witness by the prosecutor, said that whether his bride was 20 years older or younger than her certified age was & matter of absolute indifference to him. All he could say was that he re- ceived the sum of 3,000 rubles for giv- ing the Jady his name, that immediate- ly after the marriage ceremony he pro- cured for her a separate paseport, and that since then he has known nothing more of his wife or her private affairs The jury gallantly declined to convict the accused princess on the ‘“‘trivial charge about a woman’s age,’’ and she was sent back to her provincial exile. Princes evidently come cheap: in Russia, and this is perhaps the most in- teresting bit of newsin the whole story. —New York Times. A Disastrous Ending. Two Detroit merchants were sitting on adjacent stools and taking a 15 cent lunch, when one asked the other if he consulted his wife in his business affairs. ‘‘Can’t’ do it,’’ was the response. ‘I’ve tried it agozen timesa month for years, but it always winds up just about as it did yesterday. I asked her #f she thought she could discuss a little matter of business calmly and dispas- sionately. She said she could, but had never known me to be able todoso. I complimented her sarcastically on her ‘angelic’ temper, and she at once ac- cused me of being angry. I told her that I was regarded among men as hav- ing a very equable disposition and that my employees called me Old Suavity. She called attention to the fact that her pet dog, that weighs about a pound, was oalled Danger. Then d tokd ker straight from the shoulder that I de- clined to be made angry by her taunts and odious comparisons, but served pointed notice that I was going to have the respect due the head of the house. She laughed cheerily and declared that I was entirely too touchy.”’ ‘**But what about the business confer- wice?”’ ‘*Oh, I slammed the door and left. *’ — Detroit Free Press. BE SURE you get what you wam when you ask for Hood’s Sarsapa- rilla. Unequalled in Merit, Sales, Curer. There’s no substitute for HOOD’S. Well just watch our advertisements and you will but true sayiug that a peuny saved isa penny gained. you can save money by dealing at MY STORE.— a ee On every 3 ee ++ Ts Money Your Afier, is if soon learn how to get it—It’s an old Here are a few of the many ways 9 ra A worth of hats purchased here you save 99¢ | $ worth Mantle Cloth purchased here you save 0Uc i $ worth Flowers, Feathers, Ribbons and Laces you save 33} « % $8 worth Dress Goods, you save from 33 to oUc Me éeé 6. of sé . r . rr . _ OF Al 2 worth Linen Tablning and Napkins you save from 25 to Ve $ worth Fancy Goods you save from 20 to 90¢c « § worth Shirt waists you save from 40 to 50c 6c éé 4é ce “é 6“ ‘ T . OF 5 ‘ $ worth Sunshades and Umbrellas you save frum 25 to 90¢ $ worth White Wear you save from 29 to 90¢ $ worth Lace Curtains you save from 40 to 50c NEW JACKETS. Direct from London One Hundred and Seventeen. Sample Jackets including all the new Styles and Colores for fall, 1898, LADIES SEE THOSE GOODS You may say that this is a little early to rush the fall Jackets, BUT WE ARE—~ Our Mantle room is one of the best on the Island. and ladies of taste will find it to their aevantage to buy their fall sacques from us, — BOUND TO LEAD We show nothing but the latest aad bes’, PROWSE BROTHERS The Wonderful Cheap Men STUMP PENCILS MASCOTS. Members of Gotham’s Steck Exchange §$a- perstitious About Lead Sticks. ‘*‘Talking about hoodoos and mas- cots,’’ said a member of the Stock Ex- change, ‘‘the boys on the floor of the exchange are as superstitious as a lot of sailors. If you don’t believe it, you look at the lead pencils they are using the next time you are in the building. ‘*You won’t find a man using a long lead pencil. Why? Because a long pen- cil is a ‘hoodoo’ of tie worst kind. They always cut a new pencil in half before they sharpen it. Some of these pencils acquire the reputation of being lucky. ‘*Less than a week agol came down without my pencil, which, by the way, is a lucky one—every memorandum made with that pencil results in a profit for me—and I borrowed one from a friend on the floor. He handed mea stump about an inch long and said, ‘You can use that; it’s a lucky pencil.’ ‘*Sure enough, I made two deals in the morning, and each netted me a handsome profit. ‘*I was about to make a memoran- dum of some stock I had bought when my friend approached and said: ** ‘Here, take this pencil and let me have mine again. I’ve lost on every deal siuce I loaned it to you.’ **Sure enough, I lost on that deal, and the luck went back to the owner of the pencil. ‘*When you get hold of a lucky pen- cil, you want to hang on to it. **Some of the boys have little lucky pencils not more than an inch long, and they guard them a8 they would their lives. “If you, through carelessness or acci- dent, cause them to break the lead point they lose whatever regard they have for you and forever afterward regard you asinimical. Some of them wouldn’t take $5 for a little piece of pencil worth considerably less than a cent.’’—New York Presa —_— I arg Uh l Ladies’ Capes ee Ga Blouses Sailor Hats At greatly reduced prices. RN ee T J HARRIS, Londen House Does it Interest You WHAT? =| Why saving dollars, Ifyou are going to paint your house ‘you should get particulars about tke cold water paint MAG- MOLASSESANDSUG AR | NITE it costs less than halt the price of oil paint and is also a fire retardent. Ask for a sample shingle coated with this paint. FENNELL & CHANDLER : r r ‘ 7 f a Hundreds ot other lines, money savers—every one 0% them. MeLeod & Co's, $10.00 lackets for $5.00, $3,00 Jackets for $1.00, $5 00 Capes tfor $2.06, $7.79 ee Vluaks for $3.87. Now landing ex schooner “MARY P” direct from Barbados, 500 barrels bright Barbadoes sugar, 200 puns, choice Bar- :, badoes molas-es. . N. RATTENBURY. (L134 @ mae