se See MIE OG COR ye The Dal HE The Examiner Publishing Company | RATES OF SITRSCRIPTION iIN ADVANCE) @ne Year 84.00 Sx Months 2.00 Three Months 1.00 Month O35 Sent post paid to any part of Canada or the Caited States THE WEEKLY EXAMINER feeued every Friday morn) ng. It oF mA ler and ail the latest pews $1.00 & year ee Pp & Island Hallway oand atter MONDAY, 4th January,ls9 trains of this Railway wqill run dail) sundays exces ted) as follows .— | Taains Gut] Trains In ward. Read] STATIONS. ward. Rea dow! up. P.M \ ut. Pp M.A Ww 310 7 00} Charlottetown .../ 3 10}10 10 $ 30 7 19)..Royalty Junction.) 2 3) 9 50 4.17 8 08)..North Wiltshire. | 2 O4) 9 05 431 8 17)..Hunter River 1 49) 8 51 5 0 8 52). . Bradalbane 1118817 5 13 9 OO} . Emerald .. (LES BS 5 27 9 15)..Freetown ....... 12 53) 7 54 5 47 9 36) Kensington 12 3 7 33 6210 10jAr.( Lv. 12 00} 7 00 Pr. M. | Ss side > A. M 12 50\Lv | 1 1]|..Miscouche 1 37). . Wellingtor = 06). . Post Tall . occcee » 09 D Oak. .O' Laaty.:. .o6ene] Oe 3 58).. Bloomfield ...... 7 4 34)..Alberton........| 6 © |G S01. SAR ine ooes 6 O4) ip. M.| A. MI eo A. M.| | 2 30). . Charlottetown .. ./10 30} 2 50).. Royalty Junction 10 10) 1 3 23) . Bedford ........ 9 30) | 3 5olAr. ene | Lv:| 3 3 4 vale, p MtStew tb Ae 8 55 5 50)..Morell.......... 8 i7| | & 12). -St. Peters ..cccs| 7 48) | & 37|.- Bear River ...... 7 03) 6 40) eh, dalie< etna 62) “lp. M. ‘A. M.| | 4 10 Mt. Stewart ....| 8 5 ; 5 22) Carian... .csve. 7 35 | § 45|..Georgetowa ..../ 7 10 lp. M. ihe Mie iP. M. 2, M. & Wee Sienna... conca: 7 w | 6 06)..Cape Traverse ..| 7 PrP. M A. M. Trainsare ran by Eastern Standard Tim MoDONALD, D. POTTINGER “superintendent, Gen ~— Govt. Rye lottetown. oncton, Raiway Office, Jand , 1897. —_—— i] Examiue AFTERNOON is made rwhich has eppeared in the Daily | je a& Orstclasss newspaper containing fERMS : Four Dollars a Year “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Eauripides. ans és te tis — + Single Oopies Two Cents | VOL 37. The Lines In One's Palm, Square or spatulated fingers, in the sect- ence of palmistry, denote the philosophical and practical temperament, taper fingers signify an artistic temperament, and very pointed digits are asure sign of the dreamy, psychical nature. Much is learned by the general quality and configuration of the lines which cross the latter. The life line running around the base of the thumb de notes long or short life, good or ill health, according as itis longor short, clear and unbroken or otherwise. The “heart line,” running across the palm nearest the base of the fingers, signifies the quality of the possessor’s emotional nature, also the kind of love she will give and receive. This will be enduring or temporary according to whether the line be long and clear, forked or crossed and chained. Below this is the head line, which indicates the mental and moral qualities and achievements and de ficiencies. The line of fate runs perpendicularly across the middle of the palm and is a very important factor in the happiness or un- happiness of its owner. It should be clear and narrow, unchained and uncrossed by the fine wrinkies which score so many palms, and it should never come to an end on the line of the heart, since this signifies disappointment in love. A cross on the “Mount of Mercury,” which is just at the base of the fore or index finger is an unfail- ing sign of a happy marriage.—Philadel- phia Press. See our tables o 6 10 8 10 We Are the People. . In many ways the United States have ed- (of | ucated the world in politics, and 1, for one, do not hesitate to say that their scheme of Q government is the best that has ever been \ established by a nation. But in nothingdo () we owe more to the Americans than for their having afforded usthe great object > lesson of a state pursuing the even current of its way without that meddling in the affairs of other states which has been the bane of European powers. Here we havea country rich, powerful, industrial and com- mercial, yet never troubling itself with what happens outside its frontiers, or an- or of picking a quarrel with them.—Lon- don Truth. wed Bullet Proof Uniforms No Novelty. Bullet proof uniforms, it-appears, were known long agoto the Chinese. They were {s made of leather and wool in the north and paper and cotton cloth in the south of China. It seems ridiculous to call such Fora Few Days We will call your attention to our line of Flatware. Spoons, Forks, Knives. Butter Knives, and Sug ar Spoons, at very low prices. Please call, and we will try hard to please vou. G. F HUT: HESGS WNeur Year RESOLUTIONS The New Year shovld com- menee right by carrying a good reliable wath. They cost less in the end thana poor one, and ali who desire to be on tive -aou d have one Good tlue-+eepers are away down ine pric. ’ rg . . A 5} i i} . 0 . WATCHMAKER © JEWELER North s:'e Queen ~q “Tre ie 0G ae Brsti-te’, A Brown's Bock, - - Chal te owa BRAN UFFICE, Wadmans Building, - - fra avd IONE J Vii, VIGAs. VT RESTORED IN 30 DAYS G000D EFFKCT AT ONCE CATUN’S VITALIZER. A Dollar— combinations armor, and yet they make an armor superior in many instances to steel. Thirty thicknesses of alternate calico and paper will resist a pistol bullet, or one from a rifle at a distance of 100 yards A spezrman who thrusts his weapon into aman clad in this kind of garment can neither wound his euemy vor extract his Weapon, and if the enemy is an archer or armed with a long sword or-javelin he is likely to lose his life for bis mischane:.— Louden Tit-Dits. } / XN ) McKAY Isnt any bigger in our store than elsewhere. It looks bigger because its buying power is much greater, and the buying is further increased this week. If people who have not yet bought A rig LO Fe ag x * : Sb. » - 2 a ‘en (ee is ba aa ‘ irom us only knew how much they are losing they could not rest— but it is never to late to mend. The prices we are making this week 1as never bseenapproached. Now s the time to buy. The balance of our stock of Overcoats and Ulsters at less than half price. Not Many Left. Come quick betore they are all bility, wakeful m*, Imoo' ency wiler: Cures genera! or special de ness, sperm itorrhces, emissi paresis, ete, Corrects fanctional 4 ceused by error: or yuickly re ing Leet Wanhoot neobllo mn J, v.cor ani strength where rr ness prevailed, © avenient package @ffectus!, and legit! nate Don’t be deceived by {mitat. ns, insist 9° CATON’S VITALIZER, Sept sealed f you druggist does not have it. Price $1 per pkge, 6 for $5. with written enarantee of © ya plet. eure. Information, references, ete, free anu confidential Send us sat ment of cause ani | 2c fora week's trial treatment ne only Sent ‘ceac. pers nr, C*T ON MED C).. BoSTON.MA>-= ‘SCRE’, Soec'al Canned a Goods Sale We commenced our SPECIAL CANNED GOODS SALE this morn- ing and will continue it for a shor time only. We have marked our goods at prices so low that they are bound to sell very quickly, so we wouid advise our fiends to call early and leave their orders for what thoy may require in this line. BEER & GOFF gone, to BM dad dl Directly Opposite the West End ot the Market House see how it reads. 18M ...F IRE... OVAL LSURANGE COMPA" ASSETS, $50,000,000. LOWEST RATES! PROMPT SETTLEMENT OF LOSSES J. MACEACHERN, AGENT. Setecle te este st tes f Men’s Overcoats, “ “ “ 6c ‘ec “ nexing foreign lands on the plea of philan- i By s. "s throphy, or on the ground that in some centuries its area will be too small for its ©24) be 6 population, or in order to create markets for its goods. And what isthe result? No G I 66 oe one dreams of attacking the United States, \ Gold by the Yard. The beating of the innumerable little | square pieces of gold which are used to cover domes and signs, and so oa, forms a distinct industry in the gold trade, which employs a large number of hands and requires no small amount of skill. The long, low building in which the work is cariied on is filled throughout the day with the sound of hammers. On every side little boxes containing tiny rolls of goid are to be seen, which although only measuring an inch and a half in length, are each worth about £10, The gold is received in bars one- eighth of an inch in thickness, an inch in width and weighing 240 pennay- weights. This is rolled out into a rib- bon thirty yards in length. It is then given to the workmen in strips measuring seven yards, each of which is cut up into 180 pieces. These are now ready to be beaten out by hand. They are placed (protected by fine skins) in a tool known as the “clutch,” and are thoroughly pounded out on a great granite block set in the ground in such a way that there is ab- solutely no vibratory movement. The process is repeated several times, the gold as it spreads being continuously subdivided until it is of the exact dimensions required. The skins in which the gold is beaten are so delicate that they will tear as several years. The gold, which is finally beaten down to 200,000th of an inch, is rubbed with ‘‘brine” before being placed in the skins, in order that it shall not adhere to them. Easy as this work of beating out the gold may seem, it is in reality, an art of a very delicate description. The workman must know toa nicety pre- cisely how hard or gentle the blows of his hammer must be, and also the exact spot on which they should fall. Ac- are employed in the business.—Pear- son’s Weekly. A Talk Party that Wasa Failure, “You weren’t at the Joneses,” said the girl with the brown cape. “No, I wasn’t, and I’m awfully sorry. You see, I would have beer there, but you-—” “Well, you ougl.t to be precious glad that you weren’t.” ‘‘Whir, what was the matter? I al- ways thought everybody had a good time when they went to the Joneses, for I believe ——” “It was the dullest thing I ever saw. You know it to be a sort of talk party.” “Yes, everybody was to get in groups and talk about things. Now, for my part, I like——” “But it wasn’t. We just sat and looked at each other all the evening, andeverybody went home feeling un- comfortable.” “You don’t say so? Why, what was the matter? Did anything happen?” “Tam not sure whether to say yes orno. You see, it wasthis way: The pianist didn’t come and there wasn’t anybody there who could play the piano, so of course we couldn’t talk, and we all sat there feeling bored until it was time to go.”—Chicago Times- Herald. Let Him Of. ‘“Wasn’t it sad about old Jobley’s failure?” “What! has he failed?” “Yes. gon? clean smash,” “That’s too bad; he promised me something yesterday, but now, in his trouble, I will not hold him to it.” “That's generous of you. What was it?” “His daughter's hand in marriazs.” Men’s $1.00 White Lannodried Shirts for en's Overcoats, worth It is hardly a misnomer to ca'l the crowds that have thronged every day since the first of the year; countless host, that countless bargains must have left our counters. there are not countless bargains Jeft to gratify the hearts of the practised buyers Here, for example, is a pen picture of one, 12 00, now 7 13.50, now ” 14.00, now , 14.25, now f 12 Children’s Overcoats, worth $4.00, now $2.60 easily as paper, nevertheless they are | of so fine a quality that they will with- | stand the continual hammering for | cordingly, a very superior class of men . fe eee ee el ” 4.60. now &.060. now Absolutely Pure. Celet raicd for its great levening strerg'h ane healthfuness, As-ures the fod against slam and ail forms 0 adulteration common to the cheap brands ROYAL BAKING POWDER Co,, NEW YOhK Effect of Tobacco on the Eyes. The bad effect of tobacco on the eyes was wnknown even by physicians until within the present century. Sixty years ago Dr. McKenzie of Glasgow wrote, “I have already had occasion re peatedly to hint my suspicion that tobacco {s a frequent cause of amaurosis’”’—complete or partial blindness. ‘Toone form of this disease Hutchinson gave the name of “to- bacco amaurosis,” because he often found it in men strongly addicted to the use of tobacco. Dr. Williams, the celebrated oculist of Boston, says, “To be of service, treatment in tobacco amaurosis must be begun in the early stage, before the congestion has been succeeded by atrophy.” Dr. Francis Dowling of Cincinnati with- in a few years tested the eyes of 130em- ployees in the principal tobacco factories of that city. Only one woman was found to be suffering from the disease, and she had never used tobacco. This showed that merely working in the factory had very lit- tle effect on the sight, though it did not affect unfavorably the general system. Of the men examined 45 showed more or less evidence of amaurosis, 30 of them being pretty well marked cases. They all mistook red for brown or black and green for light blue or orange, and in all there was also a contraction of both pupils. Thirty out of the 45 complained of a gradual failure of vision. In one case—not among the employees just spoken of—the contraction of the pupil was so great that the sufferer was unable to go about without assistance. He had smoked from 20 to 30 cigars aday. He re nounced tobacco, and his sight was fully restored in 3!4 months. Chewing has been found to be much worse than smoking, as more of the poison is absorbed.—Youth’s Companion. Concrete Piers For Bridges. Concrete has been used by the Chicago, : Rock Island and Pacific railway for the piers of a bridge five spans across the Red river. These piers were made by first sink- ing at the site of each a caisson or box of wood 32 by 13 feet in size through the sandy bottom to rock, which was easily done by weighting the caisson and then pumping out the sand and gravel, previously loosen- ed by means of a jet of water. These cais- sons were then filled with concrete made of one part of Louisville cement, two parts of sand and four parts of stone broken to through a ring 234 inches in diameter. ‘After the caisson was filled a mold of two inch plank was made of the form of the pier. At the bottom it was 29 feet 10 inches long and 11}¢ feet wide, at the top it was 8 feet 2 inches wide and 23 % feet long, with semicircular ends. Inside these molds concrete was placed composed ef 400 pounds of German portland cement, 10 cubic feet of sand and acubic foot of broken stone, which was allowed to harden thoroughly. The plank mold was then removed and the surface covered with a mortar of equal = portland cement and sharp sand. oe SEE cee Wt penal ond dl time the work was progress was sometimes almost dry, although occasional- ly the water would rise to adepth of 20 feet, and the bottom lands in the neighbor- hood would be flooded for adistance of two niles.— Exchange. a eS This being true, Bat it does not follow that $13.50. now $6.75. HR, ON 6.00, now 30 Children’s Suits, worth $5 and $6, now $2 and $2.50 COMMENT IS NEEDLESS WOOLEN COMPANY, THE GREAT BARGAIN GIVERS. CHARLOTTETOWN P. E. ISLAND,»MONDAY FEBRUARY 15, 1897 A COUNTLESS HOST. our store it follows 6.00 €.'79. 7.00. 7.13. o.e @ HO 300 LANG OF THE COMMON PEOPLE. The Future of California Will Be Ver) Different from Its Past. The future of California will be ver) different from its past. It has been th: land of large things—of large estates of large enterprises, of large fortunes Under another form of Government it would have developed a feudal system with a landed aristocracy resting on: basis of servile labor. These were it plain tendencies years ago, when some body coined the epigram. ‘‘Californi. is the rich man’s paradise and the poo man’s hell.” But later development have shown that whatever of paradis: the Golden State can offer to the rich i will share, upon terms of marvelou: equality, with the middle classes o American life. Over and above all other countries it is destined to be the land of the com- mon people. ‘This is true because owing to its peculiar climatic condi tions, it requires less land to sustain a family in generous comfort. For the Same reason cheaper clothing and shelter, as well as iess fuel, suffice, while it is possible to realize more per- fectly the ideal of producing what is consumed. Moreover, itis a natura) field for the application of associative industry and the growth of the highest social conditions. Indeed, the country has distinctly failed as a land of big things, and achieved its best successes in the opposite direction. Its true and final greatness will con- sist of the aggregate of small things— of small estates, of small enterprises, of small fortunes, Progress toward this end is already well begun. It must go on until the last great estate is dismembered and the last alien seri is returned to the Orient. Upon the ruins of the old system a better civiliz- ation will arise. It will be the glory of the common people, to whose labor and genius it will owe its existence, Its outreaching and beneficent influ- ence will be felt througnout the world. As Practical as Usuas. Poor Man—Well, did you buy that book telling all about how to economize in the kitchen? Wife—Yes, I’ve got it. Poor Man—That’s good. What does it say? | Wife—It’s full of recipes telling how to utilize cold roast turkey, but we haven’t the turkey.—Amusing Journal, The Last Dance. He—May I ask you for a dance? She—Certainly, the last cne on the list. He—But I’ll not be here then. She—Neither wi'l l.—Exchange REMARKABLE CASES | Caronic Invalids Kaised from Their Sick Beds After Giviag Up Uope. London, Ont.—Henry R. Nicholls, 176 Rectory street, catarrh ; recovered. Dr. Chase's catarrh cure, 25¢. Markdale—Geo. Crowe's child, itching eczema; cured. Chase’s Ointment. Truro, N.3.—H. H. Sutherland, travel- ler, pilee—very bad case; eured ; Chase's Ointment. 60¢. . Lucan--Wm. Branton, gardener, pin worms ; a}l gone. Chase’s Pills. L’Amable—Peter Van Allan, eczema for three years. Cured. Chase’s Ointment. Gower Point—Robano Bartard, dread- ful itching piles, 20 years. Well again, Chase's Oin:ment. 60c. Meyersburg—Nelson Simmons, itching piles: cured. Chase’s Ointment. Malone—Geo. Ricbardson, kidney and liver sufferer; better. One box Chase® Pills. 25c. Chesley—H. Will’s son, crippled with rheumatism and suffering from dia’ completely recovered. Chase’s Pills. Matchard Township—Peter Taylor, kid- ney trouble, 30 years; cured. Chase's Pile. 2c. Torontu—Miss Hattie Delaney, 174 Orawiord street, subject of pe uak colds. Cured by Chase's Syrup Lia- eeed and Turpentine. 25 cents. Dr. Chase’s remedies are = © all factarers, Torosta =i, tC -_<-— TS ae celle sc stele AN EGYPTIAN KING. CONDITION OF HIS KINGDOM ON HIS ACCESSION, “Egypt is Des: lated and Abandoned to Invasion from All Lands,” Was the Picture He Drew=Building Up His Power. Prof. Flinders Petrie contributes to The Century an account of his discov- ery ofa tablet which gives the first historic account of the oppression of the Children of Israel. Concerning the character of “Pharaoh of the Hard Heart” Prof. Petrie writes as follows: A melancholy prospect he had seen as he grew up. His father had been active in the earlier years of the reign; but after about twenty vears he ceased all personal labor, and seems to have sunk in his fatuous pride into a mere despot, devoted to perpetuating his offigies on the monuments, and his family in the harem. The kingdom went steadily into decay year after year, and the old man became more indolent and more fatuous, while none of his sons seems to haye been allowed to take up the reins and save the ccun- try. “Egypt is desolated and aban- doned to evasion from all lands: the barbarians overrun its frontier, the re- volters invade it daily, every country is pilaging its cities, raiding its dwell- ings in the fields and on the river, They abide and settle there for days and months, seated in the land; they reach the hills of middie Egypt. : They search for the corn-land, seeking to fill their bellies; they come to Egypt to find provision for their mouths.” Such is the melancholy picture drawn by Merenptah of the state of the country on his accession—a strik- \ng contrast to the work of the really great kings of Egypt, of the Amenho- tep and Thothmes line, who had handed on the rule of Syria from father to son unbroken. The continu- ous record that we have of Thothmes III. shows that every year regularly he went through Syria to receive tribute and maintain his power, taking allthe young princes to be educated in Egypt before they came to act as vassals in their own country. Until he was over fifty this annual outing was kept up, and his children to the third and fourth generation received this dominion in peaceful succession. But under Rameses all this stability had vanished; a few raids which did not cover half the previous conquests vf Syria, a treaty on equal terms with whe foe, and the boastful king sunk into an inglorious lethargy, in which even Egy pt itself was largely given up to the foreigners. And this decay was what had eaten into the souls cf Merenptah during all his youth and vigor; until he was at least forty nothing could be done by him. It was not until the old king had come to that condition which we can now see before our eyes in the Cairo Museum,—a withered mummy, which seems as if still dwelt in and half alive with the spirit of insensate pride,--it was not until this evil genius of the land was in his tomb that a stroke could be struck for the freedom of the country. Then began careful preparation. For four years Merenptah was consoli- dating his power, wjth apparently one expedition to Syris, up the coast to the plain of Esdraelon and Tyre; this re- conquest we have learned of only since finding the new teblet. But it did not do more than secure the principal fort- ress near the coast, and command the corn districts of Philistia and Esdra- elon, which were cultivated by the people of Israel, among others. It is evident that reorganization had been going on, strengthening the resistance of the country, by the vigor with which the great Libyan invasion was repelled, after the country had been long sub- mitting to minor attacks. At the end of March in his fiftieth year Merenptah had adream. Ptah, the great god of Memphis, appeared to him, and wanted him to be readya fortnight hence. This is doubtless a priestly way of putting some warnings from spies or travelers who reported the preparations in progress. Then, early in April the great tempest of foreign invasion burst in from the west, coming just when all the harvests were gathered in, and fields stripped bare, the whole land naked and open, and canals dried up; in short, just when the greatest facilities existed for invasion, and the full granaries!tempted the desert peoples. The warning had not been in vain. Merenptah was pre- pared, and attacked the assemble¢. host with his cavalry; the gods fought with them, and for one long afternoon, from midday till dark. they slew, and slew, and slew, for six hours slaughtering the multitude. The defeat was utter. The king, Maury, son of Dad, escaped, thanks to the darkness; but he did not even secure a horse or provisions, and fled from the fiight on foot compietely terrified. His wives and his rich equipage, his silver and gold and bronze vessels, the ornaments of his wife, his thrones, his bows, his weap- ons, and all that he had were a prey to the Egyptians. Some sixteen thousand bodies lay on the field of battle, and nine thousand prisoners were taken. Never Satisfied. The reason that he who is striving for wealth or renown for his own personal good or aggrandizement is never satis- fied is because there is a want in his naturethat is never met, and never will be until he opens his purse or seeks to bless others. That man alone is truly blessed and happy who seeks to gain that he may bestow on others, And finally the great lesson taught us is that God himself only lives and lab- ors to save and bless all his creatures, and that His happiness and the perfec- tion of His purpose will not be attained until every creature will be saved from sin, misery sad death. The Life of Dr. Chase, As a compiler of Chase’s Recipe Book his name is familiar in every household in the land, while asa physician his works on simple formulas left an imprint of his name that will be handed down from generation to generation. His last great medicine, in the form of his Syrup of Linseed and Turpentine, is having the oa public patronage that his Ointment, Pills and Catarrh Cure are having. Dr. Chase’s Syrup of Linseed and Turpentine is especially for all Bronchial and NO 37 @O0G DEST L CHSt OSCE SOSESSECE i006 e 6 6 9 i e & e s @ e eo & a es e s * * = a 8 S ee e * * o & ® s ° se & 6 e & & oe @ © ° % ® to J] tw ° o e o o © e 2 6 o 8 o & @ © w e & ° & © Cd © s © zB € 6 e 6 + e 8 e e . @ e e 4 ie we s 2 o & o ° e s ~ Job Printing. time to have your work doae before the spring trade com mences, now, we will satisfy vou in good work and low prices. J.D. TAYLO J0B PRINTING. ‘FOR BEST WOR | AT L@WEST PRICES TAY THIS OFFICE ~~» We Can Handle any kind ef Job Printing. BXAMINER PUBLISHING Cd _ - Bank President Isaac Lewis of Sabina, Oliio, is highly respected all through that section. *He has lived in Clinton Co. 75 vears, and has been president of the Sabina Bank 20 years. He gladly testifies to the merit of Hood's Sarsu- parilla, and what he says is worthy attention. All brain workers find Iiood’s Sarsaparilla peculiarly adapted to their needs. It makes pure, rich. red ‘blood, and from this comes nerve, mental, bodily and digestive strength. “Tam glad tosay that Hood’s Sarsapa- rilla is a very good medicine, especially asa blood purifier. It has done me good many times. For several years I suffered greatly with pains of Neuralgia in one eye and about my temples, es- pecially at night when I had been aaving a hard day of physical and mental labor. Itock many remedies, but found helponly in IZood’s Sarsaparilia which cured me of rheumatism, neuralgia and headache. Hood's Sarsapariila has proved itself a true friend. I alco take Hooc’s Pills to keep my bowels regular, and like the pills very much.” Isaac Lewis, Sabina, Ohio, 3 roods Sarsaparilla Is the One True Bl Prepared only by C. 1. Hood & ¢ db Purtiior. All druggi ». Lowell, Mesa, Just a word about cur Itisaw lt known fact thot all Dental Go's bearing the name §&. §, White & Co. are the standard for tue world. Al. instrum-nts used in oor work beer the fam- ous stamp, S.S.W. Our... Specialty for the next (wo weeks is the la’est invention in plates for articcial teeth —Aluminum Comb ni- tion Piates—lighter than wood, thin as paper, and stronger than vreat 8 20Ccess, steel. A and Lound to give satisfaction. TEETH EXTRACT.- it PRENM by ire of the Famous Berlin Meth- od. Whena set or par- il set of teeth are rdeved, we wiil exiract charge and abselu- tely free of prin tree of Remen.ber we use onlv the best gocds in oar work. Berlin — Dental Parlors. (rer Store Prowse Jrothers O, en in the evenings from 7 to 8. e60s6ecc> ceseesceseseo SOODSOSTOSS SHeeeeve gous’ ?< GoesEeeRTEYE TESS OOSOOISOHOSLNC CHOOVSSHSOOOE SOOS SESS. GSSSETV9OSTO 9506890 0083005: S2SSOOOOCOOCEELSS ces OOSSTOCOOSRO ee 2 ——_. JADER NOW We are giving low prices on Now is the fend in jour order Printer & Bookbialer QUEEN: STRERT. Orders by mail promptly attendedvo, oe — = eno nee oe ee, — a — Sade im ee ieee ae ee! ee 3 greee§ Rise ——me ff FS alia on + ane oo Ag re old