A MONEY MAKER ONCE. n\4\A nu; n-Auuc. them octopuses I ml ! Q`??? (T KIDNEY DISEASE FORLEN YEARS.; B.B.B. Cures to Stay Cured A The most chronic diseases or the Stomach, Liver, bowels and Blood. | rm........-...a.. ..o4-:.4..f...-_.(_a_ n__.._ Write for our interesting books " ltIvent- ' or ; Help" and " How you are awlndled." Send us a rough sketch or model of your in- vention orimprovement and we wiiiteii you free our opinion as to whether it iv. probably Kntentabie. Rejected applications have often een successfully prosecuted by us. We conduct fuiiv enuinm-d n-`u-on in Mnnfrnnl Kntentable. Rejected appllcatlom have often ` conduct fully equl ed offices in Montreal and Washington ; t equalities us to prompt- ` iy dispatch work and quick! secure Patents as broad as the invention. 1! ghest references furnished. ' Patent: nrocured through Mm-ion &. Mn. woman WILL TALK. V A Glen Miller Man : Terrible 7 Trial. ` ' Ila Found a Guru at Last In `Doan s Kidney Pills. `I -he cenedlen Grocer and storekeeaor 'l lIe Herdwere and Motel Merchant - Tho Dry Goods no-now The Bookseller end stetlonor. \._._,._samplee Free 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 GOODS wau. sousm; ARE mm-' sow MacLEAN pus. co.. Limited Aoat:-cal and _'l7ox-onto. Cab v 1 To buy well, watch the latestgrices and In- 1 formation in the special `III E PRESS. . ' E: LLIUIJC wlnuuwa. '*JD`nLuu AA: Us ~. When persons apply for member- t ship into any society, the question is t asked, "Who are they, and where do l a they come from ? and astthis mul-iv titude _of people to-lay present them- f n selves for membership, it is right that ' we should ask '`Who are these that come, as doves to their windows? They_ are captives whose chains have been broken; they are soldiers who have enlisted for thirty years` war. They are heirs of heaven. They come as dovesto the windows, first, becausethey fly low. The eagle darts up as if to strike its beak into Ii; the sun. There are birds that seem :1 to dwell under the eaves of heaven;;t you see them as little specks against ( the sky, so fair, off that you cannot a guess the style of their plumage or t the shape of their bodies. They float ll so far away that if the h.unter s gun lf be disehaxrged at them they do not t change their course. Not so _withi(' doves or pigeons; they never take any I 1 high exursions. They fly around your roof, and alight on the fence, andseem ( to dislike great altitudes. .So these ; souls. who come to Christ and to his 1 ( 1 l Church to-day, fly.low.. They ask no great things; they seek an humble place at the feet of Christ. They are , not ashamed to be called beggars for mercy; they are willing to get down, :on their knees, and to crawl under _; the table, and to pick up` the crumbs iof Gospel provision. There were days! when they were proud and puctilious,[ ` iand inexorable, and puffed up; butfw ; not now. The highest throne of earthvf V ;could not tempt Mary away "from; ' Jesu-s s feet. Stoop, oh pardoned soul,` E if thou wouldst enter heaven. A high ., look and a -proud heart God hates. Fly `low. It is a mercy that thou eanst. fly at all. Remember all the years of < thy sin; thy days of youthful wander- f. ing; thy days of manhood transgres-i sion; thy sins-dark, brooding, death- ] (ul,-sins against thy soul, against thy `Bible, against thy God. 7 =` :.. ._ ..cc.....n...| r"_n.l nnfnrn whnm l I I i He will judge the nations. "Holy, holy is the Lord Gnod Ailmighty. Fly 1ow.' Again :` These persons who come to - day, are like doves on their way to the dove-cot, because they fly for shelter. The albatross makes a. throne of the` tempest; the seagulls find_ their grand-' 4 est-frolic in; (the storm-their meriestf 'hourseems t.o be that in which the surf of the sea piles most high. Not so" with doves; at the first {blow of a` northeaster they fly to .the coop.: Eagle contends with eagle in rnldair,` and. vulture ghts` vulture on the! bosom of the carcass, but doves, at": the first dash of the bird of prey, speed? `for shelter from fiery eye, and iron`: beak, and loathsome talon. So to.` day, these souls come here for sheltern Everyone has a besetting sin; that sin! is always after you. Wherever you} go, sin goes: where you stay, sin? stays. You have watched the hawk .above- the barn-yard; it sails around _` and around over the brood of chickens " -around and around, now almost down. to the flock, then back again, until at last it drops and seizes its prey. There! isa hawk ready'to pounce on everyl dove, and that is the reason that these: doves come to-day ito thewindows--i they. wunt shelter in the grace of Godi . and in Christian associations. They say, `flf there is any {power in your, prayers", let me have them; i..there be` any virtue in good counselsfgive them! to me ;,if there be anything elevating in Christian associations, letme Ieel their influence. "Where thou dwell-I est, 1 will dwell. Thy people shall be. my` people, thy God my God. Open your doors, oh Church of God, and let them} comein "as doves to their win- -duowmn ' I'll `LJ|vIu, ubuunluu um... _.-... It is an offended God oetore whom thou comest. Thou deservest his wrath. ' He. scattered the one hundred and -eighty-five thosand of Seunacheribis host in o. mght. -in trouble. .What can you do [with- Qhrist is the only shelter. of the soul out him when sorrow,comes?`Perhaps at first you take Valerian to quiet your nerves, or alcohol (to revive your . spirits: but have you found anything in the medicines or physical stimulants sufficient? Perhaps in the excitement` at the money-market, or in the merry making of the club-room, you haTve sought relief. This world alias no balsam for a, wlounded soul, no shelter for a. bruised spirit. The dove, in.the time of the deluge, flew north, and it was all water; and south, and east, ; and west, and it. was all water, in which were tossed the carcasses of the dead world; e.nd'the first solid, thing the d:oIve's feet touched was the A. ' I IITI"LY1\I\IIY I\l: rl\Y1'r7c A -usu- LEARN HOW T0 ELY Low} The Rev. Dr. `Talmage Discourses " j Repentance, HE A.BH`0RS SIN . `Can't Blame themifor Toi- ling each othr about Mil- _burn s Heagrt and Nerve _\n`u ! TAKING THE} KINGDOM. "It is not :1 drop on your "hand or `cheek, that leaves you in doubt I whether it rains; or not, but the rush .ot ah unmistakable shower. It is i not the rmkimg: up of. the gleanings, but the tossimg up of the full sheaves 8: im.to the mow-as doves to their win.- V dojw,s.". There are all ages in this Eflook. `Some of them are young, and E the very first nae they makeofythleir - \v.i'ngs is to fly into the kingdom; some 3 `-4 the tempest, 3 t 3 J I O E! s of them are old, `and their wings have been torn with shot and ruffled with and they had almost ldroppd into the sea. _Some of them .have been mukinng a very crooked course. They dipped their wings in ,fou-ntain of_sin-they wandered near ithe. g'uyl.f of perdition; but they: saw , their daun:g'er-they changed their 1 course. They have eome, at last, "as ; doves to the windows. 7 home. Most of the wimged denizens have no home; now. they are at the north. and now at the south, as the- climate indicates. This year a nest one tree; n.ex.-t year a nest in another tree. The golden oriole remains but three months of the year'in Germany, and is then gone. The linnet of Nor- way crosses the ocean `to find rest away from the winter's blast. The heron. the goldnch, and the` gross- beak are m.ig raI:ory.l The cranes call each other together several days before going, choose their leader, ar- range `themselves in two lines, form- ing an angle, and are gone. But the pigeons, `alluded to in the text, sum- mer,`asn.d wiunter, and always, have a home in the dove-cot. And so Christ listhe home of.-those who come tohim. ;'He is a warm home; they rest. u-nder lthe feathers of the Almighty, * Christ tells us `that chickens find not a warmer place uunder the wi-ng of U the hen: than we in him. He is _a safe -home; our fortunes may go down ten `degrees bel-ow zero, .thc snows of i trouble may fall, the winds -of perse- i cution `may howl, the jackals of death may stalk ifO!`th-8.ll is well, `for "gr_e~at peace have they who trust in God." From this home we shall never_ be driven out. The sheriff may sell us out` of our earthly house, or the fires may bunnit down, or the winds carry it away..but that homeshall always be ours. A....:._. 1:11.... __,,1_ L_ J___ __V__,_____ 5 But whi-le .-1 great flock this doy ;-comxas to the dove-cot of mercy, the largest flock are going the other way. 1 It is u" very easy thing to tame :doves. {Go omt with ahamirul of corn to iteed the pigeons, and they will fly Eon yo-urr ushonlders and your hands, faso tumie are they. God has.fed those gwho are before me with "the finest `of the wheat, and yet you have flown Efr`om| himpall your lives `long. You -_ 7 -._n_- _._....,_ _. v--,~. Again: These souls to-day, gather- ing for membership, are like doves, because they come in (looks. The bnuzzaird`. with dripping beak, [lut~ tering up from the carriou, is alone. [You occasiouallyflook up zigainst the iwintry sky, and se a. solitary bird .win;g'L`ng past. Bust dov_es or pigeons are in floc-ks; by scores and hundreds I ` do they fly. , You hear the loud whit` :9!` their wings as they pass. So to-I day we see gi great flock colmi-rig in-to ' .the kinugd-om. It is not astrug-gIer,' trying to catch up with his regime-n.t * I I Eiit is a solid phalanx, 1 .__.,__:h, _. J 9 a;.g;.., -ma-:.*..=-=-..... 0 non an and htlneuwi cold hands Ind feel ; _ eve I ate {at _ me, bowel: were conmpa edtal 1 wt: ng very thin as ervmu. I cannot I ex- ` pan the cell 1 had vhex I com- ` nuced `evc':`Go1deIguI1aeedgg1L . 0 ` ~ K ...:....:c`: ee better with T 313% .`-"i . =o`3..`.`c`l 333:-' ".{i';'r'.`.:" z. - ghimtfomxe .1 ohm i `know rov C In friend: in 9: 1:." Y `THE BARBIE EXAMINER, THURSDAY JAN. have taken your clothes out of wardrom, and iyour bread out of his hands`. God's Spirit` will not al- ways strive." In. the morning, after a severe night, you have gone out and seen the birds `dead on the snow", so, after (awhile, God's mercy will cease, and the earth will be cayeredlwith the bodies at those who perished in the storm. That storm is coming. It will shiver the mast of pride-it xvvill drive into the white reefs` of death every cargo of sin. `The cedars of {the maocuntain will split in the hut- ricane, and- the islands shall be moved out of tlgr places,` and the continents shall be rent asunder, and the hemispheres shall whirl like a top. in the fury of that day. The mountains will be" blasted. and the" beasts, in affright, be pitchedofrom the cliffs in an avalanche of terror. Ilhe dead shall rush forth from the sepulchres to see what is the mat- ter, and all those who despise God GILT A T T 1 J'f\`DDTI)T `T 'I)I]`T)TQI J' \I\4Il .4 u-v..u-5 so thou art mounted on a swift steed; whose hoofs strike fire from thc pavement as he dashes past, and I you cry out, "How. far is-ivt to ruin?" I answer. Near-very near! I\L 1_I__;_ ____ T .__n 1%,.) -____..1.l L._2._._ -.l............. ...v._.-........ .. ..---..-.-a..- Now. do yom "suppose that I can stuml here and know that that day is conmilng witshovwt telling you about ilt? My last resting-p1ace.wi1l pro- bably be near yours. Xyxhat if, when =I get mp inn the resurrection day, I should see you rushing at me across the lots of the cemetery, and hear you cry. "Why did you not tell me of t-hirs? If it had not been for `your neglect. Is-lmuld have been on the way to glory." I cannot prepare` myself for such 0. consternation. guru," ,,,.. 4-11 L..- 1.-...- A3,... 3.4. :_ L- It's only natural that when a woman nds 8 remedy which cures her of nervousness and weakness, relieves her sins and aches,'puts color in her cheek In vitality in her whole 3 stemyshe should be anxious to let her su ering sisters know of its M... "nnnnh I-Inlm.-e. St. lamnc Scrnnt. ...J.;... ..v. guy... as uv.......v........... "Can you tell me how far it is to hell?" said a young man, as, on Sun- day, on horseback, he dashed past a good Christian deacon. At the next `turn in the road, th: horse threw the scoffing rider, and he was dead. He wmntcd to know how far it was to hell, and found out without the dea- cun's telling him. L`- LL-.. .._L ......\-...~L..J an n 9.--4:` For Over Fifty Yen-3 ` V Mna. \\'.N Son1'u1:.'c'. Svrmv has bean used by millions of mothers for their children when teething. If disturbed at ni;:2m:nd broken uf your l(,'Slhy asiuk child H1tTe.;'1'11:; and crying V\';m1~aiI1-2!` L'llEtiIl ." lL`Ull| send at ouce`:uId ;:et a l:0Lt!eu1' " Mrs. \\'.ns`.ow .~rS.1o:hint' Syrup" far children teeming". It wnl nclieve me your litt'e su'cx'u:` nnuxcdxutuiy. l)c;(-ml upon it, mother, there Is no m snake about it. It cures dizwrlman, re;.rulutescnc ~11. :mlch:1'n x laowzns. cures wind cum-, .=.u1`leI1.~' the ;;um=. reduce-' iuthnunzuiun, .-Inn vives tone aunt energy to the wnules_vsv.em. "Mrs. Vinslow .-' So )t|x.u;; Syrup for children Leenhinzr isplca.s1uc to the taste and is the prescription at` me on the males: uni `nest fcnule p!1ysix-i:1.u~s an`! nurses m the Umced Stu.:u.=. Price 25 UCIIN I. home S-:11 In all dru-.rg.~;ca' t 1rou<'.u:u: an world. Be sure and ask for Mrs. \_V'1n31uw 9 h n.mu,: Syrup. ' u.-~:u..-, .uuu-. --.-_, nasavvn . Oh that my Lord God `would bring you now to see your sin. and to fly from it; and your duty, and help` you to do _i-t; so that when the last great terror of earth shall spread its two =b1nck wings, and cluxtch with its 1 bloodytalons for thy soul, it cannot hurt thee, for that. thou art safe in `the warm dove-cot of a. :'~aviou1"s 3 mercy. ' u(1-___ 9,, I n,#.`_ !_'| A street (tar l_.lne 'l`Imt (fin-rlcs l'nu':-uzxer fur l\'MhIug'In llu-. (Tango Free State. Boma is the capital of the Congo Free State. It is fifty miles from the mouth of the river. Fifteen years ago Boma was nothing but a rocky hill at the base of which stretched a great marsh the prolific source of tropical` fevers. _A great change has been wrought in the. appearance and condi- tions of Boma. A number of long streets -have been built over the hill. This height has been dug down and levelled so that it is `no longer dif- ficult to reach it from the bank of the river. The marshes have been drained, beautiful little parks new flourish` and the Bolmai. of to-daygis a smiling, flou-rishing town. Piers ex- tend out into the river and vessels from Europe Lie up at these l}~on_struc. tures and discliurgetheir cargoes di- rectly `into the littlecars that are pulled `by steam engines along. the main street of Boma. ' The bride's veil had its origin in the old custom of performing the cere- mony under a square piece of cloth. held at each cornr, by tall men over H19 hridn_ and bridegroom during the marriage lorviooy ` V ' n ' L Tvhe peculiarity of this steam tzv-am-. way is "that it makes no charge to any one who desires to ride on it. The en- tire populace of Boma may travel be- tween the town and the river with- out paying a cent..],?us/sengesr trains however, run only `four times aday. The man on the street corner who de- sires to hail a train must sometimes find it a rather long time to wait. nu 1 LI -._-- -- .. --~~--- -r-g ---_ -~ ..-.--. Thmngh the passenger. service is so infrequent the trains are `running about all the time; for`Boma -is a very busy place and Royal avenue through which `the, tramway runs is lined with stores. The cars carry goods from the steamers to the shops of Royal avenue or palm oil and other native products down to the wharves. At times, how- ever, when several days have elapsed after the arrival of a steamer, there ` may be no freightage business, but the tramway is as busy as "ever, for then big loads of dirt are hauled irom one part of Royal avenue to another in the still uneompletetlwork of lev- elling the town. ' - -""'Come in! Coe Id! Eternal glory shalt thou w-Inn. .....\. v..- .......... _....,I....... ...,v_ SHALL PERISH. ORIGIN OF BRIDE':%`- VEIL. GI vvuvnu - nun. nun...` ..- -..-".1-- ......., suiiering Mrs. Hannah Holmes, St. James_Street, St. John, N.B..,relates her experience with this remedy as follows :-" For some years I have been troubled with uttering of the heart and dizziness, accompanied by a smothering feeling which prevented me from resting. M appetite was poor and I was much run own and debilitated. (I Chang I nos:-tau-I ueinzr MiIhu|rn' Heart CHEAP CAR Rivas. ILIFE IN *BL11AKLLA1BRADDB, Thrilling Picture of I-Iver-Present. Misery- Almon Naked Children and llnnsry lion--l)lrt, Misery, Poverty Seen on livery Iland-'l`Ine Deep. Sea nllsalon Is a Great llelp. The conditions of the "livyeres," or permanent residents on the Labrador coast, is every year 8. cause of anxiety to the Golomal Government, becausein the event of the failure of the cod- fishery relief has to he provided for them; the regton producing nothing. and there be1ng' no stores or depots * where food can be procured, while an ice barner. shuts it off from the out- side world for)` half the year. Almost every year a steamer has to be sent along the coast, its hold:_fi1led w_ith' stores, from wh_1ch the most needy are supplxed, and it\1a a task calling for the most careful attention and judg- ment thoroughly to investigate these `cases and apportion the allowances properly. 'l'uL-nunlnn In a. r\nI'I:I'|:IIIln nf 1`)lIl`.ml HOW THE FIS_I-IE}?!-EN LIVE THERE ALL THE YEAR ROUND. Labrador is a peninsula of 120,000 to the i p: vycs 1;. I square miles, an area equal British isles, while itspopulation con- sists of but 5,000 souls, of whom about 3,500 are white and 1,500 Iazsquimauxl Labrador forms part of the main-; land for Canada, its "southern limit; being the Strait of Belle Isle, while its northern :boundary is the Hudson' Strait. But as it is frequented only by the Newfoundland people it has been under the jurisdiction of that colony [or nearly ninety years. The land seems accurst; it IS bare of green- ery and living things ; a desolate. black wilderness of forbidding rocks ` and stunted forest growth, as if it had been thrown up in some past age by a volcanic eruption and the pre- ` mature cooling caused innumerable cracks in the crust; the coast is seam- ed with hundreds of harbors. and stud- ded with islands by the thousands.'! These latter have been chosen, wher-` ever suitable, as defences behind which to locate ! .. ..n.n.- .-. mu... ... viqrricvrvi ..--_...._ ..._...-...-..._.-._, , the shelter thus afforded being of in- esumable value when the wintry gales blow and the relentless ice-pack I {sweeps along the shore, destroying in its Nth. But this doubles the 4 danger of navigating the region. ` 'l`I...._... um- ..-..... A...` I-..-.._l.......l .'_....`l \..--..a..- V- ...--.D..-....a ...... _..a.u_- There -are over one hundred fixed ` settlements rom_ Battle to Nam," each having a resident population" of five to twentyfive families. The pen- gle are termed "liveres (liveheres) to distinguish them irom the mass of the` Newfoundland shermen, who only- frequent_ the coast during the sum-' mer fishing season and are termed "floaters." it is doubtful if the world has the counterpart, of this annual fishery migration. In June eachvyear the inhabitants of `the east- ern eoast of Newfoundland to the number of 25,000 people - men, women and children-start for Labrador to engage in the codfishery. They load their schooners with their household goods. provisions and salt for `fish cur- ing, `and make their way to the her- bors where they intend. to fish, and there they remain until September or October, when they return to their homes. - During this period the "llvyere" en- joys comparative comfort, for he can rely with certainty on enough food to keep body and soul together. It is! wheirthe "floaters" start for home that his misery begins. He `is al- ways a sherman, but of the poorest order. He takes service with some well-to-do "Iloater, who provides him with. a. fishing outfit. boat, hooks and lines, and his catch he exchanges for food andrziiment at prices tliiit almost equal those of Klondike. For his fish he receives only about $2 a quintal oil 112 pounds, while for` third-rate flourhe pays $8 a barrel, sour molas- ses 60 cents a gallon and musty. tea 60 cents a pound. These "form his: staple articles of diet, together with I [Li}eLiver Pi11s.| I much down and aeuuuateu. "Since I started using Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills, the smothering feeling has gone, my heart beat is now regular, the uttering has disappeared, and I have been wonderfully built up through the tonic : effect of the pills. I now feel stronger and 3 better than for many years, and cannot say too much in praise of the remedy which restored my long lost health." n Vryunnncndueuy uugousiinn __jj;#4- - - Carier s 17' Must Bea? Signature of I-|n\r A LITITLE sm ILEMENT, --I4.A_. LL.__ ..e_._,x_,I 1....-_.._ -4 See Pu-Shnullo Wrapper Below. Genuine` , .. , ma anew nzuanv " ron WEAK Nanvous woman. . m nmnnr. i ran nnzziussg ran B|ll|l8IE88._ son mun uvan. ran cousnmwn. rem smow mu. m macoumxlou .3111! Ilolilml unlurunn. cod, herring and shell fish. ' MEAT IN ANY FORM, butter, milk, cheese, and such like he never sees from the cradle to the grave. Nor does he know what money -means; he never handlesacoin and all his transactions are conducted by the principle of barter, a quintai of fish forming the standard of value. As regards clothing the "livyere and his family cocntnve to get along with per- haps less than any other civilized` "beings, and that, too, in the face of` !a. thermometer, that for eight months in the year never rises above zero. I | mp- A'.-_.LL.._ _....L`I.. _ _ . _ . .. LL.` _._....... s... v..\.. JV..- _-.-_ -...-... _.......- _--- l The further north one goes the more {appalling becomes the OOI.l(1l.Ll0Il of the `coast-folk, -and if Dante could have !imagined an inferno of ice the circum- 'stzinces here existing would have af-, 'forded him all the requisite material for a thrilling picture of ever-present misery. Pitched among the rocks in little harbors were the rude homes of` the "livyeres." 'In many places the! fronts of the structures were upheld by posts, while the rear rested on a convenient-. ledge, and ingress and egress were by means of ladders. Timbers securely stepped in heaps of great rocks were tightly wedged against the houses to prevent their be- ing overthrown by the gales, while anon the roofs wouldibe lashed down `with heavy ropes,,which were to pre- {vent some boisterous gust from up- -lifting the thatch: Troops of almost `naked children gambolled about and ?Bl'.8.l`0d in amaze at the stranger who `landed for a closer inspection of the place, and hordes of hungry dogs snif- fed at his heels; ready to sample his calves at the slightest provocation. Dirt, filth, misery, poverty-these were stamped across the tace of every settle- ment we visited. -uj . HAMPERED. Ida never Lalks slang. Then_tlgat's it. I w"ondeAr,ed why it v was she omd never make herself un- V dueratood. .1 . UNDEBTAKER Barrie ' 1% Strand -...... \r\.vIur\runQ-cu `(I144-Aa.na`rL\Iul| _who works along the shore in his re- -venue cruiser has powers as aM'agie- trate and decides the disputes which are always cropping up among the thousands of fishermen located there, V but for the balance of the year there is no recognized authority. There is not a. road on the whole coast, nor i1 bridge, nor a. public work of any kind. For the eight months of winter there is no mail, except a few letters, which are forwarded by way of Que- bec, along the north ahore of the River St. Lawrencce, couriers taking them from point to point, but rarely ever proceeding beyond Battle Ear- bor. _`During this period the livycres travel about by means of dogs and sledges, but their only Journeys are in quest of game. which is obtainable in the form of rabbits, bears and birds. nu.--` __ 12.14. __ ,__ no: . ....v -v.... u. ---aw...-, -vu-an u-uu nunuu There is little or no dishonesty iamong them, because they have so lit- _worse than it isnow. , tle. to steal, andithey all become re- duced to the same- plan of misery be- cause if one has :1 pound of flour it is divided amting his most needy neighbors. The pitiless severity of` winter bears most harshly upon. the younger people, the children especially being susceptible to consumption and other diseasesinduced by their herd- ing together and their wretched food. Until five years ago the condition of things in this respect was very much AI, . '6. E. SMITH. The coast has no civil administra- 'tion; there are" no laws, no police, no Aoftxcials whatever. During the sum- mer months _-A_..__- -.--____- I .~ V..--a -u-u us. an urvno About that time the English people were aroused to a` sense of the misery lendured by the thousands of New- foundland fiher folk during their so- journ to Labrador, and a. branch _of the Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen was formed on this bleak. coast. This mission was originally established to work among the North Sea fishermen, ,and when its welhorganized Dhilan- zthropy made itself evident. on Lgibradorit was an incalculable bene- I 1 . ' wu years. So pleased is he at haying found in. Doan s Kidney Pills 9. care for his ail- ments, which he had begun to think were incurable, that he wrote the following statement of his case so that others simi- larly alicted may prot by his experience: I have been afflicted with kidney trouble for about ten years and have tried several remedies but never received any real benet until I started "taking Doan s` Kidney Pills`. My back used to constantly ache and my urine was high colored and milky looking at times. Since I have nished the third box of Donn s Kidney Pills'I, am happy to state that I am not bothered with` backache at all and my urine is clear as crystal. I feel condent that these pills are the best kidney specic In the country. COLORS FOR AUBURN HAIR. The `girl whose hair is of any shade that justifies its being termed red should not, it is said, wear pink, red, or bright yellow under any circum- stances, as these colors accentuate the red tones in her hair and present an ` unbecoming contrast. On. the other hand, the auburn haired girl can in~ dulge to her heart's content in all the golden brown shades that bring out the ruddy gold tints. She may also wear light and dark shades of blue and green, dark purple, gray, white, and a bluish east of lavender. Ah. said the sympathetic man, I. see you .ha'.'e'o9ntracted acold. No, answered the man who strives to be accurate. even amid suffering. Ihave expanded it. "'1`.I;i_I3-V(:'IST01!IS . COLLECTOR. Orders by telegraph or telephone promptly attended to Cotns and Caskets of` all kinds kept in stock Robes and Crape, and all Funeral Requisites furnished D o DOLMAGE, Managr, Vscnmud Show Room and {Work Shop, Collier St. Barrie. LARGER, NOT SMALLER. METHODS \VITH MEAT. _Ham and '1`ongue;--When getting low, and you wish still to make a pre- sentable dish, slice thinly, then roll to look neat, and lay on a dish al- ternately with thick slices of hard- boiled egg and a morsel of parsley between each roll. "V'7eal Loaf.--Mix one and a halt" pounds of minced veal and` half a pound of salt pork. also minced. Mix this with two large cups of stale bread crumbs, and season with pep- per and salt. Last, stir in two beat- en eggs _and mould into a loaf, Put into a pan and bake in the oven. bast- ing it often with melted butter und hot water and dipping the liquid up over it. Serve cold. Calfls Foot Jelly.-Calf's foot j-.`H.V is a good luncheon or supper dish. Take well-cleaned calf's feet, put one quart of water to four calf's feet and boil until reduced to one quart; then strain, and when cold take off the top. In taking out the jelly avoid the settlings. put half a pound of sugar, the juice of two lemons, and clarify this with the whites ofv two eggs; boil all to- gether a few moments and strain it through a cloth. To the quart A hand-glass, too, is a. necessity, it one would make sure that one`s back hair is as it should be; and 9. pretty kind is made with a. folding-handle to stand on the table. Everything on the dressing-table should be immaculate in its cleanliness. Mr. P. M. Burk, who is 9. w_o1l-known resident of Glen Miller, Hastings Co., 0nt., was aiicted with kidney tnouble for` ten years. Rn nlmmn in he 11.1`. hnvinn Fnnnrl in Hungry Henry/-Ycs. kind lady, I used to make lots of money before the money powers crushed my trade. L'u..l` .`I n.:.. tn. AL_- -._ .. \r- --vnu us I V Hungry Hrm'y-l was A counterfeit- or, mum. THE HANDS. The hardest, roughest hands may be made soft and white in a month or two with the proper care. `Rain water is considered best for washing them, but a little borax added to hard water will counteract its effects and make. it just as good. If you will make a strong solution of horax and water and keep it in a bottle on a shell near the washstand, you will find it more convenient than using it In pow- dered form. Warm water cleanses the hands more readily than cold, but they should be rinsed afterward in cold water. Wash them gently until` thoroughly clean, using a. good brush to clean the nails. There is no surcr mark of a dainty woman than well- kept nails, and their care should be considered as important as washing the face or combing the hair.` P-are them carefully to keep` them in the proper shape, and smooth the edges with powdered pumice-stone. `A I:u'mer's wife made In-r husband thrarw away his pipe and smoke hams instead. THE numzssme '1`ABLI\ A `clothes brush should have a place among the necessary impedimentu of the toilet. -_ . -.. .,...........-..'...... Dust, of course, is not for one ino- ment to be tolerated there, and arti- 'cles of glass and silver should be kept as bright as it is possible `for polish- ing to make them. rnL:._ :. __,4. 1:51! "I; '9 n -_ _.. _.. _ . . . ...v..... ; Ehia is not difficult if a chaxnois be kept near at hand, and used daily" to wipe everything. so that it is kept quite dry. ....v..\.J rv-vunoa vnuauuu I Ku_1;l` `Lady--0h. the What did you work nt 1 Y` . . _ _ _... I'T_ __ A I It will work `while you sleep, without a gripe or pain, curing Constipation, Biliousness, Sick Head- ache and Dyspepsia, and ` make you feel better in; . l the mormng. 4 yuuo UI. uuu uinwgc, LIUVV gnu Lu, auu It Luuuo _ - V Thousandsoftestimonialsfrom! thosexxho have beenpermanent-.' West I cured by the 1139 of Burdock Bxood Bitters speak of its unrail- lng efcaeyin Dysepsla, Buious. ` ness, Sick Headae 9, Liver Com`- WINDOW OF THE ARK. T - laint, Eczema`, Erylgslpolasg Sero- so. the soul introuble goes out in one u1a,Sores,Uleers, ollu,Plmles, direction, and finds nothing enbeten. Hives. Ringworms, and all I: out! man to_reet upon; and in another an-. humors. `action, and every Whither, but there If you W3-nt`t 159 mud CU in no rest for the dove save the ark. Wad; use 0111 B-_3oB l Again; These. souls. like doves, y