CHRISTIANE THE COREANS ONE PRESBYTERIAN MISSION MINIS- TERS TO A MILLION PEOPLE. "Jesus Doctrine Book" is What the Bible is Called--The Coreans Endure Hardships For Bible Study Conventions. ; On the nor'-east coast of Corea are the ports of Seng Chin and Wonsan, and between them the large provincial capital, Ham Hung. With these three places as stations, the Canadian Presbyterian Mission endeavors to minister to 'the spiritual needs of a million Coreans The zeal among Corean Christians is not limited to the paid workers, for the rank and file sharé in it, as was shown last spring, at the Song Chin workers' convention, when they , canvassed every Hbuse in the port to invite A Aven a 1 the people to service. Their zeal is also seen in the volunteer preaching on Sunday in places near at hand, as in Wonsan, where the Joeal church is the centre of eight smaller congre- gat'ons. Every Sunday there is preaching in these groups by men from the parent church, forty of whom volunteered for the service Two of these outside placés of worship are twelve miles distant, yet that does not form a barrier to the missionary zeal of these un- salaried preachers. The same spirit is shown in the formation of missionary societies for the support of evangelists. An interesting case was the recent organization of a woman's missionary society in the Ham Hung station, which has spread to the country groups as well, At the beginning of 1908, a Corean came to the missionary" house in Wonsan, asking for the "Jesus doctrine books." Twe months lat' er, he came for more books, Nothing more was scen of him until December when he and. another man arrived in Wonsan, saying that a number of people in their vitlage, seventy-five miles away in the moyntains, had decided to believe, and urging the missionary to come and teach them. This he. promised to do, and meantime sent them a native preacher and colporteur, reports, but before the missionary could visit them, two men came again urging a speedy visit, saying many more were likely to believe He found thirty believers meeting regularly for worship and studying the New Testament After due examination seventeen of them, hav- ing been attending worship for months, and showing knowledge of the Scriptures and grasp of the Truth, were enrolled as cate chumens, Ten years ago a missionary and his native helper went to the country town 6f Mun. Chun, fifteen miles from Wonsan, A young man in the neighboring village heard of their arrival, and having studied Confucianism and Budd- hism, he Went to confound the Western bar barian. Instead of succeeding, he took with Wim a copy of Luke's gospel This young man gradually came to knowledge, and in spite of ithe bitter opposition of his family and numerous relatives in the same vitlage, de- clured himself a Christian. His wife followed him into the church, but they stood alone in their village. and in lowliness of spirit * pa- tiently endured persecution throughout . the years. A group of believers was gathered in the near-by town, and a neat church built: others in neighboring villages were led to Shrist, but Shele wu village remained obdur- fruits of their toil, 'and Save deitun ta see the ? 2 ' ndurance and prayers: eighteen young men of the family and village were enrolled as catechumen declaring be Tist, fore all men their faith in C The Corean Christians' desire to: st ® 18 shown in- their Bibl pdkfions, and in their enduring hardships for Bible study conventions. Some youn to Attend the one held in Song CoS -- one hundred and forty miles, crossing twelve high mountains over difficult roads. The zea! they displayed, and the delight with which they studied Were an inspiration to all. The native Christians' generosity and self-sacri- fice are also shown in their support of schoote and inthe erection of church buildings, The fine new churches are almost entirely due to native work and contributions, The Song Chin church, to seat 350 people, was built at a ccbst of $475 (the equivalent of $4,750 in A ada), The church in Ham Hung, with Seating capacity for 1,000, will cost apart om vdlunteer labor, $2,000, of $20,000 Can- "adian money. Some of the 1am Hung school girls gladly secured moncy to help the work. men, by selling one-half of their hair, which Was a great sacrifice, for in no place is the Seripture, "if a woman have long hair it is a glory to her," truer than in Corea. : Brutalifies of the Natives. Rev. R. A, Haslam and Dr. G. B. Archer paid a visit to the native state of Mandi, in the Punjab, North India, and their report shows, among other things, revolting cruelties: "The insurrection of Mandi City was at its height 'when we arrived. All along the route we had met all classes on their way to the state capital to air their 'grievances. These sturdy, simple, straightforward hillmen should make strong Christians if won to Christ. We marclied in the early morning a stage a day. In the afternoon or evening we todk up our position on some shop verandah in a promin: ent place and held quiet talks, and have rarely fafitetiet audiences. Some had heard a little gre, but as a Brahman said, 'When you come here once in two years, how can be expected to lay hold of and livé by hate fundamental truths? Well might he udy the memorizing large "In 'Mindi City was a gathering estimated at from seven to sixteen thousand people. A dufbat had been held the day before and the Commissioner was expected, so that we had large and representative audiences. As one heard of the treatment accorded to prisoners by the common people--although the insurg- cots on the whe practised restraint--one was glad that India was not at the mercy of & pon-Christian rule. Pundits, in the Ra- aby service, who had been put in chains were taken out in the boiling sun at n to dig; holes with spade and shovel a fill thegh "up again, until, in the foam of Siam they were offered a concoction 4 ed with red pepper to que: igh-caste Brahmans thro shar They brought good] 2k Sr ------------------ state for some days without treatment. ,Such were some of the punishments accorded to East Indians. The cause of the people seems to be just, but their methods of redress will probably, call upon the leader of the revolting party the government's severe reprimand." ° The ,Age of Chivalry. J. W. Foley. Would you believe me if I told That half a block from me Lives Captain Kidd, a pirate bold, Who uded to sail the sea: While Robin Hood and William Tell Live right across the way; Indeed, I know them very well, Ang see them every day. The Captain leads as fierce a band As ever you did spy, Who do thei wicked deeds on land, Because their sea is dry; I've seen them kidnap as a prize, And for a ramson hold, A maiden with the bluest eyes And yellow hair, like gold. Swift came' the news to Robin Hood, Who Joud his trumpet blew, And gathered from the near-by wood His brave and gallant crew; With pikes and staffs, and off they tore With many shouts and cries, To rescue and bring back once more The .maiden with blue eyes. And, oh, such battles Lhave seen Upon the green sward there, Fought Robin Hood and Kidd between As only heroes dare! And I have seen men speared by scores All lying thick around, More than are killea in niodern wars, All dead upon the ground. And I have watched until I knew The maid was won away From Kidd and from his pirate crew, For Hood had gained the day; And after she was safe from harm, The rescue done, and well, I've seen Hood walk off-arm in arm With Kidd and William Tell! For William Tell is ten years old And Robin Hood thirteen, And Captain Kidd, the pirate bold, Is somewhere in between; If you think days of chivalry, * Of cutlass and doubloon, Are dead, I wish you'd watch for me, Some summer afternoon! -------------- Romance of Inscriptions. In the churchyard of the old village of Crayford, England, is a curious gravestone, which visitors regard with Jiterest. It marks the burying place of an old parish clerk, and is a relic of the days when the history of a man's life was engraved on his tombstone, for all passers-by to read: Here lieth the Body of Peter Isnell (30 years Clerk of this Parish.) He lived respected as a pious and a mirth- ful man and died on his way to Church to assist at a Wedding on the 21st day of March, 1811. Aged 70 years. The inhabitants Crayord have raised this stone to his ceerful n emory, and as a tribute to his long and fait: ful 'services. The Life of this Clerk was just threescore and ten, ® Nearly half of which time he had sung out Amen, In his Youth he was married like other young men, But his wife died one day, so he chaunted Amen. d A second he took---she departed--what then? He married and buried a third with Amen. Thus his joys and his sorrows were Treble-- but then His Voice was deep Bass as he Amen. On the Horn he could blow as well as most men, L So his Horn was exalted in blowing Amen. But he lost all his Wind after threescore and ten. of sung out The Joke That Returned. A joke that did good, but unexpected, ser- vice was played years ago by a Montreal newspaperman on his father, a minister in Chicago. The scribe, while home on a visit, found his father's purse, containing a single one-dollar bill. The lone bill brought an ins spiration, and hé wrcte on the margin the words: "The last of many thousands spent on wine and women." Not long after his father called him into his study. The minister's ménne? was very impressive. "See this, my boy," he said, handing him the bill with the inscription, "study it carefully. . This is a sad warning given to us all by some unfortunate wretch who fell lower and lower until he reached the end of his fortune. God only knows if after spending that final dollar he did not end His fatal career by a self-inflicted death. Take this to heart." At first the joker was inclited to tell the truth about the inscription, but as the clergy- man proceeded in a voice of great emotion, he realized that the explanation would be difficult to make. He lét the matter rest, with his father in the possession of a beautiful case in point. The result was that the minis- ter got up in his church the next Sunday with the dollar bill in hand, and preached on this text one of the most powerful sermons he ever. delivered. In fact so great was the suc- cess of it, that every now and then he makes the famous dollar bill the subject of an exhor- tation to young men, Hear the Cat's Explanation. You ask the reason, little friends, Why cats don't wash their faces, Before they eat, as children do, In all good Christian places. Well, years ago, a famous cat, The pangs of hunger feeling, Hid chanced to catch a fine young mouse, Who said, as he ceased squealing, .° "All genteel folks their faces wash Before they think of eating!" And, 'wishing to be thoyght well-bred, Puss heeded his entreating. But when she raised her paw to wash, Chance for escape affording, : The sly young mouse then said good-bye, Without respect to wording. > A feline coyncil met that day, ~ And passed, in solemn meeting; A law any cat? To wash till ating. eR CANADIANS ROMANCES. Experiences and Good Fortune of Quebec Lady. Standard. Interwoven with the history of ex-Empress Charlotte is the story of a Canadian woman, so remarkable and romantic that it seems like} something taken from fiction. She was a na-} tive of the village of 'Philipsburg in Missis- quoi County, at the Canadian end of Lake Champlain. Her . father, named Joy, was a retired sea-faring man of small means and a large family, whose principal if not oaly in- heritance was intellectual brightness, physical charm and stout hearts. The daughter in question received practically all her education at the village school, ere she left home to make her way in the world. She began what may be called her public career as a rider in a western circus; the early days of the Ameri- can Civil War found her in Washington, where she met an Austrian Prince with the peculiar name of Slam-Slam. He was an honorary colonel of a Federal regiment of volunteers and saw some service. Acquaint- ance with the Austrian party led her to Mexico a few years later, and there she be- came the companion of Empress Charlotte, accompanying her to Europe when the poor woman went in search of succor for her hus- band's waning cause. Of course, there is a love affiir in the story, and, as might have been guessed from the first; she married Prince Slim-Slam and lived for a time in his Austrian castle. During fhose days of magnificence she did not forget her old mother in the simple Can- adian home, and at the Philipsburg post office was regularly received a package bearing the crest of the house of Slam-Slam, and contain- ing a substantial remittance for the mother of the Princess. But the Franco-Prussian war of 1870-71 brought to a close that splen- did period of the Canadian girl's life. Prince Slam-Slam joined the German Army as a colonel of cavalry, and in that whirlwind of death by which the German mounted force de- cided the battle of Gravelotte, he lost his life. Canadian woman seems to have heen born into fortusg for she made a second marriage with a wealthy English gentleman, and the former Austrian Princess returned to "her British allegignce > About teri years ago she visited the United States for the express purpose of presenting colors to the regiments which her first hus- band had commanded. The newspapers de- voted pages to accounts of her career, and they claimed her as an United Stateser, ac- cording to their usual way. . At Washington she was the guest of the President, and the ceremony of presenting the colors was at- tended by many prominent public men. sister married a second took for in her family obscure One Chicago millionaire, and a husband a gentleman high was a Chicago physician and the eldest, in- heriting his father's seafaring instincts, be- came a pilot on Lake Champlain, living at Rouse's Point. A Household in Future Years. . "Don't you think, Minerva," said her Husband, anxiously, as he tied the kitchen apron firmly around his waist, "don't you think that, we are carrying this. idea of co-operation in domestic matters to extremes? I have been washing dishes for a week now, and between times I have been doing a little Scripture reading, and I can- not find in the Bible any authority for men's doing kitchen work, but women are frequently spoken of in this connection: 'She looketh well to the ways of her household! 'She riseth while it is yet night, and giveth meat to her household These quotations, Minerva, would seem to warrant the conclusion that household duties should be assigned to the woman" "My dear," replied his wife, "if you will pur- sue your studies further-you will find in IL Kings, 21: 13, these words: 'T will wipe Jefu- salem as a man wipeth a dish, wiping it, and turning it upside down ." This proves that you are nobly doing the work designed for you ly Providence. When you are through be sure to wash the towels clean, shake them znd hang themr straight on the rack. Death, you know, lurks in the dishcloth. I am now going out to attend a meeting of the Society for the Extine- tion of the Microbe by Electricity." After the Baloon,- What? The Lighthouse, Philadelphia, carried on by Church people, is a splendid institution, worthy of the closest study by social workers, and especially by those who ask, "In Place of the Saloon, What?" The Lighthous# is the greatést competitor of the saloons in the Kensington district, "and will eventually drive them out, or at least very Seriously curtdil their power and influence. The five members of the Gospel Quartette (the organist was included) were all saloon frequenters, one of them an inveterate gambler. Their lives were transformed years ago, and they became deep- ly interested in the work of the Lighthouse. They organized themselves to sing Gospel songs as a means of making the Wednesday and Sunday cveming meetings more attractive, besides rendering good service at meetings in churches, -. The Lighthouse is keeping the men and boys from the saloons because it is offering them superior attractions. In fact, the sa- loons are adopting Lighthouse methods to attract customers! Odd School Customs in England. The headmaster of Manchester Grammar School, in a speech, has referred to a tustom at Rugby School which forbids a boy of less than three years' standing to turn wp trous-| ets, and which insists onhis doing so after] that period. The cistom is only a minor instance of quaint practices at all the<great public schools, maintained with religious care, though in many cases their origin is obscure or unknown. The Shrove Tuesday tossing of the pancake at Westminster School, with its ensuing scramble for, the largest fragment, which gains for its: possessor a guinea from the dean, is perhaps the best known among. them. A curious custom at Marlborough requires every boy to bring to school with him a cu- shion, technically termed a "kish" to be his inseparable companion in school time, and in addition to the ordinary functions of cushion to carry bocks from ome form room| : . THE DAILY le Then followed years of widowhood, but this Nor were the careers of other members of the consular | service of the United States. One brother 4ithe crowd, each little girl is sheltered by a SATURDAY, JANUARY 22 1910. boy in the school or one afflicted with a stammer. r The new boy in the school house at Rugby is early called upon to fike his part in "house singing." At this function, held in one of the dormitories, he has 'to render a song to the satisfaction of his audience, the penalty being the swallowing of a mouthful of soapy water Another ancient school custom is the parade | of the Christ's Hospital bluecoat boys before | the Lord Mayor at the Mansion House on St. Matthew's Day, when "Grecians," who corre- spond to "sixth formers" elsewhere, receive a Buinea each, and the rank and file of the school are presented with new shillings. Changing the Calendar. The Council of the Russian Empire and the Duma are comisidering the adoption of the Gregorian Calendar. The faet that this cal- endar was introduced by a Pope of Rome has prevented countries "belonging to the Greek Communion, of which Russia is the chief (abandoning the Julian system. The latter, bas- ed on the belief that the tropical year is exactly 36514 days long, is now thirteen days in arrear, the 11 min. 10 sec. by which the tro- | pical year falls short of 3654 days 'having accumulated to that extent since the time of | Julius Caesar. The Gregorian correction drops | three of the Julian leap years in 400 years, | { and when first introduced, in 1582, ten days | were omitted fram October to level things up, for a new start. For nearly two centuries England also re- fused to recognize the reform coming from| Rome, but in 1752 it was adopted here by! Parliament, by which time another day's srror! had accumulated, and eleven days had to be! dropped. Russia, if it makes the change, will | have to throw away thirteen days, and it is} unlikely this can be done without great in- | convenience. The loss of eleven -days in| England in 1752 caused serious riots | The Good Hearts of Women. { The aim of the Good Cheer Society New | York's latest, is to brighten the sick, chiefly those convalescent, with flowers, magazines and companionship. William E. Platt has of-| fered for its use an estate on Staten Island, known as Hampton Court, with a fine club- house in the midst of eighty acres of park land; stables with eight or ten herses, and a smaller house, to be special "country 'head quarters" of the club. The club plans make it a retreat for convalescents. Already! the horses and carriages have been put to good use in giving long drives to invalids Two automobile firms have offered the use of two machines one day a week. The club has/ received hundreds of letters from people who desire a bit of its "good cheer," and doctors and ministers are finding it plenty of "cases." St. Mark is the patron of the society, which is spreading its branches wide and far. In Brooklyn a club is already in existence and branches are being formed in Chicago, Bos- ton, Indianapolis and other cities. | to Searching For The Chnist-Child. A legend amongst the Russian peasantry is that an old woman, named Baboushka, was at work in her home one day when the wise men from the East passed on their way to find the Christ-Child. They invited her to go| with them, but she excubed herself, saying that sit would follow on by and by, when her work was done. When she had completed it,' however, the three men had passed out of! sight, and the "star" shone no more in the] darkened heavens. So she never saw the! Child, but she is living, and searching for| Him still. For His sake she takes care of all His children, and the Russian children believe it is she who fills the stockings and dresses! the Christmas trees! She fancies that in each] little one whom she feeds and cares for she! may find the Christ-Child Whom she neglected years ago! And so she does, for inasmuch as] she aids His little ones she does it unto Him,! as He has proclaimed. i During Ramazan the great business of the! Mohammedan world is religion. The little | square before the Hissar Jami, the great mos- que at Smyrna, is crowded with mid-day wor- | shippers, none of whom have eaten or drunk | or touched cigarette or narghile, since sunrise. | All are preparing for prayer, washing faces, | hands and feet in the fountains, waiting silent; {ly in long rows, hundreds at a time, to take their turn on the crowded floor of the mosque. | Mohammedanism is the most democratic of {teligions. Rich and poor, Kurdish porter and {| Turkish pasha, mingle without a touch of dis-| { tinction in the common act of worship, unaid- | ed by a single visible symbol of faith. The] Sultan's interdict has been removed and the | mosques in the cities, save gy the very sa-|} cred mosque of Eyub, the pr phet"s "beloved disciple)" or buildings in. fanatical quartees, {have been again thrown cpen to Lhristian | | sightseers, who, if they are discreet, are safe | from a worse rebuke than a stare or a frown. Did Not Know" His Flock. 'Dundee Advertiser, - ' A newly appointed Scottish minister on his first Sunday of office had reason to complain of the poorness of the collection. "Mon," re-| plied one of the elders, "they are close--vera| close. But," confidentially, "the auld meenis- ter he put three or four saxpence into the' plate hissel', just to gie them a start. Of} course he took the saxpences awa' with him | afterwards." The new minister tried the Same plan, but the next Sunday, hé again had a! dismal failure. The total collection was not! only small but he was grieved to find that his own sixpences were missing. "Ye may be | a better preacher than the auld meenister," | exclaimed the elder, "but if ye had half the] knowledge o' the world, an' o' yer ain flock in particular, ye'd ha' done what he did an' glued the sixpences to the plate" i The Celestial New Year. According to the Chinese calendar, the nsw year begins om 25th January and is wildly, celebrated. Processions and festivals of the! carnival sort are held in the principal cities.) The Chinese are extremely fond of fireworks! and sre adepts in the manufacture.' Many) |kinds are used in New Year celebrations. The noisy kinds are patticularly popular, so that! the processions move along in 2 hullabaloo of' popping noises. At Canton, one curious fea-| fure is the bearing aloft on long poles of girls) gacbed to represent idols. Borne high above; big umbrella carried on a still longer pole. They look like pretty flowers rising above 2 meadow. ¢ or is proposed to hold a "Loria Doone ah famony Valle of oc at: Most Zealous of Worshippers. | { and it 21d me much good if You Have Rheumtism Let Me Send "You a 50 Cent Box of My Remedy Free. 1 Will Mail FREE To Anyone Suf- fering From Rheumatism, Gout, Lumoago, Sciatica (Who Will Enclose This Advertisement) A 50 Cent Box of my Rheumatism Remedy Free. poars of © intro. . Deformity in Chyoalc My Remedy has actually cured men and women seventy and eig a some ere so decor \t that they could not even dress themselv: hs duce this great remedy intend to give fifty thousand 50 cent boxes ay. and every suflering reader of this paper is courteously invited to write for one. Ne. money is asked for this 50 cent box neither now nor later, and if altel wa I more is wanted I will furnish it to sufferers at a low cost. ~~ 1 found this Junedy X an fortunate chance while an invalid from rheumatism and since it cured me, It a8 heen a blessing to thousands of other persons. Don't be sceptical, remember pr . first 50 cent box is absolutely free. This is an internal remedy which i See the cause of the trouble, and when the cause of Theumatism in demi have JOHR A. SMITH, hity on, fear of deformities. Rheumatism in time will affect the. hea ' with this merciless afliction. Address enclosing this adv, bly Laing pide ont Windsor -- -- -- a ---------- From Arctic to Tropics ==> in Ten Minutes No oil heater has 2 higher efficiens cy or greater heating power than tlie PERFECTION Oil Heater (Equipped with Smokeless Device) With it you can go from the cold of the Arctic to the warmth of the Tropics in 10 minutes, The new Automatic Smokeless Device prevents smoking. 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This constant wearing out and expelling of the dead matter and the replacing of it with new matter, atom Ly atom, goes on day and night, until in about 7 years a complete change has been effected, Thus every man and woman has an entirely different body in every particle of It from what he or she had 7 years before It sometimes happens, however, from a variety of causes, that the blood becomes congested in certain portions of the body. This means that the hlood vess eis in these parts become weakened, and the clreus mn in that section of the body becomes sluggish stagnant The consequence is that the dead mat n that part of the body is only partially carried and that but little of the new, viial matter is roduced ther: to build up and strengthen the tissues and nerves This condi male dis re is a constant e part of tie body, ar ter | ariably exists In all cases of fe- dead matter retained in the cir culation, wi hould have been expelled, causes ir- ritation and inlammation of the fellicate memberane, and oppresses the nerve centres, This condifion is the cause of the grievous physical and mental suffering which accom ; obta fon Inv 8. -T} » that the first thing to be dong is to get rid of the flead matter which is be- ing held in thas circulation If this dead matter Is allowed to remain there a species of blood poisoni will result and nature will endeavor to get rid of it by forming ulcers ete, The above explanation will also show why ANGE LILY is so successful in curing this gondition It is a local treatmert, and is applied direct to the affected organs Ita ¢ tive clements are absorbed into the congested tissue, and from the very start the dead matter begins to be discharged. A feeling of immense h mental and physical, accompanics It, and the Improvement is constant This feature of the expelling of the dead matter ls always gresent or less extent, and in some cares it is so marked.as to be amazing. ribed in the following letter is not exceptional: «1 am thankful to Mrs. °F. E. Currah, your Canadian representa- y health restored by your farful remedy I have suffered for 17 but not so bad until 3 years ago. Then I had & doctor, who told me | had vor, and could lve no more than a year. If I went through an operation 1 not live through it. year later I sent for him again, and he gave me up My husband then sent for another doctor, who performed an operation, octured with him 3 or 4 months, but became o> bad I ve no longer, and I began to long to dis, One day my husband came hom 1d drew a siip of paper to me with Mre Currah's ad- dress and told me a lady had advised him to write to her for a treatment that would cure me, [ sald it was too Jate, that 1 would die anyway. I could not Hft a teacup without hurting me. Then the first doctor told me | was worse than ever. husband sent for ORANGE LILY, and the third treatment brought awa hr. Others followed, until 7 tumors had been 'expelled, 3 large obes and 4 small ones. I know if it Lad not been for ORANGE LILY I world have died. for 1 could not live much longer. I would have thought ft cheap at one hundred dollars for a month's treatment, instead of one dollar. it is worth its weight in gold --MRES. GEO. LEWIS Hunisvilie, Ont The above letter is published with Mrs. Lewis' permission. All letters received are treated as being sacredly confidential, but occasionally some patient feels so grateful for being cured that she is willing to make the matter Known for the ben- efit and encouragement of her suffering sisters. ORANGE LILY is a positive, sci- entific remedy for all disorders of the female funetions. Ag explained above these troubles are of loeal origin, and require loenl treatment It is just as sensible to take medicine internally for females troubles xs it would be to take medicine internally for a bruise, a boll or an ulcerated tooth, In all these cases some dead patter is be- ing retained, ahd the Ture is effected again that I though { by employiig local methods for ex- ling. the dend matter. ORANGE ILY has antiseptic, soothing and ! healing properties, and also tones up and invigorates blood and 13 nerves. am WO ENxious that ever eS suffering woman may satisfy herself, without cost to her, that ORAN cure her, that I hereby make the following FREE TRIAL OFFER I will send, without charge, to every regder of this notice who suffers in any way from sny of the troubles peculiar to women, if ghe will sepd me her enough of the ORANGE LILY treatment to Jast her days In many cases this trinl treatment is all that is'mecessary io effect a compiets cure, and In every instance it will give very noticeable relief. If you are a sufferer, you owe it to yourself. to your family and to your friends to take advantage of thig offer apd got cuted in the privacy of your home without doctors' bills or expense of any kind. Address MARS. FRANCES E. CURRAH, Windsor, Ont. 7 yesselg LILY will ¥ We are Headquarters for PURE and Casting Alsminum x WRITE FOR PRICES. The Canada Metal Co., Ltd., Toronto, Can.