mf-awsp va, - ar .--~ --» _!»»v§_& . vigrx ,_ ` _ _ - V _ _;l_!»,t;_> _.lm ` ~ ` -"-`2,_-;_\`§-_f.,f¢‘j*§"/ff. -“"a"j » '-".`-,`~T¢'i'-';3;=tj§§§%;_'_».€£- 1, 5 -_ .A ?' ~ ~ “- ~_ ‘ sf »i` ,.~7,_ ‘1»` .=;;‘f¢=§>-."_-T; 1-*-‘;' } _ _-_ _ ,_ - -. f,__.__,._. ._i_, R r I It h. RHYXKBEXQX Lirxsnnune N. S, March 10th. 1900. llllissiis I)E.\isoi:x & Co., St. John. N. li, f I have been using your ‘ Perfect Bal-.ing Powder an .still continue to do so. It is a good article and it is not th iault ot' the powder if any cook is not successl`ul`with-it - Gi;N'|‘i.i~:.\1s.\°,-- _ I J ' \ ll ‘O _ d e Yours respectfully, 0 miss ina nAurn|ne.` §¥€\'3§§§§R'i§&»&§§§§' wanna llnd. ’ and Bug Makin. writes- thus: ilcient old materials such as flannel,cl0th, _ ___ _ __ ____ r__7_ ,_ __ _ UAA- __._._..._..-.__ _...___.. _ [` oun s o ctivit ll ° lr?) fl il ,(4 AT 'rr-3 E /l EE HIVE _ hilt' U Almost daily we are receiving additions ~to ‘ l' Al d ' - Wil oni stoc ._ rea y we have landed thiee cargoes _,ll iimde up of almost every size of dimension lumber ~ 4 in l-Ieinlock and Spruce. \,\\_‘- To 'rue euvens iN.TEREsTs (lil ii" if a We have made our season’s purchase. The quality is always first anjd uppermost--and we never ° ' ii /" -A ' `?; ¢:»,;44( ` of 10,111] of them in the Dominion. Among forget that there must be a combination of quality £1” -Q ¥_/ - "~. forward. PHONE 181. ' _ ll - 'wil '_The Bee Hive Lumber Yard. , A _ 90) _ .\ and price that will be appreciatfd by Bee dive “_ ;_ Patrons. lt will be impossible to enumerate addi- , _( i lumber hunters will iind at the Bee Hive a general Suppl y for every day usefulness. A _` _ii 'l he spring trade left our stock in a low state “Q Q tion after audition to our stock as it ai rives but 'Ii “ri before the opening of navigation but we fully expect to be up to the requirements of the trade from this J azncles Ba.1'ret1:-lil; \ /-`¢ Q*-"T wig.-Q -"*»‘ up/-` u~__>`-l»f.fa 6*- :-q, ;'\ --_.if ,ut _-..A,~l_-.f=:-`:i».i_-_ :~/Al _ ` info- il ll( @- resce_,i\\ ‘cycle-l ' ` T: ' ieaeneaeaenelee lligh in the estimation of the Wheeling Public Fair dealing--fair, firm prices a strenuous eifnrt for the best in con- struction have the present demand for the Crescent. 'lhere is no dis satisfaction among Crescent riders. 1900 Bevel Gear Chaneless $6000' ' 1900 Chain Models $35 .00, 45.00, 50, SEEDS ! SEEDS ? Imporiecl Seed Wheit, White Russian, Northwest, Red and White Fife, Clovers! Glovcrsl Timothy Seed, Vetches. Corn, Peas, etc. ` Farm Implcmentss.. Disc Harrows, Spring Tooth &1,ii_£*iifD» Pfquisitei- McKIN_LiEYiBROS Apl 3 eow _ Queen Street gras l » , f. .()ree.m` B tte . . _ _ ._ Z. R0B|NS ...._s'...:..;, .......... __ ARE _ 1 "dliEi|qRlEEl `i§§n§' - -.iron -I ....... Isn’t it time you painted that door Y°“ tmusht °f domg' '_ per buslx'cl..~.. ‘ _ llur Floor Palniterfecl ’ f &a ' yarns and discnrred _ underware stored away from which I could make a couple of fair sized rugs for the floor. I sent to Well & Richardson Co., Montreal, for two of their handsome rug designs. After they were received, I washed' my old materials and colored them with Dia- IIl0l1d Dyes tomatch the shades on the rug patterns. I hooked the two rugs, and they are so. handsome that all my friends admire them. The Diamond Dyes are, I think, the best and most reliable for 11°’-D9 dY0i1\E» -I certainly recommend them to all make mats and rugs." ---_._-@;._-_._ , Sabbath Obserance. _ l Dr. Barnado. from whose homes in London boys often come to Canada, has l8i»¢|Y Uidrésseda letter to the upwards other things which he saystg the boys living within our borders, “Do you all observe God’s day asyou should? It is the sacred observance of that day which in the opinion of many thoirg/hful observershas toavery large Byte I kept England and the English ilagin the g nd position which they occupy _to-day;-‘_ In this IDP-*$81* D¢ople often easily begirito miles from a place of worship, Never mind. so if you can possibly get tug. If you cannot go you can find time ferryour own room. Go there and take tlief Bible with you.” -_*_-;.__.___1 THIS WAS A MIRAGLE A Woman Known to be Dying Brought Back to Life. Diabetes Had Brought Mrs Allbiightlo the Brink of the Grate-Deathd Ex- pected Daily-Yet Dodd’s Kidney Pills Cured Her. Lrrrna arvEn,N.B.,May18-Never in the history of this districthas here§occurred such a atarling event, as the remarkable- almost miraculous recovery of Mrs.D.All- bright, after Diabetsf had bronght her so' low that life. seemed on the point of act- ually dying out. ' This event is certainly worthy of all the zreat importance attached to it, for it opened a new e`x`°a' in medical science It proved conclusively. and beyond contra- diction, that man possessesa means of conquering ,Diabeti-a disease which for- mally killed every person it attacked. Mrs.Allbright was cured by Dodd’s Kidney Pills. Hercase was the worst ever known in this district. She used to swell, and bloat to an enormous extent, and her aeeny never abated. ~ No sooner, however,had she begun to take Dodd’s Kidney Pills than a great changeset in.; The bloating ceased; grad- ually the pain left her; her sleep became L sound Q and unbroken; her appetite return- ed, and with itcame strength such as she had not known for years. Writing of her recovery she says: _“Before I thoroughly realized it, I was well again-well and strong, healthy and happy, although only a short time before, my friends were con- vinced I would notflive." This case is a fair example of the won- derful power of Dodd’s Kidney Pills over Diabets. It .is entirely _unnecessary :to state that these pills a1:e_the only known cure for thisdisease. That fact has been proved thousands of times, and is admit- ted by everybody. p _ ,I ._....__`g-_-_ I [Corrected'everyTueSd11 Beef(quarter)per,lb._. ,Becf(sma1l)per..lb...__..._._... __ Butte.r(fresh `Butter(tub)per lb..-_ . . . . ._ sssaesbbe asses, se* ,sssssss ¢¢¢¢o¢o¢¢ aes 2 O Cheese (per lb) Cabbage (perhead) ...... _ _ __ . Celery . . . . _ . . . . . _ . . . . . . . . . . . Eggs . . . . . . . _ ._ _ . . . . _ _ . . . . _ _ _ .__ Fowls per pair ............ . _ Flourper -cwt . . . _ . . . . . . . . . _ _ _ Oatmeal per cwt . . . . . . . . . . . . . Geese ........................ . _ iii ~§"°"1$§1ts " E. 215 eeseeee Potatoes . . . . . . . . . _ _A . . . . . . . _ _ Mutton per carcass 3 Parsley (per bimm) Onions per lb p Squash each... ..... -..._.~-.._._- Carrots (per bus) V Wild Geese *ii _ , _ re cum: I8 A. nav.. . (llilhlarials Pmitaily 0" ”"=”“‘j‘_‘2 MGE .DIAFIOND DYES - in Tliaianrllas ul All Mal Mrs. P. L. Stanhope, of Victoria, B. C. only, “ N. S I recently discovered that I had suf- at a _ N. S. Rifle Matches Will Bc knows tion."-Quesnel. ' usual. This _;W&y home. _Thou views of a the evil one uses inthe 20. “With joy from amounting badges, shots) with the new members (for amuinni- _ V ` blessedmcansot ' is done iam a smile at the Association end of a sermon; by a silly orlticlinsi on Juiy si-d, the church. dwr: by foolish gossip ea the 5¥8.f0W\_8' M!!! salva \i*’s.v”é-"It _ drift In country places some of you age." that the sower. in the days of our saviour. tion) man for old The Collis” use__o_f those the revolver to visitors as well as to are being madeto secure special railway fares for those attending the matches.-Halifax Chronicle. ' _-_-_| ` S. S. _I__lE_SSON. M- MAY 20. PaRAnLE or THE SGWER. Matt.13,1e,1sI23. GOLDEN TEXT. - The seed is the word of God.-Luke 11. LES-"' ON HELPS. ‘ match, house in the Capernaum. “By theseaside” -The Seaof Galilee; one of his favorite resorts for teaching. , 2. “Into a ship”-A fishing vessel, pushed a little from the shore, so that he could be heard. . i 3. “In parables”-Illustrative truth. “A sower”-Literally., the sower. 'No sight was more fwiu in Galilee. Some sower may haf`___ cattered his seed in the distance while Christ spoke. “Went forth"-“Th_e expression implies imported two `1. “Out of the house”--Out of his own * *wan "IN “ii in .si _.__,..'..,,, J 1.0 ..-'_ _ ~~ C. ‘D~. az =\s¢r._ Janes lived in a 'hamlet or village, as all- these farmers now do; that he did not sow near his own house or in the garden fen- ced or walled.”-Thomson. 4. “Wayside”-The edge of the paths that crossed the unfenced Palestine fields, - ber and that were used by horsemen and beasts of burden. “The towels”--“The pigeons and other birds that follow the sower reaped an immediate harvest."- Plumptle. “As in our own cornfields, a flock of bold, hungry' birds watch thef A' ' ' lu sower, and as soon as his backais turned V they are down with aswiftwinged swoop, it " Mt ~ and»away goes the exposed grain.”--Mc- _‘ ` * g`¢ Laren. ~ ~ i T 5. “Stony places”-Not gravely soil, but rock slightlycovered with soil. = ‘ ~ 7. “Among thorns”-Ground fro1_nwhi.cl1 { the' thorns or brambles or wild brier had '- been rooted out; such can be found about ; the edges of many fields nowadays; the, ground is socovered that grain could not l gl'OW. I Sprung up"-“In rich soils and hot valleys like Gennesaret the growth of weeds and V thorns is as rapid and luxuriant as that of good seed."-Farrar. Um 8. “Good ground"-“Through the care of the husbandmen."-Lange. “A hun- dredfold”-Not an extraordinary yield. “Herodotus mentions that two hundred- fold was a comm on on the plain of Baby- lon,and sometimes three; and Niebuhr mentions a species of maize that returns 5 ` ' » BAC K= A cgi-i If (you have Backache you have Ki .ney' Disease. If you neglect _ Backaghe it will develop into is only one kidney medicine but it cures Backache every time- - vi¢w¢-;,.-»~ 1- _-__--_¢,s»g.-f ~ . ~ 7,/ .»' - _/',.-»"' "_",-,. _I _-V/_`M,4-:Z3 ‘.1 n_.»-___-ff _ -- 1; ___, ._. _..--' .VW Q ~' _.f-1’ _ __,¢_;,.~_1'_;` '___,»-I‘_q_,,,v_r._ ,¢¢" _ ll’s lil- Plan _‘Sailing Will Tim _#lo -~ ~DnHMhUt i‘ Boot and Shoe Axmnnnnmn £1 rai€“£iSia,EiinrI_’SIcKm3‘ 1 V _*OF _T___ Q:-5 iii filth will __ _ as..