4 that her mind was cultured and her "I supposed you would find that out for yourself in due time," he replied, with a half smile that nettled her, for she was decidedly uneasy over the discovery she had maae.. She was by no means blind to the distracting beauty o¢ Leonora, and it had not taken her five minutes to find out the girl. "Yes, dear, 1 would go. You have no one but me, and I mean to do the best 1| can for your happiness. If Lady Lancaster is unreasonable about this matter, I shall leave her," said Mrs. West, decidedly. "But, oh, aunt, you will be sorry that 1 came to youâ€"sorry that poor papa left me on your hands," anxiously. "I shall regret nothing, dear, if I can only do my duty by you," was the reassuring reply that brought a look of relief into Leonora‘s beautiful "She would have liked to have me do so," said Mrs. West, indignantly. "She was very arrogant and presuming. She seems to be quite angry because poor Dick‘s daughter is as protty and acâ€" complished as the young ladies in a higher rank of life." "And oh! Aunt West, she was so proud and scornful and overbearing that 1 was vgod at her; and I‘m afraid that 1 "was just a little bit saucy to her. What will she do, do you think? Will she send me away from Lancaster Park?" "She will have to send me too if she does!" cried Mrs. West. "Oh, Aunt West, would you really go*" Would you give up the home of sixteen years for my sake?" cried "Why, that she was grown up inâ€" stead of a child, as I thought, andâ€" andâ€"that she was prettyâ€"ratherâ€" and accomplished beyond her station," wrathfully said Lady Lancaster. And when she bad regained the privacy of her own room she sunk down exhausted upon her bed to await the housekeeper‘s arrival. Leonora smiled, and her aunt con tinued : "I gave warning that I would leave her in a month. If it were not for Lord Lancaster, 1 would go toâ€"day; but he has always been so kind that I shall stay a few weeks longer for his sake. Can you endure it that much longer, my child?" "Take me back to my room, then, and tell West to come at onceâ€"at once, do you hear?" * Leonora had already gone co Mrs West‘s room and related hber ad venture. "Oh, yes," said Leonora, "I will try to be very good that long. And, Aunt West, when we leave here we are going back to New York. You need not shake your head so solemnly. I am a willful child, and I mean to have my own way." Lady Lancaster was purple with rage and dismay. She had sallied upon the field ready to drive the inâ€" truder from her grounds, and she, Lady Lancaster, the great rich lady, had been vanquished by the sharp little tongue of a lowâ€"born girl who had so innocent and candid an air that she did not at this moment quite realize that the girl herself knew the enormity of the offense she had committed. bring Mrs. West to me." maun‘t 1 better take you back to your room first? Perhaps some one may come in here. And you have pushed your wig awry, and the powder is all off your face, my lady," said Elise, demurely; and her mistress groaned : Lord Lancaster received a message from his aunt that evening. She wished to see him privately for ten minutes. "I hope she isn‘t going to tease me about Lady Adela again," he said to himself, and he looked rather sullen when he went to her. He was exâ€" ceed@gly impatient of the rule she tried to exercise over him. "What was it you wished me to tell you?" he inquired coldly. Elise, full of silent, demure laughter, waited for her mistress to speak. It was several minutes before she rallied from her fit of rage enough to speak clearly. When she did, she said sharply: He was honestly bewildered by the suddenness of the inquiry. He did not think of connecting Leonora West with it. bring Mrs. West "Clive, why didn‘t you tell me about that girl?" she began, dashing into the subject without preamble. "I do not know what you are talking about, Aunt Lydia," he answered. "I did, Aunt Lydia. You asked me if I had brought Leonora West to the housekeeper, and I told you that I had doue so. Then you asked me if she were troublesome, and I told you that she was. Do you not remember?" "Yes, but you should have told me more about her. It is very strange that you kept it all to yourself," she more about her. It is very strange that you kept it all to yourself," she said, regarding him suspiciously, and nowise pleased when she saw the deep flush that reddened his face. She gave him a keen glance to see if he wastrying to deceive her; but his fair, handsome face expressed only the most honest surprise. "I mean that West girlâ€"the housekeeper‘s niece," she said. "Why didn‘t you tell me about her when you came home?" He reflected a moment and then answered : Put+ CHAPTER XXX.â€"(Cont‘d.) The Lady of Lancaster ; m CHAPTER XXXI into Ww cttides: c Or, Leonora West‘s Love. i chair, Elise, and ‘ "Very well," she said. "You shall ‘not say I was impatient with you. \Lady Adela will stay with us a month | yet. You shall have the whole of that \time to make up your mind, and then |you must give me your answer. I can ‘not believe that you are fool enough | to let it be an unfavorable one." "Thank you," he replied, with a bow. "You need not thank me for noâ€" ‘thing," sharply. "Of course I know |you will have more sense than to reâ€" fuse twenty thousand a year, unless," sneering, "you mean to become a suitor for the hand of that West creature." Stung to retaliation, he answered: ‘ "Miss West can boast a suitor more |eligible than myself in point of that |\‘filthy luere‘ you hold so dear." | accomplishments of a high order. |\ When she reflected that her nephew ‘had crossed the ocean in this dangerâ€" |ous society, she was frightened for her plans concerning him. What it they should "gang aglee?" | "Did you have any selfish motives ‘in keeping the fact to yourself so long?" she inquired, sneeringly. | "I do not understand you," he reâ€" plied, coldly. ! "Ah! so you are interested in her? ‘I thought as much," declared Lady lLancaster, violently. "This, then, is the secret of your indifference to Lady Adela. You have conceived a preferâ€" ence for this lowâ€"born, impertinent girl. But beware, sir, how you trifle with me. Remember my conditions." Lady Lancaster reflected for a moâ€" ment, with her head on one side, like some brooding bird of evil omen. _ The angry flash of his eyes did not escape her keen gaze. She had spoken with a deliberate purpose. LR z> asked Flushing to the roots of his hair, Lancaster neither affirmed nor denied her accusations. He sat gazing at her in proud silence. Answer me one thing," she stormed. "Do you intend to marry Lady Adela?" "I have not made up my mind yet," he answered, coldly. 4 "Do you ever expect to do so?" she snecred. "You have been acquainted with Lady Adela long enough, I think, to tell whether you are pleased with her or not." "It is scarcely a week," he said. "Do you want more _ time?" she "Whom?" "Lieutenant De Vere." "No"" she cried. "Yes," he answered. "Why should you look so surprised? He was our compagnon du voyage. He admired Miss West very much, and he confided to me his intention of winning her, if possible for his wife." _ "His family will not allow him to throw himself away on that girl," she cried. I What if Lancaster, too, had been bewitched by that fair, piquant face and luring smile? A sudden thought came to her. After all, perhaps, it were best for her plans that De Vere should have his way. Who could tell what folly might get into Lancaster‘s head? She looked at him thoughtfully. "Perhaps I was hasty," she said. "But I had a shock toâ€"day when I first saw the girl, andâ€"she was very imâ€" pertinent to me. Is it your wish, Clive, that I should put no obstacle in "Yes," he replied. "How much?" she inquired. "The utmost limit your liberality will allow me." She started and gave him a keen glance. "He is quite independent of his famâ€" ily, and he will not be slow to avail himself of the advantage." "Happy mortal! You would like to exchange places with him, no doubt?" she sneered. "I know Miss West herself; no one who knows her would believe her to be an adventuress. She is a pure, simple, and trueâ€"hearted maiden," he answered, steadily. _ "I could wish, certainly, that I were as fortunate as my friend," he reâ€" plied. o § j $ _ She glared at him a moment, and then asked, curiously: i "You do not? Yet you must have known that I would be surprised. You knew I expected a child. You must have supposed that I would not care to have such a girlâ€"an adventuress, perhapsâ€"or, may be, a low concert or saloon singerâ€"who can tell?â€"here at Lancaster Park." "Lady Lancaster, I do not think any one but yourself would dare say such things of Miss West," he said, hotly. "Dare? Why not? What do you know to the contrary?" sneered the evil old woman. "She will if she is worldly wise," slowly. "But I can not tell. I do not know Miss Wesi well enough to decide what she would do in a given case." "Is the girl in love with De Vere? Pshaw! what would love have to do with it? I mean, will she accept her wealthy suitor?" 3 "Of course she will accept him. She is sharp enough, and such a girl as she isâ€"poor and lowly bornâ€"would not be slow to jump as such a chance," said the dowager, coarsely. "If I had known that Lieutenant De \;’e‘re was so silly, I should not have ifvited him here. I would have had nothing to do with him. But he will be here toâ€"night." "He is here now. He went to his dressingâ€"room an hour ago," Lancasâ€" ter said, coolly. "I think he will exâ€" press a desire for a private interview with you this evening. It is rather embarassing to him to have to ask your permission to woo his ladyâ€"love in the housekeeper‘s rooms, yet such is his avowed intention. If Iâ€"" he paused and bit his lip to keep back the impatient avowal. "You would bring that creature into the drawingâ€"room to receive his adâ€" dresses?" she hissed. "Yes," he replied. "Then you will not do so while I am the mistress of Lancaster. If he chooses to have such low tastes, it is not for me to indulge him in them. If he must woo the housekeeper‘s niece, he may woo her in her proper place," cried Lady Lancaster, indignant at his defense of his friend‘s misplaced admiration, and secretly jealous of the beautiful girl‘s influence. "If youâ€"what? Go on, my lordâ€" let me hear what wonderful thought was prefaced by that ‘if‘" o "Only thisâ€"if I were master in my own house, instead of a guest, it should be otherwise. My _ friend should not be insulted." Her keen eyes detected the shadow on his face, and she interpreted it aright. She was frightened at the danâ€" ger that had been so near her, unâ€" known and unsuspected all this while. "I must remove the temptation from him as soon as I can," she thought anxiously. He bowed silently. A swift, sharp, cruel pang of jealousy tore through his heart as he did so. "To see her another‘sâ€" Oh, it would be harder than death!" he said to himself, and yet there was no hope for him. Why should he stand in another‘s light? HF CAN SEE THROUGH WALLS the way of Lieutenant De Vere‘s de signs THE DEVICE. AT PRESENT REâ€" SEMBLES A CAMERA. The device in its present state outwardly resembles a camera, Sigâ€" mor Marconi said. When placed against a wall or floor it makes the solid wood or metal transparentâ€" in this respect it resembles the Xâ€" ray. Gugliclmo Marconi, mventor of wireless, sailed recently for Liverâ€" pool, whence he will travel through France to Italy. He returns to his native country at the outset of Italy‘s participation in the war at the personal request of King Vicâ€" tor Emmanuel. Just as he sailed he told of having almost perfected an invention by which a person may see through a solid wall. "It is not finished," exclaimed the inventor. ‘"Persons can be seen in the next room if they are close enough to the wall, but the image is blurred if they are a little distance away.‘" ‘‘Michael,"" said he, "drive Ella to the spring and back, so she can get me some water without muddyâ€" herself." ; u.‘iur after Michael used to fill the pitcher on rainy mornings without even waiting to be .w f Marconi saw tests of the new and powerful _ wireless apparatus at Sayville, L.I., in connection with the Marconi Company‘s _ patent suit. There was an experiment with the wireless telephone, but the weather was not favorable and nothing startling was accomplishâ€" ed. Some of the enthusiasts about the wireless telephone believed that with proper conditions it â€" would have been possible to converse with the tower at Nauen, Germany. _â€"‘"But the visible telephone â€" where persons talking Can See Each Other â€"is coming fuccessfully, although I myself am not working on it,"‘ observed the inventor. h Marconi will stop long enough in England to see his family. It is expected that he will take charge of the Italian wireless service. He is a commissioned officer of the Italian navy, but expects to remain ashore most of the war. s One very rainy morning the pitâ€" cher was not in its usual place, and he asked the waitress why it was missing. |__ c k t un y Marconi delayed the sailing of the Italian liner Stampalia, which left for Naples. The wait was to enable the inventor to finish arâ€" rangements for shipping wireless and other supplies to Italy. 7 The Stampalia was closely guardâ€" ed at her pier at the foot of West Thirtyâ€"fourth street lest some newly made enemy of Italy try to harm her. There were more than ninety Italian reservists in the first cabin. In the other classes there were upâ€" ward of 100 reservists, many in uniform. Ten minutes later, with much trampling of hoofs and champing of bits, the carriage drew up at the door, with Michael on the box in his rubber coat and hat cover. "‘Come, Ella,‘" said Mr. Clafiin, ‘"‘get your pitcher‘‘ ; and taking her by the arm, he walked down the front steps and helped her into the Strangled With Red Tape. The late Mr. H. B. Claflin, who was one of the great merchants of the last generation, lived for many years at Kings Bridge, one of the suburbs of New York. It wias his whim to have each morning before breakfast a drink of cold water fresh from a spring near the house. "Why, Mr. Claflin,‘‘ she said, it was raining so hard and is so muddy that I was afraid if I went after the water I should be too soiled to wait on the table. I asked Michael to get it for me, but he said it was his business to look after the horses and carriages, not to run errands."‘ The Wizard Marconi Invents Maâ€" chine Which Makes Solid Subâ€" stances Penetrable by Eye. _ "Oh!" said Mr. Clafliin, thoughtâ€" fully. ‘"Perhaps he is right, Ella. Please tell him I want the Vicâ€" BENSON‘S More than half a is behind every package of Century of Quality 9# (To be continued.) ocer in Canada fl. BENSON‘S. Starch Always order by the name in order to get what you want Practically every grocer in Canada BENSON‘S For Old Potatoes.â€"Put a _ *"alfâ€" cup of milk or even a tablespoonful, if more cannot be spared, into the potato kettle this time of year and it will prevent the boiled potatoes from turning black. Watch them carefully that they do not boil over if you put in milk. j Bpice Pic.â€"One cup thick sour milk or cream, one cup sugar, one cup raisins (seeded), yolks of two eggs, cinnamon and cloves to taste, pinch of salt. Bake as you would pumpkin pie. When set add merâ€" ingue of two whites and brown. This is delicious. Soft Yeast.â€"In morning soak two cakes yeast. Scald one pint of flour. When flour is sufficiently cool and yeast cakes sufficiently softâ€"stir together. Set in a warm place till noon.. At noon cook 12 large potatoes in plenty of water, drain, save water, mash potatoes very fine, then add potato water. Potatoes can be put in a threeâ€"galâ€" lon crock and when cool add sponge to them. It will be ready for use by next day. It should be kept in the cellar. Corn Mush.â€"Make a porridge of the meal, cooking it for some time as corn meal requires slow and steady cooking. Add a little more salt. Beat up an egg or two, acâ€" cording to the amount you have and stir into the porridge. Push to the back of the stove. Have ready a hot well greased pancake griddle. From a tablespoon, drop the corn meal porridge onto the griddle in spoonfuls. Let brown nicely beâ€" fore turning over. From three to five minutes is required. Turn it over and push the griddle to the back of the stove where it can fry slowly. With butter and syrup, it makes a splendid supper dish. Devil‘s Food _ With _ Whipped Cream.â€"Into a double boiler or in a pail which fits into the top of a teakettle, put oneâ€"half cup sweet milk, oneâ€"half cup sugar, one wellâ€" beaten egg, and two squares choâ€" colate broken into small pieces. Stir and let this cook until it is thick and smooth, stirring it all the while. When it has thickened, remove from the fire, and let cool. In a mixing bowl cream oneâ€"half cup sugar with oneâ€"quarter cup butter, add two well beaten eggs, oneâ€"half cup milk, one teaspoon soda dissolved in a very little hot water, and scant one and threeâ€" quarters cups flour. Flavor with vanilla. Lastly add the chocolate mixture, stir all well together and bake for about threeâ€"quarters of an hour in a moderate oven. Bake in two layers and put together with whipped cream filling. Heloful Hints. Iron Rust.â€"A quick and easy way to remove iron rust from clothes is to put a teaspoon of cream of tartar on the spot, tie up the cloth around it into a little bag and boil the garment. Handkerchiet Dresser _ Searf.â€" Take three ladies‘ hemstritc“lled handkerchiefs, thoss with an emâ€" broidered design inside of the hem are prettiest. Use the same size and pattern. Make into a strip with a row of lace insertion beâ€" tween each. Put a row of the inâ€" sertion all @wround the edge and then a lace to match the insertion. This is very pretty when washed, not expensive and mil{ launderâ€" ed. Use a strip of cambric or saâ€" teen of any preferred color underâ€" Curtain Shade Help.â€"If your roller curtains are too wide for the window iY is not necessary to out off the roller, but you can nall two emall blocks of wood on either eide of the window, and on these fasten curtain brackets, and the curtain rod quiorbam. After the lace curâ€" tain is hung, the extra width of the shade is not noticeable. | If absoâ€" lutely necessary out off roller, cut off at the solid end. This is for the benefit of those who move freâ€" quently and have trouble ftting A very chicâ€"looking toque is this skull cap of straw by Cora Marsan of Paris. Shadow checked taffeta runs through vertical bands of straw, and surmounting the brim are two horse hair brushes set in ornate cups. About the Household Skull Cap with Horse Hair Brushesâ€"Latest from Paris. Useful Recipes. <10 ARCHIVEsS TORONTO When making tomato bisque use the water in which rice has been boiled instead of milk. It will not curdle and is much cheaper to use than milk, besides being fully as Stretching _ Curtain. â€" Not all housewives have curtain stretchers and the following substitute, which is nearly as good, may prove of value. After washing your lace curtains in the usual way, select a nice sunny place, on the outside of your house. Wash off carefully. Have a box of small tinned tacks (as they will not rust) and a clean hammer. Let the edge of the clapâ€" board be your guide. Take each scallop, and stretch well. By putâ€" ting them up early in the morning, do two pairs at a time and take down before sundown. No ironing is necessary and they look like new. Cold water soothes the pain of any sudden inflammation of the eye ; hot.â€"water will help a dull pain and a weak solution of boric acid is always good for the eye. _ _ To take all of the color out of a faded cotton garment, boil it in cream of tartar water, and it will be white. With salt boiled codfish, serve parsnips ; with boiled salt mackerel corn bread or fried _ cornmeal mush. 8 7 SBhoes will last much longer if occasionally rubbed with vaseline when they are new. hok If you boil hooks and eyes in strong soda water before sewing them on garments, it will prevent their iron molding in the wash. Put pumpâ€"bows on pumps with snap fastenersâ€"it is much easier than sewing them on. k i Potatoes will be more mealy if a cloth is put over the saucepan beâ€" fore putting on the lid. . #kk" When frying meat or fish sprinkle a little salt over the bottom of the pan before putting in the fat. This prevents any spattering on the wall or rust on the stove. Blackberries can be preserved with a smaller quantity of sugar than other fruit. good From 4,000 to 7,000 men form a brigade of infantry ; with cavalry the number is from 1,000 to 2,000. More than 800,000 bushels of Tasmanian apples have been shipâ€" ped to Great Britain in one year. If possible have a outside door in your kitchen ; it will make it so much cooler in summer, and if it has a light in it you will have a glimpse of the outside world and feel happier. _ m k" Aran Suet and lard are best kept in tin vessels. Balt _ pork, . however, should be kept in glazed earthenâ€" ware. For the Housekeeper,. igs@e "A OH Jugarlocle W * 1915 The first man carries a stop watch and a gun, the second a iun only. As the fowl pass the first blind the timer shoots in order to frighten the birds into full speed, and starts his watch. Asthe ducks pass a secâ€" ond blind the man there fires a shot, and the timer stops his watch. The usual length of the course is a quarter of a mile, @lithough a mile ‘"‘track‘‘ is sometimes uaes Birds with short, square witLgs: like the kingbird, quail, and ruffed grouse, are sprinters ; those with a wide stretch of wing are ‘"distance runners."‘ â€" Birds o{the finst class attain their sudden bursts of speed through their very rapid wing stroke ; birds of the second class have sustained powers of flight, but get under way more slowly. Even such large birds as cranes, ewans, pelicans, and geese can fly ata.speedofmorodwn.hundmd feet a second. The speed of waterfowl has often been measured with great accuracy. Two men take positions on a duck pass a measured distance apart. ‘"Look here, you‘re the fellow who took my overcoat from the club the other day." "All a misâ€" take, of course. Besides, I left a much better one.‘" "I know you didâ€"but it was too small.‘" All Birds Are Sprinters and Take Wing Like a Bullet. Falcons are said to be the most rapid flyers; some varieties fly two hundred feet a second, according to the best estimate. Waterfowl, too, have great pOWâ€" ers of flight. The canvasback duck covers from 130 to 160 feet a second. The bluewinged teal and the greenâ€"winged teal, the bluebill and the redheads are only a little alow-‘ er. Mallards, pintails, wood ducks, black ducks, and others can easily, fly faster than a mile a min‘ut;e.l All the gallinaceous fowl are sprinters. They take wing like a bullet; their wings make a loud whirring sound. The quail or the ruffed grouse can gain ful}l momenâ€" tum within sixty feet of rising ; the wings beat from five to seven times a second. The quail covers from fortyâ€"five to fifty feet the first secâ€" ond away from the gun ; his wings flash like a rapidly revolving wheel. The wings of the ruffed grouse roar until the sound can be heard two hundred yards away. These large birds make only a couple of wing strokes a second when first taking to flight, but when under full momentum the strokes become more rapid. The principle is the same as that which applies to an oarsman in starting his boat : the quicker the craft is moving, the less resistance there is to the oar and the faster is the stroke, A swan cannot reach maximum speed in less than 150 yards after springing from the water; a goose requires nearly one hundred yards, and a duck, about 50 yards. he The jacksnipe has a very peculiar flight. When he first springs, if he endeavors to travel across the wind it gets under his long, curved wings, unbalances him, and forces him to tack about in order to reâ€" gain his balance. When the jackâ€" snipe goes straight. upwind, or flies at full speed, the zigzag moveâ€" ment is not noticeable. The wings of a jacksnipe are very Jlong and strong compared with the weight of his body, and he simply lacks "balâ€" Occupiers of houses in London are lianle to a penalty of twenty shillings a day if they allow a chimâ€" ney to catch fire. Heavy fowl, like swans and Canâ€" ada geese, have long wings and deliberate stroke; they must inâ€" variably rise against the wind. As the goose rises from the water he seems to be both paddling and flapâ€" ping, and he keeps that up for twenty or thirty yards before he fairly launches into the air; the swan needs fifty yards to "get his wings under him.‘"‘ _ Flamingos, cranes, and herons rise against the wind also, but their long legs enâ€" able them to spring ten feet into the air at one bound. A Spring Poem. ‘T‘was in the gloomy Autumn wher I walked about the Zoo, The creatures had the plues, exâ€" cept the leaping kangaroo. ‘"‘How can you be so cheerfal at this dismal time?" I cried, "It‘s always Spring with ine, my friend,""‘ the kangaroo replied. SPOHN MEDICAL CO 2â€"lb. and 5â€"lb. Sealed Cartons. 10, 20, 50 and 100â€"lb. Cloth Bags, "Canada‘s favorite CANADA SUGAR REFINING Co., SPEED INX FLIGHT. F i ou want sugar that is absoâ€" I!:Jtely pure“,t and as clean as when it left the refinery, you can de_gend on getting it in * Nt Sure cure and positive preventive, no matter how horses at any age are infected or "exposed." Liquid, given on the tongue, acts on the Blood and Glands, expels the poisonous germs from the body. Cures Distemper in Dogs and Sheep, and Cholera in Poultry. Largest selling live stock remedy Cures La Grippe among human beings and is a fine kidney remedy. Cut this out. Keep it. Show it to your druggist, whdo (“vlll get it for you. Free Booklet, "Distemper, Causes an mrac ** * DISTEMPER and Cures." UUCm SCIORDâ€"ALL WHOLEBALE DRUGGISTS. .. Chemists and Bacteriologists, Goshen, Ind., U.S.A. L C each other. a A farm of 100 ncres_-og‘Bwk l?u;l: DOWN BY THE SOUNI1Y3 SEA ham, York County, N.5, at public auction under and bid in for $220. pretences. D. J. Maclean, of Halifax, was presented with a gold pin by officers and men of the 25th Battalion in appreciation of the hospitality exâ€" tended by him to them. The largest cargo ever taken from Yarmouth, N.S., to Boston, went out on the Prince George reâ€" cently. It was valued at $51,561,â€" 50, and consisted principally of fish. Robert Colpitts, an 8â€"yearâ€"old boy of Moneton, N.B., was acciden â€" tally shot by his 13â€"yearâ€"old brother Fred, while the latter was showing a revolver to a companion. While swinging in a hammock on the roof of her home at St. John, N.B., Miss Belle Tufts fell through a skylight, a distance of about 12 feet, sustaining bruises about the head and body. At Digbhy, N.S., Miss Emma Mcâ€" Guire, an attractive young woman A 23, started out on a fishing trip and did not return. After an allâ€" night search she was found at a neighbor‘s house. The Newfoundland spring seal fishery is fpz;ctwl.lly a total ful.ilure,‘ owners of ships mdmg to lose a quarter of a million dollars in this year‘s venture. The total output is 46,796 seals, old and young. The net value is $93,094.33, of which oneâ€"third, $31,031.44 went to the crews, leaving $62,062.89 for the outhitters. * BITS OF NEWS FROM THE MARITIME PROVINCES. Items of Inte Lapped B3 Oliver T. Evans, of St. John, hase been convicted of working as a deâ€" tective in Halifax without a license, and remanded on charges of false Lapped By Waves of the Atlantic. Mr. and Mrs. W. 8. Brown, o€ St. John, N.B., both over 70 years of age, died within a few hours of Fred Baudet holds the record for West Prince, P.E.I., in having a litter of four healthy lambs from one sheep. The mother has for the last three years successfuily reared two and three lambs each spring. Police Sergt. Thos. Caples, of St. John, N.B., was on duty when he saw he had forgotten his badge. He went home to get it and found his wife suddenly and severely ill. Ten minutes later she died in his arms. The Government of Nova Sceotig~~~~ has appointed a commission to conâ€" sider this question: Whather the present system for the registration of titles to land should be changed in regard to the City of Halifax, and if so in what respect, or what other system should be adopted. At St. John, N.B., instructions have been received from the Fedâ€" eral authorities that all ferryboats and _ passenger â€"carrying . motor boats must be furnished with life rafts of sufficient capacity to carry their maximum number of passenâ€" William Ramsey and Frank Mcâ€" Donald, miners in No. 16 colliery, New Waterford, C.B., were inâ€" swnrfl killed by a fall of coal which buried them completely. Both men were aged about forty, and marâ€" ried, leaving families. _ * and CATARRKHAL FPEVER. From the After Effects of Pueu monia Followed by Diptheria Frequently the after effects of i\ ness are more serious than the or ginal trouble, This was the cas with Mrs. James B. Moir, Mutan Sask. Mrs. Moir says: *Bon while we were still livi ï¬'u?ï¬ooï¬s‘ I was taken do a severe attack of pneumoni I had sufficiently recovered to around, but had not been able r out when 1 was attacked wi iphtheria. In my weakened st it took a terrible hold on me, meither my friends nor neighbo thought I would recover, 1 di however, pull through, but was physical wreck, The muscles of 1 throat were paralyzed, so that ev a cup of water would flow b through my nostrils unless th were held closed,. M almost inaudible, and badly effected that 1 4 aotlng wlloose my eyesi only walk with assist: luoied as though 1 helpless cripple. Medic but did not help me. 4 A COMPLETE WRECK Fince then 1 Tiken the Pil and have alwa fitted by them For the afte build up the : appetite and i health and «t» medicine deale sents a box or from The Dr t« time hurry ©u 14 tbrous to t surroundit A simpl liquid, replac ers as they ar« absorb the ke wick does, ar thoroughly so Include sticks wit) laying you tain all t} of kerosen ger. The oesn t d Avoid There is ; Pure | 14 kee in & M Asting «Nseas ine can equa Pills. They « h sm a T n€ th the 1 fir 11 th« n« 1 HE BRICK h Dairy Ice Cream is no other desi City Dairy lce C QOur Service dealer to su it in your t1 Tea or Using herosenm ream 11 24 W For Sate Py M We wia 111 rick vOld ftx n