n> TW o_O -- A ------ (ONE-WAY SECOND -CLASS) From stations in Ontario to cer- In points in Alberta sh Coluinbia California Montana ! Ogggon Washington Arizona 1daho, ete, Dally Until April 15th 'REDUCED SETTLERS FARES (ONE-WAY SECOND CLASS) EACH TUESDAY, MARCH AND Through trains Toronto to Winnipeg and West. COLONIST CANS ON ALL TRAINS, No charge for Berths. 5 Full particulars from F. CONWAY, City Ticket Office, Cor. Princess and Wellington Sts. Phone 1187, Homeseekers' 'To : MANITOBA, ALBERTA SASKATCHEWAN Tuesday unt] October inclusive Winkipeg and Beturn - $3 Edmonton aud Return - # 0 Proportionate low rates to other Each -- Holux, Return Limit Two Months { COLONIST RATES March 15 to April 15, 1914. Vancouver, $ Portland San Franci®o and Los Ang eles Full particulafs from 1 Way, Cty Ticket § s Cur ess and Wellington St 1167 . Victoria, ote [ RAILWAY CY DRE RRs Low Colonist Rates PACIFIC COAST DAILY, March 15th to April 15th, In- clusive. Vancouver, B.C, ) Victoria, B.C. $50 35 Seattle, Wash, Portland, Ore. | . Ban Francisco, Calif. | 5? 45 Los Angeles, Calif. 8an Diego, Calif. » And to other points in British Co- lumbia, Alberta and Western States at rates in proportion. HOMESEEKERS' EXCURSION 1914--Round trip tickets to Wes tern Canada, via Chicago and North Bay, on sale March 3rd and every other Tuesday thereafter until Oc- tober 27th, at very low fares. Tick- ets good for two months, For full particulars .apply te J. P. HANLEY, Rallroad and Steamship Agent Cor. Johnson and Ontario Sts 0 : 8 ------------------------------------------ OCEAN STEAMSHIP AGENCY C, 8, KIRKPATRICK 43 Clarence St Phone Bos UANADIAN SERVICE, From Southampton From Portland, Mes Mar. 19 AUSONIA April 4 Apr. 2 ASCANIA Apr Steawers will cali Plymouth east- bound. Rates--Cabin an $45.28 up 8rd clams British eastboun 30.25 up Westbound $30 up. From St Apr, Apr. 22 RD From Mor May § Jol presomally actends women alone, Handsome! fete~write 10 $2 King East. Toronto, Om. Go to BER MUDA ES. "BEMUDIAN® (twin screw, 10.51% tons disp'acement, sails from New York 10 a, m. 1 8, 15, April, Submarine signals wirele chestra, Record trip 39 hours, 20 min. union, Fastest, newest, and only steam. er landing passengers at the dock in Bermuda without transfer. West Indlen--New S.5. "GUIANA," And other steamers from New York at 2 pan, 3 March, . 10 24 April, for St. Thomas, 8%. Jrcix, St Kits, Anti- Kua, Gialaoupe, Dominicla, Martin fque, 8t. Lucia, Barbadoes. and Demer- ara ; For full Information apply to J. P HARLEY, or ¢. & KIRKPATRICK Ticket Agents, Kingston: Qt BTEAMSHIP CO, LTD, Quebec Sr ------ 0a UFE TIRENTENED BYKDREYISES His Health In A Terrible State Until He Took * Fruit-a-tives " B. A. KELLY, Esa HAGERSVILLE, ONT., Aug. 26th, 113. " About two years ago, I found my health in a very bad state, were not doing their work, and I wa run down in condition, I felt the need of some good remedy, and having seen * Fruit-a-tives "' advertised, I decided to try them. Their effect I found more than satisfactory. Their action wasmild and the result all that could be expected. '* My kidneys resumed their normal action aftér I had taken upwards of a doz oxes and I regained my old-time vitality, Today, I am as well as ever, the best health I have ever had», B. A. KELLY # * Fruit-a-tives' is thegreatest Kidney remedy in the world. It acts on the bowels and the skin as 'well as ths Kid- neys and thereby soothes and cures any Kiduey soreness, 3 "Fruit-a-tives! is sold hy all dealers at 50c a box, 6 fo trial size 25¢ or will be sent on receipt of price Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa. 50, GRAND UNION £2: HOTEL "f=, NEW YORK CITY Staten LY. City Guide Free snd Mag 18. | Saleof Remedies for Headache! There are morc ZUTOO tablets for headache sold in this country than all other remedies combined. Think how good these tablets must be to have such an immense sale. Dealers could not sell them nor would people buy ZUTOO tablets in such large quantities, were they not what all users say they are, that is, a perfectly harmless and reliable cure for headache. Do YOU use these tablets which so many people have chosen as best ? If you donot, it is your next move. 25¢ atdealess Fruits of All Kinds 'ineappls 20 NEW YORK FRUIT STORE 314 Princess St. Phone1408 Between Women's Heaith or Suffering The main reason why so many women suffer greatly at times is because of a run-down con- dition. Debility, poor circula- tion show in headaches, lan- guor, nervousness and worry. BEECHAM'S PILLS (The Largest Sale of Any Medicine In the Werid) are the safest, surest, most tonvenient and most economi- cal remedy. They clear the system of poisons, purify the blood, relieve suffering and ensure such good health and strength that all the bodily organs work naturally and prop- erly, In actions, feelings and looks, thousands of women have proved that Beecham's Pills . Make All - The Difference 2% Sold everywhere. lo boxes, 25 cents, . Women will ficd the directions with every bos very valuable, "for full in- ~ : formation apply local Agents or ALLAN LINE #5 King St. W., TORONTO LLAN[NE To LIVERPOOL Jibn BF Ape 2 - pr To GLASGOW From Portland Postun AN I Mar. PAN \VTAN 44 Ape HIAN St. Jobe, No, ALTAN SH 0 Loudoun & My kidneys i antl" once rore the fall of the roll ) ) ) ) Tn al ei She had the packet with her, sealed n'a great sione jar. Jt was thin and flat, and had rolled easily into a shape that would pess through the jar's neck. She took the boat in through the opening, and made for a spot on the east of the circle. There was a funnel shaped fissure in the rock wall here, which even at low tide contained a fathom of black water. She had sounded. it on the last occasion on which she had wisited the Ring-Rock, and 'it was this funpel shaped fissure that she meant to use for her hiding- place. She Lad painted the jar black, 80 that it should not be visible against the basalt, and she had tied many loops of strong picture wire about its néck 80 that-she could recover it by grap pling when her mother came. She brought ber boat close to the | rock wall and was feeling with a boat- | hook for the mouth of the fissure, when a sound from the outside struck her { €Ars. She was not alone. Volces of men close at hand came to her through the fog. J dl CHAPTER XI. The Piling-Up of the Sea Horse Elsa drew back her boat-hook from the sure, aud stood up in the boat, listening with a strained intensity of concentration. She was quite sure that they were men's voices that she [bad heard; but were the men a long {way off or close to her? She knew {how deceptive is the nature of sound in {a fog on the water. Probably. some | boat was passing in the distance. | She «peard the voices again, and , this time they seemed quite close. She could almost distinguish the actual | words, "and she could hear plainly that {the language was English. The fog swept down upon her again in a thick blanket. Sie could not see three yards ahead. The thickening of the gloom twas sudden, and probably only local. But while it lasted she was safe from observation. | She must finish her work before it lifted to betray her. | She lowered the stone jar into the fissure, and pushed her boat quickly away from the side. Hardly had she 'done so, when by some gaprice of the air currents, the fog cleared away so completely, that from the middle of her little harbor, she could see the whole circle of the basalt walls. It was only a local clearness; in the gath- ering dusk of the;evening she could see through the narrow entrance that the heavy billowing masses of whiteness | were still twisting and heaving on the | sek outside. 1 She put an oar in the stern-notch, and began: sculling towards the en- trance.» A voice from close at hand rang' sharply on her ears, "Rocks dead ahead! Starboard!" She heard the rumble of a wheel, and the sharp rattle of the rudder chains. A shadowy form loomed out of the vapors, and came slowly on towards the entrance. The next moment the bowsprit of a large vessel passed be- tween the rock walls of the narrow opening; there was a grating noise, and a sharp jerk; the vessel heeled till her 'bulwark touched the basalt, shiv- ered a moment, and swung back again the other way; the bell on her fore mast tolled with the violence of the oscillation, and then, balancéd on the fulcrum of the grounded forefoot, she settled down with long slow swings, like some giant metronome, or like the dead rolling of a derelict in the trough, There was a confusion and shouting on her deck, and Elsa thought that she Saw a woman's-form. The fog crept round again. and blotted out the view {of the stranded vessel She sculled nearer, as quietly as she could. It did not seem that t any immediate danger. the vess parently was not sinking, and as the Sea outside was calm, her people would easily make the shore In their boats. She did not wish to be seen, so she waited until they gone. But meanwhile sire must know whether it was possible for her 1a get out at all. It.was #oi possible." Under the light air the ship had taken ground slowly, but hér weight had" carried her well into the opening There was not room on either side of her for a boat to pass out. Elsa was a prisoner. She looked up at the name painted on the bows, It was almost dark now, but she could just make out the white letters She nearly betrayed herself by a cry of dismay. The vessel was the Sea-Horse, the circus people's schooner. She pushed back quickly, but a head appeared over the forward bulwarks, and a woman's. voice hailing her told her that she had been seen. "Boat ahoy! We want help. your boat alongside." It was Mona de la Mar. Elsa drew back further into the fog. Her first impulse was to refuse help. Mona shouted again, and Elsa brought her hoat alongside. "De you need help?" she asked. "Yes." , "Are you filling?" $ { "No. .1 don't think so. But we're hard aground. If it comes on to blow, we shall break up." "You had better take to your boats." Z"AVe haven't boats, that's why we need yours. 1 come aboard if we let down a ladder?" "Yes." > | A rope ladder was thrown over the { side. Elsa fastened the end of it to | the painiér of her boat, and then. | waiting till the peadulum swing of the schooner brought the bulwarks to their | lowest point, put her feét in a rung and took a firm hold with her. hands. There was an almost motionless second beiween the down swing and the up, and then she was carvied swiftly ups wards. At the same time she was pressed hard against the schooner's side, and the cold iron took the skin off her knuckles. It was all'she could do to hold on; she could not climb were Bring Supplied Exclusively in Canada by The British & Colonial Press Lim, 'she reached the puiwark level. swung her outwards again, In the } brief" jase betdeen the two move EXCITING PRESENT-DAY ROMANCE ~- WEATHERBY CHESNEY Service, ted. . ments she raised herself two rungs, but it was not until she had been hoisted. and lowered eight times that Then two biick ariis grasped her and lifted her onthe deek, and a soft voice mur- mured: © - * : "All right, missy: now yo's safe. You very brave lady." "1 didn't thiok -you Would manage it," said' Mona de la Mar, who was standing close by. "Sambo is right. You are a very brave girl. But I don't suppose you need us to tell you that, and time is precious. May we use your boat?" 1 > "Yes," said Pisa. "I expect you wonder why we haven't one of our own. There's a simple explanation, bufiyou can hear it by and bre. Meanwhile | daresay you'll frust. us. We'te honest, vou know. We javen't stolen this ship." Mona laughed as she said this, but Elsa answere' gravely Taw "You may use my boat if you can get it. out, "y "Get it out?" What do you sean?" "You will have to get the boat out of the water, and launch it again over the stern. - There is only one way into or out of the circle of the Ring-Rock, and your schooner is blocking it." ) Didn't you, know?" "Hadn't a notion," said Mona light- ly. "I sa it marked on the chart, but I thought we were a good five miles froin it. Val B, will say nasty things about my navigathan when he hears. I'm his pupil in that $buject, you see!" - She laughed softly againy and then with a quick movement, came closer to Elsa, and peered into her face "Aren't you Elsa Carrington?" asked in a low voice. "Yes. . "Do. you know who I'am?" "You are Margaret Ryan." "lI was. I'm Mona de la Mar now. Come down to my cabin. Sambo, you heard what lady said about the boat. Can you do it Mona," stay she the said Sambo here till th e'll do it all Missy "Can't Oh, "Got to, cheerfully wind comes right." Then know wi in my She ves b Let me I shall be quick as you can on you've done it Cabin led the Elsa' followed her. As she In a lamp in the cabin she said with a smile "It's a funny meeting between"us too, isn't it? 1 wigh I couly have showr You over my home under less wobbly conditions, but the peculiar Jo you way down below, and pretty Hitle cir think mstance you can are sit onthe edge of that bunk without being | shot off when she rolls "Why are you here?" said Elsa, "Why am | hare, 1, Mona de la Mar, late Margaret Rvan? Is that what you mean? Or do you mean why is the good ship Sea-Horse piled on the Ring- Rock, and making it hecessary for Sambo and the sailors to life your boat out and rescue you from a watery prison? Incidentally, of course. vou rescue. us from a possible watery grave, which would be éyven more un- pleasant, So we are grateful. But in which sense am I to understand your question'--Me or the Sea-Horse?" "Both," said E . Mona laughed again. "I'm here because--oh, because of a variety of reasohs. It's a long story though, and | think you know most of it already. The Sea-Horse is here be cause | didn't allow enough for drift, an" piled her up. There, I've an. swered your question, haven't 1? "Not in the sense in which I asked " said Elsa. "No, I know that. But I shall have to explain at great length to Val B. Montague presently, and explanations are fatiguing. I want to talk about you just now, | want to know you, if I can. Do you wonder why?" Elsa looked straight at the laughing it, face of her questioner, and after a brief pause, said coldly *No.' 'You understand nodding 'I don't that the Mona clas why?" said Mona, and it is merely 8 not interest me." gers hehind her head, and ! back against the heaving wall o cabin. Hér brown eyes showéd a sparkle of amusement, and a smite played about her lips. She vas a girl who made a habit of taking life wiih Ja laugh, and even the fact that shie had just piled her employer's ship on a ledge of sharp voleanic rock did not seenr to have made a break in the habit.' Kisa regarded her with a THICK. GLOSSY HAR, NO MORE DANDRUFF Girls! Beautify Your Hair! Make it Soft, Fluffy and Luxumisnt-- Try the Moist Cloth. Try as you will, after an applica: tion of Danderine, you cannot find a single trace of dandruff or falling hair and your scalp will not itch, but what will please you most, will be after a few weeks use, when you see new hair, fine and downy at first-- yes--but really new. hair---growing all over the scalp, > A little Danderine immediately doubles the beauty of your hair. No difference how dull, faded, brittle and' scraggy, just moisten a cloth with Dandefine, «nd carefully draw it through your hair, taking on small strand at a time. The effect ¢ immediate and amazing---your hah will be light, Auffy and Wavy, C have an appearance of abundance: an incomparable lustre, softness anc luxuriance, the beauty and shimma: of true hair health. ~ Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton': Danderine from any. drug store o toilet counter, and prove (hat you hair is as pretty and soft as any-- | peated | "Of course 1 did not know. terly gale Had come, and the Sea-Horse cold Irapiroxal. but at the, di ria angen been no examination the ext the damage. For al that this lan) 'girl Ldmew to. the 'confrafy, Ake the ledge and ake her to the bottoms "fo learn. if 1 can. what sort of girl your are; and though you are not inter ested in my reason, I'm going to give it "10 you. It is becaiise you "are daughter of the mar of twenty 'houzand pounds." ing lips. 4 "That is not true" she said. bo "Oh, come! You don't deny- the relationship!" said Mona mockingly. "And as for the robbery" . "My father did not rob You," said Elsa hotly. "Didn't he? I think the term is ae curate. At any rate Richmond Carring- fon accepted its substantial aceuracy as a description of what le had done when I taxed him with it yésteterday." "Yesterday!" cried Elsa. "You saw him yestérday? You admit it?" "Of course 1 admit it. Why should- n't I? I have beén very anxious {0 see him, you know. I knew lie was in San Miguel, and | mgant to see him: but 1 didn't count on having the luck to run up against him in the course of the very first bicycle ride 1 took. in the island. However, that was what hap- pened." "Where did you meet him?" Iisa de manded. "About a mile from the village of Furnas. 1 had gone there to see the famous geysers, you know. Romantie disrtict for a defrauded heiress and the defaulting trustee (0 meet in, wasn't | gd ? Elsa decided at once that the girl was lying. Furnas is ten miles from the Caldeira de Morte. impossible, ' "I thought the defaulting trustee wis looking very prosperous," Mona wet on mockingly. *He has put on flegh since I last met him. But he didn't seem to be as glad to see me as he might have been, considering all that he owes to me. He spoke of you, hy the way, and actually.had the folly to ings, my generous heart, on your be- half. . That was a false move which | should not have expected from a man of his proved ability. Do you know, Miss Carrington, that. four father is a very plausible impostor?" Ilsa answered her with a contempt "I recognize," made a mistake in crediting Margaret Ryan with finer feelings. Will you allow me to return to the deck? You shall have the use of my boat." "But you would prefer not to have any more of my company than is fie cessary," said Mona, laughing. "I sup- pose that's natural.' But I've some- thing more to say. Your father made a ridiculous proposition to me. Will you tell him that it is declined, with Margaret Ryan's best love and thanks." lg "let me said Elsa fiercely, "How dare you mock at him like that? You know that he is dead!" Mona de la Mar started forward with a cry "Dead! Do you say he is dead?" 'Do you say that you did not know ita" - glance of she said, "that he Horse might in a fow minutes si off} "I want to talk to you," said Mona---f the f who robbed mef.. Isa sprang to her feet with quivers The tale was| appeal (0 what he called my finer feel A ASR SR easy name to remem The lew price of D & A Corsets enable their wearers to save money while improv- ing their style. : The new models of D & A Corsets meet every requirement of the latest styles. No. 612, asill 1is recommended fur rather full figures whic duces without luss of ort. he price $2.25 is 50% less than that of lar f import dy Sold by popular stores every. where and guaranteed by the maker The Dominion Corset Co., Quebec. Makers also of the LA DIVA Corsets. 514 "Dead! Your father is dead!" re- the girl, with a scared face. And 1 have! been saying all these things about : 1. fo you! Oh, what a bruté'you must | think me!" She came close"to Elsa and tried to put her arm about Ker, saving softly: "I am so sorry. | would give anything to be able fo unsay all I have said in the last few But I did not know. You believe ma, don't you You don't think I could be so utterly heartless?" I Elsa drew back from her touch: I think," she said, coldly, "that.you ished actress." are a Mona 1ddered, and her brown Syes minutes. I" were wide with a real distress. "You don't believe that I am sorry, | hat 1 weuld not have said a word of all you if 'l had known," she cried passionatély; and then, os she noted the fixed look of scorn on Elsa's face, she added: "You think that I did kno You think that!" « I do not believe anything that you have was Elsa's answer, A voice from above, shuoted the companion "Missy Mona, the boat am launched, and the stars am shining. this to said, down - DE SRL CLA ST EEE NHC It Is No Wonder that they arc"so good when you consider that we have for over S50 years been perfecting PERRIN'S Dairy Cream Sodas r Something just a little different from the usual soda biscuits are Perrin's " Fancy Thin" Dairy Cream Sodas. You may like them better. - : If you don't, the regular DAIRY CREAM SODAS are what you'll appreciate, Both kinds come to you with all their oven-freshness retained by the sealed packages-- A Se, 10c, and 25¢, at your grocer's, k. Every package guaranteed. a i "a es a Send 10¢ in coin or stamps and your grocer's same for the "Perrin Sample Package" of some of the other good things made by Perrin. : D. S. PERRIN & COMPANY, LIMITED | LONDON 3 CANADA I tink there |, is a breeze coming." CHAPTER XII. Mona de la Mar Terminates Her Contract "It is only by the special favor of the: elements," said Val B. Montague impressively, "that we have been able | to.do it. I am told that'a whole werk without a westerly gale is almost un precedented at time of the year Mona helped herself to salad. - She and Montague were lunching together in the Cafe Marquez de Pombal. t} dining-room 'of which overlooked the port of Ponta Delgada. The Sea-lHorse had been brought safely into harbor that morning. "Is the damage very serious" asked. of "Her forefoot is ¢rumnvied up," said Montague; "but the diver reports that it will not taka more than a fortnight to put her all right again for the sea, Still a delay of a fortnight is some what embarrassing, because Val Montague"s American Circus Comt tion is billed to appear in Fun Madeira, exactly a forinight morrow. But I dow't repine- derstand clearly, I hope, thai Montague does not repine" "l recognize tha: you've she | you une Val B. been a brick," said Mona warmly, © "I have very nearly ruined .you, and yeu haven't even scolded me. If the wes had broken up or the Ring Rock and gone to the bottom, it would have meant ruin to you, wouldn't it?" "Yes" said Montague: "This ver. ture represents my capital and i bit over, and 1 was fool enough to com- promise on insurance. If the Sea | Horse had gone to the bottom, Val 1, | Montague would have had to begin lite over again---from the bottom." i "lam glad that the westerly gale | did rot come." said Mona. ! "So am 1, uncommonly glad. But see | here --before we go 'farther, ther: is one thing 1! want to straighten out.! You think 1 blame you for what has | happened?" a "I don't. 1 blams myself." (To be continued) that it has been neglected or injured You wed never scandal. 3% say "get up" to What Corsets. Do You Wear? MH you could ask this question of every weil-gowned, grace- ful Canadian woman, her answer would invariably be Naturally! Grace. Ease and Comfort bas come second nature to wearers of C/C a Ja Grace Corset Ask t¢ see the new season $ designs at your favurite store CROMPFON CORSET , CO, Limited *" 78 York Street, TORONTO