%> m GOARSE GRAIN SuOar Sugar SUCCESSFUL CANNING AT HOME Requires Fruit perfect in shape and quality and a clear well made Syrup. The Syrup must be made with pure good sugar, as organic matter in sugar acts like over-ripe fruit and causes fermentation. To avoid such disappoint- ment and loss, it's worth while Insisting on being supplied by your dealer with the old reliable more than 99.99 per cent pure St. Lawrence Standard Granulated Sugar. Made exclusively from purecine sugar in a perfectly equipped and right up-to- date refinery Sr. LAWRENCE EXTRA GRANULATED SUOAR HAS THE REPUTATIOM WITH HOME JAM AMD PRESERVE MAKERS OF BEING LUCKY, and it s even, steady excellence and pui it/ are the secrets of its success. To avoid mhtakts buy St. Laimnct Extra Cranuhlid In Rffinery sealed packagts, 2 lb. and 5 It. cartons, JO, 20, 25 and 100 lb. bags, which assures absolult cleanliness and correct weights. Take your chalet of the thrti sUes of grv'n : fine, medium and coarse. Any good dealer can fill your order, ST. LAWRENCE SUGAR REFINERIES. LIMITED. MONTREAL. THEFATE^FAZUMA; Or, The South Africjan Millionaire, CHAPTER XVI.â€" (Cont'd). The Jews marry early, and had Adolphe continued to live in Frank- fort, it is likely that he would have married long ago some daughter of "la haute finance," but sometning be- side business had kept him from it all haps it would be far better if you lis- tened to him." She came nearer, and" her look seemed to say to Adolphe: "Don't mind him; take your own line." "He won't believe that if he per- sists in his Cape to Cairo project that we shall all be plunged in a second African War." "Perhaps he isn't at all certain that you political people aren't al- ways glad of a war if you can only pull it off properly." , , Adolphe Liel) laughed, and the sec- He never remembered to have been retary looked very annoyed. He was so drawn out by any woman, forget- („jg ^^ igiose men who are so fussy I side, seemed to hem them in from the world beyond. Far away the voice of a prfrna-donna engaged to sing for the night at an increased fee of a hundred pounds, if she agreed not to insist on being listened to, sound- ed like a cry from someone perishing in a distant sea, while occasionally through the open doors one could hear a laugh, or the sound of a man's or a woman's voice, as they came or went up and down the stairs. "Was it tiresome of me to bring you away, did you want to go on dis- cussing Cape to Cairo, or whatever the thing is?" "No, I was very glad, I couldn't understand him; he seemed to want the railway, and yet not to want it." "I suppose that he wants the rail way but not the war." "Ah, they are always ready for war. You were quite right, Lady Ju dith, only I know that they would like me to do it, and then if anything goes wrong to pui it on to me." Lady Judith laughed. "You mustn't let them frighten you into anything," she said demurely, and he laughed. He wasn't the kind to be friglitened, yet he took what she said as she meant it. She seem- ed to say clearly: "Because you are not one of us, they will, of course, try and get everything out of you, wring you dry like an orange, and throw you away." "I want someone to take care of me," he said laughing. "Yes, I really think you do." "I shall always consult you first." "You are laughing at me." "No, indeed I am not, I think that you would always advise a man very wisely. She half closed her eyes as she ut- tered the next words, as if she were alarmed at her own audacity, fearful of how he might take it. "They say that you are very well advised." "Oh Gelling, I never take his ad- vice." "I didn't mean Coiling. I meant â€" well, are you going to be very angry if I tell you what I meant?" "Do r look angry?'" The Farm Types of Farm Wells. The farm well, especially a shallow dug well, should be located somewhat above the barns, buildings yards and stock pens, or at least in such a posi- tion that the surface drainage from all possible sources of animal and vegetable contamination is away from the w^^l. The location should also be as far removed from these sources as convenience wll permit, writes Mr. R. W. Trullinger. Properly to safeguard wells against outside contamination, first, all sources of contamination should be removed as far as possible. If local conditions and prices will permit, it is a good idea to provide impervious floors with watertight ' drains for farm buildings and stock pens. Un- der the same conditions concrete man- ure pits might well be provided not only to prevent the liquid manure from polluting the neighboring soil, but to save the manure. No garbage, manure or rubbish should be dumped into sinks or basins in the immediate neighborhood and these should be fenced off and kept fre* from pollut- ing matter. The house should be provided with some method of sew- age disposal, while slops and garbage More than half a Century of Quality is behind ev€ry - package of BEiNSOM'S Com Starch Always order by the name BENSON'S in order to get what you want Practically every grocer in Canada as BENSON'S. EPIDEMIC OF TYPHOID. Fever is Raging Among Troops and Civilians in Asia Minor. An epidemic of typhoid fever ia raging among the troops and civilian' population of Asia Minor, according; from the kitchen should be put into ^o reports from Constantinople. Sev- tightly (lovered garbage cans and dis- 1 enty-five physicians already have sue - posed of by burying in the fields, ^ cumbed to the disease, burning or feeding to pigs. The use There is imminent danger that tha of privy vaults and leaching or over- Constantinople water works system) flowing cesspools should be absolute- ^jn be compelled to suspend opera- ly avoided, since they are likely to be tj^ng because of a shortage of coal sources of the worst contamination, j ^nj tj,e output of flour mills has been Every farmer should become ac- restricted for the same reason, with quainted with the various types »^v, . .«.,.» â€" . . . °' wells and the best methods VAs mannerr his' words, his voice, °f protection, and the well should be were almost caressing, they seemed so protected as to exclude filth from to say: i all those sources of contamination ."Could I ever be angry with you?"! which it has been impossible to re- And she thought that his blue eyes, move or have been overlooked. "so unjewish," she said to herself,' j., <..„ „„i^„»; i„„„n a â- i, forgetting that some of the most . ^" **>« «« f<^*'°"' '•"=«'>°" «"V-^ beautiful eyes in the world have be- '"8 °' » ^'e"' '* '= always a good idea longed to Jews, were very, very '° consider permanence in addition to pleasant to look 'into. safety. This will depend on the kind reason I go "Well you know everyone says that of well used, and one should be ac the result that there is an insufficient supply of bread. The situation is said to be so serious that many Ger- man families are leaving the 'Turkishi capital. Honest Confession. Marjorie â€" Everybody seems to no-i tice whether you, go to church. Madge â€" Yes, dear, that's the onlyt -to urawii uui uy aiijf wmimu, h/ib>.v- o,jg qj piose men who are so I ussy i you have an adviser, a woman ad- 1 quainted with all types and methods ting that partly he enjoyed her con- ^^^ important about things that no- viser too, a dark lady you brought, of sinking. The well should penetrate versation because he so seldom ; body can control, that when anything I from South Africa." , J to levels below that of the ground talked to a woman of the world, or a occurred which he might have con- I ^^"~ "'" ""^ " -'-""" '♦' " ' naa never seemea lo maiier so mucni whether he had or not, as to-night !>»& wells are generally circular ex with Lady Judith beside him. | cavations three to six feet in diamc- He wondered why she had men- : ter, tioned this, whether it was in order where the water is near the surface, to warn him of the attitude of Lon- \ especially where it occurs in clayey her, whether she was trying to break it down, whether she was asking for] Bored wells are wells bored with an explanation, and in the face of various types of augurs from two her friendliness, it seemed as if she â- inches to three feet in diameter, rota- had a right to know. | ted or lifted by hand or horsepower. For a few seconds as he told her ; They are usually lined with cement ., „ „ _.„ .„.. , There was'a moment's silence. Itivj-ater surface in the drvest seasons woman at all, except Azuma, while trolled nobody paid any attention to ' had never seemed to matter so much | „ .. .... „.„^ ....o...... ..„>. ,v>H - ?^>e, it only occurred to her after he bim. He was dreadfully serious, and -'â€" 'â€" •- "-" ' -- *- these years, the instinct hardly defin- had gone, that .she had never before Judith's flippancy annoyed him. He ed, that as his money increased so forgotten that she wanted to marry bad come here to-night on purpose to his ideals would expand, and that the a man. in her interest m the man him- n^^gt this man, and to bring him wife who would suit Adolphe Lieb, self. \et it was so. Away from her round to his opinion, he had not ^ ^- . ^ - . ..„.,...„.., „....^ .. „..„.= .„ ^,„,^, the son of old Lieb the jeweller of home, from her rjother, from the wanted to give the meeting the im- don, or whether it was the barrier i n,aterial and requires extensive space Frankfort at five and twenty would surroundings which, ti I the end of portance of an interview at a club ; which would come between him and ^^^ j^ conservat=on not suit-ths multimillionaire at thirty time, would each one be an associa- but this opportune party of the Gol- ' *• ''"**•"- "*•" "â€" * *" ^ â€" •-' " " five. He was conscious not only that ti<>n with the terrible past, with the jj^gg^ fostered by Lady Glaucourt, he could now make a great marriage sensation as of skimming the ocean bad seemed just exactly the thing, but that in a sense on marriage de- dose to (luicksands, or instead, tak- j,jow Lady Judith took off from the pcnded his greatness, that he could mK perilous flights, she had l)een not golidity of the discussion. Women not realize his dreams alone. Why perhaps so much her real self as she ^vere always so dreadfully unreliable., , , ,. , , ...., _.^ „.,„„„, „.„„ .^„.„... even the Gollings had made further was now. Now she was more what Xo Mr. Du Cane she seemed almost the story of Azunta, his loyalty L,r tile sections with cemented joints progress into the heart of London she might have been, and being an [ji^p „ traitress to her own country. swerved ever so slightly. Rather than 1. , . . . ' exclusiveness than he had, and he intelligent woman, all he told her in- .-After all, I suppose that in time lose this woman. Lady Judith Roach, oa„ntpH t„ lnr« itip, wWp th« was certain that it was Mrs. GoUing's tercstod her, while the way he spoke there will be railroads everywhere," he would part with Azuma, he fje aaapiea lo locauiies wnere ine ' • "^ ^~ "-.... ._i....i ,.<• . -. .•'... thought; then as he talked, his water is at medium depths and to strength came back, he would never, materials similar to those in which never part with Azuma, never. It \ open wells are sunk. Punched wells would kill her, it would bring him are small holes usually less than six ill-luck, it would be infamous. He , inches in diameter sunk by hand or loved her, loved her as he might have horsepower by dropping a steel cylin- loved a dear sister whom some ab- ! ^^^ slit at the side so as to haul and normal phenomena had produced with .... . . . . .. . ^ a dark skin, but he would never turn . ^'^ ' nwtenal by its spring. They are her away. adapted to sous m which water oc- The Jews are more moral than curs within 50 feet of the surface, other men; when they are not, they; but not at much greater depths, invariably look after their mistresses. ; These wells should be lined with tile, Soft-looking and delicate clouds foretell fine weather, with moderate, breezes; hard-edged clouds foretell wind; rolled or ragged clouds, strong^ wind. A bright yellow sky at sunset! also presages wind, while a pale yel-; They are adapted to localities ^^^ gj^y forecasts wet weather. The descriptive words fell by acci- alone understood. dent here and there, when he spoke "It will mean a rising of the whole of the new railway he was building, of Egypt against it, and we shall of his plan to build another town in either lose Egypt or " South Africa. i "Or have to take it." When he left. Lady Judith tried to I Adolphe Lieb nut in the words find out within herself why she had suddenly with a flash of fire, been actually happy during that' ""'•""•' "'â€" '-i â€" Which would mean war with the doing. He liked Mrs. GoUing very "f billions where others Uilkcd of ^he went on, "and if Mr. Lieb likes to much, and had not minded when she thousands, had a strange fascination, ^^^^ the trouble, why not?" told him that having brought Azuma ^""ch as she had invigined great ghe smiled sweetly at Adolphe Lieb to London, having her in the house in woiilth would bring, without being ^yho stood away from the conversa- Park Lane had done him harm. He Huite able to picture it. tion as it were, listening to these had even laughed, probably because Yet she knew thai he had no wish two, who belonged to the same world, he felt BO innocent, but he had yet to dazzle her by what he told her. dealing with the things which he to learn that if the world doesn't care how criminal you are if you don't look it, it also doesn't care how inno- cent you are if you don't look it. And no matter how young or how old, how pretty or how plain, of what race and what color a woman is, no matter what the links that bind them ma wom be brows In matters of worldly knowledge, Adolphe Lieb was a babe, younger If anything than he had been ten years ago at Frankfort, because busi- (less had absorbe<l him to the exclu- (ion of everything else, and because South Africa and dealings with men outside the pale of cultivated and ad- vanced civilization, had thrown over him something of pristine savagery. Lady Judith was conscious at once of his simplicity of mind, and of the rugged savagery, whii'h had become <econd nature uiul which lent him a charm he had not possessed as a young flaneur on the streets of Frankfort. Yes, they had met at the right mo- striving catch hold of him, that she had only to put out her hand, that, as she de- .'cribed it to herself, "it was all go- And at the Gollings' ing so easily. merely suggest what I know we shall have to do presently, it is for the Government to accept or refuse," he shrugged his shoulders. At that moment a group of people party to which they had persuaded 1 . ,--,-,.- ^- , him to come, Judith telling him, chaf- | entered, chatting and laughing Gol An Abraham casting out a Hagar : iron tubing or sheetiron casing. Driv- and an Ishmael, with nothing but a en wells are sunk by driving down- cup of water would not be tolerated .^^^d small iron tubes, usually IV* by modern Judaism, but Azuma was » . . .„„ • ,i;„„„t„_ „„j „' .,: i„j not his mistress. Delicately he told *°i '"'l^'',^ in diameter and provided Lady Judith this, and she thought it '^•'t*» .P°'"t «"«* screen. They are was the most wonderful story she especially adapted for use in sand had ever heard. It fascinated her. | ftnd similar porous materials carry- "I feel somehow that all my good ing con^derable water at slight fortune is connected with her, that if , depths and are particularly desirable I were ever to treat her badly, to send her away, I should lose my money, my luck." He laughed a lit- tle nervously. There was no know- ing what effect his story would have on this beautiful girl, with the Ma- donna's face. "No, it would be very wrong of you. You must never, never part with her, not even if â€" if you married, don't you know. After all a woman who really likes you would not wish you to do so. Why she is evidently your mascotte, and one day you fingly, that if he didn't go she I ImK v/as amongst them and Mr. Du wouldn't, she had seen the quick Cane turned towards him with relief, bright gleam of recognition in his Golling was so much easier to man- cyea as they met hers again, and they afire, but then as everyone knew, Gol- had seemed to resume the conversa- i mi? would have sold his soul to be- tion where they had left it. That ; '"ng to the Carlton Club, was what gave her a feeling of re- '.^"Ije "way from such serious pose and certainty when she went in ' topics. search of him, when later he was I .L»dy Judith could hardly have torn missing from the bigger rooms, and him from the group that was advanc- which gave a note of joyousnesa to : 'ns tpwards them, and from the tire- her tones when she exclaimed: some secretary with more outward "r»»o, ,„-> ...ko. ;„ oil .Ki. ..K„.f? display, if she had taken him by the really must let me see her." mcnt, amlwhen he saw Lady Judith Rrr Z' H^w „«,,,•« .IvnrvnHv ' <^"at with her hands and pulled him. He breathed a sigh of relief, it .seemed to .him as if he had just : J;,":" • i. ' ' iiv f,.i^Mir,«,i " I It was positively indecent, a woman found something that was missing 1 '"°'*''- • m really irignieneu. ! had said who was of the little party; from his house in Park Lane, which I Anyone less frightencd-looking disgusting, he had always known was missing, I could hardly bo imagined, but the joy- > jjut i,be and he understood but which he had not known how to, ousness pierced, as her eyes alighted other. If there was no love give a name to. So a man might see on Adolphe Lieb, arguing with the was at least that complete entente and recognize u picture which he ] Prehiier s secretary, who seemed real- which might lead to it, and as for knows has onc^ltted into a panel ly annoyed. him, he could only explain her friend- over his own chimneypiece. "What has Mr. Lieb done?" liness to him by the sincerity of lik- Once during luncheon without ] The way she seemed to protect him ing. She had no reason to be so nice knowing that he did so, he wondered from the aggressiveness of her own to him sir»ee she was so beautiful, he how a l>eautiful necklace would look | class, her radiance (for she looked , thought, since she held a position radiant to-night), the way she seem- ' which had made the Glaucourts of ed to envelope him with the same ' efficient importance to be sought camaraderie which she assumed to- \ out by the Gollings to run them in wards Mr. Du Cane pleased him. He London. raised his eyes to hers, with an ex- 1 And the breezy way in which she pression of nfischief, as if he appeal- had dealt with the Premier's secre- â- ed to her to come and save him from ' tary had given him an insight into ' the rating he was getting, and the : the immense potency of a woman of each there round her neck, which he had had made from the finest diamonds of his mine, a necklace falling in dHops in double rows of drops of which one could rm see the connecting join, giving the idea of tears rolling down a cheek one after the other, and which jay at his ))ank, waiting like a guil- lotine for a neck She pleased him, pleased -him as of old Rebecca had pleased Isaac. This the world in assisting a man's career. Somehow to-night, he could imagine them both sitting together on the ter- race of the house in Park Lane, screened from the eyes of the crowd by panels of green leaf, or driving together, and discussing the great schemes which his brain thought out. look pleased her. If only his ances- try had not been quite so ancient and more Saxon, he really would have was the woman of his dreams, and j been quite like any other man, she the only thing that troubled him was ^ told herself. whether the idea, the fancy, the de- 1 "Come here and persuade him to sires which had outlined themselves | listen to mo." In Lady Judith's pre- during luncheon were destined to â- . sence the Premier's secretary drop- ^ end in dreams. Was she always as ped the aggressive tcne which was j which he was equipped now to deal nice as this to everyl)o<iy? that was' almost a bullying one, in which he with, and which, for all Azuma'a in- what he worulered. That Lady Ju- had been talking to Adolphe Lieb. It telligcnce, had, been restrained, limit- dith Roach should marry him for his! was impossible to withstand Lady I ed in their vastness by her savagery money, that never entered his head, | Judith's beauty, even when one didn't] and want of tuition. his only doubt was whether ho should approve of her morals, and of late: Judith had led him to a little room, ever see her again. And when iWrs. | she had found l^rself entering an , within another of m':<lium size, which Golling, with tier fine perception of] older clique, a more serious one, per- gave from the large room on the the de'orous and the pica.sant, had | hups, anyhow one which suited the ground floor. It led into a conserva" left them alone, while she went to | new pose, which had succeedeilr the i tory where a fountain plashed, and the schoolroom and nursery, he liked \ hesitations of a jcune fillo, and which I tall plants gave an illusion of sum- the way iha made liiin sit beside her [ gave something almost matronly to] mer, summer and country .seen on the sofa, while they talked of a I her appearance. She was more like hun'lrrd things which interanted him. j n young married woman now, and Preeontly ho was tollinft her about she was intelligent enough for men 1*1 â- n'nrfl, tibout his anxieties, the of intellect to enjoy a battle of argu- ' 1 •' (Jisanpointments the crowning ment with her. . . . J- res, the charm of the Veldt. "I don't know whether I shall, per- (To be continued.) * Corporals in the Life Guards used to be commissioned officers, ranking with the senior lieutenant of other regiments. where the upper soil is likely to be polluted. 4. 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The troubla starts in the mucous surfaces, and the digestive apparatua, too, must then be impaired. He begins to couKh when tha glands are materially affected. Is your true salvation. It restores the appetite and normal functions of the whole (fystetn. The action In such oases Is remarkably rapid and sure for recovery when you use this remedy aocordine to Instructions with each bottle. All Wholes.alc Drug Houses. Sold by^all druggists, horsa goods houses, or express prepaid by maiuifacturors. SFOBN MBDIOAXi CO., Ohamlats and Baotartoloffiata, OosUan, Ina., tT.SJL. Few products in\ .~...„.„^ "" householduse "^ "!^ai!!Miiii..^.„.^;„ to-day have bridged the gap from the primitive things o{ sixty years ago as has I!!"!!!!" through mists and fogs, perhaps through tears, but she was too en- grossed with the present for the plash of water to remind her of the past, the small room, the low divan, on which ho threw himself by her Canada's first refined sugar, "Ye Olde Sugar Loafo" of 1854, was REDPATH ; so w»s tha first Canadian granulated sugar. In lObO, and the first Sugar Cartons In 1912. The leader In every advance Sugar stands to-day first In t)ie esilmatlou of tens of tliousands of Canadian families. ^131 Aik for "REDPA TH" in Individual Packagâ€". 2 nnd 5 lb. Cattont. 10, 20, SO and 100 lb. Bag*. CAN.U)A SUGAR REFINING CO.. UMITED, MONTREAL. 'f