and one ver-failâ€" house. ‘Lnd loam | 7 miles ’ particuâ€" [ iS'l’l‘lli. to the re cant: -t.l. v more 5 acres, Build- 1, 36 x r for 5 .le ; one .wnshlp 0! A lennda' mucr cm- nfl PUS‘ {eal 300d no twelfth p of Fe!)â€" ; more or buildings had from about. i past half «:11 gram 5 from ;--u Maria and good this farm l.‘ rrason- .rs apply \l Is: “.9 .511. is: at. I m. It murator, H horse l; l lur. an 8.00 pan. 0.45 .430 0.55 3.1!» 1 01 tan 1. 06 8-3. .1. 15 3.11 3.05 P-W 7.05 90' Lindsay. .rp' .- 1:: Lindsay, and VICE. \XDEH- (‘arnd-Jfl, on land, 4 granar- nwn of olevatorS. .ur church Lunacy] R'ULWAY 2-13. .n school barnyard a: fence, m’. house, . 'A) acre r-< wheat ".1, even .15 p.13. W '11- 30 leI. p05. t. wall vmg well ( )nt; ;ll- 1. A 808 Animal With Henri. Liver and Kidneys Like a Sheep. ‘ _ The fursealisalandanlmalofpev- verted tastes. who, living at sea. has had his paws changed into ampere very like the long black kid gloves of a woman. His heart. liver and kidneys are exactly the same as those of a sheep and just as good to eat. but his flesh. although just like fat mutton to ‘ look at. is rank and distasteful from his habit of eating ï¬sh. The whole package is put up in a parcel'of thick white fat to keep the body warm. while from the skin grows a heavy crop of beautiful brown fur. protected with large flat oll bearing hairs. mako ing a glossy surface which slides through the water withmt friction. Perfectly fearless. overflowing with fun. a perfect little athlete. marvelousc 15' strong. the fur seal is the most de- lightful of all wild creatures. But. al- thnugh they live at sea. the seals. be- ing heavily clothed in fat. skin and hair. ï¬nd the temperate latitudes much too warm for comfort during the sum- mer months. Sim-e they cannot shed their garments like ourselves. they mizrrutc to :1 subarctic climate. gather- in: in immense multitudes where there are ï¬sheries to support them. Their ration is ï¬fty pounds of cod every day, which for a creature the size of a sheep is cousiderahieâ€"Exchange. The Man Who Braved the Storm and the Sailor He Rescued. 0n‘ the coast of Ireland there was a terrible storm. and a crowd gathered on the shore to see a storm tossed ves- sel not far away being puunded on the rocks j Sturdy men lanm-hed a boat and pulled away :It the cars to rescue the imperiled ones. As the boat came back the watchers on the shore cried. “Did you get them?“ and they answered: “All but one. We had to leave him or risk the lives of all." And when they were landed a stalwart fellow stepped from the group and said. "Who will join me in the rescue of the remaining one?“ Then an aged woman cried out: “Oh. my son. don't 20: don‘t go! You are all I have left. Your father was drowned at sea. and your brother Wil- liam sailed away. and we never heard from him. and now if you are lost I will he left in sorrow alone." But the man replied: “I must go. But the man replied: "I mum 5U, mother. Duty calls me." Then he and other brave hearts launched the boat and pulled for the wreck. A__... uv..- ._“__ Anxiously the mother waited in tears and prayers. At last they saw the lifeboat coming: nearer and nearer. and when it was in hailing distance ï¬les calted. “Have you got your man?" And the answer rang out clear above the storm. “Yes. and tell mother it’s brother William!" Nest: of the Golden Eagle. Every pair of eagles whose habits I have had an opportunity of watching over a period of a few years would seem to have invariably at least two alternative sites for their nests. Some have three. and I know of one with four sites. In fact. I only know of one pair out of many which habitually resort to but one place and only one. The reason for this is. however, ap- parent. for owing to its situation it has never been disturbed. The nest is in a small cavern on the face of an absolute wall of limestone rock some 800 feet high. at about 400 feet from the summit. Above the cliff is a talus of loose stone at an angle of forty-ï¬ve degrees or so. above which again rise other precipites. To reach the nearest point above this nest would be a long day's workâ€"London Saturday Review. The Art Was Known to the Ancient Greeks and Egyptians. ' Flemish artists are believed to- have been the ï¬rst to make tapestry for use as a covering for walls._ The artitselt is certainly very ancient. many of; mm hangings used in Egypt :aml Greece being considered true tum-Stry. its subsequent history is obsqure, but it evidently maintained a lingering ex- istence in the east until tln- .Saracens revived it and brought. it to "Europe. Tapestry was used by the Saracens only as drapery or curtains for the courts of their houses. Embroidery appears to have served for this pur- pose in northern Europe until after the twelfth century. and much of the work of this period was really em-l broidery, such as the incorrectly named Bayeux tapestry. It was in the tour- teenth century that tapestry began to be largely made in Flanders. where the weaving industry became very impor-, tant. At that ‘tlme twenty-seven streets were occupied by the weavers of Ghent. in 1382 there were 50,000 weavers in Louvain and more still at. Ypres. Very few samples of tour- teenth century tapestry remain. but those that have come down to the present day closely resemble contem- porary wall painting. During the lat- ter part of the ï¬fteenth century the golden age of tapestry existed. especial- U in Bruges and Arras. The Flemish tapestries of that time are models of textile art. The color is rich. the dee- orative effect strong, the drawing and composition graceful. and the whole A STORY OF THE SEA. tapestries of that time are models of textile art. The color is rich. the dec- orative effect strong. the drawing and composition graceful. and the whole of the loom and at the same time the aesthetic requirements of wall decora- tion.â€"-Argonaut. -"r'--* Ofï¬cial Ir. India. When Lieutenant Henderson was captured by the natives of the Gold! Coast hinterland they got into a 3 wordy discussion as to w they wonrd kiii him. The victim stened awhile till he was weary of it. ‘“0h..weli," he said. “i can’t be bothered with your arguments! I‘m very sleepy Let'me know when you have, madeï¬up your‘ minds." ,And on to sleep he went. The unexpected performance savedhis life. His calm indiflenence persuaded Samory’smenthattheyhndtodo‘dth some one of immense impom Una. Experiences HISTORY OF TAPESTRY. COO LNESS IN DANGER. February 27th, 1908. FUR med a boat and cars to rescue the to the Ancient English Military him nnharmedto. Snmory’l count. In the 11min! country. ' Once again lieutenant _Bendenon saved himself by a like exhibition of courage. He found Samory on a throne, surrounded by 4,000 warriors. yet when motioned undo homage on his hands and knees he did nothing of the sort. He simply sat on the throne beside Samory. shaking that. monarcl; warmly by {he hand. Thanks to this; and to nothing else, ‘he was accepted as the representative or a great sov- ereign instead of a captive doomed to death. He talked to’~8amory of the â€I...“ uvâ€" â€". queen. and Samory talked to him. Thus a mission which migqt have ended. at so many African missions have ended. in a terrible silence and a suspicion of unspeakable horrors. did, in fact." end in a valuable basis of fixture relations between Great Britain and a Moham- medan powers.- London Scraps. The Shape of the Sky. v, , What is the apparent form of the vault of the sky'z; There ls’probabiy no one to_whose eyes it seems a true hemisphere. with the zenith appearing as distant as the horizon. At sea or in a flat country the seeming greater distance of the horizon is best shown. Professor J. M. Pernter in discussing this subject reaches the conclusion that the form of the vault in vertical sec- tion is that of the segment of a circle the arc of which subtends at the center an angle of the order of forty degrees. If the reader will draw such a segment he may be surprised by*the amount of flattening which is hus ascribed to the sky. From this ticai illusion many ‘ curious eflects arise. such as the seem; ling increased magnitude of the sun and moon when near the horizon and the apparently oval forms of halos and i coronas seen at low altitudes. A Financial Episode. A Milwaukee business man up to the teller‘s window in 0 city banks during a ï¬nanci: presented a check and asket money it represented. .L_ -- “I éaunot give you the casn." sum the teller. “but I can pay you in clear- ing house certiï¬cates.†“1 would much prefer the currency,†answered the man. "The certiï¬cates are just as good." said the teller. ' . “Well.†returned the merchant, “if that is the case I suppose I can go home to my baby and give it some milk tickets and say. ‘Here. little one, â€'"W‘A nrn incf â€S 200d as milk? " these are The other day at a golf cmn In new.- land a minister of the kirk was re- proved by an elder in his church for using high flown words respecting a bad stroke he had made, and the min- ister replied: ‘ *-- -Aâ€" m‘nh lbtt’l I CyllIâ€"u . “Weel. Dam-id. 1 was nae sae mlch swearing as merely embellishing my feelings.†“You certainly told me to can my privileges.†“Well, but I didn’t tell you to brace my daughter.†7 AA... luv: u.- u.._a_~ “No. .But to Embrace your daughter is a privilege.â€-â€"London Express. A man must stand erect, n erect by others DRIVER ‘ANTS. The Way These Ferocious Little lu- sects Defy the Freshen. There are certain ants that show Wonderful intelligence. and the “driver guts" not only build boats. but launch them too. Only these boats are formed of their own bodies. They are called “drivers†because of their ferocity. .Xothing can stand be- fore the attacks. of these little crea- tures. Large pythons have been killed by them in a single night. while chick- ens, lizards and other animals in west- ern Africa flee from them in terror. To protect themselves from the heat they erect arches. under which numer- ousarmies of them pass in safety. _ Sometimes the arch is made of grass 'Q‘nd' earth and is gummed together by some secretion. and again it is formed ‘by 'th_e bodies of the larger ants, which hold themselves together by their en-mm m'nners while the workers pass by 'th_e bodies of the larger ants, wmcn hold themselves together by their strong nippers while the workers pass under them. At certain times of the year freshets overflow the country inhabited by the “drivers." and it‘is then that these ants go to sea.- The rain comes suddenly, and the walls of their houses are broken in by the flood; but. instead of coming to the surface in scattered hun- dreds and being swept of! to destruc- mn A.†nf «he ruins rises a. black dreds and being swept on: to uesuuc- ‘tion. out of the rains rises a black bail that rides “hymn the water and drifts away. - At the ï¬rst warning of danger the iittle creatures run together and form a solid body of ants, the weaker in the center. Often this hall is larger than a common cricket bail, and in this way they float about until they lodge against some tree, upon the branches Whenever you see me lugs.» v. S." brandedaon the left fore shoulder of an animal, make up your mind at once that that beast is or was at one time the properw of our rich old Un- cle Sam. - 4 AL. I... M Branding Them 1e Du Then again}!- you knew the key to the system of branding utilized by .the quartermaSter’S department. United States imny, you would‘ln a moment army to which that animal was as. signed immediately after purchase by the government. --- __z_..1- Ia nnf a 3y uvus ..... mast some tree, upon the branches which they am soon safe and sound. GOVERNMENT ANIMALS. Ree business man stepped ler‘s window in one of the during a ï¬nancial flurry, check and asked for the Theén I. Provided For by Army Rggulatim , A It“ Shaky Logic. Trimmings. to be two wtâ€"m- H public 3:31: club in Scot- the cash." 3810 pay you in clear- ine to embrace not be kept lgches'below ‘ ' 11.. Fuiï¬nlno.‘ mtion of the The Wifeâ€"Fancy. John.- they gm get- :01 “mm ting out a woman’s dictionary: ‘ I m supplied P)", der 1:1?th ‘maent from up ocu- ,A .u .mm m’V’m Wï¬'m‘ï¬u’mberi of hoof ï¬m’nds ontheumellnetobethneeâ€"tonrthsot an lnch high. the letter to M the number and blocked so as to pene- trate the hoof one-sixteenth of an Inch. For example. the hoof brands on horses assigned to band. Ninth cavalry. would be CB9: to I'M}: A. Fifth eav- ;Iry, would beâ€"As: to Company A. but- talion of engineers. would be BEA.â€â€" Clnclnnati Enquirer. Advaneed Arithmetic. ‘ Kenneth is the name of a good no- tured Washington lad who is as am. dious as any of his companions, but he is young yet and has not ndmnced very far In the grades of the public schools. The other evening he was ‘13. iting a boy friend who has laid his plans for serving in 'Uncie Sam‘s army ,, L_ ;._I_A.A.â€" ___.1.- y ~7 _ in the future and contemplates gradu- ating from West Point some day. The two were talking about mathematics when a young lady sought to test Ken- neth‘s knowledge 0! ’rlthmetlc. "If lemons are 23 cents a dozen," she asked him. “how much are cast Iron lamp posts apiece?" With a perfectly serlous expression on his face Kenneth replied’: " “I don't kuow.~mlss. I haven’t got that far in 'rlthmetic yet." Discrepancy In Computing the Date . Not Corrected Until 1752. The observance of Easter dates back to about the year 68. at which time there was much contention among the eastern and western churches as to what day the festival should be ob- served. It was ï¬nally ordained at the council of Nice in the year 323 that It must be observed throughout the Chris- tian world on the same day. Thls de- cision settled that Easter should be kept upon the Sunday ï¬rst after the fourteenth day of the ï¬rst Jewish month. but no general conclusion was arrived at as to the cycle by which -_A tvul .‘vâ€"-_ month. but no general conclusion was arrived at as to the cycle by which the festival was to be regulated. and some churches adopted one rule and some another. This diversity of usage was put an end to. and the Roman rule making Easter the ï¬rst Sunday. after the fourteenth day or the calen- dar moon was established in England in 669. After nine centuries a dis- crepancy in the keeping of Easter was caused by the authorities of the Eng- lish church declining to adopt the ref. ormation of the Gregorian calendar in 1582. The difference was settled in 1752 by the adoption of the rule which makes Easter day always the ï¬rst Sunday after the full moon which ap- pears on or next after the twenty-ï¬rst day of March. it the full moon hap- pens upon a Sunday, Easter is the 1 Sunday after. 15 “I“; u‘. â€" â€"_~, gaping in surprise at this curious ter- ‘ mination of his involuntary rise in the world, or a silvery haddock. staring'at you with round. reproaehtul eyes, or a pollock, handsome. but worthless, or a shiny. writhing dognsh. whwe vil- lainy is written on every line or his degenerate. chlnless face. It may be that spiny gargoyle of the. sea. a sculpin. or a soft and stupid hake §from the mud flats. It may be any 1 one of the grotesque products of Nep- f tune’s vegetable garden. a sea cucum- ber. a sea carrot or a sea cabbage or it may be nothing at all. When you have made your grab and deposited the result. if it be edible, in the barrel which stands in the middle of the boat. you try another grab. and that’flthe whole sto . I 7â€"â€" __.|. -mm OBSEBVMCE 0F EASTER. Quito as Much u Game of Chance at Politics or Poker. You let down a heavy lump of lead and two big hooks baited with clams into thirty. forty or sixty feet of wa- ter. Then you wait until something nudges the line or until you suspect nudges the line or uutu you suspect that the hooks are hare. Then you give the line a quick Jerk and pull in hand over hand. with more or less resistance, and see what you have drawn into the grab bag. It may be a silly hut nutritious cod. , "-4 -â€"- 5A.; Luau. It is {3:51am liow much amuse- ment apparently sane men get out of such a simple game as this. The in- .,g --__LM BUB“ u. ï¬lmy-v uw_- terest lies, ï¬rst. in the united enort to ï¬ll the barrel and second. in the ri- valry among the ï¬shermen as to which of them shall take in_ the largest cod 7- L- :1-.." UL Luca.“ Bus..- ..._- .7 or the greatest number of haddock. these being regarded as prize packages. The sculpin‘ and the sea vegetables may be compared to comic valentines. which expose the recipient to ridicule. The dogflsh are like tax notices and assessmentsâ€"the man who gets one of 4.]. -... a.“ n... than nothing; for they “5".“â€" them gets less than nothing, for they count against the catcher. It is quite as much a game of chance as politics or poker. You do not know on which side of the boat the good ï¬sh are hid- You cannot tell the dinetence be- tween the nlbble of a. cod and the bite of a dogflsh. You have no idea or what is coming to you until you have hauled in almost all of your line and caught sight of- your allotment wrig- AL- Li..- mm PUJNbIGHO nouâ€" v__., to please a friend. She was complete- ly restored to health and. thongh that was ï¬ve years ago. has never had a return of the trouble. She ate the on- Inna ï¬rst as she would an apple, - ions Exchange. When He Got! His Orders. “My friend Jinks says he can't catch up with his orders." “Is he a mnufacturer?’ “Oh. no.3jnst a married man with the grown daughters." DEEP SEA FISHING. 32.7%qu .W "" Eating Onions. with dropsical tgndencla m, during the day-#- How tho Grantham Gub- Fiuh win. In Lamina Bill. . * While the kingï¬sher feed: by day, the great heron__be¢ina his ï¬shing at ,A___ ‘_-_ ‘ IL less as a stone. Sometimes for half an honrnotafestherinores. ~‘ ' He watches with unwearled patience. When he does strike it is as quick and as mre as fate. for the ï¬rst luckiess ï¬sh that approaches within his reach is seized with surprising dexterity. Like the‘ kingï¬sher. the heron heats to death those ï¬sh of larger size. swallow. ing them whole. headforemosn such being their uniform positions when ‘found in the stomach. He will then 1at once assume the same attitude of silent watchfulness. and the tinny tribe. though frightened at his ï¬rst dash among them. return again in a short1 interval only to be transï¬xed with his l long lance shaped bill. ‘ Hornadax's “Natural History†says: "When a heron is ï¬shing it stalks slow- ly and silently along the shore. prefer- ably in water about six' inches deep. its head carried well forward. but labout on a level with its shoulders. I while its big eyes keenly scrutinize ev- ery object in the water. it takes long steps and plants each foot softly in ,the true still hunter fashion to avoid alarming its game. When a ï¬sh is found within range the kinks of the I neck fly straight and the ï¬sh is seized inc-tween the mandibles. The fish is . not stabbed through and through." A _._..o settles right down to hulness. motion- X "Vt DLSI‘I‘I“. vâ€". 7 This latter statement is only correct when small ï¬sh are taken. I have It on expert authority that herons re peutedly stab large trout up to two pounds in weight. making a hole In the back large enough to Insert the thumb.â€"-Lonls Rhead ln Becmtlon. change made ‘her coukl not work. COUIU um. "I"... . ' “But what is the diaerence?" asked the foreman. “There is nothing but a straight seam here. just the same as you have been used to." “i know,†replied the woman with true feminine logic. “but it isn‘t sleeves.†And it did indeed prove to he a feet that owing to her four years of may work on sleeves it took her fully tint many weeks to _over~come her nervous ness sumciently to run the machine at her accustomed speed when sewing an- other psrt o_f the waistâ€"Exchange. Sitting on a High Hat. “It I were to offer to wager that I could sit squarely on my silk hat with- out crushing it. you would take me up, I suppose." said a ciuhman to a fellow member. “Well. you would lose.†he continued. “A good silk hat should support the weight of a man say 140 pounds without yielding. providing the weight is applied gradually and care fully. The way to do it is to place the hat on a smooth. strongly supported surface. crown downward. and lay a board across the rim. in the hollow. On this seat yourself steadily and slow- ly. and you will ï¬nd the hat does not yield. Of course. a hat that has once been bent or broken will not do. Nor is the; rule invariable. it applies only to good hats. Have I evertried, it? Yes, I have. but not on my own hat." health. Later. the winter 908800. 8F prosching stagnation. in '1“! 11° takes on flesh. get-s "1087.†“d “â€3 a furious debguch 0’ bud 1"!“ hem tum ll. wâ€"â€"- to this‘furious inuscular straip the gut in peril every season. and his very one every bad year, so that each un- favorable change in the weather set- nervesonedge,itcanbereadilyimo- ' ed that the real "quiet, peaceful country life" is something sully dif- terent frorp_ the 1deal.â€" code But- " 7â€" -â€"L 2-- tuna. object. I '. you may smoke. course, he mtneases must not do 39.†A mmy 0! those present. m- cl '{evenl_of the justices, at ann- nines. mm or cigu'ettes. About 150 whales are uptnhd I ll. 12â€â€œ Whale averages 2.9% ‘ a _.._.. . , . River "Flow! With Blood.†Fa. Feb. fl.â€"â€"A letter In: reached' here from Multilï¬tflz. the Sultan oi the 809th, announcing 1 “mm encsmped “3 blood of “1° "OVEIHU‘ French.†#â€" About 150 whales are uptnfed , -‘mm .m as Power of Habit. smgkinx In 503% go nervous that she vvw‘. â€"â€"â€"~ I 1:)“ Hum": for March. Says Testimony on Which Man Wu Condemned Wu False. Chicago. Feb. 24.â€"Eighteen-year-old Jerry M. Vzral, whose testimony more than any other person's served to convict the Bohemisn fortune-teller. Herman Billik of the murder of six members of the Viral family, has. it is announced. recanted and in an -mamu. (homes that the testimony vâ€"â€"'» _ it is announced, recanted end m an afï¬davit declares that the testimony was simply perjury. Billik is under sentence to hehnng- ed March 20. The Supreme Court has canned the judgment. destroying the man's last chance, unless Governor Deneen shall issue a pardon. _ Not only does the Vzrel boy 1mâ€" nnahn his own evidence, _hu_t he de- WITNESS OONFESSES PERJURY. pughn hid own evidence, D!“ an uv- qlares that two of his relatives also usuall‘ Niodegqeyefw, FEARS WAR MAY RESULT. The present is an age of newspapers. They may be roughly divided in two classesâ€"the big daily and weekly newspapers which treat of the news of the world ; and the town weekly which give the news of the locality. By the former the subscriber can learn all that is going on in the world in general, and by the latter what is taking place in the town and district in particular. q By clubbing with the Watchman and any one of the following. the subscriber can get as big a variety of local, general, and particular informa- tion from week to week as he requires to satisfy his appetite along any line he wishes. The following is our clubbing list prices for the Watchman-“'urder and any paper mentioned : The big Weeklies sometim as for instance the "Sun," The Mail and Empire (3.. Advertisement w.â€" x.â€"Eighteen.year-0.ld ’ . ‘ hose testimony more p191}? person's served ‘0 ! “so: risen “Farming World." Disgppff'†‘xlies sometimes run in specxal lines, up tlm “Sun." the “Farmer's Advo- $1.15 under the mouon. to the cluim for 1 plaintifl my have _. a__. -0 To‘ suit. on amount 13“.) Britiah ‘Houae Gets Down to Workâ€"1 Prime Minister to Retire. . London. Feb. 24.â€"The session of Parliament. up to the present appar-‘ ently uneventful. will begin to-day a busy and important week, with the introduction of a new education bill and the publication of the naval esti- mates, over which there is said to have been much divergence of opin- ion in the Cabinet. On Tuesday the Government will make a statement on the Macedonia situation and the Con- go debate will occupy Wednesday. The licensing bill. one of the Govern- ment's principal measures, will be taken up on Thursday, and on Friday the woman's suflrage bill. The health. of Sir HeanICampbell- Bannerman, the Prime inister, is improving. but very slowly. There is not the slightest hope that he will be able to resume active leadership be- fore Easter. even it then, and the party is beginning to take for granted the advent of Herbert H. Asquith as Premier. which would be an impor- tant development in many ways. as Mr: Asquith in the leadenot the 1:5:- Lint!!! my nlvc. The ï¬rm of Lawson Jones has so issued a writ against Lind, Eer- a-n A: Go. for damages_tor fawn: QUICK mvwwu â€".vâ€"_.-_ A. Mr. Asquith hold: 'me influen- tial position of Chancellor of the Ex- che‘fluer. {1i- opgointmont u Premier COMMENCE BUSY SEASON. TRIED TO WRECK EXPRESS. WIS $39494. $1.85 $1.75 $1.75 $1.75 $2.25 [notary Friday , afternoon, Wilber Bend. the 15-year-old sen of Mr. Sam- uel Read. 0! the Asylum road. Pot; tersburg. died at Victoria Hospital on Saturday. The accident happened shortly after 5 o'clock. the elevator falling from the fourth storey to the ground floor, carrying the young man with it. in- flicting such injuries that he never retained consciousness. How the accident occurred cannot way the elevator started to drop. Whe- ther the cable broke or not cannot be learned. The guards provided for such emergencies failed to act, .and the elevator and the boy tell to the ground floor. Dublinjhheland. Feb. English fashionable, bot} bility and out of it. com vent to enjoy _§he Lgay‘ ously bovcotted. not only b:v the Bug- H-h hm. hv the Irish aristocracy, and _ .1 ously bovcotted lish, but by the the season thre me. There is this, of courseâ€"the mg the theft of '7 "‘ I‘,‘A‘- I 9 Earl of Abeuaeen. Is “.5." . not only by the Eng- Irish aristocracy, and atem to be a flat fall, only one reason for scandal surround- the crown jewels from Wants Yankee Fleet. Melbourne, Feb. 24.-â€"(C.A.P.)â€"â€"Pre- ed a statement mier Deakin has issu respecting the invitation of the Unit ed States fleet to visit Australian ports. wherein he referred to its im- gortance upon the future development y the appearance of such a body of warships on the Paciï¬c. He says: “Receptions of the fleet in South American ports would be eclipsed m the visit of the fleet Australia and :- ‘kn hin- W“: -â€" , says: “Receptions of American ports woui Australia and the i would mark a new tory of this part of 1 Former Minister Sentenced. Rome, Feb. 25.â€"â€"Nunzio Nesi, who‘ was at one time Minister of Public Instruction, was yesterday senten toeleven months and twentx days in handed down by the Senate, sitting as e high court after ten hours delib- eration. Furthermore, Nesi is inter- dicted from holding public ofliee for (our. years and two. months. License Worth 850.â€. London, Feb. 25.â€"An interesting in- cident connected with Earl Grey 19 related here. apt-0pc: of the new 11- censing bill. The Northumbetland magistrmes granted a new public house license which Earl Grey found increased the value of the place £10,- 000. This is described ' ntion to the ...... of public houses. , Young Englishman's Plight. Hamilton, Feb. 25.â€"â€"Whi1e out uk- ing snapshots of the ice banks at the beach on Sunday, John Feast dia- oovered a young man in the lake up to his waist in water. Feast got help and bravely went out and rescued the man, Walter Brent, a farm hand, who came out irom England last summer. He was almost dead. wrougu mun a» ,,,,,,,,,, , out that the C.P.R. line will be garb alleled from a point near Bran 011,: due west to the mountains. This line; will peas bflf way between the border is “ Aï¬nï¬â€˜ï¬‚fl fl vil'dn. He "a.“ 3"" ._., and the C.P.R..‘ opening a agricultural country. Kingston. Feb. 25.â€"-Alexanaex a. Babeock was sentenced to the Central Prison for one year for bigamy an suspended sentence on a charge of cruelty in breaking the arm of {four- mgnths-old inlant. Babcock is w rel. pulled the trigger. The lméflmnt Vm Guard. Montreal, 'Feb. 25.â€"The annual rush of immigrant: from the old country is “4113318, and the ï¬rst signs came yer Fatal Elevaior Accident. Hill's Engineers Out. Medicine Hat, Feb. 25.â€"â€"Enginoert ? the Hill system are jagaip activj Saw Abandon“! Schooner. New York, Feb. 25.â€"â€"The Amaricur .ehooner William H. Skinner was sightegl. mama! and abandoned, out I‘llâ€... «aw-.1093; 5999919: Societv Shun: 99““ «new. [)ny Wave In Winn!†mm Féb, 85-1-30W9 “-1. Year For 8‘9"“!- PAGE ELEVEN new era in u of the world." ‘cb. 24.-â€"Mn7 both in the 110' come here each gaye‘lies of the ,egins this w , Patrick’s D8?- m of the vice- :deen. is rigor- mlv bv the Eng: “LAIexanQey 8;