: MEREDITR'S HOME Bx WL TRADITIONS CHARGED BY AN N ELEPHANT. HAS LONG BEEN PLEASURE RESOHT., x ince Jane Austen's "Emma Picnic Parties at One of England's Most & Beautiful Spots Have Been, a + Popular Amusement--It's Box Trees Are Kamous Theoughon the Country. Cne wonders when Box Hill first became a favored spot for pleasure We associate so much oi ideas of travel -and enjoyment th railways that it is natural' tc ne that they must have beep first to popularize it, says Arthur ry Anderson in 'The Londor miele. If so, however, we shoulc back to mid-Victoriau days South-Eastern line whic) @ base of the Hill, was opén '48 1849, and that part of the , Brigliton and South Coas illway line was only completed i [867. But early novels show tha r eighteenth century ancestor: thought as much of al fresco parties we do, and ir is unlikely that sc glorious _@& view point as - Bex Hil Id. be missed. There is, in tacts rect evidence available, and for uch longer than one might imagin H aff been the resort of those pl bent, It ia not every sich delightful BPO: gets lmmortalized in a novel aL aos) and Weymouth, Lyme Regis and Brighton, figure us scene: f galety in the early fovels, bu "were ' well known. Box HH [gureés in but one of them, thoug! that it bulks largely. © It is bh Jape Austen's "Emma." This take us back a hundred years for visits to Box Hill to be a customary forn of entegtainment, It is" not, it must be confessed, & ~ Yery happy precedent, since the party They give the hill its name, © brief ti was a melancholy failure. Of all the long record 'of misunderstanding skilfully worked out, im which mme Woodliouse found herself in Yolved, the party to Box Hill proved 80 small part. "During the {wo Whole hourséthat were spent upon the hill, there seemed a principle of separation belween the parties, too irons for any fine prospects, or any collation, or any cheerful Mr . Weston to restore." a" the excuse of the illustration + 18 ot that the party was dull, but t there was a party, and that this ® hundred years ago; "Fmma" having been published in 18516, so that we get a very respectable an try for those outings which make Box Hill a sort of outer and more refined Hampstead Heath. Bit the essence of the INustration is not that the party was dull, but that there Bave 'chosen it, and Ne! son would not have stayed---on his Way to Portsmouth for Trafalgar- in the romantic little inn, whose gardens open to the box-clad slopes Kéals would not have come to e same fun in 1817 for country ealm to sustain, and datural beauty 10 Ingpire him during the labors of dymion." These did not sudden: ver and set the vogue for Dox Its famous grove 'of box-trees re lit Evelyn there in 1655, and Defoe, as a faithful chronicler of 'England's beauties, had also to come Ao admire and to write about the view, Those same hox-trees are notable which suggests that they are older than the tradition of their planting +n the reign of Charles I., for though the tradition i§" specific in name and date and concerns a period almost within recollection, from its first ap pearance averything points to the famous 'grove, the finest in England As indigenous, a native and charac 'teristic growth. It is not likely tha they. will ever--at the hands of the tional Trust---be cleared again tin the past they have had a high valle. They were sold--at the be- ginning of last century--for a figure which is variously given at $50,000, $60,000 and $75.000---and the preci- pice which they now cover as gleam- ing dark velvet was then left white a8 & cairn of bleaching stones. At dbout this time, too, Box Hil came ioto notoriety because 'of the eccentric burial of a certain Major abelliere. Everyone knows that. s is buried deep in' concrete in tower on Leith Hill. There is A tower to keep alive the story. . But few who tread the soft turf of Hill imagine that this oMcer of ines way huried at his own choice ~~some sa¥ head downwards; others, in'ap erect ure, but at all' events with the bn placed perpendicular- Jy<-undet the suminit of the hill. But a truée to box-trees and ec- conthics. Tt is 'of Keats und Mere- dith we thi Keats came but for @ to finish "Endymion," bu ven that short stay has linked name for ever with Box Hill. | pub? Bridge Hotel is altered since at day, but his room remains. «As for Meredith, for more than years, treavears of his prime d@ his golden Hge, he lived in the Foliage, separated only by th of the road from. the gentle slope that formed his con- outlook. Roaming far and Be over the hills he loved, he saw, marked, and treasured, the story their beatties, and worked them lov gy into his novels, as in 1 'thé Crossways," and into ; 'his poems. It is in "The ush in February" that we get st, most direct, of his por- of Box Hill and the view chalet study, hut in "Love the Valley""-----most beautiful of (8---~we get again the hill, its ; its valleys, and the winding, owed Mole, in a score of en- ing aspects and combinations. Box Hill as a public possession we .owe to the generosity of a sin- 8 giver. 'Box Hil as a revelation "the betuty and poetery of nature "owe (0 George Meredith, and and more as the years go by, 8 appreciation grows and reverence ns, we shall come to regard it "his indestructible memorial. N Removal sale! White lawn blouses Fes corset covers,' from 23c.; blouses, 65c. Dutton's. Gibson McArthur, ofa © - EL jail for tw A Plunge Theongh a "Tree and a Rifle Shot dust In Time. Captain C. H. Stigand tells in his Y00k « 'Hunting the Elephant In Af rica," of a narrow escape he had from a you bull elephant. The animal Bad 'charghd the Huotingyparty, with fhe usual result that the natives fled at thelr best gpeed. Ie 'dodged sharp: ly from (he path"of the enemy and tripped over a fallen tree, dropping his rifle and just managing to sélze it by the muzzle as the elephant way about to tread on it. He then dived headforemost into the branclies of the fallen tree. "I made frantic efforts to crawl through, but a stout branch resisted my progress, and pt the same mo- ment the galongwa pushed in after me and pushed mé through the branches on the "other side, Two drops of blood from. his forehead fell on my shorts, one on the thigh and one'on the knee. Instead of pushing we straight through in front of hii, though, he kicked me sideways. The branch, and the next mo- |ment 1 foupd myself crawling out yn hands and knees on one side of he tree, with a rifle still grasped by he muzzle, while the elephant wan xecuting a dance and gramping up the ground the other side, five yards 'rom' 'me, ¥as under his feet "1 qui¢kly changed my rifle round «nd discharged it into hid stern, It was the last cartridge in (le rifle Having fired, the rifle was taken out of my hands, and ! found Matola, who had counted the shots, glanding be side me, ving nie the second rifle 48 a waiter might offer a dish. By Some oversight it had not been load ed, for 1 had given strict orders tha' aone of my men were ever to load wr unload my rifles. leing a good ioldier, Matola had not disobeyed this order, even under these extreme cir 'umstances, but had gone the neares o loading it he could. "The breech was open, and he was holding the clip In position witl his thumb just over (he magazine All 'I had to do was to press.it dow 18 1 took hold of the rifle close u the bolt and I was ready 10 fire. Th #lephunt was turning round and shot him in the brain, dropping Liv, dead." stubborn se Rainiest Place Ip England. The little village of Seathwaite in the famous lake region of England has the distinction of being the rain fest spot in that country. It is a place of gray stones and gray rain. The roads are of loose gray stones and the fenees that divide the pasture are bullt of still larger gray stones, The mountains rise close about it-- Scawfell, Great Gable, Glarmara, be- loved by Wordsworth -- and many more gray and misty giants. A lit- tle brook rattles among the stones, and on the dark sides of the moun- tains one may see here and there a milk-white streak, where gome stream pours down in what the peo- ple call a "force" or "ghyll." But it is a singular fact that up on the mountaihside, above the village, In Sty Head Pass (Sty Is Cumbrian for ladder and ft i¥ an appropriate bame), there is a little strip of ground that for some reason catches 4 positive deluge whenever rain is falling anywhere in the neighbor. hood. On that narrow ribbon of territory, only about 250 yards long by a few yards wide, the rain-guage shows an average rainfall of about 200 inches annually. Outside that little space there is an immediate drop of some fifty inches in the annual rainfall. Of ecurse there is a reason, but ft is not plain to the eye, or to the ex- perience of the natives. Penal Servitude For Life. It is a popular error in England that penal servitude 'for life" means ih reality "for twenty years." Of cotfrse it is no such thing. Penal sérvitude for life means precisely what it says, neither more nor less. True, all life sentences are reconsid- ered'at the end of twenty years, and If the convicts" conduct has been all that it ought to be during the whole of that long period he may be tenta- tively released pn a ticket of leave, But obviously that is a very @ifferent thing from letting him go free alto- gether. He is still a convict and will remain one to the end of his days. He has to report himself every month until death frees him, 'and if he swerves from the narrow path ever so litlle--and is found out---he goes straight back to jail without even the formality of a trial, to be released, as a general rule, never again. -- London Answers. y Old London Bookshops, Just within' the gateway of Gray's inn, London, is the greatest curiosity of the inn--1he famous old bookshop of Jacob Totison, Pope's publisher, Which 1s now the hedd porters lodge. Here he published Addison's "Cam- paign." After him, Osborne, the book- seller, whom Jollusoa immortalized by knocking down, had the premises. The shop is oben confused with the one under the Holborn gateway, which is erroneously sald to be (He shop: of Toason. This was occupied by, Tomes, the publisher of the first edition of Bacop's ""I'wo Bookes 'of (W¥ Proficience and Learring" 605). The Blankéts, In the reign of Edward 111. there were eminent clotlilers and woollen weavers in England whose family name was Blankel. They were the first persons who manufactured that comfortable materisl which has eve? sinee been called. by their nate ang which was then dsed for peasams' viothing. - " First Submarine Cable. between Dove and Calals, France, opened in Was Lhe urst subaarie cable, -------- White Rose flour put up in 7, 49, U8 IL. packages at all erorers. The private bank of F. C. Dale & company, Madoc, closed its doors with a statement that it would pay The. cabls lant, 18.0, 4 depositors fm {ull in ton days impetus he gave me bent aside the. evidently . thinking that If of bigger gray stones and the houses | Lclan and told him that his boy hadn't Advancement of | Right Hon. Herbert H. Asquith | himself ohe of the best ble te get and maintain the very hostile. They wen in the picture. He n glasf Fife, to whom he interest is appealin FF APOLOGY. Jennie looked so debonair That Tom kissed her then and there Without warning; Sought her lips and caught her cheek Moving by the left oblique, Caution scorning. She was wary, he was bold, And be would not be controlled, Fate defying. And he left her, knowing not It for goed or ill he'd wrought, Fearing, sighing. Hoping much, but fearing all, Tom requested leave to call On the morrow, And in very humble guise Offered his apologies, Fraught with sorrow. Words, it seemed, would not sufos, Bo he kissed her once--yes, twice-- Sin repeating. But, alas, her lips movell too! , Now 1t happens sans ado At each me eting ~Columbus Dispatch. | | Planning For the Future, [ | Elsie (aged five)--1 do hope some Dutchman will marry ime when IJ grow up. Aunt Mary--Why, my dear? Elsie--'Cause (I want to be a duch- ess.--Philadelphia Ledger. Canceled Obligations. Little Everett was a member of the Band of Mercy society and was proud | of the membership. He wore his badge, a small star, as-if it were a } policeman's insignia and was often | heard reproving other boys and girls | for cruel treatment of dogs and cats. One morning a woman of 'the neigh: borhood heard a commotion outside Everett's home and, going to the win: | dow, was surprised to find Everett in | the act of tormenting the cat. "Why, Eyerett," she called, "what | are you doing to that poor cat? | thought "you belonged to the Band of Mercy society?" "1 did," replied the little boy, "but I lost my star."--Lippincott's. One or the Other. A noted physician the other day was called upon to examine the heart ac tion of a college classmate's gon. "You've got tobacco heart, I guess," said the physician. "But, doctor, 1 haven' to protested the young man. "Go "way now; I'm busy.". Later on the father met the physi | smoked for four years. "Well, then," said the physician, "the boy must be in love."--New York Trib une. Dolly Up to Date. "What's the matter with the doll?" asked the toy salesman. "It couldn't possibly interest my chil- dren," replied Mrs. Flimgilt. "Tt doesn't wear a slashed skirt."'--Wash- Ington' Star. = A Wise Precaution. "I see a kick coming on father's part about our engagement," said the malden, "Then I'd better hoof it" sald the youth.--Exchange. & teen. 6} J. B. Tresidder, of the Montreal Star Publishing company, and knowir as one of the most prominent Free- masons in the dominion, "died on Wednesday after a long and painful illness. Reduced prices this week in fresh herring, whitefish, salmon, salt her- IW BI ®: 5 ASQUITH AND H 8 ELECTION SMILE, stump"spes do say it is largely on account of his broad smile, as will probably a favorite replies to 'one of his quest | know better th Ade | | dents which p { map sitting near him and asked: | it was once black. | motor | phone tic spelling:and chop of the last | & new stage. | subject of a sermon was noticed on {| Arbroath, | subje | faithlul, | irreparable loss. | Brazil nuts and Pecans, { turn into an enameled szncepan oue- lit threads, then ndd thre tablespoon- 7 barbarous custom come down to us ring, salt salmon, ete., all fresh and good. Gilbert's stores. Rev. W. Nptten, M. A., recior of! Pembroke and rural dean, has been | appointed rector of Cornwall. rime Minister of Great Britain is ers in the Old Country. He is a of his andience, even though it be try it on" al present. ET with his constitnents a -- . The Color of Hic Coat. Professor irchow wis atmost as fa. dor his excessive biuntness. of as for very remirkable atdinments. Often he so unfe 12ly 10 the students who sat under in the lecture routus that 1 t * been Knosvn lis classes and not return Berlin traditions, one of the professor's A wrong apswer to mous speech imental spoke to leave According to g they fous was: . 'Certainty. nat Any cook would On the other hand, he seemed to ap- | preciate the spirit in some of his sto- wunpted then to, nuswer hin back In very much bis own tone Once when he was pfesiding in a very old and faded suit of clothes he turned suddenly upon a seemingly bashful "Do your eyes tell you the truth? What color is this cont of mine?" Without an instant's hesitation the young man rose and said: I presume Now it is any color except white." That student was passed. i THE OLD SYS BEAR OR (MFADING THE WEATHER ~ .- He Presents Facts for Impartial Judgme nt--some Very Interesting' Records of Past Winters Arve Giy- en, Collins Bay, March, 27.<(To the Editor) :. In the early part of Féb- ruary it there appeared an item in the Whig stating that neither scien lists nor observers had any confidence { reliance in the, tradition of what vas known as' hear: «day 1m Capada, or ground hog day in the states, I am of the fourth generation which there are now mix, of one the oldest families in Canada, she mame 15 prominently' connected with the settlement thereof, and | respectfully submit to your readers of ol their impartial, judgmeys Previous to 1808, the year of Montreal, there were no telegraph or | save' dhe Fron- that ran from in 1837, aup- manac' or . steambbat tepac or William IV Kingston to Toronto, wich, ran all winter with military : plies. ? How were the pfoneer refugees obtain any accounts of what weather conditions were likely be? Surely only the predictions ol those that could tell from the ions of animals, ground hogs, monks, birds, and miragee. Prominent among those that were certainly adepts was: First, Mrs. Woodovel,: who? owned. ninety. acres of land there and lived in a red tavern stand a little to the south- of the residence of Anthony MeGinn Rankin, M.P.P., near the hove. She gained much © notoriety tnd fame assuming successfully the "WiteW of Endor," men- of the Holy' Bibla. white pony and was surveyed, - always for, never. = re whenever®. she predictions wore died aboui nin chip vest iwwnom of the tioned fn Samuel, she rode a littla atress of all she 'what she asked and pay for it although her vividly eorreet She years ago. Second, John C. Clark, f George FF. Clark, here, sttown, kept records for many years, and a man: of talent, and vonderful executive ability and a great and who after vears age, won the comment and admiration of both Rt. Hon. Sir John A. Macdonald lion. Alexander Campbell as be wonderful man of his day Rachel Powley, wife of the Powley Slab City, now ninety years ago, deceased ago, and fourth, , grandmother of Cal -hved until vat fused, we fit, ty grandfather and of gn was great wnman; sixty favor some thle he wind ng a Third, Rev. James Westbrooke, thirty-eight ye: ebo Holm vid" 1 Victoria street, near ninety years, and is deceased tbout thirty voare. The writer knew both these personages and the assui their Even Preachers Do It. This is the age of full-speed-ahead- at-the-rigsk-of - breaking - your - neck. ; Speed is the thing. Fast trains, fast cars, quick lunches -- the pece that kills! Anything to save time and energy! People indulge in Hable of words. When Christmas proaches the inajority use the word Xmas," because sit is labor-saving and can be written with more speed. But the abbreviation of the sacred uame to the letter "X" has reached Pecently the following a bulletin board in front of Rev. J. HE. Pedley's chureh on Spadina ave- nue, Toronto: "Xtianity and Vot- ing." Xtianity is merely the spirit of the times.--Teronto Saturday Night. Obituary For a Dog. insertion by the Rev. dJ. G, parish minister of Carmylie, Scotland, of this advertjse- in a local paper bas been the t of some criticism: "At the Manse of Carmylie, on the 10th inst, Argus, for many years the sagacious, sympathelic friend of the parish minister, who, by this lamentable demise, suffers an 'Until the day break and the adows flee away," Cana- dian papers please copy. A A was The Lyon, ment a favorite seeuis, ar How to Glace Nuts. Glace nuts are always great favor- ites. Use walnuts, filberts, almonds, For the glace half pound of granulated sugar and one-half cupful of water: Boll until fuls of vinegar and boil again. remov- ing from the fire the very instant it chafizes color. Dip the nuts as quick- ly as possible, let them dry and dip again and cool apon paraffin paper. If many nuts are to be dipped it is better to set the sirup into a larger vessel of warm water, so that It will not burden. Stage Paint. Painting the face on the stage 1s a from the age of oil lamps and candles. With gas and electric light and opera glasses for the remote seats in the house it'is not needed.-London Dra- matic Journal. Charges. "Your lawier made some pretty se vere charges against thie other fellow, didn't he?" = "Y-e-e-8 but you onght to fee how he charged me!" Thete is a euficiont recompense In the very consciousness of § noble deed. ~Clcero, i « { tions was wonderiul, i traditional lad lelgar and k for & harbor ance convictions and predie- to say the least, and made. their company very inferest- ing. indeed. The names of these four viduals will go down in history, especially that oi John C.: Clark I am reluctant to entrude upon your valnahie space, but I shall give you the records in the last fifiv-nine years of thay ars and how | the appal ions or gigns were therewith. of noted indi- nore un few of Sted 17 1855 the dont 2nd of February was very bright, cloudless calm. A terrible winter foflowed through Feb racy and March, with an awful quan- tity of snow. My father went ten miles west of Belleville with a sleigh on the Ist April, returning home on the 4th of April with twenty bush: ela of potatoes, blazer and a fanning mill, and, by the way, this was spring that prodiice was so dear, viz.: Potatoe a bushel; wheat, $2 and $2.50; f 6 hay, $50 a ton: Lhe best farmers then sold from $1,100 to 81,500 worth that time. . Ihe year 15566 was very similar, but not ne severe, 1564 was a pret. ty severe winter in February and deep now, 'but about the 17th of March the chipmonks were out plentiifd and to stay. Sugar-making did not last a week, and farmers were soon in their lie iekls at work. In 1896, another severe winter occurred in February and deep snow, but the chipmonks appeared about 10th. May and by the 17th of March the samow had all disappeared with terrible floods. Anthony Me- Gum knows Governor McGum sow- wheat that day, and Ex-Wargdén HughRankin sowed a large Bold) of i. T. R./sta- although | oats just north of the G. | tion here soon after and covered by quite a fall of SNOW, and | barley was sown on the' 30th of | March and I can assure you the yield wos enormous and heavy: In 1878 the 2nd of February was| a white frosty morning and a cloudy day. All February and Mareh were open, no snow; grain sow the first week of April. In 1880 tha. 2nd %f February was cloudy. All February and March were open; no snow. In 1885 the 2nd of February was clear and cold. February apd March had very deep snow, especinlly Maieh, The roads had to be dug out the 2pd week in April In 1886 the 2nd of February was clear and cold: a severe winter: deep snow; very bad in Mareh and the traffic was totadly suspended on the York road on the 6th of April on account of SNOW; Spring very late. In 188%, sky, of a ewt.; rly BO the 2nd of February was cold; a terrible = winter and very deep snow. In 1903 the 2nd of February was clear and cold; a. very sereve winter for cold and good deal of snow. In 1914 the 2nd of February was clear and cold; almost 'a cloudless sky. We all know what the winter has been never relaxing for any time until the 24th inst, when the chipmonk, ground-hog and the rob- in made their appearance 'wells nown and additional harbingers af Two million dollars at St. Croix, Charlotte county, N. was asked by a delegation. ! Boys Dutton's. B. Removal sale hoots at less than dest, spring. . We all know what sefepce and architecture have accomplished for the amedioration of mankind ana there can be no doubt Lit that from > " Judgment--Soime Very Interesting | and I' the inception of the stage'line from | nail or newspaper (first in 1810), al- | Let us iorget the : his deceasé, | its usefulness the~watchfulness of ability have become absolete, From time inimemorial people of | all nations have gathered their wea-| ther-wisdom from the sun and moon as well as from the peculiar actions and habits of beasts, birds and' in- sects. Thousands of farmers = to- day watch the old apd new moon {for plowing, sowing and other work ¢onnected with the farm. Seamen, fisnermen, huntsmen, explorers and travellers to a large extent are guided by the conditions of the sun jand moon and foretell the weather with greater aecuracy than de the majority of our moedern 'weather prophets. The eslebrated Sir {Davy, one of the most. successful {modern explorérs of the secrets of {nature was not above atending te, |and explainir the "weather omens which are Iv rned from popular ob- servation, In 1841 when Migk of Kingston drove the four horse-stake to To- ronto, then Little York, the postage Humphrey what fabts are in. my possession for jon a letter to York was 1s 3d. Fare [Tar 10s, one passenger £2° . H. M GRASS. 'Forgetting and Remembering things that vexed and ped us, I'he worrving things that caused our souls to fret; I'he hopes eo cherished still. deni us, Let us forget. long, were little slights that "PATENTS Herbert J. 8. Dennison ATTORNEY, tre ada AEs oronte: 'Pa- Copy yeight, Nt pr Denson, ere; oon Tence.. White ¥ nT Jas SAGE TEA PUTS LIFE AND COLOR IN HAIR Don't' ik Gray! | It Darkens So Naturally that Nobody Cau Tell, You ean turn gray, faded hair beautifully dark and lustrous almost over night if you'll get a 50 cent bot- tle of "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy" at any drug store. Millions of bottles of this old, fam- ous Sage Tea Recipe are sold annn- ally, says a well-known druggist here; because it darkens the hair so naturally and evenly that no one cap tel] it has been applied. ug forget the pained us, greater , wrongs sometimes vet; The pride with which 'some lofty disdained us, Let us forget. Fhe that rankle ona us forget our brother's fault and failing, Fhe vielding to temptations that be set, he, unavailing, Can not I hat purchance, thought grief be forget But blessings manifold, past all' de- serving, Kind words and helpfal countless throng, fault the re swerving, Let us remember deeds, I'he a'srcome, ctitude un 1 lon The love, the generous giv sacrifice of ing, When friends the clasp. warm and strong, The fragrance ach hfe of holy ing \ . et us remember long. were fow, hand of r N Whatever and Whate'sr over wrong, {ove of God our dered precious, Let us remember long things good and true gracio right - has triumaphed ol man has ren. What - TRAFF 1c Is Showing a Great Increase Lately Weather Conditions Aprile 2.--Grand ofiicials in Montreal are watching with interest the increase in traflic along the most westerly section of the Grand Trunk Pacific main line. The tratlic between Prince Rupert and Pricstiey, 337 miles along the main line, i§ in aging week by week since passenger trains were put During February of the vear the increases in the number of passengers over this section of the route was . 1,57 ad compared gyith Fehruary 19 9 \ notable fact Tn connection with the steamship trafic is that the steam ers north hound are carrying many more passe than those going south. The Montreal, Trunk into opera- tion. present ers weather conditions this in Prince Rupert are very favorable to construction work spring the } | -- | Wormwith mission piano, practical- ly new, 8195, at Lindsay's, 294 Prin cess street. ' Physicians at thes Malden, Mass., {hospital announce that Charles A. Walker is recovering from an opera- tion for appendicitis which disclosed that his heart was on the right side of his hody. The appendix found ih the middle of the abdomen. Eliminate kitchen worries, use White Rose flour Dr. Thompson, M. P. for the Yu- kon, has been called to Windsor, N S., owing to the death of his mother. Great reductions in - all' suitcases and trunks, must. elear. Dutton's. A. G. Pettit, father-in-law of E. A. Lancaster, M. P. P., died at Grimsby Premier Asquith's election is like to he unopposed in Fife from 35e. ly Boy ol sweaters, ton's.! Those whose hair is turning gray, becoming faded, dry, scraggly and thin have a surprise awaiting them, because after one or two applica- tiofs the gray hair vanishes and your locks become Juxuriantly dark and beautiful--all * dandruff goes, scalp itching and falling hair stops. This is the aga of youth. Gray- haired, unattractive folks aren't wanted around, so get busy with Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur to-night, and you'll be delighted with your dark, handsome halr and your youth- ful appearance within: a few: days. Agent, Goo. "V. Mahood. Sshbmmsnsint, RE ------------------ Come in and See Our Medium Priced Gas Fixtures We have a nice assortment of Gas Kiytures at moderate prices, suitable for any room in the house. Inverted Lights, 70c and up. Weisbach "Reflex" Lights with By-pass, $2.50 0 and up. Gas Domes, 50 and up. "Iwantu" Gas Jrons, $3.76, - For Sale by DAVID HALL 88 BROCK ST. Thin People Gan Increase Weight Thin } women who would "their weight with 10 ! there" 8 Sargol a while and note with their meals 1 i « Jest wort} resalts 1 was|' it turns the of what you at produc- blood pre ated form whi accept All t es from yo Dut- | 1 and pleasant, effi | heresy Would Be Pleased To Show You*Our Selections of Woolens F or, the Coming Season Crawford and Walsh, TAILORS Princess and Bagot Sts. -~ dd Kingston, Ont.