PAGE TEN 4 "AN EASY WAY TO GET FAT AND BE STRONG charge witir"most thin folks y wish to gain weight is that they \ t on grugging their stomachs or stuffing it with greasy Toods; rubbing useless "flesh creams," or follow. some foolish physical culture stunt, e the real cause of thinness goes itouched. You cannot get -fat until your digestive assimilates tne food you eat. There is a preparation known fo re- liable druggists almost everywhere which sepmingl embodies the missing lements nee ed by ihe digestive or- * to help them conyert food (nto fat-laden blood. This modern treatment {a called Sargol and has been termed the greategt of flesh- builders. Sargol alms though regen- erative, re-coustructive powers to coax the stomach and Intestines to liter- ally soak up the fattening elements your food and pass them into the blood, where they are carried to the starved, broken-down cells and tissues of your body. You can readily picture what resoit this amazing transf a- tion should produce as with incr welght the cheeks fil out, hollows about the neck, shonlders and bust dis- appear and from 10 to 20 pounds of solid, healthy flesh is added to the body. Sargol- is absolutely harmless, inexpensive, efficient. A leading druggists of this vicinity have it and will refund your money if you are not satisfied, as per guarantee found in every package. If you find a druggist who Js unable to supply you with Sar- gol), send $1.00 money order or register- ed letter to the National! Laboratories, t. Antoine St, Montreal, and a com- siete ten days treatment will be sent au, postpaid, in plain wrapper, NUTE --<sargol 1s recommended only as a flesh builder and while excellent results In cases of nervous indigestion, etc, have been reported care should be taken about using it unless a gain of welght is desired. GRANDMA NEVER LET HER HAIR GET GRAY She Kept Her Locks Dark and Glossy, With Sage Tea and Sul- : phur. on tract When you darken your hair with flage Tea and Sulphur, no one can tell, because it's done so naturally, 80 evenly. Preparing this mixture, though, at home is mussy and trou- blesome, For G0 cents you can buy at. any drug store the ready-to-use preparation, improved by the addi- tion of other ingredients, . called "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Com- pound." You just dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. By morning all gray hair disappears, and, after an- other.application or two, your-hair becomes beautifully darkened, glossy and luxuriant. Gray, faded hair, though no dis- grace, is a sign of old age, and as we all desire a youthful and aftrac- tive appearance, get Rusy at once with Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Com- pound and look years younger. This ready-to-use preparation is a delight- ful toilet requisite and not a medi- cine. It is not intended for the cure, mitigation or preventiop of disease. Take Tablespoonfal of Salts If Back Hurts or Bladder We are a. on. of meat ead and our blood Ye filed. ith urie acid; says a well-known authority, who wains us to be constantly on guard against kidney trouble. The kidneys do their utmost to free the blood of this irritating acid, but become weak from the overwork; they get sluggish; the eliminative tissues clog and thus the waste is re- tained In the blood to polson the en- tire system. When your kidneys ache and feel like lumps of lead, and you. have stinging pains in the back or the ur- Ine {3 cloudy, full of sediment, or the , bladder Is irritable, obliging you to seek rellet during the night. When you have severe headache, nervous and dizzy spells, sleeplessness, acid stomach or rheumatism in bad wea- ther, et trom your pharmacist aboat four ounces of Jad Salts. Take a tablespoonful In a glass of water be- fore breakfast each morning and in a few days your kidneys will act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, com- bined with lithia, and has been used for generations to flush and stimu- late cl kidneys, to neutralize the actdsin urine so it is no longer @& source of irritation, thus ending urinary and bladder disorders, . Jad Salts is inexpensive and can- _ not injure; makes a delightful effer- vescent lithis~water drink, and n body can make a mistake by taki a little occ: ally to keep the kid. neys clean and active. For "ere h stm) a some i . @ THE CONFESS! 4 . (Copyright, 1916, by the McClurs Newspaper Syndicatey, I shall not attempt to describ: dining-room to which Mr. Gordon es corted Mariam and me. My lection of it ig so blurred that I can- not. As I think of it here befor eyes lovely women, some state young and shrinking, some bold and hardened; nearly all them painted and bejeweled, beauti- fully or' oddly gowned; and men, tall and handsome or small and ugly: red-faced and pale-facéd; some with staring, shameless eyes, others with shifting glances; some bending across tables as though pleading with | ihe women who accompanied them? [ others plainly satiated and bored; whose "faces were flushed with others who viewed with cold cvnicism all that they beheld. M with it all*is the recglliection of pu gent odors, so fragrant, some nause- Ating, and the alluring strains of the orchestra Even yet 1 can close my eyes and feel the impulse which swept over me that night. It is the belief of some persons that good men and good women are always good; that honor and purity are untainted by circumstance or en- vironment; that whatever the con- ditions under which one is placed virtue will be triumphant. But that is not the case. In an atmosphere such as Mariam and I found our- selves that night purity and virtue may become very unstable attributes. When the stage is set so that every combination of art, every flash of light, every flower, the very atmos- phere itself, designed (o accom- plish one purpose, it is likely that that purpose.will be accomplished. In the place where we were a hundred minds and a hundred pair of hands had combined their efforts to create an atmosphere of sensuous- ness, and they had succeeded. Under its influénce the virtues became numbed and the sensesruled. so that when newcomers gazed upon the half- clad dancers, with their lithesome bodies twisting first this way and that; as the noxious perfume of the place mounted to the brain and the wine flushed the face, they became AA recol- i snme v is A ("Low Cost of Ee En Menu for Saturday BREXKFAST Orariftes OF Stewed" Fruit" Home MVinde Cereal Cornl Cornmenl Coffee or LUNCHEON SUPPER Puree of 3 wa iRed ind he or en MNNER inked No Bgaplant "hf Salad Frult oly Cakes / ALerrons | tion in her emotions. of | or Bary & Practical I Home Dress Making] Prepared Specially. for This Newspaper "By Pictorial Review wholly different . from re when they éntered as it turned out, was m > and: Mariam's. I could note the change in her as plainly as if 1 worked it by my own magic 1d 1 marked each vat had successive alter The change If is none the less perceptibl ssibly, if I.had been a regular hac 81 and I should not have noticed it. But as it was I felt suy self growing belder; I realized that 1lmogt willing I was losing my grip an the things which heretofore I had h-ld most sacred. 1 was reaching the point where 1 might dare or do thing. > Mr Gordon; 'whose 'digrity and stateliness pever left him under or- dinary 'circumstances, had assumed i f evnicism as soon as he en- dA retained were thera Marian more subtle a fe tered the place and ha ; the spe a which ymmiented "earlier in *h at the tithe h 1ocked me However sed and I him a Ie not more and more of the he had told us about the circus parently a eirene had not been only thing to disillugion him rave ide hnt story Ap the un ld help As we left the room #ud felt the] pure, cool night air on our faces we were all, I am quite sure, greatly re-| to our lieved. Mariam left nothing imagination "Ugh!' she shuddered, as she drew her wrap about her neck and hastened toward the car at the curb. "How delightful it is out here!" Mr. Gordon gave me a quick glance, surprising a look bf relief on my own face. "80 vou, too, are glad to be out of there?" he questioned, nodding back toward the restuarant. 'I do not blame you." He must have read my thoughts, for, after we were in the limousine, he turned to Mariam _ 'So you are satisfied, are you?" She looked up at him with uncon- cealed humility. "Yes, Uncle John, I'm sufficiently," she declared not ask to go again." (To Be Continued.) little miss, punished "1 shall ~~ | Living' Menu | Chicken Salad. Materials----Two cups chicken, cups celery, 1 cup mayonnaise, cups shredded lettuce, 1 hard boiled egg, 6 stuffed olives. ™N Utensils---Khnife, 2 measuring cups, bowl, ¢ Directions---Cut the cold chicken into small squares and mix with cel- ery, which has been cut finely. Set in cold place, dust with salt and pep- per just before serving; add half of the mayonnaise and the other half cover over the top. Garnish either with hard-boiled eggs cut into six pleces, or cut olives, capers or pars- ley. The garnish is a matter of taste, A i Y eT Buttons for One-Piece Frocks is shown a youthful dress of Santiago brown velveteen, having long ome: piece fancy sleeves and an open neck trimmed with a turn-dewn collar of velveteen surmounted by another col Jar of pink silk gauze. The skirt is a three-piece model and may be made with or without: the tab extensions at the front. The back of the waist and back gore of the skirt are cut in one piece. In medium size the frock requires 434 vards 54-inch material. a cutting the dress a part of the velveteen is used in open width and the remainder folded in half. The purpose of the open width is to ae commodate the front gore-~of the #kirt, pocket section, sleeve and col lar, all of which are laid on a length- wise thread of material. Of course two widths of the velveteen are laid together, right sides facing, so that these sections of the pattern will be cut in duplicate, Now, take the folded goods and place the back gore and back of the waist (in one ee) on the Jength- wise fold, as shown in the cu THE DAILY BRIT at-| | tendant, the change might have been Pioneer Stfucture in Toromto Erected in 1794. i There is a widespread lack of! {knowledge concerning the history of {the celgbrated pioneer"s log cabin | which for years has occupied & place fof honor in the Exhibition grounds {in Torontos A greal many citizens | wold be willing to wager that it is ! Castle Frank. | e also many .other similar] ideas current whieh The | Star Weekly thinks it is timely to | eorrect. | At commencement of the reign of | | George III. was born in Nottingham- | shire, England, one William ' Sivith, | Turning to the study of architecture and engineering as he grew up, he acquired - sufficient cfficicney to be sént, in 1774, by the British Govern- ment to superintend military works iin Cape Breton. Upon his arrival there he drew a large tract of land | which proved a valuable coal mige, and to this day operated by the Do- minion Coal Company. Smith devel- oped it to the extent that he was able to freight a vessel and sell the cargo in New York.in 1792, coming up to Newark (now Niagara) in the same year. There he fell in with Gover- nor Simcoe and accompanied him on his first tentative examination of the Toronto vieinity a8 a site Jor Upper Canada's captial. They found only one English family---that of William © Peak---and three Indian | wigwams east of the Don, one of them occupied by Chief Kashago. In 1794 William Smith moved his fam- here from Niagara, and being n choice of land by the Governor, ted a town lot at the corner of King" and Sherbourne streets, along} with part of lot 15 on the east bank the Don, immediately south of King street. Almost his first act was to clear a'space whereon he could erect his cabin of logs. Sub sequently Governor Simcoe utilized Smith in drawing plans for the build- ing of Castle Frank, up the Don-- the Governmental summer house-- also in planning, surveying, and lay- ing out the future city. They labored hard did these real York pioueers--- especially William Smith--thig first original York pioneer, who was pres- ent at Toronto's birth. After Gen- eral Simcoe's departure he pursued a contractor's calling. He built the first St. James "Cathedral," and im 1808 the *big lighthouse on the ise land, in which his son-in-law assisted. He served in the War of 1812 and was takendgprisoner at the capitula- rion of York, but was spared peaca- lrully to breathe his last in the resi- lence that he had built on his town lot. He was buried in St. James' hurchyard, King street. His eldest son, Thomas, having been killed at the battle of Queenston Heights--the next son, William, succeeded to the business, which be amplified and ex- tended, also being prominent in other directions. He:was the first assessor and collector of York ang Markham Fownships, holding office/ till his death in 1839. Jobn Smith, his old- est son, now came into the family fortune. He was born in 1811 at ihe second home, near the King-Sher- bourne corner; and when, later on, he sold the town lot, once more re- veried {6 'the original property over the Don, where he built a comfort able residence hard by the old log cabin. He was present at the skirm- ish near the Don bridge during the Mackenzie troubles. 'Was { the origiual ily | give Soldiers Helped Farmers. The extent to which the military authorities have co-operated with the farmers in get in the crops is in- dicated by a si t issued by the Ontario Organization of Resources Committee. Over 6,000 .men have been given leave of absence from the three military divisions. In No, 1 Military Division, 1,400 non<om- missioned officers and men have been granted leave from the London camp for harvesting. From the Kingston camp, No. 3 Division, over 1,000 fur- loughs have been granted, the per- iods ranging from two weeks to two months. In No. 2 Military District (Toron- to) the number of men on furlough for harvesting for recent weeks aver- aged about 4,000, the high point be- | ing reached in the week ending An- gust 5, when 4,369 men were on har- vest leave. A The com refers, in the state- ment, to the of the military authorities to "the farmers, and | states that in a few cases the leave has been abused by unprin- cipled farmers giving certificates to men who never worked for them, the | release of the soldiers had generally 'speaking been of great assistacce to the agricultural industry. One Tongue. ; With bilingual teaching in French, German and Ruthenian wiped off. the curricula, the public schogls of Mani- toba have opened, making a new step in the school and language struggle in the Provinge. Very little informa- tion is available yet as to the out- come of the change. . » Backers of the French language in St. Boniface and in other French speaking districts throughout the Province announced recently that they were prepared to put up a struz- gle fot their language. They refused to discuss their plans, stating that they were waiting for the Departi- ment of Education to show its hand. It 32 robs that there will' be a ISH WHIG, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1916. Theory || Of Progress | By ETHEL HOLMES A Miss Mary 'Medford and Miss Gwet dolen Tracy, chums, twenty-two twenty-three years old both rich in their own right, tliought much on the same lines, * "Gwen," said Miss Medford, "I have an idea that progress is the only means to happiness. We must be constantly going onward and upward." You aud I are apparently at the end of our rope and still very young: We have inde- pendent fortunes. If we marry ondi-{ pary men we'll be bored through life. Let us go abroad and each marry' a title "What kind of a title?" "A knight, for instance." "Then, | suppase, according to your | theory, in time we'd have to divorce | the knight and marry a baron.' From the baron we'd have to rise to an earl. | then a duke, apd so on till we got al king. But I'm with you." | The two girls sailed for Germany. | where every other respectable man is | | respectively a noble--at least a Von-tut that was not the kind of nobility they wanted. So they went on into France.. Here they found jt difficult to understand whit a title was worth, France being | a republic, they couldn't see What ad | vantage a count or.a duke had over a | commoner. Besides. the old nobility | were all either legitimists or Orleanists and the most recent ones, Bouapart ists. If the sovereign of either won the government the others would Ye down and out. - Our heroines, heing practical American girls, had no use for uncertainties, So they went over 'into England Britain has always been considered the best preserve in the world for noble game. The law of primogeniture provides for one branch of the family | at the expense of the others. But the] prizes were correspondingly few, The scions of soma of the oldest blueblood- ed, titles were or bad been married to music hall girls, and this further re duced the American girls' chances. Though .they had brought letters to families in England and were admit ted socially, neither of them saw any- thing : worth purchasihg, for really that is what their intentions meant. After spending several months in Eng- | land looking over the bargain counters they made up their minds to return to America and take up some fad. Gwen sald she would prefer a dog. But what they had been hunting for all over Europe came to them on the steamer coming home. They had met a. young woman inp England whom they had asked to help them in their quest. This lady informed them that two young noblemen, the Earl of Elm. hurst and the Marquis of Bablington. were going to America incog. Whether the girls purposely bought tickets on the same steamer as the nobleman, or vice versa, does not appear. At any rate, the four crossed together, and before they had been out twenty-four hours they were as thick as peas in a pod. ' The noblemen passed by ordinary names, Elmburst as Mr. Calkins and Bablington being Mr. Stryuger. They did not tell the girls that they were noblemen incog, and the girls did not tell them that they had been informed l.concerning them. Calkins froze to Mary; Strynger made up to Gwen. The men both declared that if they ever married they would wish to be mar- ried for Jove. Naturally, after such a statement, the girls would have been very foolish to tell them that they knew them to be British peers. Of course it could not be expected that the two American girls would snare two such men within the few days of a voyage, but they came very near together. The night before they made the port of New York both cou: ples were on deck sitting close in dark corners. Calkins told Mary that he wished to give her some memento of the voyage which she had wade so bappy for him, and she promised to ac- cept a silk umbrella that he had fu- tended for an American lady friend of his in Boston. Strynger prevailed upon Gwen to accept a box containing | a dozen pairs of gloves. : In the morning while the vessel was steaming up New York bay the ladies gave the gentlemen their addresses and the gentlemen gave the ladies the mementoes of the trip. When the ship was 'docked the ladies went down the gangway together and were driven home. During the ride Mary, while comparing notes with her friend as to the probability of a conquest, was fin- gering the handle of the umbrella that bad been given her. "Why, it unscreWs," she said. She twisted it till it came off. and | something dropped from it into her lap. Picking it up, she examined it. 4 "Why, it's a dinmond!* she exclaim. | ed. From the head of the umbrella | that she had removed she poured out a couple of dozen more. "Good gracious, what a gift! It's worthy of an em- "» leniency at first in strath of the Act. , it? With the advancing Une Reqiest -- to those who write for our Recipe Book. y 7 . J The recip lce -Cream, | BEN CORN \A { Sauces, Cravie [ ly goed dishes, call tee the success of or ot FN order NS \_\. THE CANAD N MONTREAL, CARDINAL. BRANTFO NN ately Foon Lt \ z Frozen s. Muffins, Popovers, s, Entrees, Relishes and lots of ON'S STARCH these recipes unless you do = © insure everything turning out insist on having BENSON'S? oday, to Montreal Office, and SON'S at your gr A STARCH CO., LIMITED OCer Ss. SASALS Great Values Men's fall suits in. on Saturday tweeds and worsteds, browns, greys and mixtures. Reg. $15.00 to $20.00, for $12.00. Men's Overcoats. Don't miss seein our fine selection of winter overcoats, in al shades and sizes. Saturday for $10.00, $12.00, $15.00, $18.00 and $20.00. Sweater Coat Specials. Reg. $7.50 pure worsted sweater coat, with shawl collar, navy, Oxford , brown or crimson. Special price on Saturday, $4.00. Other good values $2.00 up. Mothers -- We're setting new selling records. with these new boys' suits, over- coats and mackinaws at $3.50, $5.00 and $7.50; and that's a good evidence of splen- did values. Come in and see. See our ladies' high cut boots, patent leather, with calf tops, all sizes. Reg. $6.00. Saturday for $4.00. Louis Abramson's The Uptown Clothier - 336 Princess St. i PM. G. OF NEWFOUNDLAND Hon. J. A. Robinson, Daily News Is Appointed y 8 St, John's Nfid.,, Oct. 27.~Hon. John Alexander Robinson, for the past 22 years editor of the St. John's Daily News, has been appointed Postmaster-General of Newfoundland succeeding the late Hon: - Henry Woods, and Hon. Charles Emérson has been appointed Registar of the Supreme Court. These appointments cause two legislative vacancies, Mr. Robinson having been a member of the Legislative . Council for some years, and Mr. Emerson having been a member of the Lower House, and also minister without portfolio in the Morris Cabinet, of Chalmers extended a Road Rev. R. J. Power, church, Halifax, was animous call to Avenue resbyterian church, Toronto. Colin C. McCrimmon, a former Toronte druggit, died suddenly in Detroit. ; > While praying £ sinners some ion. "The Pinch" --ha ite Flour you felt -price of wheat '"'the seven- cent loaf is doomed," say the bakers. In its place we have the eight-cent loaf--in many cities only the sixteen-cent loaf. A loaf of white flour "bread is not a complete ration. However wholesome and , it does not supply all the proteids the human r ¢ nutriment in a digestible Fin Pp always the same price, 'always the same high quality. Eat it for breakfast with milk or cream or with fruits, IN EFFECT JUNE 30TH, 1916. Trains will leave and arrive at City foot street. Depot. of Johnson A m. 7am 3.sfam fSdam . +. 358am 31pm . 37 . to Tor. 5.20 a.m. tl. Lid . 1.41pm 3.40 p.m. lin 0. 7 fl ici. S04DM $1--Local to Belleville . 648 p.m. Kast. Ly City. am. Bx. .. 368am. 1 te 13Tpm No. 13--Mall 16--Fast 0. Nos. 1, 6 7, 13, 14, 18, 15 19 rum dally, other trains dally except Sunday, For Pullman accommodation, tick- ots and all other information, apply tow. I. Hanley, Agent, corner john+ son and Ontario Streets, Kingston Cat Agency for abi Ocean Steamship inex, London Oh. 4 .... .. ASCANTS Het. CABIN AND' D CLASS (Avonmouth Dock) : From Montreal Oe. 3 ......., FOLIA ........ Oct, 3% mine in the world. Sbades of the ns hang about the begin aings of Olo Tinto, in the eleventh centiry before the Christian Sed: Carthage "exploited" the" mine; Goths succeeded Romaus in digging out its ore. ' Today British stock- 'bolders are drawing dividends from ; 'Made in Canada