THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, THURSDAY, MARCH 9, 1916, Bary & Practical [TELLS OF THE BURIAL ARE DRIVEN OUT Homé Dress Making, BS 1 CET asonge CLASSED AS FOES OF CARRANZA ' = AND TOLD IT. nh A : ; RICHARDSON. l is with weakness ; A THA To quiT. A Lesrons "He Saved Others But Himself He va wl Thirty Arrive In New York-- Church » : : Could Not Save"--Tribute Paid' = - Proper Confiscated By The Mexi- Deceased By Chaplain Gordon, [San Government, 'A letter from an officer in' France N | New York, March to the Whig says: \ E | thirty nuns, memben No fallen Hero has received a more A u 3 | honorable burial at the front than ZX 7: " n =» sa party of Prepared Especially For This Newspaper J 8 of the Order of Salesians;" who said thejr church Princess slips for girls and juniors made of nailnsook and trimmed with embroidery and lace. It is made to he slipped on over the head. Just as emphasis is put upon proper Price, Embroidery design No. 11744. by Pictorial Review ~~ - : « . - v Princess Slip For Juniors. ' 5 lingerie for grownups, we find the new spring underwear for juniors punctu- ated here and there by novel designs. Charming to wear under sheer frocks is this princess slip of nalnsook trim- med with embroidery ang lace. It is to be slipped on over the head and closés at the shoulders. If the ruffie of lace is not desired, the skirt may be finished with a plain hem emphasized with feather stitching or similar dec- oration. In medium size the sip requires 2% yards 36-inch material, with 3 yards of CONSTRUCTION GUIDE 6600 * Pateated Apri 30, 1907 lace for the ruffle, 2% yards insertion and 8 yards edging. the slip. First, close under-arm seam as notched' and turn 'under the lower edge of the skirt on lower line of small "0" perforations, should a hem be pre- ferred to the lace ruffle. If the ruffle 1 to be used, then it will be nec to cut off lower parts of front and back on upper crossline of small "0" perfo- rations. Sew the straight gathered ruffie to lower edge. Neat, lap shoulder edge of back on front, matching small "o" perforations, and close with a button and buttonhole. The embroidery design is exceeding- ly aafhty and works up quickly. s Review Princess Slip No. 6600. Sizes 10, 12, 14, 16 and 18 yedrs. cents. Pict: Transfer pattern, price 16 cents. Above Patterns can be obtained from NEWMAN & SHAw, Princess Street - mary ERR Greasy clothes made sweet and clean with p The Good Did fashioned . GREED GD GEE (0D GENED GOD GENE) GD CIID G Wermour indumy To Tne | Texrume. Cocom On anss Iv! + ARLIN F your husband is a machinist, miner, painter, plumber, printer, farmer or laborer, Pearline will make it easier for you to wash his work clothes and they will be cleaner than ever. It is surpris- ing how Pearline loosens grease, grime stains that seem to be in for good. The Procter & Gamble Distributing Co. of Canada, Ltd. Hamiltenn, Canada Tag SROCTE® & Gammit =iG CQ Aimost tawice as big a package as before at the same price-- ! : ' ¢ I & | ¢ ! : ne omens anp ONLY GENUNE, Most Valuable Medicine ever discovered. 'The best known Remady for LoucHs, CoLps, E RONCHITIS. | *" "DIARRRCEA, DYSENTERY & CHOLERA. The oaly pallintive is NEURALGIA. GOUT, RHEUMATISM. Vo : 3. ? But a few hours are required to make our beloved comrade, George Rich- ardson. Every grade of officer and man from the G..0. C. of the corps to the lads that so loyally and Jov- ingly followed him through many a tight place during the past w-eive months paid tribute to his giave. Stéut men wept and turned back to their task feeling that life would ever be the richer for his having lived and the poorer for his having gone. Captain Gordon his chapliin, de. sisted by Major W. Beattie, former 1y Chaplain to the Brigade, conduct- ed the service. Captain Gordon Whose personal loss is very great spoke as follows at the service held in the hospital: "During thé year since we ar rived in France scores of our com- rades have fallen, but no death has caused more widespread ' sorrow than this; or will be more sorely missed than Captain George Rich- ard. For years before the war he was known as a sportsman who on the field or on the ice played the game as it should be played. When war was declared and volunteers were needed he was among the first™to offer. When he was asked how he could, risk his large business interests, he answered simply thift when one has played at soldlering, he should work at sol- @diering when the time came. We all know how he worked. When a bit of work had to be done that called for courage and skill and re- \ source, it was assigned to him. _ For he was utterly fearless, not with the rashness of" dare-deviltry, but with the high courage that comes from devotion to duty at all costs: He 60 ammo ap amo o> am G00 I | was worshipped to the last degree. Instead of asking anyone else to do a risky plece of work, he preferred | to do it himself. In the little things that make up life as well as in the big things, he was always mindful of others. Among all the gallant ! comrades whom it is my privilege t6 know, I.Xnow none more fully de- serving the title honor, "A soldier and a gentleman." Modest as he was, he could never be induced to speak about himself, but we shall! long hear him speaking home to | our hearts. For a life like his speaks to us more pgwerfully than words could do of the beauty of self-sacrifice, of the nobility of work well done. 'He being dead yet speaketh.' "It was one said in mockery of his Saviour and ours: 'He saved oth- It | was literal truth, and its highest | ers, himself he could not save.' tribute. that could be paid. So courage that.fatal morning, we can say of him as of his Master: 'He saved others, himself he could not save.' And we recall our Master's words: 'He that saveth - his life shall lose it, but he that loseth his life shall keep it unto life eternal." " One Who Played The Game. The following is from a Toronto officer regarding Capt. Richardson: He lies in the military cemétery in a little town In Flanders. Yesterday I stood beside his grave. It stands among hundreds--graves of British soldiers who like him have played the game to the end. Most of them with flowers laid on the day before when they buried him. There was a Cf -reatn from the officers N.C.0's and men of No. 4 Company of his own battalion. Beside it was one inscrib- ed "From Officers N.C.0's and men of No. 2 Company to our Captain." A third vas "To one who played the game from officers N.C.O's and men" Sereen Farm Party" and next to it a fourth inscribed "To a good friend from some comrades.' These were all' floral but at the head there wag one all green bearing the in- scription in French "Sinceres Re- grets"--mno doubt from some ome with whom he had We all knew that the men of his bat- talion were righf~--that he always lege, in business, and the two men who carried him mortally wolnded into the trenches, told me how he played it even to the end. He was conscious and talked to those about him chiefly of the raid and his regret at its failure. "He re- cited some poetry" ome of the men said and when I asked him what it was, he said. "One line impressed it- set on my mind:" "Glad did I live' What an epitaph to choose: " : "Under the wide and starry sky, Dig the grave and let me lie, Glad did I live and gladly die, And 1 laid me down with a will. ~ ""'This be the verse you grave for ome, Here he lles where he longed io be Home is the sailor, home from the sea, - { And the hunter home from the hil * He knew from the first he would Tot live and in the early morning a few hours after he was hit, he died just behind the trenches where he had so often and so resolutely faced death in many forms calm and un- afraid. -His worth beyond our words and will live ij the hearts of all those who kmew and loved him and remembering his own brave words in the face of death, may we not cap- ture sone of his spirit and say: "Noth'ng is here for tears, noth- ing to wail rn Or ki the breast, no weakness, no contempt, Dispraise, or blame; nothing but i well and fair And what may quiet us in a death 80 noble." J ssi ' WILL OF JOHN MACNAB. Bequests For Jailisusi And Pine Halifax, N.S., March 9.--The will MeNab, 'will- be amount {6 & quarter of a million dol- lars. The will, after providing = for = : mow as we remember our friend's | he Blood on the mucous surfaces of Hall's Catarrh Cure was | the best physi. | were quite bare but his was covered | been billetted. | played the game--at school, at col- | of John probated. | and it is believed: the estate will sters Mix | | Antonio Lopez fromr Mexican ports. i ther superior, | i i } | | { | nuns said. "We were accused of be- | and convent property af Morelas, Mexico, valuqdat $250,000, had been confiscated by the Carranza Govern- ment, arrived here on .the steamship The members, in charge of the mo- Francesca Chaconey Antequera, are on their way to Spain, They said they had been forbidden to work longer in Mexico. "Our convent, where for more than twelve years we had been edu- cating children of the peons, was closed early in December," one of the ing in sympathy with Gen. Carran- za's enemies and. we were evidently convicted. At any rate we were | told to leave, being allowed to take , With us only our personal property. ish the infant life depending on her, and enjoy the happiness of watching the de- | were not subjected to any indigni- i ties, but it is hard to leave our work | and 'the hundreds of children whom velopment of a perfectly healthy child. A GREAT BOOK THAT EVERY WOMAN SHOULD HAVE. Over 'a million copies of the "The People's Common Sense Medical Adviser" | are now in the hands of the people. It is a book that everyone should have and read in case of accident or sickness. - Send fifty cents (or stamps) for mailin charges to Dr. Pierce's Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y., and enclose this notice and you will receive by return mail, all | charges and customs duty prepaid, this valuable book. many relatives and a number of charities, provides, it is understood, that the residue shall be divided in- to six equal. parts, a part goimg to Dalhousie University, one to Pine Hill Presbyterian College and one to! the Halifax School for the Blind. Belgian Relief Fund. Collected in Pittsburg township by William Gordon: $5--Rev. W. T. Kingsley. .$1--John Duffe, John Weir, Wil- liam Hyland, John Ward, Thomas Hyland, Joan Hyland, William Ahearn. . 4 60c----A. Potter. Total, Previously acknowledged, Total to daté, $409.90. $12.50. $397.40. Somehow, most of us are always glad to meet the young old man. Many times a disappointment turns out later to be an advantage. a i Catarrh Cannot Be Cur with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh is a local disease, greatly in- | fluenced by constitutional and in Qrder to cure it you must take an internal remedy. Hall's Catarrh Cure 'is taken internally and acts thru conditions, the system. prescribed by one of cigns in this country for years. It eofposed of some of the best tonles known, combined best blood purifiers, The perfect com- bination of the ingredients in Hall's Catarrh Cure is what produces Norderiul results in "catarrhal condi- tions. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO, Props, Toledo, O, All Druggists, 75¢ Hall's Family Pills for constipation. tite A with some of the such | "Friends of our order in Vera i Cruz and other Mexican cities gave us shelter until the ship sailed. We we have learned to love. = Friends in Spain have paid our pasgage from Mexico to Madrid." Reports of epidemics of typhus in Mexico were confirmed by members of the party and by other passengers on board the ship. It was said, how- ever, that a systematic (cleaning up of the towns and widespread sanita- tion work, mainly under the direc- tion of American doctors, was rapid- 'ly stamping out the disease and that | the epidemic would be under control { inside of two months. - a RED CROSS BOCIETY. i Amherst Island Collections for Janu. ary and February. Belgian Relief Fund--Mrs. i | Howard, $1; Mrs. Fred. Howard, $1}, Mrs. W. Hamiltan, $1; Mrs, B. Hitch- ins, 60¢; Miss Fowler, 60c; Mr. Glass, $1; Mrs. J. 8S. Neilson, $2.55; Mrs. H. Sandwith, $2.60; Mrs. W. Montgom- 'ery, $1; Mrs. H. Filson, $1; Mrs. | (Dr.) Hudson, $1; Mrs. Dixon, $1; | Mrs. C. Tugwell, 50c; Mrs. J. Beau- bien; 50¢; Mrs. D. Caughey, 60c; Mrs..J. McMullin, $1; Miss Hill, 25¢; Mrs. Finnigan, 26¢ Mrs. H. Brown, { $1; Mrs. W. Cochrane, $1; Miss L. | Cochrane, $1; Mrs. C. Gibson, 60c; { Mrs. H. Fleming, $1.50; Mrs. Ss. | Pringle, $1; Mrs. R. P. Sanders, $1; Mrs. 8. K. Tugwell, $2; Mrs. R. D. | McDonald, $1; Miss Irene Richards, | 26¢; Mrs. H. Sanders, $1; Mrs. Cum- i berland, $1; Mrs. McMaster, $1.50; | Miss Fraser, $1; Mrs. E. Scott, $1; | Miss E. Glen, 25c. Total, $33.05. For Red Cross Fund--Mrs. J.Ham- {ilton, $1; Mr. BE. Morrow, $1; -Miss R. Hill, $1; Miss Maggie Hill, $2; Mrs. W. Hamilton, $1. Total, $5.50. The society sent 19 night shirts, 13 dark shirts, 24 pairs socks. The so- ciety'is making more shirts and socks | which will be sent soon, The so- | ciety has beem sending in money, ete. | since 1914. i Mrs. 8. K. Tugwell, secretary. i ee The man with a surplus of vain- ness is not a friend getter or keep- er. \ Sleepytime Tales ERIC FINDS LOST ETHEL. Once upon a time Ethel, of 'the Three E Children, went out to play late in the afternoon, as she, had been in all day, which was very snowy, and her mother thought she should 80 out for a while and get the air. < When it began to get dark and Ethel did not return, her mother began to get worried, and when it was quite dark she was very much alarmed at the absenge of her little girl, There were none of the boys at home, as they had all gone on a sleigh ride, and Father E was away from = home, 80 that mother hardly knew what to do. 5 Finally, she had an iden, and, call- {ing Eri¢, the dog, she told him that Ethel was lost, and kept saying to him: "Go find Ethel: go find Ethel." Eric seeind at last to understand, and | started off on the run to find his little playmate. He romped' and raced over the fields in the deep snow, and finally saw, way out in a big field, Some, tracks of small feet, which he new must be Ethel's. He began to follow the tracks, but the snow was so deep he made slow headway, and only by springing up Pen ws the tot and er the snow could he get along at all Suddenly he saw, away ahead of him and almost hidden in the snow, something red, and as he floundered up to it, he saw it was Ethel trying to wade. homeward, but the snow went up above her little legs. Eric barked joyously to encourage her, and tak- ing her dress in his teeth, he helped to drag her to the fence, ahd so toa road, where it was easer walking. It was a long way round to get home, but Erie, by barks and tug- ging at Ethel's dress, managed to keep her courage up until they reach- ed the doorstep of her home, where she just had to sit down, she was so awfully tired and cold. Her moth- er came out and took her into the house, Eric still keeping firm hold of her dress, and even after her moth- er had put her on a couch, covered her up warm and had given her some- thing hot to drink, Eric still kept tight hold of her dress and would not let . go,-even-to-get his supper. He Seemed to think that he had found her, and that she still needed him to take care of her, and ever after that Eric saw to it that she did not BO away from the house unless he was close beside her. "Low-Cost of Living" Menu { Menu for Friday BREAKFAST @ Grapefruit Salmon Omelet Toast "Jelly Coffee LUNCHEON Oyster Salad Steamed Rye Bread Canned Raspherries Ginger Cookies 1 : DINNER Cream of Celery Soup Steamed Haddock Blanketed Potatoes Mushrooms and Cheese Olive Salad Chocolate Custard \ \ BREAKFAST. Salmon Omelet--Drain a .can of salmon and free from bones. Mix with two cups of bread crumbs, one cap of milk, and three beaten eggs. Fry brown and fold. LUNCHEON. Oyster Salal--Boil one pint of oy- untit the 'edges carl, then chill, wilh two cups of celery cut in small"pieces, and a cup of boiled dressing. Serve with & garnish of celery leaves, DINNER. ; Steamed Haddock--Boi] five mi- nutes a cup of vinegdr, a pinch of cloves, cinnamon, and a ring of on- fon, Pour over the fish and let stand one hour. Drain, steam until tender and pour over a sauce made Pay a cup of milk boiled one minute and a tablespoon of flour that has been boiled in half a cup of milk, Add a tablespoon of butter and a tea- spoon of minced parsiey. Blanketed Pare raw po- tatoes and cut in half lengthwise. Place in a baking dish with the flat side up and on each half arrange a ligt of bacon. Sprinkle with salt and pepper and bake until the pota- toes can be easily pierced with a fork, and Cheese -- Chop fing halt a can of mushrooms, add t tablespoons of bread crumbs, one egg, half a cup of grated cheese, and half a cup of sour stoek or wa- ter. Place in small moulds and a---- brown in the oven, # Veno's Lightning Cough Cure puts scientific precision into the treatment of bronchial troubles--cures as surely as water quenches fire. Veno's is not a mere hap-hazard mixture of a number of ingredients, thrown together in the hope that one or two may prove effective. Veno's is all effective, an absolute specific. That is why it is the most successful cough remedy in the whole world. Awarded Grand Prix and Gold Medal, International » Health Exhibition, Paris, 1910. That medal was the hall mark of scientific approval--the highest award offered at the Exhibition, And Veno's Lightning Cough Cure won it as the purest, surest, speediest, and most thorough remedy of its class. Veno's 1s free from narcotics, free from poisons, and just as suitable for childrea as Conghs and Colds Difficult Breathing Bronchial Troubles ; Whooping Cough Price conts. Hoarseness : Asthma Large size containing 24 times the quantity 60 cents. Sold by Druggists and Harold F'. Rit.hie & Co., Ltd., 10, McCaul Street, Toronto, Proprietors ~The Veno Drug Co., Lid., Manchester, Eng. itis for grown up people." You can drust Vend's to cure-- Nasal Catarrh' Blood Spitting Dealers everinchere, or direct, on receipt of price, from the sole agents for Canada, Give the Children Crisco Foods Crisco foods taste as good as they look and what is most important, they are digestible. ) Crisca cookies, doughnuts, gingerbread, etc., are good for children, because Crisco isa pure and absolutely all vegetablé cooking fat. It is the cream of food oils, made | passible by the discovery of the scientific "Crisco Process."' (BISCO Made at Hamilton, Canada Made at Hanuiton, Canada or Shorten ake Making makes fried foods more delicious and wholesome. It makes digestible pie crust. Crisco cake is as rich as the mostsexpensive butter cake. Try Crisco in your favorite recipe. For shortening, use a little less than you would of butter or lard and in cake making, cream it thoroughly. Use plenty for deep frying, for the same Crisco can be used over and over. GASTORIA i Mothers Know That | Genuine Castoria A For Over Thirty