NEW METHOD WM. F. PATTON, Prop. ERR es i Dye Works For the Hest In Dyeing and Pressing, J. B. HARRIS, Prop, . In 14, 1and 2 pound cans. Whole -- ground -- pulverized -- also Fine Ground for Perco- lators. 170 Bary & Practical Fiome Dress Making Lessons Prepared Especially For This Newspaper by Pictorial Review Model For Chiffon Blouse. Chiffon blouse is a characteristic Shade of brigk dust. It is ideal for the Woman who likes colors that are strik- dng without being bizarre. Any of the soft, transparent mate- rials that are now so fashionable may be used for the development of this 'waist, but there is nothing more ac- ceptable chiffon. Burgundy red, blue or brick dust would be a tone of the required character with the neces- sary lack ©f "loudness." The waist is built upon a lining and the high neck is finished with a funnel collar. The frent and back are cut in one, the drop shoulders being gathered to short foun- dation sleeves forming a slight puff. In medium size the waist requires 174 yards 36-inch material, with 1% yards lining 86 inches wide for underbody, front, back, foundation sleeve and pep- lum. A waist that does not necessitate much sewing is always desired, so that the seamless outer front and back and lining back will be appreciated. These sections of the pattern are laid on a lengthwise fold of the goods, as are the two collar sections, To the right of the outer front and back (¥) the sleeve (G) is placed, but on a lengthwise thread of the material. The lining is folded exactly as the waist material is folded so that the front, stay, peplum and sleeve may be arranged gn a lengthwise thread, the back being the only section of the pat- tern that is laid on a lengthwise fold. There is another charming version of this blquse, supplied for wemen who will not capitulate to the high closed collar. - It has a V-shaped neck finished with a pleated ruche.gathered to a narrow velvet band. While the effect is high the ruche permits of absolute freedom of movement f uséd for an evening model the sleeves can be shortened and formed into double puffs. cums Pl Review Waist No. 6619. nts. Price, Sizes 34, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust. Above Patterns can be obtained from NEWMAN & SHAW, Princess Street "The Most Valuable Medicine ever discovered. : The best known Remedy for J Coughs, CoLbps, ASTHMA, BRONCHITIS. Aste like a bu BY Effectuaily cuts short aft Pin attacks of Ere a sabaes SHIORODYNE. = DYSENTERY & CHOLERA. Checks and arrests those too GROUP and AGUE. ative is NEURALGIA. GOUT. RHEUMATISM. is fakion in drops. 0 graduated according fn the malady. Rind: creates a calm refreshing shoo ; 3 all other remedies fail: leaves ed medicine can be tolerated. CONVINCING MEDICAL TESTIMONY WITH EACH BOTTLE. Sold by all Chemists Frices in Eagland: '} ing. THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, THURSDAY, APRIL -------- os . - TEDDY AND REAR. Ounce upon a time you remember, Larry had brought home a little pup- py dog for his little brother Lonny, abd also to be a playmate for Larry's I dog which he had named Bear. Lon- 'ay had pamed his new dog Teddy. Teddy was a much smaller dog than Bear but: he at once took charge of the bigger dog and he did everything he wauted him to. Bear [followed Teddy all over the house, showed him | where his basket was, where the dish was put for them to eat from, and touch a dit of food until Teddy had commenced (0 eat. It was plain to see which one was going to be the < S rsl.onny was so pleased with his pet that when he went to bed he wanted to take Bear to bed with him and his mother" said he could, just for one night, Lonny and Bear were just snuggling down together in bed when they heard something coming at a Tun along the hail and in burst Ted- dy-and up on to the bed, where he dug his nose in under the covers try- ing to find Bear. When he did find him he made a funny little noise of contentment and lay down close to Bear and they all went td sleep. The next night. when Lonny was Bear wagged his tail and wouldn't ready for bed, Teddy came running and started to get into bed but Lonny's mother objected and the two dogs alter that had'to sleep in their baskets, ("Low Cost of Menu for Friday BREAKFAST Sliced Bananas, Lamon Juice Rolled Eggs 'ried Wheateun Buttered Toast LUNCH N ®'rab Ment, with Tomato Caraway Bread Canned Strawberries Cake Tea Coffee DINNER Clam Bisque Fried Cod, Tartar Sance Mashed Potato Creamed Onion Prune and Nut Salad Leman Meringue Pie BREAKFAST. Fried "Wheatena--Boil ten minutes a cup of wheatena in six cups of boil- ing water. Turn into a wetted mould to harden. Cut in slices and fry brown. Serve with honey. LUNCHEON. Crab Meat with Tomatg--Mix a can of crab meat with a cup of bread crumbs, a cup of tomatoes, the grat- ed rind of a lemon, the juice of one lemon, and a glass of sherry. Turn into a dif and bake fifteen minutes. Caraway Bread--Scald two cups of milk and 'add two tablespoons each of butter and sugar. When luke- rr at SA A ma FOE CANNOT PASS VERDUN Tis is. What a Wounded French Soldier Declares. ONE THOUSAND FRENCH HELD UP NO LESS THAN 15,000 BOCHES, Foarful Slaughter of Germans In A* tack On Cailette Wood By Petain's Artillery and Infantry. os Bar le Duc, France, April 6.--"The Germans will never pass by the Ver- dun route, monsieur." It was a sol dier wounded in the German attack on the Caillette Wood who spoke His left leg had just been cut off [above the knee, but he was amazing- ly cheerful, "One can live without a leg," he said. "I still have ten fing- ers and they are all I need to get something to put into my mouth." "Would you-like to hear How we turned them out of the wood?" he continued, "It was Simple We tharged and drove them back. We can always drive them back like that, The Boches don't like our steel. "In the beginning we had walting several days for their at tack, and when they came we were quite ready for them. You under- stand, we don't sacrifice our soldiers needlessly--we French. It was our machine guns and our 75's that we used against the German masses, not our men. t ; een Fitteen To. One, really laughable. Germans came from two sides against our position-in the woods. There were fifteen thousand of them in their four columns, and something less than a thousand of us with our machine guns in our trenches to turn back those fifteen thousand. The | bombardnient had been going on| since before the break of day, when we suddenly perceived a bitter odor in the air, and the ringing of a bell notified us to put on our goggies and masks. Hardly did we have them on when the bombardment ceased and we were enveloped in a thick yellow fog of chlorine gas. : "Through it we vaguely saw, like phantoms, the German columns com- Here and there was a- glint of light on the steel of their bayonets Our T's roared and the mitrailleu- "It was The drifted away, and when it had gone there were no German soldiers in [front of us, but only the dead, the dying and the wounded littered the ground. Reach Trench To Die. "Sheltered by gas they had come nearly to our wire defences, and at one advanced post three Germans | had fo into a trench, but an officer shot them down with a revolver. ."Agaift they came in a a wave, and this tithe no cloud of ® hid them from us. We cut them, Se deliberately, our eight machine guns turning tn halt cire Along thet ie motion the ses spit into the fog. Slowly the cloud Living" Menu | warm, add a yeast cake dissolved in a cup of warm water, two tablespoons of caraway seeds, and six cups of rye flour. Let rise to twice its bulk, shape in loaves, let rise again, and bake. DINNER. Clam Bisque-----Boil a quart of milk With three slices of onion for three hours. Cream a tablespoon of butter, add flour, stir until smooth, add to the milk and boil, Chop =a quart of clams, bring to a quick boil and add to the milk. Serve at once with a ta- blespoou of w lipped cream on top of each cup. Creamed Onions--Cover with cold Water and boil until tender. Drain and pour over ga sauce made by blending a tablespoon of butter and flour and two cups of milk. Boil un- til thick, Cook the onions in the milk one minute. ! Prune and Nuf\Salad--Pit tooked prunes and fill with chopped- nuts. Serve on lettuce with a French dress- ing, Lemon Moringne Pie--Make a pie crust from a cup and a half of flour, a big half cup of lard and a small cup of ice water. Roll and bake. Fill With this mixture: One cup of sugar, a heaping dessertspoon of dry corn- rch, a cup of water, the juice of two lemons, the grated rind of one. and the yolks of three eggs. Boil un til it thickens. Pour into the baked crust, beat the whites stiff, drop by Epoonfuls and brown in the oven. nerink grain in yellow August fields. But our crop was the grey.clad Ger- man soldiers. The second wave did not conre as far as the Lrst, but they had not had enough slaughter, and a third followed close behind! There seemed always two men to take the place of each one shot down. But We held, monsienr, and on our end of the line we might have been there | yet Ground Favors Attackers. "On our right the ground favored Germans, There were small hil- locks there and little ravines which gave them shelter, and their third wave reached our trenches on the right. We had te withdraw then, so 4s not to be surrotinded, and when the fourth German wave came on i found rest and shelter in our trench- had time to take breath slowly back through the reserves came up on the run with bayonets and knives, and I went back with them to meet the Germans again, It was bloody work, mon- sieur. There were no shots fired. It was hand-to-hand, with the bayonet and Knife Those Germans fought well; they behaved like men, they could not stand against us. We pushed them back, but every step for ward meant a German killed As we fell Sudden Thrust Triumphs, "The struggle went back and forth in woods mangled by weeks of in cessant bombardment Some times we gained ground, then they would push us back a little; then we go forward again. It was like a man climbing a slippery path on a steep hillside, where 'he mikes two forward and slides back one "At last we 'rushed them - back with a sudden thrust, but reserves tame up for them and they. charged us with grenades. I fell and the charging Germans kicked and struck at me as they passed over my body: 1 covered my face with my arms and protected my head, and as the Uer- mans passed beyond me I heard the fight going on deeper in the woods. steps Sees The Germans Beaten, | woods our but! 6, 1916, denly it was around me once more. I saw the Germans giving ground step by step. I saw men fail. 1 saw death blows given, saw the look of angry fury give place to awful sur- prise and horror as the steel went into flesh, "Once more the fight passed be- yond me and the wood was ours again, this time to remain in our hands, with no more Germans to come te renew the attack. Then two of vr stretcher-bearers came and now you see nie here in the hospital. My leg is gone, but what does, that matter? 1 still have my two hands and ten fingers, and the Germans never will pass by the Verdun route, monsieur, I assure you," BRODER VOTES WITH LAURIER, (Continued from page 9.) shadow of this great war, to plot against th interests of the country, and te feed on her revenues. i think the people of Canada are alive to the situation; and, while we think it a not wise to say too much or criticize too much during the war, we have but to look across the water to see that public opinion, that is always acute and sensitive to Great Britain, was so aroused that the Prime Min- cross the floer of the House and change the personnel of his Govern~ hese are things that the people votice. While 1 have no fault to find with the fact that the Judges are to be appointed, and while I am satisfied that they are ag competent, as thorough, and better judges of an investigation thai any committee that this I®usce could appoint, yet the people cannot distinguish be- tween these fine technicalities. A Vote For Full Inquiry "I have no fault to find with the fact that the Judges are appointed, and those that have been appointed have such a standing in the country that the people will be satisfied with their work, But I wish to say fur- ther, while I am on my feet, that the people of this country, who are working night and day, who are sub- scribing money to help the army, and are making willing sacrifices, feel, and-1T am sure this House feels, that the money for this war should be properly spent. 1 intend to vote for the motion of the Right Hon. gentle- man who leads the Opposition." GERMAN INHUMANITY. Authorities Confiscated Serum Sent Home by German Doctor, Recent events have revealed a re- markable fact about a German scient- ist now interned at the Alexandra Palace, London, Eng. The scientist is Frederick Mehnar- to, a pupil of Koch and a Harley Street consultant who came into pro- minence three years ago in connec- tion with experiments in the treat- ment of tuberculosis conducted in London at the Margaret street hos- pital, Greenwich. Dr. claimed to have discovered a serum for consumption. On the outbreak of war he was | tuterned at the Alexandra Palace. His house in Harley street and his home and laboratory at Notting Hill were closed. A few months ago a well-known diplomatist was suffer- ing from the disease for which the interned German's serum was consgid- ered a possible cure, Representa- tions were made to the authorities, and it was agreed to allow Mehnarto to retarn to his laboratory at Notting Hill, as he alone'could manufacture fes. But it was not for long that they the serum. The secret he refused to impart to anyone. The German left the palace each day under escort. But an initial dif- ficulty had to be overcome. For his experiments he had kept a number of + vipers. These were now dead. He | was given facilities for obtaining what he required from the Zeological Gardens. Thus supplied he worked for months in his laboratory, producing the serum under the official eye of a Scotland Yard officer. {| He also continued experiments for { the perfecting of a serum to take the | place of "606," and claimed .to have arrived at a satisfactory result while working as a prisoner of war. ; While thus engaged news was sent him from Germany that his mother (who had visited him in England just | before the war) had been stricken | with tuberculosis, contracted, it was feared, through a too { Visit to his laboratory, There was | a request that a phial of ber son's i serum shonid be gent her. By the courtesy of the British au- thorities a messenger was despatched with the elixir and with a letter in code to Dr. Mehnarto's only sister giving the secret of the cure. The messenger was seized on entering Germany, the letter and phial were confiscated, and the sister to whom the letter was addressed was arvest- ed, and, as far as is known, she is i "For three hours I lay there lis-| still held prisener. tening to the fight coming nearer Meanwhile the illness of the diplo- and 'pearer me again, and.then sud-| matist for-the treatment of whem Dr. back and Mehnarto had' been allowed to return to his laboratery did not yield to treatment. Eventually the permit to leave Alexandra Palace was revoked, and the scientist now spends his days behind the barbed wire at Wood Green alogg with other Germans who hold high places in' science, art, and medicine. A t the timé of his interment Dr. is said to have been in negotiation with the physicians of a crowned head for a supply of his serum. i ENTIRE TOWN IN MOURNING. 24 Victims Of East Coast Zeppelin Raid Laid To Rest. London, April 6.~--The funerals of twenty-four victims of Friday night's Zeppellh raid took place yesterday in | 8n east coast town. The entire town 'Was in mogrrning and business was suspended during the passage of the Proegssion to the cemetery and the interment of the bodies, Thousands of pérsons lined the route of a mile to the temetery, Maryland racing for the next two Years. The bill, which was introduc: ed for the purpose of suppressing wa- Erie in has Stace died + apturai ister of that country was obliged to} Mehnarto { For Over Thirty Years Fac Simie Signature of 747 Tue CenTAUR COMPANY. MONTREALANEW YORK THE GRENTAUR COMPANY. NEW Yank eivy. Fat Frying with Dri land dng Made at Hamilton, Canada Without exception, cooking authorities agree that deep frying not only is more healthful but more economical than shallow frying. You can fry many foods in deep fat which you now fry in the pan or skillet. With Crisco there is no smoke in the kitchen because Crisco reaches frying point without smoking. Test for proper-heat with a bit of the food you are about to cook. Use plenty of Crisco--about 3 lbs. on an average, so that the heat will not be reduced when the raw food is added bit by-bit. There practically is no absorption if plenty of Crisco is used and the temperature kept high. There is a great saving, because of the small amount absorbed and because you may use the same Crisco over and over. In fact, you can fry fish, onions and potatoes all in the sage Crisco. Strain out the food particles aftet each frying. A crisp, brown crust forms almost instantly. Then the inside bakes instead of soaks. Because of this fact and Crisco's vegetable origin, fried foods now are most wholesome, There will 'be no interruption in oy The Lightning Cure for BRONCHIAL - COUGHS 9 Veno's Lightning Cough Cure puts scientific precision into the treatment of bronchial troubles--cures as surely as water quenches fice. Veno's is not a mere hap-hazard mixture of 2 nmwber of ingredients, thrown fogether in the hope that one or tivo 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 rest, surest, speediest, and most thorough remedy of its class. Veno's 1s free from narcotics, free from poisons, and just as suitable for children as it is for grown up people. You can trust Veno's to cure-- Conghs and Colds Bronchial Troubles Nasal Catarrh Price coats, size conlaining 21 times (he 'quentity 00 cents. Toe everywhewy, or in on receipt of price, from Harold F. Rit-hie & Co., Lid, 10,