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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1915-11-25, Page 6.'"#,,;',9• 74111i -Tee-. Iry -77, • ou to try the first 1 but we rely Absolutely on the Inimitable ffavour 'Mt quality to make you a permanent customer* We will even offer to give this first trial free if you will drop um. a postal to Toronto* °iiia )p, ••••••••••••••••••••...•••••••••••••••••••••••••...1E The Vicar's Nephevv; or The Orphan's Vindicatlpn • • CII4WTEB "Uncle, want to tell you. Th10. is ell a Mistake; I'knOw. nothing ;about • these things; I never eew them m MY life before; r. never' heard . ft; word about them." The Vicar tn.* up the:knife: .an . Aaa ibis?" • • ' "Yea, t took the the knife, that's true; ". and sold it; but not for 'those and not to, the "man that traiti-! . "What did you sell it for • • "I sold it to a boy -for -a-0 • ""To boy?- And for whatVo Jack stopped short, "What did you sell it for?" • For an instant jack paused, con- sidering what explanation he could invent; then he resigned himself. 10hr he cried;. "itta hopeless! x •van% tell you; X can't tell you -and. if X did you'd never understand." understand enough," the Vicar answered. "May Christ defend. me from understanding any morel" He oat down at his desk, motioning the boy to sit opposite "I have given up, what little hope I had of appealing to you by any other. means than force: What have to think of now is IMiv to purify the school from defilement and how to protect the innocence\of those who are not yet tontaminated, and, above all, of your little sister." HIS voice faltered for an instant; then he continued steadily': "I must know the the -whole truth, ,and I mean to have it from you at any cost.. .You have ten minntes 'to decide whether You will confess at once, or whether I must force yen." s Eiteept.for the ticking of the watch there wa$ absolute silence* in the Jack had said, the position was hopeless; the very quality of his in- nocence rendered it, .to his uncle's • mind, not merely incredible, but un- thinkable. , The hand of the -watch had crept past nine of the, ten minute Marks. Re remembered climbing one day on Deaditiart's .cliff, and seeing, rabbit which some one had shot, but not • killed, and- which had fallen to an in- accesstbie place, and lay. there, bleed- ing to death. Now *gain, something was bleeding to death, as the -watch ,When the hand should- reach --- the minute mark the thing would die; and after that nothing in the world would ever matter any more. The ten minutes were over, ,111r. ,Raymond rose and took the bey ,by lithe arm. "Come upstairs," he said. They went up in silence into Jack's room; and the key turned in the.lock. There ivas mirious glitter in, his eyes. "My dear boy," the Viear said, "all , this has beenas dreadful to me as to The bey shrank a little further away. "What the matter? Have you fallen and hurt yourself ?" 4You got out of the 'window? You were thinking of running away? Stand up!" He peumel a moment, waiting to be ' obeyed; but there was no movement. -Stand up!" he reputed. jack mod himeelf a little and looked up. "Well " 1 said •"will you kill Met or must I kill you 1 ' . A trust blurred the man' e sight; he struck out blindly, witha- tleriehed hand. As Jack dropped, like a thing etruck dead, silentlyan a heap at his feet, he realized what he had done. In the first Shock of fear he thought that it was.he who bad broken the arm. At his cell for help, Mrs. Bal- m/A came runnirig out from the house. "Josiah! Oh, What is ' • "Help nie carryhim indoors,and send for the. doctor as quick as you- erin Make haste!" She bent down to enter the shed; but stopped Short,. seeing the boy ly- ing on the ground. She stood still for a moment, looking; then turned on her husband. . at.have--you•deriela.-She •"I don't knew." She steeped without another word and 'helped. him to lift tha'hare For some time jack only passed from one fainting fit into another Jenkins,. hastily summoned, lo round with graye pace after he felt the pulse. • • "Some more prandY; .and -get applications,- quick!, And,. send .Willianue. ,want • .se , "Wont= . The mar waa.a mostan he Jac - • • olv* ' , Is there any -danger. he talter- • "The pulse is very' low. Why was not called in sooner?" The Vicar moistened his lips. "I don't know," he Said again. "You don't know when it happen - 'd? Nor how?" The doctor tinned .back to his Pa= lent. • •By the time Dr. Williams arrived he danger of collapselwas aver, and he old man was a little surPrised Selected Recipes. Per °Muteduddin p pour 4 quer ef ocenhe Milk over a pint of the bes fine oatmeal, and let it remain 41 night. Next day beat two eggs ati add a phial of milt Butter a heel that will just hold the ingredients Cover tight with a floured cloth, an boil for an hour and a half. Nat i withcold butter and suite When cold once and toast it. Per baked apples take the nutriber required, and choose thein, if possible of equal size.. Wipe them welt With damp cloth, and remove the core with a 'fork or apple ewer. Place thein in a 'baking tin, sprinkle them first with a little. water and then with gram- latecVsugar, end bake hi a moderate oven until soft. The time will depend getter one cup suger; two level table- t ePoone cornstarch and one saltspoon t sat. Add one cup boiling water, stir 1, and cot* for ilve Minutes, tlien add 4 one and oni-balf cline choir/eft crau. u berries and one-half cup seeded •and ' chopped raieins, and let simmer for a fifteen Minutes, being careful not to t burn. Turn ,into baked ' crust and cover wrth meringue. If clewed, this may be baked tyzo crusts, in which case use ene-half cup of cold water in , mixing, instead of WO cup of boiling writer, and do net cook before Pitting hetween creets, . • Priciumeed ,Chicken.-,-/oine. chicken, wipe off with clean, wet eloth, pour etdd water over it, dtain ,and lay' it still wet.in pot in layers each layer pen theicind-Wiiritile used; anCWill moderate 'oval twenty mixtute* serve garnialtsd with paraley• Bekaa Vial end Oniona.--.Pail , Bermuda Onion, cover with boiling water and cook one-half hour. Drain, rinse in cold water and drain again., Remove centre* from onions so as to leave regularly 'Shaped cases. (hop 1 *Qs reakli:iviteddhltoen13-haanIfti '°tellaeapiTounathYvnieael , yolk, of egg, two tablespoons- fine bread crumbs, one-half teasPonn salt, same of paprika and two table- spoons cream or milk, nix together end fill centrea of' onione. Set onions in casserole or baking dish, add one. half cup broth or boiling water eon= taining beef extract, and let cook about one entrone-half hours in mod- erate- oven. Baste a few times with liquor In pan, adding more if eedest. When almost demi addone . ble- spoon ilbur mi*cd-with. water la -pour, and cook fifteen minutes longer. Stir in two tablespoons of butte and a little kitchen bouquet if you. hey° it and se •e from cesserole . Uaeful Hintie from varnished furniture. good beelatealio, boweycr well . it is cooked, will not be obits best unleee served ,dircetiNijle4 hooked, T941Ve• a brilliant polish to StaVe -diaaelVa tablespeenfid, Auger in a little and add to black - lead. .9 If curtains -are alloWed.tO' dry ther.," eughlY before being is lied* will be 'found that they last, clean °Tiger: • . • After Washing' leather *levet! rinse them, in cold water, thee soap again. This will prevent..„.them .from drying s • y; TO clean a. burnt pan dip a hard crust of bread in kitchen salt and rub he burnt portion, then ;Wash in. hot soda andwater. . When using salt to remove stains from silverware, the salt should be melted and a strong solution applied, otherwise you rim the risk of scratch- ing the silver, • . Set, n the r.,+! verd'athtIcivltelirssmiel neorindririta .vcratitre e°ver. *eft, bring to belling point, 1 then slinnter, slowly for Some bow*, hot Platter and :keep hot while adding 'until chicken is cooked. olfemove lid from pot season chicken with salt = ....„. f • . - any; white - „pepper,. transfer meat to ,flour and -butter; rubbed IC.,getnerp to , lineOr in pot, where fond was ctioketl: gravy$tirimitiielhteli4clep 0' aunrdits=nthb. beaten Mvagkeet • I return to pot enough :-.to. 'Make ,i very hot and 'Ihnia• ever chicken in platter. vary from 20. minutes to 1 bonr. When the applea,.ara readyliftg them. on to a clean dish and sift ft little en... . Dr ,gar over, • .•-•, • okesi Those who are ,fond carrots will hiu; •find this recipe enellent:-Use good4isecl- carrots for four persons.. hot Serape and:pare...them and etit into o'oin04. 'small pieces. put a. teaspoonful of . reedered, beef suet 10 . .pot)- ado• -a' littlg onion juice, ppt ,ie carrots,: let thein took for few Minutes, but no brown, .pour in boiling Water -to cover, season with a half teaspoonful or salt, O dash Of Peli,Pert andone teaspoonful of sugar. Let the carrots boil rather slowly for an hour. If the water boils 100 add a little boiling water to re- plenish: Cabbage Soup, -Fut two cups shred- ded cabbage on to cook in enoligh Water to cover. Let simmer slatrly about three-quarters of an Iniur Until tender.. When cabbage has cooked one -halt hour season with salt and pepper and pour into hot tureen in. which there. is one teaspoon. butter. If desired, strain. Serve with oyster crackers. Tastes muchlike oyster stew. ' ' • Cranberry -Raisin Pie. --Mix to.... you; I'have seldem had, so hard a , duty to perform,. That in y house should have been made a Centre of; dealement And .contemination to, spread the /poison of vice atang fleck; that my dead brother's ehild Should have been a pause efaffence to these innocent' membeta •�f grist, has been to me perhaps the bitterest disappointment of, ray life." . He paused • a moment. Jack had f net, moved. A sense of fear came 4 over the Vieat.as he saw how wide and strained the great eyes were. "1. know," he went on, "that you now think me harsh and cruel; but *you will thank rne for it some day. MY child, you have been fii danger of hell fire.' But X see that your evil pride is broken, and that you are sorry Air. your Cone • and lay t your hand on Ood'a. holy. Book, and t hat his colleague should have thaught he promise- me that you will abandon t t necessary to send for him' Your wickedness. Then we will kneel i down tog"etlief and pray that it may o please to forgive you this deed- o ly sin and to lead you into righteous. t ,ness.'" Be rose, holding' the boy's hand., It t was silently, furtively pulled away. "Jack:" he cried out, , "gave you a still not repented?" - t Jack stood up and loblred round W him two or three , times, like' a W creature caught in a trap. "Are you, . . going on?" he said, it It was the first time that he had fl spoken since Tuesday night, 4`J'ack!': the Vicar cried again, "Jack," he repeated for the third to time. "Do you mean to-defy_trie?".....w ---They-gooked-at-e0h " Other in silence. Then the Vicar's eyes crept s slowly downwards to the naked shoul- der and to the straight red bar across a5 it. • Jack went slowly to the bed -post D and put up his hands te be fied. de * * * * * *, an peration.of setting the bone brought n another fainting 'fit; but this time he boy ;Men rallied, and lay with alf-closed eyes, glancing now and hen indifferently at the figures mov- ng round the sofa.. When his un pproached him he ° shuddered urned his head away; otherwise aa quite passive and decile, but ould answer ,no questions. "Did - he remember 'falling? Was from window -ledge? When was. it?' ow did it happen?" Keenly shook his head in silence. . Then they brought him something drink; and he took it obediently., ond,cring.Vthy -they-could not :let -him lone, and ethy the glass should jingle o -against his teeth. "Do you want the pillow shifted?" ked the Vicar. . Jack looked 'up at lint silently; and r. Jenkins, standing near, saw the adly vindictiveness in the black eyes d bent dawn. over the sofa. , ."Is the arm hurting you much wv• "It's not so bad when you letv„ it, one." • . - • "Does • anything • else hurt you • pt the arm?" •--- • . Jack looked. ronnacnLitim_slowly th grave Contempt. ". . • "What_anakes you think that-1:771- viin't made a fuss, have ••- 'Indeed you haven't; you little Spars - II," said Dr. Valliant& He had over- ard only the k...^tiz words. "I wish grown-up patients patients made so little- n't you, Jenkins?" • Dr. Jenkins said nothing. He had ener eyes than the older man, and him the steady, practised stoicism this mere' child was a frightful ng ,to see. The rope marks on the tete had aroused his Suspicion's' at. e first, and he had been 'watching ietly. When no one 'else was loisk' g he had seen the boy put up' his t hand furtively, and bite it. , e tion had explained to him the.-siv, _ etlittle 'dints marking the . brown in in so many places; apparently e mere clenching of teeth had not Cabbage Ifoar.-Remove crust and scoop out Inside of oblong ' loaf of bread, leaving . will one-half inch thielr, then saute casein butter. Shred , sinall, firm,' well -bleached cabbage I soak in cold water thirty minutes, 'drain enct cook in uncovered vessel contaming boiling !salted, water. to cover. Add smell pinch of soda. Conk twenty-five minutes,. drain, season 'with half saltspoon pepper, one table- spoon melted butterand one -halt cup white sauce., rin bread box case with, alternate of cabbage; bread= crnmbs and grated cheese moistened with cream, and ftnish with thick sprinkling of grated, ,eheese. Set in The dark stain on 'the ' inside .0f aiuzninumboiling a solution ns ocfarim;abteerreanindevbeallioraxy and letting it Stand for Some time in the vessel., • • . k When making aprons it Mar lre an dvantage to put the pocket in the entre of the apron instead of at the ide,' where it is found to be contin- ually catching. en the demo handles and tearing, . To 'test silk, fray out the threads and break them. If they snap easily it is not good. The warp 'thread run- ning„lengthwise sheuld be Of equal ...§.1.7ertits*iswitshe.i.the7wool- threadr-run-t • • Remnants of meat. of • different r kinds can be ground fine and mixed I with rice, a raw. egg seasoned and made into „cakes and fried brown on ' bah sides. •They, are very good for lunch nith. . • cle a and he '..:Bijk014r.mGenetiVE. That night, When the household was asleep, he dragged himself up no off the floor. He had lain there, Air. ering,,.his head clown on his arms, al ever since his uncle went out. He looked- round the room, ce light was allowed him, but the night -was clearand•the moon -Shone in at wi the window. In the ivy *outside a bird began to twitter sleepily. ha He reaChed the,,tahle at last and drank some Water. After that. no. ta Was less inclined to tumble down when he he tried to walk, • and managed. to all open the cupboard door and take out do . the candle end and.matches which he ice to of thi wr th nu in lef 2c ag sk th • *Oglesl. thing for, ft *me 00. ni94.1- • - tr a n s poroi;ion corporation in, the • world •to reach' out and pick.- ' Prank .Steehen' Meighon -off financial • tand. maps,. When the ". shareholders *I the Oanadian Pw elflo • gall sr ayCompany. ' reeent at lis • Meeting, hold' in Mentreal,„ -ye t to th�addt. Oen . of thie . Cana. "' • Man to Dire& torete, the busi. liese. world the wide -world. over nodded ` its ale proval... „Be was the man thet, fit, the square •post. " . for the square bole,t he right •-'man-,-brandedsnd' labelled • "C'. P. IL • Back frora •tbe, , trenches' et.: P'ran coy., and Fland.ark- the smell of .the pow. der still on him; luedstr-drunis still • quivering w.Kb . the „,ebocit • of the ' ," bursting shrapnel, n Brigadier -General. to • bielghort-fer . . . Such IS his,litle*:Makes picturesque. mitry hit* the 'larger -age, • Wen d 'haielie-'servect his bleeding country. - The beat :evidence' of thla could DO • hlr-ho,'ObtainethfrohrtherfeW surviiing who . engaged the theft O Calonel,Meighen's Fourteenth 'Battalion at 'SL Julien. Called borne 'to. I" lend his experienced advice•to the ,Militie authorities of* Canada, the t honors of'. war 'gained only by duty Well done 'heye overtaken the young reginiental Commander. • • • ° . • • W : . But military prowess is not essential to the .Make -nn of the Canadian a • Pacific 'Railway Director, and men do not graduate in the service of their • • country; In an Industrial way .by leading ,gailant Canadian. soldiers to ' y ,Ittotory in Europe. In the veins of thli Man runs the blood Of Mount y Stephen. The dist President Of the. Mendip Pacifie Railway Company, Lord- Mount Stephen, was General Meighen'a. ',Hebert Meighen, e; tether of the new Director. was e railway. aseeciate of Mount Stephen,.and u himeelf- a Director otthe road. -Here; then, is the Meighen• pedigree: it. in g„ •-•-• ` • Melghen was a big ,nian it tie day and lie left biS iniprliit on s the country. His o. P. R. affiliations were extensive,,and Is • appropriate • that his son should resume the .,Conneetion direct. One of the father's • aeltleYentectswas_the 'founding ef-,••the---Lairetef-7the-tWoode:•MflIlng-Com- pany. and inmorerecent Years:OrankB:.Meighen had been, widely known ite President. ` In° addition te... the large ....interest held by ' Robert Itietghen. estate-. in-- the:great rallwey..company, this' take of 'the: Woods attilieg Company, one of 'the largest 'of its kind in the world hike been for had hidden there some fortnight ago. /laving got a light he opened the • CH•41)TER Ir•-• yvhieh was running' in his head., AS Bible, and tried to And the passage On Friday' evening' after familY familiar as he was with the •SeriPtures Prayers Mr. Raymond. went up, as it •took•bini a 19hgc,time; his hands -usual, to the locked gable rem. It were so stiff and swollen, and, shook' was. after sunset, but there was still so as he turned the leaves. But he light enough to see. ' - found it at last; the twenty-seventh Jack was crouching on the floer, , chapter of the Beek of • Deuteronomy; ' half-dressed,. in thefurthest -eorner the 'chapter of the mount of cursing,. - Of the tooth.. He would' Stay so With- he be he that perverteth : the out moving, Sometimes, for hours to judgrnent,of the stranger, fatherless, gether; On the table stood a plate of and widow. And all the people shall Say, Amen.", . • ' •• Then he climbed Out On to the win- dow silt and let himself down by the ivy. He had done it often enough be- fore, without any thought of danger; but. to -night, as be reached the • re- _ jecting le-tige7,111Tar ziness overcame POWere .and flung down on the fioor. hint -again, the wall seemed to `sway - A.ed then had followed horrors Willa. and lurch forwards and the. garden, wmild haunt the dreams of both for bed belts* to.rise mit rushing • upon years to come. him. He threw up his hands and fell.' After thittbitrhancla had been tied; After • dawn he Woke hp, somehow, ' but the precaution was aeofiless: he andcrawled into the wood -shed eloSe had no thought of resistance. ' There at 'hand. There Wee little conscious had been some . helpless, mechanical purpose in the action;, hardly - more struggling, but nothing more. When than the blind instinct Of a wounded unfastened he would cower. down Animal, to hide_ and die in some dark again in ' his cornet, silent Under -.A place. He • realized that' his . right standing nothing, Now, aa.hia-linel, etarm. was broken;butthat he , 'appreached and Spoke , to ., him,-heTwas'---net --very cleat -about anything, , 'grouped face downwards on the'floor-except. that he was cold and , giddy, 7- in hysteridd convulsions,: arid wished,. if he was going to die, he He fetched water front„- the • next coil ie a bit quicker,and get it Over. lool •room, and , tried. to make the bo' . „About- eighteeelockatlie"Yieatedifie- it's :drinkit:-°Bitt---7,74eVa teethwere..,leti...down-iiite the garden. -ins eyesWere' "T like a; Viee;:- When at last the dumb.t.hard nand steely...with .anger; ii4"'- bad, -the writhing stopped, he began to sob' been in the emPty -gable r AUL Tea and a tratqr-jug. On Tuesday evening he had sprung suddenly at his • uncle and tried to strangle hint. For one moment the furious, pressure, of . fingers on his throat had Made the Vicat 'wild with _ fear- then th_e>bey-liad_heen_ over - o en preyed help •enough: "Yo didn't learn that trier in one night he thought; "and you know More tha 'you care to 'tell, We haven't got the bottom •of this story yet." "Do you feel better now?" aske Dr, Williams. -• fasten your things and make stir there's no, more mischief anywhere "I think saw a cut on the righ shoulder," Dr. Jenkins put in. "Oh, we must expect to end fe little tilts. and bruised atter such tumble," •said the old doctor cheer fully, ' "You needn't shiver; So, m boy; I'm not going to hurt you an more, that's all over. , Hullo!". He had Uncovered the Stilted shit "W..10., What the dickens have yo been doing to yourselft...-Tiunhlin out ofwindowevery_alight for -month? °You never got into, thi state by . . a Jenkins, come here c at ..this_ekld's:_abenjterstm, Why -.1C- • • heti there was deed- allenee; Whit three Men watthet-eirch other! Jack!" the clergyman whispere hoarsely, with lips as colorless as th boy's own. "For Glad's sake, Why didn't you tell me )' the arm wa broken?" • • ' ' • • hiuSgahcked. only. :looked at. him thia " (To be continued:: • ODD PORMS,OF OAMBLING. Many Ways in Which 'One May Take - a Chance. -WI* game has appeared among the newsboys of London, England. It is called "ibiloo.P-, fitimberean perticipate., Each player, has a lturip of sugar witiell he places before him,. together with a 'penny or whatever the stake may he. He on whose lump of edger a fly first • settles whid the game and sweeps in the etalces. The Mexican Yaquis emPlOy the jumping bean for purposes of gam- bling. 'Ut is a seed resembling a bean, which bounces up and down ;and all around on a level surface. " A ring' is drawn' with a piece .9f chalk on a fiat board Or a titble...,,arid then the ring is cut into sections of • equal size; like cuts of a -Pie, therel being as inany"diviiions as there are phiyers. Each player then puts a bean into- ItiS section and the .beans begin dancing over the, circle, whf •18 enclosed within a hooplike riming - went, so- that- the beans are confined within the circle. The ',moment a ' a er's s ction is empty„..lie.....-must-: place- another bean down, but when- ever several beans are danpifig on his - section he must teke them, leaving only onebean. And so the game gties on as long as the players choose. Na- turally each bean represents, money and is sold fel* 4 specified amouht by the banker of the game.. Another form of gambling is prac- tised' arnongsailors, The oldest sailer in the forecastle is usually the stake- holder arid ;he-takes-thir--bets on whether -t. et -L. -will -win; 'Those Who -- put their 'money on It4 are wagering - that the pilot Who comes aboard when port -is Inede-wiitinwhiirriklif feet deek firdt; while' the -alters 7bet on his, left foot. ') uncontrollahlY. o e, leer murmured. This, without doubt, was the flea], breakdewn of the stubborn will that he -had get himself to conquer; the hardest victory,he had ever Wen. The sobbing had stepped at last; asek was lying on his bed, ouite still, his face hurled in" the pil w. • "Thank a dr, th v• .• had seen the. Marked Bible and th " Then the'Vkar sat down beside ini , _and touched himagently on the aim. • "There, jack, -don't cry-any.;.more; s't up . • d listen to me," - - - 1 . jack 'sat up • obediently, but .• he = ihrarkaway as far as he cottid. broken ivy hanging froth the wall. The, Vicar elenehed hands, , '"111 I had only tor, touched " him,' he thought; and hushed. 'angrily " the memory of the bare shoulder and the red wound which had driven -hive mad with desire, - • -' The 'open door of the wood -shed Caught his eyes, and he _looked in: The Amite huddled up atnotig the fag- d mass' years One -of the biggest of the railway's euatoniere, b e • Let no one Imagine,- however, that this new member of a galaxy 'of . Canada's captains of Industry; is without merit of his own, or that he Is s. tiding Into the C. P. R. hoard item on• family prestige. At the present elmehe holds' the renewing Important ollIces:11President of the Lake et •. . the Woods 'Militia CemeanY: a Diteetor, df the Dank of°Toronto; President of the New _Brunswick -Railway‘ Company; a Director -of• the Canadian' hiorth.West Land Company; President of the Montreal .0pera CoMpany; a got's` erept further int 1 dint_ret... Pei. He apPialebett and • stooped down. ' "Jaelc, what are you doing there?" soLDIElt I ..Direeter of the Paton Matilificturing CornednY. To figure thne PrOnti- ',vent!), In the heelnessclife ofithe Dominion is to prove his:great personal. -ability and -tntritak adUMelt. L'oLievel-head" 'the "adjOctive that the big • busIness-tmen-e r-Canad pplY-'-tcr Prank -8;----afeighier.' 7 • . " While filling se large a Plebe is this,. Genteral,,.Meigitee • *0 Still -found •Tlirdlitireirt Efilitefitaliadate-fanefficl as ariTexperVexporient. • . or the hazardone.gaine of pony polo, and many a mreering battle has heal •woo by his own --sir and daring.. Ile Is an efithusfastle sportsman In ." , • Many dir•eetimis, as ;Is evident In his 'therahershiplif •the -following clubs: The Ferest and Streani, the • Montreal Hunt, the peck River' Polo, the . Montreal Jockey, the Teresa° Hunt, and others. • • • • •-• General Meighen was born at Montreal, December 'it' 1869. lie' was . ederated .at Montreal tate] School •and graduated in Arts from MeGill. • •Ilulvereity In 1889. He began hit bushies4 lite In the steamship office • the ;Robert ROfolect, company, litter entering the service- Of the, Lake of 'the WOOde Milling CorePeeY., in their Montreal office, For Menr Yeartf.„110;,.Was !Treasurer' of the Camipaily,.inieceedlrig to the Presidency on the. death Of • 1911...= Besides the clubs inentioned deneral Melghen Is a ineinher of the St,•. . '3anie8 end Ititiversity Oltibs of Montreal; the York 010 Of TOM:110'. the ;Junior Athenaeum, , of' London, England: end tbe Point andith Club; Ofi' IN.arrangitneett Pier. Hie. plibliespiritednete IS Indicated In thafeet that :he was Honorary Treasurer of the geed committee for the Oliebee "centenary Celebration in 1908, and Was Mtn of the erittelptil preinetere of the Typhoid Emergency .1•100liitel, In Montreal, In IMO, t For meet of hie life General MeIgheii has .eerved . in the militia. of • ".danide. He was formerly adjutant -et the 6th Royal tligitlanliereand became VenteiltatinCeltliel etimintindirtg the regiment 1111000, Ile Voltino„ ?leered fervisertice in Smith 'Africa, :When the meileut war broke eat, lin- • .eisent to the front in-tenimend Of the 14th inattelion, leading his Metit, through several °tine' neat fenioue' and important mictigeniente Wer Mt the whet remit. Ile wee etelittal in an ,ailViner7 CaPaeltro.. and 11; .4.oir engaged in •oreanlehigand tetruitteg the SW overeeat Itattalionot, OtanAlan (trendier 01.404ch ritometibli hat tete*, plata Alto pe,;.1 0,51,!144?., Woman Who Befriende+-Wirunrkd Australian Its Sole " - 1Cgacy of $50,00u bee' just come ..to Mrs.* John WerCharri, of Goicer, Vorkehire. England,- tv setriel te her .itindnesS to a wounded Aust: Ohm soldier, Robert McClure,: . • . , meciurc, .a.1 -to was it; ranehroan from New 'South "WaleS,..- was serionsly 'wourided doting the Turks' attempt to ObitS the Stift Canal., 'He was emit to ttiglatel. and !edged at a hospital not far trent , WAtelfarliTS-lome. ArtraWarehtnie, husband is • serving in the army, veld frequent stisita • to, hospital and .did several sninll savices for the wounded 11(04 Clut, Who died- about a Month after Teaching tnglatul./ Ile made • Mrs. Warelunia his sole heir... • OM1NtONop CANADA We Will iaatte a citeultir fully eXplaining this Lon and • 'will receive :eubeeriptions in your name, or otherwise; as deifired, delteating the bends to yen' at the Government? 'If youare interested' Woe suceees of this Loin Wa.ite tiS Immediatelsr, Canada .130iid CorpiiratiOn. - LIMITED (lovniWstEhtitt *al hZT.INICIPAT; latSnINTVIt2S 89 yolge 'Streot • Toromett Ont. • . • The latest destroyeri tliger iv* • other waratih)a of their 6140 in t Nat l' they. itaite a :MO ho'w instead of A turtle-haeli d•nek, and nre painted Ver.. ' • . MADE IN - CANADA .mitstreptmeT • BAKING MUMS GUARANTEE!) TO MADZ FROM INGREDIENT.S SHOWN ON ME LABEL AND NOM 01171.M lE RINTEW THEIR WEAKNESS. How Accidents Were StopPed, in tin( • ' Streets of Paris. France, the light anise eame Int • During. the reign of Louie kl.T. fashion, and great ladies of Paliat were accustomed to drive in them about, the city., But beautiful hands are not always strong ones; accident ' began- to ocgur-Nore and more 'fro. quently in the streets. 'Consequent* the king besougbt.the minister of po4 lice to do tioinething, since the lives of pedestrians were constantly in dan= ger. • "I Will do whatever is in my pow- er," replied the police minister i "You Majesty desires that these accidents al ordinance that ordered that, in th manse eknintigr4r1Ye;ie*rl, "Certainly/41: The next day there appeared a roy, future, ladiesLninder, thirty_ year* --of ,:---- agelhould-infot drive, Wakes throug the streets of Paris. That seems mild restriction; but it is said the searcely a woman from that time 0 drove her own pheise. The polio minister km* that few weinert care to. advertise the fact that the were over thirty, and that the res would probably be too old to drive arlYwaY- The flist cif ALL Rernedies7.. t,4 ASELIINTE,-," in its ,ina37 t; . forms with their . innum- erable uses, is the 'foundation of the family medicine phest. ---7714740 In - Pe euini Jelly . It 'keeps the akin:smooth and', sound. Invaluable in the nurs- ery for burns, cuts, insect bites, etc. Absolutely pure and safe. AVOM SUBSTITUTES. In- sist on "Vaseline" .,in original packages bearing the name,' CHESEBROUGli 114,41. N "0- -PAC/I/RING CO, Consoli- dated, Per sale at. all Chemists 7 .and Gentral4teresi. ar stIlustriae4 booklei-*e dr! requeal. , ..41iE.14BROUGH,IVIPO CO: -- ' ' Ar...viaeuarted) _ isao CHABOTAVE4_11014TREAL • imiouirsugommixowxxxxongimoomx; y those Paitis? Itere 1s teetimonial unsolicited "ILI bad my would be advertised on every street; •_tether." The; unlit or wOffitta that his rheumatism and falls tokeep and -use-Sltiati's Lint= anent is liko a drdwaing :matt • _refusing a rope.“ -4. .1, nth Dyke, Lakewood, Sloan's Lininien 101 rio.1' • • o ‘7. •••ti _ 4 •