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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1915-06-10, Page 710( • s..• ••••• ••••• e*:erarycleetarr.,),,erte7710-",,'''' ••;;•N•'" • 1 , " • •17417"1",. VirT' • THE CatitlIA.N LIE PICTORIAL. Whet Call be RoueWith Vonitryf There are few agricultural crops that are greater than theteof poul • try. Any man, wonian or child will , find profit in poultry culture. We find poultry a neglecteel tilde 'issue een.farmS to an elevated bueiness winch Affords support and luxuries nienra. Poultry raising will flouride anywhere regardless of climate. • . • , An Interesting Oreepati011. -e„ . PoulteY'raiseng es, 44 Intereat3Oft APOUPUtiOn. -The rettrns he, secured quiekly, 'Of Course the " . amount of money to be got out, of Lt. depends upon the work applied end ability for making a• "go 01 it." . " Melly feel,---ee irether„Iinee ablate ee-eellaSTIT-If sikh the couutry would he flooded- • lhe bin produetii. There is as good • per cent. eotentertst for 'the *nee whe are willing to do the work as ,It should be done. ]?or anyone who . • e !,s adapted' ten this line of work. he . will . find"' in it a' gond, paying; tea. • ;Ies • n: , . • • 600d. fil!0,0k., Best. Theee days.theefarler teene.et •• ford, to,luteber :ate*, neither," 04 ehe afford to feed and care' for 'MU- • gee] fovele. No one is able to raise poultry so, cheaply as the :farmer. Of eolrrs-e-if one has It large number . it will require a little more work. Right Feeding leseentiai. Noematter what- - breed • iu.licAtii — they rnut he frd properly t. 4t.tnn the b es t results.' Sot one in: ten--oi.- ' 'the thousands of•flocks on the farra. produces enough eggs to pay for the feed and asreat Many only just pay for their) board, to 'say nothing About the time. taken to • care for them, which means that, the.. feed- ' given them is nothing, but a load. Many ..farraers think as, long.ad they • 'Can- take .seine •eggs - town '-and 4 buy &few grOceties,.thattheir hens are making good. ' They _ do. not, nw how qnuelt their •coffee, etc.) is costing, them, as no reeords! AM - kept and they: cannoe.tell where they,are at 1...gitlf their ;hang. ee • .•-there arriare possibilitiee on ••thia. farm. for. a profitable poultry • plant and. every farm should have flock,of or 1,000 hens. If -Pre- .. • .... per mithoels ' are used, a goodly .10111 of Money -can be obtained from' farm -•nook: :-., greitt:treuble- '7• on ttfis -farm in the winter is that .• the:fowls are net given any, or not 'eneugh greed Med. ° Rale should eaised or ()ate sprouted. If the - people who Manage the great poul- try plants of the country on *small lot of ground after buying•all their food are able to make a, good pro- fit froni poultry, it would seem like the fernier °Quid more than ,double this profit. Where stock is kept, there is so much food going to Dentend Increasing. • ThO'demainitfor poultry prednets is on the inereaee. No market has • ever refused to. buy Our products and- it is up to the producer to mar- ket at such *nee of the year when be earteabtorin the highest price. he winter, When eggs, are 0„t highest more thee. to care ferethe flock.rotau ;has been with us for hundreds, of years -end we are only beginning . to apply „the 'beet methods of care. and feeds. rtgg .ptoducition is Sadie negleeted on farms 'where it cOuId be inede to pay the best. ;•, On •the ,farM, :the , gretindi ',are apt to he. mere „Wholegoree. The death list isestnalk, and, food chap - ere; ..Orehardd autitinper lotareake. an ideal place, t� 'rear poultry; In- sects are abundant, and plenty of. eeratehing, Material is at hand thia, fitraishingthefewis with the need- ed exercise. More failures come. from under feeding than from any , Other one -cause. In everY leek,- we -have alobeof birds that .ebeiirdbe culled" out. _ . , . The Hen and the Cow. 'Poultry is. fa,st taking a .pIa,ce side by side with the ow ' in -suPplying the necessities of life. You need but 'a 9=11 piece of, ground' to es- potiltrY,Plant,and •a: start can, be mode with • small • c.,a,pital, The increase_..iXelt,*.ekLia..VerY orhere 11- morwprOfit-iii• eggs, ' and the most profit eomes ni the winter time when ithe'-eggs. Are high or -in 'the spring when you can sell eggs for -hatching purposes.' During July and Aagas,* when. eggs are lovv in.pAce, is a.godel time ,,to, raise 744i Dim, )390.4`,. as these thickens, if -given &gaff quarters, can almost take eare-ofr.themselvei; if they,are given free range. ' Most. 'persons • think that the spring is the • only time hathk hickene Why allow a,closed sea - ion A:Ott-fine of the year Make a longer season of:it. Spread peofits over the whole year: "PARIS CLUBS PA'1111„OTIC4,„,„_ OiitivasS Shot4' Many Meinhers • Killed .oe •Wounded. " A, libel on young Frenchmen be- , jonging..Ao t.he highe,st, soCiety.---hasi • stirred up 'Sufficient 'indignation to • • • '1?1!0:41.tee Several detailed, replies, ‘- the/ugh the original statement is unworthy of notice ns. being the work • of "German •, agents. A'Po.rtuguese Paper began . • bhe •trouble by. stating -that" "abont ' 740,' deserters from the French • emir,' almost all belonging. to the aristocracy or the highest ranks 'of tocietyy are. :now , at San -Remo"- (in" To establishthe baselessne,ss of this statement an investigation has been .rnade into the, effect of the war •. on -the anost'select Paris clubs; At the Jockey Club, 34 members have. been' wounded 9 are prisoners 35 ••• hnxe been apentioned.mdeepatelies, " 15 have won the, Legion of Honor; •" ' 2 have 'been decorated with the • • inilitary.rnecial,:and' 6 proposed for •,promotion in the Legion of Honor, • , every oneofthe foregoing being • •• bearers of noble titles. • The Cercle Agricola-, familiarly 4 known -as -the 4“Potata--01nb;'---hae killeete-12-wbuirded- , and 41 -missing. The Union Artie- • • .tique, or • `.4"Epatant,” ,(extraordi- . nary), his had 7- killed, .18 wound- • e , 17 unsereg„an , 0 meetaon,ec,l in ••despehes..• l? The Automobile Club hae liad 15 killed a.nd 30 ouned;:Abe- -nue 11.Oiale. Chili, 4 killed, 15 wounded, and 3 missing.; the Gee* Artie- tieflie et .Litte,rairei (Volney 014b), 4 killed., .These statistics' are not complete, 'but they show' that the aristooratic-class,Ailte-everytother in the 'country, has done 'its.duty; and_nof fledto any Italian -.,pleasure, kesort. • • 4' , • " • Ohl '"Iroine" Remedies: Many household remedies- have been left out of the new edition of the British Pharmacopeia,' Among them are clandelion„' sarsaparilla, and _elder flower water, Although they have •been disearded ,by the General Medical Connell, they, may . "Alt...that .cart be said in fa,vOr of .these old medicines is that they are harmless," said well -lemma man- ufiiettiring chemist recently; "Ser. saparflhe and clandehhir %have- -no epecific effect On any portion Of the human frame. Ai an agenteforere- (hieing -inflammation elder floweit. Water has been. superseded by lead and opium lotion.. The majority of the old wives' remeclies are about as useful as the,addea".s.,torigue or toad's buil re, detente 4f -the , . • ,,rnt not 'afraid of horses now automobiles are so much more more ;vi- w1• INTERNATIONAL° IeRSSONe , • , atirm 18. egieseeneen*aureeteee*ereeeeieelling, • , Fifteen thousand • Britieli were ' drowned in the,. Yser„ Widely9eireuliteed. by the twees in. -0,417 iaanY JasttSePtiMbarP• '4614*4af'"4,•144"ef the British had reached -the district.' The Lion and Tiger, *wail' • newspap•er reader in.GerMani'kfloW8, were: both stinkiii the DOggar • Aar* hattle.-4wOfc'piontres. 4f.,the • going -down were, spublisieed in e German illititrated jeuruals of repute, *Puenorting-,toelie •frene sketches ' by naval. officers; .,Abeeve &oft' "the latest German picture of the disaster, that never happened. No date is specified, • nor the ship's name ---which is discreet,. is entit144; "Sinking of an English , • •-„Tre9P-sh,iP in, the Channel," The Germans _mist be in anore despondent mood. than outsiders iniagine • if pi.etomiej lying is needed' for eneouragement • SUNDAY SCOWL STUN a . • • • .0EltIlIANT DECEIVED: •Newspaper:Points Out'Some of Her • - • aa.lsealculations. - •The German newepaper Der Tat& , which -during the 'first month of the war •shouted :--"Iferr. Gott, sind diese• Tage. sehon" (0 Lord,• liew„ elelightful these days are), bats ar- • rived now at a. totally 'different The gas fneovatioh vvas inere -murderous reapromptur;--7The--gar factor was te •be 'the Centribution 'of Germart science to a' movement sieraneoerevatemottitaili • BROKE UP . .GERIVIAN •ATTACK •Germany planned the ' Lesson E - The Blessedness - of I' giveness.-7-Paa. 32. Golden TeXt, Psa. 10 The Heavy Hand of Sin • - (Verses 1-4). e • . •Verses 1,' 2,* These verses, i•edite the ".hlessing of • forgiveness." 'Saint Eaul,_in_Romans 4, uses them forcibly in in his argument • Blesse,d--Our Psalter (Pa. 1. 1) begins With tibia word and 'weaves its happy charm Aroughouti :the. music of praise and thanksgiving. The Word Means "ItaPpy?'" • alf- blessipg must bring happinide: * •-Transgressiow.i.-:, 7 sin -7 „: . ini-. ,quitYwrifeSe 'Forth: frequently re- dur in.- the Old Testament.' 'They mean, respectively, (1) rebellion a foreible breaking, of God's law; "missing the meek," or wandering from the' Way ran& (3) •depiiiiiitY, grave moral delinquency. . These three words are repeated in verse 5. 'Forgiven . . . Covered . . imput: eth not threefold -par- don isicludingalt eierengdoedg* f'F�rgive" leans- to take sway the-,hurdear--6ea--anhn71.:-20)Tt`en:-T Ve,?' implies making the sin to die; appear so 81S. 11.0t to nieet the eye of the judge; and "not to -impute 'iniquity' -is in the nature of..a Can:- cell'ation of the. debt whith the debtor owes,,,, but which he will not „be° required to • pay. • • Guile----Deceitinlness. 'Absence of iniquity cannot be imputed where guile remains. -There must Cher self-deception nor an atteMpt to de.ceive God. • 3. Bones -In Hebrew poetry, "the bones" denote the funclamen- tal part of the living organism. • In PrOyerbi,-they spokenef at. the seat of health (16,„24); in Pea. 8. 2, tion o poisonous gas. as a tent ore agency of warfare. state of mind and declared recent- ly • I • "So many of our calculations Bonds and Their • Yields ilrooul Boido..There 18 a Splendid Market for .Whielt are Quoted on Moot Exelunilec •" Few •general claeses of bonds of - ter loath wide range of 'choice 43 the railroad bond. This kind 'Ot in" ,vestment.offers a great v,e,riety of bonds, ranging from the atoctly staid, and sober prior lien Or ant naortgege bond to the third and fourth general debenture issue; and -eliort-term notes. ranking either •pare passu with the the one or the other orthe'inortgaged, Or as a eecendaq lien alter all the, others have, been looked after. If the Investor wants absolute security for his money to- gether with a steady .rate of inter - et, he can get this 3U° a CertaM type Of tileray bond:- or if the spe- culator wants to take' a little flier in, eoreething_whichreme mat -11240 WeinentSeii.i;ii,tetY Iaelang.In shares, and yet has sufficient price - 'variation 'JO net .a decent F;roat on the turn, he will find his doeireieful- filled by ,Yet another yype, of Fait', wad bond. And eo itis all the way down the.lipet practically. *every re- quirement oaf the average investor Will he kink" 4,o be.: fulfilled. by scme one Of. the. nufiierous kinds of railway mortgage Mortgage seenritiee- ." "...The Straight Meittgage , Probably .the • best known *tepre- rientative of this large class is the ordinary railroad mortgage bend. This 7 8 an obligation of ar railroad oompany, which, runs for a certain , length of tinie at a certain definite " ng Priee in the open Market. : mere money ha. been *tided tee build the railway than is represent- ed by the •ibcad moue, and this *do ditional money is often raised by the sale of • stock and seeondary bonds, all of which. increase the Se% verity behind the 6rat mortgage bonds. These latter.sweithe safest - kind of security; bec IrksArei place they are * ma/ ge-morto gage against'proPeety which the very building of the railroad hat • made more valuable; in the second place they aro nicrtgasti against other torporate„ proPegt/' wbiebe has 4 4:lefiaite Marleeteble value aside. from .the value of the land itself. , • -----Nitifek-is--See y-Suffieisint? =.:-- - - - -- at(ameraur of bonds to h4escheinitd4t4he'Smbli urtklo • 6 - • ' Thereah3 Var101,1,1-0 iligi to 42)13 and as to whether fh-Sy are or ars . not an &boob -110y safe investment. Examinatien of the trust deed will thew the nature of a. mortgage; tag the investor need not bother enueb *Wet, this as rthe bend'heuee will' give Win all the necessary infokinee . ' • ' v tion, The total,: riariret valiie " the read, itaoost and replaeemeat • • value ire, however„ important Jactr • ors,. These can be arrived at only by careful coneideration of all .tbe. securitiee outsfa•neling 'and theil -r • ate of interest, -,and -•usually -se, lh! 13°,1',14kheeeld 'he „e0.Ye,red tiice enretlby a mortgage upon railroad oveir: inPro*rPetgriagYo. liticIrtilier are tliseecnArreactl 4. re °I the na*". It is essential that • gbYreaat Then there is the -earnings featr . greater agihaeincostmaplalivo,ra pro- profit. the railroad be operating at a ite°4 PrOfit.. Bend interest must be earn- ' ptrty ; ; while ha the case of the ed. and. well earned. Further, be. other subsequent issues- of bonds fere Pr4tli*are'sh'in the property they may be-Secared--*' separate Must bs.weli Maintained, sufficient properties ' or'. as seond or third allowance bi'ing set aside f°.-1 re. ' 4 mortgages .-onlhee BaMe--- ' property.. Pl"ements .and-rene*-818, ..• , The short-term 'notes may he seenr- The issue of *subsequent morn .. , British- India would rise when -the have eleeetved u* We expected tha,t , :hrialtoavould revolutionize the west,- ' havelgieg e . i holders? confidence 1 t 1:t• ' :Is hai no. tt II *et rh : talit property,e. .. . oPbI i 0 rr i 43 J . ,1 ed. in. either of these two Ways, or a first shot NY4S-fire.Lin--EurnPelmt.thele-re the 'world with proas paign against the allies and oertain amount 'of treasury stock niayhe set midi! as special security, and .mereover,it preevidee A. ).)tiyel - • . ce in addition to -the general 'deed - of in reality 'thousands of Indi•ans came' ta fight with the -Britiehhe Germany's military genius.' 7 hypo t : against the pieep.erty it-. lern "ad ffhodd itlia te xne,e( • ' -, • • expenses ; tor -the second and, eubse, - towhrole Rritiele Einpire, would' Tile h' t•ah " self. • n ,to pi#00s; but the Colonies ap-. n... -11TaY date -the viiihle 'collapse of , ere a t ,p , ,. , , _ , . „, , a 8 i another • ty 0 • o . • "v Germany's hopes from the result of -railroad bonds known as -eguiplinent rnt-1-4 at a aux !final -rfi° tnS Bro. the fighting.6- La k 'Ge .: trust ' till twhich a ngemare . rter ca es-- are special- , - . mortgage or lase their money.-• ---- • "Peat "to'hireloser thanever' iiiittlid' f with the Mother Country. • We ex- Many called Chemical science to her ly sedured by ;the equipment they Why TheY Are a Good BUy., . • - , peete a =rep an re e Ice in aid and poisoned, ithe air --With :the are. issued to purchase These are m co" d• ' - d, A • • cl, " t ' • h t i; iv • that ,t.. 1 h f .11 4.,. 4„.,. „,:4,." A A , any ne, Ian an Mangan • . • - South Africa, yet it turned out gr .ants o c ear •th e :way or usutn.,,,y anier.iza,.e..._ .,on...s att.re- railroad •b 0314 are ,an eel -lei -101e ,notthing but •a failure. 'We expected t e -irresistible advance7of the ICas• redeemable Serially. ' They are dif: good hei„eaeibeveesene +n11 'P6. ,,_:,„:;__;-•_,.:.„______ ser s advaace,, but the . valor. of mortgage bond in that their scour Cemarla',a obstruction of that.; eal--ity.is rollievetoelyarrd :not fixed- vance . that :proved irresistible. * - assets; ' -. . .. " • .` . . Canada is doomed 'to study a *The Kest Kind of . . weary and apparently finending•list Security: . 4 • egainet. ue, Weanticipatedthatethe- • • • f .0 gent mortgavis -thc - trouble -in Ireland, bat indeed; She ee4',1e •Xt. ras not ibe' l'Irent it"' the .erVinar$ railr�ad sent her best soldiers. against us. We anticipated that the party of "peace at any prite" .would be dominant in England, but,it melted away In the ardor. to, fight against of Casualties -that records the heroic. :-`• 47-114"-e-albsc4ute-se#1114t5"-is.741' GetinianY:*Ve-i•e:Ck-Oned that Rag- land was degenerate and incapable 4 ,es of Canada's killed, wounded garaniount consideration; it would, and missing. 'The dead, the suffer- e difficult to find better bonds of placing any weight in the scale, ing , and the captives are not the than the first mortgage and even yet she seenis ,be our principal •forgotten victims of an obscure the second mortgage bonds of ' the enemy. • • '• skirmish. • The Untried troops •feeee' big railways of the United Watee, "The.eame_has been the_ease.with France and Russia. We though't 06,11_04-a- thettiselves across and L'anadar.t Ufa: that France-was-depravedetindeeli-- compering fattlaway-wthieh-Ger---tonVot-mest railwe,y--i.huildere.on - videct; and we find that they are man Cheinistry had cleared for the this continent; when ihnildine new formidable opponents. We be iinglitiest attack that German stra.- S..:ta isaucaonda for -SO rauchper tegy. eould Plan. Canada's sol- initeed line,, seenring the•bonds bv lieved that the Russian people were far .toO discontented to • fight ddiiseirodeatodkethudp that attack. They a mortgage against the property for their Government, and we marl•e plans of . Germany's •on either side of the right..ofsway, great general staff. - They grudged as well, as, upon the actual railway' our plans an the supposition of a neither life, limb nor liberty for line itself. Usually a.good. ;deal rapid collapse ..of Russia, but, in- the Ein,pire which they Served, arid stead, she mobilized her millions for the country whose name they - 11.1. quickly and well, and her ipecIple are. -full of enthosiatsm and their 'power is crushing- Those who led us into all them mistakes and ;mis-- ealenlatiOns, have laid upon -Mein- selves a 'heavy responeibility, • • • l'wo Lancashire Germans. • , . .of pain or vexation;in*Pstt. 22. 14, ' The story of two Lancashire lads the psalmist's bones (that is, the Who arn. sexving in one of the ne* hi lf til as body) :are -"out of joint" because ,France• is told in Tit -Bits : of the 'pit:Semitic:hi. of his enemies; One day. the Officer- in ooramand in ?sae 35. 10, i1 ,his bpeo sent- theta together With several for joi because of ,deliverance. •others to reconnoitre the enetne.'s A- 31foisture----Ftigurativelyr-bh inies,--2e--,--ehan_taking ,different- yitel„-- sape.--ereluieeefethe-lev-Ing- dir.ectien. Now the day previous organism. there had been heavy fighting • on man mse• , so and ePirit as well Cavalry regitnents •in northern 11. Penitence Before Forgiveness •(Verses 5-7). . • the very. ground that they were • scouting, so that when our 'Oldhani • her? ,saw a German helmet lying 5. I aeknowledged sty sin--4this is behind a hedge; he was struck with • e rs p petwe and h ppi- . _ . . fi t en to • a bright idea • • : • nee& iltie penitence must be corn.. Putting. on the Prussian headgear The .-Passitio• of the, Turk • - •.rnay,be withheld. Itis Well tO eine tect th6 enemy':s Whereabouts with- he 'eliought woeld he able to di- • piete- and. wilbele-bearted. Nothing , • „ pihoize4hisqpctzikemt. out himself .being,ieuspected4..._e.spe- . .• b i ih ' ' all i Ny_tNinking..lie__Ieted_aletcofess•• ,-,11e- liad not, got • :very far, how– "all.". An infinitesimalpime of -de. , ever, when a shot Tang out only a 1, --fiay. in oa-tooth. will-inake -tilfeieover= short: aTwity.-He dropped., ' ing of silVer and geld invalid. , : behind is hillock and fired hack in •-• , • - — e ' . What to hapPen to 'the Turk,- -the peninadine--eO11111!-1.1...e:--Iteld----21) and his, in the future 1- _That clues- Britain and France. --Of-.-couts tiort. has been -already- answered. -Egirpt, note-hild,by Britain, migh ' • ,p,hraseology familiar on the street be extended to include Palestine • eg man ad deluded Inanself ci. Y t wabilgatirig-dm4k: - • i e „ • erman weight of .sin .veas enormous, Rho- ' And wiltnat be a mete, GUM_ Frain the bautasee to the vath nEfiea--it air -se- as ent-ire Alga that' will satisfy'the'world, but -the 'Arabian ;Sea will be territory 6, for this-- itheeekolv en , such a removal as will deprive the that niusb be dealt With. It would - eadhortation sponitine.ously- 'issuing ..„Obeomaii -Turk-of power-evet..he, desizable---eansumina, -front ithe• life' of nee -who' havnlable . •-Tether ,races. The Turk has proved tion ivere it possible to restore the experience... • , • '• • hiniself one of the oppressing pow-- evethui this territory an Armenian - -Mayest fouriclitirougliont the: ' ers, exhibiting 'only those 'methods Power. But that vision. side, the Old Testament •iti an intiplietition • 'efafrightfaness_Whichlhaiebeeinex- *peeing 'of Constaatitiople to Rue- that it time may 00111.0 for tan indi- • Whited most unexpectedly by one sia suggests further vest pessibili- 'Mind when the forgiving God May or other race,. both. of whieh ' have - ties for ' Russia. She ',night even not he: found. (See espeeially,lea, -Aline-been ojeseeertegjeiwee.ai Ear,- nu edertakey ' without regard 1: the 55. '0; also Dent. 4, ; Jr 29. 29,- 13; •, 7. ..lbarian,...The Turk is incapable - of tithe -involved, therectiatrietion eta. Prey. „r: 251 teer.; Chap'. 12, and •• attaining , just 40 Much 'eanal that would Cornmet the Bal. frequently in; the Psalms). . 'Seim incapable of tic with the Sett the valleys Great •watara. 'overflow - Flocds • rartehine the. defier_ --Rah eteee well .of the melee: eefi the rofiteper te9-e:offbe wqaugennt,e;ti:he,Tial,reisatiknien.tgthe - metaled, and mated, • seething tO suggest..the desirability •. •• n-rinox a; Water 1iay Thtei Would 611e Nielliberiarienin- nlight- inundate • . tile inipenutrig tipheaVat, 44.41 Russia be oiled d fully th,„ thelemilltry. (See Pea 18. 18; Isla, the polio -of the Allies Will be '-t0e "P '28. Nab: „ . 0 , 4.• 1111.3 11.1 Ii - ••• • "bagand baggage?' departure into -Ileditertalikanand from •thete to. -esi•Jeneeelee wog 'made. -- 1- 9 91 1"19 1.11 11 effeetitally east the Turk. into the _discard heap. Re must be cleared nut of Europe and relegated as far way in in -Asia, 44 May be possible. That, is what ehe world has been -waiting for all these Iveaty turies; the Turkdoett not belong to Eurepe. To permit him to remain ' now when he, may lee put where he belongs would be out of the ques- '‘. tion. The proper plan *mild be to .strip him of every vestige ot. na- tionality AO gleit he would become a • subject -race: life is stilt at heart a • nomad -a scotirge of the wilderness '.- and it is there he ,should go. There Ought to be difficulty In the matter. Constantin le; fall Whether. It may or not te Peons, it le evident that the Dartlatellee and world, atui its Vita resources brought within •the teoPe of devel- opment. • • • Thc -importance the. pattestion'' of ,Constantinople is, ther dere, evi- dent, tor it ateitne net mily the strangling of the last • vestgei of TuYanian barbarism in Efirope, but of giving opportunity to a, vast eivi- litable mass hither -tee erneleveloOd; The greater eivilization of the fiv, ture eopnotaitttlly depends On the P sse mime of 'Oorlstaittinople by the Allies, which they will in'dne hard though the toe& nretY bny gain. With the fall of Oonstantmoplewill. be seated. e dooni of modern Bar.;wi haria-bot east And West; for in that result alotie deft the latitre„stle.• oute that safety Arat vihieli is es. sential to Its liampliteas«. lit Instruction from, th15 Nest nigh (Verses 8-11). I Will inetruci ithee-e-Selitivehe and pot as some commentators sayy -the .perdraist, is speaking. hu - molt speaker 'would dim* to say, wili -,eannael thee with Mine eye upon thee,. "(See Pea, 33. 18; 34. lb.; ler; 24; 8, and in many other piteSages.) •• . • 10. As the hrUte iunimat eat, not reason and must be ton -trolled), man, is Farind not to ieteepree liko iifnny:nottrows theni thus become "brutasl (see rens (to• loo 12, flo; '221 er. 10. . • 2117*146: Yoli 00. 1951, butlia•ving.... kindniM6i, Or *ft Wilt abpnt Min that ttinoeth • • r • thc_ rifle preobicalegan eartteSt. For a few moments the two men lied. at each other without any suc- cess. It happened that they were within shouting, distalwe and our Oldhanilteetuld n'Ot atif-St • "1 11 one ofer:on thi yet,. gad' „ • . • 'You may guess his surprise when the reply was: „; "Aar, • it getihee. ittst,' xiwa 0313110;11 ihe Right Young Man. - A young man in quest of a situa- tion - entered the: *ft•partment. .."Nyell," kindly said the eaptain of finance, "there'a opening in the bank -for the right young man, and there have been several applieants for it already. Are You energetic and Willing to learn?"' ."Try me, Sir." "That's good for a ,starter. Do You sgamblel" "No, sir. heve tmother to Support, - and , can't r ' isk my earninp that . way." "Aheml Now"---eliere the great maii•squarecl himself before. his ap- plicant, inclieation that the most empertant question was now to come -"do you ever go fisbingi", "Yes, sir," tepliecl theeroung Mae, without hesitation., "Was fishing yesberdey." "All And *That kind of catch did you make I" "Only one little perch," tailed he. , "Good f You're, the young . term I've been Necking, .Ali the othiwe answered eip all right nnLuc tat latt question; t they, ' • -tarried.' t• ,i'The action in . _ . • . Whith o --- -many, Canadians' laught Under Weight fi:Orders and 'fell may be remembered as the-. • • security'behind the iselieS • moreprominen,t companies:le of,the, • ' beat; andparticularly in theease • • ' Canadian railroads finaecei • tliroughaale.of stock. is the• market . ' • . • 'value of the roads greetIy-ixeeeese: - clvairtihouesb°,, rnetlaedsousi.n..4,regbilreociatillesg,T•bol:Tal • have keit down below normal. . A values and appear u cheap; compared withsome other ineestmenteeetneeeee,e,„„e, 4 Ities,=-' Their eitremely-Wide range • , - -.z°Ifer.fnim-t•Ogether-,•-,With,-..gecieral..7--,.•.T.----.._ • stability of price' make them ,an -tractive_buy. Aseesorne- boil& are quite epeculatiye ie nae ture,"hoWever„ the •counsel - of . - • • thoroughly reliable bond cleate-t• is adVised where safe investment ; .'. • the first consideration.- , • • •• -t• turning point in this: war, as a • •• • *Weyer. much manufacturers when it comes to manufacturing her battle that changed the history of - the world. ••. would pref•er to be contributing to own munitions Of was France could a• , the arts of peace economic pres- take care of herself in a Cate of dire • , e sure hs i forced them to turn their necessity, while; England • bin a, • ,position to tarn over her .great manufacturing centres tie, the, mai-( • ing of war materials. Russia, how- •, ever; „With her millions; of ',fighting ' ••• ineri, is so largely an agrieultural. . nation _that she cannot make -in' • Months the ammunition' which..hei hostCould- use upein a_few eevireVeer.„—--," Access IV the _-Ciae-!•e,_realin. hat ' •••• • ' been difficult •except across the Pa- , cific and over Siberia. With Arch-. • angel frozen 'solid and the Pardee' • nelles inthe hands of the enenw.i • .% • ' Russia, has been well sealed upt• and though,. a certain anio•unt material has filtered in by way "of - the Scandinavian peninsula, there • Ilea been by no meinihe free&in- • , • of eommtinication 'desired. , The • ;•''• fall of. Coristautineplee;,-----i:.:-.7' - - • ' ket inenitianaz_fo_the.Czar!s- armies, • • :0 ,, • ther nations • consume theii'-qii-Ota: as y rapi .as can. • ,• '• - made,. a,nd-the new Millions that • ' . , England is expected to .be put into .. • ; the field will require powder Mid '• 0 ihnest • meom , The Outpoured Cornucopia for attent•ien to' .war munitions, , - Belgium. ' the remit. that the inills of the • country,: are groaning under the The ruin wrought by Germany in weight oftremendons orders: Con - Belgium °has ' MadeLit_necessary for tracts running - up to ;millions of the rest of the world to-give''$8, in dollars' have already been plamel at money or an kind, to each: Of the the behest of European belliger- 7,500,000 eitizens. Viaat_harbar,-;_ents.,:-....As--yet---enly--;,a• :fraction -of :lei:dun-destroyed civilization.- has what will be ultimately demanded_ been trying to, rebuild. The clift-Vif the conflict continues has been etulty Under :Which German apolo-, ordered. But with the business gists have'been laboring is that, of now ' in hand Producer's of keel; .ereating a state of world . opinion • POWder, anternobiles andfhundreds favorable i'a'Germany, at the same •of allied eommodities are riding the• time that the World it _paying for full tide of prosperity and Making What the Germans destroyed: - big plans for the future: -s upon It is estimated that 2,000,000 de:. .. Astounded by theprePayedness of stitute Belgiannmet aepend Germany, and realizing the hope- foreigai aid; The Reliefi,Comraission lessness- of - meeting the Teuton on is. 'spenartg -about $2,000,0Q0 a anywhere nearequal ferias -in thel month, and is not yet -permitted to state they round-% theni-eRV-,-et-s .., last_ relaxits effort. The - picture, of,. August:, the Allies were nuealY ha' misery a•nd despair has net beee'-7P"taw,,,. ..,____ I -43:5?-/Ite-4teedd-taldag " -thtr imeafdri -'-'-`too dark:- Tlie-T're• measures to tope with 'Bryce report is but a, fractiom of the situation. , Russia, with. ea - the cumulative testimony as to jaertieleentlymlinmnisted,.f a:e• . jilt:- Irea9n1cliel: ,w at e giam hashed to **endure f • L. 2. • - - - - for kmping a pledge' that her kwrtei .e.a.ctorieie tione too large o mighty neighbor., ruthlesey ;violet- , -eeiher fowntomfen sUpplied, and England,doace,a06 With the bre- c aniounts. 7 •' .-- — — -•' ed. The stream of benefactionsp I p . ' No small feature of the .renewec must not novr tease. Itit does the ,osition of g activity is the, construe•tion of many vast hosts of trained' ' fully equip- buildin to' •tit. facilities ' •• • gotrflglittta- out of raw - recruits, of:the•laetoried..1_Makers of struc. . Belgians: will • . , gs enlarge e••• . , perceived at once that the full out turea steel. have .been Insured put•of all the available' factories in .aged bytheinflux of orders- *which , • • . , • the world was needed bel The laisitaina was. ineured tor, 'about • 21,500,000 ($7,500,000). Of ,nient,udenr the wa.,r'ris.k plan wili. have to payabout 80 per•cer4t. The, cargo. o lave been intured , almost :entirely ,Anieriesneineur. Lime ciffices. . A' High Grade 6% Investment CITY OF CALGARY 6% ICREAStftY BILLS: Due .1918. letereet`wayable 15th IWO& and Senttt eiber, le Toronto, Mont. reel, and New York. •• ASseasnient ....... 8134,880;4k , Populetion .,.*. I 80,000. • , PRICtt Piir•ind interest. •. YIELDING 8% • 301111 STARK & • 24 AtiE141b01 01". torciito. ore the desired end was attained. /I „ • With control of the seas: asserted. the7problem -emu- ' l'fi d- tdegree.Only the ohstaele oftimefor manufacture of implements and supplies stood. in the Wtte of the Complete equipment of the allied armies. The trade routes of the ocean, were open for the !passage of ships bearing . the needed munitions, so that 'no alit- culty cquicl be experienced in traOs- portation once the Commodities were ready. ' Representatives of foreign coun- tries swarmed to America, buying up all the supplies in night ce.nd placing eontraate for futuri deli- very. The inipetni4 which the steel industry received was marked, but other lines were quielely effected, eueh as the automobile makers, And. manufacturers of herbed Wire, submarines, powder, eartrielkeei single and many other implements . Of war. The intense actiVitY wit- ntsj at the outbreak of the war has only inereated • as elie Months have passed, and many ars .toilt, dept that flootitide is by no means in ought.. 'rteiteile in ptohably the Moat he,10. ess netion tattOig tAbA belhgeretltti -Indicate muth building throturlietli,.:'.• the eountry. • .•s , • _. , :.STIL1G-Li)S1i THINGS IN P1111S, „. , 'War Brings No Relief, to Lost • - iiiiii-Vepartittent. • • • •line.lost property department at, the Prefecture of Polite has not found its labors Sensibly diminili.. ed by the war, although the popu-, • • • lotion of Paris' has been teamed by • • mobilitation. Mr. Dubois, the head of the service, says.: POI ten : jects brought here as having been „ found in 'one daY,nine al4W0 been •' lost by women, and as the female - • population of Paris has not been . affected by the 'war* oar work has • been almost as great as usual.. In I September, 'when the great exodus oceurred at the approach, of the Gem:mese the number of ertielea . brought in dropped from file aver- " age of ato,flo 0.7,000 404,850, but • since the, „vieterY of theilkrItoltlie *1141 ayetage Jima 'been retuta. • , • - • • , In 'order tb *Noy life a mat / inuet be a littIthaiisetatila attagion4 I