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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-03-23, Page 6New Records - Created bY The Sun Life of Canada,. OGRESSIVt1 husineo* metimAss hocked by forty-. five years of fair -dealing, have achieved for the Sun Life of Canada during 1915 records that are new in the Canadian life assurance fieId • Assurances.of ovor $34,000,900 issued and paid. for in cash; Total A011112111100$111 Forms of over 4250,0Q0,000-; Total Payments torpowy.-- — holders since organization .of more than $52600,000; Asset* in 0208118 $74,000,000; a Cash Income of nearly $16,000,000 and an Undishibuted Net Surplus of over $7,500,000,a11 are high-water 'narks in the annalaof Canadian life assurance. • Their achievement maintains the established, prestige of the Sun Life • a Canada as - A Leader Antoni the we Companies of the Ell1pitTe The following mAntantial and =Kann increartell registered during the past year clearly d ieuionstrate the strength of the Company's position :- 1 915 1914 INCREASE. Ansts se's& Deeetalmr3lat. . s $ 74,326,423 $04,187,056 $10,134767 (15.8% Cash Incotne . . 15,972,672 15,052,275 920,397 ( 6.1% Surplus h 985,487 061,763 123,724 (14.37 Net Surplus as at December 31st. . 7,545,591 6,003,791 1,041,797 {16 Total Payment* to Policyholders7.129.479 0,191,287 968,192 16.7 A Assurances Is anid sad Pahlferia Cesl; 34,873,84 32,167,839 2,706,512 8.47 Assamtacee ha Force . •. 257,404,160 218,209,8$5 39,1044425 17.0% TortomPluirs-4-Rowl-ft- • P." • T •• • • • • r• • •.1800 • •• • • • •• •. • 4 • • • • • • .pl.. 1906 • t • • • • • 4. • 1915. . . ..... „ . ' II. MACAU Y, P.• A.S., • eaesmaereAso swreuMentaseres. ' 48,210.73 SUkszes 1,Le4S,escee -3.717,492.23. 15.972.672.31 z: ASSETS $ 98,401.45 1,11i,004.8.9 . 6,365,770.63 • 81.939,811.138 74.329,423.78 LIFE AssoltAtien. e. • •lle FORCE . .• • •,.$Y 1,oe1is30,co fie3e,8i8,77 • 8i,764,s1e.25 • 95,190,691.11 0257.404.19o.42 &II. EWING, vaca-passumrr. FREDERICK' G. COPE ' SnC,IAETARY.., . • e ,1871 • HEAD. 9FF10E, MONTREAt. CIR1RING G GO THROUGH HANDS' OF• A DOZEN EtPERTS. • - • . Haw Weapons Of Warfare Are 'Tried and Proved Before • Acceptance. , . , There is -no weapon in use by our forges to -day Which has to stand sp • terrible a strain as the quick -firing • gun. This fires a preijectile weighing ; about,eighteenland hairpininds; It Itaa_nrango_ot over four _miles, ahd. the shell, on leaving the muzzle, tray - els more than three hundred yards in the first second, says London Answers. • ,In all great gun factories there is a special departinent where this test- ing is carried out. First of all the barrel, from bore to muzzle, Is accur- ately gauged with Most delicate in- struments. . hiside the Barrel.. Next, giittaperclia impreasiOn •' • taken of the inside: of the barrel: This Is kept—filed, you might, 'say..44o-• gethev With full particulars and ded• • criptien of the !tunics Which it be- longs; a." . • ; all appears correct the -gun is sent to the prOing ground. 'Here tho• . testing is most severe, the • charges used being considerably .heavier than• those..empleyed in actual. warfare. . It speaks : well for mOdern workmanship • that very few eannitteeliow any signs of damage from this treatment. I Guns that have withstood the tests are then returned to the works, where the ganging process" is gone' through • all over again.' Inside and out, the whole barrel is; carefully measured to see if there is any enlargement due to the heavy charges. • If the expert pronounces that the gun •is satisfactory, off it gees to the grinding -shop, where the bore is late. • ped out with Iced blocks in order to gave a , perfect polish and finish. • The AnakprOces's is the "browning," Which consists in treating the whole • . of the.-onbite-'of• the Weeper -four or ' five*titnes over with a ..certain • VMS Mitain: the' metal. to -Wea- ther in, a remarkable fashion. • Our ,field artillery t e nes m the world, not even exceptitig the .Ger- . • man. It is also fairly modern. It was • only tert,years ago that we re -armed all our batteries. We built eleven hun- -. tired new guns, which cost rather ever - ;009 • aptece. At- the Okeliampton Terme on Dartmoor one of these guns .estoblielied a mord by: firing .twenty. nine rounds within One ; 1916 -cordinghe gentle -It ;Along -to an- other:man Who makes therequired al- teration. His tools' are so delifate that he can wok to within the thous- andth of an inbh, • Bach goes the barrel, to another viewer, who, by means •of magnifying glasses; is able to judge as -to its per- fect: straightness to within the ten thousandth part of an-ipch. , Watch ,one these men at Work; and what strikeseyou Most forcibly is not so much that he is able to gauge the barrel with such marvellous accu- racy, but that h02' seems to ydiscover by magic the exact spot where there is any departure from the straight. . He wastes no/tiMe:-about it, and, with a- couple of Aare blows. with a hemnier, instantly rectify a small error. . . Every rifle goes through the hands_ of half a dozen experts before leav- ing the' factory, andafterwards is put through severe, firing, tests, not only to make' certain of the soundness of the barrel, but also to ensure that the sighting is daperfeet _anworkmaaship can make it. .• CANADIAN TIMBER: Users Decide On Its Use Excluaively • • Construction Work. • The decision of the varioue,Domin- ion Government departments and of the-Canadidri Pacific railway to use Canadian timber only, tea decid&Itia.,,, °vantage in the utilization •Cnnad- jai 'thither mak therefore, marks a de- finite gain for the Cause of conserva- tion nr- Canada. •. • • Southern pine, nve'll in 1915, when Canada was at war and when there Was a great decrease the cdpsump- tion Of lumber, was imported to the extent' of 95,000,000 feee, , ;a "value of over $3,000,000. In previous years, very much larger quantities were imparted despite an adverse trade balance for Canada and in the face of a supply in Canada of better timber atanequal' or lower cost, grown and Manufaetured entirely, within the Dominion. • The Dominion Government has in ,pest years, titled many million feet of Southern pine in various works but henceforth ;Canadian timber Will be used to the exclusion of the foreign article. Douglas fir • will replace Southern pine in such works as Que- bee-and-Mentreall-,-barbor improve ments and 'Hudson Bay terminals. oug as •een use en ire y in the Toronto Harbor works, as a clause was inserted in. that • contract calling Lor Canadian material. The action of Baron Shatightiessy, in ruling that -Canadiati timber einly Shall be Used in works esT the anedian Pacific railway 'shows that large private users aro also Ahdingrit consistent with present conditions to Use 0ithediap products; Other `consumers -throughout Easter as ' Ad in a cannon, so. -in a rifle, the alt-Impurtarit,Ittre*-While cannon ere,„built, Un, the barrel of a . • . • rifle is made by. bo4ing alt. a B&W rod 'of steel. These rods are fixed in a lathe, and bored chit )4 drills, which eritetnat opposite., erids arid almost iricet in the 'Centre. The fit* testing ,of the bored -out barrel most, iligenioue. The breech end is sealed 'end !Arnie airtight. Then. at the mutale end is- inserted a gauge • which extietly eiirrespontis to the. core , red here. • . • If , the :diateeter,-be absolutely. true • the.eir •congir.eseed in the berrel will ' • support theweiglit' of the . gauge. If • "tbere is 'anything -Wrong the gauge, After passing this test satisfactei, , ,31yrthe barrel.goett„to d niati termed a teetn° plitete it a steed ee arranged that .light fieitn e mirror is refiected Acme the b'arreL The yiewer Ts otes Whether. Arty of , the rinses of • light 'reflected: ott the Polished inner surface are irregtilar', Passing the "Vicw#ri ' • 4 they are, he niarke the barrel c. ••.; Ctuirda, •larWlind the lend -the two largest , users: Arehlteettirat end in stens- also are rapidly replacing South- ern pine by Douglas fir and the im. ported woods by the home grown pro. duet: • • -- 1 .FASilIONS SET BY sottnnit. • ••• 10. infeetioneia Mush ieduce& Taken as UM a eVidenee appeare .t trouble ' will Work More good for the balance than an effective treatment for the bird iteelf left in the eloele will de. We believe the only prefitable produet le the oat). whieh has not been stele One , perfect bird in tonetitutionel Makeup' Is better than ten with the lead phye, • !WHITE DIARRHOEA IN cuims..ko 'weakness. Therefore it is much ,The Greet, bluititude—Review. (J4 SUNDAY SCROD' INTERNATIONAL IdESSON, MARCH 26. . ; better to remove and kill tin Old one Ey A. P. Marehall, Masora Fells. Can. to eave the balahee whetiesie. danger. : • " e». sisex° ItevOatinit „me.... ;Appears. 7";1q.s- . 'It IS tiiinecesiarito eniiYetie-who After the chicks begin th 'lenient" 1 • , •• - - " Ile th • T WONDFSFUL BEAN GERMANY CAN'T GET •Arq••••I ' 304 DIFFERENT VARIETIE5 OF SOYA !SANS • . Minehtirilen Product Prete Whoest Qfl --Dynaralte . h . , • Made. has lenglieen handlIng elnekens that and phew seine l'ea d development d evelposn down with moil woe mass this ie One of the things which prob- inahint. moderate Change of feeding and . lime Individuals. It faces the There is a little . bean, sometime 'ably causes more treuble, and lose methods desirable most of the dale- DJ ck hilt mealy - ,troublea-thate -Tarry-ilie '7t -H101; eareful feeding and matiageatent Must closes:, not svith a vision failll, 1,11Matiing witht it dentim.._ littliffileIrQintVion: le63 autuitnown to the need of the crowd and Of the eingle ;than any other or combination of go from white diarrhoea is over hut other causes often are considered as will occur. Keep the chicks always ee of a.. few , 0 arnica Yloihtidielyit‘ctitIliftee, ebeluint tte'Ya,cr gret'tif";•'-'" chick. No doubt.chielts that die from still he carried on or other troubles chosen individuaU or a :chosen people The Soya ' bean i its name, meet it , Anted to eternal blessedness, htit of a is one of the most wonderful prang - :having succumbed to this disease, but in a condition Where they can talte, auowin;. for thot,... there sou remains inore feed and, they. will most likely great Multitude' Winning through to. tions of the eon we Ilevot It can bet " • a very large 'proportion • of ' lama be a healthy huneln Trying to •foree. tnheeedEAterotp.URV One of the greatest —and. 18-7:used th..inanufaeterlein dee* , Christianity is that ifs ens 'of things, dynamite And bigh ex. through white diarrhoea with to many by heavy feeding Only results At first . . h s and teachers . petfple no uppercut check for It. . in a coniparatively short time ,of lint- to think 'religion in group. terms, They • We relieve°. this trotiblet MAY . be ting them- off their. feed. and causing ilinet get the vision of Gcgo which 'caused in Many ways. It may be .a disorders Of the degestive aPParatus.- xesas declared was mirrateill orsonto. general effect of using weak steehi At Little and often withsome :mwo.orebh ',111; .. The' ancient prophet hOs th into be one to bad keding, method get. At AS a rule that and yet is .also. wider than the race. plesiyes being among them. Befere- the WS.1' Oe'rrnens was so * ' eaxioue t� ' have soya .beans fhat OW intPort duty Wes specielle taken Off them; now, thanks to the': -British - havy, ehe.can. only get the heaps, nY compassten'of God brooding, evey thr. through neutral ceentries, • srauggilag, them in. small quantities. that encourage bowel trOubles; .or it this direction. It ae not the anatnin may actually be the restilt, of ' haeter- theY .eat in a short tiniethat counts children and the dtimb beasts ° She wanted 0 grew tin in . hereele., 141 growth in the egg iteelf either kill- but thramonet they put into pimgi, heiPlesil of that great' city. of. Nineveh, Nix- enti,,because I had beini stfeceesful in score thousand: that knew not theirstar ing the `embryo or being PrOSent- ha flesh and 'feathers, . in the Ion ' run .- " beans 'in ' both'. g ' ting er°04 01a°Y.It . • heart or , .e4 d ':, . shows ns•. the Ge „ . .in in , much cattle"' Jesus silo . , . o , as the teere‘ stream NV: e• 'Preached in the ,, rmans. at • the beans *mild not ••• Vest and .South Afriete:. was to. Atter I told (he right hand over their left and also eroVi., in their countrY...,. 711101.1 ' was needs of the crowcleci. jif - f d°11btit811 4411Pleauailt 1 'Id 'the° '84Ya - - c en he- t•. ... - the hatched chick. :If artyone'wil) re- that. Iwees ou,t.. Patience, Perseeer- flecti on their. operations we believe once 'and carefulness tan make; :many • they Will fail to 'find pinch ale this, changes in the final • . slew an4iate, erett.., winter or carlr,. 4 • • . 'epring-chiettene, but. that . it is most • • inIE PRINCE: OF WALES. -PPviderit inthelate Spring 'WI eunf- ' mer hatehes. :There may be Several EDUCATING THE Bial4rx " How Soldiers Who Lose iSght Will •• ; Be Cared For., A statement been issued dealing with the ivork 'carried on at S. Dun stan's, .London, by the. Bliniled diem' aitd Sailors' Cake Committee, of which • O. Arthur Pearson is chair- man. - It is - that men, have likelihood of the trouble from goad and in the best possible condition. The leoat the'difficultncil•of reading With stock of vigorous constitution is re- thi finger -tins in a fortnight, and that mote unless the "embryos afe weaken.: men who have never seen a typewrites ed in ineukatien. or the chicks are in - have learnt .to use it :accurately and jured by bad feeding or other equal: - a# a fair" speed in the same Short iy bad treatment. Artificially hatch - space of time. These are .exceptional ed chicks should come from eggs laid case, but as a general rule Braille reading and typewriting are acquir- asitiusrday,avtteignotrioounsinstuoseth hanadvealltethene -businesses as. cobblers and -earning, dl)yet ed With remarkable rapidity.- ' " Men have been trained in poultry ellen if they hatch may be so weaken - carried out to the letter or the ehicks farming, and 'Others are building up ect. tte to develoy diarrho_ea_soen_after arneunts equal to their weekly pen-. they are hatched. • ' If there is 'any 'suspicion, of the lauies' for this'. Using eggs, -front. Some Amu* ' *-Storieg in a. Biography weak stock perhaps; would be the Meet .. • Just Published. . • I apparent one far such birds will only Love of animals Ili 'been. one of be likely to ceme into laying during the heir-apparent's 'abiding charactea- the natural* breeding seasen. _ The isties says ?an David wimainson, elimination 'therefore of weak stock in'a short biography of the Prince of re. 1 Wales, which he ;luta added, to his should very much.help,in this di c tion and ' prevent -the rapid ger/nine- 'books of the royal family. - tion from them of any bacilli that May , The book sets. out from the birth -of be prebent in the systems . of this the Prince at 'White Lodge—an event weak constituted etoek! Chicks pro-. which created the unprecedented ciuced at unusual' season are'usuallv •••• Phenomenon of three male deseen& perticularly eared for and- are leas ants in the direct line of inheritance. likely to be overcrowded; having The mita used at the christening. therefore 'better sanitary.: conditions service was brought from the River and food. This...is of the very greatest, . . , joidan;lethe gold bowl was the same importance. ' .. that he'd been the christening font of Ityvpuld leak then as though to pre-, all the Queen's descendants ;born vent this trouble and tontier it much the realm, and "the carrying cloak of More than the handling of the hatch- the royal child was made of the veil ed chicks must be talcen into consider- Worn by Queen Victoria at her mar - *ion., If the hirds'being bred from riage.a , have ever euffered from white Maw- His "first reviler pocket money was hoett it may- be . expected that there a _shilling -a Week, rising steadily, hut Wixligll gbeertstenthdaatne4t10 ihnaevreeassraeuldurbk; coinp ensations. Birthday presents not rapidly." There 'awe; however, carried to otherkthrough the eggs to „,suripned ethild alwaya And a way to possess niftily of his Wants, and he. the chtcks. Subjected to heated con- ditions these germs become adthe and himself of the lathes, mechanical ap- Propagate' at a rapid rate Firstly pliances, and models. of machines and° then the breeders must be free from it ships to. which he was attracted. .• Absenee. of 'side" has contribnted Mach to the popularity and esteein in which the Prinde had been held by. all hin younk associates in the navy, at Oxford and in- the .army. • Once an in the jail after the sluni hag robbed his life of strength and surrounded it with evil: We cannot take him out of the crowd. We must change the sluni if we are to do this. This will not take reepensibility away from in- diViduale; it will increase it. It will not let Ahem escape by . saying it was ot-their-fault3-ir-Will-set-them le work to change the conditions that overcame them. - . • . 4. Body and Soul. There is no des. eription of the Holy City by the pro- phete and seers which does not spe- cifically declare ' that the physical tan it was stalled that "rfot the snialr; need's of life are met: They declare est exceptioe or discrimination !ins ,and again that there shall be nO wept been made in his favor." , • ahd no complaining, no sorrow, no There is an(interesting chapter on crying,. that God shalt Wipe away all "Peraonal Characteristics" • in which' tears. This lesson does not merely Edens: ',Several basketmakera are trouble with the old. or young birds earningsgood wages, and makers 'of . picture. frame, aye an • , other Lirtielea, requiring an expert knowl:- I' edge of :joinery' find their time - fully And profitably, occupied.. . Among other employments for which men are It will be found helpful to use the follpwing seven grains of each of sulphoearboliti sodiune sulphO- carbolate of eakiim, and- ifilphie. carbolate of zinc and six grains of bicloride of mercury, • with three being trained are those of niassenrs ;grains of citric acid. This . quantity 'shorthand -Writers by the Waffle sys! to the gallon of water will help a great tem, telepliene operators and divezs. deal and in many cases effect a mire. An urgent appeal to •the public is Put up in capsules thie makes :a tem - Made 'for help in tarrying' on the work. • " • venient form .of treatment. • The Lord •Advoeate, -Mr., • Robert However effective this may be it Munro,' K.C. M:P., received ' in * his still renittins . true. that the proper ,chantherein:Edinhurgh a deputation method, is to avoid the difficulty en - Royal Blind Asylum and School, con- chicks there Ahould be, no particular When..we get out strong from the. directors of the Edinburgh tiralY• slating of the Rev. Dr. Burns (the reason for being troubled. The dan- chairman), John Laing, David Dick- ger from white diarrhoea is ever Us - son, son, 'and the secretary, A. W. Fisher, • regarding soldiers and sailors -blind- ed in the war. A letter on the sub- ject was sent to the War Office from the Board of Directors. The deputa- tion ' stated that. the feeling existed .in Scotland that blinded soldiers and nally: in four or five weeks; so the chicks can be grown properly up to four or six weeks all danger se far as white diarrhoea is .eoncerned. should be -past. . We feel no reason to hack on our own methods as white diarrhoea has sailors belonging to 'Scotland should been Practically unknown fora num- - be cared for: and trained by Seottish ber of years. When the young chicks ,people, THREE YEARS • OF WAR, • AstfOloger Says Germany Will be Del.. feated in August, 1917. around the Vent and on the top of the "Sepharial," the mited London as- head. This makes. them all little red trologer Who predicted the 'Beer War 'treads as , the preparation , we use' is in 1899, the war in the Far East in red: hi color and at the sande time J.89.14, the revolutione in" Portugal. anti we have an—egg °Up _bandy _usually are first hatched after all are nicely dined off and we Wish to start them on their way, the first thing to do Is to use n liquid preparation tor the prevention of head lice. Dipping the finger into this we snnply, oil the down •; ° ° erlIS" a writer. . A ccrom.imity, r:oligi9nn.alem .71 h' es. 1#3:. c.i.illeofyiyaitb,oentif,f:eq.carrointeeti -offrou' kelnufte;ttutvelad s'oes or tlie quarter hey been the. ground • there is occunied by the e half to four feet in height and bear Pleats. Whieh stand from one and a story of the ilevelonMent n com- ppds of about tw,o inchea in length, containing two to five seeds. • Marvelous Use 6f the Bean • =Andy religion.- The litt e cempanY of the disciples is enlargetLieto a cora, monwealth Working out their common life together; then comes the story , their reaching out, touching far cities and gathering. in other peoples; 'tlia host of witnesses,. heroes, and martyrs of the.faith are unseen help - ere; they belong to the company. Now cone the vision ,of the great result -••=--0, glimpse of 'that great far-off day when the life of God shall fill the earth, when for the common People the rough places shall have been made simple and the crooked ,places straight, • when in the justice- and righteoueness of the common life all flesh together shall see the glory of the Lord revealed. The purpose of our religion is net the salva- tion of souls, but the redemption of the world. , - S. . Is the individual lost? For a long while the church ha a been think- ing only of the, It is truly intiethat 'Jesus has- discovered him, We, can never step thinking. of WM. The crowd cannot deaf with.him alone. To find and save him we must find his relationship to the crowd and the crowd's relationship to him:. We ;must lift the pressure of the. crosed ;from Ins life. We cannot leave him Osborne cadet "asked him whether it was a great responsibility to he the tent of the Prince of Wales. 'I've nev- er thought about Win that way,' said the -Prince. 'It's always seemed • to tne great luck to be borrithe , eldest sen you haven't got to wear aay• of -your-brotheris- old-elothesni"-,This, • true, is an entertaining illustration of the Queen's well-known admirable methods . of bringing' up the royal family. • • At the completion of his training as a midshipnian an hoard the Hindus - an illustratien is given of his re- markable powers of endurance. "Dur- ing the Prince's visit to 'Germany, in 1913, two German, officers were -de- lraehed terhis One day the •party had • been „automebiling. The Prince asked for the car to be stop- ped, as- he felt stiff and wanted to have a walk. 'Why not walk home?' he seggested. It is fifteen miles; at least,' said ene of the. astonished of- ficers. 'Never mind, 1, can manage that distance all right.' So the three started offi but only one of the offi- cers accompanied the Prince to -,the end ,of the long walk, as the other had to stay behind -with fatigue." ' . FOREST PROTECTION. vital message , for the sin ,of the soul. Commission of Conservition Has Is .5. • The twofold gospel. Man's sued a 'Report on the Subject. • dual nature, body and soul, flesh and • According to press; reports, Sweden spirit, is interdependent. Each needs -proposes to cut off the export of I the other: the body to; strehgthen the chemical pulp to.. Great „Britain. Na..; spirit and, the spirit to subdue the tui ally all eyes are immediately turn- flesh.' Jam proclainied a gospel that ,ed to Canada to supply the threaten.; helped each to help the other, that ed deficiency. " I led them both, into the- ideal life. An The Commission of Co metier' evangelist recently asked, n "If a nian give a figurative description of, • a shepherd meeting the need of the sheep for food, water, and Ahelter., Thet prophets and the apostle.s were face. to face with the. active phyetc- al imeds of the poor. They endeavor to Meet them. When they write. their visions of the City of God they liter- ally mean that thitnger and pain ,have been removed and shelter has been provide& For they see that city built upon earth. Their dreams had fern - 'dation. It is no mere disembodied bliss that, is described, but an actual condition of • community life trim which the sin of the soul, and the need of the body have been removed. " If the church to -day cared as much about the hunger of the body as the prophets and the apostles; it wouldhave a more in - ick it is In "de W drink a 'Halal Protection , Canada, 1-9+8,-191.4 " pel orshall I feed him ?'"! . The answer just betted a report o 4Forest,•iii•Iniziffy; shell J. givt him- the goo- . the present. great war, recently. gave fall a warm scalded milk, eAs see do hag . 1l I which he declared, that Germany would play her, last eard in Novembei. this year. , "Win was in midLheaven at the ally we 'find it economy to ease for'provincial forest services andof the same grout,. 'When the POlitICIanS ing. typical report: . time ef the birth of the Kaiser," said utter, cut alfalfa or cut cioirsr, which ! federal departments intrusted With onlY are looldhg after the needs of "A serious figlit was taking puce he. =Pulses of his nature far SO leng that "door natere. With 'odd 'commercial , Porest .fire -protection is astiuminii .shelteri-and-ithe preachera: only are shollid barnbPenin_eam.p. The „Men, - -- - I • 4 • of this .milk and we try to 'see t at1Vte is o o ment they have milk as much es possible ,r connection. It contains . much infer. of our community life We need that throughout their entire -glreivth Us..! maim respecting the Work of the both shall be done together by \ the : • • • In all, there are 300 dilfereat vari• etieri. of soya beanie and how wonder fill the heal' hi can be seen from the following 'uses to which it can be .put; Heenan comiumption, ge a vegetable,, like, inarrowfat peas, and in propane tion of soups. • , ' • As a substitute for. meat, specially mentifactUred. • htaigufactured as a eubstitate .for , Chocolate._ • Freneration of macaroni; As flour, for biscuits and brown nread. . . , As artificial °ream and 'milk. As a substitute for coffee. - • Preparation' of ,plastic substances • , and artificial horn Opechil blicuits and food Maaufac- . tined for persons suffering from dia. - hetes, as the. beans centatn no sugar or.stareh. • • As a baste' the manufacture of saucea---such as the famons, SoY „The beans are ground into... Meal for, feeding cattle. In the. United States -the beans are fed to stallions bisteed of the ordinary .horse bean, Poi: the extraction et, 'oil, and facture of Wreak°. . . 1 , In China the, bean &Ire is Used as a fertilizer, in'.,sugar planatiens, and in , the rice fields. . . .sapan soft alio is used 'as manure for wheat and yarioub Other ' craps, even fer.cabbagea; planted with the seed. . In Mancherla and japaa•it- is food -for-eattle.--horimais-Inules-raid hugs. Helps In the Making Of Margarine But.; it is the oir of tae soya been winch gives it its greatest value. The oil is used in the manufacture- of: , 'Olyetwine foe making dYnaniite and high explosite: Beans, linoleum . dia tubber, substitute mar: gine, paints and varnishes in place of lin- seed oil, edible goods anti 'toilet pow-• 'den waterproof\ • cloth, paper um- brellas -ono. lanterns; salad oil, lubri.'' - 'eating oil '•-•'-• in China, for greasing axles' and native maehinery—lamp oil Instead of 'kerosene oil (it is used en English ;or burning). The • soya oil is also Used, for preserving sardines, and in the place Of lard and . cattoneeed, oil f�r cooking. • • Soya''''be.ans.,4etliaa ihteciatl: On the list, of China'a execirtie about i2enee.- 060 worth Of them 'being etported from China In a year. • LONDON LIKES. POLICEWOMEN Their Efficiency Overcomes (Woof- . . • -.Von That Was Violent Although -at first violently 'opposed: • to policewcimen, England, •after six months trial; is beginning to like thein. The first report. of the policewirmen's • orgardzation shows that, contrary to ' the •popular expectation,' it is just their tact which ie ' earning the po- , licewornen a good name.. During en east coast Zeppelin raid policewomen : were asked hi assist in keeping•erder in the -streets. An excited little croivd of tired .wornen and children oat one street corner could not at firtit be per- suaded to go bomb, once -the raid Was ever, because of a suspicious: 'light which remained in the sky. The police- • *omen calnied them, says the report. • retained that -the light had nothing to do witli--26ppelies, hut. was merely the. ' Planet Venus, and sent the crowd • How. tho, policewomen Intervene to . stop street fights is told in the folloW- Sepharial 'Ile fellhwed 1.Vild t.RIV-t04 the 'runs ir §1"et -natural '013t..-,4-hic -care of our _forests, '• the body—air, ' water, light, food, and tweetiat ketaviOnft.tdhr.eurii:ceile•a. he can hardly hope to escepe at this', thick grain (-it must be the best) seat- 'A large placejn public attentien. It, is looking after the needs of the spirit, the crowd separ- - ts"tio4-11:grah t. WThhe late hour the dangers rwhich are now., taiga' ih this Titter and break °Pylons that if Canada is to continue •then comes disaster in church- and ated thy fighters, persuaded them . °women cleared tlkomed to extinci occasionally for the first Need"( with ' ds a wood-PredUcing country, she state. "rho needs of the spirit Lire . .. put on their coats, and made th Al911-and lOrionntlY.. . e boiled, egg the cleanest same and , must conserve ber . resources of this the needs Of the body, and the needs schaenkev.hantle and return quietly 43.11clij; I"The Germanic power, iti: se far as ' dry lai-di soaked m Milk squeezed ', nattnal-product.. The-report—treatireofthebodyareilinneede of the epirit. - --it•-is--identilled-wibliereassianisrinieavilL, dryy-theHehichs......tcome•-,right..-throughl•-exbauStiVely .of the _lire ...protectipe„. of A. senntl commtinity pregratin meet . NP. --H--.......,....r.: be brohen in August, 1917, when fight-. and ate happy as conld be Possible:forest lands along railway right -Of, Minister t,.e them together in their ing will cease, and It will be nailed ' One 'particular we think. may meter- way. . Through co-opevative action joint releti_o7111Lp. 4.._........7L • „ down in April of the following year,: ially help' with the email chichs is the • great headway has beenmade in se- when the terms of peace will lelin- 'fact that we not only have weter veg..' curing the • reduction of forest losses' ally agreed upon. .. . ,t'Spls k-erimulcitisly clean hut use Only through forest fires traceable le rain• i Destroy the Early Fly. , 'Alc*ander's Smooth,Pace Style to be Changed -by Present War. • Alexander the, Great' is said, to he responsible for Men shaving their' faces. When his phalanx swept into Aga, :the beards of his soldiers were found to be a soured of danger to themselves. In hand to hand en counters with the enemy the latter were found to .possess !too great an advantage bi helrig able grasp the -7bearde AS a =matter eif military ne- cessity Alexander ordered his lighting men to Shave. To -day inthe treeeires of Europe soldiers ave per - 'netting their bearde to grew tie a Prottetion against colde-.agttin a nee eessity • of • wog -And doubtlees the westing of beards will be 'very gen- crafty reViVed. in consegeenee. , . . "A year later there will be a ri,yolt boiled water for theVei y small chieks, Way eausea. - ' The bright eutiny daps of March against the, Junkers. , : I We believe it to be 'the Small par..,' The fOrests of BritisirColainbia tied '.and Apritltiarpean.indAuneetrenlyt. 13:1:in for . ,"A. great depreasion ivill conthnie uticultirs like this that will tell in the' on Dominion lands in the West have 11011101Y to pettr over l'Germany for one hundred:and ' lone .run. Every particle They get : been dealt with in 'reports containing; destroying these Pests Should he Made severity years" : . ••••• ''' watIst ba -in 'Perfect eendition and no: the results of special etudieS.eondnee. On the first fly seen, and the good "Will you venture on any Other' " in connection. .with the ed by Dr. 0. I). Howe end Mr. j. al., work should be consistently and et - prophecy *. *. • . • . . • White. The Trent waterehed in fectively carried on, The destruction war 74 ' "I' further see a great forward rattentiOn, in a report d an investiga- Ontario, ' has alto 'received especial of.. the early fly will mean the saving Movement, on the side �f the allies,,in don by Dr. C. D. Howe in the town - the. West in lVfarch; aleo; some signal ships of Burleigh and Mahlon, Thie euteeeeee for the Allies inApril—es- district is important in thatf while Pecially lathe first week. , of very little value as an agficulturtil : "In July I sec that the Weer will area, it; is being reneetedly OVerrtiti be really ill, 'aod disposed to intrigue by forest fires and the little reniain,- -for .peate. •• ' • . ,4 ing,merehentable timber. destreyed. It •• "And 'I';'prediet that Germany 'Witt is suggested ° that the area be placed play her led trump e4ra in rtovereber. undet . the control ef the Dominion Inthat month her 'fleet Will emerge,' and thegreatest naval battle' of all thrieS wilt he folight. It Will reetiltin a deeisiee.nictory for the , Eritieli fleet." ' 1 . element of 'thaw mustbe taker, at any time. Sloppy food is itlWays dan- goons in our. esimation and leads to much of the difficulty sobse growers have. When the chicks; have beeo:fed anything but dry food thet Will not spoil any that is left should be re- ntoved, and it Would be One well spent to occasionally scald out troughs used for feeding norposee, to rid them '�f any sour Condition.; If any eases shoW themselves we ree move the birds, treat them with cwt. tor ell • or ,a prepered tablet, arid if itnprovelerit doeft not come in two tir three daye wri ng theirriedits' end 'fiery there. By having fresh Iitter Ire. qUently replacing the old, danger. of • , THE SUN LIFE OF CANADA. New Records Have Been Created By I . this Company. The Sun Lite Aaeurance Company of Canada, achieved records during *915 that are new in the Cenadian life assurance field. Assurances over $84,000,900 were issued and pads for in oath; total aseurances vow in fordo over .$250,000,009; total pay - merits to policYholdets since organ.' of valuable lives, as there is no mote ization more then $52,000,090; Assets, peraistent carrier and dietributor. of in excebe of $14,000,000, a .ctteh tome of -nearly $10,000,000, and an disease than the • houseilse of vZ00,006. All them figures , are high. distributed , net surplite eer IdoheyeFluonokE' '‘tiv'fu.1, Den- water marksin the inals of Can - Mal" asked ()pc than of another.' /Wien lite assurance. On another '4/ luta litainr.d wan men call, aa- �olnrnn WIll be found a comparative other a liar, arid the men that, Was statement of the Walton done for. 1014 ahd 1915, and else a statement ithowhig the Corepany'a growth front* 1872 to 1915, all of whieh show a et - inevitable iterated, and elect reilecte the greeted etedlt :on the, manage. nicht of the 8u/.1.1,10. • 'ealled ti har Ladd ,the other man ivould Forestry Branch, for prOtection from have to apologize or there would. be firevand for refereetatiori. • ' • a fight.e. -4" • whi should that tedec. yeti A Mali sometimes' triakee nioneY, ilooa ao•bad , butnioney never rrialtee a man, "The Other man apologized:" , • • , ' • • 4