pai Cos hae High Cid. Ton: see Cordage iis Be Disease it uote ED Ranch Has Become AS — The Kind That Makes the World a} Now Manufactured From Hemp sg heehee oe The alt of Wipe “Sa Distinct Factor in the Pure Bred 3 cattle sheep | exists ween the busine men of} Grown In Western Gendda| | ric MG MNtemiims Beco Gruth ont. ann aie ternere ce tie Livestock Industry of the W est anothef 60 days following the an- | Surrounding district as demonstrated nouncement from the Department of | in a “gravelling ’ held recently} > d Agriculture, Ottawa, that there has|is bighl~ commendable and should | Expert Agricultural Information [ seas REE a eskapeh ih eee been a new outbreak of foot and} Prove a source of inspiration to the — hill country of Southern Alera mouth disease in England at Wiggin- | People of Saskatchewan and Western | Many Publications oe Annually |Which junrped into world: promlaicice ton, Tamworth, Staffordshite. ; Canada generally. « | To D ractical elght years ago; because it tock he Many permits have been issued for} The gravelling bee is an annual ations Haney’ of the royal heir, 1s no longer the importation of pure-bred cattle,|¢vent at Craik. Farmers donate their | con is recorded as saying | be regarded as the mere hobby vf sheep and swine from Great Britain | team and their time to haul gravel Treading maketh a full man. @ YOURg man ina position to induize to a number of provincial poinis. The Dates For Digging Potatoes this season’ up to date, and this new Sagi be the mua ere es and being 0, the farmers of Can: | his taste, but asa practical establish- 5 . . aa outbreak will necessitate the holding |'he townsfolk, including clergymen, jada haye every = new Sodustry, employing only, thirty Early Digging Appears To Furnish up of these importations, insofar at jlawyers and merchants. peel off their | come - ade 200,000 i Seep pas” og at | Most Productive Seed least as those from England are con-j Coats and aid in the work. At the end | ment and every locally subscribed, y ap as a} gee ne Me Re 0 A new and significant step, alike in Jana free Canada to a larger extent of Western Canadian agriculture and in|her dependence upon foreign sources the indusirial manufacturing of that | for these very necessary ‘commod- territory, was taken in May when at /itles. Already, it is understood, pre- Portage la Pi ©, Manitoba, a yar-' parations are under way for an ex- jety of twines and cordage manufac-/| pansion in the Province of Manitoba. tared from hemp grown in Western Canada was turned out and shipped opporiunity to be-,| Ment with an essential placa in the ry practical Govern- | 88ticulture of Western Canada. The agricultural college is-; Prince of Wales, came to We s 7 7 > experime: eT e cerned, until Abat part of Gre: j-;0f a couple of days the town {s /‘sues iis quota of publications anftal- | Canada this year as a real W Ont ~7 small one, but the event is full of in-| Au Interesting experiment with th Pere a Ae Deep hea : eee Hts Bs a rancher who is playing 1 rescripti food terest and moment inaugurating |ObJect of determining if the stage of t#in is once again declared free from| threaded by well gravelled streets |ly in addition to the large number | ™* Ac playing his part ia mn ie as na uraun oa tie ’ ne eve. ‘ thin pe? =. with a i ; ae 3 7 maturity of potatoes when dug has an | tlils dréad disease. j which keep them in good condilion | published from the Department at, ‘he development of the territorys activity with such possibilities to 3 pei , i at niretsi : DY nerves meat Pah Pee iical e MF orhieite influence on the yielding ability of! Im the case of importations coming | for the next twelye months Ottawa, During the past year the Ex: | rst industry. Weak ae = . 7 nie o from Scotia it is > We do not know what the towns-| perimental farm system alone was/ That from the very first the Prince industries of Western Canada and | ‘thé Seed haS been made on the Fred- | from Scotland it is not the intention DP . Experimen- | Of the department to stop importa-|folk do to reciprocate the assistance |responsible for ihirteen bulletins, Of Wales regarded the E.P. Ranch as sidents of the |seven pamphlets, seven circulars and |" passing fancy would appear to be ericton, New Bruns en Mountain potatoes | tions if affidavit can be made that the | rendered them by the re E one of which there fs sore need. The : ton Tt alg Ee. _ plant at Portage la Prairie is of im- tal Station. Gre: hen proved and modern type,-and on this planted on May 16, 19 were dug on |Stock being shipped from Scottish ees. aPC but itis a safe bet|four spe cial pub ong making a Neer ic cons eles step His reeagy foundation the new industry can con. |AUsust 17, and on September 30. In ports has not been in England within | that any time the farmers are Up /total of $1. The butletins referred Hiataty me § pee : to imme. ig 1 ‘ fidentiy be expected to proceed apace. |1926 the seed dug early produced 60 days of export, nor been in con- a: a shortage of help in the har- | to. the cultivation of tobacco, to the ee : at . “a Ss ? a eh = of any meine ‘The actual manufacture of medium |*t the rate of 313 bushels of market- tact with cattle coming from England Mee ods onan any other Lihat the jraising of sheep and Wine in Central ne cs apes . shia ee reputa- Mr. He, a ee Cs rater |able potatoes per acre and that dug within that time. Further, it will be | townsfolk of ( nal can be relied upon ae to the DreyRence of plant hee = sa leu Mo cireles of i Ur nei : Canada marks the ‘culmination ot | ate Eee pie punt: required that Houts carrying: suey cat:/.to chee eee i Pe ieee Ob aOR Ses rs Bnd gare Sabena fae ni idee any ra tn | obtain reseed PS sy & © years of experimentation and other'| Jar experiment in the previous year | tle from Scotland must not touch at ai is this kind of el that makes | management iu Eastern Ganndg to 1 nitéd K t snark os oe. ; it iquid, oF sed 10 teak bt 5 » Pe eek sen Aciown: for’ seve the Green Mountains dug early also | English ports after loading. | t he ond a pene place to live in | wintering bees, to preserving fruit rece : " ‘sg 3 st WJ ee = ; and that brings material results as jand vegetables in the house, the gen- | /ivestock—horses, cattle, and sheep— eral years that Western Canadian soil | Produced a better crop than those dug:| pe dap the Pie . : ve) F 31° > ol aera t pcigs atoas nultivati in that country. Every year sines Seats! “ late but the difference was only about Migration Scheme | Well that would otherwise be unob-|era of seed potatoes, the cultivation : ; Fae =—! © ae ee + 4 pte 2 wc 15 boshels per acre. ] 8 tainable-—Farmers’- Sun. lof the strawberry, to Garnet >wheat, similar importations have beon made. mp my Ot le t eek a wae th Bn nitobs Agr | _ hee 2 Ex-Officers Of the Army, Navy and a RT TS jand gave standard descriptions of | ia effect . this has been striking H e ade a he Man b A 9 a . F re = . and far-reaching. The anima Bey eee Gctiees, tiaProteasor Har. Our Age Of Progress Air Force To Settle In B,C. Urges Farmers To Advertise _ bee!s and carrots, The pamphlets =i cai iti ed anim oe im sist China In Ei ; won of that institution gives cor seb iat | Ser ass The value of this would have. been - Provinces should not have a hemp- led feasts simgicnie aanealten karts M.C.A., Sir Henry staied. Mr. Rogers said: [ieee projects of the Dominion Depart- bai inctly-Ttalbesie'y Nate 5 of Ma ‘a SS “ . ' Ss! iy nite however, ha such growing industry and engage in the/as normal condition of the human| 2ritish Columbia is the only part of ‘0 sound advertising progr ras |mental farms, the story of the experi- vaadabin aenanic aa y x ae ‘ " a nia ntttea ue |= = " |the empire in which the scheme ts|ever worked out without a- survey Paeatal farms, a treatise on mush- | *?U&Die animals been confined to the manufacture of products imported in |royal ranch, but the acquisition of a ; ee : aaa < | ‘ ea “Katabie, it class of animals he had scarcely be- millions of dollars annvally. i u to the country to the extent of many being carried out, he said. Condi-| Purporting to show whether a product |rooms and toadstools, and why alfal-} . tions here were consider iarly jis m While Individual ad- {fa should be grown and how to grow 8 here were considered peculiarly | is fore known became a possibility for After being satisfied that ample n estimated that Chin le third of the wority ers, and the Chinese Mi ers, established recent, ‘sted by the London af es leper mission orale and ranked high among cifie Raflway in Southern Alberta | part of the world has risen above it- -winners. Going farther afield i likewise established the suitability of | self and burst into flower or fruit, We of the Chinese leper Shunned because of is ndition he is also pene often killed by his fel , who believe hin tb of heaven's anger. War — Chinese have not rent as a disease bul a5 ape icted onan immoral jp athiful “will of heave! ompiled by the mist at the disease is sli ease in China apd ssistance has bect a n by the foreiga mk race, which it kas never been | suitable for the seitlement of this| Vertising would probably cost a Dro- | it. Yo all these were added reports en nO E mnic c) a 2 | - 3 the Western Canadian farmer. Supplies of raw material could he Winnipeg Newspaper Union type of migrants, all of whom haye|hibitive sum, co-operative advertising | for the year from every one of Ee aineod Helga aia : Thntaetel ae 5m iu ngonatile-tilistanee n, incomes of varying size and some of| Could unquestionably be worked out} thirty branch farms, stations and Sere ee ee ee oduced within reasonable distance Fico y ¥ he advahtace. of . cticut | Ot, SO dm ‘ the | Stock from the ranch has Sie’ point: of manufactur at Por: | whom have a small amount of capi-| to the advantage of the Connecticut | sub tations, and of course from the - Pr y . a is intende 2 setllers | farmer. | Divisio: f the Farnis System. Ja Prairie the Manitoba Cordag: ia ie. int ae pear setlle "i ar A | ision of the roi System lada, elevating the .standing of the Ss ake land, iz snl per z ; any imported hemp seed of the ; w ie a and, probably in sma Exhibits | Held U | livestock indusiry of that territory “quality which it advanced to ee Tag P | Solved Difficult Problem |another notch. Rapidly the ranch has been dis- {seminated throughout Western Can- ide campaign ot farmers with a guaranteed price per | Se { - = yl ic: |made itself a distinct factor in the z ras U.S. Cust: Hol ts | | Extade 2 " 3 - pe started in the neat ~ ton of straw delivered at the factory. | Great Britain Had | epaneeee ee eee Prince Edward County Farmer Saved cattle and sheep industry, and in | is hoped that a be A field man in the joint service of | | Super-Centenarians | Gomme abtutelaid/wctive-auiployeaor Fine Brood Of Chicks |lorse breeding, particularly the rais- on station can the company and the provincial gov | ES, ; 3 = 4 A Prince Edward county farmer ling of polo and racing ponies. ‘The Placed a broody hen on a getting of| effect has been even wider than this, |15 eggs. but unfortunately the hen |for animals from the ranch hi jthe United States customs vices | {has thrown a monkey wrench, figura- 1 - » been tively speaking, into the programme 7 es i R f | died before the chickens were due to |; ama f 1 arts e of the Alberta Government in connec-| ‘ ; r in} demand’ from) miny-) parts: ict athe hatch. Whether the chickens had aF | {pitea ¢ at 43 and have’ travelle - : | tion, with its serfes of Alberta exhibits| | es and have: travelled. to, he is the oldest living man in the| {ready been counted or not is not ;stock farms in many states of the at eight middle states fairs. The col- 4 world. He says he is 145 years old. baa of: gr eas Beaea | known, but in any event, the prob-| Union as far as California, where jlem confronting the farmer was solv they are carrying on their work of se ernment, which has throughout exhib ited a keen interest, chose the land and inspected it for proper culti e tion. During 1926 approximately 5 acres of land in Manitoba were sown ie to hemp, most of this about the Por- Jear the stomach a - ; tage plains, in close proximity to ihe s{l] so an OP i factory, with smaller areas at Morris, Dozen Or More Said To Be Over 130) | When They Died | It is claimed on behalf of Zaro Aga, | a Kurd living at Constantinople, th: ante are “fete Ul ch cause great sulci promptly dealt will eis litulional weakness nedy— Miller’s Worm i 700 ains and other products ! | with accompanying illustrative ma-| The case of Old Parr; the Shropshire aborer w e Ex 2) ed by boring two holes, one on each | stock i rove t. ns and W E ‘ } laborer whom the Earl of Aruhdel | 5 ari, fal’ which was shown-at the poul: | e€a . stock improvement. it there will be Aa _~ Clandeboye, Roland, Elm Creek, Car brought to London in 1635 at the al |try congress at Ottawa. eeooe | jside of the nest, through the bottom! ‘Throughout the eigut years the he trouble. And = berry, Neepawa, Langruth, Oak | leged age of 152, has been cited to| > pe jof the box in which it was placed.| pyince of Wales, despite the fact ney Will repalt = was then shipped in two sections for l Phen Point, and in the Winnipeg district. | This year it has been planned to seed | _—- $00 acres. Uniform success attained would in- | preve that Zaro Aga’s claim is really | a rooster was placed. on the he has been almost cuaselessly trav- ‘est A Old P ti juse at Illinois, lowa and Nebraska ex- ue with his 1 thesis A hese & modest one. Since arr’s time PRES wi 8 legs through these two | ellj iste arts 2 E e, ¢ e e tS me | hibltions, has been held up some-, elling in distant parts of the Empire, there have been a dozen oi ore in- holes, and fastened securely together! has exhibited a ageing pres 4 on a dozen or more | whereson the border, and the ‘cus- ee y has exhibited an unflagging interest habitants of Great Britain who were ; |below. By this means ihe rooster ){n the ranch, which has not been ans that bail Ss yy think y } : aoe : ; watt thing #8? bi Mcate that hemp will grow in prac- said to have lived to the age of 130 ae a et x a not a | compelled to coniplete task! merely sentimental but practical. On cossithen ~ Ueally any part of Manitoba. _ Crops or more, but the last of these, most of | oo) yh, any Albena aicmane ae wn, {Bteatly beneath his dignity as a fath- {its yearly visit to England to supple ock in the Portage plains ran from six to whem were Irish, died in 1840, ai Re Dap eA MDa ys in t0e |? andl head sob atibal avabtold Ria ment the ranch’s stock depleted by ily a ja es ten feet in height, despite an untay-| -_— | 5 seg ee was-kept sitting on the eggs until he} sales, the manager has, when oceas- necessan'y arable season. The average yield An old railroad locomotive, with its | be ame the proud and only pa “Why do you drink so much water, nt Ol jon offered, conferred with the royal wheels removed, heats a passenger | pyerett?” asked a mother of her 5-|2 fine brood of chicks. following | owner, who has personally interestea station in Norwich, Conn. It also| year-old son which they were placed under® the | himself in the stock tc be moved. On man | jg sound ie > ° was 2% to 3 tons to the acre, and harvesting and retting were success- » fully carried out. Hemp yields, ac- heats the train shed, and cars in the|" “gq you won't have so much to|C#%e of a foster mother his y to Western Canada this year _ sording to report, returned Manitoba yard. » Hernahamacwlihe replied thecruone ———+— the Prince could view with satisfac _ farmers an average of about $50 per _ ster. if | The Boss—"Do you want to take| tion the result of his efforts since ’ acre. Hemp growing and manufac- He—“Would you be angry with me asa ee | your vacation this summer?” when eight years agé a boyish im- . ture have been successfully inaugur-|A Brace Frock For the Miss Or Small if I ed you to be my wife.” A man who 1s satisfied with his| Bookkeeper—‘No,-I want to take|pulse prompted him to acquire the ee _ ated in Western Canada,send judging Woman } She—“Not at all. But I’d be furious | job never reaches the top of the lad- | mine in the winter so I can get a seat flovely- Beddington property. ‘This ’ by all the preparations made can be! pelightrully girlish Is the chic frock | with ‘myself if I agreed to.” | der. on the observation platform.” |time he came back to Western Can- expected to make progress from now | shown here and would be smart if - . ada not so much as a royal heir but . on. fashioned of either woollen material 1 rancher with a definite standing among the gvicuiturists of that territory as a real Western Canadi The rough and polished twine is of | °T silk. The skirt has box-plaits in es aq /frent and is joined to the bodice hay- BOOMS AI DearaucG ands it. was stated! tucks at.cach shoulder The long “ that, size for size, the broaking straiu|ragian sleoves are finished with He ef local grown product is much|shaped cuffs, and a trim turn-down wi) the market at competilire prices, an Collar fastens onto the dress. The Was No Relatlon back is in one piece a shaped | Here is « good stery ‘concerning » niarket at competitive ces a F : m | . the niarket at competitive prices D | belt achieves’ the two ee A Miss Vesta Victoria, the music hall actual test proving this, and those smart note of contrast may be intro- star. who have used it ciaim ft fs longer. | duced in the collar, stronger, cheaper and easier to han- | No. 1 is for , » men and is in B a e! wine: 8 a 8 Ze. sy, " dle than other twines of similar sz years. «Size 18 requi cuff | A certain Englishman was luuehing | with a well-known American socloty woman in New Yor ¥ Two, three and four piy twines polish-| {nen material, or 3 Presently the talk veered round to r ed and stretched and rough, heavy,| contrasting material Is | English music hall star ant ihe unpolished twines are being manv- {39-inch additional is required Naereiitd sit v ¢ | 20 cents the pattern, BCCEE" BRD ENEMY FOPEate rater ae Uae factured. | Ten J 1 Many styles of smart apparel may toria The twine is belog placed on the | p. found in our Fashion Book. Our | |} “Any relation to tia Inte Queen market and is having success in Win-| designers criginate their patterns in | Victoria " asked the hostess in’ all mipeg. Selling at the same price as|the heart of the style centres, and seis oe their creations are those of tested seriousne: popularitiy, brought within the means of the average woman. Price of the siher twines and the type of product, no difficulty is experienced in dispos- Tuneless Pianos Costly tng of-all their present output of one! pook 10 cents the copy Right tenths of the country’s plaud _ ton per day, and Western Canada. can = . are alwaya out of tine, Charles Dents easily take care of the output of pr® How To Order Patterns chmann, of Chicago, told delegate vent plant. to the National Association of Plane The path has for some time been | Address—Winnipeg Newspaper Union, Tuners at N York He asserted a an elesred for engagement in hemp man- | 175 MeDermot Ave., Winnipeg > a that about 0 of the $900, - __._ mfaeture In Western Canada and suc | rextis ae ~ 000,000 spent annually for musteal __--—-- @essful experimentation and demon- ee ee oo Pe 7 7 ee “ we . C - outs MME as walnd cone otete | Prince of Wales Receives First Railway Ticket At New Station eit ye ancniee ‘e be Sees ees as nD sale 1 plavo nec re- daha, terprise and capital. With the sue- When ELR.H. the Prince of Wales ;the new Depot, entitling him to pas- ai eessful launching of the {hdustrial | Se formally opened the new Union Statjsage “Between AH Stations” and Gillen, general manager of the|out of tune the musty ce eS side there is no reason why the in- | “* | tion at Toronto his first action was to| good “for all time.’ Photograph | Toronto Terminals. dustry should not now spread rapidly Name _......... visit the ticket wickets of the Cana-/ shows His Royal Highness at» the |right of the photograph is seen Prince -—— : dian National Railways, there to re-| ticket window; behind him in morn-|George, with Mra. W. WN U ies Town of Ontario, and to his right, Mr, U quent tuning and thet when it got al ear did Nile On the extreme | wise. , r G. Roses, wit The Rossian govermment wmwede teereeeeesseetereessene os Celve ticket No. 1 of the Lseve from ing coat ig Lieutenant-Governor Ress jof the Lieutenant-Governer. jcolns of platinum In 182%.