= found elsewhere. ‘United States, from every advance industrialists and statesmen are su sit ed that they may guide their activities not only by the suctesses but by the failures of others; the ais- ~ today onl: remote has "pleased to call marvels seem clumsy and immature, wise legislation and enlightened practices; these headings suggest, but do not define, the advan- tages that will arm men in the future as they unlock the treasure house of PEAY “natural resources. 2 | Tatercating Speculations A "o What Future Holds For WORLD TRADE IN NEWSPRINT PAPER Canada’s Exports Exceed Those Of All Other Countries Combined Sr The Development Of Canada MADONNA AND CHILD 1 sing the most recent esti- Canada's “national wealth, this at $26,000,000,000, or $2,- he the jn order to equalize popula- This would give the Domin- 1 an aggregate of $300,000,000,000, ‘Canadian Mining Industry | Appears To Be On The Eve Of Great Revival And Expansion | With the development of the pres- | PRINCESS LICHNOWSKY ent century has also come the neces- FIVE CHIEF EXPORTERS | NEWSPRINT PAPER | 1927 ) goo raggeo segec0nggoo | CANADA SWEDEN NORWAY NEWFOUNDLAND == FINLAND | ‘that does not differ greatly the estimate of the national of the United States made for The Journal sees reason to ve that the national wealth of da will expand at a rate its neighbor “will find it hard to | from the percentage stand- » While the respective rates of e will naturally be a matter ‘strong interest a much more im- nt consideration relating to the lopment of the Dominion can be Sir Joseph Duyeen has established a new record in the history of prices for paintings by giving $875.000 for Raphael's masterpiece, “Madonna and Child,” at an art sale in England. Sir Joseph purchased the famous picture from Lady Desborough. tri According to the best data avail- able the total export of newsprint pa- per from the different producing countries in 1927 was slightly more than 3,000,000 tons. Canada's export shipments accounted for over 60 per cent. of this total and the balance was contributed by some fifteen coun- land and Finland, each exporting less than 200,000 tons, were fairly closely grouped, while Germany and Great Britain had the major shares of the remaining trade. The diagram is based on figures published recently by the Newsprint Service Bureau. The Dominion’s commanding posi- tion in this field of international com- merce is, for the time being, beyond dispute, but it should also be a con- stant and effective reminder that the Canadian people have a greater busi- ness stake in forest protection and conservation than any other people in the world. es. Sweden, Norway, Newtound- his was touched upon recently by. Shipments Of Game Animals Elk and Mountain Sheep From Wain- wright Are Liberated In B.C. The British Columbia Game Con- servation Board has just concluded two important actions in connection with restocking certain areas of the province. Twenty-five elk and one hundred Rocky Mountain sheep, do- nated by the Department of the In- terior and taken from the herds in Buffalo National Park, Wainwright, Alberta, were liberated at points where these species had become thin- ned out. Th elk in one shipment were set free at Spence’s Bridge, near Kamloops, while the sheep, in two shipments of fifty each, were released between the Okanagan Valley and the Kettle River, and at Chase, B.C. e New York Sun when it pointed that Canada is in a position to t, proportionately, more than the le and to be made by science. Its sing results of waste and wanton tiruction, the possibilities of con- ervation and replacement ot natural yurces, are alopen hook =arhich japters are added every dav trom xpe tt and experience. Machi y economically far more efficient han anything now known, devices T ly speculatively projected as possibilities, transportation facilities that will make what we are Winnipeg Newspaper Union What is true of development in} Canada is true of every other land hitherto unexplored. Today there is} no measuring stick by which may be even faintly suggested the stu- pendous potentralities of tomorrow's utilization of the earth and the full- ness thereof by man if he exercises ordinary sense. C di the New York paper pronounces, have given many exhibitions of possession of that endowment. e German Immigrant Discovered In visa as a quota immigrant, andenail- ed into a packing - case consigned C.O.D. to himself at a fictitious ad- dress in New York, John Phoenig, 19 years old, of Dusseldorf, Germany.) tents of one day’s mail received by who took this method of stowing) prof. Lloyd, head of the poultry hus- away on & trans-Atlantic liner, was} discovered only after he had been are} loaded on to the pier in New York. on the case, thrust his hand in to in- vestigate, thinking, shook it. The checker ran down the pier shouting that he had been bitten by an animal. The box was opened and Phoenig stepped out. ted when he was found, and his first; demand was for food. He explained | 5 he found he had not enough money j EY/ On to travel to the United States, so, with the help of 4 friend, he con- oo structed the box. It contained blank~- jar of water and a supply of sausage, pumpernickel and the ship was at sea he loosened a} board and was able to get out and walk around, but could not find any additional supplies. Distribution Is World Wide British Columbia. Has Record For Poultry and Eggs British Columbia has achieved a wonderful record for high-producing poultry and shipments are being made | to practic2” every country in the world. This is evidenced by the con- Shipped Himself C.0.D. no! Packing Case On New York Pier Equipped with his passport and a cr bandry department of the University of British Columbia, which included letters from widely-scattered coun- tries: From Japan, acknowledging -receipt of hatching eggs, which had given good results; from several States in the Union, including hatch- eries in Michigan, such as “hose in the Zeeland district, which turn out 6,000,000 chicks yearly, California and Illinois; Kentucky, regarding cock- erels for poultry clubs; private brecd- erg in Connecticut regarding high- A checker, noticing a loose board and Phoenig, without Ui Phoenig was somewhat emacia-~ Union University. ts, a cord hammock, a five-gallon q To Locate In Winnipeg chocolate. While Easten Box Firm To Establish Branch Factory In Western a City A firm which operates a large box factory in Toronto and a strawboard | # Will Represent Canada mill at Trenton, Ontario, is establish- Mrs. Edith Rogers, only woman) !ng & branch factory at Winnipeg at Planting Seed From the Plane Reforestation Scheme Is Idea Of f Large Pulp Company Whole forests may spring up if the plans of a large pulp company to plant trees from aeroplanes are car- ried out this summer, as was fore- cast at a recent meeting of the Royal Canadian Institute. Grass seed was successfully sown from aeroplanes in the United States last summer, with the result that efforts will be made to sprinkle tree seeds from the air as part of a reforestation scheme in Northern Quebec. More than 250 square miles of forest a day could be planted if the project were feasible. Dairy Factories In Canada The latest returns show that the numberof dairy factories in opera- tion in Canada is 3,047. The total is made up of 1,269 creameries, 1,418 cheese factories, 334 factories mak- {ng butter and cheese, and 26 factor- jes making condensed and evaporat- ~ ed milk powders, etc. For the Larger Woman The woman with a mature figure will appreciate Design No. 908 with Western Honey Production a pwatnes Ee ee , rr nishe Manitoba and: the other Prairie) with unusual rever collar. Inverted Provinces are increasing their pro-| plaits and flared moyement to hem- duction of honey much more rapidly line, Printed silk crepe in combina- than the eastern provinces, and lust | Bonswith plain harmonizing crepe is ictured and is a smart choice for year they ‘produced the biggest crop} street. Printed sheer crepe, a little fn their history, according to C. B.| more dressy, is also adaptable. Crepe Gooderham, Dominion Apiarist. satin, wool georgette and faille crepe | are serviceable. Pattern in sizes 36, | 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46 inches bust inea- |sure. The 36-inch size requires 8% yards of 40-inch material with % yard of 20-inch contrasting. Price 25 cents the pattern. Our Fashion Book, illustrating the newest and most practical styles, will be of interest to every home dress- maker. Price of the book 40 cents the copy. How To Order Patterns Address: Winnipeg Newspaper Union, 175 McDermot Ave., Winnipeg Pattern No....... “You say you live by our railway? al Have you shares in the company?” “No. I make jokes about it!’-—Lus- lige Kolner Zeitung, Cologne. Name .,-.+.++-- repr lature, and Hon. Peter ister of Labor in the Dominion Gov-| ernment, will represent Canada at the | International Labor conference to be ‘| held at Geneva under the auspices of) the League of Nations this summer. Rt. Hon. W. L. Mackenzie King, Prime Minister, of her appointment. ative in the M: ba Legis-| an estimated cost of $1,000,000. Add- | ed to this is the development of 4 firm which will manufacture paper | 0 products from waste materials col- i lected in Winnipeg with which wood pulp will be mixed. sy 8! Heenan, Min- j colored of the Quotations in verse and illustrations decorate some German notes. Mrs. Rogers has been notitied by inveterate pipe smoker. She is the wife of the late Prince Lichnowsky, who was German ambassador to Eng- land from 1912 to 1914. She is now a resident of Czecho-Slovakia and has numerous novels and plays to her drawings. Hold Million Acres In U.S. Worth of Jews to the farm lands of the just issued by the Jewish Agricul- tural Society. years of its existence this society has fostered the back-to-the-land ioye- ment, and it has succeeded in induc- corporated, there was & Jewish farm population of 1,000 worth $150,000,000. Davidson, general manager of the so-) figures for arsenic, ciety. “They are invariably associated ! gold, lead, nickel, platinum, metals, with trade and industry, but there} zinc, coal, natural gas, has never been a time since the Col-| gypsum, pyrites, clay products, ce- “‘hack-to-the-land’ them in the United States — an in-| view are contained in the annual re- years. oO f | sity of again revising the older esti- ieee of the Dominion and of the place it is destined to hold in the | worla economy. Until, comparatively | recent years, even in the judgment | of well-informed individuals, Canada las a habitation of civilized people | comprised only a fringe of productive | soil lying between the northern wil- | derness of ice and snow and the | northern border of the United States. Nor has that view entirely disappear- ed on this continent, for it is still voiced occasionally by public men and | the press of the Republic. Yet we who are privileged to live in this | ravorea land know how wide of the | mark that judgment was and how little it is in accord with the actunlit- jes of the present and still less with the potentialities of the future. Even that other and more reason- able opinion that divided Canada roughly into an industrial east, three prairie provinces and the Pacific coast is no longer as true as it was once. Manitoba, classed as mainly a grain-growing region is becoming an important manufacturing centre and is daily increasing its prospect of ranking at no remote date among the centres of the mining areas of the Dominion. Nor is there any sound reason for limiting mineral deposits to those already known, rather are the geological and metallurgical ex- perts justified in their assurance that prospectors as yet have only done & little superficial scratching and un- covered but examples of the wealth that is buried in the ancient forma- tions that form the crust of so large a portion of Canada from the Atlan- tic to the prairies. Recently the Department of Mines issued its preliminary report on the mineral production of the country for the value of the mineral output for 1927, at $244,520,098, an increase of 4.09 million dollars, or 1.7 per cent. Princess Mechtilde Lichnowsky -is tt only a noted author but also an edit as well as some verse aud Jewish Farmers Successful Oyer Hundred Million Dollars There is a steadily increasing drift nited States, according to « report In the twenty-eight that after he had received his visa} record stock; Havana, Cuba; Eng-|ing a large number of people to! over the previous twelve months’ Jand, for more pedigreed stoclt;| abandon city life for that of the farm. l record of $240,437,123. The further hatcheries in Ontario; West China In 1900, when the society was in-| statement is made that:— “New ouput records for all time in the United! were established in gold, copper, lead, tates; at the end of 1927 some 80.-| and zine among the metals, gypsum 000 Jews were tilling the land. It is|in the non-metal, and structural ma- estimated that they hold 1,600,000) terials field. Values for natural gas property idee petroleum production’ also ex- c eeded any recorded in previous year. “Our people are rarely thought of | Increased outputs, in comparison s tillers ef the soil,” said Gabriel | with totals for 1926, were noted in the cobalt, copper, cres and that their petroleum, nial days that there has not been a | ment, limestone, sand and gravel.” movement among] Further expressions of the official tinct which reaches back over 2,000) port of the Department for the fiscal year ending on March 31, 1927, pre- pared under the supervision of Dr. Charles Camsell, Deputy Minister. After noting the expanding value of Challenge Cup For Best’ the annual Canadian output and the Good Farms Competition ape OLD FORT IS NOW MUSEUM Coats . 2% q Cigsre ss i ioe c, showing how the grounds have been made Into a golf course. ‘The first powder magazine of Fort Anne, built in 1708, L. Fort Ann 2. It was in the year 1604 that the; site, about the year 1635. The foun- lis Basin became known as dation of one bastion of D’Aunay's fort is still to be seen. The fort, after being burned and named by Samuel De Champlain, Who)». Huilt on several pennies was fin-| was second in command to penolne | ally left for all time, and not appear- | Pierre du Guast, Sieur de Monts,| ing to have any particular name dur- | when he entered with a small bat-| ing the French occupations, the ar- talion the sheet of water now known| ticles of capitulation simply refer to} as the Annapolis Basin. The name} it as the “Fort of Port Royal.” Nor | finally attached itself to the surround-| was any distinctive name given to it} ing settlement and was known as| by Nicholson, but later It came to be} such until the British conquest in| known as Fort Anne. Today the fort | 1710, when the place was renamed in| houses a splendid museum, an object honor of Queen Anne, Sicapalls) wondrous moving to the beholder — Royal. beautiful in its natural setting—re- After a period of years the country dolent of history and romance and| was restored to France and D'Aunay| alive with memorable names and| Annapo! “Port Royal’—the royal harbour — ‘Ww oN. -U. 1785 ~ )Town erected the first fort on the present] deeds, fined to farms within a fwenty uve mile radius of Calgary, will be held) this year by Trade. Crops, farm buildings, dens, livestock, and machinery will all be taken into making the award. A challenge cup| opment, which in itself will also be awarded the farmer on/r any part of Southern Alberta who produces the best crop of wheat. | additions constantly being made to the areas under exploration, he pens this enthusiastic summary of the present position and future prospects the Calgary Board of | of the mineral industry. In his own gar-| words: “In addition to the extent of Can- inj ada’s physical field for further devel- furnishes a ble basis for d in the growth of Canadian mining, there are a number of other factors that have a vital bearing on the outlook. Great technical advances have been made in prospecting methods and in mining and metallurgical practice, | and Canada is now better equipped in personnel for adyancing in mining development. The intelligent inter- est aroused throughout the country in recent years is a force in itself, and as a result of the close relations existing between the universities, government departments, and the mining industry, the Dominion is gradually being better equipped with engineers, geologists, metallurgists, and other technical staffs. Through field and laboratory investigations and in other ways, both Iederal and Provincial Governments are assisting in the work of mineral development, Moreover, the railway companies, banks, and other business interests have become deeply impressed with the importance of mining and are giving it a measure of attention al- ready great, and likely to increase a8 development continues. It may, there~ fore, be said that there is behind the Canadian mining industry a strength of support which leaves little likell- hood that the industry will fail to ad« vance through any lack of competent business or technical backing.” | —_—— Mary—"What would happen if 1 Wheat Crop In Southern Alberta A “good farms competition,” con- consideration What It Stood For Sight-seeing Guide (on rubber-neck wagon): And. ladies and gentlemen, on your right you see & monument erected last year to a notable cause. Inquisitive Old Lady: And what does it stand for? The Guide (sarcastically): Because, madam, it would look silly lying down. ——— The trout can move through water at the rate of thirty miles an hour. “Mother, you remember the teach- er who was ill?” “Yes, Are you crying because he is, dead?” jate a worm?” “No. He has recovered!’—Pele Mother—"It would kill you!" Mele, Paris Mary—"No. it didn’t”