aiid nit, How Education and Training Helps the Farmer to Meet Highest Measure of Success —— Even at this late day farme Reindeer Farming Is still to be found, here and ther ‘ . who ridicule the idea that — colleg Being Investigated courses in agriculture, or. higher " f B education in general, can benefit the ane Se te farming industry. They decry the iniBarrenandsnef Northwest The founding of a r¢ industry invéstigation of scientific methods = and the application of th to farm-|2" Darren eee Bee tne ake bioti Rnd But, tory is being layed by the federal pa altoeéther Mom. the tact: that department of interior pending com higher education opens the door to’ pletion of an investigation ah d nd, ived an ap. axperts from Green intellectual enjoymeuts invaluable partment has rec to every individual man and E woman, it is-worth while examining plicaion from a British Columbia thé situation from the lower stand-|‘¥7dicate for permission to star point of dollars and cents. Prest- een Susie barren dent Glenn Frank, of the Uniyersi-|owevery there is coustderable uncer- ty of Wisconsin, who bas been fc tainty as to the food resources avail vestigating the matter, a whether | 2¥!¢, and, until this is decided, the it pays the boy who wants to be a application will be su pended. - The farmer to gto school, and present investigation is being conducted by Wiidus facts Hie lias unearthed that Ponslid Brothers, who entered the Meeivatiention: “He mentions that| °°res lands early In 1926 and’ ore mo Jess than twelve agricultural |®*Pected back uw utumn. If thelr report is favorable the department states in the Republic have made sur veys for the purpose of tracing just will encourage the founding of the in what! clfect corimon® school, -bieh | MSs and: probably ‘will'sthreameoy- ernment farm, bringing over a boat school and college training has upon | the earning capacity of the farmer. In Texas {t was discoyered that an load of ‘reinde from Norw pate to | uneducated farmer might earn $20,-| Beats Record for Size 000 in forty years, while a farmer who ae spent twelve of the forty yez in | Hen Lays Five Ounce Egg Containing school might éarn $10,000 in the same Three Yolks period. That to the farmer A despatch from Revelstoke, B.C., who spent twelve years in school will | States that a White Leghorn pullet, earn $20,000 more-in forty in years ing to Alf. Graver, of that city, than the farmér who ne went to id an egg that beats all size school. In the twelve years the Tex-|Tecords known in that part of. the| as lad will have spent 2,160 days in | count It measured 7 inches in cir} school. These 2,160 days In school ence around the middle, and 9 - will net him $20,000 by the end of | inches over the ends. the longway of} forty years, or an average of about the oyal, and weighed five ounces. $9.25 a day for every day spent in| When opened the egg was found to school. Not! bad wages! President | contain three full-sized yolks, An- | other remarkable feature of this hen‘s |achievement lies in the fact that she has been laying eggs almost as large | | Frank comments. In Georgia it was discovered that the annual net profit of the uneducat ed farmer Js about $240, while the this since she was five months | annual net profit of the farmer with | old. She has never bees known to lay an average-sized egg. a common schoo] education is $ the annual net profit of the farmer with a high school education 1s $664.50, while the annual net profit of Winnipeg Newspaper | Union the farmer who has completed an sgnificant in comparison with the Zorente Mail and Empire. . , ege course is $1,35: wilco’ A oreanutcentes its tenn: | — - agricultural college course is $1,354 pro’ neo's resourc snd its unrivall | 0 Mill Neichb Wisconsin's experience showed ed position for export to the wes ur wonaire Neighbors that farmers with a high school ern United States, Asia and Austra- rare | education acquired the ownership lia Eleven Thousand Millionaires and | of their farms in about seven years. | ——___--—_— One Billionaire in the Us. But farmers with only a common | |. Advice Worth Nocing Federal treasury statistics reveal school education took about ten | The germs that cause colds can be| that there are eleven thousand mil- years to acquire a clear title to} projected twenty feet in ordinary | Honatre s and one billionaire in the thelr lands. Indiana, Illinois. Jowa | j| conversation, and colds cost us anj| United States. The figures are inter- and Kansas had the same story to ayerage loss of ten da actiyity an-| esting, for Chauncey M. Depew re tell. In all these states, and whether | nuall declared a doctor recently. | calls that in his boyhood there were in owner or tenant class, the better If everybody with a cold would stay | only two millionaires in America educated farmers were earning the | at home at least the first day, the | More interesting would be the stories higher incomes. ‘ spread of the disease would be great: | detailing how these men and women e| Frank concludes from | ly reduced, because the germs can} acquired so much money or its equiy- President Frank conclud from | these discoveries that in farming as| only transmit the cold during the first |alent. Most interesting and most im-| fn other vocations, one’s wagon had better be hitched to a star than 2} steer. | Defining Mass-Production | Turning Out Work at High Speed A a] Single-Job Machines Puiting it roughly, in the days one made, say, one table, that ten men working in a shop to gether were slowly turning out ten} complete tables. Under modern meth- ods. however, the ten men would be: tween them be turning out one com plete table only at a time, one man, we will say, doing nothing but legs, another castors and so forth. With this type of specialized work each man becomes so expert at his one job that the tables are soon turn- ed out at clockwork speed, each table old | so A Fetching New Frock Of smart individuality is this at- | tractive frock. The flared skirt front is joined to the bodice, while the back is in one plece. View A has a becom- |ing shaped collar and flared cuffs fin- ishing the long dart-fitted sleeves, and | ers of the West | 500,000 The Favorable Prospects y Synthetic Rane Good Year is Indicated For the Farm- | Food Supply in Future ticity has been hailed as Despite the delay in eding cau a that where there is no vision the peo- ple perish. But the cathode tube may | not be, in Dryden's paraphrase, the unde available ene oped horsepower or rgy in rivers and water- alls awaiting harnessing to supply | h I hict anmasGnt 5 hich true ara Tomithernilnaditiavavener lil tral Daren born through W nich oot : i E : S 3 rise. Ata a rmers 0: of the future. Though 2 million | * Ai gle Bop ieee a sad | the present generation need not worry Their furrows will break the dollars has been invested in the pulp | and paper mills of British Columbia, | mite this development is comparatively in-|Stubborn glebe for sore portant are the facts about what they are doing with thelr wealth—Toledo Blade. twenty-four hour's of illne. Will Take Aerial Photographs For the first time since its incep- tion as a game preserve, aerial photo- graphs mapping out the wood buffalo preserve at Fort Smith are to be tak- en by the Topographical Survey. Two planes will reach Alberta shortly, and if flying and photographic conditions are satisfactory, the whole survey should be made within a month. With recent extensions this great natural park is now 17,000 square miles. in eastern city, air to operations, are furnished. an fresh as required, it isn’t. of revenge the sweeter It isn’t always the coat that makes the man—sometimes it’s the padding. precisely like the last. Multiply this process thousand. | {s trimmed with an Egyptian design a at the front and on the belt. View B FCs, Poe aa nnndreds “of, single job shows the same frock with the collar machines, instead of men, and we get | and cuffs omitted and the V-neck the beginning of mass production | simply bound, while buttons adorn} methods. The tables will be turned | the front vestee effect of contrasting 'e 3 obing | material. No. 1570 is in sizes 16, 18 out so fast that the cost of making and 20 years. Size 18°(36 bust) re- each can be reduced. 39-inch mate }gulres 3% yards 3 2% yards 54-inch, and % yard 36-inch | contrasting mate for vestee in |View B. Price 20 cents the pattern Transfer Design No. 1190, Blue or Yellow, is used for trim V A. Price 20 cents the pattern, Radio Business Declines The Dominion Bureay of Statistics reports production of radio sets, parts and batteries in Canada during 192 valued at $6,277,544, or almost a mil-| Every woman's desire Is to achieve lion dollars below the 1925 figure. Re- | that smart erent appearance which ¥ draws favorable comment from the turns were recelyed from 41 establish | opyeerying public. The designs ilu this fleld. ' Young son (to shoe clerk waiting upon his fastidious mother): “No use showing her the first ten pairs—she won't take ‘em.” | ments in traied in our new Fashion Book ar originated in the heart of the style centres and will help you to acquir that much desired air of individuality Price of the book 10 cents per copy. How To Order Patterns Ir. Palestine been dug up, two stone tablets have which authorities Winnipeg Newspaper Union say furnish proof of the captlyity of the 175 MeDermot Ave. Winnipeg Jews in Egypt. | i A Pattern No............ Size When the worst comes to the worst | {t's up to us to make the best of ft. | Pema Has eres * Some men tell the truth and then| = ~"""" 5 ed ebb 8 Se aes try to He out of it. | Name eee aki ee — W. N. UL. #1687 , Town .. Goaas i ees i 7 ‘ .. [tribe members bas an attachment of! } | An Old Age Industry at St. Andrews | Old Frank Atwin’s four score years , ian romance and adventure that do not hinder him from turning out|#!ways appeals to the tourists to nome of the finest models of. the In-| ‘at part of New, Brunswick. Many a _ | Dlace names are drawn from the dian canoes made by the Indians of | language c people the New Brunswick, This trail-hardened | qian Pacific's Igonquin Malecite. photographed above, is| St. Andrews being a ll-known ¢x- holding a finished model of anoe of;ample of this. which very little is known, being that | An old friend of Atwin’s, John of one of the seagoing s used s, died last yeur at the age of by the Indians. In th 103 Hori cident he met with scout the shores of the while deer hunting These hardy according to old-tim Indians are the descendants of In ingly daring tri were made met bt Champlain and De St. Andrew’s-by-theSea where this | Monts in 1604, and still speak their Old Indian lives with many of his| old language and observe their old tribal customs. Possibility of Electricity Furnishing | time yet.— | In a hospital maintained for horses | everything from} The nearer you get to the butt end Canadas s Trade In Furs Has Been Reaching High Levels by backward. weather the W gre boon to the r. It would crop outlook becomes more et not only lighten his During t z ast Few -w Y ears ing with the passing of time. Aj would also do a lot St ES: 4 recent report from Winnipeg stated work known as “chores” and play a \ that the acreag wn to wheat this! part in la operations such as field Ploughing Under Peas { Before the entry of tsh into year was placed at 17,500,000 work. Hence it would help to solve aN the fur trade of the chief Bee : ; s a Green Manu t compared with 000,000 acres last|the problem of keeping sons _ Fe'centres were Leipz Amsterdam, l yea nat the harvest may equal! ehters e lank But it w A Paris and Vier e monopoly y ar but that the harvest may equa)! daughters on the land. But it y Detrimental . Effect. Is. Noticed .in Siar = u th monopoly he npe in 5 fro 2 € ray too. Synthetic od 1eld by the Hudson's Be Somp. the bumper in 1915 from/the other way too yrthetic foo Following Crop as on’s Bay Company 3,000,000 ac lecline from! is F ossibi f the futu ; ; and the com ing posilion i : A ac decline from'‘is not an impossibility of the futur The ploughing under of peas as a ee a c es iuon it had 26 in acreage + al ow- | eg 2 t of the Nation 0 8 such the m: ourrer 5 in act S no all 1 how- | At the annual mee of the Nation green manure has resulted in a slg-| op 4 te main current eyer, as of the land not put/al Flectric Associ Atlantic | nigcantl selitet AP eh o ef rade in Ainerica went to inte wheat is being used for coarse | City, L. A. Hawkins, neer of | roilowine red. with | orut Britain: London” became . the ‘ollowing s compared with 3 grains. e research laborat > Gene lea market and so continue pect # Rais : the research laboratory of the Gen the_ bare “fallow Tho datrinental = fe z € i continuea Alberta as 2 sufferec ike > | Electric x any predicte nt ecent years rta Has -not suffe kethe Electric Company, redicted effect has also been quite appare - two other Prairie Provinces. So far, food factories may supersede : The Great War brought revolution- J ; in the oat crop following the wheat. |... . a record crop is being talked of there. | farm. He explained that the dev Tl : tnt bested tae pe y¢ ses In the fur trade among L : ; i - hese lis were obtainec é ieee } Growth 1s proceeding aormally in} opment of the high power cathode | ..,j.5 of. experimen iy | Which was the establishment of pow- Series axperiments cove g 8 both § atchewan and Manitoba:|ray tube given us a new tool of yea eanitacted tt erful competing fur centres in Can- P) shapees, Ts, CLEC a Ae 7 ' and the reduced 2 not caus-|tremendous power whose possibilities | ya nitoba, Ext nial ¥ ada and the United States which dim- ; =k ‘ : »b Ixperimenta ing unqualified faction. The|are not yet determined. It will turn yield’ of wheat followin inshed the sale of American pelts on | ald of wheat following ‘ Saskatchewan Farmer points out that |lodse in the air huge armies of high | jerrajow ay “ed 35 the London and other European fur 7 anes . F | . allow averaged 35 A 3 prevailing conditions will give the | veloci electrons, and one of them reer p as markets. St. Louis began to bold fur acre over 13 yé farmers an opportunity to put up alone has a ot jutput equa auctions in the yea ) ss6 pp t : I D one h an electron output equal to penn onewhich had: heen} — a : ear but these good fight this year against weeds, | that of two or three tons of radium * ‘ _| Were discontinued in New York =" . * ploughed under in early July and 33 ;. which are becoming an ever-greater | We know alres that it is capable of | pycnels where tl ed Hnate bear fur auctions commenced in 1916 and shels where the peas id been problem, w > there will be more} produ new chemical reactions be those of Montreal in » attracting ‘ ; 5 : ploughed under in late July The 3 >, ummer-fallowing and intertill some of which may prove to have} q;.,.. from all parts of the world. BH : ) { difference in the case of the oats fol than usual. Besides this. the exc great commercial possibilities Bt ‘ ined value of pelts sold 2 b lowing the wheat was still more strik . sive moisture has helped out tl “Recently it has been found,” said ; ‘ three fur auctions totalled 2 F. A + Z ing. The ploughing under of peas ’ grass and provided badly needed for-| Mr. Hawkns, “that certain vitamins, F : many million of dolla each year ge for dairy catt! jat I Sa Raia Rica eet ea pa Leo es OH ent ott nies oe ereatlye! 1 by age for ds atile. at_leas Heitor F ackit-s “ j vhich is not greatly lessened by th - : jat-teast, may be produced. Bood tack") nitrogen content of the soil, but mois phd te dat. Apparently there is ample reason |ing in the vitamin necessary for pre- Fi F liscontinuance of Louis. Westera 7 7 ee - ture is dissipated in producing the ; } for looking forward to a good harvest | vention of rickets may be made anti Seen eri “ne rt Canada has alSo shown considerable > 3 eit ; Y - f nanure crop. 1e experments A = 4 /from the West on the whole.—Tor-|rachitic by raying with ultra-violet or a : }enterprise, Winnipeg, Edmonton and | ° ait < % were made on a rich loamy clay soil | y, 7 tonto Globe. | cathode ra The food factory may A ancouver having established fur auc- ¥ ‘d and the results have emphasized the =: = aes — | supersede the farm, even as the wool- | - tions. A development affecting the ly a \ 7 fact that moisture 1 greater factor | Gaiadian cot Pp f as sse 2 § 1-3) anadian cominerce in furs | Superior Pulpwood jen mill las surpassed the spinning |in increasing. yields than fertility in| ~~ : ete wheel, and mechanical refrigeration A A provision made by the Provincial Qn Vancouver Island}. it : a a soil which is lacking in the essential! Go venment of Alberta’ through 1 $s su ‘S' 4 tc ie 4 : = x € e of 2 erta nroug 8 Ws eS. | is a eC Re ae ae : etricity ingredients of plant food. The lts Game Branch t i bl ed oe 1 not onl vi r 2 WwW s wuS- } +u ie ranch o enable farmertrap- Development in Paper Industry Smali a i ‘ bi baz: ett: a a es 1S- | are even more definite when the cost Ser EGY ‘ tt * ’ ; : j try, ligh ouses anc ‘ de heat 5 ‘ 3 vers and others to dispose 0 heir A eet igh Beaten ie xen “a es at er ae : of seed and the extra labor involved | ¢,., mee : : but it als v Vv a ne | 5 = It is stated that two-thirds of the t also will purvey health in the |i, preparing a seed-bed for the pe: a; : : |form of ultra-violet baths, furnish the |. 5 ji , anada’s external trade in furs pulpwood of British Columbia—about are taken into consideration. ‘ 7 . Pa eae {food supply, perhaps, and provide very mat ly increased in recent 125 billion feet—is located on Van-} ‘ 1 1 aoe SS oe } year Exports hay i t € +. other and as yet undreamed- of ways rae ’ ave risen [rom 90> couver Island and that it is of super- x | - : of health, wealth and happin | Canad s Telegraph Service 668,000 in 1914 to 22,440 in 1926 for quality for paper making and z — ac a 5 : = Vision is, of course, necessary to} and imports from $3, 000 to $7.5 very dense in stand. Moreover there e é |Number of Messages Handled Last|eqq 7 i AUAISEIDALeLicR eURLBSSLAITALADOUt progress in science, and we $93. The capital investment Is val- s 8 sInad ¢ | Year Shows Big Increase ued at about $10,000,000, The nwnber Dominion statistics recently issued |ot fur skins treated is over 4 millions show that more than 12,090,000 tele-| , > ri : 1a AS es j}and commerce in furs has . shown grams were sent out in Canada last) marked increase in’ America espe |year, over various lines, representing ly in the last 20 years. ‘Today the jan increase over the preceding year | pelts of practically every fur bearer 2,404 telegrams, Or 6.6 per cent. | j, pe ing utilized. The Canadian National Comps i rnteag tan }bandled 5,538,295 mess jadian Pacific Company, 5 Sages, Western Union, |minion Government service, Temiskaming and Northern Ontario, important problems have been met and to a large degree solved in the by the | Fur Industry, accord ing to the past few but it has not, Natural Resources Intelll years z gence Service of the De of > North American Telegraph, the Interior at Ottaw solved and Marconi Wireless, | the vital faetor of the future of the as 2 pssage Te | ¢ a No less than 2,701.000 messages wert |fur supply. That is m in Canada from United j mic problem and r States sources. operatioh of the A total of 1,019,625 cables were sent} arected. Among 6,402,405 received qui various the interests contributing causes which have been a menace to from Canada last year and | cables were received. Money trans-/ wild liter might be mentioned the- |putten by wire increased in PFoHDy predatory birds and~animals,’ laxity |tion, last year's total being $7,790,127, | of protective laws and scarcity of }or over a million dollars increase. {legal protective sanctuaries where | The report shows Ontarlo to have Pas breeding may go on undis- the greatest wire mileage with 109-|turbed, the advance of clvilization 202 miles; Saskatchewan, 37,951 | through the development of agricul- jmiles, and Quebec 35,356 miles. The} tyre, mining and the wood products forest fires whicn the fur | Canadiam National has 1,922 offices 1D | industries, and the | Canada and the Canadian Pacific 1,510} ravage and destroy offices, and the Dominion Government | natural home. service 1,0 The revenue brought} into Canada by its wire | | about ten millions and a half. | Less Electrical Power | For Domestic Use beare services Just One Substitute for War | Five Couhtries Are Ahead of U.S, This Respect so highly developed in Arbitration is Only Way Fox | For Says Sir John a country Simon on i ° {in up-to-date methods, it is surprising The terrible thing about war is not mB = {to learn that the United States 1s its cruelty or its crippling expendi: | relatively backward in the domestic tures, but the fact that it cannot be} 3 5 relled upon to. produ {uati Sir use of electricity. Switzerland, Japan, =} ie roduce stice, Sir | . Denmark, Canada and New Zealand, attorney-general gland’s Jolin Simon, former lot-Groatisritaincariione ott {n the order named, are ahead of tho Hofedidawve aera ra ad United States in the proportlon of ed lawye: sa a Ndvenambaroreetli Peace’ Soclety at homes wired for electricity. One fac- 5 sfore the reace Society } tor th has a vita Fi z on th Guildhallin “advanced ~ oft 1thie Mtavah) Onset Hee SALA ROAD E RPA arms limitation conferenc t Gen | situation is that many areas of the arms a srence at Ge 3 J | eva, } United States are lacking in water fa ert ‘ power necessary for the economlo | That is the fundamental fact which 5 Pinke ala yathAemenibared whe Ww production of electric power. In that st always be reme € when we _ \vonsiden arguments for some substi |Tekard. Canada ts singularly favored side nents fo Ne subs tute for war,” Sir John said If we aor Sify 5 i e 1 at a mean to find a substliute for war rere re Ae The call of the sea has proved too much for Miss A. Dale, for forty a matron of emigrants on ships. returned after tive to look and that of arbitration there is but one w is in the direction “No Hague |to civilize years She convention, no attempts to work months’ war, no pacts of comprom- i ; id life on shore, and sailed on the Tonic jise are’ going to end in any good un - re tending emigrants to New Zealand jless we accept the principle involved “r th ht 4 ld t ih : in the League of Nations that what is| 7 Mousnt ’ would be 4 ke a dream | ti 7, a very good rule for other people is to end ee it in my tthe home at also a very good rule for oursely cats vy" she sald, “but, a \lrtet |Ume ashore has proved my expecta Naw Power Plant tlons to be wroUi During her loug ~ Y 3 ss Dak x sailed The Carrot~ River Valley -Aiitla, | Ul! s8:matronseMise Dolo Aas sailed y Tisdale, Sask. are Snstalling nearly 1,750,000 miles. new lighting and pow plant The ‘ hich ha capacity of Unique Breakfast Cereal site vilavnian to'h A company has been organized on the Canadian Pacifle Coast to manu electrified When plans are comple will be available to priv ture a breakfast cereal which will special rates, 100 k.w | be composed of grain, spinach, lettuce See and celery, with honey flavoring. An Lifting chines, constructed much | other has been incorporated in the like the modern elevator, with pulling | Maritime Provinces to meke’a cereal ropes and winding drums, were used | from apples and grain 236 B.C as early as | “You look lke a sensible girl, let's And lots of people who think that | get married.” they have nothing but trouble don't Ser-—"Nothing doing. I'm el of [know what trouble really Is sensible es I look.”