-ABROTSFORD, SUMAS AND . MATSQUI NEWS Offer Unsurpas x For cnt. Ax Each year Axidences a greater at preciation of the Canadian National | dian people and visitors from other | lands, and-each/passing season fur-} ther extols the forest ht of the men who have retained for all time these | enchanting fastnesses of nature to be| the playgrounds of a continent for“All | ~ time. ~ = Though the final” figures are not | available for the past year and the | / \ annual report uncompTeted, it is au-/Boundary issreached again he myst thoritatively stated that the parks in the-1922 season welcomed as great a volume of visitors as they had ever known, at “least equally the traffic of the year 1915, which had hitherto stood a record. In that year a total of 166,000 holidayers, of whom 73,000 were Canadians, yisited the National Parks to revel in their wild beauties; In the year 1921 it is estimated that foreign visitors to the parks left the fum of nearly $20,000,000 in the coun- try, or almost $2.25_per capita of Can- ada’s, population, and this amount must have been substantially aug- mented last year. eat It is confidently anticipated that this season the traffic to the National Parks, especially those whieh le in the \western and mountain regions, will be invaded by a yet greater army of tourists. Every year the desire to spend freer, more unconyential holi- days, the most striking antithesis of the jordinary day’s voutine, becomes more pronounced, and greater crowds | seek to give expression \to this urge. It is coming to be more and more ap- “preciated, too, that no area so satis- fied this craving, nowhere is the realin of nature so inviolate, as the, Cana- dian National Parks, where the most rigorous precautions are taken that “\ Ane beauties of nature shall be pr served ‘unsuliied, the yesraes of na- ture be, banished as,far as possible “and_these wooded sanctuaries retain their immagulate charm. 2 har The Rocky Mountains Park has for years been the Mecca of the contin- ent’s holiday-makers bent on such a vacation, and it' easily legds all other resorts as a pyme tah for { porting in nature’s haunts where civil’ ization is left ‘not too-far beliind. in| moré than one yote tdken among tour-: ist parties who had in addition travel led through many or all of the U: nited | — States National Parks, it was elected | as the most attractive-and entextain=| ® ing. In 1915, of the 166,000 tourisis| at the various Canadian parks, 71 000) were visitors at Banff, the- guleway to} 4 this unriyalled playground. | For the motor traveller who, holi-} day bent, seeks to penetrate the heart | of nature and has learnt to love the} ~ rigged, untarnished beauty of the Canadian Rockies, 1923 is, in one re-| spect, a signal year. The last day | of June will see the official opening of the ,Banff-Windermere Road, the last! completed section of the Canadian | ~sector of the Grand Circle Tour which | stretches up into Alberta “ for 6,008. miles from California and takes in ten! National Parks. For fears work has progressed strenuously upon it, tear- ing through pine forests and blasting through mounfain strongholds, until) now the way lies open to what is un-! doubtedly the most picturesque motor trip on Me continent. € : Motorists who “pass that Way this s | summer wil be-real pioneer: The | 4 new road is built through the heart of Se \fome of the finest. scenery in the| Ea Rockies, seventy-three miles of it be- *~ ing through virgin mountain and for- est country where many of the peaks as yet bear no name. It} crosses two mountain passes, the main| Contd National Paste Parks both on thie part of the Cana-}an altitude of 5,000 feet and later the ‘a fely t dizzy. spells, the a ; ada, | sed Attractions my Of surinte range -of the Rocky Mountains being traversed Via the Vermilion pass at Brisco range through the Sinclair pass at an elevation pi 4,950 feet. The grades, however, are easy, the ayer- | 2&e~ being 3 per c@mt. and the maxi- mum 9 per cent., which is maintained only for about 400 feet. Holidaying in this section holds un- strpassed attractions for the motor! ing camper. Until the International be prepared to leave the things of civilization definitely behind and_man- age with the little camps which have been situated periodically along the trail in such a way that the pfimitive aspect is in no way violated. One might write exhaustively of the many wonders of this trip, the virgin for- esis and towering mountains, the Ver- milion paint pots, the radium hot springs, the rugged beauty of Lake Windermere, and~ the varied attrac- tions of many dletours.. Suffice & to say that the-month of June opens up to-motorists a ngw western wonder- land and playground which, it may be said, is unequalled in the continent and probably in the entire world. L. C. Newsom, Editor Advertiser, and Pro- prietor of The Stavely, Alberta. Poultry Marketing Co-operation Elements That Are Necessary’ If Suc- ‘cess Is to Be Achisved While the title of a bulletin just is- sued by the Dominfon Livestock ranch, “Co-operation in Marketing Potliry Products,” would indicate that its contents were of interest to those engaged with poultry business, never- Time Englishman Had Chance Stanley Baldwin First One Since Salis- bury to Become Premier ¢ “For He’s an Englishman” is the song that should greet the incoming Premier of Great Britain. England has ‘served a long sen- tencé of exclusion from™the Proemier- ship of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ulster. / F Salisbury was the last Englishmap to serve in the Rrefiership unless H. laid down are applicable to any foxm of agriculiural @o-operation. The writer, Mr, A. Benson, District Poul- try Promoter for Ontario, hits a vital point when he says that while there is evidently an earnest desire on the part of producers to improve existing marketing, conditions, there appears to be a lack of uniformity of thought and ideas as to methods of procedure, and the limits of the fiald in which co-operating producers can hope to achieve the greatest and most per- manent success. It is evidently with a yiew to help in remedying this con- 6 Asquith, she" xepres entative of *la dition of affairs that the bulletin has See CRASH AaTne ee vecognized | ye ef\ written ~ and published. Not é is 5 Ss y, Ca 5 Bien Blis ni eee ‘Camp’ | alone are the fundamental essentials va s fia eg Bt i 3 ae eee | |t6 suecess and the principle of ¢o- PIER ay é ae x nay | Operation Idid down, but details are awe Te aoe Mn DANE Ne Unga CKEr | given relative to organization, to the It is ime an Englishman had a chance, | lHoealtgaannen hicnda that ar: aie Stanje Y S an Eng-| saa ii ae aes ae aes an ae vail, to the niethods of management 5) S| 16 y 2 a : Pe aU SRG ARO ony. 0. the) that must bé adopted and maintained highest and noblest qualities of Eng- lit Tiaeesse eter bereentaveds ton are: lish character.—Toronto ‘Telegrani z ‘ i ate a | house methods, to marketing, to grad- ‘HUSBAND DIDN'T DARE Dye eas LEAVE HER ALONE HEART WAS SO BAD ory te be cpntrolled pridr (Q-0rgan- Those feelings of faintness, ey ization, to the cast-iron contract that enous be made between members, and to the attitude of producers; the whole concluding with the rules of a those suggested market agreelnent Yor local Fgone sinking sen-| units. j sations which comé on from time to| x Ah te time “indicate a weakened condition e . ed of the heart and a disordered state of | Increased Consumption Of Milk ra ; the nerves. | \meuRW's HEART AND NERVE PILLS ve no equal as a remedy to strength- en the heart, invigorate the nerves | and build up the run-down system. t California Uses Milk Extensively In Public Schools the movement forthe greater consumption of milk and its products, which is going on in many | the -Union, « California stands at the In states of MENS (on ee Eckville, Alta., hheaa. There is a city of any write out a year ago I had | “alifomni i . x befrt trouble. My husband didn‘e | 22° zB see ue? oe pee se as dare leave me alone, and often had to|S°Ft of, milk service in the public Stay up at night with me. I would | schools. In San Francisco, 10,500 just feel kind of fa&int-and my heart | half- -pint' bottles are purch: would seem to stop beating. I would] just faint away, and it would some-| limes be an hour before they could | bring me back to life. ~ Someone told/similar service. the about Milburn’s Heart and Netve|are also common sed by the childyen at’ the sehool lunches: every day. In Berkeley every school has Nutrition classes in the principal a Pills. I got three boxes; I toole them | i iti and felt much better, 50 continued | “les. Een ee fale NEOs all Winter, and now I never feel any| classes is required to drink a, quart | such faintness. I surely do appreciate | of milk a day Doctors, dentists and | the good they haye done for me.” opticians give their services free ot Price: 50c a box at all dealers or harge. In 1922 fi deal Fe one mailed direct on receipt of price by | °'@'S ny 1922) then nepple.of Cali: The ¥- Ont, fornia consumed 13, more milk-than in any {the per capita con | from 1742 gallons Milburn Co. ,Limited, Toronto, | Leads In Chyd Welfare gallons in In a recent-address before the New | lons in 1923. The ‘consumption of York Canadian Club, Dr. James w.| butter indy ased from 22 Ibs. to 221% Robertson, of Ottawa, Chairman of the |!Ds. per capita in the same period. ¢ Executivé of the Canadian Red Cro&s Society and Chief Commissioner of the ‘Bot Scouts Association of Cang T: declared that in the past four|distributed among Saskatoon school nada had made more real pro- | children by the Par! Officials and gress than any other nation along the | Dominion Forestry Branch on the oc- lines of child welfare’ Six Canadian|casion of Arbor Day. Each child re universities are giving courses to wo | ceived one maple and one ash. Last men to fit thém for work in saving the | year only 5,000 trees were distributed. lives of babies, he said. Trees For Saskatoon s to the number of 10,000 were y Look to, Your Eyes Beautiful Eyes, like fine Teeth, ate the result of Constant Care. The daily use of Murine makes Eyes Clear and Radianr. A simple way to foach an egg is o,) turn it into a teacup in which a piece of butteF has been placed. Put the| Enjoyable, Harmless, Scld end cup in a small pan of boiling water, | Recommended by All Druggists. and the egg will be ready to take up capital in- vestment for $2 164,687,636. Fire total earnings of the railways in 1916 were $261,888,654, and expenses $1380,542,259, while for 1921 — the earnings were $458,008,891, and expenses $422,581, 205. ea Nothing probably Gould give a bet- ter indication of Cabada's industrial growth than railway tralfMe both pas- sehger and freight. In 1901 steam railways carried 18,385,722 passengers, in 1911 they carried 37,097,718 pass ers, while in 1920 the number atried was 51,318,422. Preight traflic shows even a greater growth, 36,999,371 toys being moyed in 1901,/78,884,282 tons in 1911, and127, 429,154 tons in 1920. The part that the development of Sie esources is taking in proyid- ing freight traffic to the railways is evident in the fact that in 1901 the tonnage of forest products was 5,301,- 519; in 1911 it was 13,238,347, and in 1920, 22,278,880 tons ‘were handled. Grain. provided 4,694,853 tons of freight in 1901, 7,545,516 tons in®1911, and 14,295,458 tons in 1920. Products of mines in 1911 supplied the rail with 28,652,236 tons of fréiglt an 1920 with 45,076,968 tons... Manufac- tures, info which natural resources ter almost universally provided 13,5 a tons of freight jn 1911 and 32,- 925,394 tons in 1920, among whe latter being wood pulp and paper with 3,447,- 614 tons. To*handle this traffic the ra used 2,433 locomotives in 1901 and 6,080 in 1920; 1,159 first-class passen- ger cars in 1901, and 2,212 in 1920; 45,904 box and cattle cars in 1901,,and 167,128 in 1920; 23 coal and flat in 1901 and 45,188 in 1920. _ of agriculture, the forest, mineral and with their con- 2S n- Uc} ilways 9. cars The expansion development of fisheries resources, 2 - } One of the outstanding features in| Sipace with the demands for tle moy- 2 r | comitent manufacturine activity port- end for the Canadian railways a period pot increasing’ freight traflic and the resultant expansion necessary vo keep ing of this rapidly BrowINE ees Canada’s Rivals In 1 Dairying New Zealand and Australia Capture Large Share of Trade The Dominion Dairy Commissioner, Mr. J. A. Ruddick, who with Mr. W.. A,’ Wilson of Regina, Saskatchewan, recently returned from a visit to New Zealand and Australia, states that New Zealand has made great progress in the dairy industry in recent years. Many new factories have been built and many have been reconstructed and modernized. Australia too las made great advances, large factories” in New Zealand, being the rule, some of the creameries making as much as.800 to (1,000 boxes of butter a day. In New Zealand if is a small cheese factory that does not Make 400 or 500'tons in a yeaw. Mr. Ruddick is of opinion that Canada, will meet much keener competition *in the’ fu- dure in the matter of quality and quantity of dairy products from these countries than shé has in the past. Relating to these facts it is interest- ing to note that the amount of butter graded in Ney’ Zealand in the mont® of December, 1922, was 9,758 tons, compared with 6,128 tons in the cor- respohding month of the preyious year. The total for the last fiye months of 1922 wads 35,663 tons against 24,944 tons in the Same period of 1921. , X \ if Saves Trip to Paris Two young NewYork girls are put- ting on a fashion show that eosts $350 for each ticket of admission. It is held for those who deal in ladies frocks. The originators of the idea go to Paris in advance of the season and bring back the latest. creations. Each holder of A ticket is permitte@ to eopy five style. The price of admis- ; sion is considered cheap because it saves the cost of sending designers 10 Paris—New York Correspondent. — Crop Prospects Good | There is every*indigation that West- ern Canada will reap a bountiful crop this year. Not ‘at®any time in tha past five years have prospects looked quite so, promising. There appears — to’be abundance of moisture, and the farmers and business men are feeling much better regarding the prospects Diner.—“Look” here, vait found several pieces of Str pie.” Waiter—Thatgs right, pie—evidently thatched.” ry, Dye in this : \ sir, cottage Healthy Liver Healthy Life « x bali liver—healthy or clogged, active’ makes all the neta -a vigorous, cheerful life and low spirits and at Ee liver, come consti- pation, dizzi- ness, bilious- ness, indigestiony headache and the blues there is nothing on earth so good, asCarter's Little Liver Pills, Purely vegetable.) Small Pill—Small Dose—Small Price ~~ “it 5 not just Seus! ‘take mustard with Yard aids digestion late the meats., ‘acquire Mix it ul ifmu. tom “thal It is a B00 freshly for every Ihe t makes people, their meals. Of d helps to, assim) “ d habit to meal. keens...