* Drotecilon gy Mt forest lands jy ! the Mani be atchewan, DA oy ! : 18 of over 4 forest Teserrés iy & Recky Mons | ta, The alr Ry Tndes Work ig om © Dominion, : Created | Rite hall — Strongly Recommsty Dodd's Kidnay Pills y Onton, Alberla (i Used your Dot's iy i few years and r} ackache trouble thy wonders, T have ee T have heard pa hem from a numbe ¢ district.” ent comes from Ya sides at 9324 ith Je ; Mrs, Elliott found ta ands of other Canstia h the use of Dodi nly a few people vie great importante ¢ dneys {n good onde e kidneys are the yer blood. If the Kiser dd with impurities tht n their functions joe od, instead of be - isoned, and fi fm shote system, wil i vondition may dee % ved during the Milt child brought wy ht any language val spontaneously. : —__—__—_—, hee a nine? a a % a = ' “Wa 3 ‘ “ YBBOTSFORD. SUMAS AND MATSOUI NEWS - Aerial Attack On Black Rust he To Be Launched This Summer By The Dominion Government — | | Continuation of Educational Cam- An aerial attack on black rust, one of the most serious enemies of Can- adian grain-growing, will be Jaunch- ed this summer in an experiment by To Stamp Out Disease Paigns Will Be Necessary the Dominion Government. A suryey of health conditions dur- Two aviators, who were sent down ing February across the whole con- to the cotton fields of the Missis | tinent, including Canada, has just sippi, and there for a week studied | heen concluded by Metropolitan Life the methods recently adopted for | statisticians. The excellent health fighting the boll-weevil, with, it is! conditions which prevailed during said, remarkable success, will give | January, continue. instruction for carrying on a similar! Compared with February, 1926, campaign when the time arrives this|there are pronounced declines in summer, one in Eastern and one in| death rates from measles, whooping cough, influenza, Weart dis and Western Canada. of pneumonia. Rates for typhoid, scar- Wing Commandet Anderson Camp Borden said the aviators chos-| jet fe. ver, diphtheria, diabetes, re- en were from that aviation body, that spiratory diseases other than pneu- the aeroplanes would be taken from monia, suicides and accidents were the camp, and returned there when the summer was over. -The cam- Paign, however, is being directed from Ottawa, more or less higher. So far, this year, there has been no alarming increase in the death “4 . ty a |rate from any disease but the small in order, tobe. effective,” W ME" | increase in diphtheria mortality con- Commander Anderson haid, “the A¥-| stitutes a challenge to health work- ing has to be done as close above the lers, Since 1922, due to intensified towing crops as {s safe. The dust ainsi for immunizing children 4s contained In a special apparatus on }and educational work. the disease has the aeroplane, and coniderable prac been registering a new low point tice is cegerners) to operate it effl- each year. The death rate dropped celently. Wind conditions have to be 60-per. cent. between. 1921. and: 1926 taken into account, and pie dusting se and this success was perhaps the only done while flying in) a are greatest single sanitary accomplish- direction, relative to the direction of fentiofelact wean _ the wind.” So serious had the losses from black rust in the cereal crops of Western Canada become that in September, 1924, a conference was called at Win- nipeg by the department of agricul- ture and the Research Council of Can- ada. As a result of this, a series of experimental projects, covering all phases of the subject, were mapped | out to be carried on in Western Can- ada. The present aeroplane attack {s a continuation of these experiments. | | time is There has not yet been to determine, definitely, what the exact cause of this increase, but pre- | liminary research seems to indicate | that the type of disease now preya- | lent is of above-average virulent. | At any rate, the situation calls for increased watchfulness, a continu-| ance of educational campaigns and! an intensified effort to stamp out the | disease. | Canada and the Empire Winnipeg Newspaper Union J¢ Viscount Byng Gives Address Status of the Dominicn “Canaila is in the midst of her evolution and she has no desire for} our interference to tell her what slie| on | | ought to do,” Viscount Byng, former | Governor-General of Canada, empha- sized in an address in London on “The Canadian at Home,” “She knows that the Old Country fs ready to help her if she help,” he added. Viscount Byng thought they must “take the word “Imperialism” rather quietly to Canada and not try to thrust it down the people’s throats “Imagine,” he said, “asking a Brit- isher 150 willes from a railway sta- tion to enthuse over a Strategic naval base at Singapore.” The speaker was not _ over talk of annexation Proximity of Canada to the United States, “Seeing that the frontier is mot guarded and is easily crossed ~ you cannot expect the people on each side not to be a bit easy-going about each other,” he sald. “Personally, I _ think it rather a good thing.” ‘ perturbed and the Sugar Beets Proper Cultural Methods Will be Adopted in the Raymond District Beet seeding began in the Ray- mond district the middle of April. J. W. Evans, of the agricultural staff of the Canadian Sugar Company, was the first to begin drilling in this dis- silhouette, you will find much to trict. Ag field superyisor he is urg-|admire in this distinctive frock of Navy Blue Is Smartest If you are partial to the straight More Than Score Safer to Declare Car Of Championships | i Advice Given to Canadian Settlers Returning From States Dominion Capital is Party Of Canadian Farmers Will Leave For Europe To | Famous as a arith ph a : 2 biel ten fs the ahem: wa cis canst: atl : ae mdiridual athletes and athletic} = pa lanad a teams in Ottawa, the capital of Can-| evers consideration shown them by | Study Marketing Conditions ada, hold 22 world and Canadian | the cust officials, if they bring Po] }championships, a record. for the|2¢k an automobile, the only safe : ‘be Saas , , |Dominion. With the defeat of the |*4¥ to keep it from seizure Is to ve- Kansas City Woman oo ana: Er Ege | Boston, Mass., hockey team at the | POFt at once to the customs office at| Is Customs Expert /o)7y24 newt be a He, JSEAapUNE Pato jelose of the winter season the Otta-| te port of entry. | =a ee * ae t at close TONES, in wa team, known by the name of the} - W- Breadner, commissioner of} we! Known to Officials All Over the|* = Ms heart of the world’s grea |“Senators,” won the Stanley Cup, | customs, paints: out that ft was, im-| World aries eh what manEnE tp nis he the world’s Professional hockey | Possible to lay down a general prin-| 4 Kansas City woman, known in] uc'S When they reach the ultimate | ciple, and each case only be and market, he is going to Jearn a championship trophy. The Cana-} = mba home and foreign posts as A, D, little: more about how he can exter dian Rugby Championship is held by | elt with on its merits. The regula-| tones, customs broker, has opened], ie Dee e Tous haw ile tena exten Biises eb cic, tion is that only tourist's cars and ai, Wine und: interdsine Phiston Tox te susiness with this ullimate mar- | Championship prizes for figure | Settler "effects are admitted without | women. Hanging out her business| AS ants af hetesene ion 1 200 skating, speed ‘skating, rifle shoot-|P4¥meut of duty, and they had to re-| shingle twenty years ago before. al a7 F ts ene et ee jing, bicycling, ladies’ hockey, bas- | Port their cars and get a permit. The | xansas City business office, Mrs.| on ae ae (aes oS |ketball, wrestlirg, swimming, row-|Permit may be extended on further Jones has become one of the best pee fromean m5 LY, ext jing, paddling and other sports are at | #PPlcation. sits regulation only &D-/ known customs experts in the world. ates Baska a * ea jPresent held in“ Ottawa. For the| Piles to bona fide tourists, however,| “purine the war vast. shipments of visit a oH RRS |Past few generations the Dominion | bona, fide Beltlers; Taw materials and supplies were} 9.4, : £ Great Brita itt vite | Capital has been famous as a centre In the case of a man returning to managed by Mrs. Jones at her desk}, ~ ee nh ede he % for all kinds of sports. Many of the |C@0ada and intending to settle down |; the inland port of ‘Kansas City. is Sane BS AS es ge star athlefes in other places, partic- here, could he bring his car?” he Was | white (iaiieeesttei Sains Gpaesed Hct ng farms, and a side trip to sak ! aukea. | as \ Denmark, for a special study of co- ularly on professional hockey teams a : : ; =f | through the Kansas City yards lad- operative marketing Dr W. J. in the United States, are-natives of Agaln we would have to deal w ith le with®Bveaitrdin™ Soitt @Amneriés FReyoaihce oe r. ak . | Ottawa. The Canadian Capital ana} the specific case,” said the comumis-| Adstralia and the Orient bound for] ; Oe ea io SRGEOUIESS eas jits environs have every conceivable| loner. “If he had been living in the ‘Oglahoma’ and Arkansas smelters, | ae site naw piece ee United Statessand*had a car, and bnpteeer Canadian National Railways, has an- facility and advantage for indulging in every kind of sport and recrea- |tion, so that the young people grow up with the conveniences and at- tractions right at their elbow, as it ‘S computed for the Govern ;ment the duty on them and saw them properly invoiced and on their way. Mrs. Jones had made an extens study of customs Jaw and treasury then came back to Canada and in- tended to settle here, his car might come in a effects, if its value was less than $1,000. setUlers’ jnounced this plan, which is being arranged in Canada by C. G. Groff, former publicity commissioner for Alberta, and in England, by B A. hace i ¢ A TRS 3 Weir, of the London offices of the were. The $1,000: ‘limit, howver, does | gecisions before entering her profes-| ... “2 oa a2 t apply t farmer i in witk Canadian National Railways. not apply to a farmer coming in wit 0 ston She has a keen legal mind : 2 his effects, If his car is really one | that anyone : fascia Sick ‘the Seen A tentative outline of the program Feetehts at enjoys a tussle i d:)-11t| Pear ile NS aa as: Dairying in Canada of lils-effects-and Js-for-his own Use, liations of the rapidly, chaneing tariff | Meecst® Visits to ‘the whent | ex he can bring it in even if it is over | 1, : isl ; ee : naa k “i .| changes in Liverpool and London, Opportunities no Better Any Place that yalue.” aws, and she has now expanded 16 }some of the mills, the Merkeland Services to such worldwide propor- | tions that she is known to customs jofficials in every clyilized country in the world. Says South African Farm Manager “East west—home's best” is an old saying and a commonly quoted pro- verb, in the taal, in South Africa. E. Crohn, who went from British Columbia to East Griqualand, South Africa, says in a description-of dairy farming conditions there that “there are no better opportunities in dairy- ing farming here than in Canada. Crohn was a cow tester in the Fraser Valley; part owner of a farm paper in B.C.; left Canada and spent some time in the Channel Islands getting first hand information anent Jerseys and Guernseys; is now farm Manager and cheese maker on the East Griqualand dairy farm owned by R. A. Young, at Wanstead. Na- tives do all the milking, ete., and na- tive labor is cheap—Crohn has a na- tive woman cook at $214 per month Brings In Good Revenue Flour Milling Industry in Canada Shows Remarkable Growth The Canadian flour milling indus- try is one of the main sources Canadian industrial revenue; this | manufacture yying with the pulp} and paper industry for leadership among Dominion industrial activ ties in point of value of annual pro- duction, A recent goyernment sur-| vey covering this industry since the first Dominion census was taken in 1871, reveals the remarkable growth of flour manufacture in Canada, which has in the time placed its pro- duct on markets all over the world and made it as potent an advertiser of Canadian quality as the country’s wheat. The development of the Manufacture of flour in Canada has, | Politicians From U.S: of Former American Citizens Enter Politics in Western Provinces Hon. O. L. McPherson, minister of | public works in the Albérta provin- | cial government, is a native of King- man, Kansas. He moved to Vulean, Alberta, in 1907 and began farming there. He now owns a 2,400 farm. Shortly “after his election to the Legislature in 1921, when the farmers’ party was voted into pow- jer, he was appointed Speaker and | continued in that office until he re- signed a few months ago io accept the portfolio he now holds. Ten oth- er members of the Alberta Uegisla- acre and a boy to help her at $1 per : ture came from the United States, month. Oxen do practicafly all the an dacbsareryy wlargelys Corr sponded and all have made aA success of farm work he says, horses being with the settlement snd cultivation farming in Western Canada. Six used only for riding. of the great wheat-growing territory members, of the Saskatchewan of Western Canada, aud it is reason- Legislature also cante from the Unit- x Ps e able to suppose that the future of ed States The Art of Time Saving Canadian flour production will be tea gauged to some extent by further Room for Many More Improvements Along That Line In the old-fashioned kitchen our mothers walked many useless miles. The modern housebuilder, if guided by intelligence, puts sinks, kitchen tables and cupboards in right rela-|to Britain was advocated in a bill| World’s greatest wihieat exporting tionship and saves steps eyery day | outs came before the Dail Eireann,| Country three times in the last six so long as the -house stahds. But) put which experienced a quick death,| Years, the export totals for the per- there is room for many more of such] president Cosgrave opposed it in the|iod of 1921 to 1926, inclusive, estab- improvements and ample rewards) jnitial stage, saying that Ireland is|lish the premlership of this Domin- awaiting those who can think, Time) tn honor bound to observe the inter-| fon beyond all challenging, On the is worth more than it used to be. national agreement, namely, the}SiX years the United States, Can- There are so many more things to do| Anglo-Irish treaty. The bill was de-|#44’s nearest competitor, falls short settlement in the wheat-growing areas, which have recently been con- siderably expanded. Greatest Wheat Exporter Proud Position Held By Canada Cannot Be Challenged Although Canada has been ousted from the proud position of being the Keeps Oath of Allegiance Abolition of the oath 6f Allegiance with it if it is saved. When our sys-] featea forty-seven to: seventeen. | of the Dominion by nearly ,000,- tems of education are broadened to ee ee }000 bushels. meet the full requirements of mod- Old Oak Canoe Found Latest figures, issued by the Bu- ern life, doubtless they will give An oak canoe, nine feet long, and| eau of Statist show that Canada place to training in the simple yetlestimuted to be from four to ten|held the leadership of the world in wheat exports in the ye 1924 and 1926, In 1921, 1922 and 19 United States was in the van, More Wood Being Used World mightily important art of time-say- ing. thousand years old, has been unearth- ed on the south bank of the river Tyne, near Ryton. It is in an. exceb Tent state of preservation, and has been placed in the Hancock Museum, Newcastle-on-Tyne, England. | Y 23, It is better to be some men than to be others. slandered by praised by in is Using Larger Quantity Spite of Substitutes ing beet growers to adopt cultural | navy crepella. The straight bodice Methods in order to conserve mois-|*™@4TUy fastens under a flat plait at | |the centre front, and a suggestion ture, co that a good germination Oflof the flare, now so popular, is seed might be ensured. A good stand }achieved by the use of inverted of beets, he said, is a yital factor and | plaits running from the curved lower the first essential towards heavy |@%se of the bodice front to skirt ton t harvest tim “|hem. The back is in one piece and MEEeAt Rarzest: time. quite plain, e ‘ow belt caught in the Winnipeg Stock Yards = for low. and the long set-in sleeves | Better Prices Bring Greater Returns|have tab culls fastening at the Although Volume is Higher wrists. No. 1320 is in sizes $4, 36, Last year 193,139 head of cattle|38, 40 and 42 inches bust, Size 36 ates bust resuires 25% yards 54-inch navy | 32 re ‘d ate iT 7 enra 7893.82) hogs" were marketed crepella; % yard white crepe. Price through the Winnipeg Public Stock 2 cents. | Yards, and realized 147,000. Many styles of smart parel may Though the number of animals mar-| be found in our new Fashion Book. t psigners iging their pat- keted was less than the 1925 record, OUT designer Sp enale ae terns in the heart of the style cen- the monetary returt was $1,000,000/{res, and their creations are those of Sreater, owing to the better prices tested popularity, brought within that prevailed. Ontario feeders took) the means of the average woman 45,590 and 41,000 went to.the United | Price of the book 10 cents the copy. States feed lots, and 17,865 went to = Manitoba farms, Sheep and lambs How To Order Patterns to the number of 55,850 were ma Keted, compared with 36,600 in 19 ss—Winnipeg Newspaper Union, MecDermot Ave., Winnipeg It’s only the man with more mon- | * : ey than brains who has more friends | Patterm No-............ Size than enemies. When a man borrows trouble he une, puts up his peace of mind as col-| OF ei rete Jateral. i seeee . aes Pierees eevee W. N. U. 1681 PTOWM 2 ccc ec ct cecsetweveneseneeees eS oo ae oe 7 In substitutes the world never much of that material every week as at the present The mod- steel passenger ship las wood in deck would built ship or ago. It all without of that a pointed all surrounded his pro to the grave. spite of the increasing use for wood the before people used time. em ocean much its fittings: entire seventy as nore have of was than wooden and an in idea years seriousness and any a play on words noted Cana- dian conseryationist cently that in spite out re of modern jinventions man is still | by wood in every from the cradle stage of } gress | | Canada’s Only Blind Operator | The only blind woman in Canada | who..operates a switchboard is Mi | Ethel Squair, of Toronto. She looks | |after the telephone calls at the Can-| | |adian National Institute for the Blind Champion Cow on Beverley street and orks hei board with speed and effctency, | Another champion cow has made its bid for fare, this time appearing | completing her calls in the regula jon the eastern horizon. She hails from Cumberland County, Nova Scotia, | tion ten seconds allowed at tlie or . being discovered at Fox River. “Rossamond” as this cow has been | dinary telephone exchange. christened, is the property of Harry G. Kerr who claims she is going to _ Jeelipse the records of Betsy Wiley the Nova Scotia world’s champion milk} fail service in Austria recently jand butter producer. |was suspended because a postoflice “Rossamond” is a Durham grade cow and she has produced 392 pounds employee failed to doff his hat to the of milk in one week, which churned 2014 pounds of butter after deducting postmaster. Fellow employees offend approximately 12 quarts of milk and 1% of cream for home consumption. |«q at the postmaster’s reprimand, | This record is creating keen interest. | declarea a strike. | wharves in Glasgow, where live Can- adian cattle are landed and sold’ by auction for slaughter or for finishing on Old Country feed lots, and a side trip to some of these feed lots; the Smithfield market in London, and — Covent Garden, the great fruit and produce market. Canadian butter, cheese, bacon and fruit, on British markets will also be seen. The farms of some of the most famous breeders, particularly of Shorthorn cattle and Clydesdale horses, will be visited, as well as districts where other noted breeds of livestock have been developed. In a three or four-day trip to Den- mark, visits will be paid to co-opera- tive bacon factories, dairies, egg so- cleties, as well as to some of the educational intitutions. Money in Sheep Saskatchewen Farmer Finds Sheep Raising a Profitable Venture A Saskatchewan farmer relates his experience in sheep raising ag follows: “We kept 40 ewes through the winter of 1925-6 and fed them on oat sheaves, chaff and hay consist- jing of a mixture of wild upland hay, | slough hay and clover, “The | next spring the ewes dropped 44 lambs, all of which we raised. The wether lambs were sold for $9 each and the ewes were kept for breed- ing purposes. The wool clip aver- aged about 7 pounds per head and sold for 35 cents per pound. We find that sheep will keep the cultivated land free of weeds if they are allow- ed to pasture on it,” sweet Still Marketing Grain C.P.R. Handling Graln at the Rate of 180,000 Bushels Daily The Canadian Pacific Railway re- ports the marketing of gfain at the present rate of 180,000 bushels daily, as compared with 128,376 for the corresponding season of last year. Manitoba's 180,000 compares j with Saskatchewan's 533,000 and Alberta’s 366,827. Loadings are also | above ast record with 220 ye 10,673,133 bushels, showing that there is still plenty of grain in the country, A Question of Safety Keep your eyes to the front at all times while driving Don't become so intense in your conversation that you must turn your head to ad¢ $ the person beside you or those in the back seat, Things happen suddenly in these days of swiftly moving auto- mobiles, and the lapse of attenilon from the rond’for an Instant may lead to a’ serfous accldent. | Bs. BS Bie Why He Was Interested | “Well, my litt#é man, anid the ar | tist, owvée been Ing at 1 all through, the dinner and I feel greatly flattered. Would you Hke me ta tell you a story?” “No, Mister,” said the kid,” but Mama told me you lad a receding chin Won't you do it for me Just once? and then I'll show you how I }can wiggle my ear: | It takes a featherweight wife to make the heay elght husband shake in hi oe When ft « e8 to silent par re many a hen-pecked husband fille the bill