MATSQ BOTSFORD, SUMAS AND No Mere Idle Boast Canada Holds Supremacy In Realm Of Poultry Poultry raisers in Canada are “sit-) ting on top of the world’—at least} “WORLD HAPPENINGS BRIEFLY TOLD Farmers’ Marketing Tour Canadian National Railways’ Tour | market, and a great pleasure to lear | that some varietios of Canadian ap- ples had won a leading place in pub- lic favor. Our next engagement was to visit the Cockspur Street offices of the | Canadian National Railways, where we were cordially received by Mr. Cc. J. Smith, the European Vice-Presl- ‘o Great Britain and Denmark, 1928 A Dill introduced in the legislature of New Brunswick prohibits the erec- [onan Se, Une chicken prone tion of advertising billboards of any The World's Poultry Congress, at Jind along the highways of the Pros Ottawa, was’, manifestation of Can- Tinta. . ada’s supremacy in the realm Tare Toad aman On nme ee ine beat es Newfoundland the Carnegie Founda-|1) the world. We have a sys ft é Sate orld, e haye a system of | mg tion has pald about $18,000; record of performance for poultry) cul pensions to college teachers since) 13 indeed unique and highly) of | Ma ‘This is no mere {dle boast. | Before entertaining us to lunch Mr.| comparative talk on the British ba- L rapt *} con & grading 1QWS) with a number of sldes of bacon from we proceeded direct to Birmingham, dent, together with his department chiefs, The run of this fine building, owned by the G.N.R,, was given to us, and we had the pleasure of seeing the industry, ilust 3 ish Pal iatest copies of Canadian pupers. An dustry, illustrating his remarks) interesting feature of the fine offices, which house & busy staff of some one | hundred people, ts a magnificent mu- jral frieze by Frank Brangwyn, RA. | (To Be Continued.) (Continued) arsh gave & very informative and any different countries and special ts arranged for the purpose. From the Marsh and Baxter plant 1905. 4 beneficial, Canada boasts of the) ., - ¢ where Ww: rn vi r f Canada’s acceptance of the princl-| champion laying hen; and whut) ee a et Be LN Alaaihetty k ple of Frank B, Kellogg's anti-war] comes nearest to the poultry ralser,) C.B-E., J.P., after which we were tak- Could Be Home Grown " r campaign was received at Wsshing-| perhaps, is that Canadians are als) ment to outlaw war is now considered | napits. as definitely launched. consumption per capita nas increased | thi Z. Mclimoyle, assistant deputy] by approximately ten dozen eggs. We} in minister of agriculture in the Alberta} are now consuming eggs in Canada | Government, died recently, following at the rate of 28%% dozens per capite, | fa stroke. The late Mr. McIImoyle was|and this commendable habit, a result, | in; mi born at Lakefield, Ont., in 1876. He/no doubt, of our efficient egg grading | and a talle on Denmark by Mr. J. came West in 1899, Inw, is a boon to the whole poultry | yee “ie zt Londen OS al hee accounted for $1,450,-| head b & some years in Den~/ 99, leaving $3,523,000 as the value} dle, ndustry. m: We are marching forward steadily |in the matter of poultry husbandry. /It is being appreciated more and breeding and selection will Captain Charles Kingsford-Smith. the Australian flier, lived in Vancou- ver with his family from 1903 until 1912. The family came from Austra- lia, returning there after nine years. more how The father, W. C. Kingsford-Smith, | boost production. and the flier’s elder brothers were in| demanding eggs and chicks from 5 business while in Vancouver. lected parents that are known *0 be} Major-General J. H. MacBrien re~ good layers, and more than that, ceived a telegram offering him a known to produce eggs that grade | Moth seaplane for personal use in | high because of size and quality. Zt is connection with his work on behalf of |no longer necessary to purchase eE6s aviation in Canada. The donor is} 01 Bir Charles Wakefield, C.B.E,, known | than question marks. We have P as the patron saint of aviation in gressed far enough so eggs ani England. chicks of known quality aiiccoteniavamploni (ie ore Sno sean kind poultry raisers sculptor, who died recently, executed | Should demand—Farmers Advocate. the Victoria memorial in Winnipeg. Other Victorian memorials from his} hand are to be found in cities as far apart as Leeds, Newcastle and Cal-! cutta. Sir George Frampton was also | responsible for the memorial to Nurse Cavell. = W. D. Gregory, prominent Toronto | barrister, announced that he would} not accept the “KC.” offered him by the government. This is the second time that Mr, Gregory has refused this honor, the Drury government haying- Offered it in 1921. “Toureel strongly that the practice of giving certain barristers precedence is out of harmony with the Democratic stand- ards that generally prevail in Can- ada,” said Mr. Gregory. Wool Prospects Good | | | e-| tl P<, | al di Newspaper Union ‘ Winnipeg is ul il lv t - Bs i $10 | Substantial Increase In Export Of Wool From Canada A very substantial increase 1s to be noted in the export of wool from Canada in the last fiscal year. This increased from 5,223,981 lbs. worth $1,538,660 the year before, to 11,140,- 101 Ibs., worth $3,149,9: According to the Canadian Co-op- erative Wool Growers, Limited, wool prospects are very good with the con- dition of the naw wool bright and “the shinkage average. Foreign mar- ket conditions are also reported ex- cellent. Western Fair Dates July 2-6—Manitoba Provincial Ex- hibition, Brandon. July 9-14—Calgary Summer Fair. July 16-21 — Edmonton Summer f Fair. July 23-28 — Saskatoon Summer - y Fair. Distinguished Model July 30-Aug. 4—Regina Summer) A distinguished model featuring the Fair. diagonal closing, circular skirt at = . \front, plain back and up-in-the-front Avg. 8-18 — Vancouver Summer) waistline. Crepe satin, new light Fair. | weight Kasha, tweed, canton faille Sept. 3-8—New Westminster, B.C,,| crepe, wool crepe, fiat sillk crepe or Tefal | crepe ah ee {als for style No. 910. The applied band around the neck and down the : “A fellow ‘can’t be front is particularly chic {f made of a-| contrasting fabric or color, or cut tients.” |from the Bs at Sizes 16 mers ___ |years, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46 inches Second: “No, I lost a patient yes-| Hust, Size 56 requires 3% yards 36- terday because I pulled a good one.” | inch, or 2% yards & neh material, }and yard 30-inch Price 25 cents the pattern. Many styles of smart apparel may nd in our Fashion Book. Our | designers originate thelr patterns ip __~— the heart of the style centres, and SS their creations are those of tested | popularity, brought within the means of the average woman. Price of the | book 10 cents the copy. | ls First Dentis too careful about joking with his p: Always heat a new range grad- ually. This will prevent the possl-| ye fou Dility of its cracking. | How To Order Patterns ddress: Winnipeg Newspaper Union, 175 McDermot Ave., Winnipeg | Pattern No.. | Name this eye-| Town “You are dancing well ning, Kurt.” “Yes, the scent is leading me on.” ‘My perfume?” your wife | How is that?” “No. The waiter has already tak- | en lamb and green peas across five | ‘She promised to divo — Meggendorfer Blaetter, Concelt sometimes makes @ mai tadmire his own mistakes. WON UT! en through the magnificent City Hall ton with satisfaction, and the move-| most insatiable in their egg eating|tnore m the evening we 8. ve v In less than ten years the} charming fi shone all through his delightful ad- \ dress, which was accompanied by & remarkable selection of Danish slides. On Mondsy morning, after a brief 3 fant othe Biren in shan wockeenwel| mores oe: Imports of almonds to-| goldiers, Flock owners are| proceeded south to Kenilworth Cas-) wick Castle, described as the “most are available, | ¥' though the present castle is 5th cen- tury. ‘miles from Warwick. The house in which Shakespeare was born remains little altered, and wandering through in} visitors, amongst them Scott, \about a mile away. It was a dell served old place, today the property of the nation. The cott@ge contains much of the old furniture and many of the old fittings. We also visited Holy Trinity Church, set amid the trees on the bank of the Avon. Hers) Shakespeare is buried and he! which Shakespeare was christened is| st parish register, containi of his birth on April 26t ie ean April 26th, 1616, 18| ear, and chill thoronghly. Serve in| about the disgracei we were fortunate in being able to stroll through the grounds of one of the colleges and in seeing the memor- was found after having been washed Roma are appropriate mater-| contrasting. Fr . | was Lawyer—'"You say you want to BUC) centre for fruit and vegetables. Here for breach of promise?| we were given our first inkling of thi It shown § e art treast kes ewes | und shown some of the ert treasures CanadasSpends Millions Yearly On) to he crucified a stupetying drink, and {n the wholesale murder musical comedy “Up with | Importation Of Nuts they offered such to Jesus, wine | populations, and if ts figured that In erate a block of the best seats/ Canada imports something like $5,- mixed with myrrh, but He refused it.| various countries at the present time x | Matthew says He tasted it and then} : welay 4 | enough of {t is in stock and stored up ing been reserved for| 000,000 worth of nuts annually, but} ® this figure includes peanuts, Sunday was spent quietly in Birm-| are, of course, tubers and not tree gham, our Stinerary including a) ea tour of the environs of the elty|uts: In the last calendar year Im- the house hav! |W) | ark, and his love for that country} | shelled and umshelled, valued at $1,- 457,000, slightly exceeded peanuts in talled about $822,000. Filberts, hazels| and pecans were imported in quanti-| © le, one of the most extensive baron-| Queen Blizabeth to her favorite, | grown in Canada. Pp Our next stop was Warwick. War- s h Recipes For This Week h (By Betty Barclay) is still, | | \i SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON |The Terrors Of Golden Text: His own love toward us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for |us.”"—Romans 5.8, They led Jesus awa; going outside the city, Jewish usage (Acts 7.58), gotha. Golgotha means “the place of nf refused it, Jesus regarded the suffer- which | ing before Him os part of the cup |drink, and He would drink it to the | ports of nuts totalled $4,973,000, of | Stee of other nuts imported. Walnuts, the ani each should have. tragedy, fal ruins in England. Kenilworth dates | ty, and thes 1s 'q_|Mothers gave their sons, wives thelr from 1120, and was presented in 1363 | 7, ibs vcr etal ela saan, the va-| husbands, by leties of tree nuts which can be) the nation poured out its Robert Dudley, who was wont to en- tertain her there in magnificent style thought only of his own greed. He chance to get rich. He got ri Fi JUNE 17 Modern Warfare © s % “i THE CRUCIFIXION — Enough Poison Gas Stored Up To Destroy Millions Of People ‘The explosion of poison gas at Hamburg, Germany, the other day, killing eleven persons and sending oyer three hundred others to hospital, Explanations and Comments has naturally attracted a ‘aod dead The Cruclfixton, verseeu ae of attention. Because this happened Mitey ail ss the| by accident during peace It ts re- to Gol-| garded as quite a tragedy. Yet thé poison gas, in killing people, nerved the purpose for which it was erent- Jed. It Is made and intended for use of urban “God commendeth Lesson; Mark 15.16-47. Devotional Reading: Isalah 63.7-12. skull.” We call the spot Calvary, om the Latin word calvaris, skull. was customary to give one about | to destroy millions of people. The | dispateh, from Hamburg told how this gas Idlled human beings, #n!- jmals, birds, trees, and all vegetation | with which it came in contact. It Is y thorough. It leaves behind it hich the Father had given him to 23. The garments of the erucified—the dress, shoes, outer garment, gir-) and seamless inner robe—were) ver, ites of the 8, @'the soldiers cast lots to see what | co mp There\is much alarm over this ‘Ihave have been many lke these| tragedy. But the world will have to ony LY er Beet | get over this tendency to shudder at save by wha' \) horrible things, for as events ore In the Great War, When) ‘ranging all the nations grow more ‘and men themselves, ‘and| fully armed than ever they were In money in a| the past. There are those who de- profiteer| clare that war 1s in this world un~ ad no call to service; he saw only a | avoidable, that tribes and natlons ich, but | have always warred with cach other ig wealth is blood money.”—Joseph | and always will, and that those are ‘ort Newton. A |but visionarles who belleve that It was the third hour, nine o'clock | through the League of Nations, ar- | pitration, and world courts war can ut of it. assion of service, the SCALLOPED DISHES tes the town. The earliest building ates from the 10th century al- meat, fish or vegetable enough medi- um cream sauce to cover, Sprinkle well with buttered crumbs and bake until brown. When starchy dishes such macaroni!, use thin cream Medium cream sauce calls for 1 cup Shakespeare's country is a@ few | 8a) he rooms we saw on walls and ceil- gs the signatures of many famous Car- The | Spoons butter. ‘Thin cream sauce calls is| for 1 cup mill ight|4 tablespoon butter. o visit this beautiful and well pre- isle, Thackeray and Browning. village of Shottery Hathaway ORANGE STRAWBERRIES 1 box strawberries. Juice 2 oranges. 1 cup sugar. 1% cup heavy cream. 2 tablespoons powdered sugar. Fee ia euceuandtta|” eee on oe ee ing a record) Wash and hull strawberries, cover h, 1564, and! wiih orange juice, mixed with one cup) re also} font at| is the grave of his wife. The i Beat the cream} | champagne glasses. | until stiff, Add powdered sugar end peas and, with the pastry-bag and {al to the poet Shelley. The nos |tubey Pipe) es border jpround esc beautifully wrought In marble, shows | 8188s. the drowned poet lying exactly as he ae Travelling Clinic In Alberta stark realism created a sensation. | ee Our next stop was at Windsor Cas-| Visiting Sparsely Settled Districts vem ira eae ure ied Rover Where Medical Serylces Are ° ¥ e privileg: n | ; secing the State Apartments, the ei) Mardi To Obtain magnificence of which words fail to| During the month of May, a trav- describe. Jelling clinic, with two doctors, a den- ‘The castle overlooks the River tist and three nurses, is touring Thames and has been the place of| ze See tdenice (oro Bagliah adnge: tones | Cone ee northern sections of Al- tries. Here James L, of Scotland, | berts- ‘The travelling clinic is a new King John, of France, and King Day-| phase of public health work, devel- iyo Besant, Wee ae prisoners) oped to cope with conditions in ni in e liens” es) I. saw from his prison Joan ames 1:| sparsely-settled districts where medi- his future wife. io and dental services are difficult to A vault in the castle in which re-| obtain. Where there are doctors or pee rome of eee VIUL.,| dentists, the clinic co-operates with arles I., and Queen Jane Seymour, a ig connected by a subterranean piaep eect nu cos (Ut ee Worlsn.e% sage to another vault where are fur. | amine and, in special cases, min- fed George Il, George IV., William|or operations. IV. and Edward VII. Queen Victoria and her daughter, Princess Alice, are buried in Frogmore Mausoleum which lies in the park adjoining the The Siamese twins, Lucio and Sim- castle. |plico Godino, who live at Manila, Near Windsor Castle is Eton Col-) pnilippine Islands, have lost thelr lege, which was founded by Henry ; VIL, in 1540. | automobile driving licenses because From Windsor we proceeded to the| police cannot decide how to arrest King’s farm, ae Lote shown over gis Kyyitgueyes one violates a traffic law buildings by Mr. Murray Conac! er, | wi ‘i it for f : the munager. Mr. Conacher mapdes | Serene risking snlbeten tales (arrest some of ihe King’s Prize Hereford’s and showed us fine examples of Dev- The Our stay at Oxford was short, but up by the sea. When first set up its pipet Set Solved the Difficulty |twins drove so enthusiastically that A little boy was sent er with a note to the clinic doctor. our way dily increasing traf- falling as we | through the stea fic. Double deck buses with which we time, and it’s spreading.” | were to become more familiar London, began to make their appear-) ance as we reached the outskirts of} Greater London. At last after passing |many unbroken miles of buildings, | we found ourselves in Oxford Street, then Regent Street, and finaily at \our hotel, the “Regent Palace” just off Piccadilly Circus in the very heart of the West End. : We rose bright and early on our first day in London, for we had sev- en engagements facing us, including the reception by His Royal Highness, the Prince of Wales. Our first trip to Covent Garden, once the gar- laden and burial ground of monks, but now London's greatest distributing | °| fi enormous consuming power of the | e| people of Greater London, for we saw | before us one day’s supply fruit and |vegetables for a population equal to} tion.» Him, The accusation placed Hi Pour over layers of well-seasoned| the Jews,’ Pilate knew of no crime of which Jesus had been guilty, and by this inscription he sought to annoy mankind is insane to drift towards the priests, who, as he expected, con- ‘ sidered it an insult combined with] John 19.21-22. That all who passed by as potato or|might read it, jice,| written in Hebrew, Latin, (John 19.19, {zn 2 tablespoons flour, and 2 table- Cea ce time: throughout the it, 1 tablespoon flour and) © and disgraceful enough in itself, but {f Jesus had hung upon His cross with nothing near him to disturb the im- pression of His calm ser nocence, it might have happene: the people who stoo would have lost sigh' by the other, and innocent, twin. The Royal| they got frequent notice from the by his moth- “Please, will you do something for | Willie's face. He's had it for a long es c | “The most foolish persons are those who answer everything with a ques- in the when they crucified im on the cross was “The King of |/be outlawed and prevented. The jin- above goes may be right, but if they are, war when the evidence of the utter destruction that will fall upon great centres of civilization {s so sbun- dantly evident—Regina Leader. Tires Last Four Minutes “Crucifixion was terrible | Length of Time Guaranteed For Speed Of 200 Miles An Hour One of the most important factors in the success of a racing automobile enity and in-|\, the tires. When Major Seagrave .d that | d and watched \vas assembling the car in which he jore than two t of the disgrace| attained a speed of m pot ee eer il eee ot) hundred and seven miles sn hour at e sacrifice. Alrea ace of| suffering might Pet aukiicd as plors| Demon peace record later broken fous as it has seemed to the world| by Capt. Malcolm Campbell, he cou- since, But as it was, they went to the| sulted an expert as to the best tires [a SS ae oie. preichet tor his racer, After a series of elab= culprits who were waiting for the sie Ree sn tiiece Pale Vaso (dOubE| Xe tea eee a contents glee fulness of the| have built tires for you and IT can they hung Him|safely guarantee you three and one- ” —_ phillips|palf minutes’ life at two lundred miles an hour for each tire.” They stood the trial as did other parts of the racing car, but the guar- antee period, an amazingly short time compared with the life of the average automobile tire, shows how ‘An air race to the South Pole ap-| close to the breaking point the “su- pears to be in the making. Captain| per-racers’’ are constructed and what George H. Wilkins, Australian avia-) terrific strains are exerted upon is tor and explorer, who recently flew| them. 4 across the Arctic, has opened head- quarters in New York for his Ant- a arctic expedition. while half a mile Will Explore North away at another hotel, Commander One Man Sub-Polar Expedition In a sib frm Richard Byrd ig rushing final prepar- Meee neRe Seon for his expedition to the same) 4 other sub-polar expedition is Sn about to set out. It will be a one-man Both men hope to fly from the rim) arair, by EH. F. McBee, of EUBeney > of the Southern ice barrier to ta | OFF ‘and the route will be from Ea- «0 pole and back before next Christmas. | AVA to Athabaska, down the Meanwhile, their preparations and|,iohaska and Muckenzle Rivers, — travelling schedules take on the as- ‘cross to the Yukon, thence by the pect of a competition for completion tualde passage to Prince Rupert. Ash x oF the ne Eas back by rail to Edmonton. All the Byrd plans to sail from Hampton) — tor part of this trip will be made Roads, Va., in his supply ship, the|‘" | 44 foot motor-boat. Sampson, about August 15. Wilkins, Mr. McBee is now making arrange- who has been in Copenhagen, will ar- ie ‘ounia Be adventicet The mo- rive in New York during July, and) +1 oat in which he proposes to sall after a week’s stay, will fly across] ¥.4 northern waters came to \samon- the country in the same craft in| ton in tow behind a small car and is which he recently travelled from being shipped to ‘Athabaska, where at Alaska to Spitzbergen. He expects to . call from California about September| take tol the wae to themselves, the Inscription was and Greek languages 20), the On either side of Jesus a thief was rucified. Saviour's sufferings, between two thieves. Brooks. May Race To South Pole Plans Of Byrd and Wilkins Take On Aspect Of Competition wt The Comforting Word A rich but eccentric man died, The clergyman, who was young and new to the parish, thought it a fitting op- portunity to call and comfort the widow. ‘You must not grieve,” he told her. ‘The body that lies here is not your husband. It {s merely & husk, an empty shell—the nut hag gone to heaven,” Where Byrd's expedition will be elaborately outfitted and manned by 65 men, Wilkins plans to make the effort almost single handed. His ex- pedition svill include about five or six men. The Smallest Automobile That his new auto is the smallest in the world and will attain a speed of 17 miles an hour are the claims of the builder, Jans Schultz, a German mechanic. The machine welghs only 20 pounds, and has a four cylinderea water-cooled gasoline engine, clutch, differential, accelerator and brakes. It ts controlled by a set of strings be- cause it ig too small for even a chila to get into. Japan is planning a national cen= sus in 1930. ———— No Cattle Shipped To Britain Not a single hoof of Canadian cat- tle has gone aboard a cattle boat pound for Great Britain within the last ten months, though 100,000 head went to the United States in the same period. In addition, owing to in- creased prosperity, more meat has been consumed in Canada within the zhu “Ts that a good hunting dog Canada. It was easy to belleve that} ~ ,, aoe “ n| one province of Spain alone sent 4,- Do you think so?”—Buen Humor, |tast ten months than for some time) “It all depends on bow hungry Be 000,000 cases of oranges to this great | Madrid. previously. ia!’ isse-Strix, {hol ®