West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 7 Oct 1920, p. 6

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The of the glarec Iwe #p waw Das less :« the in to se 19¢.)% weeles B Fo prive with throw L088\ the at t intel wttri blac dow: near H ing slre £6 mM eal me ed 1 eith hfte w t Th us tro ed lon wh pa por s Or koat #v% the the n i. as wh th i8 an kn 94 box hal It gives and" at for flay for sal: to satisiy your esthetic taste, | You will need a box 14 inches wide,| 6 to 8 inchos deep, and as long as the| window. A few holes should be bored in the bottom, and below the box whould be placed a flat pan to catch any surplus water that. may drip' through. In the bottom place a one-! inch layer of coarse material, such as) einders or bits of broken brick, Onl the top of that is placed the soil, which should consist of oneâ€"half gomâ€" mon garden loam, dneâ€"fourth sharp sand, and oneâ€"fourth wellâ€"rotted maâ€" mure, well mixed together. If you have space for but one kitâ€" chen window box, a practical arrangeâ€" ment . is ds follows: Nasturtums around the edge of the box, next to this a row of parsley, and in the eentre of the box, thyme, sage, and summer savory. The Dwart or Tom*Thumb varieties of nasturtium are excellent for the window hbox, since they are lowâ€"growâ€" ing and blossom profusely, The nasâ€"( turtiurm blossoms and leaves may be used for salads and garnishing, as well as for table decorations. Perfection, Moss Curled, and Double €urled varieties of parsley are reâ€" «eommended because they are the comâ€" paciâ€"growing sort, ornamental enough to be ntilized as a border. Parsley shou}d be planted rather thickly to imsure good germination. When the plants are well up, pull out the weakâ€" est to allow the others a better chance fer growing strong and healthy. If you want fine, showy plants, thin to three or four inches, but if you just want "parsley," that will grow with Hitle or no care. Parsley holds first place among garnishing plants, preâ€" sumably because of its ease of culture and its beauty. Thyme, sage, and summer savory wre the sweet herbs necessary to the kousewives for flavoring meat dressâ€" Ings, meat loaves, and the like. One er (wo plants will be sufficient to supâ€" ply the wants of the average family. €ut the herbs as often as is necessary to keep the box looking attractive. These may be dried for future use. If you are fond of mint sauce with your lamb and mutton, a plant or two ef spearmint should also be included im vour selection for the kitchen winâ€" The Finest andrl;;;e:tfi'l?;;â€"'&old’; "CALAPA" Tl\e;eâ€"isâ€" éénuine and unmistakeable pleasure in its daily use. Black â€" Green } Try a packet from your grocer, or Mixed but be sure it‘s "Salada" _ pse fresh temp night wi@in meter near the box, and consult it frequently during the day. Fresh air must be admitted whenâ€" ever it is possible to do so without mjury to the plants, but cold drafts should be avoided as you would avoid w pest. In sunny weather be sure to epen the window from the top before the heat of the sun, by concentration on the glass, becomes too intense lorl the young plants. The admission of fresh air will counteract all danger from that source. On severe nights newspapers may be placed between the wirdow and the plants. Â¥FCSHN all, P] temperature mnight to 50 wain‘iained. meler ncar frequently . Fresh air ever it is 1 Injury to t} should be a w pest. In epen the wi The climate of the Peace River| eountry is remarkably mild for ils1 tatitude, winters clear and crisp and. emmmers dry asd balimy. Blizzards are unkrown, and the tempering inâ€" fG#uence of the warm Chinook wind is experienced over a large area. It is a country teeming with beauty and utility and of enormous possibilities. KFrom practical tests it has been proved an excellent grain growing reâ€" gion, due, no doubt, to the long sumâ€" mer and late frosts. As far back as 1893, prize winning wheat in competiâ€" tion at the World‘s Fair, Chicago, was grown 15 miles from Peasa River Crossingâ€"500 miles north of the Inâ€" ternational boundary. Few territories contain a larger area of lapd suited to stock raising, while pasture is abundant throughout the summer, and in most cases through the greater part of the winter. The Peace River Country is rich n natural resources, the greater portion of which have seen but little developâ€" mwent â€" Indications of oil are widely Th arden Winter Window Box. : haven‘t the kitchen window )t you can easily acquire it €sseT / TOLLSC entials for making windowâ€" nin@ a success are sunshine, plenty of water, and that a re of from 40 degrees at 0 degrees during the day be d. Keep a reliable thermoâ€" Canada‘s New Land of Promise e fun of gardening, time produces herbs s and sauces, greens nishing, and flowers APbou! tHhe Since it is possible to have the proper growing temperature for the kitchen window garden, seeds may be planted at any time; however, you will derive more satisfaction if they are planted so that you can have someâ€" thing "green" from your garden durâ€" ing February and March. ;very well. We have a baker with our | oil stove. Our kitchen cabinet is very | pretty. The upper part is taken off and we use it as a table. In one |\ drawer we keep the spoons, forks and knives, and in the other part we keep | the dishes. We have three dozen dishâ€" |es, large cups and small spoons, | knives and forks. We also have pans, a dish pan, a water pail, a large and A schooigirl in one of those proâ€" gressive public schools where a hot lunch is served, gives the following description of how the plan works: We have bhad hot lunches in outr school for, over two years. I think ltt is very goo@Ror.the children. It helps the children to study their lessons. Many children dg not eat much for breakfast and if they do not get a hot dinner they will get sick. Some chil-‘ dren will not eat their cold lunch at school. The farmers will have warm feed for their chickens, pigs and cows. If the farmer takes good care of the animals, why should he not take good care of his boys and girls? Children should have something warm to eat at school. In some rural schools there is hardâ€" ly room emough to serve hot lunches, but it does not take as much room as some teachers think. The only room neded is for the stove and supboard. The parents of school children should help the teacher get the things toâ€" gether. We have had three chief cooks. They are the following: Emma _ The children take turns about in bringing the soup meat. Every child brings a potato for the soup then one of the children brings beans, noodles, or whatever we put in the soup. When the soup is done the chief cook takes it from the fire and divides it into cupâ€" fuls for the children. The one who| brought the meat divides it among his| friends. _ By this way the children lbring more and nicer meat. When we ‘have mashed potatoes one of the chilâ€" | dren brings the milk. When we have \baked potatoes or boiled eggs the’| lnmnher of the child is put on it so that each child gets its own egg bac‘c.{ i The parents like it very well. We have |\ no trouble in getting the soup meat. 'I Almost every week we have soup | three or four times. We haveâ€"one hot .E dish every day. It does not take much | time away from our studies to tend | to the cooking. P., Loretta W., and myself. We also have some waiters that bring the food to the pupil‘s desk. C We have many things in our school. We have an oil stove, kitchen cabinet and another small cupboard. Our oil stove has three purners. We like it a small stew pan. All the things in school are bought with the money we received as premiums at the county fair. In the morning when we come to school we peel the potatoes and put them in pans till recess. The teacher starts the oil stove and the chief cook puts the soup meat on the fire. At recess we put the potatoes in with the distributed and much development of the field is being undertaken. Several companies are drilling and operating at the present time. An increasing inâ€" dustry is the inland fAsheries of the great lakes, whose product extends even to the New York market, and it has been found profitable to establish canneries on Lake Athabasca and at other points. Tiny settlements have sprung up every few miles along the Edmonton, Dunxegan and British Columbia Railâ€" way and there are larger towns such as Sawridge, High Prairie, Spirit River and Grand Prairie, all centres of rich agricultual area possessng infant inâ€" dustries of promise. Judged by imâ€" migration fAgures, the Peace River Disâ€" trict loome large in the eyes of home seckers, and their rush into this last zreat west is probably unprecedented in the bistory of any new country. The Peace River Country has been termed the "Last Best Weet," and its area,. morth of settlement about the railway line, offers apparently the last chance to pioneers. Our Hot Noon Lunch. "Bob, shalt we go and help him?" amsked Hetty, as they stood looking across the quiet street of the little English town at the fAigure of an old man who, struggling in a fit of coughâ€" ing, was feebly clutching some railâ€" ings for su;:iport. \ _""No," said her sweetheart, abruptâ€" ly 42 + "But he seems very ill, Bob, and he‘s â€"he‘s your uncle," remonstrated Hetty, gently. » "He may be my uncle," flared the other, "but he robbed my father, and he is a miser, too. I won‘t breathe the same air as the old wretch." _ Hetty, gazing compassionately at the distress of the old man, still hesiâ€" tated. "You will be leaving me at the botâ€" tom of the street, Bob," she said, "so would you mind if I go and see what I can do for him?" ;. Y i: A “Tl;le;u"M-r;e-H," rephied Bob, reâ€" luctantly, after a pause. _ _ Leaving him, Hetty went across tol the miser, Culver. He was shabby end dirty, and when he heard Hetty’s' sweet voice the dull, narrow eyes he turned on her held an expression anyâ€" thing but friendly. "Can I do anything for you?" she asked. > At first old Culver shook his head. Then he mumbled, "I want to get honfé. Then I‘ll need no help from anybody." "Let me take you there," the girl offered. She sHipped her slim arm through the old man‘s and he hobbled weakly along. "Got another o‘ my attacks of asâ€" thma.‘" he croaked. "Ought not to have come out todqt, but I wanted something, and I can‘t trust anybody to buy things." Mumbling and grumbling, he did not appear to gcluwu one redgeming feaâ€" ture, and etti)" was glad when his home was reached. It was a mean, depressing place. Cold grey ashes littered the hearth, and everything was dirty and untidy, old Culver for reasons of economy prederrinf to look after himself. Rreathless and wheezing, he was in * He Ts Ciin s ‘ Breathless and wheezing, he was in such a state after his exertion that Hetty was alarmed. "Shall I fetch a doctor?" she asked. "No!" snapped the old miser. "No doctors for me. Nothing but thieves they are. I often have these attacks, but I soon get over ‘em." Hetty did not care to leave him at once. He looked so bent and ill as he sat huddled in a broken chair, "Then I‘ll light a Are for you and get something hot," she said, "You need it." 9 Culver turned on her suspiciously. soup meat. At half past eleven we eat our dinner. Then we put some water on the fire so that it will get hot to wash the dishes. Each child has a napkin which he puts on his desk. Then we take the soup from the fire and put it in cups. Each child gets a cup of soup. When we have mashed potatoes each child gets a plate of potatoes with white sauce on them:; When we have mashed potatoes each child comes to the table and gets his potatoes. We all go to our desks and eat our dinner. _ The children have to stay in school for twenty minutes while they eat their dinner. After they are through eating their dinner they have to bring the dishes to the table where they wil} get washed. Some times there are mary dishes to be washed. Be Sure Pork Is Well Done. l Pork is a tremendously important food in Canada, the amount eaten beâ€" ing equal to all other meats, including poultry, and it is important that housewives should realize that danger may lurk in a piece of pork not proâ€" perly cooked. Fortunately few per-l sons prefer pork rare, but many cooks serve porkchops which have not been! cooked to the point of absolute safety, and occasionally pork roasts are enâ€" countered which are underdone. Beef iis wholesome enough when rare, if fresh, but pork should be well cooked, even if perfectly fresh, and if the least bit "gamy‘" especial cars is . necessary. Hogs are subject to a parasite known as trichinae, microscopic worms which bore in the flesh, and these parâ€" asites are found in one hog out of every seventyâ€"one on an average. These worms cause in human beings the disease known as trichinosis. Unâ€" like many other infectious diseases, the severity of the attack of trichiâ€" nosis depends upon the number of parasites swallowed. Large quantiâ€" ties of slightly infected pork must be eaten in order to produce bad effects, but small quentities of pork that is heavily infected may cause severe illâ€" ness or death. Thorough cooking of pork even heavily infected kills the trichinae and the meat is rendered entirely wholesome. Good apple butter can be made without cider. Add enough water to the peeled and sliced apples to make a thin apple sauce, and let this cook very slowly, or simmer, over a low fire for three or four hours. Brown sugar can be used, being added when the cooking is twoâ€"thirds done. The sugar which settles at the bottom of m barrel of molasses is excellent for this purpose. A pound to a gallon is usually sufficient, but this amount is a matter of taste, as is also the amâ€" ount of cinnamon, allspice and cloves to be added when cooking is done. Minard‘s Lin‘iment For Buins, Ete Apple Butter Without Cider THE OLD SOFA â€" By LUCK WILLIAMS. for it if you do," he whined. Hetty cbeeflul%“:dd him not to worry about that, as he grumbled at her using so much wood for lighting the fire, and cautioned her to be careâ€" ful of this and that," she almost left him in disgust. "Come," she coaxed, "let me draw this sofa to the fire, and you lie on jt. You will be more comfortable." "Be careful with that sofa," whimâ€" pered the old miser, as she moved it. "I can‘t have that hurt." â€" It was an ancient giece of furniture. The bottom sagged almost to the floor. Threadbare and torn in many places the covering, though now dingy md faded, hinted that once it was a rich fabric. 5 f. A ‘"o-c.&mimmlly the old man pe Hetty as though he could not stand her at all. t h "What‘s your name?"" he asked eventually. + She told him. «* "Married ?" * Hetty gave a little laugh, but there was a touch of sadness in it. "No, we‘ve not got a home together yet," y *> puedlé.id hi head back ulver 3 y ack on the sofa and cloaeflfis eyes. "And Il was going to be married once to a‘ gel like you," came in a wheezing, halfâ€"audjble voice. _ "And weren‘t you married ?" Crdâ€" inarily an inquigitive question, there was a sympathetic quality in the girl‘s soothing tones that invited confidence. "I loved her," moaned the old miser. "But she was rich and I was poor." He halted, perhaps because the memâ€" ory channels of his mind were blocked with the garbage of time. _ "I got“-' ll'l'fl not ou MC 3 _‘ M . Y 2." h in pa ‘ bit of money now," he continued. "I don‘t mind admittin‘ it. â€" But sheâ€" she died afore I was well enough off to marry her." Hetty stood silent. So this was Bob‘s uncle, the miserly old vagabond, who lived alone, wutinf his money in useâ€" lessness and recoiling at the touch of his fellowâ€"men. So he, too, had loved. he was mumbling, slowly. " I recogâ€" nized it in a secondâ€"hand shop, and I bought it. It is the very sofa she and Iutfiom.heroninherhomo. I seem to feel her sitting by me now, telling me as she told me that day‘"â€"the quavering words came almost too low to be heardâ€"‘"that she loved me." It mfis}\t have been that the old man was so 111 that he was delitious. But Hetty laid her hand on one of his shrunken ones. â€" "Perhaps you will meet her again some day," she said, softly. The warmth of her touch seemed to revive old Culver. "What are you looking at me like that for?" he raspâ€" ed, pettishly. "I‘m not going to pay you for anything you do, mind." _ "No; is there nothing more before 1 go'.’" Culver shook his* head, but after a few seconds he said, "Will you come round toâ€"morrow and bring me eome bread and a bit 0‘ meat? 1 can‘t trust that woman downstairs to buy things. She always charges too much." "I‘ll bring them for you," Hetty asâ€" sured him. Seeing that she could do little else for him, Hetty left. "Well," said Bob to her, when they met that night, "what did you do with the old scamp?" Hetty told him. "It doesn‘t seem right," Bob went on, half apologetically, "but I can‘t help hating him for all the harm he has done us. And indirectly he has harmed you, too, Hetty. _ $ 1A "How?" asked the girl, surprised.} Then she added, as an afterthought,| "Although angbody who has hurt you | has hurt me, Bob." | "I didn‘t mean that," explained her| lover. "I‘ve told you how the old‘ miser robbed my father of his busiâ€"| ness and left him penniless. Well, father became a wreck, and I had to| spend all the money I‘d scraped toâ€"l gether on him for doctors a.nti)e treatâ€"| ment and so on, though, of course,| that didn‘t save him. So don‘t you see| that if it were not for my uncle you ‘.and I would have been married long| ago." | _ "Still, there‘s lots worse off than we ?J'e," Hetty replied, trying to be cheerâ€" mal oo en i are s io a K 2 _ The next day she took old Culver his rovisions. He was a little better. At ?lis request she continued to bring him food for several days. He never thanked her, and sometimes he hardly spoke at all. Once he tried to pry a little farther into Hetty‘s reasons for remaining sgingle. She did not reveal Bob‘s idenâ€" tity, however, and the old man ended up by insulting her sweetheart, whoâ€" ever he was, saying he reckoned he To his own dead romance he did not refer ng'.l:;, and Hetty respected his silence. one day he talked again of the old sofa, evidently the only link was one of those "idle spendthrifts who didn‘t know the value of money." "I‘ve had this mifa ten years now," loved. "When I die I hope it will not get fnto anybody‘s hands," he said, in his broken, gasping voice. | _ "Then leave instructions for it to be destroyed," suggested Hetty. "But you won‘t die for many years, Mr. "No," whimpered the old miser, "but when I doâ€"â€"" He stopped, and his weak, blinking c{u questioned her face. “Wfill‘{ou ook after it for me then ?" he ed. "Iâ€"I wouldn‘t like it to get into anybody‘s hands." _ _ 1“Yeu, if you wish." was Hetty‘s reâ€" P y“l}:‘t was wranlinit Lasn it Hila it is bottom sagged almost To 1NE 11007. | 4 adbare and torn in many places || covering, though now dingy ul!lâ€"; d, hinted that once it was a rich}. ic. ccasionally the old man peered at|| w as thouoh he could not underâ€"|â€" â€"you‘d do it up and reâ€"cover it, wouldn‘t you? I couldn‘t bear for it to be kept the same as it is now." Hettvy fell in with his whim. "I ould recover it if you want me to." The next day he was so ill that, But you wouldn‘t keep it like it is he he asked he his Tecme 7 C O dad the miser was parted from It was several dayps IAL@T WW® "" met Hetty with an expression of grim amusement on his face. "Some joke," he began, abruptly naing into Pubject of his thou " some JORE; _ MC UE UREIE!" oc n 5s ho Uion Pn CA henre mie 0 s eard 0: Culver‘s will read 'Lm." "Has he left {ou anything ?" asked Hetr?, with little hopefulness. "Not a hn’pema,” growled Bob. "I did think he might have felt some reâ€" morse for robbing father, but not he. All his money in the bankâ€"it was A little over three thousand m}mdoâ€"â€"be little over three thousand poundsâ€"NC has willed to some hospital." . "He might have given you & little bit," Hettz’slghed. "What called his ‘household efâ€" fects‘ are to be sold to defray his funeral expenses. But here is the fokox my dear. He‘s left you someth ng." Oh!" exclaimed Betty. "What?" Bob g:ve a laugh. "A darned oldl sofa," chuckled. "It was a proviâ€" sion he had evidently added to the will Aust before he died, for the solicitor could hardly read the writing." 1 "Don‘t laugh, Bob. He thought a lot, of that old sofa." â€" "He also wrote," went on Bob, in tones of amused scorn, “t?t if you don‘t want his decayed bit of furniture it is to be burnt to ashes." There was a thoughtful, halfâ€"sad look on Hett{"s face. "I think J shall accept it, Bob." "What for?" "Well, we can do it up. Really I think it will be worth itâ€"andâ€"and you know, Bob, it will be a bit more for the home." Bhe whispered the last word as though she was afraid to mention the hope that seemed so hidâ€" den in the mist of the future. Bob had other thoughts. "I‘ll have nothing belonging to that old vagabond in a home of mine," he sall, S6A00) + x Hetty clasped his arm appealingly. "It will bring us a little nearer to what we‘re striving for," she pleaded. "Beâ€" sides, I promised the old man I‘d reâ€" cover his sofa when he was dead. Life was cruel to him in some ways, 9"}’-" Holding him under the spell of her gentleness, she told him what fraq- ments she hadl earned of his uncle‘s broken loveâ€"story. At last, a little grudgingly, Bob consented to her acceptance of the old piece of furniture. The t.hhzin Hetty‘s room were poor and bby, but they appeared almost elegant in comparison when Culver‘s old sofa was brought in. At the earliest opportunity she beâ€" i"\ to strip it of its battered cloth. 11 the flock would have to be removed for Bob to get at the lpri:::n, and lmeelixgby the sofa she worked with a will. Her hand came across a small hfl!‘.lhl: p...rf“l' phin s e ie A If dvou carry out your promise you i} find this in payment." She tore open the package. Notes! There seemed hundreds of them tightâ€" ly rolled together. Actually there were nearly two hundred pounds. Her mind was thrilled with one thought. What before had been in the uncertain distance was now near and almost substantial enough for her eager fingers to touchâ€"a little home for her and Bob. s _ She laid her head on the old sofe and cried. Tears of joy mingled with tears of A young lady whose knowledge of | needles is limited to the fact that they | can be used only once on a talking| machine is not likely to make an econâ€"| omical wife. | Minard‘s Liniment Relieves Colds, Etc. | * 00 + *# # * m‘ mu, * Hetty a doctor. _!fl-*. at night Culver 53| STOVE PIPE ENAMEL i RAM S AY‘ S (The End.) rap “ f You can counteract the effect of heat and rust now and keep stove pipes black with TORONTO ASK YOUR DEALER Shiny Stove Pipes has color card: An eyebrow usually contains about 300 hairs, and each eyelld is provided with about 210 lashes. meve The reason why an eyelash in the eye is so irritating is that, like other haire. Its surface covered with minute scales "Kaybee tuolnw mothâ€"proof and wonderâ€" handsome pieces of furniture. PDireot from manufacturer to yOuâ€" Write for free illustrated literature. Eureka Refrigerator Co. Limited COARSE SALT L A E D SALT . TORONTO SALT WORKS 0. 4. CLIFF $# TORONTO DONT RISK MATERIAL .Pure Wool Worsted Jerseys For Dad and the Lad BOB LONG Pullâ€"over or Button Shoulder Style Made for Hard Weer, Comfort _and Smart Appesrance Your Eyebrows. R. G. LONG & CO., Limited Then give him a pure wool jersey, + Ing by hiufnpend Bob Long. Jt him romp with all his vigor 1 _ He‘s the best boy in the land, And hc‘ll“alhnyl be bright and am » If he 't:t‘! & Bob Long Brand. You want him good and healthy, __You want him big and strong, Bob Loug Brands Enewn from Coast to Cocs: ng or running. â€"Take no oth ’._, sCENTED RED CcEDAR CHESTS BEE KEEPNG N _ _ WESTERN CANADA PROSPEROUS INDUsSTRYy IN B.C. AND MANITOBA, Favorable Conditions in the Woestern Canada is inevitably ap. sociated with grain growing and live. stock production, with huge | wheat fields and vast cattie hords. Othe, ag l‘l“lllll'll wm“‘ being constdered so relatively unimportant, they are of. ten ellminated from consid« ration Then, too, It is & prevalent conception borne out by experiance to +« ex. tent, that the farmor devoting himsey to either or both of these ag? tural lines has sufficient on his han<s to o cupy all his time and attention â€" The basis of this trend of thought conld be discovered in the old beuet 0 the ‘mt wak not ad@apted 16 the pureult }ot the bentlier phases ol ngroultun and just bow erroncous this conte !uon was has been proved ecent years by the gratifyins sucees mil in fruit growing and othes «lide lmes in the préirie provinces Prairle Provinces for Honey With tae exception of Brtioh ( bia and Manitoba, heekeepine / wert caa bardly yet be «n attained the status of a prospeso dustry, though the great aroused of late years would i more general following cf 1\ teresting branch of farming â€" mercial lines. What has bee putably proven is the adapisi the prairie provinces to es~ hopey production, and tha western farmer can profiiabls | a few hives for his own domei )umptlon‘ Canadian Honey Unsurposse Canadian boney )# unsurss QW",V b’ that of any count ing mainly to the warmer sumus ubundance of nectarâ€"producing 1 until froset, the average yiclo colony is greater than in the 1 Isles. Bees can be raised and produced ae successfully in t« as in the east. The natura bu Alberta â€" throughout the | neas \ fords abundant food for the be« | the alfalfa felds of the jrrigat | triete of the south and clover [ ‘the central and north« i Egtve adequate supplies of =oo | polien for countless hives . | | Columbia, conditions are is ; ' a y | cellent, especially in (be fru gtrlcts. &nd honey production in | ]clnc provinee | is | increasing \In Sackatchewan, apianes ane i ‘fully operated in many pas . province, . whilst Manitol forging mhead as one of U« bee keeping provinces of \!= fjon. in the laiter province ! and olbers are eDtering Li« extensively, and in imi apiaries are to be found v of bopey are produced ani Producton on Large Scale. Experimeats | carmed . zgovernment experimeita covered the following net duction per colony of be« in the different province Man.,. $3.27; lndian } $11.83; Lethbridge, Alta combe, Alta., $12.79; Inv $1326; Summeriand BC Production in British The production of Brii in 1919 was 344,58%0 poun there beng 1655 beekeep« 10,000 colonies in the pr toba in 1918, with 921 ke proximately 15,000 coloi produced 944,104 pounds per hive. In the Kooten British Columbia alone i tons of honey was produ: age surplus per hive be: as agminst 38 pounds f« province. One Slocan I had a surplus of 2100 ; three hives. As a proof of the adap Alberta climate to bee ra profits to be derived th expevience of an Edm may be cited. Starting m x« & W the the d feed, was 21 pounds, wi from 35 cents to 40 cent In 1913, the record of progu this mpiary was 100 pouno: or st prevailing prices, a $40 from the homey of esch Beckeepers Associat Everything goes io «hn culiure and honey product the increase throughout th« Manitoba Beekeepers Asso tablished in 1903 and re 1914, had 821 mctive memb with 156,000 coloniee of hes Beckeepers â€" Association Colambia, 1,183 members colonies. There is also : Reckeepers‘ Associntion. | Beckeepers‘ Associntio: conntry require very |ito and there is no branch of : v hich renders returns in | tion to the care required. The word Califorma s !" Epanish "Caliente Forn=4a," «+ "hot furnace." with a foundau d bees, he manag« â€"bred queens, to m that in a few : st purebred str . Me keeps frow ; and disposes of spring or fall. |n nine hives he } ig increaseu dur wentyâ€"one, and + d. less that regu ng flowere 16 per th af SUPPLIES 95 PER OF OUR NEEL ‘Took More Than try at ! place in 1667 twenty # indusry oldest 1 e es A . onl shoemakers the sh veloped year by y® found to be & hig porfected induatry which compare Y€ the ’Muc( of any In the year 187 ginning veloped in Oanada, with Their total com put, it was Their total combined 0@ ed to some throe and :« tion dollars, the average output being $3,850 and number of workers being four. The Introduction of The shoe Industry at as can be seen, a simal tion, but an advanceme days when the travelli went from house to h the needs of the peop! after confederation be became a great factor ment of shoemaking work was all handan howover, the advants shoes in larger uniis â€" nized and the hand : gradually eliminated twenty years later, ont ploying less than five Ancreased to fve thow tories employing five numbered 269 Ten 1900, this number was Indicating that many able 1 of the on & econon tom sh eat meis establis the ind velopm« «teadily tories | capital an @nt payi in s buy. It i Ing th place, produ less â€" ie Canadian at the pres From =| United Canadiar approx n shoes, a1 increase mod 0 possil prove this 1 reveals the the making e.ublhhd. entire count com dati dat vention sible « 1862, t chine f be im; plying $ quireme of Cana Uvelihoc producti For ma1 eredit for the his) product, and 1t tool tury to overcome favor of imported ever, the high qv footwear, as shos Montreal Convent!l Of the Nationul 8i Clation, is universa has made the indus portance in the Dor which is increasing ~ About the middi« week the telephone r the stenographer sal "Your wifte wishes Mr. Green." phone, but be sure her just as much as "Teoll her I‘m busy "and cannot leave to women cannot read Ninete« Toâ€"day the mm time A | importance a mong , c..m, A dd\"“ veals the fact that : wuo‘, and at th jre country, there . shoomakers. 8o th y is not only one « manufactures, but ‘ s it is toâ€"day, one 4 ers the sho®e indus The June groow ompare very iay uct of any other ; year 1870 the re given, and th of 1667 is found until in 1871, in | vas the third lare An. with 41590 e=! The Fading 44 he shoe indu by year unti a highly on prod: and

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