The significance of such a foreshaâ€" dowed export trade may be appreciâ€" sted trom the fact that last year the Pominion‘s honey exports amounted to only 513,038 pounds, worth $54,561, in the previous year to 116,353 pounds, worth $13,520, and in the year prior to that to 74,107 pounds, worth $12,8$40. Canadian honey, from its excellent Iity, has rapidly and favorably esâ€" :ï¬d itselt on the British and Ruropesn markets, and shipments from Ontario alone, in the : six months of the prosent year, totalled nearly 1,000,000 pounds. Attention has recently been directod to the romarkable interest being deâ€" Â¥oted to, and the development of, apiâ€" qulture in the Western provinces. There bas been a similar progress in the Eastern province, where the indusâ€" try has been for years established, the movement tending here towards a ::h-thn of the industry. From regarded by many followers The remarkable development of inâ€" terest in apiculture and in the proâ€" @uotion of honey which has featured the past tew years in Canada, is very slearly illustrated in the announceâ€" ment of the Dominion Apiarist that Canada will this year have six million pounds of honey available for export, Ogures arrived at after consultations with the leading Boeckeepers‘ Coâ€" operative Associations of Ontario and Quebec. The understanding is that oqutside markets can be found for this quantity, and another result that proâ€" mises much satisfaction among proâ€" ducers is that the home market will be stabilized. Once Followed as Hobby, Apiâ€" culture Has Now Attained SIX MILLION POUNDS OF 1924 HONEY FOR CANADA‘S DEVELOPâ€" MENT IN APICULTURE The motor takes people out in‘regular systematic exerciso rather healthful and restful clotge-. Folks!than take the place of it in order to dress for comfort when they go on an get the best results. auto tour. Of course, they ought to| There is not much doubt that, rightâ€" dress for ease always. But they think ly used, the automobile is an imrort- this is impossible when in civilized, ant factor in the health and happiness communities. However, out in the of the nation. And in thousands of wilds they do not care. Here, again, cases it is helping individuals to build they get a taste of comfort in dressing better bodies. So far as folks with poor appetites fic. Driving on roads crowded with are concerned, the outdoor life that the cars puts a nerve strain on a driver auto makes possible stimulates such which may go a long wni toward offâ€" desire for food that It is apt to beâ€" setting tKo beneficial, healthâ€"giving come a problem to secure enough. The factors of the outing. motorist, after a few miles run, is Then, too, a person who drives a car likely to find out for the first time in may get the idea that by virtue of this months that things to eat taste good, fact lgs: is getting sufficient allâ€"around no matter how poorly cooked or how physical exercise. As a matter of fact, much dirt gets mixed with the victuals the exercise that goes with owning and before they are served. operating a car should supplement The motor takes people out In‘regular systematic exerciso rather healthful and restful clotï¬el. Folks!than take the place of it in order to dress for comfort when they go on an get the best results. auto tour. Of course, they ought to| There is not much doubt that, rightâ€" # s Emm Sm S io i e In getting out into the Open O some rctivities of a motorist that tend eamping parties m‘“{ Wg"' are findâ€"‘ more against than for it. For instance, Ing out for the first time that they can if a man is going on a weekâ€"end trip breathe night air without sufferlng hne had better get an early start, so as any serious consequences. ‘to avoid getting into very hesvs tratâ€" So far as folks with poor appetites fic. Driving on roads crowded with are concerned, the outdoor life that the cars puts a nerve strain on a driver auto makes possible stimulates such which may go a long w-i toward offâ€" desire for food that It is apt to beâ€" setting tl{o beneficial, healthâ€"giving come a problem to secure enough. The factors of the outing. _ _ and under the strain of family J@T8. s» than he formerly could with a horse Then, too, in touring around the :nd buggy. Nowy he can annihilate country there are m‘â€w‘“f' Of i!â€" space at a rapid rate when it is necesâ€" terest to see. These keep the mind gary to reach a person quickly in busy and are an education to th03¢ orgar to save life. Automobile ambuâ€" who study such places. If the mind jances have also come into common is hg: busy on such worthwhile item$ 2e and greatly facilitate transporting it is less apt to dwell on personal ailâ€" .;., persons to hospitals, where exâ€" ments, which, aithough largely i‘mag- pertâ€" care can be given them. inary, do become a menace to health if." But thero are certain warnings the mind continues to concentrate 0N whi«h should be given automobile ownâ€" One of the oustanding activities of that may have it: the automobile owner is the weekâ€"end formal conditions. picnic and camping parties, which m NEEDED EXE vide healthful recreation for the wh The owner of a family. This not only bringrthe ©l0fâ€" of physical exerc ful bloom of hea‘th into the cheeks Of machine and car his wife and children as they enjoy might not get in a the outâ€"ofâ€"door tun, but it aiso tends ,,",,,, pumped i to keep the family together as a UNit. »_awled around, The whole family goes on these OUtâ€" jngije his auto h ings, and thus gets into the habit Of .anyv muscles, son for happiness and contentment in famâ€" ily life, which in turn makes for better health; for happy folks are more apt to keep well than those who are upset and under the strain of family j’:l. doing things 7k;fvt'ber. This makes #.» hanninace and anntantmant in fam. The Automobile Cana TRAVEL ROAD TO HEA LTH IN MOTOR CARS Beekeeping has made rapid strikes in the Western provinces, where more followers are being enlisted every | year. Last year British Columbia, in an adverse season, accounted for a production of more than half a nxillion‘: pounds of honey. The production in Manitoba, where the growth of the| industry has been phenomenal, was| cubstantially in excess of 3,000,000 pounds. Saskatchewan in that year ; produced 121,600 pounds and Alberta | is also achieving a worthâ€"while proâ€"| duction. The production c( Western Canada is the more significant since it is only of very recent years that any | attention has been devoted to a (-om-’ mercial honey production. Output of Ontario and Quetec , Provinces. | According to the Deputy Minister of | Agriculture for the Province of Onâ€". tario, the aggregate value of the honey ‘ crop in that province in 1923 was alightly less than $1.000,000. There! are in the province about seven t,hous-! and honey producers, but out of these ; only about six hundred depend um! the industry for the groater part of | merely as a hobby, or an intereciing wideâ€"line desultorily followed, apiculâ€" ture has attained to the proportions and has the enthusiastic and wholeâ€" hearted following of a main industry. Organization of Coâ€"operative Pools. Bea pools or coâ€"operative societies for honey marketing have been organâ€" fzed in Ontario and Quebec, and such is the status of the industry in Westâ€" ern Canada that the Coast and Prairie Provinces are expected to have simiâ€" lar organizations in operation before the end of the season. The next logiâ€" cal and expected step in the organiâ€" zation, and the keystone of the enterâ€" prise, will in all probability be a cenâ€" tral selling organization. With these arrangements completed according to the plans of the authorities it is exâ€" pected that the Canadian honey indusâ€" try will be established on a permanâ€" ent and profitable basis. The quality of Canadian honey has already won for it an enviable position in the Old Country, and a demand has been created. As soon as the market price can be standardized the supply will be assured, and the honey trade will be an important factor among the wealthâ€"producing commodities of the Dominion. But there are certain warnings which should be given automobile ownâ€" ers regarding their health. There are some activities of a motorist that tend more against than for it. For instance, If a man is going on a weekâ€"end trip :.Eeci ; namely, that it enables a phi: ian to get to his patient much quic The owner of a car gets a !rod deal of physical exercise in handling his machine and caring for it that he might not get in any other way. After he has pumped up a fow tires and crawled around, over and under and inside his auto he has used a good many muscles, some of which he probâ€" ably never knew he had before. _ The automobile is proving a treâ€" mendous factor in hea‘lth in this reâ€" NEREDED EXERCISE OBTAINED n Queb its effect under more City + _ In 1928 the Province of Quebec had ; 1,199 beekeepers, which included 1,048 who were registered for the first time that year. Their production was 3,893,â€" 826 pounds of honey and 41,459 pounds of wax worth $1,983,051. The annua) |lverago in Quebec for the past seven years has been 68,005 beekeepers, with | 68,770 colontes, accounting for a proâ€" duction of 2,617,092 pounds of honey and 29,878 pounds of wax with a value | of $1,405,025.45. their income. The Ontario honey crop | is marketed by the Ontario Coâ€"Operaâ€" | tive Honey Producers Co., IA4. The newly constructed United States, is seen in it: And this old road which the Prince of Wales will again throw open to the public in November is toâ€"day what it has ever been, the most convenient route between London and the ports of France. "My dear," he said when he arrived home, "I heard a clever thing toâ€"day. My friend Smith, when I fell in that puddle, said, ‘Ob, Onions, you are in a mess!‘ " The announcoment that the Prince of Wales, upon returnings from his Canadian trip, will open the reconâ€" structed road between Dartford and Btrood draws attention to one of the oldest and most celebrated highways in Europe. This is told in an Asâ€" sociated Press di@patch from London. This patch of road is in reality part of Watling Street, a thoroughfare of great antiquity which still traversos the heart of London and, just back of Bt. Paul‘s Cathedral, to this day bears its ancient name. The motorist who toâ€"day comes up to London from. Canterbury traverses the same road, tha famous Watling Btrcet, which .oman: soldlers took when, on conquest bent, they marched through England. Spoiled the Joke. A mah named Onions had the misâ€" fortune to fall into a puddle. A friend who was with him said, "Oh, Onions, you are in a pickle!" s in the remarkable multiplication of export figuras, It is the belief that in the successful penetration of foreign markets, and the generally favorable acceptance of the Canadian product, this can be expanded to a very great extent yet. Another item of producâ€" tion. has been added to Canada‘s varied list of agricultural products, which promisos in the future to occupy a very much more important place. The joke was not lost on Onions, who determined to let his wife share the laugh. Autos Use British Road Trod by Roman Legions All over Canada there is a very | gratifying increase of intorest exâ€" hibited in apiculture, well illustrated Chineso refugees in the war zome are shown moving thoir belongings into safer areas, using sampans as a means of transportation. The scene is Shanghal harbor. Lepp recen ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO , A Century of Science and | Engincering. of Queen‘s University, and Dean H. M. Mackay, of McGill University. Mr. Arthur Surveyer, President of the Engineering Institute of Canada, who was one of the principal speakers, was honored with a doctorate. Great Britain Gives Books to Tokio Imperial University By passing the diplomatie and conâ€" sular vote the House of Commons sanctioned the gift hy the British govâ€" ernment of $125,000 for the purchase of books in Great Britain for the Tokio Imperial University. f For Canadians the celebration is of special interest. As Rensselaer beâ€" came the pattern of all the colleges of science,and engineering on the conâ€" tinent, it naturally left its mark on several universities north of the bounâ€" dary. Moreover, not a few of the young men who, in the early days, contributed to the material developâ€" ment of the Dominion, turned to it for their education. One, John Fiske Barâ€" nard (‘50), who had constructed a number of the lines which were mergâ€" ed in the old Grand Trunk, became chief engincer after they were conâ€" solideted. Another, Edward Penneâ€" feather Rothwell (‘58), of Ingorsoll, became the most eminent mining enâ€" gineer of his day, founder of the Amâ€" erican Institute of Mining and Metalâ€" lurgical Engineers and editor of the "Engineering and Mining Journal." Two â€" graduates â€"still living â€"are Charles Macdonald (‘57), of*Ganan-' oque (where he still maintains a sumâ€" mer home), who designod and erected numerous bridges such as the famous Poughkeepsie Bridge across the Hudâ€" son, and John A. L. Waddell (‘75), of’ Port Hope, whose career has reached far beyond the two Americas. ‘ Among Canadian delegates to the: centennial were Sir Robert Falconer, President of the University of Toâ€" ronto, Dr. R. Bruce Taylor, Principal of Queen‘s University, and Dean H., The library of the university was desiroyed in the earthquake of last year, and this gift is in restitution. Râ€"3. w gro w gevm Few of those who enjoy the comâ€" forts and conveniences of life in 1924 realize how recent are the developâ€" ments in science and engineering which have made them possible. Yet Ronsselaer Polytechnic Institute, of Troy, New York, the oldest college of science and engineering in any Engiishâ€"speaking country, celebrated only the other day the hundredth anâ€" niversary of its foundation. Th Cypress Seeds ugh cypressâ€" trees in swamps their s nato frder water. _ recent r Berlin. y crrived in the commonly eds cannot Falconer, y of Toâ€" Principal Dean H. It is but 1831 years since Governor|{AM"D" i0 "N°0Z NC M Simcoe, the first governor of Upper‘m the big chain of lede Canada, removed the seat of govern. the Coppermine, Back‘s ment from Niagara across the lake{Th.w“ and other no to a tent pitched on a site just east of | 4r&in the area lying fro the present city of Toronto. Land in‘ north to the Arctic and the new provincial capital could no| th@ shores of Hudson B doubt have been obtained at that time] ,, Th® r0ute taken was very cheaply, and property on what tillery Lake past the s1 are now the downtown streets was| R@!!&nce, through the C farm land. A foot frontage more orland Aylmer lakes to Lal less would hardly be conlitrorod in reâ€"} g“ an adventurouns trip gard to values, but the surveyor of| {9"Y §Carcely visited by those days, as at present, required m-| ld‘l“ two hundred years cursey. Time has justified this need wcovered it. fortaccur::y.'ntch is evldommjt by a r1:- mt nirun iï¬ eente cent report of the assessment commisâ€" sioner of Toronto, which shows that A Prize Ba propeity located on the corner of ]{ing| «â€"â€"_â€"__ and Yonge Streets is now assessed at| Batisfaction â€" and _« $18,000 per foot frontage, or $1,500) come to us from many d per immch. Who could have foresecn ‘morning‘s mail brings a that t griginal tent of Governor that the baby of one « Fimcoe in 1798 would be a city of, wards has taken a prize "u0,000 people in 19247 | fairâ€"J. J. Kelso, se« With the extension of reilways, arcd| dren‘s Shelter, Toronto The Natural Resources Intelligence Service of the Dept. of the Interior at Ottawa says: While Canada has a large area of land, amounting to approximately 3,â€" 608,010 square miles, and it would seem that there should be plenty for everybody, at reasonable prices, the settlement of certain portions and its use for business purposes has greatly increased its value. In business centres, particularly, prices have reached such a height that the necesâ€" sity for accurate surveys shows the importance of this wor{, ard while, to the unthinking, the mattor of a difâ€" ference of a foot more or less need hardly be considered, a few yearsâ€"a comparatively brief space in the life of a nationâ€"may mean the establishâ€" ment of a community that will rapidâ€" ly become a metropolis, and a conseâ€" cuent enhancement of values to unâ€" believable heights. For a number of days during the middle of 1928 no spots were seen on the sun‘s disk. Just where the zero point for sun spots is gives rise to a difference of opinion. During the period of sunâ€"spot maxima the intensity of the northern lights in the lower. latitudes gives evidence of intense magnetic conditions. Bome spots do not produce marked northern lights, whi‘e others do. Just which A French architect named Knapp is being blesseod by the working people of France and has discovered at the same time, not only the way to become popular in this country, but also the menner in which to become the busiâ€" est architect in France. Old Sol‘s getting the "measles" again. Between February and August of last year the sun had a minimum of spots, Professor George H. Peters of the United States Naval Observatory, has obzerved. The number of spots now is increasing and will increase for a number of years. The sunâ€"spot cycle ocours every eleven and ons tenth years, says Professor Peters, and has just passed the imninimum in propect for 1984. He has drawn up plans for five difâ€" ferent types of small houses to be enâ€" tirely constructed of concrete. He has built one of each of these types of dwellings in wood. This wooden house is in turn lined with wood throughout, thus forming a huge mold for the conâ€" crete to be poured into. When the matrix house is raised with the aid of a crane the walls of a finished cotâ€" tage remain standing. Sunâ€"Spots Will Increase He has soldved the housing problem for the poorer working classes. His idea is simple but ingenious It is based on the principle that the workâ€" ing people themselves are indirectly responsible for the high cost of home building in France, and he has merely found the way to reduce enormously the expense of skilled labor in cottage building. CONCRETE COTIAGES BUILT N _ "FOUR WEEKS BY FRENCH ARCHITECT H.M.S. Hood, the flagship of the special serv!fe squadron which recently visited Canadaâ€"is shown steaming into the harbor of Plymouth, after com pleting a world voyage. Natural Resources Bulletin. ~ }A,_'m .. omm * Poigh w Smb 49: NW M > * * wa BR uit ts <l e $$9ee . %, Mpent teitee es 46o oo ds decutier W98 4." & m 4 c o ng 4 :' ue Phal d\k e l in t edne ue en iss whike Ns c . 6 c s w o ag se % in " t t ; 4 #x. # § : m , f y & '\’2 yoee % ; h 1 ... € » + , ; , 48 h ES hi 8 ° x Segy s td »Aitâ€"l by? cyd g 4 se‘ s 4 m g P 9. * 6. *# â€" * f k s N. 69 # > Pnd Leavil s * 3 uie o chuais 4 24 $ " § ' * is e > sMe h C 4 w d rediennt e Ned enet s ie i y [ Awadh c P toi h n h in ofthas ol f S l « + E: ?\;‘,â€"_ s neFs \ > & F4 * j P tase a mA Colys K+ ; R ‘9s k. ols e aK d ol o ie is 288. A & s Heers Eol c ons 9e Pvemive ht #i55% #2 > f ' * + n oR y mt ane & 324 h . %8; F Eartiee 4 e P K ; J y y E L j ; f s P : 6 - iss v.'\' P # f 3 MA y# F] 4 i~ h U > j % & B F *o en > 20 f § wetX, e ies d . x 4 for a Number of Years | _ Batisfaction _ and _ encouragement | come to us from many directions, This ‘morning‘s mail brings a letter stating ‘that the baby of one of our former wards has taken a prize at the county | fair.-â€"{._ J. Kglco, secretary, Chilâ€" The route taken was by way of Arâ€" tillery Lake past the site of old Fort Reliance, through the Clinton, Golden and Aylmer lakes to Lake Mackay. It was an adventurous trip through terriâ€" YTory scarcely visited by whites in the last two hundred years since Herne discovered it. + Canada‘s greatest natural resource is her ‘ands, and on the surveyor must she depend for the accurate subdiâ€" vision of that lard, that futwre citiâ€" sen« may not have causes for disputes over measurement. G. H. Blanchet, government director of surveys, is back in Winnipeg from the Barren Lands, after a lengthy trip by canoe through a country which is "terra incognita" to most white men. Completing first the survey of Great Blave Leke, begun in 1921, Mr. Blanâ€" chet and his party, fAifteen in all, headâ€" ed north and east into the Barren Lands to survey the area contiguous to the big chain of lakes from which the Coppermine, Back‘s, Yellowknife, Thelon and other northern rivers drain the area lying from Grea* Slave north to the Arctic and northeast to the shores of Hudson Bay. Surveyors Brave Perils in Wilds of Far North the cpening up of new areas, what is farm land toâ€"day may early become a city, and what in western Can..da may toâ€"day be bare prairie in a comâ€" paratively few years may be another Winnipeg. "Btanding room on the earth will be full up by the year 8000," said Professor Gregory at a meeting of the British Association. The world popuâ€" lation will be 700,000,000,000." In Chile all the universities are open to women on equal {erms with men, and nearly all professions are open to them. Chilean women have already distinguished themselves considerably in medicine, in dentistry and in literaâ€" ture. Each clear day of the year at noon Professor Peters photographs the sun, A photoâ€"heliograph with five inches aperture and forty feet local length is used. The image of the sun is taken on a plate four and a half inches in diameter. The light is thrown into the camera from the surface of an unâ€" silvered mirror. four weeks after buildign is comâ€" menced. Knapp‘s plans provide for two rooms, each of which are ten feet wide and twelve feet in length, and a kitchen, ball and cellar. The cost is 8000 francs (about $360), of which the owner of the house has to pay but 1200 francs in tash, the remainder being advanced for him by the French Govâ€" ernment, which lends him this money for one to thirty yeare at a very low rate of interest, under what is known as the "Loi Ribot" (the Ribot law). Twenty such houses have been sucâ€" cessfully erected at Troyes. Each of them, it is said, would cost no less than 25,000 francs if built according to the methods generally used at preâ€" sent in France in constructing conâ€" crete buildings. ~ Eight days is the actual time re quired to build these houses, the prices of which include the services of twenty workmen required to set up the woden mold and the use of the mold itself. Three weeks is required to purge the new building of dampâ€" ness. spots cause probable increase is a problem whi€h Professor Peters is working on now. Such a house can be ogcuphd within Equal Rights in Chile. A Prize Baby. sons until this can go on no JONE@T, Many sons of agriculturalists have abâ€" solutely no prospect of being able to secure farms in their homeland, and in addition there develops a supply of agâ€" , ricultural labor which is in excess of the demand. This has, for years, re sulted in a migration of some voiame. The Notherlands own colonies are, climatically, too unsuited to the purâ€" ‘suit of the agricultural activities to which these Dutch farmers have been accustomed, and hitherto this flow has gone in the main to the United States. The last United States quota law reâ€" duced the Netberlands immigrant quota‘by some three quarters, permitâ€" ting only 1,637 to enter in the year, A new bourn had to be sought, and the ;Holhnd League for Emigration gave |it as its opinion that Canada was the ‘most desirable and suitable land for Dutch settlers. . This delegation of editors spent their time in exhaustively studying the conditions of the country with a view to bearing this out and enâ€" couraging a move in this Gdirection through the influence of the press. ! Movement Purely Agricultural. | Unriformly they stress the fact that the constituent of such a movement would be almost purely agricultural. The emigration from Holland, which has always been in progress, shows ;9\'61')‘ tendency of increasing, and it | is not intended in any way to encour | age the departure of industrialists or | urban residents, Dutch farmers are particulaly successful in mixed farmâ€" ‘ing and dairying, and the editorial idolegatlnr! is looking more especially ;!nto sectors of the Dominion sullable j for such pursuits, and above all where | Dutch settlers have already located. Ancient Gold Coins Found _ on Banks of Red River Gold Coins, some of them of ancient vintage, and jewelled ornaments, the whole probably worth $2,000, were unâ€" earthed from a cache on the banks of the Red River, near Winnipeg, by boys playing on the besk. Their ownershin is unknowp. Bince ho was a boy the Prince Reâ€" gont has been much interested in the study of biology. He began collecting specimens while he was in the primâ€" ary grade of the Peer‘s school and amassed an important collcction as he grew older. It was destroyed by fire in the Takanawa palace after the great earthquale. He is said to know the name af every in in Japan. part of the Netherlands Government on the possibilities of the Dominion for the settlement of the surplus popuâ€" lation of the country. Not long ago the Dutch Settlers‘ Union issued a pamphlet giving information about Aagâ€" riculturall opportunities in the Doâ€" minion. This ie followei up by the visit of four of the foremost editors of the press of the country, and Canada can hardly fail to benefit extensively from the dissemination of their views upon their return. Prince Regent of Japan Plans New Biological Laboratory The Prince Regent of Japan is sponâ€" sor for & new biological labaratory which will be erected in the compound of the Akasaka Imperial Palace. The plans for the laboratory . are being drawn by the Prince himselt. Canada bas not been very well known in Holland up to recent years. Of late, however, there has been a gratifying interest exhibited on the The Dutch both in their transplanted â€" continent. in an extensive tour of the Dominion. They had one broad purpose solely in view, namely a close investigation inâ€" to the success of Dutch settlers alâ€" ready in Canada, and a study of Canaâ€" dian conditions, with a view to returnâ€" ing and encouraging a Dutch migreâ€" tion of some volume to Western Canâ€" ada. The situation in the Netherlands as presented by them is this. The entire arable area of Holland is settled and under cultivation. Farms have been subdivided by farmers amongst their 19 261 100 M i. sooiieietstetatnt delegation of Dutch editors, H. C. J. ® urweiy t o c T uo o delegauos €1 eAE t o Baron Van Lamsweerde of "De Tyd4," T. Cnossen of "De Standaard," M. J. Brusse Niewe of the "Rotterdamche Courant," and H. J. Brusse, who made _ ccenvematrn â€"tour of the M‘flk’n. 34 in the Yukon the North West " Most Successful e Duich are suc in their native now the name of every Alpine plant 06 in Nova Sco 638 in New Bri ish Columbia; 1. Prince Eiward kon Territory; : st Territories. iful Farmers. successful farnm recently by & l1 farmers and when American flocks of ind wheat, 4, whilst lucts are Bcotia; Brunsâ€" i; 14138 â€"leâ€" and TiE 1924 WOOL( CF THE DOMI ESTIMATED AT 12, to 13,000,000 Poy Percentage of Higher of Wool Steadily Inc in Canada. At Septe Canadian « the Canadi ly all out hands, whi wool! held ! @lso been 1924 is est 000,000 pou to the grow 000. The d proximate] when Onta pounds, All bec 4.682.6( which naturally p; wive sales on foreig? Canadian wool c0o: with that of any c« enly used extensiv« €ustry but is going extent to the foreip g‘noully recogniz« sheepmen are pro equal of similar cl grown elsewhere in Export and Domes Approximately ha of Canada remain manufacture. in t the Dominion «> pounds worth $1.947 ©34,433 pounds wort The United States wrchuer, taking worth $1,674.005 In late y« been wrou; Canada th and â€" mark comparativ Canada wa unsatisfact dian manu 1,455,58 stated to 1 other years worth $2 there is : trend of : to other : buying C tent than of the p: per ceni ©00 ; Woo futu prod in which en of in the th ad #1 erk in t gqua ma hig ore Iy T i1 mot 1 Acienc physiq Steps mission wembly protecti AI W Hely held Leag it w ount