Canada west : 350,000,000 bushels wheat in 1915 : Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta . ir success indicates thatcorn will become an important crop in this district. OTHER AUTHENTIC YIELDS REPORTED FROM DIFFERENTPARTS OF ALBERTA IN 1915. WHEAT OATS /\tre nr i\Lro Rlddellvale—R B Kiddell 110 51 40 fi / ? \ •r~\/~i ,i -i i ii 1 1 A 4o Oft 80 tamrosc—F I Farlcv 60 34 50 12 73 Ridgedotigh—Campbell Bros. 35 40 20 77 25 Scotstown—R S Tod 13 44 33 R. S. Tod 15 47 Hanna J. W. II OA£U 30 14 80 G. A. 300 35 60 65 200 34 Innisfree—S. D. Horgan 880 35 250 70 Richdale— W. A. Pinkerton 90 37 5


Canada west : 350,000,000 bushels wheat in 1915 : Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta . ir success indicates thatcorn will become an important crop in this district. OTHER AUTHENTIC YIELDS REPORTED FROM DIFFERENTPARTS OF ALBERTA IN 1915. WHEAT OATS /\tre nr i\Lro Rlddellvale—R B Kiddell 110 51 40 fi / ? \ •r~\/~i ,i -i i ii 1 1 A 4o Oft 80 tamrosc—F I Farlcv 60 34 50 12 73 Ridgedotigh—Campbell Bros. 35 40 20 77 25 Scotstown—R S Tod 13 44 33 R. S. Tod 15 47 Hanna J. W. II OA£U 30 14 80 G. A. 300 35 60 65 200 34 Innisfree—S. D. Horgan 880 35 250 70 Richdale— W. A. Pinkerton 90 37 50 54 B. Hall 40 33 7 70 S. W. Jackson 32 25 72 E. T. Coghlan 65 30 89 J. McCluskey 55 43 40 75 E. S. Stafford 42 54 35 80 E. S. Stafford 48 35 J. Burns 30 43 8 10 McNaUy—T. Moran 580 35 40 95 Vegrevllle—E. B. Wagar 39 25 59 H. Trenhaile 55 Hawkdale—W. Havden & Sons 25 25 55 W. Havden & Sons . 40 40 50 Youngstown—A. W. Lyster 50 41 40 55 Lamont—R. J. Torrie 90 30 195 50 J. Alton 70 30 70 50 H. Schultz 48 32 78 41. A Paying Western Farm. —A sample of the productiveness of Canadianfarm lands is found in the experience of Mr. D. H. Engle of Humboldt, Iowa,who owns a quarter-section in Gleichen, Alberta, He rented this quarter onthe basis that the renter w as to furnish everything except threshing and haul-ing, and one-third of the net receipts were to go to the owner. Although only80 acres were in crop, Mr. Engle received a profit of $, which was hisnet rental of the land for one season. ALBERTAS THREE DIVISIONSNorthern Alberta.—North of the end of steel extends 75 per cent of thisrich province, yet unexploited. When the railways push into Athabaska andPeace river districts it will be realized that Alberta owns an empire north of theSaskatchewan, a country set apart by nature to provide homes for millions ofagrarian people, when the plains to the south are filled up. This northernportion varies from great open stre


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectagriculture, bookyear