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In vie«r of the fact that Ontario is increasing so rapidly in the volame of fruit which it prodncBB annually, it becomes of tho greatest importance thit we dhould look around for new markets, and that wo should take advantage of evory opportunity afforded us of increasing our sales in evory direction. Although we now produce large quantities of fruit, we grow but a tithe of what we could grow provided we could find sufficiently large markets for our surplus. This subject has been given me, I presume, for the reason that travelling as I do across the Dominion every year, and sometimes twice a year, I have opportunities of becoming fairly familiar with the country and its products. Extent op Country. — I shall first call your attention to the extent of this cout.try. r.Ianitoba extends 320 raile-j along the 0. P. R , and has its tv/o additional southern lines running parallel ; it has also a line running north in the Dauphin Lake territory. A very important point in connection with the demand in any country for fruit is the number of villagea, towns and cities to be supplied. W'unipeg now his a population of 40,000, Brandon 6,000, Portage la Prairie 4,500, and besides these larger towns there are many small places v.ith a population varying from 200 to 1,000 or more in each. In addition there is a large population of farmers scattered through the country, and most of them, owing to the good crops which have been grown there for some years past, are very well to do, and as far as I know the peoplu there are exceed- ingly fore! of fruit and willing to pay almost any reasonable price for a good article. The cheaper it is, however, the larger the consumption wiil naturally be. Passing on to the Territories, we have a further stretch of settled country for 200 miles beyond the Man- itoba boundary until we reach what is known as the Moosejaw district, where the gen- eral settlement of the country practically ends. Beyond that, for another 400 mileH, until you reach the foot hills of the Rocky Monntaios tho country, is more or less arid, and while agriculture is quite possible where irrigation can be practised the greater part of the country is bare of any attempts at cultivation, and is mostly used for ranch- ing, bands of cattle and horses being kept at different points. As you approach within fifty miles of the Rocky mountains, you reach the town of Calgary, another important centre of population vs-ith about 4,500 people. It is also a railway centre, having a line running north for 200 miles to Edmonton, passing through many villages and small towns on the way to the terminus, and another line running south to Fort McLeod, which connects with the Crow's Nest Pass Railway at that point, and carries supplies to the population in the mining districts. So you see, taking those sections of the Terri- tories together with the eastern part, Regina w'th its population of 2,200, Qu'Appelle with about 1,000, and Broadview 800, and a number of other small places along the main line tcether with the branch line runnin" from Recin.^ fco Prince .A^lbsrh 250 milf".§ von /- \M y^d have a stretch of ctuntry which although as yet sparsely populated is filling up with a fair amount of rapidity, many thousands of new settlers coming in every year, some from Europe and some from the United States. Throughout this whole region there is a grow- ing demand for fruit which will admit of a consumption far exceeding anything we have at present any idea of, provided we can get the surplus stock which can be easily pro- duced in Ontario landed there so as to be sold at reasonable rates. Talking with a gentleman from Prince Albert eome time ago on this subject of fruit, he said, " Why, we have been bo accustomed to pay about fifteen cents a pound for fruit that now it has got down to eight and ten cents a pound it seeme to be a comparatively cheap article of diet, and we are ma'king use of it very freely " Fbuit Growing in the Nobth-wkst Country.— I shall next call your attention to another aspect of the subject, and consider what these people living in this district, extending for a thousand milf s from east to west, and 350 from north to south, are able to do for them- selves in the way of growing fruit. The cultivation of strawberries has been tried at a great many difierent points in this part of our country, and it has not been attended with much success. Strawberry vines are hardy, but in the autumn, about the time when the young runners begin to root, the ground in the NorthWest is usually so dry that for an inch or two the soil becomes almost like ashes, and the winds are so frequent that the vines are rarely still, and the runners are blown about from point to point and never stay long enough in one place to send out roots, and for that reason there is seldom much success in propagating the strawberry. Where irrigation can be practised that diffi- culty can be overcome. Under such circumstances plots of strawberries may be grown with a fair measure of success as far as multiplication of the plants are concerned. But there is another difficulty to contend with. In the springtime it often happens that heavy frosts occur in the morning and a hot sun jshines during the day. This occurs usually in April and sometimes in the early part of May, after the strawberries are in flower, and you know the effect of severe frost on strawberry blossoms — it destroys them completely, and so lessens the crop that strawberry growing cannot be relied on any- where as a profitable industry, and this fruit is chiefly grown by amateurs. Raspberries are cultivated more successfully, and some fairly good crops are grown in some parts of Southern Manitoba, and also in the neighborhood of Winnipeg, but there is not a sufficient supply to give the general public what they war^t in this line. Black cap raspberries are ess hardy, and blackberries are usually too tender. Red and white currants can be grown very successfully all over Manitoba and the Territories, provided there are no severe spring frosts t ) injure the crop after the blousoms open ; in that case they can be depended on as a tairly reliable crop. The same may be said of black currants, a.i the varieties of which are hardy and succeed well, and, barring the effect of frosts, where they get a favorable season the crops are usually good. Among th»i large fruit no success in'a general way has attended the efforts to grow apples, pears, such plums as we grow in the east, or grapes. At the Experimental Farm at Brandon — and similar experiments have been carried on 200 miles further west at the Experimental Farm at Indian Head — we have tested over 200 varieties of Russian apples of the hardiest sorts that can be found. We have also tested all the hardy varieties of pears, plums and cherries, and have also tried a large number of small fruits, None of the lj>rger fruits have succeeded, although we have been working on this line at Brandon and Indian Head for more than ten years. We have sent thousands of apple trees to these farms but have never yet succeeded in producing an apple. Hence, as you see, we have not had much encouragement thus far. Near Morden in Manitoba, which is in the Red, River Valley and south of Winnipeg, at an altitude very much the sanoe as that of Winnipeg, that is about 700 feet, or nearly 500 feet lower than the ex- perimental farm at Brandon, there is one farmer who has an exceptionally sheltered spot who has grown fair crops of crab apples on a few trees, and he has also produced a few larger apples of several Russian varieties. This is 3onsidered quite a feat in that coun- try, and is chronicled in the newspapers, and specimens are photographed and made much of, showing that it is a feat not often or very easily accomplished. I visited this plantation sevcsral years ago. 't is owned by Mr. Stevenson, who is an enthusiast in this work. There have also been a few crab apples produced in the neighbor-hood of Winni . iSAnU&'k >m 8 peg, and a few more in Southern Manitoba, and that is about the extent to which these fruits have been grown in that country thus far. I visited Edmonton, 200 miles north of Calvary, several years ag;o, and almost the first person I met when he knew who I was and where I came from said, " Oh, you must go and see Mrp. So andSo's garden; she has got a Tetofsky apple on a tree, and you must see that before you go." So I went over to see this prodigy, and there happened to be an American friend travelling with me with a camera, so I asked him to come along and take a photograph of this wonderful fruit When we got ther^ we found that the apple was not a Tetofsky apple at all, but a Whitney Crab, (Laughter ) As there was but one specimen on the lower part of the tree, and it was pretty well covered with foliage and the lady was much disappointed when ib was pronounced to be a crab, we left the place without taking a photograph of this fruit. Altitude in the Northwest country often makes more difference and. stands more in the way of success i i the growing of trees and shrubs than latitude ; hence in going west, as you rise higber and higher the difficulties increase. At Brandon, where the altitude is 4!iO feet greator than it is at Winnipeg, we have had no such success as that I refcrrod to as having been had by Mr. Stevf nson near Morden. The only variety of fruit that can be called an apple which we h%ve yet prodmeed at Brandon is the berried crab Pyrus baccata, a small crab which grows wild in the northern part of Siberia. This fruit, which is about as large as a cherry and with a stem almost as long would scarcely be recognizf d in this country as an apple — yet it is valuable for making jelly, for most of ).)u no doubt know that jelly comes chiefly from the core, seeds and under the skin of the' apple, and as these little apples are nearly all core seeds and skin they make more jelly per pound than the larger apples would, and it is just as good. We are, however, trying some experiments at Ottawa which I hope may result in increasing the size of this apple. The Pyrus baccata has been crossed with such apples as Tetofsky, Duchess, Yellow Transparent, Fameuse and Ribston Pippin and qui*:e a number of other varieties, includ- ing some of the hardier Russian forms, and we have now growing at Ottawa 750 of these young cross bred trees, eich one of which is a distinct variety, and wp are hopincr, by mul- tiplying the chances in this way, to produce something good eventually, and trust that in a few years we shall be able to thus improve this small, wild Siberian crib and increase its size so as to make it a tolerably useful apple to the people in the Northwest country. We do not expect to produce such varieties as will be competitors to any extent with the fruit that Ontario could ship there, but if we could grow an apple equal to the Transcendant crab and produce it in abundance it would be worth hundre Is of thousands of dollars to that country. In many districts remote from railways tho people seldom taste fruit at all, and to he able to prow fruit as paUtable as the Transcendant crab would be something to be prond of Householders would rejoice in such a production to an extent which these of you who are privileged to be surrounded by beautiful fruits can scarcely under stand. Besides, the growing of such apples in that country would not only add largely to the comforts of the householder, but would give the climate of the country an addi- tional recommendation As you go further westward the altitude increases, and by the time you reach Calgary you have attained an elevation of 3,388, If so little can be done at Brandon at a height of 1,150 feet, but little success can be expected in the higher altitudes In Manitoba in the river valleys, in thp lower altitudes, the wild plum is common and usually fruits well, but the quality of the fruit is very variable, A large proportion of the trees produce inftricr fruit. Some of them, however, have fruit which is very acceptable to the people, and it varies in color as the wild plum does in the east, from yellow to red. The trees are generally hardy, and they will not only grow in the river valleys, but when transplanted to higher altitudes most of them will grow and bear well The Sand Cherry, Pricnus pumila, is also found throughout most of that section of the Dominion, growing in many localities as far north as Prince Albert, where the fruit is produced in considerable abundance. The fruit of this shrub varies also, like the wild plum, very much in its quality and character. Some bushes produce cherries that are quite a good size. I hwe seen them nearly as large as the English Morello ; then again you find them but little more than a skin stretched over the stone, with no pulp at all worth speaking of, and not only astringent but bitter. By selecting the best of these varieties of /herry. been done at Brandon, /xo^ur and growiLg teedlings from them and propagating these by layers and distributing them among the people, we are doing a work which ia much appreciated. Should the • xperi- ments now being tried on the Fyrua Bacmta prove succcHsful, and the further work of producing good varieties from the wild plum and tho Sand Cherry by careful selection meet with good rfHults, we have along theie three lines of work some promise of useful fruits for this westf rn country in the near future. Some Native Fruits. — In some districts wild strawberries are found, but not to any extent— the wild raopberry is much commoner. The fruit of the wild black currant is also common, and is uhoI very gpnerally, thoush it is rather strong in flavor. The Saskatoon berry is another favorite fruit in that country, and in plentiful years it is collected in large quantities and dried. The fruit is very much like what we know in the east as the Shad bush or June berry, and reminds one somewhat of the Blueberry in its flavor, and is a very good berry, especially if you are fruit hungry and cannot get anything else of that sort to eat. The Pin Cherry, Prunus Pennsi/lvanica, which grows in the east also has a very small fruit, yet it is regarded there with favor by many people, who gather it and uake jims and jellies from the little pulp there is over the stone ; and by gathering plenty of the fruit ono can succeed in getting a reasonable amount of jelly. These smaller fruits, with the wild plum, the Sand Cherry, and further east down towards Rat Portage the Blueberry, make rather a meagre bill of fare. Hence there is a very lartje demand for good fruit, most of which Ontario and British Columbia could cupply, but up to the present time about eighty per cent, of it has been supplied by the United States, nomo of it coming from California, some from Oregon and Washington, and some from the Western States of Illinois, Michigan and Minnesota. ft sterns scarcely creditable to the enterprise of our fruit growers that four-fifths of all the fruit that is at present used over this whole stretch of country, populated at present probably by nearly 250,000 people, is sent in from the United States. Were is a market that Ontario should do something to capture. Fhuit Growing in British Columbia —Let us see what British Columbia is do- ing, and what sho can probably sufiply. CrosHing the Rocky Mountains at a height about 5 000 or 6,000 feet you descend on the other side into what is known as the Columbia Valley, where the first crossing of the Columbia River occurs In this valley, from Golden to Donald, which is at an altitude of about 2,530 feet, and much sheltered by hioh mountains, some experiments are being carried on in fruit growing, and although they have not been conducted long enough to demonstrate much, still there seems to be fair prospects of success with some of the hardier fruits in that valley. Tht Col- umbia River flows north at tho first crossing, and makes a great bend above the base of the Selkirk range of mountains, and then flows south, so that after crossing the Selkirks, which form the second range of mountains at about the same altitude as that at which the Rockies ure crossed, you descend into another valley whore the Columbia is crossed the second time, and there the altitude is less. At that second cro- sing, at Re.velstoke, it is only 1,475 feet— about 300 feet higher than we have at Brandon— and much more abeltered There tho climate is milder, and along that river valley from Revelstoko down to Rossland there have been within the last three or four years some very success- ful ffforts made in the way of growing small fruits, and there are a few old-timers who have been there a number of years who have had apples and other trees which have been producing of late fairly good crops of fruit. Hence that may he taken as the beginning of the fruit growing district, or thn eastern extremity of the fruit growing districts of British Columbia. After the third range of mountains known as the Gold range, is crossed, which is not nearly as high as either the Rockies or Selkirks, you strike another series of valleys at a point which you vill fird on the railway guide marked as Sycamous, a station which is 1,300 feet a^)Ove the sea level, an 1 stands at the head of what is called the Spulmacheen valley which extendi south about 30 miles, and south of that lies the Okanagan valley, which moat of you have heard of as a fruit growing district, where Lord Aberdeen has a large ranch, and has a 200 acre apple orchard which is coming into bearing very nicely. Ther-) is quite a large number of apples pro- duced in (hat valley, but they get prices such as you would not dream of getting here, I tr-^velled ' " ' I I through that district in August !a§t and visited I I I Aberdeen's ranch at Coldstream, which is in the upper part of the Okana^an Valley, and another or hard which he has near the town of Kelowna, situated about the middle of the valley. At Kelowna the manager told me he had sold all his apples to a firm in that town at three cents a pound. All he had to do was to pick them and take them in in boxes, not packed in any way, and they undertook to pack thera and ship them to the mining district s, and were doing fairly well with them, buying them at that figure. At the other ranch the manager said he was not willing to take such a low price, that he was doing better by shipping them direct to the mining districts. $1 80 a bushel would be considerel a pretty good price for apples in this neighborhood, but there it was not regarded as anything ox'raordinary. Such prices are mainly duo to the difficalties of getting fruit in from the outeide on account of the great distance from the points of pro- duction and the expanse of transportation. In the Okanagan valley there are large numbers of varieties of apples grown, and they do very well, and bear abundantly. There are also a number of pears produced, such as the Birtlett, Flemish Beauty, Anjou, and other good sorts, and thest^ also bear well. Plums bear abundantly and cherries also have good crops, but the season is not long enough there for the ripening of grapes. The season is too short also in the Ooast climate of British Columbia to permit of grapes ripeningwell ; so that as far as grapes are concerned Ontario has no competitor in this western country as far as the Dominion is concerned. California is the only country which c»n compete with you in that particular. J was surprised on going through the Okanagan valley last year to find in several places quite a number of peach trees in bearing. I had heard of peach trfes down there doing wonderfully well, but liad never before seen any trees with fruit oa them, and as this was my third visit to the valley I began to think that possibly they never bore; but this year there was a coDsid-rable quantity of peaches of good quality, some of which I had the plea'iure of testing on the tiees, which sold in the orchards at five cents a pound, and must have netted their owners very good returns. Fruit in thk Coast Climate.— Starring from the terminus of the Canadian Pacific Railway at Vancouver, and coming east again, we have between Van- couver and the Co^st rangi of mountains— which is the last range you cross in going to the Pacific Ocean — about 100 miles of territory in which there are a large number of valleys where the land is rich and the country shelterei by mountains, and the climat* in very niucli like the climate of Enj^land Here apples, pears, plums and cherries can be urown in the grentest abundance. Plums I have never seen grow so abundantly anywhere ns in tha*; region, and the apple trees also bear very heavily. Throughout this whole territorry a great deal of enterprise has been shown of late years in fruit growing, aid orchinls are being planted in every direction. During th^ past year, 189P, the weather has been warmer than usual, and at Aga-^siz. where the Experi- mental Farm is located for that Province, which U 70 miles east of Vancouver, we have succeeded in ripening qiiitn a number of varieties of grapes, includitii,' ihe Delawjre, Aga- wam, Brighton, and a niimt>erof other sorts, some of which have not ripened on that farm in any season V>efore. The ex|terience of this year ahoj