‘ 5g..‘1 -var‘ ,:......, In gingham, oiflce. fabric and thrillingly low A well-rounded summer Children's fast color print ance of our Spring 4 Prowse Bros. Limited " ’ nnolv and snunorn rrrrunss mom LADIES’ soon Ladies Summer Dresses sub-crash, linens, plaids and seersuckers. We guarantee you'll practically dresses all summer. Ideal for home, town, or the Smart in fashioning, durable in wardrobe! We know you'll thrill to these carefully chosen fashion suggestions : CREY SHEEN DRESSES! LINEN DRESSES !. DOBY SPUN DRESSES! Lovely colors and fetching trims. Sizes 14to52————---'-""""" in a smart array of styles and colors — — — ' til f t th t offering the hal- n°" t °ml°°k ° “Coats .'I°o"§i. THIRD orr “live in” these in price — — - A demands a well-rounded $3.49 49¢ dresses. Sizes 8 to 10 ROYAL FOX FEED coming in {run all over he country indicate exceptionally line results from Loyal fed ranch!!- .Here is an excerpt from a letter received a few weeks stir: “We MW now looked at 82 females and have no pups, and have 5 more lltten yet¢pcome.W'eirad85plli|l9|’°m9 of our females." Results like this. ecmbinea with Ipynl economy and service FM" that your choice of MI feed “Ill year should be IN!"- Ihe St. John Milling company Ltd. saint John, N. B. KILLS ALL FLEAS EIIIIEV ON FOXES AND ALL FIJI!- BBAEING ANIMALS PULVEX kllle illhntly Ill (MCI. and ticks and prevents Immediate infestation. KILL! TERM 0'!‘ AND KEEPI THEM 01?. ee 1'0- order from your Fox Supply House or Draggist. CANADIAN C0-OPEEATIVI WOOL GBOWEBS LIMITED Oanadtan Distributors: ‘ with a strong. Frost Fox Fabric is Economy for the Fox Rancher Your pens are either an investrnerit or an expense . . . it is a wise invest- ment to enclose them wire fabric that will re- sist rust for the longest possible time, with no maintenance. R081.‘ CHAIN mm: name . . . gelvsslud eke: woven, and that is important. an unbroken. heavy east ei sins all over. giving moisture no foothold. Frost Pea Fabric is made in widths from 13 in. to 12 it. and in 12. it and IBM gauges. Samples inforrnatlnn on Frost Fabric and Steel Pens fine on request. flexible That of wire, with stocked and sold by : The DOMINION SILVER FOX FIIIIS, Ltd Summerside, P. E. I. ' 4-? CANADA,S FIRSTAAND BEST Fox Cubes FOR 6 YEARS ‘‘*I1_ I ' . ‘;‘J V Private edvfis received by the state the writl Y9P°I’Md in Alberta is thousands of force is greatly exag- Bill Oolpitts of Calgary. brother of Red Oolpitts of Salisbury, N. B. isgoinstotransferhisliups from the ground to sheds am: in order to movlde sufficient accommodation has under construction three miles of sheds. They will be raised two feet off the ground and each com- partment will be four feet wide by eight feet, long with a seven foot. front wall and a five foot back wall. The floor and front will be of one and one-half inch fifteen gauge wire netting and the back and par- titons of wood. The roofs will be shingled. The pups will be taken away from their mothers and placed in the sheds at about six weeks of age and left there until either mated up or pelted in the fall. The parent foxes will be turned out in larse runs leaving the breeding pens, dens, etc., unoccupied during the summer and arly fall months. The Colpitt’s Calgary ranch has some 1.600 pairs of breeding foxes and this year's production is over 6,000 pups. Anent the above, our criticism would be that 4 x 8 with the main wall entirely of wire would leave the shed pretty well open to the ele- ments and allow, sun, rain and snow easy access to the fox. Then again one and one-half inch mesh yilre does not seem small enough for the very young pups. The Norwegians use one inch mesh for their floors and it certainly is much better. Fred Colpitts is using a different method in his ranch. His sheds have wooden floors and shavings are used instead of straw to keep the foxes clean. He has several miles of sheds arlilciquite as large s farm as brother 3 The Manitoba Government, spur- red on by the Manitoba fur farm- ers. have just completed a. modern mperimental Farm, situated a few miles from the Winnipeg city limits, at the Manitoba University and Agricultural grounds. It will be in charge of our old friend Dr. J. A. Allen and is the second Experimen- tal Fur and Research Station estab- lished by him, the first being at Charlottetown, P. E. I. in 1918 and that is unique as being the world's first Experimental Fox Farm. of course the principal building will be the Laboratory, which is equipped with the most modern de- vices and there are also modern feed ltchens, observation tower and quarters for the help. The breed- ing pens are 28 feet long by 8 feet wide, with steel posts and heavy . The rear fl foot section is roofed and boarded on three sides. The animal to be used in the ex- periments have been donated by fox ranchers in the vicinity of Winnipeg and are said to be excellent stock. so the Doctor will not have a handicap of starting out with a poor bunch. Dr. Allen interviewed, said, “The principal object which we shall have in .view is to solve the common problems encountered in the breed- ing of fur bearing animals. My eon- frere and I will devote a lot of our time to the genetics of fur bearing animals so as to determine if poss- ible the factors involved in such problems as brown fur, smokey tips. poor density, white underful, etc. Our activities will not be confined solely to silver foxes and mink, but we will also investigate marten and fisher. If marten could be domes- ticated as are mink and foxes the annual fur production of Manitoba could be increased by $700,000.00 A few weeks ago Drs. G. Ennis Smith and John C. Jack of the Ex- perimental mix Farm at Summer- side, met the field men of the Can- adian Natlonal silver Ilbx Breeders Association and discussed with them the ya blems that the silver fox ranchers are called upon to contend with. Dr. Jack advised the pilling of ups fir seconds (round womis) at weeks old, and stated that unless a negative test was shown for worms every for should be pilled in the fall of the year. Dr. emits advised on giving of 1 \ SUNGL0 Iuneer-Pep Growing nations are Manufactured with and without Pipcsnbestartsl at from C esatelowkaet an on in... latices. use -rs‘: rur an-roxwrrn nssaramu. rpm wdghtl Iserh mm’m’:'n:?m'-1:‘ lerhggrswingpu-ied.upsrtiislr sltlbvvuishiz esllsastmsst. Ivee,hsasIs.‘ sltlsfsslfiell ruins! sores on r-once coivnscrsn wire Silver Fox Farming some food foliowint the use I! tetrschlorethylene, the use of which should be preceded by a fast for a good part of the day. 'ntrachlore- thylene for bookworms is the belt known remedy and !"i'rench's, Nenia Capsules and Glovers Verinlfuge all contain tetrachlotetbyene. In connection with the feeding of foxes Dr. Smith gave out as A gen- eral guide the proportion of meats (including fish) to cereals as one to one during summer two to one from September and three to one from November first. In addition they should be fed more roughage such as alfalfa meal and bran, also green vegetation including water- cress ond green vegetables —- not more than one-quarter ounce each meal. Milk is a well balanced food and some may be mixed in the la. tion—whole milk until the pups are three months. after that skim milk. Rice is a safe cereal it well cooked. safer than most cereals, but it needs one-half hours boiling. Fish, he said. is good food if not too fat and can be fed with cereals just as meat, is fed. He thought that the heavy meat feeding of some years ago was the cause of produc- ing samsons, but not wholly so. Fresh dry brewers’ yeast, which can be obtained at a reasonable price is excellent when fed in the proper quantities. The state Khme wardens at no- chester, Minna., have been reques- ted by citizens of the state to re- move a colony of beavers which have constructed a dam in Marion township near Rochester. This dam notwithstanding the efforts of the people living in the vicinity of Marion, has flooded one of the most travelled roads in that section, hence the kick. J. W. Ritchie of Busby. Alberta, writing in the American Fur Breed- er, gives the results of seven years experimentation in the breeding of martens. His original pair of marten muted in July, 1930. He had no suc- cess in raising young, although the two pairs he started with mated, until 1934 when he raised one kit and in 1035 his second female pro- duced cwo female kits. These he expects to be ready to breed this July and he anticipates better suc- cess with their young and probably larger litters, because they are ranch bred, while the pairs he star- ted with were wild caught marten. Re feed, he says they eat the same foods as mink and about the same quantity, Their health has been excellent. Mr, Ritchie predicts that eventually marten breeding will be the vogue and equally as popular and successful as silver fox or mink breeding. Years ago muskrat. farming was started in Great. Britain and im- portations of animals made from Canada and the United states. These became a nuisance and four years ago a bill was introduced to control the keeping of these animals in Great Britain, and no one was allowed to keep muskrats except in proper wired in enclosures and they must have licenses. Those which escaped bred and became a menace and were trapped by expert trappers appointed by the government. In one country three years ago 2,500 animals were caught in that way. Their spread has been kept down but the government in a. report says it is not yet possible to state with certainty that the musk- rat has been exterminated in Eng- land and Wales, since one or more stray specimens or even a breeding polr, may yet survive in some re- mote spot. We thought raccoon farms were a thing of the past. but we note by an exchange J. W. Marlowe, Charles City, Iowa, will start a raccoon farm on a recently purchased property near Mitchell, Iowa. Raccoon pelts bring good money. but the trouble is that they eat so much their pro- duction is not a paying venture. Wild raccoon are said to be fairly plentiful in the vicinity of East Point. and a farmer who is also famous as a trapper, gets from thirty to forty raccoon pelts every year. The same man has trapped a lot of silver black foxes, none of which bore tattoo marks in their BN8. one or two were excellent specimens and he has kept them for breeding purposes. L who are ‘ ganadian National - of the silver For n Association are e ' ‘ that all foxes must be tattooed prior to August 16th and registration pep- ers forwarded to Ottawa. Each rancher makes his own arrange- ments about tattooing, that is to BB)’. he can tattoo his own foxes or 0311 Employ In ex-inspector or any other party who has the requisite skill and paraphernalia. The ex- penee involved in being a mom‘ of the Canadian National is new V01’! light the only charge being 01.00 for each for kept and rqumg- ed. and membership fee, Q The liestnl dsarllss ‘I'll m)Nl.Iu.W will pruent the “ahrisglgf as Ont" in 0 at Bell ll-Nh_’ at !..-68e1- -gill SE12! SLO’! hlACllINl—-3.0. ILP. seised a slot rnaclaine atNorth R/ustico yesterday. It understood that court action will follow. ' TE! PBISBYTIIIAN CHIJIOB IN OANADAP-Divine worship will be held on Sabbath next in Galvin Presbyterian church, Mermaid, at 3:30 p. in. Rev. M. Scott Pultmr will preach. 1..-our-1-as-u ‘I'll YIIBBYIIIIAN Church in Canada. Divine worship will be held on sabbath next as follows: Hartsville, ll 8. m.; Brookfield, 3 -p.m.; Glasgow Road, 7:50 p. m. Rev. G. Osrlyle Webster, interim-modem ates, will preach. L-out-'l-Iii-ii BOLOIST AT ST l'AUl.'B—The Rev. Robert Messervey will be the soloist at both services at Bt.Psul's Church on Sunday. Mr. Messervey will render selections from Men- delssohu's oratorio, "Elijah". Prof. Louis D. Thompson will be at the organ. POLICE COUil'I'—-At the police court ymterday a drunk and dis- orderly was fined five dollars and costs or ten days in Jail and s drunk and incapable was sent to Jail for ten days while a third drunk was fined three dollars and costs or nve days in Jail. A man appeared on a charge of wife beating and was re- manded. Two vagrant: were allowed to leave town. EXHIBITION ENTRIES FOB LIVE s'l‘0CK—-To comply with the request of the Live Stock Branch. Ottawa, all Exhibition entries in the Registered Classes should be made with the Secretary on or be- fore August lst instead of August 4th. Get your Registration Certifi- cates in order at once as the regu- lations set out in the Prize List will be strictly followed. J. W Boulter, Secretary, Pivvinclsl Ex- hibition Aseociation. L-598:! DEPAB/l.'MEN'l‘ OFFERS ASSIS- 'I‘ANCE—In talking to the Ministrr of Agriculture. he informs us that his Department is very anxious to have a few pure bred mares of ill‘ have on the Island. With this idc" to make selections. purchase, and pay costs of freight and insurance on animals if ordered in the near future. MR. GEORGE W. DOCEEITY. Cherry Valley, announces the en- gngement of his daughter was Ins Ruth of Somervllle, Msss., be Mr. Burton R. Cochrane of Arlington. Mass, son of Mr. and Mrs. William B. Cochrane of Margarltsville, Nova scotla, marriage to take place in the near future. L-6346-7-25-ll. BRADALBANE PASTORAL CHARGE, Rev. Arthur Wallis, B.A., Pastor, Sunday, July 28th: Pleasant Valley, 11 a. m., special service fol- lowing renovation of church inter- ior; Rose Valley. 3 p. m.. service of Dedication of the new "Hymnary”. presented to the congregation by the Young People's society. Choir assisted in suitable music by the Bnadaibane Choir; Brsdalbane, '1 p. m. L-5358-'1-26-1i THE BAPTIST CHURCH — The Rev. H. L. Denton will preach mom- ing and evening at the Baptist Church tomorrow. ‘ _, School is held in connection with the morning service with story period for juniors and regular study hour ot 12 o'clock to 12:80. At the mom- lng service Miss Pearl Burns, con- tralto, will sing. Miss Lillian Mac- Kensie will be in charge of the music of the day. TRINITY UNITED cnuncn — The services Sunday next will be conducted by the pastors. Rev. Hugh Miller will preach both morning and evening, taking for his theme in the morning “Unanswered Prayer", and in the evening, "The Value of the Insignificant." The Sunday School meets in the ‘Ksaflr: ‘ldlsmiglrglal ‘eff’: taking Dari: 11 open 0 morning service. The music for the day will include a duet, "Thou Re- main ‘, Blast Redeemer", by Mrs. W. H. Macltse of the let Presbyter- ian Church, New Glasgow, and Mr. Jae. Oslder. Visitors are cordially “ ‘ to worship at '1‘rinity.Unlbed Church. Gill. GUIDE IN CHURCH PARADE A1‘ Gl.onGI:'l‘0WN— on Sunday evening. July llth, the Provincial Girl Guides in camp near Georgetown attended divine service in the century old St. David's United Ohiueh. They pre- sented a fine appesreuw and were one the other. Skim mik is pre- ferable to whole milk at this season heavier type placed in the hand: 0‘ , farmers in the Province. so that w: ' may receive the full benefit frorr ‘ the high class of stallions that W “ in mind, the Department is willing 3 and pure ingredients l n_.____._— Sflfmv/N W/LL /AM" ‘ PROD UC T5 - Pankelled. variously tinted C. acnee. . .wl'iicli, in I 13380 combinations for new Flat-Tone is eco_noini%rel_-OI °I¢l;oq“"" °°""' clan and bemmfu —thTt:‘id?n?tify Sherwin-Williams products. To see what S-W Flat-Tone will do for the walls and ceilings of your home. come in and examine our tint folder on this re- markable paint texture! walls and old. wash. w-“- -.~ well within '°*°.'* Y“ M m°**°""=:. :.:':.‘.'..t ......'““° “‘.:.‘.'.....: alarge And it has of th verags and S.-“‘'/ Flat- decorative 1535; surface: it the durable S. W. P. House PAINT Sherwin-Williams quality at the price Of ordinary paint outside 33-’ Ask for color cards ‘ CHAR LOTTETOWN heartily welcomed by the pastor, Rev. John sterling, as well as the large congregation present. An ex- cellent sermon, nppropflaig to the occasion, was delivered from the words found in St. Luke 2: 49, “Wlst ye not that I must be about my Father's business." The Guides made a splendid contribution to the interesting and impressive service by rendering in concert their beautiful prayer, and also by Joining with the congregation in the hymns and . p0IlBlVu reading. The preacher emphasised the im- portance of comprehending in early youth the true meaning of life and exhorted the Guides to prepare i“emselves in mind, and spirit to assume their rightful re- sponsibility in the remaking of a world in which chaos and misery prevail as a result of human greed and seliishneu. He expressed the S llN iOG L0 pi.-..‘.. ass-soo hope that the training received by them as Guides would stimulate their seal for the eternal veiitier of life and enable them to realise the folly of pursuing the baneful and frivolous pleasures so rampant in the present age. Living_ thus. they would experience the joy and satisfaction of those who earnestly endeavour to follow the Great Guide. Personals Mrs. Mary Murphy and Mrs. Ann Mcconnell of Brookline, Mass, are guests of Mr. and Mrs. George McQuald of this city. Mil’. and Mrs. W. C. Knight of HNHT Monctan returned on Friday by motor after a very pleasant visit with friends and relatives on the IT’S SEA FOOD TIME! 'And it’s all at it’s best at Roop’s now! Freshly caught fish of all kinds ready for your pans. Here are some suggestions. FRESH HADDOCK locperlb. 5 FRESH HADDOCK FILLETS .. .. . . . .. 18c Der lb. FRESH HALIBUT .. .. 25cperlb. FRESH SALMON . . . . . . .. . 32c & 35¢ Der lb. WEEK END MEAT SPECIALS FRONT QUARTERS LAMB .. (Boned and Rolled) ; CORNED BEEF (anycut).....-.-....-....... l2cperlb. FRESH SAUSAGES 17c perlb. ROLLED ROAST BEEF... ROOP’S . LIMITED" 125 Girsfton Street l9cperlb. . . . . . 20¢ per lb. Island. They were accompanied by their daughter, Mrs. Moore. and grandchildren, Hugh and Margaret Moore. Racine, Wis. Mr. and Mrs. James E. Trainer and family of Waterville, Maine. on visiting the Island. They are tbs guests of Mr. '1‘rainor’s mother, Mrs P. J. Trslnor, Johnswner River. Mrs. (Dr.) Farrell and daughter Eleanor, of Medford, Mas, are visit- ing friends on the Island and are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. B. '1‘. Gallant, of this City. . KEEP 'l'IDY—0n. ELSE SANDY, Bedfordshlre, En8.—(0- P.)—-Council here wrote to see bet- ter house gardens. and its ultimatum to citizens is to "keep tidy garden! or you will have to quit." We Deliver.