T 11651213151’ THE CHARDOTTETOWN GUARDIAN SEPTEMBER 11, 1938 FOR FARMERS, STOCK ABREEDERS and GARDENERS ~ NEWSY NOTES = B! AGBlO-OLA Prwnna b; Pro With t e Directors LNUI PINT (‘ART ll -\GE ti: ‘o niiii . l~ Vii‘ 15m and Comm un lcafc with rask Well 00., Ltd. Vaiii-"hrin H. Groom, Siimmcrside in Fa r hinnzigcr for l’. E. Island urncrl for scveiitv-cn days. till its: by n rivul who forrrwl on one war ARE SOY BEANS NEOLECPED? There is an article _ Cnnruln ncglcciing the Soy Bean? ' own qucry bv comparing the 8600 ncrcs of sojvhccins grown in On- turio with tlic 3.000.000 acrcslzrown in the United states. Furthermore. Canada imported soyu. valued at nearly $700000 in 1037, flmclll De of B‘; 'DAIRY.TOPICS time I f I]! In O0- Qt .....::..»:.r::::i....::'.= "c" "- e whole of Sicily had fallen be- ; the Runic lPhonerlani arms; city of Syiucus. besieged by pcszilcnce broke out. 1111' are apparently low 50f the cow w secure lmguc P» . _ ._ .ii"us arc the iii luullv 1n i‘ ill-assorted 'l‘.. produce the prai cal i Irom lvllvll- P~"0!1fl'l_\‘ bolanccd _ ifi- ' '.'. 115 the tile best iccd . for ‘udc rm r of zhcse ya uable 1Jr0chicts. l 0rd er .r' er- h "e hlSVDYI- l u=r>rl th 0. 1i s... l . i~ bu’, ill to li suvczcdcci Willi thcni. and ovbc ans " pcr cr-zii oil and H0 All".‘ltf‘!‘ analysis the Iil ‘nor _ gives, protcin 35 ncr c oil is ll . wntvi‘ f RS3 cllrr mcthori." luv prlici” thnt. works like n OUPFII‘ n": lll tho cylinrlcr’ 1... of their old antagonist. too’ lino. the city was . . - inhabitants butch-cred. flu: torch illfilllCfl. Czivlluvlo was a lioap of oshcs: thcii tlic in thnt England is confrontod is now thrcatrning unothcr. headed "Is bcr of The tho September num nmvrcrs its mci-‘s MfiiZRZltlc_ it products l l l In accordance with the P. Agriculture policy of assisting Island farmers to oh- tain Ground Limestone at low pared to ship limc in cnrlots more to nil Island points at two dollnrs and eighty cents ($2.80) pcr ton delivered l and fifty-five cents ($3.55) per ton delivered in bags. These prices are in effect until Dec. 31st, 1938. Bruckville Manufacturing 00., Ltd. lirookville, St. John County, N. B. H. G. S. ADAMS. MANAGER. E. I. Department of’ price, we are now pre- of thirty (30) ions or n bulk and three dollars iii 111 mflny Darts of Ontario feeds in mineral constituents and it. is impossible sufficient minerals from the rations supplied to meet the demands o: znr body. This condition is flint indicated by zii-c sicainrri bone and bone flour. ciihcr Calcium or same n the zinimnl, ir is as sure a liberal supply of _ rations uili do niuch to prevent the trou- blc. Sicumr-zi bone incril is probably i0 use in providing iii [modern , ' as it contains both F‘!l“l',"'l*"5 in Pl yporus. To each ' l i‘. piilnds of concou- >ll' 3i "i. _ tuic and mo pounds of 311ml‘ of mr-rccnory __ ___ 10215 now returned from Sicily ‘_“—‘_‘_"__-—'"—" "bclllorl. by wnirii and is likel to increase its imports _Z\fy soy beans in r-lie garden are ripening. and the IEHVCSBTB taking on tne golden sheen which denotes _ _ that harvest tim-~ is drriwin near. so now Prague is to be pm- ,.é_fllll1vgrnllbillrflllnlllr r-hLc The leaves fall early and y Iéie nounced Pyalqg, what are we 30mg .. .. me s cnci of the month tlic beans will be to do about Longfeumv-s payable unce. of the torrid sort that lei bore polcs. as the ancient beginning- ' " rs used to soy- In previous I have pulled the stems up "1 have read. in some old mar- v and mriric them into sheaves. vglloug p315 tire stookocl for a few days ‘and ihcii smrcd till threshing. In to get an early variety, for . and their chicf nt- ‘ilic last six {yours I have hand- :P“;ll= ‘to on rippallinizl picked t-hc pods tlint rl ened first. cm for sccr: and now 1.1 _ I . cur how my read- cr who . c- growing soybeans, linve , It is said "\'v'.'l"l'f‘\‘*"l‘ you can grow corn you ...i<i azticle points out soybean is ziivisible into cont be- _ cent, Hfriraxc» 26 pcr c-oni, i-inrl the imng l0 nor cont mineral nsli extracted ulic pressure or by solvent. is ilainini Wnular- ‘The "rvl bonus arc rhjv-lic-ntori m 150 lflfi‘ res i’. and arc fcrl into an "oi-i- meat Eilllflfil‘. 'A rxwivcrful scrcw or worm in p, perforated tlir- mutt-rial post a ‘ . the nil as fxppllflfl "PIIS-fillifl through tfhe perforations ' The uses of thc . six your.» in !ltl"‘(i ,1 dcmo- ‘#11 5W1 111ml 0T1‘ YP-liv numerous. Fluttcrcd her little breast, _- {mm n; qo.;,.,.,._n,p,._._ inStFad and fhc rcnrleg" will do well to Like birds within their XlESJ ' mid and qmm sigurethc cilri-cné nlilmberf of the By the hawk frighted. q", . hi". . _ . .gnzmn zinc s u y iem .or him_ "$9,. h‘. $221,?» cm. Andthei-i gave a new version. for H m ‘ pm, a’ nurseries and tho like. as fellows:- ‘.111.- . - Antiochus of Tur- RAm-MY worm 1 "We" “ii "‘“‘."°-"°" m“ Syria. and “'11s OllllRPCl to flec from Hm‘ Sh“ “as 5°19 51mm" z Cqflhqgr- p. mp (fluff, of P1115133‘ One livrs ancl learns. The "Rail- For l“ the M7551’ Shade Kiiio of RWhvi-na That, monarch will’ _W°1”m _Wil1ch from the deg. I 100mm up lanky, :0 Ilvlitny- m; my“, up g0 "rliltriu of its raivnscs. I took to oh 1t w“ “we” w S” Hanmba‘ _ took b.» m. 1...,“ n; m, Coming Math’ Us two beneath a tree, fllrrgs (n11 t" i)» ,1 n,.w_ Singing the hymnsH sh, me!- . “up Mn Of Moody and of Sankv. I - m‘, r,._ Strange to say‘, this lyric. gem mom.“ a re... ans]... ' m_ found as little favor with _ the n; . fcstcri by this inacct to ' rlcmon- 5'."11°°1. ‘Pulhorlfles- a5 the 0113111111 u,“ _ Dmbahh. strnic llf» app nncc ’ill\'l work, (lid with the public! Suit, (Tnriliniziiiinn U-xlrlm“ lrry nqlllilll! lad '—“ film's .11‘ iii ‘no csi o e ,5 “p1,. miram; by moi ripplz- in vv v direction, so that COLOR m THEKITCHEN noun o.’ it ciin be urrrl. Thc sur- . “Hnlvlwil tho Cnrilinulii- f- I" of til" conic fiwclons in an- . , . - . » w» mini Pimlc im- (14% Ila" "vim" ‘"111 ¢'l‘<1~“ll<"l"1fi-l Qlolfilsriicrlgrlilhilln‘Qfii-ilxligflnssall C.’ "W" 11".“ ‘11~‘l>1“-"“1 -' “H. “"1 “°"““*7' 11"" - - 1‘ can buv the loveslicsi; oilsilk by the v ll‘ . might hnvc .9111‘! 1'51"“ “VFW” .1“"“1"TPS‘ I Fmherl vnrd for curtain-milking You can m. m, m, (unrlflpr WP that this ysv-t is iici gcneril in the > ‘get n 9pm,]. ma,“ m. pétemod _ lslniicl as yvf. but whr-rr an orch- ard is lhfrwtfll inc cffcz-ts arc dis- ri.s*rr~ii.~.. I nus further tclu that the rnrlicr vniicitcs of applr. such as Yellow ‘Irnnsnarcnt, nrc apparently steamed bone meal. This should be done summer and winter and is considered just as important in the ration as Protein. hay or silage. ‘Mineral defic ency diseases devel- op very slou-ly and when estab- lished ta e a long time to correct or cuic, rcvention is much better 51511501 06D vcd, 811M019? "01" lllllll cure; therefore. minerals (‘l-‘vlfllli; but: . m. . Il- ‘Y v-C- ‘mould be provided throughout the ll a shoriugc of m l lllfltlEl‘ [W313 B‘- oossessions, coniinucs tlldfilillllal u cr bc- ' ' 41w‘. 111d wills so". 111m 1d the difficult)’ of getting stock (‘PYP-ll-‘l "'41 111111 101"‘ - ‘car it is ovcrcome. Bone meal can d fiinvpii up lll illllllnlfaiift‘. Flic claws lb; fed “m, [he 5am and m pk, summer may bc placed in a box in thr- pasture ficld if the cows are not being rain fed. sail should aways be provided. rlt may be fed in iiie grain by mix- ling one pound of Salt to each one liurrirrd pounds of grain, or it can K fill bc fed d . or pill in boxes in .k. lllllfflfillflcllfilk ti... p3,; m- Snp blocks sup. F..fl.'ll'.1\l'lllc'fl1‘ plied. Cows rcquire one to two l!" - “W15 811d ouncos of salt per day. _ v_ "Klllj-‘YS In areas where there is a known 1 6101*. F1415 "F11 iodine deficit-nay this mineral v broil. corral sr-liil should be supplied to guard a- ‘ld 211170116 rfifik gainst goitre. Iodine salt is a very 15 10W 11! P09500015 convenient, method of feeding. or s iloui 1c:- WCKJJIUP it may be supplied by feeding po- FTBI Cvlilfllllillg tassiuiu iodide. Dissolve one ounce 111111. P11f-‘SDOPJS in of potassium iodide in one gallon of miter and feed daily per animal one tablespoonful of this solution ontlie fccd, This will supply two giains of potassium iodide per head per day, which 1s the recommend- ed dose. I Sunlight greatly assists in the assimilation of minerals. Cows should be turned out. therefore, on bright (lays during the winter and linvc mineral supplied in the sum- incr thiit they may store up a re- s=rve supply to curry them through the long stable feedlngporlod. iiiéqiiiriiéilrf iféfiiiiift ed its attention to the plums in British Columbia that year. PRAGUE, LONGFELLOW’, ETC», /Some legend strange and vague. That a midnight. host of specres pale Belsaguered the walls of Prague." The list of places in the back 0t’ the CandaianGcography says the word ls pronounced ivith the long "a." so that it would rhyme with plague: so does a dictinnry of "modern Geographical Names." Well. well. ‘is zi nciv world, my masters! Longfellow had a great vogue in England years ago, and his poems were included in most of the School Readers. Just about the time when the evangelists Sankcy and Moody were at, the height of their fame. an attempt was made to include “The Skclctcn in Armour" in thr- school repertory. Objcctlon was token to i; certain part. as be- ing unfit for schools. but a news- papcr man connect-ed with ihc Now- csmle press. came to the rescue, He quoted lnngfellovvs lines:- “I wooed tlii: blue-eyed maid, Yielding yet half afraid, And in the forest. shade Our VDWs wc plightcri, Under its loosened vest Give the kitchen i1 touch of color then it's polka-dottcdchequcred 0v bcsprigged with tiny flowers. An occasional springing is nll that. it cvcr psks of you. To be really smart, besides cur- MAR-SHFIELD. I CONSERVATION I A WEEKLY COLUMN OI‘ PRACTICAL OPINIONS 0F TEE VITAL ISSUES AFIICTINGWHIE USES AND ABUSES 0F NATURAL RESOURCES BY MB. LUDLOW JENKINS. THE CRISIS OF 193'! The 1936 attitude of the Blo- 'lcgicol Slll‘\0_\' has been duplicat- _ lpd in the early months of i937. 1111x111? a 5111811 qua-Hilly l Droutli conditions which were so 91 110111‘ "1991 1H 111B grain mixture i serious in Canada, and our north- fO .' gm prairie states during the suni- l1‘ incr of i930 pEFFISIEd i ough the fall and winter, and into lsorirg of 1937, While the ‘of tlic Ohio \v.s drenched flooded. the waterless P011115 Saskatchewan and V gained only a light COVEIlflg‘Of snow", and dust swept the prairie mp9 mil: of North Dakota and Minnesota. Nll’. lloyes LIOYd. head of the game prrwcztion forces in Canada. and Gain:- Commissioner of North IDnkotn brought ivord of this condition to the second North American Wild , COrilerelltifi. held in St. Louis in the first wcek oi March, 1937. The con- tinued drought representing t0- gethcr with overshooting. the most menacing situation in water- fowl history. would, one son the foremost topic of the Con- ference. In rcnlity the subject was mentioned only in whispers. in odd corners. Evon without a continuation of the droiith, closure of the season is necessary, During the past winter. the Biological Survey made a sur- vey of southern concentration grounds, and report an apparent increase of ducks over the prccqd- ing your amounting to from five to ten per cent. But the incrcaw was irregular. Some of the rarer species have continued t0 dedlfle despite the fact that there was no lawful shooting of them in i938. Any competent student knows that; such a condition‘ calls for closing the seamn unless the rarer species are to be allowed to disappear. ‘The situation reveals clearly the failure of the “selective bag" u n which the Biological Survey as been relying for the preservation of the rarer s ecies; and it leaves the more plent ful species still in dan- ser- . To appreciate the intensity of this crisis, one must. look at. the waterfowl problem by decades. A century ago. as everybody knows. ducks and geese in North America wore reckoned in the bil- lions. At that they hurl {against them evciy known cncmy except man, and yet their host, was count- less. From the Atlantic to the Pacific. the migration every sivriiis and fall meant the movement of a. bird army whose aggrcgate num- ber staggered ihc imagination. NINE-TENTHS or THE BIRDS ARE 00m: , HO Drainngc and settlement. of doubt. out. down the numbcrs erly breeding ranges, such as the Gndivall, Riiigncckcd Duck. Crin- VHFDQCK. Rcdhcad and Bluewinged Teal; but the emptiness of. well- wntered Canadian brooding ponds in 1935 told the real story -the story of destruction by thc guns of the white man. Northern breeding grounds and southern fccciing grounds are only ten per cent. occupied. Why harp on the rilsappsarancc of breeding and fcedini! mounds? The habitat. 15 5:111 there; the birds are gone. ’I'he Canadian government has charted the diminution of water- fowl: beginning in flu- 18705. the descending curve slowly sharpen- ening for several decades. then making ri calamitous plunge down- ward. Today, ncmrdiiuz to this Can- adinn chart. nine-tenth of the birds arc gonc. Makr- no mistake as to where they went. For decades. every butcher shop in the United States was piled high with Wild Ducks during every migration season. The numbers seemed countless. as lind the num- bers of thc Passenger Pigeon. But it was an illusion. Drainage nar- rowed thc fending arcns. heighten- ing the concentration of ducks, zmd thus increasing the slaughter -and also prcrerving the illusion of plenty. cvcn whilc tho birds were fast disappearing. Market; shooting‘ and spring shooting wcro abolished. But still the illusion persisted. for now the ducks wcrc baited. and were drawn in concentrated flocks to the vcry guns thrrt were extcrminating them. In 1930 thr- Biological Survey. concluding an nxhaustive survey, estimated tho‘ tho totiil number 0i’ waterfowl lcft nlivc was lzctwcc-n 80.000000 and l00.000.0fl0_ s, revela- ggyg pflglnfl m.» plum-h ()\‘(\]‘ 1r, lllllillvlllf‘. and ll“l'. thc romcrli" is gal,“ .0 - ~ . . and soivcri i with salt! npoison ' luly. It is gctt- the]ilgdgrurgarvtlyndfioyifurcgililkTtl-hls Sonic writ . lnyc iikennrl Eng- nii so tin . nu l.- ‘miirprn- hldinq the mimbte m1] "my ‘W511. l to Carlhuco on nccoui“ of her silile for rill .. cvcrj-Jtllillf‘ ing-up bowl from the cvcs nf the . nurcc. oiul ‘ l‘ conquc .., but Tho (lniindiiii and American cn- world! ' tiv- llkPll/‘SS (lore. xxril. hold gnarl lin torrloignnts lKRLVJfl a list. i}! ‘IlD- - _-__'_____ hvr l.l'l'll.ll'l70l'.l, of sub "ct, raccs. '1‘ ll‘ my!‘ common panics" o insects Very {rush brand 15 a Cz-i-lhazinirms 0min d. and did not lrlh i930. but no “Riiiiuwiv Worm" ragggrlljq, Try healing .,.’.’.‘h'{a’,|f,"§'§ Pliligllifill But lhcrr is n ncirallcl- is among the-m. The hricfest of your iircarlknife until it. is very not notes. stutcs that an irzsnct termed before slicing the loaf. _ r WH Ymfvs bred them: and you've fed em. Now you musr. finish them. And right here is where you'll make your profit-or come out in the 0 P. The difference between profit and loss. lics in the finish. It's the col- our . . the sheen . . . the loss that. adds tho profit. ‘The finis is what the fur buyers look for after they et a bunch of skins to go over. The ur thnthas quality they want AGENTS-J. Robert Mulch, (fhsrlottotown, Bruce, MscKsy and Co, LML, Summer-dds. The llnli Mfg. and Cold storage 00.. Limited, Summerside. possmi LER Dwcwl L11 NAPANIF ' FDX F tion which so alarmed tlio sports- mcn that thry cnvc un their SPY-Pil- year fight ngninst rcdiiction of th bag-limit from“? to lfi-pcr do); AT wiu. THE HARVEST BE? gets the good prlr-i. 1r n lacks finish all the rest of it doesn't count much. Finish your fur the Ross-Miller way-using the Ross-Miller ' ration. Vita Crumblo. 0B d). with R-M Standard Cubes (Al for Sundays and emergency occasons. Build up n profit this fall. When gelling day comes. you'll reap your arvest. Samples and feed sche- dules for Autumn on request. Writs us. y. m 17rd f).‘-4l\Hlfi ODDS Manitoba. Morick those ducks with limited and south- - What is the situation today? The Biological Survey estimated in Jan- uary, 1935. that during their winter concentration only 17.000.0000 ducks were to be found in the United States and 10,000,000 in Are the birds going up or from mess fi ures? Superintendent Ray Steele o M lssippi Wild Life Refuge estimate a reduction of 25 number of ducks in i936 along the Mississippi River flyway. Wisconsin wardens on the same flyway put. the decrease at 50 per cent. (Figures given out by Minnesota Game Protective i giie. ~ , These reports. made by trained and impartial observers. the numerous dldiduai sportsmen iwho “saw"more ducks this full than any time in the past, ten years"). and the propa- gandu statements made by Joseph .Knapp's “More Game Birds ~Amcrica Foundation“ Mexico. down the Upper r cent in the hat flew south Lea- discredit "cheerims" of in- in after their Pair-plane survey" of Canada lakes ‘last summer. l The most o timistic of all the med crlsis' ited thousands. they ap into small what cnl. the Benin llinl JOIII ber up to 50 m would irieportiss l?‘ zvhfclgh crgilii-i g‘ a1 s . e, make closure of e sea- SW11 - 8 0 Q 00 0 111‘- Summ vey. which finds an increase of five or ten per cent on southern feed- ing grounds. But what does an ad- dition of ten per cent amount to, when the problem is to 000.000 ducks that number? Let us put down in a. column three estimates of water- fowl numbers, making as the first figure a billion, the unit in which waterfowl were formerly reckoned. Here is the result: b may be bring 2'1,- to fifty times single ack 1870 _ — ~ - — - 10001100000 lIOSO - - _ _ - _ -1o0,000. 1935 - _ - _ _ _ -- 27.000000 with g pmgnesivo increase o! five per cent a year, it would take fourteen years to bring the num- 000000. one-half -t.he 1930 total. With a progressive increase oi’ ten per cent, it would take eleven years to get back the 1930 total. And 1930 was year in which a waterfowl was recognized. th depletion forced a reduction in the bag limit, agitated since Eleven years to get back to s for- of n22 crisis eyear in which 192i. But, let us bake note. this would represent an increase only tn s lim- riumber of species. with other: still going downgrade-downgrade to extcrmination. To Be Continued Entomology CHEESE AN?) FLOUR. MITES Almost all kinds of food stuffs. including flour, sugar. etc are subject to attack by several kinds of very small, oclorcd. eight-legged known as mites. Though so small as to be scarcely sometimes swarm over or in tn- fested food products ‘in uncounbed r cheese, hams. pale- animals visible, they The question of how these crea- tures are spread about. of new with such apparent pear suddennm and of what them after they have consumed the food which they are eating, has been a source of wonderto many. A knowledge oi’ the life histo these tiny creatures explains questions, The microscopic eggs of the animals, scattered at. random over their food material. becomes 0f of ese develop six-legged mttM. that pmiti-y should be thoroughly cleaned of all food materials and the entire lpremiscs including all cracks and crevices, sprayed thoroughly with benzene and kerosene oil. Infested hams. after the injured portions have washed, scraped or cut away. be dipped in a solution consisting of 1 part caxbolic sci cohol. and l0 gar will dostroy t e luring the meat. LARDEII. BEETLES brown. he. A LARGE PlIP 0R0? Insure s, largo crop of sunny. vigorous f"!!! this your by feeding ROYIL FOX FEED shown that the use of Boys! with I [Md meat rsllon ll the non pol- llvs way known for the rancher h secure but breeding results. Insist on Royal. Ask your (IIIIQI today or with direct to The St. John Milling company -Ltd. washed shed their skin periodically like tn- sects, increasing each moult. until they reach the adult stage. 0r in certain conditions they may enter a. resistant. nesting stage in which they remain until ditlons are favourable for new de- velopment. In this stage the animal is covered by a tough coat. the legs are shortened and the body is provided on its under side with a number of s discs that may serve later as a means of attachment to some pas- sing object, such as a. sect, etc. It is in this way that the mites arc spread from place and are able Beriods of unfavourable conditions, iough it. is not known what origin- ally causes them to enter this state. as they may do so even when food is abundant. The small size of these creatures and their resistance methods. when they are in iicstuig stage, makes them some- difficult to course fumigation with sulphur. or hydrocyanic acid gns. factory. when this method is con- venient. Where this is not practi- in size with con- resistant licking mouse. in- place to to resist long to ordinu the r handle. Of is satis- f TIMELY NOTES 0N TOPICS CONNECTED WITH Silver Fox Farming <- previous shl breeding Douglas, ‘our. 113i“ 111‘ approach that 000 bout one small. the head on F011" . attac t0 9781118 to oration . Th control . or store-mom out. with been ml)’ 10 parts - is of water, which pests without in- . active ru . s- IOHIIBI UOIQI New Unlawful A Dover, has a red ear year old and which fins done much service at: eorn-huskings. We blush to think that we hsd forgotten all t that kissing game. This Dove ' tri k h“ ah r mans c seem‘; some men can get any favors from sbou the chick The Ohsrlo 31st co November 4th. Bflllhlnfl g, ular pursuit. You could hardly when m. 193g; mm; 9n m; “b in nope; has been known to ave m; ‘how fin m» he Dem on ‘h’ many chewed toll tips. market and so does n. nice finish like "m" . h x_ gglx apples which "Nizchc m" ‘Qnfém Health‘ ut on the pe who - "N, h, ""1, $581133 “ " f0‘ "H118 t 6 nouns. ' ' nIii-nsn runsi This powder is ordered. Price 3% money order for delivered , this paper. Onn supply any quantity. Dr. . M. Nicholson, 202 Kent 8t, Charlottetown. P. E. I. be J l. {he quality is much improved over will go forward on Monday the 12th to the Model Min ism, Ontario, Th ty-one value $10,000. After that we ems to make to California, Coorado, Massachusetts. Wiscon- sin and Washington. Had a cable from Sweden the other day mg $1.000 for a. well-marked piur. You will agree with me that. the shrewdest ranchers on the contin- ent. appear to favor white faced foxes. We are retaining faced males which I expect to mate with 50 females. We fi “By the way. I visited the Hud- son's Bay ranch at. Winnip terday. It is simply wonder-f _ Mr. possible to make our visit en- e. He showed us some beauti- "PS. the offspring o1’ those d from the McLure dz M nnon Sliver Fox Forms, Ltd. ‘They were excellent. I also noticed some very fine young fisher, large as the mother. He has had wonderful success with h bloom and grave while Hudson's Bay 1vf.r. Douglas‘ cake made the visitor tn feel that the H. B. a generous shipment of furs season." The above is Just. another stance of abroad, sud I am sure there is no m one that begruikes the splendid financial returns which ceiving bee blazing a trail off the ordinary paths. You know it. was a terrible crime, punished by the death oi’ the fox. to have white-legged silvers in your ranch if you were 1n registra- No doubt the Scions who irmde the laws sincerely behaved they were ri ht, but who can Judge the vag- es of fashion. and it would seem standards issnot to be d all We have been asked to again sound a. warning in regard to the presence of dogs and cats on silver ox ranches, The best authorities in the United States are age practice. and even thong a. dog lover like ourselves, it is saf- er we are sure to give arway you: faithful canine to some n the fox have s inch long fully grown is often found smok- ing meat and meat products. - peclally those that have begun to spoil, and of museum which ive ark-colored beetles with I. oad, light-colored bsud behind ‘rho insect is a m id bmedeir ts ssidmto p genera ns s year. posits her eggs, if ibis, directly meat, or . in neighborhood of such food. ernergl the outside of tho meat. peneiirsitin and comp sting their dsveioprn in about four weeks. The pupae stage endures for from three days a. week or more. the beetles em- e first. in? rid of in ested materials infected parts the meat cut away and burned and the infested premises cleaned up and spray mane. taking especial csre with all cracks and chevtces with hydro- cyanlc acid gas assures adequate- When not too numerous, persist- ent killing of the beetles by . will bring results and the use of poison baits, consisting of cheese ground up with arsenic. has been recommended. Nicholson's Fox Health - (3 FEEDS Qfll su m lbrhibltki muvvlln will be ‘in years. Our first. shipment I'm-m, Fort Wi-ll- n mink a 3V6 offer- 50 white on distemp nd that. line produces exceJent results. made g1 researc . very much the control YSS~ the Manager, did every- be lowered almost as bilifies. He is mink. walls makes the to the ranch very attractive Special and 1t O. should have m- a successful Islander he m vaoc e his ash!‘ 1'8- of in is s feature Nations 8e ember ex rants:- close reglmontstion o! esii-ed after here has inst thé You are best appe rty not pelt th t: Business. male:- than a N source of distem i’ plan half when s . stretch any sway a. nrn- - flllll‘ ‘$52.2 s enrich m; is also s. perrnlclous pest lsgecimens. The beetles e to those gnibs are pass through not t“ the The ng in s. few days. deeper as they grow @111‘ of the fox lay egg! for another gan- steps to take in gutt- tlils pest. is to remove‘ o infi. As thoroughly in pe in the lea ed with ben- thi ably. hand M in; a fox ZgleldO no pelt on AGRICULTURIST FOR 1 CENT) the weaker. P9 . all?‘ and ph Bil \ New Hampshire msn oi’ com which is 80 ill; the United States. Encepyfifim para-typhoid, m, gcllizléléfiltlthsgtilfaeé governmental and 61861568. are utilizing their Rles to combat these numbers of the Am Fur Journal and th 4 Breed". have authoritative articles different strains that, vaccination figbmggastmin is elim qua lFur our pelts we notice that a been grsa meni: in the handling, tailor ng or preparing for market, there is still room for further im rovement and et more attention hum-d; having pelts realize. 1c u iii first gum the attraictivenes: of s silver fox not in the wid a. pelt slightly You s fnh it in Lily kill the beauty or and thin th fur wesk in the neck. skins prime last; I fox a rancher er down to the foi-epaws very much when it is ns out: the shoulders consider- when it is d not protected the neck st all, the leather of the rum much stron er t an from the s oulders to t e certain percent the drying an . Itmllser has a tsndencv to pull on not a tpxlsce u tack or two in the A. K. "Ollie" MoNeill writing on our emis from Iibrt Qukappelle. Saskatchew- bug ‘cmplopyfees o?';§§°'},,,§‘,§1mm~i an, says: "Perhaps you will be in- no be rmitted to have d ow terested w know the results of our cats. Th u the our“... o. °' breeding of white faced foxes this G, Green. noted authoriti on '11“ ear. The pups have done well and temper and other dise) dis" many other Prominent “first?” Distemper has been v 11d fox ranches hfilfif its wll and almost “w u 8V do with tlnimgl ener. svourzes. Late erlCB-n National e American m; er control and other m. es. tfective discos Professor Pinkerton vs-rd Mggdlcal School, regress dl H; does not beliegilrteenrlllgi 8d in 1 th _ Jliostcien, H}; can be accomplish of distemper epidemic; b. hi1 “ye cojsutseoof immune serum even i: such treatment iq to a point whergouig could be ibl Vaccinatiomu e on 1‘ m“ Sea" seems to have much greater pcisgl. the other hand, states there are sev m] of distemper find with one stmin o: both in qualit and rocluction, A i flock of Bllfiflpyhfllpfl w keep the vrgtsnelitlay be menwnve against wegds m tin; 3850b and ducks _.____ _ an r; ens pee u escriips gh- "ma, out of one mink shedg, which I us§bragcali-rimdgvaocine‘mhm.g thought was a splendid ides. A tissues of.’ animals dy on; ranch, beau :fu1 landsca e with flowers in 1n ma; way the posqlb u of .5 tgractical point of view e difference whether e strain in question is canine dll~ temper or some offh on; is as we are sure that it is distemper, erstminul ion. However, you will also remem- 3nd 1 1g 5 m” “member herthtwiniblf dtihlk, k ' wlgiltllerilgggeiilgefoxgr grill ogdthfu: “m” addrm‘ qu cs. o n supe o o ers, "wna 1 p,“ and usually a. very ales; blue black. ‘Iherufltis thgoti e of intergig. tl lug article by Hans S udt. New York fur silver fox t; grader, 1t article otpglie American and fwarkst Journal. These are In rmding ough number. s t 1m rove- ould be given of the very As you no doubt pse or ally helps nuke s. sale. I luvs noticed that s. consider- able amount of fax pelts us not: ed on the proper tiled boa-r and at times enough care is n taken to see that: they treich It is very detrimental to pelt 1n width 6 “Fflipfl mmwnlgri you u.‘ length you character sud yvll in- crease the volume of fur, but when width natur- of fliyglchanot- e Ihsveolnono- IYEIIN IN NHFK. floed that a very lug; percentage pelts an by preventing snv over-stretch of the neck of the pelt. not only in the pelting but in he stretching on the board and often an example. ve l work it green and another example when plac- lt on the ai-d oven if stretch it. and only 1a tihe proper sized . firing and you have and the back head. There is a e of shrinkage in naturally. the This also thins out: the lm it. Al n11 he fox it for t at tempt, to stretch it tum your board nmund old in slightly from the fare tn the also s few tacks order to (Continued on page 18. 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