~.'»\-1.»; 2-.» -»;»_-/ _'r_'r . TIMELY NOE ODNNEOTED VIITN Silver Fox And Mink Farming /ii. the Saskatchewan Fur Mar- wm; service sale held lnstweek ‘ showed firm to slightly L prices. A toll OI 523° “'35 ‘)‘_1,.md in ii fine collection of , Cumberland ijlousp muskrats brought from 51.44 .0 -:4 cents; Central and North csiiirais brought from $132 to $13.; 101‘ extra large and small W, |);'nii[!Ill- from .58 to ‘.10 cents. ‘mu,-.: 100.000 muskrats were sold. it Bishop ii; Co., Chicago, fur ma men's furnishing retailers are ‘,.,,,-_- out of business after hav- nemi in business for 94 years n.’ the deciding factors in g \\ as the fact that the build- .. I which their salon was locat- ‘ ;.s to be torn down this fall. A collection of 27,312 EMBA , P.-istcls brought good inter- . unchanged prices at Hud- Bny Compuny fur sales. New last last week. Earlier a col- ,n of 4,500 raw EMBA muta- nts.» brought good interest iziz~h.mged prices. Prices for .\ ..: the pastel types l‘.Ill_ZCd .-42 to under $30 with the - 'Ulli‘llI'lg between $30 and {mimics ranged from $21 to .\ _\‘- v York report is that I re- -- ‘l in hard gouzis IJU.>.i'iL;S :9 department store mun- . to pay more attention to ll‘.OllS this season. These contend that top manage- s showing increased con- dcclines in hrirdware vol- . “ii is seeking to bolster , . i.dr volume by propping up gm‘ _'fl.l(lS SIIICS piirticulariy weak _. « .v.; li‘.'ilLI) to wcar. Fur oper- -~ are generally regarded as krst spot in the ready to all over the country, t'Ol‘CliIl0ll which has tx- nt I(‘11SL five years. For two some retailers are hciicve that the fur dc- .in:.s can show substantial nciiicnt if management is \'.|I..il‘.' to iucrcliiuidise and pro- nin‘e furs more aggressively than iie:p'o.’ore. i-.~.' -in-ek's London sale of ranch ui.:‘.lt b_\' the Hudson's Bay Com- 3 showed flint Scanziiiiavian IV"i.lf‘fI mink ndvniiced 10 to 15 wt cont. American raiiched mink S\Il.(‘Il was locally held. was most- ]v ‘.‘.ilIlf‘Il'll\\'n, the limits bring too. h:gh H. B. C. estimated that 60 IN THE HOME " "1 : JIGSIW STAIR RAH.” »' ii~oGRILL£s FATTERN-396 ' . 4: Today's pattern is for I simple dmszn of authentic old-time grille- wnrk for door wings. porch rail- ing: and other ornaniontal fea- lute! of architecture. While the dcsign is simple It has wide range nf VIS/‘S in combination with stand- out stock for bannistcrs and ter- inco enclosures. Various uses are Sllfhlll on the pattern together \\'lIIl actual-size tracings for com- binations. Just tape the design to the lionrd, trace, cut it out with 8 I‘-it saw and paint according to the elfocl you wish to obtain. Fol- low the» rlirocilons on the pattern fnr Sfllllnfi in place with nails or srreus. Ask for pattern 390 and Pnrlnsr 3.'ic to cover cost. Apply to the Workshop Depart- ITlt‘.';'.. the Guardian. ‘ IN OUTBOARD MOTOR! IUII ‘-HIII CF AW UNI HAND ‘~l‘flfl r trill-*1): fill, I/0/5/1:;0n SKA-H(‘lFZ‘.f in u rs Ouuiuzurri Mums /. ‘Mn (l.i.| .-|.,,. ... t'lutl»..,l .1. . ' ll-we ....,. ATPIOS per cent of the offering was sold or this amount between '15 to 00 per cent went to the United states. Biggest European buyer was Pap- ert-Strasbourg. Best males realiz- ed between $20.60 and 828.00 Ind best females went from $14. to $16.80. An offering of 12,000 stand- ard mink advanced 10 to 15 per cent at the New York Auction Company's Minneapolis Iale last week. The turnover was 96 per ‘cent. A collection of 8.000 platin- ums was reported '18 per cent Iold; 5,000 sapphires were 02 per cent sold and 5.000 Gunmetals were mostly sold. All these different types were reported as having ad- vanced 10 per cent from the pre- vious year. | Thirty Montreal retail furriers are taking part in twice daily fur festival presentations which start. ed last week and continued foi two days. It is I revival of the formerly held retIilerI show which specialty fur houses sponsored I: this time of the you but which was omitted last year. At open- ing night theive was a dinner and preview of I 50 garment collec- tion, mostly coats plus I few short- er pieces generally in evening furs 'Also presented were I dozen gar- ments which manufacturers offer. cd as door prizes. Dealers, dres suppliers and manufacturera at- tended with participating retailers Reflecting trade interest was ef- forts to revive Canadian fox. Two fox stoles were shown. one Ilngle width, the other two-skin type. Ir. more expensive furs mutation minks dominated the picture ii. fincly worked garments mostly styled on traditional lines. In a late issue of Women's Wear Daily is a drawing of I model wearing a double bronze bleached silver fox scarf. newest novelty type said to be creating interest with buyers throughout the country at Solofi at wechler. Inc. Below tht cut is the following:- On ‘the Up- swing: Bronze-Bleached silver Fox, Pastel-Dyed Foxes. Popularity which fox is enjoying today witl: consumers throughout the country is Icting Is I spur for the develop- ment of new dyes and bleaches in this fur and and for increased buy- or interest in them, according to spokesman for Sololf at Wechsler Inc. “Newest type featured here. for ‘instance, Iilver fox bleached I golden bronze. is Iaid to be Il- ready registering considerable Ic- ceptance with retailers. lt is list- ed as I good recorder number in semi-shaped stoles. Upward trend toward more color in foxes is also pointed up by the fact that -pastel-dyed versions are moving up in the selling picture here. Cites’ is the growing cross-country de- mand for azure blue, dusty pink I and chImpIgnI foxes. Another col- or that is being well received is I gray with blue undertones. These pastel foxes. it II noted. are re- Agricultural Meetings Planned MONTREAL. (OP)-Alrlculturli technloiuia from Ill parts of Can- idI will gather at lucdonold col- Zego in nearby Ste. Anne do Belle- vuo June 21-24 for the 84th an- nual . tion of tho Agricult- ui-Il Institute of Canada. chief speaker It the opening session of tho four-day convention will be Sir Juries Scott-Watson, chic! adviser to the United King- dom ministry of agriculture. I Stood by a stream I stood by I stream pure crys- tal clear. And here to me most dear. swirling on through last Valley- field. was I otreain from which on I had garnered I trouty yield. I stood on I grluy pad of green. Juat touched by I shower to I glimmering sheen, Beside I stream where the speck- led i-rout. lie Beneath the surface awaiting I fly. I stood on In emerald turf trim- med in red Waiting to pull its’ bed, And my soul was stirred with the beauty around And the rippling stream with it's peaceful sound. I trout from I stood there fishing Is the sun- set came And the hues were dimming like I dying flame, And I put down my creel and my fishing rod _ And my soul was It peace in this beauty of God. —John E. Sinclair Lawrence, Mass. . 'eis, with center band of matching satin that can be hooked up into shrugs. “At the same time that these zolorful foxes are pushing up into the promotional spotlight, bulk business continues to center I- round Norwegian blue fox. Rath- :r then leveling off Ifter success of last season, demand for this fox is said to be on the increase ind stronger than ever. At pre- .eiit, it is noted. buyers are ask- ing more for the lighter mutations than my other type. Listed as second best in current ordering is natural white fox. Favorite styles are pocket—peplum states and double-tiered, semi-shaped ones glue capelets." - rm breeders are reminded that the annual general meeting of th; Prince Edward Island Fur Breed- ers‘ Auociation will be held in the Board Room of the Department oi Agriculture It 2.00 p.m. Tuesday. May 25. The ranks of the fox breeders are getting smaller bu. she mink breeders are increasing .n numbor and both of these need Lhs encouragement Ind support. of- fered by thc Association, so it i hoped that Ill members who can _. ' ordering best in double tiered cape- NEWSY So far II we know, the tin can came into being, becIiue Napoleon was concerned It the great loss of his fighting men by Icurvy Ind food poisoning. This wu so great that he offered 12,000 francs to the discoverer of I method where- by his Imperial Irmies in many lands could be ntely fed eIsen- tiIl foods It all seasons of the year. At that time his offer would amount to about $2,500 United states currency, and would be con- sidered I fortu.ne. The value of the franc has changed greatly since then, for in 1951 we had I quite mod t dinner in Paris. France, and i oost us 1,000 fnnu each. Nicholu Appert, I French con- fectioner, who preserved food by seI.ling- it in bottles that were placed in boiling water. won the prize. The firm of Donkin at Hall, about the some time in England, improved on the method of pre- serving meat and meat soup for the Royal Navy. by processing it in “vessels of tin." This was the forerunner of the tin can industry This industry grew rapidly, so ihnt by 1890 the supply of tin- plato used In the United states was being imported from Eng- land and Wales. From then on in the United States the manu- .Icture of tinplate was made at- tractive by I high import tariff in Canada, however, the require- ments were imported largely from Great Britain as recently as i935. . . . The great iron and steel firms of Hamilton, Ontario. now pro- duce Ilmost all the tinplate re- quired in Canada. As iron and scrap steel Ire melted in the open- .iearth furnaces. and cooked with limestone and other materials, I steel suitable for tlnplate is pro- cured. The cooking is continued for about eleven hours when the molten steel is drawn from the furnIce into giant ladies, which carry 200 tons It I. time, and pour it into ingot molds. Gian‘. rollers then reduce the steel, af- ter further treatment. to slabs Lliree tons each in weight, L‘lLCI. nese slabs are heated and deliv- ered to the “hot mill," where. af- ter several reductions. it comes out II a coil of steel. The coil is pickled after cooling, and the scale removed, ready for cold rollini; into tinplate. Sulphuric acid and other materials are used in the pickling process, and the steel was through many washings before Lt emerges as a bright stiip of steel that is then covered with a vegetable oil to prevent rusting. it goes to the cold-rolling depart- ment in reeled coils. The hot rolled strip is rolled It By J. A. Cllrk. 13.86. TEE TIN CAN NOTES it comes through the cold reduc- ing mill in strips about I mile long It the rate of 4,000 feet per minute. The palm oil rused Is I rolling medium, must be removed from the steel so that its surfaces can be tinned; for this purpose an alkali cleaning agent “Pennsalt" is used.’ a 0 . There are two methods in use in producing tinplato that I! coated with I very thin layer of tin on both sides of the steel strip: In one method the steel is processed in sheet form. and dipped. in a molten mass of tin, after the steel plates have been treated with A zinc chloride-based flux, so that the tin will adhere to the steel sur- faces. When this method is used. the unit of sale is I "base box" containing in sheets 14 x 20 inches, this equals 31.360 square inches of surface_ and AI‘! pounds of tin are required to cover both sides of this area of steel. The thickness of the tin coating is said to be 0.00008 inch on each side. The second method was I. deve- lopmcnt caused by world War II; when the British and Dutch tin mines in the Far East were seized by the Japanese. there developed in shortage of tin in North America. An electrolytic coating process that conserved tin came into general use; by its use, only one-quarter pound of tin was required foi each base box, that is, the same amount of tin by this method would produce six times as much tinplate. In this method. the steel coils are first thoroughly cleaned by pass- ing them through alkaline and pickling baths to remove scale. They then pass through lht‘ electrolytic tin-plating bath, where the steel strip which is the "cath- ode" receives A UNIFORM deposit of tin from the “anode", the anode being I bar of pig tin immerscd in the bath. To operate such a line requires 17 tons of tin anodes. and 15,000 gals. of electrolyte. The tinplate comes out dull, and is brightened or “ fixed" by treating it with chrome acid. It then has to be cut the required size and sorted for shipping. Types of Cans Up to the end of the last cen- tury, commercial tin cans for food preparations were hand-soldered. open top or hole-and-cap type. To fill the latter type, the food had to be stuffed into the can through an opening less than ll; inch in circumference. and the separate cap with I small hole in the cen. tre, was sealed on with a solder- ing iron. The vent hole was closed after the cans were boiled. ?.?.’.".2:‘...“.§.‘&'.i‘.£l?.1’:T“f?:...“l...li‘.? or IN WE LEAD IN will be in attendance. 7 bred heifers. Edward Island. Phone 4425 PIIRERRED AYRSNIRE SALE sponsored by THE P. E. I. AYES]-[IRE BREEDERS’ CLUB 27 head OAISELECTED Island Bred Ayrshires. 10 heifers up to breeding age. 6 fresh cows and heifers. I 4 choicely bred young bulls, breeding age. Sale to be held May 28th. 1954, 1:30 p.m., at the Provincial Exhibition Grounds, Charlottetown, Prince For catalogues contact— I JIM NICHOLSON. P. O. Box 369, Charlottetown, P.E.I. Charlottetown ....................... ..- ............ .. L. J. Rosalie: suminoi-Ilde ...._. Prince Edward lslnnd Fur Pool Ltd. - 0'Leu'y ........_.... ...._........ .... ..... II. B. Willis Inc. French River ..-... ._....... Arthur A. Campbell Central Bedequo ..._. Dunk River Dairying Co. Albany . ........_....._....._... L. D.’ McLeod 8 sons Victoria . .. L. D. McLeod 8 Sons Stanley Bridge _. Bold’: Food Service Wheatley River . ....................... Preston Rackham Morel] ....... .... Dlngwell & Rosslter Kllmulr ....... ........ _..... MoGowIn's Ltd. Murray River .. D. M. MGKIIIIIOI Brookfleld .._....... Cruwys Bros. Mount Stewart CIII-|i’I Food Service Start —feod weeks. Let’: 3333333333333 TIP OF THE WEEK FROM YOUR MASTER DEALERS - ter Turkey Pro-Starter Kruml turkey: 3 good Itu-t. ing Plan with Your Is- land’I MASTER Man IVAN KERRY DIII 5455 TIP ND. 30 your turkey: on Mu- these for four comple I This will Iuuro your Discuss Your Feed- 3333333333333 snnvicn QUALITY THE ISLAND FERTILIZER 00- "Lin. OIIARLOTTETOWN VALUE « Itlw W . TIM wliolo family will bag to mow the lawn with the cosy-or-breathing, new Lawn-Roy. II rolls like a ball on rubber tired VIIVOIII , . no goon, no clinch . . . cuts lorwordl or backwards. Rotary action Iluovu loll, ollkiont operation, Iliminohi bond -'Imning,roIiing. Powerod by world famous Iron-Horn. (“Q9 3 you'I Iwy ill I F. A. S. 120 lint St. /\~ofl\ O I Made In Canada by he voonvfocturon of Hive». DON'T GET A GOAT.. L ll ll I. JONES .GE‘[ A LWN-BOY IVII HIM ‘ in 1001. !t hu I‘ full. open top_ Ind made possible Saturday. Msy 22. 1954 The Gunrdinn °°““““"i“ ““"“‘K “Id '1" hi!“ cans is first coated with protcc- to be packed in them speed manufactures of car. a. The tive enamel or coatings which vary Page 11 tinpiate to oe used in making tin according to the products which are Continued on page is fa) fh) siderad. (ll (2) (3) (4) (5) and gone. (6) at-y. we did POTATO GROWERS The Provincial Marketing Board did not consult Island Potato Marketing Board on the the wording of the ballot. Why‘? If the Potato Marketing Board is all that the Promoters claim it is. wouldn't common courtesy require the ballot and the questions to be asked? In other words, your producer- conirolled Board is dictated to by a three-man non-producer‘ Board. ’I‘licre are several facts PANELYTE * OF The following facts are worthy of your consideration: l’i'iii(:e I‘:(I\\‘Ell‘d question of the Plebiscite nor that the Board be consulted on It is always accepted by those who are interested in the Potato indus- try that a Provincial Potato Board is a desirable organization to further the interest and to give leadership to the industry in every way. Is this what the farmers are askedio confirm? We feel that on the surface it is, but in reality the promoters have something else in mind which is a compulsory Pool and one man selling for the whole potato crop financed only by the grower's potatoes. about one desk selling which should be con- Ii would create an auiocrat whose ideas would be forced on all. No auiocrat could sell potatoes on a competitive market. The present marketing arrangement has antagonized the custom- ers for our potatoes, after having lost the United States Spring seed trade, and if It were not financed by the Dominion Govern- mcn‘ this would have ended in disaster. Service, quality, and previous connections would be all gone. Compulsory Pools in any other vegetable produce have all faded Financing a c0nipulsoi'_v Pool can only be done with the fai'mct"s own potatoes, and he pays for all mistakes. Remember the chairman of the present Marketing Board at nieeiings has made it clear he favors complete authority for the Board. Much has been talked about co-operation between the New Brunsivick Board and the Prince Edward Island Board and all benefits that would ar.~,cru-3. This year has shown us that the benefits are entirely imagin- various Be \'(‘l_\' careful what you do. PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND I. POTATO and TIIRNIP DEALERS’ ASSOCIATION I‘ It ourselves with %{4 Hora‘: iusl one of the hundred-and-one ways You can beautify your home with Pouolyte. Whether you do It yourself or have if done, Ponolyle is the perfect surface for bright modern sink and C0U"'€|’ tops—for dinette: and breakfast nooI<s—for beautiful practical vanities. It’: the‘ ideal surface for kitchen and bathroom wolli, tool Once Installed, Panelyio is a lifetime I°Y"f‘° "°l"I"9 or scratching, no more pointing, poporing of PI¢5'0"' log; and Panelyie is so cow to kIOP 0I0°"'5"0l‘/ ‘I'M- Vicif your Iwnbor or building materials supplier, or icrttefor afree sample and I’aneI_yle's new colourful brochurb IANILYYI DIVISION, 51. not: run counuv icnuon imuuo, ‘ Shlolms, Quebec PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND You are about to be asked to vote for a Potato Marketing Board. What does it really mean? L. M. POOLE G: CO. Pull’: Wharf LUMBER and BUILDING SUPPLIES llal 5511-5512