s=~ NEWSY Noras - U! AGIJOOIA '__ .A-'1fd.n_¢_.~__,__,__ ___ . __ _ Th ad to fill i" the . ere appears to in the law in this case.) con we consistently give up . - wi the expects. the weather for continue to pray emrecovery of ‘relation or whl without im- whi '- noted ock, S. J.. » was reeen .0! his eudiwvrrs. "s: "Apart of the bulrush and were very 1501111?’ A». and test ‘- beneficisl results of prey- ». .. to the 0k, and their Dr. 1086's tic state- ‘hoist in the vii-or our onor page of?» byhfnxll. Y ll. FOX FEED 4 'dnring former caucus tthenoeolBoyIlWmIl ‘t ration lo the moot Wil- knownfortheraneherl ‘ bleedfngreflllll. declertodnyorwrlh ; t. John Milling v l-Pll- a Newlltenlwlok accordance withthe P. l}. ulture policy elf-doubting; Inland formers to ob- “ ~ oetone. at low pri ll “$100110! ' is It l‘ bum are. u ffeotuntil o... m. 1m. 4 uivoobpiilpes bloke couuty,,.iw. a. .»All_All8.llA1iA01l1l.'v- y v ‘some inns mm m: “as no nine to My" violate such 1s w w" .. o. "r: nsrzrm» - “K01 our? s ‘imam u... bill Private c- p, tisweliforhunterstoknownot only their own rights but also the rights othen, and to ve due considerati to such r ts." (A sound ooncusion but often neg- leotedl) NOTES 0N ISLAND PLANTS O ‘llhis smell family, the first of the monoootyledons, is widely dis- - out the world. tholah its species are very limited in on Cat . Eur- ope and Asia. The real Bulrush is a Scirpus with a rather ordinary “Brass? ap ancc. an so when the o ain't‘: wlshflda depict c Bul- tushes" they pointed in the more Gtteil, which thus led bee. ohe ohl. nia ate the roots peel off the outer rind root the tender stem. which for of l8 inch Oatetei do water-few . and Finally t is known to harbour the lam of the Oat-tell naeoiq, itells. ' fill. discourage or- iginnli . page nu 1...‘ tion was in . m. rean went to the elped t0 In.‘ Department l of we are now pre- . (00) tons or two, olllrl- Ind el hiy In bulk and three do lm per ton delivered in bags. without trespessimotlh“ “my " lmnterhss-no to MW" ammo to n a public tines going st a profit. Denmark -which this Island I sometimes compared to —h.as 300 silver fox farm» with s tion oi’ about 6,500 fxes. ‘me nduswy was established ln 1929 and hss been expanding rapidly. ‘the skins are of medium quality but give s ‘like Norway and Sweden, meat of- glfléuoducts are cheap in Deo- Michigun-Oluo live fox show in December was W. H. C. Ruthven ~*..u'srn~..mr.".z. "h: a...“- cr n e can ox - zines as "a good sport." of the _ and mink pelt B!!! oonsin uses chloroform u. lim his pelters. He has s funnel with an opening o having first <1 cotton bat pluifien u“ m1 £1.12; chloroform rough Bl. opening in the top of the funnel saturat- gig the cotton batting. 1'11, 10x out. week, so Ehsex, the lover oi Queen 511m. brl-h- WM reputed m be endowed and other courters wondered how he could keeg‘ up tbs ¢llp, The that he was about to th li it f his physical resources. he mwould would go to THE TIMELY NOTES ON TOPICS CONNECTED WITH Silver Fox Farming ‘Mayor George Mcmtyre, Mont- ague. who takes such In eu- thusiastic in everythlnq 00n- Flwledunnl the wvetlgbeing of his comm ywns gprmghu. ltttletawnyesturaa he proud when his fellow towns- mau, H. W. Davison. §lil°'..l".%“..it‘§°“‘$.““°ll’.é" ti?‘ l’ show and other awgdgl 0 Mr. Davlsion has been 1n m; fox business for qultg Q armba- 0g and writer rmnembers although he could not, buy, k W1‘? hlBhly of the quality anlrlhoal: therein. This fall Mr. mvggm pelted N that did not. get to the show and neighbors say thgt | i?" “n”: ulnar r" "m" . o . exih bitéd m m“ L. B. Pollock of Keswiok. On- tario, must have something on other silver fox breeders in On- lvlo —-flnd Wrlllllls further onus Year after year he wins the cum] Championship award m the On- tario pelt show and carries on most of the prizes in the var-gnu; classes. The writer remembers very well when Mr. Pollock started raisin foxes and noted at the time intelligent manner in which he went about it. We add our tribute to that of many friends in Ontarip and elsewhere at his success. ‘rhioves h been various sectgrls of ill. thin}? 5mm “M11118 mink. Some of them throw in poisoned meat and when the mink are dead pick them up and take them awa _ Some o! the min-k have been sto en alive, show- that the rob rs possessed ex- QTfnkIlOWIedBB 0 how to handle Roland M. O. G. Tu lin Oomswvok, Park, lvfichiga; w; odd’ Fran-l: Tuplin, ormerly of Nuw Annan, P. E .I., but now of Brit- lsll Columbia. was the winner of Oham the Grand pionship for live gauze: at. the 193a Michigan-Ohio A New York fur manufacturer ls displaying c black fox coat for daytime or evening wear. It is 80 inches in length with fl sleeves and eollazla neckline of the box style. The sillvez- fox population ed Gennany is stated to by in the vicinity of 20,000. Mink and fur animnk n 60,000. meats and the intensive ?‘°‘"““‘ ats the ur farmers have had e difficult time keeping their ven- ffill‘ Profit to the breeders, as un- Among the exhibitors at the The stete of Wisconsin, the t tflur mute 31st, February 1st. 8nd and Henry Bimonson of Rural Wis- thmugh which he can loroform. He places funnel over the fox’s nose, ales‘ the chloroform and paces We have not heard s word mm our friend Lowell Hancock. Sum- merside. sinm- the pelt show lest resum h is ~ after his glerculgan eexertxigitsimlgiggd with almost su rnatuml enemy. secret was f it was this. aliv discovered, and When Essex found sll- ui t1 m ou siglrtg Ynmfiluou.’ wwhgrgn b2: bed for a week and the only nourishment he would take was milk. Then. rested in mind and body. he would reap r 2t court. We don't know wh no; Lowell has followed the vechnique of llhsex or not, but mun: that even with his wonder. flll Pflvlwrs of recuperation some form of relaxation u nccmery. Quite a number f l1 Polls llflve gone int: 211013.110? KILLS TICKF. L10]. -uvnu m’ Wm???’- D RI - K IL THE “PERFECT _ ' 1s . ALL . PURPOSE FARM INSECT POWDER I‘ O H. LIVESTOCK AND POULTRY. . . . . . N o n - poioonoue non-irritating, easy your livestock lad eevel 7°! Jul dined. whet .I0l1IDQIIiI. Kl L The nnmlbuluoouui Unoqualled for disinfecting, berm, ult n nee .fox .901", . . Pear“. izuaovl-corrolivi. race;- EIHXBTANT. llIll-KII. and IIIOL ere deeper Products - British llele-Inlly Guaranteed. Order from your Ines, Hardware, Ieod and Iced my pound and an it, and when the English unit dofiintlutthee dyerswhc th movedto e n.3, thwsetu theirtradse thoeecounries world wide known. Prom this date should be hept u sible. Ii’ dens have out it should be done right away and any straw is o. well lmown fact that mete earlier anddo better if quiet during the months of Janu- H’! sdrvise 3? disturbance in the ranch. Flor best results quantities horse meat. excellent pert. January and February. um. Inc, elves the“ Q. come? A. Greenland. bArctic and northern Japan. Q. e ‘gm? of Alaslrss, however, The o! the mine come from the peninsula. but tihere are also B- 18W ‘Ilhese latter are poor quality skins. cipal t of the collection being sold alntrhe R. in Copenhagen. The Japaneseskins come from the coast of Hokkoldo. The Japanese skins are government u? is the iaot that scarfs an be- msxieu inflhsriottetown either, sbthcgettshirflelonorbyflthe Isluuihmierl.1.td.,uidpa n: saythgflsretkiteequslinsty and to osemeds upin MontrealmdQuebecomdpi-ioes arelower. ‘The Canadian Fur Auction Sales Company's sale of silver fox and other furs commenced on Wednes- dn and continues the balance of week. Next Monday Hudson's sole o! silver do}; The New York’ Auction Company's ' Sale cd silver for also opens on Mondo next and the Norweiglsn eels silver fox at Oslo next Wednesdfly. January will certainly be a busy, month for the auction houses handl silver fox and mink, on both, es of the Atlantic. Prices and demand du this month will have l t industry for e rest of 1989. The tion is that there will be a kinds of prices will be no higher. and pos- sibly e bit lower, than December. Amcrveisonbet/wem the Brit- ish Government and Hence. with probably the United Sta/tea also airing part. to prevent the de- preciation of the pound. neces- sary the lBritrishatJflmgefi-nmfint will stop e expo on go so as at or around currency readies $4.70 we have to figure onflgager cent decline, on o. 9N. pelt means $1.50. privileges hi8 big: their meiotic!»- cnti vequitrtedthewsder- ls-mvmdmovedbegmdbegmeqe WU! um - Greet. Britain and Holland and made exporting na- tions. Bwiss we. technique is onuletthe ranch es pos- ' he cleaned or hay put ln. It foxes usry. We would not Billing later than this date the creates e certain amount u have to step up the meat fed,- Particularly finelts are also an ration in Benjamin H. Herziyolofwl-‘lggzlgafi ue fbx, whl there different sections in these countries? A. No. There are two which come from the Islands. being large and coarse, with wol- fish characteristics. There ls only one type of Greenlands, the prin- oyal Danish auction blends off the controlled . Q. What are the characteristics that determine the value of a blue fox? A. The most 1m ortant char- acteristic ls color, fo owed closely by the length of the guard hair. Of secondary importance is the fullness of iur and the silkiness of texture. Bize makes only a minor difference. Q. Does the color of blue f0! vary‘! A. {Ihmrwlor v and the also variu. The colors run from Japanese and the color of e blue fox in different sections val-a » ciee. m instance, the Gree blue fox rurv" toward a truer blue 3 the other W110i, some 1N1 the style v1.11 uc mi‘ pale blue fou- es, at. other times for dork blue axes. Reliance, Scandia and Per- feet Choppers. Knives and Plates ‘and puts. Iflfhlilooloughtttlo. _ rum ‘ , colorsl l N GUAFDJALT. How Many Feathers on the Turkey P 20 Prizes Offered For Best Answers. c» ‘nibb- o-Wu T""'"0 “- s 90W"! <s—-:"'°"*' wwoooc-ogtg“ Thenumberffth thtk‘ ' llsum m z. s. 4. all. vitae? “wane-r their? ill till‘ illlfzlrfilsgillifiulx? i5???“ "' u" “m” "h" This contest is sponsored by The Charlottetown Guardian. All prizes are guaranteed by The Island Guardian Pub, Co., Etd._ Box 491, Charlottetown, to whom all correspondence should be addressed. ' ‘ CONDITIONS (Continued) RULE L-Anyone not eligible under Rule 2 and eligible under Rule 8 may qlllllfL for com than by qualify any and n11 of the members of h s or her immediate family living in the same 20 Prizes Offered For the correct, or nearest correct, solution. 6880 prizes as shown below will be paid: 1st prize - - - - - 415.00 2ndprlze-------10.00 3rdprize------- 5.00 4thprlze------- 4.00 5thprlze-------- 3.00 and 10 more prizes of 50 cents each. CON-DITIONS I -- mpelltl l ll‘ bfllll’ l8. 1930. All lull ns audio cdnslldlzzmgnmust 52.1fm Citarlotigiown Guardinnslry that irne. RULE 2—Any subscriber who is peld in hle to compete for the above V hers of the subscriber's immediate nmlly. living ln the same hnuw. are eligible to complete." No monfly heed lions, BUT SEE R. LE 5 R. correspondents are cnn in all. 6th prize - - - - - 7th prize----- 8th prize - - - - - 9th prize - - - - - 10th prize - - - - ldvance ui Sept. 1939. is lee. Also any and all mem- be mm Wm‘ the "w?" In a new subscription with his or her solution. Rule 5. ff those who tied have both. or all. sent in new tlnns. then the prize will go to the one whose subscription on which he or slur became r-llrlble ls mid farthest In advance In lhr year 1M1. 1f both or all are paid in advance of Dec. Ill. 1941, then i-lvc EGARDING DOUBLE PRIZES. sldered eligible under this rule. ... who is In arrears ma com te on condi- 0.1.1.1!’ 3:0. tloldyggsslgsflm paid and the subscription remwed to some date after Sept. 30. 1939. Such rsons should immediately wrlic to or call at the office of The the amount of the arrears lllylllk- a subscriber's family may com pgld the arrears and renewed u hnrloltetown Guardian in lcurn Any and all members of sun-h pete also when the subscriber has‘ p la September 30, 1939. -_,_ .-§_ “my a- Mi'\ W -__ § n‘ or her new subecrl tinn. and ti: shall a house. Rule 2. sends In l. new Twenty prizes “m” m“ “d” "m b” ‘M for a. chance to win a the prize that otherwise might be won. money will be divided evenly among those tylnr No Short Term Subscriptions Accepted In This Contest l Subscription Ratos (Cash In Advance) ~ CITY $5.00 per year; By Mall in P. E. I. $4.00 per year; », By Mail in Canada and U.8.A. 85.00 per year Solution Turkey Feathers Competition (f1)—My solution of the number qf feathers on the turkey is (b)-I am eligible for the competition on the subscription addressed lo the following subscriber: Name (c)—Amount enclosed on account of the above subscription, Name . . . . ...-o--... (d)—New subscription. Address" Second new subscription. Name -.......~~.--o--.- Address Amount enclosed for new subscription, S. Name of contestant Address Daie1989 NOTE: Section: (o) and (d) are IObIIG only her I , 1939. or if sending Septem mdotbepeidforoneyeereooh. .2 Wwuuns-n ~ . 1 .. Y é 111' .-. - -$ 2.00 _ _ L09 RULE 5—Every competitor, alrcul nsllfled under Rule 2. 3, or 1 m) l. may. if he or she so desk-so. due-lily e can: for a chance in win ' ' - DOUBLE the amount of the prise that. mfg t otherwise be won. . - 1.00 To so qualify the entry it is neomeary to have it accompanied by a _ _ L00 new subscription for one yearn. Thus if a person, qualified under scrlptlon with the entry and wins first instead of $15.00.. A arrears would have to pay all arrears. renew into October 1939. and send in n years eubscrl tion for someone else in order in qualify E prism. A person not now a sub- scriber would have to subscribe himself, and also send I. new sub- scription for someone else, to qualify his entry for a s. DOUBLE prize. Ii. is not obligatory to cprailfy under Rule but such qualification gives n contestant a chance to win D0 RULE ti-Esch competitor. by lending in his or her solution. agrees that the decision of the judges will be indisputable and final. RULE 7--All sfllllllons must. be sent on the printed form below. RULE 8-1" case of a ile. the prize will 1o to the one who had sent ln accordance with (Jul out this form along the border lines. fill in and mail earl to the Charlottetown Guardian. R0. Box 401. Charlottetown. PL. . Address.................. _.-..;c-. ' Ifoebeoriptiorllsnot ire-adv lnovneortwonewnbeerfptions. nowlbbocri