Illii‘éfialitiééi cases oi ra- bies are coniirmeo There were 1,147 confirmnd cases of rabtos in (‘nuptln ' :Ic 12-month pP-r'md et‘tf‘lNl \lt L'll :‘It_ reports thr- Health I imals Branch. Canada Uni»: of of Aartculune Allhouz‘t II was all .. .. .si- of In over tltta Di“?\‘l0l:< if? .muzhz. the total “as loss lion II:I.I' of the record 2330 cost.» In MRS-‘15! As in pl'l‘HUlh 5mm \\.ltl‘.li'.‘ flt'UlllllIr'il lo! tin. 'Ilfitl‘ill' of Palm“ 733, The i.‘wil.li\'l' untitl- ed 293 form {liltlllll—lj‘. Ttl lions and 30 rats. ’I‘h discasc Fotlmtrtl mp pat tern of nthPt' years rpmhm: n peak to the “tutor amt yawn”: off Lo the scrins to 3 Int\' :um. mer Lucid-:— room-r5 the m“, tagwu» (11552593 d!‘l?«1"il Ontario "nth R70. had the hrgest number of caSPs. )L‘lr‘l toba had 1‘18. Queber- 38. the North-west Territories 9. For the. first time In recant j.oars. rab— ies was uncovered in southeas- ter Saskatcheuan near the Manitoba border whey-o l-i cases were confirmed. Ontario counties with l‘llf‘ Tori est numbpr nf casos ‘Icrc I‘arlc— too. 83. Huron. 60. Perrb and Wollincton. 3R oat-h; Simww. 48; Waterloo. 4t; Dtrt'hftm. 39; and Grey, 33 Rural ll‘lllllll'lpaltltntt in \lnni. ltoha harm: the mom t-asos uni-e Woodward, 21; Hamioia. 2ft; Blanshat'd and Shoal Italic, ll car In QttPiwr, emintuz. utth lthc 'nosi vases .\r:ontouil, and Chateau- 15. Prnttac. fl; @1133" 3. Forntnaltely. rabies: has not become established in the dog population and there has been no instance of a dog tran~mitf— in; tho disoase to amt-Ithcr dot;V Every one of line 70 cases In-l volvinz does resulted from the animals encminttarimz diseased foxes and other “did-lilo, ln I'Imv of this. federal voter- friartarts Iirzc ounors to kcep S’hPlr dogs on a leash or licrl up, have them vaccinated. mod N» port all suspoctcd cases of ra-i ..a, THE FITZPA'I‘RICK BROTHERS AVERAGE 85 PER CENT GRADE A Island’s largest sow battery is owned byFitzpatrick bros. A comic of enterprising young farmcrs. Edward and Leonard Fitzpatrick. hate the province‘s largest sow battery operation at lO-\lile House. and they also are feeding some weaner pigs to market weight in an ad- joining building, The brolhct's York and Landrace have culled otIt about 1’5 per cent of the original dams and are still “coding out some of 9 sons as tlicy strive for the best slot-k obtainable. Just now thf‘y have a month old Locomhc boar which they are crossing with the other animals, The main idea. appar- ently is to cross the new breed with a York-Landrace cross to see what improvement. if any, it will cilcrl In their operation. 86 PER CENT The operation of feeding the, \veaners to maturity is just get- ting rightly underway. but the brothers fottnd they averaged slightly hottor than 86 per cent Grade A t-arI-asscs from the 180 hogs they marketod last year. Thcy bclim‘e the longthy La- combc boar may improve this averacc. but they are anaiting the rcsull of tho cxpcrimcnl. and no litlcrs strod by the new ani« mal have grown to maturity as i started with f. The no: breeders are averag- ln: approximately 10 weaner pigs to a son» in one count ' got 276 \I'caner pigs from sous -—- and thcy have raised as many as l5 \Ieancrs from several Laurlrace son's. But sontclimes, they cxplain single liitcr counts are mis- leading. One of their Landrace son's produced only two pigs In her first llllcl'. and the natural tendency would be to cull her Inllnrtltuli'l)’ lqu “to brothers lie-Iii Ilr‘l' .IIIII ‘Nli' prmiurcil Iii pl-s “mt tutu .\'Itr’ |ll'i|\ll|('t‘\.l 1.3 pm lll t'lt'll of not last t\\o litltts tho ltoutncn said with satisfaction. The coal is in go as high as 125 sons in tlicir hatterj. and to raisp between 1.800 and 2.- 000 market was per year. they sat SLIM \‘IARGIN The pure for marital animals. s as hizh as $2850 per hun- dredweizht last year. but it was doivri'to a scanty $24 when the writer dropped around for a chat. and that leaves a mighty slim margin on which to work, The brothors tried rcsfricted feeding on one lot of 30 pizs last year they fed about 150 pounds daily at around five months of aze — but thcy are. not sure that rcsIrIrtcd fecding' Is the ansncr to bcttcr quality‘ and more cconomtcal hot: rais. in: They believe that good grad- es can be obtained with the. rizht tync of animals. and their PXDPI‘ZPllf‘e has borne that out. The pcilefed feed is spilled on tho ('nIIt-rPlP floor and the ani- mals eat It from there Then: Is no hopper or trough feeding. And thore is no waste. either. Edward and Leonard insisted. I‘SF‘. NO STRAW It must bc a lot of work feed- III: the animals that way. it “as sttzzcstcd. But the reply was 41 animals. ‘ in the barn. “We worked in our i .firm negative. "We spend only one hour and 20 minutes per day .feeding the 800 pigs and doing the daily cleaning chore.“ they explained. Water is available in bowls. Here's one idea that will surprise many farmers: the Fitzpatricks do not use am" straw for bedding. They don‘t use any straw at all. But their pigs are clean. they insisted: and they were clean. just as they 3 here is no trouble with dampness on the concrete floor. and the Fitzpatrick men suggest it may be because they dumped 50 big truckloads of sand on the ground and that is under the concrete floor. The pigs keep the feeding spot 0 the floor Lean. “ ' 2 n train pigs to do nearly anything. ‘ i you start em enough." Edward explained. The sow battery building is; 32 feet by 132 feet. The penS‘ are. seven feet by 94h! feet and ‘ that includes the. creeps for the Q little pigs that measure 20 inches by five feet. pens in the feeder house are nine by 20 feel. Each pen provides space for 30 feeders. and the Fitzpatricks plan on in- creasing that to 35 pigs. they said. They plan on each sow aver-. aging a little better than two litters per year. The oldest son" in the battery is five years old. i and has narrowed eight litters: to date. Looking at the big pile of bags of feed. I asked thcm if they have much trouble wtih rats. They have had no rats.‘ but. did have some trouble with mice until they brought cats into the barns. and t 9 mice‘ problem has since \'ii'lu:t|l_\' III» appeared. NO FROST PROBLEM They use heat lamps in the creeps for the pigs from birth to two weeks in cold weathcr, t But there's no problem of frost MOTOR REWINDING & REPAIRS Storey Electric Ltd. 1 :It I‘rint 0 St. i‘h'fown 24-Hour Emerzcncy Scryice DIAL 4-73“ shirt sleeves in the feeder barn during the coldest days of last winter." they said. The Fitzpatricks are running feed tests on some of their hogs and measuring such things as the days the animals take to grow to maturity. But none of the reports are available yet. they explained. The brothers farmers at first and kept some 12 to 15 sows: then they decid- nere lePf‘I Olds Ltd. today - = 203 Fifiroy Street bios ho the nearest foderal Vet-i cauimned not to pick up or ei'inarian‘s office. i Iantllc any “lid animal lthat ap- As a further safeguard. lllllll-' pours slf‘k or latiio. If'lnkl‘llilfis arc urged to elImIn-l 'I‘ttttirnt‘ss Ill uttd animals l> am all stray and uninvited uIIItotural and “lion a slit! oils. lrnbies, nho veterinarians point \rlull and cIIIIlrlton tiltkc are on. ron'u children. efforts of those who fit‘ the out end. "F try Archer 8: MacDonald Ltd. of the Soil Conservationist "I Where God cI ated the north by “is divine process“ for the bcncfii of men! not one man. nor one cwncrntitm. but mankind for all it . "I believe the Aliyigbty gave man an Inheritance of tho Ninth, not to be boarded as “I believe that wbatwever a man sowctb, that shall he also reap; that ho who man- .10; his flelds. pastures. woodland. and ntrcnmn with respect and wisdom shall reap the bountiful barvct and so sballbls descendants: while. In: only of his own irimediatc gnln. shall hrilll to grief his land. himclf. and his child- "Holdlng these beliefs In be into. I dodlcafe myself to the task of bwlpiniz my fellow man "all" their own personal responsibility in comrvlng lbc carlh for the gon- eratious which follow nun. To this end I shall devote my host or III, the earth It: the Lord‘s and the lu’llncus the-tool. but the rcsponsibillly for Na stewardspr it would in man." Archer 8. MacDonald ltd. OPEN EVERY NIGHT "I'lL 9:00 me o miner guards his treasure. but to be used with wisdom and in the Tulips! f t pctual benefit of all map. I m M "or. ‘ "I believe all of mankind. rczardlcss of race or creed. are entitled lo a fair and . "notable share of the earth‘s bounty commensurate with lhcir own cf'forts. But in so "ou ' ' ' believing. I hold the in-ovocahltI conviction that man bimsclf owes earth a debt of respect and fealty. be who uses them nolflnbly. think- knowledge in Izuldlnz tho mil that the land which nuturcs us shall be fruitful with- St. Peter‘s Road. Parkdale Phone 892-1623 MODERN MILLING YOUR BARN DOOR 0 if you are interested in really saving money on your feed bills . . . G If )ou want to conserve the lime and labor you spcnd handling feed . . . 0 And if you can see the logic of processing feed right where it's grown and fed to the stock... You’ll Want To Be Served Regu- chrIy By Our New Daffin Mobile Feed Mill If we can't give you better. faster, more conven- Ient feed processing service at less overall cost to hen WE DON'T DESERVE YOUR BUSINESS On that basis. GIVE US A TRY! NO OBLIGATION—JUST PHONE 05. RIGHT NOW. TODAY! Or ask any one of our Satisfied Customers. MUTOHDALE MOBILE FEED sEIich Charlottetown . Buy from Remington Our .00 Our CUSTOM BLENDED Fertilizers HIGH ANALYSIS Savings REGULAR ANALYSIS Features Our GRANIU'LAR For Free Flowing r Free SOIL SAMPLING Our Complete SPREADINIG SERVICE Our ed on the large-scale effort. They grow 90 to 100 acres of‘ grain each year — they averag- ed 67 bushels per acre feed the grain mostly to the 50 head of cattle; 12 of them Kare milk cows. They get enough manure front the pigs and the cattle to cover about 100 acres. They have approximately 250 acres of clear land in all. Make Farming More Profitable CHANGE TO THE ALL NEW I964 CHEVROLET TRUCKS The new Fleetside Pick-up by Chen-clef for '64 makes your pleasure. Here. you have functional available in two body sizes. So drop in and look them over at Island Chev - No obligation to buy- styling and ISLAND CHEV. OLDS. LIMITED FARMERS New Quality and Service make the Difference Our SPRAY CHEMICAL Supply 118 Our COMPETITIVE PRICES or through your Dealer. . . But Buy PRIMA FERTILIZERS Phone 267-3414 with .‘ Herta barley last year - bu t Retail value of Canadian dairy products is estimated at mm dun one billion dollars a yEar. Thirty-five Acts of Parlia. mom are administered by the Canada Department of Agricui. ture. CDA'E Health of Animals Branch employs more than 500 ans. ' vetennaci hauling a hard-working design Dial 4-6577 P.E.I.