he bo. 12 The Guardian, . 1 ‘Wed., Jan. 28, 1959 Cattle Sales Not Reduced t By U.S. Move OTTAWA (CP) — Agriculture Minister Harkness said Wednes- day. he doesn't think recent “Umited States regulations cover- =S ing the cattle disease brucellosis a -—==ghould—“‘serieuslyrestriet” Cana} -— dian beef exports. : These exceeded 600.000 head last year. almost double the 1957 figure. - : Mr. Harkness was replying in the Commons to Eric. Winkler (PC—Grey-Bruce) who said con- cern has been expressed that beef exports to the U.£. now will be restricted by the U.S. regula- tions which came into effect Nov. 8. ~f -h-e— agriculture department said last November in outlining the new U.S. regulations that western cattle—bulk of Canada’s export trade—would not be af- fected to any great extent. : Wednesday, Mr. Harkness said Prince Edward Island is a bru- cellosis-free area. and various counties in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick are qualifying. So were seven areas in Quebec and work was proceeding in the west as well. > Agricultural (Continued from page 5) 6. The contest closes on Fri- day. March 20, 1959. 7. No identification such x econtestant’s name, school, et- eetera shall appear on the es- eay. 8. On a separate sheet the con- testant shall copy and sign the following statement: I (name), a student in Gradé_ class of (teacher's name) in (name of school) do hereby certify thaf this essay was prepared and written by myself. The above statement shall be placed in a sealed envelope and enclosed with the manuscript. 9. The essays shall be mailed to Mr. J. D. S. Sterling, re- tary, P. E. IL. Branch Agricul- tural Institute of Canada, Box 1210. Charlottetown. 10. The prizes shall be three in number-$25.00, $15.00, $10.- @. +. 11. AW. essays shall become the property of the Agricultur- al Institute and may be pub- lished by this society if desir- a Kt is expected that each essay will contain material not only on the contestant’s personal reasons for choosing the particular car- eer but also his ‘or her) ideas on how it would benefit agriculture in this province. BEEKEEPERS The setretary of the P. E. I. Beekeepers Association announc- ed that the Beekeepers requiring packaged bees in 1959 are re quested to book their orders im- mediately. Commencing on April 17th., 100 packages will be ship- ped out daily. HM possible bee- keepers in an area are requested to get together when placing their orders. Packages consigned ia this way will arrive earlier. Spring road conditions often delay delivery of the packages which must be distributed from Char- lottetown. : The Provincial Government will assume the cost of the ex- pressage. Packages will be ship- ped prepaid. If you are present- ed with a bill for expressage, please pay the account and for- ward the receipt to the Secre- QUEENS There is no satisfactory method ef guaranteeing Qveens for all the beekeepers who require them and, for that reason, we will not be keeping a supply on hand. Beekeepers must make their own arrangements for extra Queens by placing an order dir- ect with the supplier. The order for Queens should be placed so that the Queens wil! arrive about five to ten days after the bees have been received. The Queens are $1.15 each prepaid. The price for a two pound package of bees is $3.95 AMERICAN FOUL BROOD KM is recommended that al! beekeepers on P-ince Edward Is- land use drugs for the prevention of Ameriean Foul Brood. The following nrethods have been us- ed for the treatment of this di- sease- Plan ‘1! Feed a syrup made of one part sugar to one part water. Use feeder cans or division feed- er. Mix one-half teaspoonful of T.M. 25 ‘Terramycin) into one- half gallon when the package is hived and another half gallon one month later. Plan (2) Use % teaspoonf u | of sulphathiazole or sulphadiazine to one gallon of syrup. Pian (3) Commercial beekeep- ers can spray the medicated sy- rup into the brood nests. The syrup is best admijgistered sev- eral times during tak spring; each colony eventually receiving a total amount equal to about one teaspoonful of T.M. 3. if four applications are made % teaspoonful of T. M. 25 should go into each hive on each applica- tion. Remember the sulpha can be @ dangerous drug if not handled Properly, so don't overdose and make sure that bees don’t store it im the honey supers. Sulpha drugs do not kill the organism eausing the disease but appear to make it incapable of growing and multiplying in the larvae. Sodium sulphatjiazole and T.M. 2% can be obtained from ,drug- stores, local Veterinarians. and bee supply houses at a few cents per colony. 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