COUGARS RAI D RCAF SHOT nt-or RCAF Station Hol- cougars have been reducing the pet l bcrg on the northern tip of Van- population at the station for the couvcr Island. is this cotigar kit- last few motitlis. Holding the cun- tcn. tiliicli itcighs about 40 pounds t gar is Flight Lieutenant John l)cnt and is about a year old Thelof Dartmouth, Nova Scoiia and ' COUGAR! have reduced the pet ren Houston of 38 Rochford St. population at RCAF Station Hol- Charlottetown. P.E.I. Mrs. Hous- , bdrg on the northern tip of.Van- ton is the daughter of Mrs. W.S- ieouver island to four cats and Hlllll” 0' 31 E030" 51- Charla iflvp dons within the last few mon- ntietown. Shown in front of their ths. Houricr, the ”cats” have not home are John 4. Mrs. Houston, bothered the family of Leading .Iurly 6. LAC Houston and -liidyis . Aircrnttsnian G, R. Houston sta- twin. Janet. Sitting on the tractor Ll tioned at linlberg. LAC Houston is the baby. Jeffery. 1 year. ,is the son of Mr. and Mrs. War- National Defence Photo 25. were withdrawn Tuesday night WITIIDRAW FROM TAIPEI Though the situation is back to 'l'All'l-ll. Formosa (Reuters -, normal. martial law has technic- More than 30.000 Chinese Nation-i ally been enforced since ISN9 he- 'llIIlI troops. rushed into Taipei cause Formosa is still considered tf0Il0VtlIIK iinti-American riots Mayt to be at war. ,a PETS his son Gzirv 12. Dciinis .'lI('L.0ISI'l 10. son of l-lliglit Sergeant Neil Nit-I.ei.sli of Oak l.alti-, Manitoba. lltlllls the rifle iiscd to kill the tuiigar. National Defence Photo CFCY TONIGHT JUNE bib 0 Page 12 The Guardian Thursday, June 6. 1957 iinriv-iioirs Ines Robb, writing in the worn. en's column of the New York Teln- gram and Sun. thinks that royalty may by its selection of silver fox and mutations. bring them back again into style. She reminisces about the 1930's when young ladies were saving up to buy silver fox capes. They had a change of ideas in World War 2 when they made mink fashionable and dropped sil- ver fox as if it were the plague. Now Miss Robb notes silver and mutation foxes are making a new stand. The Duchess of Windsor and Princess Grace of Monaco are sport- ting mutation fox capes and Leo Ritter. one of the men who make the styles popular. states that he is putting new amphasis on foxes in a line that he had now in prepar- ation. if the above is correct. and we have no reason to think it isn't. . I lot of foxes that have been in storage for years will be appear- ing in the markets. FLASHBACK - The Fur Trade Journal of Can- ada has a column Twenty-five year ago. That would be May. 1932, and this is a statement from it. "Silver fuses continue to sell at good prices and at the winter sale in Iiionireal selected half to 365 to 8140 . . . Muskrat was more of a standard fur at this time pog. sibky than any other fur and at the same sale extra large and large skins brought from 63 to 70 cents." A collecttion of some l3.000 raw- muiation mink was 96 per cent sold at New York Auction Co. re cently and during the entire week 97 per cent of the 183.000 muta- tion mink was sold. Bidding was strong throughout with medium goods very strong and good iner- cliandise in particiilarlv strong demand. There was some European participation in the sale. ECONOMICS Marshall Ticiiiig. it l'illl('llPl' and columnist writing in this months Am-crican Fur Breeder magazine. states that male and female mink kits that won't bring S12 at aiic- tion should nnt be raised. Perhaps we cannot help to raise some SI2, he says. some likely looking kits fail to develop or fur out proper- ly and fail to bring S12 But cer- tainly we need not deliberately start in May in feed out a mink of ll type that cannot possibly bring 512. There will be male kits as well as female kits in our litters this spring that if fed to maturity will not bring a Sl2 price. Obviously he concludes. it would be foolish to raise these kits. The basis on MINISTER OF SPEAKING ON '” LIBERA Inst-rtrtl by the N.S. three-quarter siltcrs brought from; OIIFIIR TOPICS which the rancher should keen Of kill a kit should, in Mr. Reinifl Dlllnlon. be determined thusly: who- ther or not it is economically sound to furnish the feed, labor and WI Blane required to finish off each animal without regard for all of the other items of cost. . United Mink Bra-ders Assoc!!- tion sale last week which was con- ducted by the Hudson's Bay C0m' pany Fur Sales. Inc. New York. was a wonderful success: 97 PH cent of the 25.020 standards will sold with prices advancing fully 25 per cent over January. A "W high for the season in standards was set for H.B.C. by N0r”"l'00d Fur Farms The lot which sold at 8105 was boiiilhl by Cil955l19l' Fur Company .N'orthwood's next five male lots all went for 346 and Northwood also shipped the toll female lots to the same purchas- er at 337.50. A collection of 14.795 demi-buffs was 100 per cent sold and moved at prices slightly high- er than I-l.B.C. May 1956. sale. The collection was described by the buyers in the room so I with some fine strings. . Beaver and muskral were two it- ems which highlighied the gener- Ial sale of the Canadian l-'iir Auc- tion Sales Co. iQuebecI l.tii.. In lMontreal last week. The substan- lilnl beaver offering of 220000 skills was 75 per cent sold. Muskrat was 70 per cent sold with strong de- miind. Higiicsi price for the 89.- lwt muskrat skins was 52.25 for Quebec seal. Strings sold from pS1.l0 to 32.10. Some of these were )from New Brunswick and some from Ontario and the remainder ,from Quebec. 'or1'iMisM There is a general tone of op- timism in the United States and Canada and this has reached the stock market. or the stockmarket niny he the cause oi it. certainly there is much more hopeful feeling in biisiiiess than there was a few months ago. This is clearly shown by in recent report of the Federal Rt-serve Board of the United States which states that ten or elev- en districts in the U.S.A. report all upstairs sales in department stores showing gains during March ranging up to 69 per cent. and it may be of interest to PE. island crs that Boston leads them all with a 69 pcr rent. in the early 1890's ivhi-ti one could get passage to Boston on a boat leaving Char- 'iotieiown for 88.00. thousands of young men and women from this province left for there and have made it their home since. The executives of three auction CFCY-TV FHDAY i JUNE 7th 9:45 P.M. STANDARD TIME 1 HON. R. H. WINTERS PUBLIC WORKS BEHALF OF THE L PARTY Liberal Association ed dyiu due to the heat and reduced Ht yield for which we have no clear explanation as yet." George Mayer and Vincent Ullman. vice- presidoots of American Fur Auc- tions. offered this picture of the situation: A heat spell had clearly llttft Production on a "spotty bas- N - C0011!!! so it did during the W'h0lPlIIl period. They esimated Dnaduction would be off 15 per cent as a result. adding that "it's W0 early for a final figure." some ranchers... however. were getting full litters. they added,' William Fitzgerald. vice-pi-951. dent of New York Auction Co., U. C. Orclciines Mother Of Three ST. THOMAS, Ont. fCPl - A YOU!!! married woman with three children is to be ordained amin- later of the United Church of Can- ldl. In I move unprecedented in the church's 32-year-old history. Faced with one of its most un- usual questions in years. London conference Tuesday voted by a "'1!" majority to ordain Mrs. Elinor Leard along with nine male candidates on Thursday. She will be the first mnrricti woman to be ordained by the United Church. The wife of a missionary. slic is now on furlough from India and is living in New York while her husband completes p'ost-grad- uate ltudies. Mrs. Leard. who is to return to India with her husband. Mild she wants to be ordained because it will give her added staths In work- ing among women and young girls. ' ,,Niohtits aiidores ireiiiigt, lliloiolit, tiitet Keiine, oniiiernt. Geiriiohe iind heseitigt Fleoken so wie JAVEX” TRAN S LATIONE Nothing else cleans, lileaclies, & removes liltt g....... kills germs, ileoilorizes, anti stains . I I A I W py Fhus average instead of I gge on litters, Dlll'l.llI 3" P53 wave. he exPllUWd- mud may young and many died. Aim, may mink appear to have nu,-313; jnemll and the veterin- mn, u, trying to and out what f" mud it.” Is. Ittsaenid. how- ever. would not venture an utt- nsats at this time on the aspect- ed decline In production. Otto Grouse. Prelldut of Unlbd Mink Producers Association. ed this interpretation: "Moro kits Mr: heat wave and the use of "Hg; provid- thetica in foods instead of Ilorg. meat. which is too high in pm. have been lost in the last three it looks like the sveraae litter per weeks than in the past 20 years. Tito worst areas are Minnesota. TO HEAR POLITICAL DISCUSSIONS on , RADIO on TELEVISION HEAR YOUR ON TOMORROW NIGHT IS YOUR FINAL OPPORTUNITY ' LIBERAL CANDIDATES NEIL MATHESON -- CECIL MILLER CFCY- TV --- 9.45 P. M. CFCY- RADIO --- 9.15 P. M. (All times Standard) I VOTE LIBERAL Inserted by Queen's County Liberal Ass'n. female will he doown nout 35 pg, cu”... , . w-srx.v..u..r ILLETTE BLUE BLADE DISPENSER (FOR CLEAN St-lAVES- aonroizmsus SHAVES) PROVEN GOLD-PLATED LURE ( FORTROLLING AND spmmne) ammo av aox ( - IIINGEDCDVER) aoxxoeaz roe N .. L. nsxmzm ew, H088 wszsrx A fll0U54ND-AND-0N! osssm its IN wopksxxop on yam? . rzwsrurzo rwo-mxzzos 407044 92:) hx Gillette K ElZOI' -o-......,p O S i..'iI:?n ""'" - nun what om a razor matched to his I . '5Peeds. LIGHT : :3: :l'8.lr"er btrds. REGULAR .5. ' '-P "Id beard HE I. PIEACVIY for dense beards. ON 5. Cfisn oc;In"r.u'”"- Twist! 5 ""'l Klan clean PPCIIO. Thu”. I ;-any-out o. ,. VI