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Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 29 Apr 1949, p. 2

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Government officials, and not only those in the Department of Lands and Forests have realized for a number of years, that the fish and game population of Canada was being rapidly depleted. The large percentage of this depletion can be traced directly to the door of the American tourists, the same ones that the Department of Traâ€" vel and Publicity claim, come to this country "only to view the scenery". The propaganda machine that this department ‘has set up is one to encourage the wholesale destruction of the wildlife in this country. F The only real hope that we have of retaining a certain amount of fish and game for our children to hunt and fish for, is the many sportsmen‘s clubs that ar being organized all over Canada. ‘There are of course even a lot of these that have small concern for the fish and game und are more concerned with taking than they are with conservation. However, the large percentage of these clubs have for members, men that are really interested in helping to better conâ€" ditions for our remaining fish and game. If those clubs that were really interested would get together and bring enough pressure on the government. we are sure that excessive hunting and shooting by tourists would come to an abrupt end. â€" ; Greg Clark. known all over Canada and a great part of the United States, as a writer and conservationist, has now released a statement to the effect that the "Damage done to wildlife in Canada by American tourists can never be paid for in American dollars." He goes on to say that the "Americans have depleted their own country of its fish and game and are now working hard at doing the same in | Canada." | __ No less a person than Lands Minister Harold Scott has recognized | _ =~~~ â€"â€" ~~~ that the hunting pressure was getting too great on one of our bigger | * game animals, the moose. Mr. Scott has closed the season on moose Us‘“g DD’I‘ Sprays for this year at least, Ontario. When a Government official realizes a that regardless of the American dollars the moose attracts to this lll Dalry Bams country, that to have an y moose at all in a few years, the hunting | _____ pressure must be removed, then indeed the situation is very serious.. A number of statements hav Canadian Wildlife Situation Is Serious Despite the attitude of the government that "they can do no wrong". suflicientâ€" pressure from a combined group of sportsmen would soon convince them that they are wrong. f The seriousness of the wildlife situation in Canada certainly eannot be over emphasized. l While this paper has been harping for some time on the amount of damage done to fish and game in Canada, by American tourists, the situation has now reached such acute proportions as to attract the attention of some of our better known writers and conservationâ€" COU. aN TODs¢!| ‘ d i & I . I Authorized as second d.-i-:-fi.m Office Department, Ottawa organization shown. This covers Training and Operational work of the Tactical Air Force. Monday evening, May 2nd, at 8 p.m. The purposes of the Association will 1 Officers will be elected. The film "Wasp This meeting is sponsored by exâ€"Air Force men in Kitchener and Waterloo and is not affiliated with any other Branch of His Majesty‘s Service are invited to attend an ORGANIZATION MEETING IN THE LEGION HALL, 48 Ontario St. North, Kitchener, on R.C.A.F. Association Come and meet your friends and make new ones. ALL exâ€"Air Force personnel who have served in any JOIN reductions. THE WATERLOO CHRONICLE This is your fight for better living conditions and »greater tax Party membership is your first step in taking an active part in your country‘s future. Through aggressive lcadership, the Progressive Conservative Party has already done much for you. You can help do wore. Work with the party that works for you . . NO CHARGE yA REFRESHMENTS k a £4 | 1 J is for you ... _ BRA THE _ iRESSIVE CONSERVATIVE PARTY FRIDAY, APRIL 29, 1949 CONSTITUENCY...... I wish to join the Progressive Conservative Party. THE PROGRESSIVE CONSERVATIVE PARTY THE MARCH for GREATER TAX REDUCTIONS (Preferved, but not vccemtial) (Ploase print) (Pluase print) 49 King Street E. KITCHENER, Ont are not in their stalls Special care should be taken to see that milk and cream cans and milking machines are not touched by the spray. DDT in oil solutions may be absorbed through the skin of the animals, and will be found in the milk and in the animal fat. There has been little or no diffiâ€" culty in spraying cattle themâ€" selves with DDT, when wettable powders are used in water, since the water spray does not peneâ€" trate the skin and the residue is not absorbed by the tissues. Even with water spray, care should be taken to see that milking utensils do not come in direct contact with the spray. An official statement has been made by the United States Deâ€" partment of Agriculture, after a meeting of the principal governâ€" ment agencies concerned with the utilization of insecticides. "There is no evidence", the statement says "that the use of DDT in acâ€" cordance with the recommendaâ€" tions of the various federal agenâ€" ciles has ever caused human sickâ€" ness due to the DDT itself. Howâ€" ever, minor toxic symptoms may be produced by kerosene and vaâ€" rious solvents used in DDT and in practically all other insecticide mixtures." The statements deâ€" nounces as "totally without founâ€" dation" published reports that DDT is responsible for the soâ€" called "virus X" disease of man and the "X disease" of cattle. Both these diseases, the Departâ€" ment says, were reported and reâ€" “cogrgized before DDT was ever Spraying dairy barns with DDT, particularly with oil solutions, say officials of the Department, should beâ€"doneâ€"when the cattle All pesticides sold in Canada come under the provisions of the Pest Control Products Act, adminâ€" istered by the Dominion Departâ€" ment of Agriculture. This is done to protect the farmer from buying worthless or highly danger(ms preparations. No preparation is allowed on the market until it has been analysed and approved by technical officials of the Departâ€" ment. If such preparations are used in accordance with the inâ€" structions on the label, they will be effective for the purpose for which they are recommended, and will have no detrimental effects. . A number of statements have appeared recently in United States newspapers which are criâ€" tical about the use of DDT sprays in dairy barns. Some of the stateâ€" ments have even gone so far as to suggest that DDT is responsible for "virus X" disease of man and "X disease" of cattle. BIBLICAL LANDS of Egypt and other African countries are seen flow anew in a huge scheme being launched by the governments of British Uganda and pt. n."fie-. envlu.‘:.‘ the use of the waters of the Nile to make mil ; of acres and the peoples who live on them free from the bondage of drought and to provide el. .c power for farms factories. The first nlg,.oudu the equivalent of $48,000,000, is a dam in Central Africa at Owen Falls, Jinja, Uganda, where White Nile pours from Lake Victoria on its long journey to join the Biue Nile on the way to Egypt and the sea. 'unrromuuvamhonmun&lm-eywmmmuun‘um“yhl‘y and the sea. Redmlsvhuuudaboveha wluudaln-‘mmdtwolrm firms. Egypt‘s gain will principally be ¢ultivable land and U ‘s power, African neigh ulso beneâ€" M‘Jng from power or land are the Sudan and Tanganyika and possibly the Belgian Conge. Nations Plan to Harness Nile and Make Deserts Bloon make critical notes upon injuries, and be too acute in their appreâ€" hension, is to add unto our own tortures, to feather the arrows of our enemies and to resolve to sleep no more.â€"Sir Thomeas Canada‘s swollen civil service their business since it‘s cocuzg payrolls. And it‘s very mu them close to $300 millions ‘06.. as against $88 millions in 1938. To put it another way, the avâ€" erage family head now kicks in $80 a year to the federal civil serâ€" vice gyroll kitty as against $28 in 1938 and $65 in 1945. a ear could be saved by reorganâ€" flndngs’ s on federal housekeeping in U.S. The Hoover Commission estimates that at least $3 billions ment along business lines. special survey in The Financial Post. And while the situation has been under some scrutiny since 1946, it‘s now thrown into M? focus by the Hoover Commission‘s plied the family music. The family Bible and family alâ€" bum were popular institutions. They didn‘t have to hire a big h;xsky man to teach boys how to play. ‘The hired man got a dollar a day for 16 hours and earned it. Ladies‘ Clubs were the Ladies‘ Sewing Circle and the rolling h. Mgk was delivered into your own pitcher from the dealer‘s tin There were no croo: except mother when ahen;:Led her restless babe to sleep. People used to arise and retire on the same day, now they retire and arise on the same day. Boys were boys and girls were girls but nowdays mothers and grandmothers are girls also. when they were young. Having had so many personal requests to have it reprinted for the benefit of those who onlg had heard their friends talking of it, here they are mostly by an unknown author: "In the good old days Ladies wore bustles. Monday was washday. Nobody swatted the fl{. Nobody had appendicitis. There was no traffic cop. Everybody played croquet. ; There were no Bolsheviks. Men sported wiry whiskers. Cream was five cents a pint. Ice cream was "iced cream." Nobody was ashamed to walk. Boys‘ shoes were coppedâ€"toed. Saturday night was bath night. No one was fined for speeding. Vitamin guages were unknown. Widow‘s weeds weren‘t cigarettes. Only small boys wore short pants. Nobody was told "The line is buâ€" sy." 5 The livery stable was the social circle. Women, nor men either, played Shows in the Town Hall came onâ€" Chickens all went to roost at sunâ€"~ down. Nobody cared for the price of gaâ€" soline. No one had to look for a parking place. â€" i The sheiks all lived in Arabia or _ ly so often. â€" â€" Paper and celluloid collars were IN THE OLDEN DAYS THINNING APPLES (By Mrs. Clarence Diamond) WITH C Some few years bmdthb corresâ€" â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" pondent had pul some old| The favorable effe« sayings which were most descripâ€"|ning apples are well tive and entertaining and served|by fruit fl)rwrrs; but to take readers back to the memâ€"{ning is laborious and ories of their forefathers as they golf. _ D Farmers came to town for their THB WATERLOO l(Onitwb) CHRONICLEB To ruminate Alarming, say many citizens, of CIVIL SERVICE SOARS There are three times as many ople on the Ottawa payroll toâ€" y as before the war, states a The favorable effects of thinâ€"| ning apples are well recognized by fruit firwars; but hand thinâ€" ; ning is laborious and under presâ€" | ent conditions is a costly operaâ€" tion. For these reasons, chemical blossom thinning :firays have | been developed. Within the past few i'ears a number of these che~ ; mical sprays have been investiâ€" | gnted at the Central Exgerimental : arm, Ottawa, reports D. S. Blair and S. H. Nelson of the Horticulâ€" ture Division The dinitro comâ€" ; pounds and the hormones naphâ€" | thaleneacetic acid and the sodium salt of mphtaleneace{ t:;:‘ acid show promise as sprays for thinning apâ€" gles. These chemicals are applied y a power sprayer operating at sufficiently high pressure to give good coverage. 4 The dinitro materials have givâ€" en satisfactory results on the heaâ€" vyâ€"setting varieties such as Duchâ€" ess, ‘Melba, Wealthy and Yellow Transparent. They are caustic in effect and destroy the pollen that is shedding as well as that in the unopened anthers as soon as conâ€" tact is effected. These sprays should be applied when the trees the terminal bloom will have alâ€" ready been pollinated. The floral parts such as the petals and tips of the style, along with the young leaves present, are often severely scorched. ‘The trees, however, quickly recover and at harvest should be Afimed when the trees are in full bloom, at which time Varieties, such as Mcintosh, which in certain seasons do not C A NA DA PRODUCES GOLO FOR ALL TH L W O RLD appear normal. One out of every three dollars we Canadians earn comes to us as a result of foreign trade. This campaign is designed to help all Canadian industries and, conseâ€" quently, to help put money in the pockets of every Canadian citizen. Lhis is an adaptation of one of a series of adverâ€" tisements which, for the past two years, The House of Seagram has published in magazines and newsâ€" papers printed in many languages and countries throughout the world. These advertisements feaâ€" ture various Canadian productsâ€"lumber, salmon, furs, nickel, apples, plywood and many others. WITH CHEMICALS Why Seagram‘s sells Canada first Che House of Seagram THE ROYAL BANK OF CANADA Waterioo Branch â€" H. S. Beveridge, Manager Canada, world‘s second largest producer of gold, exports more than ninetyâ€"five percent of her productâ€" an important contribution to the world supply of this universal medium of international exchange. ranged to meet your needs. Come in and talk it over. and equipment. Pay cash to carn valuable cash disâ€" counts. Strengthen your position with suppliers. * It pays to buy for cash. Use a lowâ€"cost bank foan to PARM ImMPLEMEINTY which would normally adhere. The hormone sprays do not burn the foli but wilting, dwarfing and u'l:fimc of the foliage has been observed on some varieties. Naturec has endowed our country with an almost limitless supply of valuable resources. Properly used and converted to manufactured goods, these resources can carry our nation to unprecedented greatness. But first, the peoples of other lands must learn of the prestige and quality of Canadian products. FARM IMPROVEMENT LOANS for the above purâ€" poses are available at any branch of The Royal Bank of Canada on attractive terms. Ask at your nearest branch for our explanatory bookiet and full particulars. â€" New implements, machinery or equipment? New foundation or breeding livestock? A farm electric system ? Fences, drainage or other developments? New farm or home buildings ? Additions or improvements to existing buildings ? The House of Seagram believes that it is in the interest of every Canaâ€" dian manufacturer to help the sale of all Canadian products in foreign markets. 1t is in this spirit that these advertisements are being produced and published throughout the world. are available the grower without previous experience should use these chemicals cautiously. For trial purposes, the dinitors should be used at the rate of 114 pints or % pounds per 100 Imperial galâ€" lons, while the hormone comâ€" gounds are ap&l)iéd at the rate of ounces per 100 gallons. The safâ€" est policy is to sli{ghtly underâ€"thin with the chemicals and finish off with the hand thinning.

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