Ferrets : their management in health and disease with remarks on their legal status . s confers no power of sale,but merely a right to keep the thing dis-trained until the damage is made goodby its owner, the right may not be avery valuable one. APPENDIX 11 PAET I Vermin Traps Traps which are used for catchmg and killingvermin may be objected to by the reviewer asirrelevant to the present work, but it must beremembered that when a ferret is lost on arabbit w^arren it must be retaken by fairmeans or foul, otherwise it will cause greathavock and destruction on the warren. The traps now placed be


Ferrets : their management in health and disease with remarks on their legal status . s confers no power of sale,but merely a right to keep the thing dis-trained until the damage is made goodby its owner, the right may not be avery valuable one. APPENDIX 11 PAET I Vermin Traps Traps which are used for catchmg and killingvermin may be objected to by the reviewer asirrelevant to the present work, but it must beremembered that when a ferret is lost on arabbit w^arren it must be retaken by fairmeans or foul, otherwise it will cause greathavock and destruction on the warren. The traps now placed before the reader arethe best for the purpose of catching polecats,ferrets, stoats, weasels, or rats, that have comeunder the authors notice during a number ofyears practical experience. Fig. 37 is perhaps better known underthe name of The Dorset Trap. It is a verystrong and well made spring-fall, capable ofbeing used for almost anything. Fig. 38 shows a simple cage trap, made ;64 FERRETS of wire netting, for taking vermin alive. It isbaited inside, and, as a rule, when one has been. Fig. 37. caught, others are sure to followlight and effective. Figs. 39 and 40 illustrate another It is very-trap


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookpublisherlondo, bookyear1897