. Breeder and sportsman. Horses. August 19, 1899] CRjx; gvs&Tiev mto !fypwt*mwcu THE FARM. The South American Trade. â ; No stone should be left unturned to wio oar shaie of the South American trade. Hundreds of thousands of dollars are annual!? paid into the pockets of British breeders by South Americans for stock no better than we cao supply from our own herds and flocks. The current of that trade set in years ago toward the tight little isle and still continues. We have made fragamentary effects to get a foot- hold in the South American market, which belongs to us by every geographical
. Breeder and sportsman. Horses. August 19, 1899] CRjx; gvs&Tiev mto !fypwt*mwcu THE FARM. The South American Trade. â ; No stone should be left unturned to wio oar shaie of the South American trade. Hundreds of thousands of dollars are annual!? paid into the pockets of British breeders by South Americans for stock no better than we cao supply from our own herds and flocks. The current of that trade set in years ago toward the tight little isle and still continues. We have made fragamentary effects to get a foot- hold in the South American market, which belongs to us by every geographical right, but our success has as yet been small. It will re- quire systematic efbrt in every possible direc- tion to change the current of this established trade that now flows from us to our rival breeders across the water. In other column attention is directed to the Export Exhibition to be held in Philadelphia and a very sensible suggestion is submitted that information of value concerning our pedigreed stock industry in this country be placed within easy reach of visitors at that exposition. Our register asso- ciations may well enough concern themselves with this matter. Doubtless they will hod the authorities of the Philadelphia exposition ready to lend them every possible assistance in getting before foreign visitors information that would lead them to investigate the char- acter of our pure bred stock and our ability to supply them with animals that they need in their improvement of their herds and flocks.âBreeders' Gazette. "Warranted Not to Sour. A sample of milk was lalely examined in St. Louis and the chemist returned it with the endorsement, " Warranted Not to ; It had been so dosed with preservatives that it was warranted not to spoil; embalmedâin fact, poisoned so thoroughly that not even that most resistant form of life, a bacterium, could live in it. What chance has a sickly child. when such poisonous food is given it? Or, for that matter, an
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjecthorses, bookyear1882