Till-: ILVT rnoiJLEM 



1 



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suffer likewise from their attacks. Finally the rat is the 

 primary boast of trichina which causes so nuu-h damage and 

 loss in the raising of swine. One of tlu; prime re(piisites hi 

 all such industries, if they are to be conducted with safety 

 and success, is rat-proof construction. 



The depredations of rats on fruits and vegetables, bulbs and 

 seeds of all kinds, and all manner of merchandise, meats, and 

 stored provisions are too well known to re(juire more than 

 passing mention. liuildings are damaged, water pipes gnawed 



Fig. 84. A small night's work for a rat 



Eleven chicks have heen killed and dragged into tlie hole and three bitten so that 



they died. Photograph by the author 



and buildings flooded, the insulation of electric wires de- 

 stroyed, which, together with matches carried into their nests 

 and ignited, cause numerous fires. " It is conservative to place 

 the entire yearly loss to the people f»f AVashington from rats 

 and mice at $400,000" (Lantz). For Baltimore, l>anlz esti- 

 mates the yearly damage at $700,000; and foi- cities in the 

 United States of over 100,000 inhabitants these studies would 

 indicate an annual loss of $20,000,000. 



Black death, the bubonic plague, beginning hi China in 

 1334, swept westward ()\('r Furope, and in that single epi- 

 demic killed, it is estimated, 25,<)<l'KO()() ])c*ople in Furope 



