THIRD BIENNIAL STATEMENT 155 



of fresh meat from without, are entitled to preferential 

 treatment. 



10. The relief of persons inhabiting frontier regions 

 who by reason of sex, age or other causes are unable them- 

 selves to take out licenses and hunt and kill their annual 

 quota of game must be specially provided for by law. 



11. Every community large enough to contain a post 

 office should be established as a game-protection centre, or 

 unit, and a deputy game warden should be appointed for 

 each centre, to whom an annual salary should be paid dur- 

 ing satisfactory service, no matter how small the salary 

 might be. 



12. The duty of every such deputy game warden should 

 be to issue hunting licenses, check up the reports of license 

 holders, and generally promote and be responsible for the 

 observance of the laws affecting game. 



13. The cold-storage of legally-killed game to promote 

 its full utilization by the holders of hunting licenses, be- 

 yond the regular season for hunting, is desirable and neces- 

 sary. 



14. It is time for the Governments of Canada and the 

 United States to stop all killings of female hoofed game, 

 other than caribou, by Indians, by prospectors, and by all 

 other persons. 



15. The waste of game should, under certain fixed con- 

 ditions, be made a penal offense. 



16. Regulations should be framed to require the rea- 

 sonable salvage of game meat by sportsmen. 



LAWS TO COVER SPECIAL CONDITIONS 



It would be placing a very low estimate on the mental 

 fertility of Canadian and American law-makers to assume 

 that it is impossible for them to provide a share of caribou 

 meat and snow geese for the widow and the missionary 



