(continued from preceding page) 
now prime, Talk about a surprised man. He kept on 
trapping and every day his traps were full, it took 
him half the night to skin, clean, and stretch the furs, 
At the end of the season his figures added up to 
2,800 muskrat pelts that brought in the handsome 
sum of $5,100. This, plus his $1,000, was not so bad 
an income off a worthless marsh, and he was his 
own boss, doing the thing he liked. 
Natural 
N : usk rat IH oods 
Listed here are the 
aquatic plants important 
as Muskrat Foods, all of 

which are listed with 
prices and description of 
growth and water condi- 
tions required, in this 
booklet. 
Page Page 
Wilds Rice aero. serene seers Sweet. lag iss. cn canes 24 
Wild’ Celery. eq ne rae 8 iWatersiris So.) teehee 24 
Sago Pondweed .......... 10 Burreed®. see eee one 26 
Hard Stem Bulrush .......15 Gattails: os -salscns ore cre 26 
Deep Water Duck Potato . 18 ReedsGrassyus acetone 26 
White Waterlily .......... 19 Bickerel Plantuncenereieee 25 
American Motus! ys. seen 19 Three-Square Rush ....... 25 
Wapato Duck Potato ..... 20 Redhead Grass ............ 23 
Water Shields ee 23 CordaiGrasse) o.com een 27 
Page 40 
FR WON ON OIA ONO 
MUSKRAT FARMING 
Man has been engaged in the trapping of fur- 
bearing animals since the early ages. The women 
of the stone age wore furs as clothing, the modern 
women wear furs, not alone because of the warmth, 
but for the beauty and their personal adornment. 
Trappers, spurred by high prices, have ruthlessly 
depleted the wild supply. The drainage and reclama- 
tion of swamp lands have destroyed the breeding 
grounds of millions of muskrats. So, if we are to 
have a dependable supply of fur, they must be raised. 
Statistics compiled by Frank G. Ashbrock of the 
U. S. Biological Survey, show that the muskrat is 
the most important of all fur bearers. More than 
fifty per cent of all fur used today is muskrat. His 
glossy pelt is not only used in its natural state, but 
when dyed is sold as Hudson seal, river mink, south- 
ern beaver, neutria, otter, sable and many other 
popular furs. For the past few years the demand 
for muskrat pelts has exceeded the supply by from 
fifteen to twenty million pelts. The result of this 
demand has prompted the commercial raising of 
this little fur bearer, by some of our largest manu- 
facturing furriers and far-sighted individuals. Musk- 
rat farming is a business, the same as banking, 
manufacturing or mining. It is as practical as the 
raising of sheep, cattle or hogs, the difference being 
that it is ten times as profitable. 
BS ®’W™’W >’ >’ ’W>’OA’WOANOA’*O>’*A’O’AA’A’ A’ AA’ A’ RA AD’ 
KKKKKK KKK KKK KKK KKK KK KKK 
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