FOR §T9 R§E§x§x g .<= _ Where grain an’ hay are hid? Who build that noble pigpen? The ole man did. FUL IN GARDEN flowering shrubs play an im- portmt part in the glirtleii. Miiny inf them are conspicuously beauti- Iul when in blossom, and lit into planned effects in curiihiiiulliiil Mlth flowers, willie before mid lil- lter their flowering SPlPOII they serve as n green liurllgroiiilil against which the lillllllfll and pi:- rennial flowering pllilli§ iii-e n‘:- Who built them bull-proof fences, The piistur‘ fields amid? Who cleared tiie cedar slaslliii"! 'I‘lle ole niliii (lid. Who built ihiit noble mansion, | No iiiortcngi- for a. lid? , \\'lio planted out that orchard? ‘played- The ole mail did. Such shrubs should be selected [and placcd in relation to other no did u “m, aflccnon’ rplants in the garden with as inucli It was m5 Joy and prid,” care us needs to be ii5(‘(i iii placing And whm his work was ‘ml-med’ a group oi‘ pcreiiiiizils, for ilicir The ole ma“ dim. conspicuous appeal-ante lllil)’ ily spoil ii picture into \\‘lll('il they do not fit. Iii general they siniulll not be used iii the lililillt‘ iirens of home grounds except tirliigiy mid with careful i-oiisitleivitioii of ‘their effect. Indisc lillllilit.‘ pluiit- lng of such shrub-l n3 bridal wreath, liydriiiigcus, etc, in front yards is tcninionplrice. It. ]3l‘i".'l'lllt3 the working out of ii (lit-lulled and harmonious planting, und belittle-s the importance of tile floirering ihrubs, which lire individually beautiful and (icscrre to be pinced nvherc their bCiilli)‘ will be properly Set off. These em: shrubs which produce exquisite flowers too beautiful to be placed anywhere except in the ‘foreground where all may iidmire them when in flower". BccntcFs double flowering crab is one, and Prunus triloba, or double flower- lng plum, is another. The new French lilacs lire of this lllli.\ll‘t3,.A ,and any one fortunate enough fol lpossess them should mrikc the most oi’ them. Several beautiful- new varieties of the old fashioned‘ CR5- \\'lio let the homestead crumble, The liiiic trees amid? Who ivrircked the old vcriuidah? ‘rile young man did. wit.» lit the {lllCflllllflFS ElkTl their tents uiiblzl. Anti spoil the splendid orchard? The young man did. The big barn wide and tall, From its foundation slid, Who saw it slowly fall? The young man did. proce.‘ ~ ,_, wii d - KVh, 1;,- hzive (J ‘(Bi u“ Who let the rascal ragweed The fertile fields amid, Destroy the wholesome clover? The young man did. Who with an awful mortgage The noble acres hid? ri‘ who destroyed the sugar-bush? The young lllllll did. Who in his old Ford car ‘Weilt lickety skid and lkid. syringe, or philadelpliiis, have To mm fast and f“? , been developed by the French Tm, you“, Inn“ did house of Lemoine. Bouquet ' ' “ ' Blanche, Virginul Mid White Lady i“ ll. K. Kernlghan, in The Witness are among the finest. All have yihite flowers. laruei- ihan the old - ‘ Iashloned type. and in some crises l » most fragrant. _ I The old fashioned rugoso roses g '7 ;ll'9 b61118 Sl-IDDTf-‘mfiflifid by 5l‘\'t-‘l'-'11'ur plkntiition ilie planting should l‘. ‘Qty e53, lmPml/ed WDPS- Tim-W YOSPB fir" lake ill-ICC very elirly in the spring. . giongl = W1’? hafdy- Tilt‘? QNW 1M0 21'0"!’ -bcloi-e the canes liiive budcled out. ‘menu P bushel with dork urccn cio>.si' lcii- lThls (‘ililblvs the plants to g0 for- ' Igatmi: YES. Mid belblls‘ in UK‘ Sllfllbbfi-FY ward iritliuiit niiicii shock. It is , of C011} ‘l 50rd!!!‘ in IOCHUOH Whfirfi £11911‘ 51ml" dlflpuillilli tiiiit ilie soil be careful- . ilgggw‘! ’ U5 W111 b9 BYTPCUVQ- ly prepared and well fertilized l! 98B .205 v R086 F‘. J. Grootendorst is a hy- our: is io secure abundant crops. the hi brid produced by crossing the rii- TWO gcncml systems o! planting mm g, xosa and baby rambler Yvsvs- It zirc about cqulilly popular. With the Produces double red flowers! 1;" hill system the plants are set about Iummef- R953 hUEOTIl-s Flows l‘ ° four feet ii LlYl. each wa , while if in huze bush covered in “my with the hedge few system i: used the llingle Yellow TWWPTS- ' distance belwcen the rows should i 110w To DESIGN "out GAR’ be about six feet. in order to pro- iii DEN ride plenty of room for cultivation. l‘ Although well designed garden? If the plzintationds of considerable Ire becoming numerous. mos homeowners are content with the layout of their home grounds which was given them by the sub- dlvider. That is, they flCCPllt the PLANT ll ASPBHIKRIES EARLY run i\ furrow and set the plants in this. For a small plantation the with equal success. teed to plliiit little or llillt h within this arcn without further nttcmpt at design. ihe plliiits too deep. i.‘ x 8111MB!‘ ‘deed, but on the other llfllld n real- 2H 1y beautiful ion ul ill!‘ icel- Fqnhn muls_ ., Int; of iiiirir: , in o l§'_li'(li‘ll ‘ Well"?! (“Us for a (lpqrflfl hr Ilrizigviviivrv‘ ‘Three lire the recommendations the 0 5km nyurl] err-liter than It)"iIlIllll_\' of Mr. M. ‘B, Davis in his bulletin noon! the Mil ' and stiffness require. A housi- miirlit be lfllil Garden Items THE OLD MAN DID "DWERING Sunni“ Buuylm Who built them splendid buiidins, THE YOUNG MAN DID size the best method to adopt is to hills may be opened with u spade sidewalks. bark fence and side boundaries iii; sufficient. drvlfiicrit- AS a m“, U101." is grmter dang“, lon of their inirdcil lllYll, tintl pru- of sliiiilniv [lllllillllfi than of setting The crown should be nt least, four inches low- er than the level of the ground in ct liiiivecn tlic soil and the on ‘File P..i:.~plJt-rr_v' mid Its Cultiva- “p-nplp, lion, isiued by the Department of l Bxixgxi ~.~==—-" _. Iii-Q‘: ui- MEMIiMKiE-‘niu-g‘ CK FARME "€Z-ZTI'=Z€%ME:W%M§§R%Z¢ Few thinks are mom intellectual- ly disconcerting than the manner in which science periodically upset; the structures based on our sup- posed finalities and this is specially true as to our concepts of matter, A couple of generations ago the mo- leculo was understood to be we ultimate indivisible particle or mat- ter. It at last gave piano to the atom, smaller but making the same claim. Ln ou: own time the atom itself has been Shlll. up into the el- ectron and the proton, and now the l'ie'iltr0l'l—“liltle hipthci- {,0 the pm. t-on"—-is suspi-iteil to exist. will iilie process "proceed ad infiiilt- iilill?" The most powerful microscope nl. our command could not make such stomies visible, much less measure them; iior indeed bad Somme any unit of measurement which could ‘be applied. It became necessary to ‘create such a unit; aild the small- est measurement in common use, the millimetre, ives therefore theo- retically divided into one thousand "microns" whose symbol is the Greek character io; “m" but “ouch herein, for convenience, is repre- sented by the contraction “mn_" Small as this measurement is it is adequate only for visible particles and a. further unit, the "millimi- cron" (which is herein referred to M, "m-mn”) was employed to de- note the one thousandth part of the micron. Beyond this, science, “MW/hilt hflltingly it is true, meas- ures by algebraic devices. It is interesting to trace. step by 5WD, the advances in our know- ledge of the infinitely lit/tie, and to read of the dimensions of things , beyond our limited sight. First- there ls the “visible particle," Vig- ible that is, to the unassisted eye of a. keen observer; this may be at its least, 10 mns, in enamel”, Whrii billfillli,’ i1 ruspbei-ry patch Th9 C0mi>0und miscroscope in- creases "19 POWB: of vision to the extent that "microscopically re- solvable particles" moy be viewed, with a diameter as small as 250 m-mns. or one-four-thousandth Dart of s. millimetre. This seems small enough in a1] 001150191109: but beyond the pow- ers of resolution of the microscope there is a vast field which may only be explored by trained search- ers, and in which smaller and still smaller particles are being dismv. cred as methods of examination are being perfected. ‘Thus we find as the next step the “secondary i0!‘ 1M8?) colloidal particles" held in suspension in a. fluid “glue-like" as the name implies-quid made visible by diffusion and the ultra- microscope. Such particles measure 5 m-mns upwards Below these 9,- Rain arc the primary colloidal par- tieles, down to 2 mmns; and the "molecular groups" 21.4 low a; 0m ni-mn across. These also are ult- ramiscrosoopic objects- ln some eases; there is resistance ‘Such fl manner that the mw of Just at this point the layman to the idea of desiunlnsz. a feeiini: "mm m, in a dopwssiom Cultk gives up the chase of the "mighty 1Q that. Ollidflfll"; calls for iiiioriiilili- mum, Wm. m, Wm level up the atom.” The ultramicrosoope. a , ' _ v1 t}: and that any interference ivitli v.,,»,'.i_1n setting the plums the can“ highly ingenious instrument.’ but Délflfill- haphazard iirrrinwrivlii 1T“ Rim Should h.» Lfunvplfd firmly above with limitations, is the lust means ‘ 9' CW9‘ and Pl"3“"lll°‘»‘“- T’ "m." 1”‘ “l- ln‘ iiiit: iimts so us to tlllSilfe proper 0i’ rfiearch available to the ordin- RYY observer. But the physicist keeps on. With the aid of the x- TRY Spectrometer he rounds up the molecule and the atom. The mole- cule, he finds, ranges from 0.5 to 50 m-mns, and the atom from 0.1 to 2.0 m-mns- Try to realize that to 111$!" design. The \\'l]i[l0\\,= mi, i ‘b0 n; '.'I\'!(l'it'lllll.il" lii OilJlVlt, Kinny vn- 0.1 nrmn is me one ten millionth varying ialzefl, and lliiir, l iviintiut. "luvs lwic brcii izioilii iiith suc- _ _ -'pi,n5i;l¢1-ni1nn of hplni‘, '1 he w» iii. ilic (Wiiirlii l-"xncrimental pa" of a munmetufl moms lillflll? he of irr lwilin Tilt‘ iviiilel." llllll descriptions Mom‘ as was ‘Stated i“ the ' and the contour of lll/ vii-i i» ‘u: ii-r- but oi illcse, including ?D°nm!?__PBT9EI'-"il>h- L! now known ’ djpd_ such g, 1mm.- ie/mui n-n Iir: 11.1.!‘ 3:, purple illltl rrrl raspberries 0 comb’; of 9' Ymcleuli the P1050"- Ilij.‘ more "iniormnl" lll"l. ]li'!"llll7S majority of our l1'ill1l' uroriivls w‘ Ill Uiiliwil. Czniibiurtl on Inge 1.‘! "‘ l "ENGLISH" PAINT Buy wisely. Get the most value for your ‘money. In surface covered you get more value‘ in one gallon of B-H "ENGLISH" PAINT than in two gallons of cheap paint, . Manufactured by ‘ BRANDRA M ' HEL'2£F*_€.°..'.‘£ _ sow pv m!» , i FENNELL fir CHANDLER, Charlottetown l zire iiiiitoiiictl in llllllflilfl N0. 114 in Dcpiitmeiil of Agriculture round winch xvolve the elections in a fashion that suggests n. min- iatiire solar system. The electron, which is "a minute disembodied charge of negative electricity" is Cxflminlld "in mi electric field while _ floating on an ultromicroscopic particle" and u; found to measure the onc-lnilllonf-h part of the one. millionth part of a millimetre, mul- tiplied by two! The measurement of ihe pnsltivcr iiied by "Positive Ray fllld pflyflc- lcs from radium," is asserted to l)?! 1,10 to the mlnu-i-ninvth power 0i {l miiliniicron- Which i: as much 3;.- to say it measures the one bil- lionth part of the one biilioiitli hart of a millimetre, And well just let it go at that. i ..____ Indian Mcdfclm plants [10, sondllll‘ I15"? BDNles 0i Ruldcn rod. or as we ltzill ilu-ni "yellow-weeds." were usxwi lJy ti.» tribes as o mark 1n their floral cal- as o "man" The stems were re- duced to almost the rendition of chwcoal, and broken up Into p100" el of a few millimeiies in length. the NEWS Y, NOTES BY AGIJOOIA ly charged proton, which is (ixfiffl: ' v These were piled on the skin‘ ovbr the affected part and fired. A counter-irritant! , Arehillaicit Millefollum L: Yar- row- or Nilltill. The Wimwbfigo endar: "Winn ill‘ goldenrod is in bloom." they tmiltl, "the corn (bell) is l-ipez" . Aster sp: Olie of the species who used by the Pawnee Indians as the best. material for the remedy known name for 311's “Hi5 Hangk-slntsh, meaning "llfiiiiili-Iiuck tail,” from the lrlllllmllblllfit‘ oi the 19M. Swivel" Aflcllllslit Alilipluilotlrs Nlltt: ‘This and other species of Wild Sage were found in P, E I., by Prof. Gi-oh in i926. These sages, called Pczhc-hoiii "Gray licfbs" by the Oiiinlias, were used both medicin- ally rind iitualisticalrv. A decocflon of the leaves was drunk for sto- nirioh trouble and many other ail- ments. A bunch of artemisia. was used as a towel, when an Indlan had broken some taboo di- 115,4 touched some sacred objegt, he was OWEN! to bathe with flftevmlgfg w clear himself of the consequengeg, An Indian related this lIlStflIlce of its use to protect in such eases; “Two horses ran wild in the camp and knocked down the "Sacred Tent." An old man caught them, rubbed them all over with wild sage and told the son of that: owner; “If you lot them do ma; mam the buffaloes ivill gore them!" When an Omaha chief was instal- led, the Sacred Pipes we“; to be laid on a bccl of artemisia The iODs of the plants were burnt as Incense by both vegan and chris- tian Indians. Aretium Minus Schk.: Burdock. This plant was introduced by white settlers, but was speedily adopted by the Indians for medicinal use, It Was Used by some of the tribes as a remedy for pleurisy, The Muskrat in Trouble The muzkmt is becoming as Kfvat a nuisance in Europe b; lg the rabbit in New Zealand, oi- the Bray squirrel in England- Each of thees animals was introduced to a new habitat by man, and coming m F- Dlace where its natural en- emies were unknown, and when the climate was milder it has mul- tiplied to such an extent 55 to be- come what may almost be termed a. dangerous pest. While travelling in Alaska in 1905, the Bohemian Prince col- loredo-Mansfield brought back a dozen muskrats, of which flve sur- vived» He liberated these on his estste near Prague and finding everything in their favor, the ani- mals oversprcad Austria, and are now invading southern Gennany. in spite oi’ governmental precaut- ions. The damage they occasion 13 by tunneling through banks ‘of every kind, thereby bursting m- servoirs, causing loads and dykes to subside, and flooding out mine workings. A yearly convention ls attended by representatives of all the governments concerned, to eon- sider the best means of meeting the (liinger for the next twelve months. And all this expense, both of damage and precaution, is traceable to one man's interfer- 0110c with “the balance of nature." The iiiuskrut is in trouble in 0 we +0 mo-omaoo 004004 04+ ‘ SEEDS for EARLY PLANTING BUY NOW and put in if ground l: M. I EARLY GARDEN i-eiis Sweet Peas LETTUCE, iiiloisn. SPINACH, r-rc, mo. If you have a HOT BED for Early Plants put in CABBAGE. TOMATO. ou- column, r um n: IN, sQo/lsli. 021.2111, mo. We‘ have many varieties ol HARDY FLOWER SEEDS. 9 (Tall It CARTEIVS HIE!) svoiw. queen sriissry 4 All ready for the spring seed ’ business. Garters 6o. o-oo-oo-vooomov-ovvvoooowvoo- LIMITED § @OQ VQQQ-OO-OQOQQVV-Q liligs wt lmillPfl with an lnfus-', ion of ‘h. lmiii ililll a wad of the “ loaves putt-d in ihe ear was n cure fur carat-lie. k Extra liiiinbiir tint ‘ WHITE BANNER SEED OATS ISLAND GROWN We have a limited stock of i the above, which are put up ih new 3 bus. bags and, are ah excellent quality. Selling at lowest prices . WHOLESALE 8c RETAIL A. Horne & 0o. Bflmm, mo. The "Destructive 1M1‘- eign Animals Bill" which has pas‘- scd through the House of Lords. provides a penalty of $100 for turn- ing muskrats loose, or allowln! them to escape, and if the offence is in respect o! more than four ani- mals, then the penalty is $35 more for each extra animal. The "Fen Country" of Erlgland is the vulnerable point, for there the riv- er; grid waterways are banked of! from the rich blank soil, which produces the finest crops. 1n Scotland the muskrat has be- come naturalized over a wide ar- ea, The young trapper who first introduced the musquash-as he calls it-into that country. had rented waters at Feddal near Bra- co. and wired them in. In all countries there are iu disPOSBd people and Scotland is not ex- empt; some miscreants , tore up part oi’ the wire and allowed 80MB of the stock to escape. Now the animals are spread over a wide area in Perthshire. Fife, Dumfries and Kinoardinshire. Them is a. notion (in Scotland) that the muskrats have added corn (that is oats) and fish to their menu. This is in line with the ob- servation that animals do change their food habits to some extent in new environments. However I have always been under the im- pression that the muskrat here. will vary his diet on oats if he can got them- FEED THE BIRDS CONTEST I molly envy the prospective winners of the latest books donat- ed by Mr. Robie W- Tufts. The Editor kindly forwarded me a copy to look over, and I find it is the much sought “Birds of Eastern Canada," by Dr. Taverner. This book is out of print, and is the more valuable on that account; and it is not likely to be reprinted, B8 the author is bringing out ‘"1118 Birds of Canada" instead. This will include the birds of both East rind West and will be more com- prehensive but not so handy for our folk as the "Birds of Eastern Canada." These fine prizes, (of which there are three) give complete descriptions of all our birds and colored plates of 100 species. Personally I'd rather have this book than a money prize! SOWING msmuvrions Fort Pnitunnmi. swear PEAS Many people have become dis- couraged in trying to grow Sweet Peas but this beautiful flower should never be given up rr-d will not lu- by new beginners if the following few simple rules are followed. Just as soon as one can work in the garden without muddying ones boots the garden becomes fit to plant. One can determine this by taking handful bf earth .nd squeez- ing it lightly. If ii: crumbles it is safe to plant, but if it compacts to a. light ball. leave it alone for a few days. The best plan is to dig a trench about two feet deep and iii the bottom put a layer of about one foot of well rotted manure or vege- table mold, such as rotten leaves, pack this down and puta llyer of six inches of good garden soil. Plant ihe Sweet Pea seed about two inches deep and about two inches apart in this and gradually, as the peas grow, fill in soil around the peas ai- ways showing them a hriif inch above the earth, than put n stake (lei-gei- than ulbmum Handle) at eioh end of trench firmly .n ground lnd Itratch hen win w rile/stares for the vine: tn climb on. Do this ma ym friends, and l allhhoi-n will Ill Ill lllfl “l0 MUM uIJhe Im- mensc bloom Imam: to your. Be- fore hoavy frost out ‘he vines on‘ about. one Inch lbovo the ground and» y them ovet the stubs '0 Il- ilher lnow. Al noon .5! '3" V1995 know above [round the following ,4 fi our home surroundings of the lawn. or by planting out an- in beds. Annutils may be more pro- than in the wider ones, as peren- nials and shrubs are generally us- ed in the latter. The position of the beds imd borders will be the first considera- tion. They should be open and sunny ones and so locntcd that of time so they should not be in a. depression from which water can- not drnin. . A freedom from the roots of trees and shrubs is also desirable ‘for annuals will not grow well where these mnt throughout the border. The soil most satisfactory for the growth of annuals is a porous sandy loam, one which can easily be worked. Upon the manner in which the soil is prepared to re- ceive the seeds, will largely de- pend success or failure. It is better to use a fork when preparng the border in Spring than the spade. as with the fork the soil may be broken much more finely, a. condi- tion which is necessary so that the fine roots of the annuals may readily penetrate and the growth of the plants be not checked. I! the soil has a reasonable real- due of humus (decaying organic matter) from last year's applica- tionjt will not be necessary to ap- ply rind manure to the border 1n Spring. If, however, the soil does not contain enough, it will be ne- cessary to apply short well rotted manure and to fork ‘it in. Having forked the border the next step is to rake the surface very finely with ll. steel rake [and to remove stones or anything likely to ob- struck the growth of the plants. The finer the surface soil down to o. depth oi’ three or four inches, the better wiliy~be the growth of the annuals and the more beauti- ful the border. The tuller annuals should- be sown at the back of the border, Those which are half tall or inter- mediate in height, in the middle and the dwarf kinds be sown along the front. Annuals, say. which are two feet in height may be consid- ered tsll, from 15 inches to two feet intermediate, and from_12 in- ches downward, dwarf. ,If it is your desire to make a bed of annuals in your lawn and not a border at the side, the procedure will be different. as the annuals should properly be about the same height throughout the bed, and might even be sown with an indi- vidual variety. However, it is not proper to out up your small lawn areas. and it will pay you to make a border rather than a bed. The seeds in the patches should be sown evenly and thinly and should be covered very lightly with finely screened fertile soil by means of the rake or preferably by screening the soil over them. One- eighth to one-quarter inch will be sufficiently deep to cover the seeds except the larger ones such as Sweet Peas. which may be cover- ed about one inch deep. , Generally in latitude 44 degrees, the locality of Toronto, the time to sow annuals is during the last two weeks of Mny, and at Mont- real the lilst week of May and first one of Julie. On the west coast about six weeks earlier. If the soil is at all dry it should be careful- ly watered as soon as the seeds are sown, by means of a can with n fine sprinkler. The surface of the soil should never be so flooded as to disturb the seeds. After germination. when the seedlings are from two to three in- ches high, they should be thinned out distances apart. according to their heights zit maturity the m- ler ones being spaced a greater distance apart than the dwarf ones. In the rear, about 12 to 15 inches apart, middle ground 9 w 12 and front.-sny. 4 to 9 inches npiirt. To this, of course, there are exceptions. If’ plants ore set out, this will ‘also be the approximate spacing» ‘ Ageratum -— The Floss flower, useful dcrs of annual plants. Six inches. in lute Many. Half hardy. Adonis-Crimson. One foot. Use- ful for front of border. Hardy. Alyssum-Sweet Aiyssum. Plant out in May. Sow outdoors in May nnd thin seedlings out somewhat. sing in front lfnrdy. , Antirrhiiium -- S n d p d r a gon. iPlant out in May, nine to twelve inches apart. Bow outdoors in _May. thin ii-edllngs foremrutioned dis- sprlil: you may bum till olJ vhl“ Juice apart. Height six to 36 fir, imggrtsxagztazcmxaezcé Annuals ' i ‘_ Cne of the many ways in Which ml! b8 made beautiful in summer, in by sowing the seeds of annuarflovver- m: plants in borders at the aides nuals which have been raised in- ' doors and also through their perly used in the narrow borders ldy. water will not stniiti for any length Nine inches high. Orange, salmon, ma. out of the molt umui- har- dy nnnulld for beds or border. Aaiorlntiuin -- valuable foiiaza punt roi- bed: p: borders. Ono to three feet. Leaves wonderfully @01- 0nd. mint out. corms M: May, x-iiur im-iiv. Agremone~PrlcklY ‘Pbimv- BOW outdoors during May, thin out well. Tiircy inches high. Flowers white. lemon. Poppy-like produced dur- ing July-August. P011989 V91’! at" tractive. useful for massing. Har- Aster-Chinese " Aster valuable for beds and borders. Flower all season. Colors various. Plant out in May. Sow outdoors in May. Thin nirle to twelve inches apart. Half hardy. ' ‘ Calendula-The Pot Marigold. yellow. All Summer and Autumn. sow or plant outdoors in May, thin six to nine inches apart. Height. about one foot. Useful lrrbcds. borders and for cutting. Hurcly. Centauria- variously called the Sweet Sultan, Corn Flower, Knay Weed. Blue, white. rose. Two feet high. sow outdoors "during May and thin out nine to 12 inches apart. Late Summer and Autumn. Hardy annual, splendid for cutting. Chrysanthemums - Plant out- in May. Sow outdoors later in month. Plant or thin nine inches apart. Height and colors various. Bum- mer and Autumn. Good for mid- ground of border. and for cutting. Hardy. murkia- 0i’ wonderful colors. Scarlet, orange, pink, white. About eighteen niches. July-September. Sow outdoors in May and thinout nine inches apart. Single and dou- ble kinds. Hardy annual. ' Coreopsls -'- Coreopsis or Culli- opsis, beautiful hardy annual ofi various heights. Of shade of or- ange, yellow and red. Useful for cutting or for border. They flower late Bummer and August. Plant or sow outdoors in May. Plant or thin about nine inches apart. , Cosmos- Mexican aster. Useful for rear of annual bordein- Large masses are fine. The double varie- ties. Pink Pearl and White Pearl are splendid. also many single kinds. Three to five feet. Late Summer and Autumn. Half hardy annual. Plant or sow outdoors in May. Dianthus -- The Pinks. D. Hed- deinegii, single and double flower- ed. Chlefly crimson and other dark shades. D. Chinese. single and double in many colors. All wonder- ful for border. Height little more than one foot. All summer. Plant. out in May. nine to 12 inches apart. Bow outdoors in May. Thin forementioned distances. Hardy. Delphinium - Larkspur. Height 12 to 24 inches. Colors various. chiefly shades of blue. Splendid for beds and masses in border oi- wild garden. Plant out in May. Sow out- doors in May. Plant or thin nine to 12 inches apart. Hardy. Eschscholtzia - Californian Pop- py. Most lovely annuals of yellow. orange, scarlet, deep rose, single and double kinds about 15 inches high. For front of border or other position when plants, of great bril- liancy are required. Good foi- dry sunny positions. Sow outdoors in May. Hardy. Gaiilardia. - Blanket Flower. Plant or sow outdoors late May. Plant or thin nine to 12 inches apart. Red. yellow. One to two feet highl Useful for border and cut- ting. Half hardy. Seed Potatoes L Bliss Triumph > Seed Potatoes l We have n dew hundred . 2N‘ 58k. Clean field PRICE rs ruonr, J. Lester-Bough; dior- Qnee and w it k Amy”; t Streets <_____ Godetia. - Most beautiful plant; for beds or border. Bummer and Autumn. Twelve inches high Plant or sow outdoor; ‘n M”. Plant or thin l2 inches apart. Hill:- dy. ' Gyosopiiiiii _ The Chalk vim Baby's Breath. G. Eicgans a lovely annual. White,’ rose, lilac. Bum- mer and Autumn. Good for b0;- der. Unsurpassed for cutting. Har- dy. Helianthus - The Sunflower, Single and ‘double. Yellow, orange, red. Tall for rear of borders. Min- iature kinds for border and cub ting. Scw outdoors in May, mm out 18 lnchesapurt. Hardy. NEGOTIATING Tmi WAGE soALu sir Austen Chamberlain tom nib one at s‘ recent dinner. A Negro mp- plied for a lob and set forth m; attributes without too much mo- desty. "Ali right," slid the boss, "you can have a. job, And as to “l. ary-vi'eli, I'll pay you just what. ever you're worth)“ "Brit's no use to me, sun," 1Q- turned to the applicant. ‘Tee gettu-l mo‘ dun dat where I is now." ____"________f______ IN Tll E STU II Kalmuck, 2.15% Standard ma Registered Bil-ed by Peter the G Dam, Ester Bells, tillléfulg-yzgot’ bells Second mm Expressive, (fly e12. mm of 411mm ‘ 2-9794. one of today’: leading Sire of Nedda, 1.50 , n vmflfl champion-B, Eloclio ear, gm g Hnmbletonlan l0. Kalmuciil " _, g prong 1g, Ilia only colt over two yearn oh! Ill: won race record of 2.14. Kalmnck was wonderful mu horse. Baa been oecond In race in 2.04%.. Kalmnck will stand for ser- m; .vlco at owner’: stables. Tenn: l5 cash at time o! service, Slo when more proves with foal. mum it owner's risk. WILLARD KELLY Box m, cnuloltewm W 7 C. M. Lampson fifCo. LIMITED. 64 Queen Street London, E. C, 4, Enghml Public Auc:ion Sales 0 new nuts Sgipailrlr; ‘m? will he furnish- e w oil c nub lillyhlg to R. T. Holman, I.,“, psqm. moi-side, P. l, l, r nqn-emua by Alfred Fraser, Inc. 21: Fifth Avenue New York, N. Y. r edging beds find bor- ' Blue, white. nmapluni autumn Useful for edging beds and mils-f of annual border. ' I imiinriiiiaisiuii l I IMPERIAL rum ion The success, following tile-use of this popular “Imperial” product during past seasons; has clearly proven its merits to our are planning on feeding ll I ‘xpei-ieiiced ranchers, who erally this year. Our formula is specially suited to the needs of the young and growing foxes, is rich ln vitamines, and a sure preventative of rickets. Pitppy Food may be ordered {either “Fine” or “Coarsef to suit the ranclierfs requirements ' . older early so aé ‘to be ‘l... of leeaiviliny tar t1 supply iii good Box 446 wrap-m. - . ~. Charlottetown, t’. E. I. ' time an a heavy deniantl is flitili Qliliiplliy, iii. Phone 721