SEPTEMBER 26. 192s ‘A Safe, Sturdy Pen at a Low Prige This completel enclos ' sturdiest,‘ safest null most ppetilghhmr “u”? 1180i b! hundreds of the most successful rsnche l’ the country. lt is covered top, boggom m‘ sac“ with PRINCE EDWARD FOX NETTING WhIQh l, Z times stronger than others. specially m“, u, on, Ipeclflcltions for use in the salt-laden sir of tha lilaritlmo Provinces. Every twist o; fame}; EDWARD Netting is solder-locked. 1g “uh u“ strain of storm and hard use. Prince Edward Fox Netting ' ' for the Economy Pen N0. 1 ECONOMY PEN troll 150 itxtllxltixls. l roll 150 It. x 36 x 2 x l6, Complete with staples and lselng wire. Prim new" Pill! ...............$23.2:l N0 I ECONOMY PEN .l roll 160 ft. x 36 x 1% x15. lm!i150ft.x36x2x15. i Complete with staples and lscingwlre. m“, Ffflghfi Paid 524m NO. 3 ELONOMY PEN 1 roi 150 ft. x ‘l2 x 154 x 15. ~ Conpictc with staples 1nd lssln; wt", pm, new‘; $29.45 Prince Edward Fox Netting J tisSoldby - - - - - - - R. T. Holman, Ltd., Summerside. AR. T. Holman, Ltd., Charlottetown. Kennedy 8: Co., 0’Leary. Russel Champion, Kensington. Wm. Callbeck, Bedeque. Hayes, McKay & Shari). Tyne Valley. J. H. Myrick & Co., Alberton. ..--.-u-..-...-...-.............. .-~.-»................. ...-...--...-....-.-... WORLD'S LARGEST DAM OPENED of supply to the Nira canals sys- tem, and is designed to irrigate a large area which has bxn subject to famine. The opening ceremony was conducted by Sir Leslie Wilson, Governor of Bombay. The Lloyd‘ Dam. which was ope“- trl recently at Bhatgar. India. is the largest in the world¢At the openlns it was shown that the huile reservoir compares favorably with the Assuan Dam, which is 2.500.000 feet less in volume and coat nearly b0 per cent more. The new dam fonna the source SHOPPERS’ FACES SNAPPED To obtain natural expressions of UOOOXO-OOOO-OOOOOGO-OO OQOO PEERLESS ‘WHAT WE HAVE WE'LL HOLD‘ "it's Better to be Sure Than Sorry" Your Foxes an the molt prolltoblc investment that you have. Are you going to loss them. b! Bills any MIMI Netting than Peerless‘: "Uertalnly not." ‘Why?’ ‘Bennie;- Wu m» as ease snow- ing that. the best "QUALITI ' Ne"!- PING” lg protecting your Foxes Ibis netting u uAl-VANIZLU oe- Iore and after being woven. Hangs Flat without. nagging o: sag- ging and makes a MP1"! "ll"- Can be erected ry an "AMATEUR SPEUIALLY MADE FOB CS. DUB PRICES ARI.‘ TUE BESI UN run‘ ISLAND McGOWAN S LIMITED Kiimuir The Rogers Hardware Company, Ltd. 00-040 000a 04040-003 Spinning and Weaving Send me your wool to be spun into yarn. 25 cents for single and 28 cents for double. Sizes, fine. medium and coarse. Send by parcel post or freight I pay freight on 100 lb. lots, Weaving done with wool warp and double width suitable for blankets. All white except border where grey may be used. Wool must he clean. Put ship- pers name and lddress on all parcels and owners name and instructions in- sida otherwise I will not be respon- sible for losses. Send early. WM. LANDBIGAN, Souris, P. E l SBBii-li-t-tuetflursatsmos. -_.-__ his store window a camera which. with its operator. is invisible to the gozcra. One picture of a girl looking longingly at a string of pearls bore the title "Covetous." Another show- ing a young man surreptitiously looking at a pair of silk stockings, and evidently making up his mind to go in and buy. was unlabelled. Two small boys gazing at a mechan- ical train was charming, and equally so was that of a group of children watching a butterfly crawl up the shoppers a Berlin merchant has in wlndow 13311.3, WESTERN CANADA A » ' NEEDS . POTATOES We are in daily touch with all Jobber! at every point. Wire us your offerings and quotation!- C. N. ROBINSON FRUIT AND VEGETABLE BROKERS WlnnlWI- Mun. Members Begins, suk. Saskatoon. Elli Canadian Hortlculturll Council. High Prices are bruised. Use A Ransome Rotary SUMMERSIDE LOCAL AGENTS- Rollo J. Campbell MurrayRIver-John J. Bed! 5rL;esrlttt?”“' A ’ r0 Hgmfl¢¢|l~Geo@ 'Crozier“ " " American Fruit d: Vegetable ‘Shlppen Assn. “Z f“, , Uflflfl. for Potatoes Will not benefit you if ‘ your POWtOQ It Does Not p‘ Bruise THE HARDIE MF C0. i " bo T. B. Chi will»? llsllibdsr-Tl-lugb. MCKIFITIIOII Carieton-—.T- 3- 311168916. St. Louis--Frank Callaghan CO., LTD. Calgary, Alta. Edmonton, Alta. Digger FOXNTTINC L ' THE crlmtuurrlyroww GUARDIAN. i NEWSY FARM NOTES BLACKl-IEAD IN TURKEYS Years ago the raising of turkeys was a profitable SldB-llllg on island farms. My neighbor kept a llflfi flock every summer and I well re- member the destruction they caused in my grain fields. He assured n19 that they fed only on Bflifilwliners. but they certainly broke down the ripe grain by making tracks through it, so that I was not sorry when the disease made its appearance and every now and then left a defunct turkey in the field as a S1811 0! i" pNSencE. At last the ground got 50 infected that my neighbor went out of the turkey business, and so did most farmers for the same reason. One of our most popular maKB-Zin" -which, by the way, Oil/tn Gum" from these notes-has an informative account of the propagation of “black- hggd," the rllscasg in question. As the result, of much research (how much only a mlcroscopist can appro- clate; ms causal organism has been _ traced to the domestic fowl. 1n what is known as the “blind out" o! he“ and chickens, parasitic worm. called the oecum worm, is common and in the feces passed from the fowl w! hundreds of microscopic worm eggs- Contained in these eggs is the 6X- ceedingly small organism responsible for the "blackhead." The r888 l" picked up by the turkeys on range. either in soils-d food or contaminated water, and the Organism °1' 89"" finds its way to the liver oi the bird. multiplies there and destroys tho tis- sue, thus killing the turkey. The remedy than is to keep the hens and turkeys strictly apart; there must. be no chance of turkeys getting to the contaminated droppings. This will mean raising them lniarge pens ‘and will incidentally prevent them from becoming a nuisance to the neighbors. ‘Then, and not till then, will the turkey industry revive. GASOLINE AND OTHER. THINGS In another column a few days ago, the statement was made that mat- ter can be destroyed. This reminds me of an argument I once had with my "boss" of those days. He gave his opinion that gasoline, when ex- ploded in ‘the cylinder of an engine, was destroyed; there waa nothing left. I took exception to this and contend- ed that hothing in nature is dc- stroycd‘. it is only altered. To settle this I wrote to a noted chemist and elicited a reply which may be briefly put thus: "The explosion of gasoline produces two harmful gases and wat- er vapor-C O, CO2, and H20. As you say, nothing is destroyed, only altered." This, of course, concluded the argument. Gasoline is therefore one of the hydrocarbon compounds and is de- rived from petroleum by fractional distillation. A thermometer is im- mersed in the vapor as it comes over from‘ the retort and at certain read- ings the receiver is changed. Ahighly volatile and inflammable ether comes OOQO§§Q§OQQ§OO§v§§OOO§-§-@ @ POTATOES on) TURNIPS We will be buying every thy at our warehouse Hogan's Wicarf. highest prices for good stock. Accommoda- i tlon for Boat loads. J‘. LESTER DOUGLAS, Charlottetown, P. E island. Phones 798cm! 9J8. 00-044 04+ 000 0Q 90060-400404 7727-9-19-1mo. i-Farmers‘ We Have i "FLEURY" All of which we are so By Agricola over at 40 to '70 degrees: then comes gaaoling at ‘l0 to 90 degrees. Follow- ing this is naphtha. (90 to 120); ben- zine (120 to 150); ke osene (150 to 300.) Still higher boiing points give the less volatile lubricating oils, while vaaelina is the most solid residuum. By freezing some of the residues, parafiln (used in waterproofing pep- er, scaling prsservm. etc.) la obtained in the form of white flakes. The weight of a gallon of gasoline fa de- termined by its specific gravity; thus at 0.630 sp. grov. ind at a tempera- ture of 591ieg. It, it would weigh 6.8 lbs. A gallon of water weighs l0 lbs. a lecturel-‘recently tom his audi- ence that the energy developed by the vapor of one gallon of gasoline is equivalent to that developed by 97 lbs. of dynamite. i m: raunnvc or races Trees. it may ~ not be generally known. may be pruned at anyseason of the year, but the dormant orient- leas season is generally ‘ ‘ as the moat suitable time, for then one la better able to make out the shape of the tree and to space the branches properly. There is also less loss of sap, and the work may be dons on days when one is not rushed by other labor. Pruning has two objects; the pruning of shade trees and ornamen- tal shrubs is to promote symmetry. and is then s. matter of good taste and judgment. In the case ol fruit trees, though symmetry is Lm it especially in young specime 11c main object ls to encourag; ..-u.lt bearing surface. Heavy pruning or cutting back will delay the fruiting of a young tree, so should be sparingly practised. In an old tree it may be necessary to pro- mote the growth of new wood to re- place that which has gone out of bearing and to allow the sunshine and air to get st the, inn-er and lower portions of the tree. ‘Trees which are not thinned out frequeni" "2 st the bottom and grow bushy . the top, a “enomenon which ma; ;.>._l1y be observed in any spruce "bush." This leads to long straggling branches. bare with the xception of a little fruit at the tips. The prunlng of, such trees should take tho form not only of cutting back the growth of the terminal or outside branches, but also of the lateral or terminal branch- el- "Let the sunshine into the centre," is s good motto, for the sunshine fipens the wood, without which there can be no crop. Never leave stubs; cut back to the trunk. to a lateral, or to a bud, leav- ing a clean cut which will heal over. Cuts and wounds should be painted to keep out moisture and fungi. Avoid croches; remove them where pos- sible and encourage branches togrow li- rliht angles. In removing large branches. aaw a iittla upwards at first, then down to meet the out. so that when the branch falls the bark is not torn off. ' §§-O-O~O+O§O POTATOES “WANTED sun mixed cars ‘vegetables. Wire col- lect quantity and Pica. O4 J. B. IODEL. Regina. Sash. »»»»»»+o-oo+eoe+oo-» 'l'l46-9-19-tf. Attention in stock a “HOOVER.” Latest Improved Potato Diggers -With Truck Attachment "HALL MFG. CO." Thresher: i Cleaners (Separate and Combined) Grain Crushers-Grinders and Root Cutters. " ' "ANKER-HOLTH" Cream Separators.‘ sizes.) - “PEASE"_ Warm Air Furnaces (All sizes). "FARM WAGONSW-lsfi (All mi Made and Imported ing at lowest prloos,_for_ cash or on terms to suit our customers. DON'T FAIL to call and no samples oi the - above and get our prices before buying. ~ A. HORNE £9‘ C0. You con depend on Fairbanks- Morse Engines Home Water ' Systems Farm Light Plants Windmills Hammer Mills Washing Machines PAGE ELEVEN It gives so cheaply llllllllIIllllIIIlslllllllllllnllllrlslllllaaIslansllslusllsuaslans-nu. u! nu The Fairbanks-Morse FARM LIGHT PLANT gives automatically abundant electric light for house, barn, stables and garage-safe, clean light, and power too for separator, chum, grindstonc, pump or washing machine. Sturdy, compact and dcpendable-—bllilt for long years of service. Write our nearest branch for free illustrated booklet that tells all about it and how easy it is to install and operate. svlllllsllssllsslsllllll4Illllrlrllnlnlsnllunlslunl ll The Canadian FAIRBANKS - MORSE Company Limited 5:. Jwn, Quebec, Manta-uni. Ottawa Tannin id ,wl l in. c-i “ ilk“? “$53., Vino "” Plotice We are pleased to announce that Mr. George R. Thompson was made Manager of our Prince Edward Island branch, succeeding N‘ tem ber first. t‘. R. Lawrence, on Sep- He will have clunplete charge of Hardie Sales and Service on the Island. All correspondence and other business will be handled from Summerside. Hardie Mfg- Co. Summerside HARDIE SPRAYERS RANSOME ROTARY DIGGERS 7842-9-24-26. Excels In QUALITY of Produgci RICHNESS of Vitamine Content‘ QUPERIORITY in Highest-class Pelt Production ECONOMY in Feeding Costs For sale by distributors in leading business centres and direct from factory. Imreoml. BlscuIT C0- _ Ci-IARLOT "rerowu \ P.G.i. “\, . abundantllfgllil‘ s ~.' and power too-v FA 13S 1 I .Fs.‘t»§ ‘...1 w ... ...oir.r._l,».i:vnaw.... nlgq‘:f‘ I