MAY 12, 1925 "' GEORGETOWN HIGH SCHOOL. ‘Ilonor roll (or the morfth of April. , ‘Principal's depL, Grade X. — 1. _ Cathizrine McKinnon; 2, Elsie ,.Knight; 3, Florence McDonald. Grade lX.-1, Joan McDonald; ‘.l. ‘Ralph Douglas; 3, Rhoda Easton ‘ and Wnldron Lavers. intermciliattn-i, David Levers; 2, Helen Goteii; 3, Francis McCor- muck. ‘Miss Milrris‘ ilepL-Grzvle Viii.-— 1, Qrace McDonald; 2, hiiiiiiQll Mc- iDonalu _',Jl, Kenneth Fraser. Grade Vfi.—~1, Dorothy Jenkins; 2, Helen Douglas; ti, Fdwin Deli. Miss McC0rlllack’s dept. Grade Pb siclans . rescribe fiegular use of iodine for goitre prevention. Use Windsor Iodized Salt regularly, the some us you Vi.»-1, Niicllaili ‘iiOllri-(C; . Roy Wonk] Reg.“ Table S31“ Lave n" ii, All : Hutch iiit: and - - - - Lnwreni. liati-llifih». Grade V.—1. I""“"“‘°P’“'d° °f “h” Nettie Wliiiki-r: z, iuiia floss; 3, llo- is tasteless, harmless. it pre- Vthfi goitrt- v ‘- l" pi. tirade lV. Apprcvedbydleflnufia irlrn ‘Ind (lladys . . Mooney; ?, (‘llarlcs Jenkins; 3. PmvmaalB°fld°f Health‘ ilugh Mcllollaiil. Glade iii. — 1. Amos Lilvalldlnr; 2, (lerrard Scul- ly; Ii, Alli-n McCoriliack. Mls-i MinniscyE-l dept. (irade iI.— Si‘. 1, (larria iilaston alrl Louis Vkitlli 2.1 ‘IWFPIIPQ Doyle; 1i, Gan. Kelnphlil. Jrx-l. Lillian Llewellyn; :1 Jiijillil S-illly; Ii, iltiltin McD0il- aid. Miss ‘lkiyloi-‘s iii 7i. Sr.,-»1, Bes- sie Sit-wait; 2. Frvirlil Solomon; 3, Walter fi'ill'!'l‘ ; 4 Miiiccnt. Fraser. Jl‘.— l, Junie Llewellyn‘; 2, l-‘l-riiiiiziliil liathililier; Ii, 'i‘lleresa Yorstun; 4, Frilcis llowlett. Two rife: or your grocer: THE CANADIAN ALT 00., i ad icluss-lmllll Piiziii / 2 3 4- 5‘ 6 7 6 9 /0 // j /2 I3 l4? 16' r6 17 /a /.9 20 2/ 22 3 2¢ 25 26 27 28 Z9 30 3/ 32 3s 34 v as 36 z? 3'8 39 40 4/ #2 l3 44’ 65 46 47 49 .9 ‘ 6'0 6/ - 52 53 6'4 55 | 46 Fly. Cross Word Puzzle No. ‘I27 iii l\iiillilt.‘l'_ ' . ii) Sirike gentle blow (pL) Kay to Cross Word Puzzle No. 127 £30 Sufi. water. 52 Group of people. _ Horizontal mi A color, - l All order. 55 To join ill a gunle. 6 (1illll.'ct'sc_ l0 Smell. Vertical ll lilolirllfiil cry. 12 ‘Tropical pilrt. 2 billiilitilli off penile, .14 Anlhropoid. 3 (jil'i's ilnlile. iii Voiciulli- liillllilifliil. ~i Colllnmnilur full.) if), Unit, .'. For lrallsportiliioil. 20 ilesigiliilg wolliall. ti Cotton or linen fabric, 2] Tree. 7 itiver in l-luropo. 22 liesigniliion. ii iullltb 2'1 Negative. ii A kind of voice. 26 Alllcriczin isillilds (nb.) l2 illimersc. 27 A conlltly l3 To. ill) Foreigner. i5 'i‘nbuiilteil tiliont. 32 Another country. . l7 Pilrt of spinal colililili. Ziii To cover n hole. ' iii Alike. 35 To mus an incision. 23 LOW only. Zlii Period (Latin; int)" 2r. Biblical nlnn. Ii!) Girl's name. F23 "Willi!"- .|| Umm, 2!) Cigarette ciiti. "l Fishing requisite. Y" lliv-‘rv fine. iii Monster. ' 31 A name r l’, 33 Sorrow or bung"- Portion of a lawn. You can’t buy furnace perform- ance on a cut-rate basis. Memory’: Sunshine Furnace is sold on a guarantecd-to-heat basis. Mofiluryh Sunshine Furnace Heats because (1) It is installed on principles laid down by ~ McClary's heating engineers. (2) It is installed after examination of all the ' conditions of your home. Proper Combustion with Any Kind o! Fuel. Coldoir hitroduced undel- the fire fonbuming hard coal or colic; ‘wanncd air introduced over the fire through Mommy's exclusive Air Blast Ring ignites the gases from soft coal which ordinarily puss all‘ u loot. ~ Consult McClaryk Sunshine dealer I116 h! Wm ml!" I heating survey of your home. M Sunshine-Furnace ‘ "tf-iiiiiilt "ittWa-‘hfié-"l..." i.'w"i-“-?i".-{'“ii-T=°---'- a’ It. John, ILL. Blanca. Calgary. Milli"! I“ CURRIE & MURNAGHAN ~ Charlottetown Agents for McCiarys Furnaces- iaijys ‘The Secret 0P Successfizl Baking consirs very largely of choosing a baking pow- der whose leavening qualities are uniformly reliable. Magic Baking Powder is the powder that never fails you. This is tho reason why it is by far the most popular bak- ing powder in Canada. MAGIC BAKING t l Wished They Did Not Carry Cattle ()'l"l‘/\\\'A, May li)—'i‘i-stifyiiig ilefore the Ocean itaies (follilnlitlco. ycstcrilziy .i_ i’. llollerty, traffic lllallagel of the (‘illlail all (lovcrli- llleiit .\'|t\i‘t'.flii,il‘|l: Maliille, admitted 1o li. .l. Sylnlllgttnl, K. (2., counsel for lhc (Yollinliltcl: that willie four ve is of lllc fiict had been coll- vcrtcil into cattle floats, there were time." whtn the innnilgciilcilt wi shed it ilid not carryy cilttle. .\lr Syilriliguln qiiestiulleil thc witness at liengtll with respect to the il..<l\‘ cl‘ l'l‘.\'lilllt' iiiiéitfliiit ii by the system iii tho carriage of cat- ...t- all iiKiiiiiat laiiiUl‘ nnnc prim.- able cargoes. f Tile approximate loss pil‘ voyage pcr boat ln- said ivolild be over $600. cxpimsl-s weri‘ cililsiilered thc (‘uni pally oil-ll $20 rate had only $11 per hiad as ilgu list ilDUYiiiAHlS. wiiiElQiK 'i‘i)lt()N’i‘U. \iay lf).—~-'i‘llc rail iw-ay mail clerks wilil hold a 00H ivlrntlon in Oitaiva on May 2‘lith The salary duct ' as the l’. ‘ 37 39 Poultry habitation. Ill book holders, volcano. A long street ill ’l‘orilll‘til. Weed. Wise man. Produced by the sun. lilgh explosive. Within. An indefinite ilrticic_ ‘i0 43 45 47 49 51 53 Answer to Puzzle iNo. 126 . —--i<o->———— KENSINGTON HIGH SCHOOL ilonor roll for April: l, Anna Sheen; 2, Arthur ittlaily .1, Doris Jardine; 4, ituhy lingers iamci-l .\'lilllililn; 3, 1, Klliiiitfflii itoildy; Protlit. 1, inn-bet McLean: 2, Kvnnot lilittlo (lilirkc; 4,’ llldiih ilogg. lloriii iiorilard: 3, Edna Champion i, (lerniii Mi-Ki-lizic. tirade Vlii.—l, Keith Wcdiock 1i, iteir lnlggan; 1i. ilclell itogcrs i, Irene Champion. Jenn McKenzie‘, 3, Alfred Higgins 4, .losi=ph Ready. Jennie Clark; 3. Minerva Duggan t, Lulli Callloron. i-r: 4, Alberta Kelly. Miss Maci-‘adyenki dept-thud Caseley: Ii. Herbert McKonna: lam-is Millnlzln. Glade iI.—-l, lren ‘rildo (liilis; 4. Eddie MPDOIIRM. i, Goldie Bernard. Wntpml; 3, James Kennedy: Albert ThompsonuClnss E. — Joan Mill-man; 2. ‘Grail Acorn; Reginald Cameron. lii POWDER- Atitcr other Question 0f Salaries on wil'l ‘be one nlaiicrs llliscilsseil. as Wcll Govi-rllmclliks failure to llvo up to ills lprollliscs with the pmlal employcs throughout lilo service. 34 Port of famous canal. Old spoiling for well known Prillclinllki dept, Grade X.. Sr.—- f-iffllii‘ X., Jr.—1, Gwen Spriggs; 2. Milrilm Mili- lnali; ‘t, Ray Stewart. tirade IX.— 2, Milrguilritc Higgins; 3, ilalie Waite; 4, lielcn Vici- Prilli-lpilfs dept. Grade Vi. Viclfaiiycn; ii. Myrtle "lil-{IIOS and Grade Vil.-- 1, .lelllll<l Pilyntnr; 2. Grrtdo Vl.-—-l. Gladys l/icNelll; 2, Grade V.—l, bliiecn McKonnii; 2. (lrado l_V.—1, Marlowe McMahon, 2. Margaret (Willis; 3, Vivian Payn- ili.-i, Kntiltifiilt‘ Murphy: 2. illvn 4. “aeeley; 2, Rena Kennedy; 3.0M- Miss (lnndwinki ilopt-Cians A. -—l. Doris Higgins; 2, Olive Reeves 1nd Glen Inglis (equal); 3, Everett Hilghes and Norman Hogg (equal), Class B. -— 1. unis Lockhnrt; 2. Ruby Kelly: f4. llrlith Kelly; 4. Gertrude Cameron. (time (‘..-1.(‘irnl-e Scmplc; 2. iiele4ll Hnttie-l-‘oilarty. Class D.——l, Mar- lorle Kennedy; 2. Boyce While: 3. THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN BliNililN 4 lliiiuilail ilillill. MR. i. li. Spcakng Oil ‘the Bud-get Dobuto in the Provincial Legislature, April] 4th, Mr. J. ii. Buntaill, Conserva- iiVc mtlllbL-r-for the 2nd Queen's. sai-d he had no intention of taking. up very lnuch tlinc, as he thoughti ills ‘fcw remarks on the Draft Ad- dress were sufficient. a icpresentanve ‘of Second Queen's he felt it incumbent upon him to (‘XDTQSB to the best of his wbiiity the feelings of his constituency. Listening to the various spunk- urs who llnd prcccdtd ilim, Mr. ly, somewhere, bi; a blunder. Ho d.i1 not think he had ever hoard or| lcad in the Legislature so many] conflicting remalks. lie could not iindoictalid the hon. members in the Opposition making such fabri- cations. He recalled that in 1911,‘ the first time he llnd engaged in ].()iit cs, tilere was grout agitation throughout the country. The Lil-- niiliii at tile time were ill power. Till,- Conservatives realized the position they bad left the country Ill and thc ire-ling tiiat existed llllloiig the electorate. ill fact the agitirtiun was so great flint as a result of the elect-ion of’ 1911 the liberal..- went out with only two survivors to tell the tale. Tile COIP servatives came in and held oflice until 1019, and during that time the taxes they placed on the people were so small lthat they were really almost forgotten by the electors. But in i919 a strange thing 0ccur~ red. Mr. Buntain remembered speaking ‘to tho Premier at thc time and heard lrim make ii. ‘state- lncnt that he felt it was almost im- postsibli; to run, the affairs of the Province with the small rcvonuc at his ilispilsnl. We know that a great many oi the people realized the position. aliil tlia-t the Premier was, as ft ivolc, on thc horns of n (iiiPiilillfl ill ilriler to extricate him- scll he awpvali-il to tile people fol‘ an additional $75,000 ill order to meet the dclnaild of the teachers ‘for ihtffllfllfiilti salaries. Every rea- sonable. lnall in the House and out of‘ it know this. But the then Op- position lnade a great (lutcry through the country that there was too much extravagance. Premier Arscnalllt was rei-ogn zed as being one of the a-blost mrn the Province has produced, a mall who was an honor to his profession and to the leadership of tin‘ Legislature and. Government. But ho was defeated by the Liberals. They had gone against llinl with one of the most ridiculous platforms ever framed. Every memlbor of the Legislature ‘knew it was absolutely necessary that more money ‘be secured ‘by way of revenue, yet cvr-ry member i-n the Opposition fought against that; ‘they declared that. the Con- . serviltives were extravagant; that - they were spending money ‘foolish- ‘ly and that they were unable pro- perly to conduct the affairs of the Province. On ‘their promises that they could run the country on the then existing revenue the Liberals went into power. And was there ever anything so corrupt? ' Those men, with a reputation to eurn for thcln~ selves, came in, and with feelings bottcr imagined than described, cams forward and said: "We can't make ends meet either." They violirtcil every principle 0f honor. They hilii made statements to the country tiiut were false, yet there was no appeal to the people to rec- tify their ilisdccils. They must take tho responsibility for ‘that. They formed a Government whose whole ani-bitlon it was to legislate. not only in their own ‘interestsbut in the interest oi‘ their friends. One of the first things they did was to raise tho taxes against ‘the hurd- worklng farmers, nnd as a result ‘thflfg wore indignation meetings all over the country. Men refused tn pay the taxes, which had been rais- ed from 20 cents on the $100 to 5t) cents. The-n they put on thl- Poll Tax .which the Opposition mom- bers have ‘the audacity to stand up and support today. instead of pay- ing $2, as under tho Conservatives, the ‘poor farmer had to pay $3. $10, and in some cases $12 in Poll Taxes. Worse than that, many of them in order to lzrilt-lfy their owli pecuniary nm-bitions, deliberately. ‘by virtue of tmclr bcing members of private corporations, undertook ‘to place tho public nflmey into those corporations, and by so doing ‘put sumo 0f "it in their own pock- ets. if this was true Mr. Iilllltaill wits prepared to retract it, but. it was common talk among thc pi-o- pie at the time. On ‘behalf’ of‘ tho farmers lhi‘ speaker wished to compliment thi- resent Government. He ‘believed hat for honesty, integrity and hon- or, no worthier leader could be found than Premier Stewart. He could pay the same sincere compli- ‘ment to the Ministers oi’ Public Works and Agriculture. in their speeches thoy have elucidated the qnestiolis and problems pertaining to their respective ofliccmand their records cannot ‘be contradicted by any members of tho Opposition. (Applause) Our Province ‘is all farming coun- try and we cannot, like our neigh- bors in other provinces, look for wealth in coal ‘mines, lumber, gold, factories, etc. W9 must depend very largely on agriculture alone. and as an agricultural Province we are in the unfortunate iposi-tion o! having to purchase elsewhere, with our hard-earned money, the neces- aitles we require. In so doing we place into the treasurios of other provinces the revenue which is so badly needed ‘here. . it is quits evident, Mr. Bnntoin believed, that the present Minister h E B However, asi ililntilin felt that thcro must surc-iycars has not ‘been the success the \ rtock have been given every en- i-onrilgelnciit. Tile short cilurscs rcv-liltly institutcil.‘ lire meeting w til encouraging success. All these things arc ill the illttrests of‘ the fillincrs, and the encouragement. ,'-',iVt‘il tileln by the Dcpartnlelit ‘of . gl-liauitilre is much appreciated. The clover liullcr, which was a failuic under the Bell Government. il.l$ bccn put to work ‘in the West- ii-rn part of the Province. Tile brick and tie manufacturing industry. which ‘for the pilot four or five ‘people would like to see, is today wolkillg totvzlrils that end, by which it will be ul‘ value to both the (lovcrlilnrnt and those engag- ed ill the lvork. i So iar us consolidation of small sii-liools is concerned, Mr. Bnntain i)(‘ili!Vt‘li it would bl} il move in the right direction. lie was pleased that the lllelnbcrs of the Opposition ale in favor of that idea, us well. \\"i-. have been told that thc reason our t-ducatioTlal system ‘ls not just as good as it should be is because boys ill‘ twelve years and over fall to attend. 'l‘ilat ‘s one of tile fail- ings i-liaiili-tc-rlstii: of thc ‘farmers o1‘ this Province. The speaker, who wils it filrnicr himself, and who Fvhiigliilicli the hard position in which the farmers are placed, felt this to by a very regrettable state 0t‘ affairs. it is (Lscollragiilg to tilllik that our thrillers ari- iiut ill a position today to hire help and are oilligild to kei-p their irliiidrian at ililiill! to iliiiiiSi ill the work. lle would not say w'lieiiiel' thi- filrlllcrs wi-rc at fault ill tilis or not, but it was (‘Ufiiliiliy not il very good filing for thi- future. Too many of our young farmers are zllrl-ady gililil: ailrilail. TilFy may some day real- ize that iliillit‘ is llil» ildsi piarae, after all; but lil iiit‘ lllnailtililc tile Province i..~ losing a valuable. asset in these young nlen. We have been told by thc nlclll- hers of the Opposition that the ‘business cilrrii-il on under the l'r:l- hibitioil Act is a nefarious ‘one at the prissrlit tilllo. One lllclnllcr oi cause the money is going into the upkeep and improvement of the roads. actions of the members of the Op- position with the act oils of the present Government he could not help thinking that the intelligent eicctorlvof the Province have ill- decd weighed those gentlemen in the balance and found them want- ing. The balance i-s zigallist them today as it was two years ago. (Applause) Mr. Buntain did not ‘believe thcrc was a time in ill-.- history of the Province when the people were so satisfied with a (lilvciliment as nt the present time. The Government, by its sincerity has made [iiu people feel thc fact that they are liv ng up to their pro-election promises. (Ap- plausc.) SEARLETOWN SCHOOL iiollor lioll of Scilrlctown Sciiuul for April: Grade X.—-l, Ethel lloiialld; Artilur iiolialld; 3, Jean Alflecit. ‘Grade Vi.~‘l, Nellie iiliilliiiifll; 2 Gladys Lowtiler; 3, hiurgarct Mac Neill. Grade V.--l, Frank licil; 2, Jean Callbeck; ll, Margaret Afticck uliu Gilbert licli equal. Grade lV.——i, Mary Nounall; Kenneth Green. Grade ii. Sr.--- lluy Sobey; 1i, Gladys lllncklliorc. Grade ii. Jr.—1, Olive MaeLoall; 2. Gladys Leilrd; 3, Layton Green. Grade l. Sr.——i, Donald Cameron; 2, Eldon Sobcy; 3, Lloyd lCaineron Grade l. Jr.--1, Lea ‘illackmorc; 2, Lcitll Blilcklliilril; 3, (iiga Green. Perfect Atitelldzlllcc: Gladys Low. flier, Nellie iioullam, ilaruld Af- ileck, Margaret Afficck, (lilbert licli, Edith Sobey, Gladys Blilck~ lllol-c, Ray Sobey, Frank Gallant. Mary Noonan. Kenneth (lrecil, Lay- Lt-an, Lea _ liiilckillore. Lilith lillickniilrc. ‘filial vlirollncnt 33. Avcragi: nttilnilallce 2X.8.--Vi-ra M. Bernard, teacher --—-<o» .\lilltli‘tl'lt Llnlulrilt for Folds. the Opposition‘ went so far as to say that this (lilvcrlillleilt will g4 down to posterity as the rillll .-.i-i£ ing (iovcrliulililt. 'i‘his was one of the lnost ridiculous statements Mr.‘ Bulilalll had heard. even from tin-I mellllbvt‘ from 'i‘igliish (Mr. lilallcii- and.) The boll. lnclllbel" knows that the (iovi-rliintlnt has llo jurisdiction over iili- Proilibtlou fkllnilllssioil. The (llitirfliifiii of thc Prohibition Act has been put into the (lillnmis- sinners‘ hands, and these gillltlc- men are, as a lnatter of fact iloillg ilettcr and more efficient work than has ever been done before. Some (lfiiilfiSlil ivas llrlde in i'(‘- gard to the (Iolnlnissitln allowing medical men to issue prescriptions. Mr. Iiuntilin believed that some- thing shnllld be ‘done whereby those prescriptions should be dis- continued, or rallicr reduced ill number. lint the matter is u VHF)’ difficult thing to manage. it is conceded that liquor might be good tn some persons, filough. he had never used it ililllself. Suppose the doctors were restricted, say. to twenty prescriptions a illontll, and a very sick person camo iliollg nellr tho onil of thc lilolltil, when these twenty prescriptions had been ilhltjfi ilp? However ‘badly the twenty-first prescription was need- od, the tint-tor could not issue it. The speaker would not undertake to say whether liquor was neces- sary or not, but if the lnezllcai fraternity say it is, wily should thi- twcnty-flrst prescription be held hack, when It nriglit mean the death of the sick person? Thorn had 'i)i‘t"l’l read ill the ilollsil the other day a petition asking that light |)t or and wine be sold ill the Province.‘ 'l‘iii\ speaker could lint conceive that ally hon. gilllilenlan in the House would entertain that idea for a ilionlellt. Today we have illllldrcils of ailiolllolllles rllll- nlllg dilrililgh thi- country. ‘lilo pvopk‘ wilo ruil lilUi-ii‘ iiillinllobll-s might lleiroille as reckless as the ilt‘li(i(‘l' 0i the iippos lion, wilen ill‘ ‘brilke six or seven springs of his car! it. is well known Illal iill‘ lnan who bncilllli-s all iilf'i)i‘iilii,‘ is tlli‘. lllail who at one time oi" zlnoill- or took Ills first glass, Mr. linll- tain. for ollo, would do all ill his power to prohibit uliy such ilctloll as lhilt proposed by filo petition. ill; hoped the Legislature would never oolldesccnd to plum» oil the Statutes all Act lvliii-ll will tend to milko tllo younger generation weaker. Criticism llnd been made by 0p- positlnn lllenlbers with rngilrd to thc tnx of’ two cents a gallon on gilsolfne. Mr. Buntnin ilcllevr-d this tnX who‘ u belle-fit and not an in- jury. Tile hard-working farmers liilfi flsherlnen do not pay the tax. Tllc ll\(‘n who rlin their automo- Wllat is Soilgril? Wilrll docs it do ?' food. cannot use too illllCii. liow preferable, but not necessary.) rays affect tlic life of bacteria. it kccps bciicr in that form. disperses. sects cat thc bacteria. bartcrioiogisl. is ii a nciv principle? specific purpose. is Soiigro iloisililoiis? bilcs most are the men who pay. and they are not cnlnpluining bi‘- When the speaker contrasted thc| 2i PAGE sEvEu l Constipation’: warnin s show on theface- Get sure relief with cliogg’s ALL-BRAN ALL BRAN b "rigs suds results. Kellogg's has rought health to thousands when nil else has failed. If eaten regularly, Kellogg's ALL-BEAN is guaranteed to bring permanent relic in thc most chronic cases or your grocer returns the Thousands have rid their oystcma of this diocese with Kelloggfi. ,_ ‘ purchase grit-e. dint two table- Constipation iuyour body is like sfiggiigg gleyaTm chrome case“ dry-rot. in timber. it continually weakens the structure to the point o! collapse: Its poisons creeping through your system lead to over fort serious diseases. Pmpies are caused by consti- pation. So are circles under -.le eyes, and s ota before them. So arc hollow c eeics and sailow skin. So is unpleasant breath. Drive consti ation out of your system with Ke log ’s ALL-BEAN. Doctors recommen it-they know Kellogg s ALL-DRAN is rcad - to-eat with milk or cream. iic i- cious with fruit. Recipes on cvcry packa e. Madein London, (lamina. Scr by fending hotels and ros- jaursnts. Sold by all grocers. Buy a package today. y . 4‘ ALL-BRAN Does Oh arlottefown toll (lreen, Gladys ‘iifiiifthUiiVu Miler (‘an i: be used on ail kinds of plants? grains, vegetables, silrtibs, flowers, lawns an-i ‘ Must fcrtiliicr bc used with Soilgi-o? lo silppiy thc bacteria necessary to make the plain food now in the soil available for use by thc plant and the more added, iii tilt‘ way of fertilizer or lllainirc, thc better. iiow oficn should it be applied? successive applications will tend to increase growth and hasten iiifiillfily. is huilins ilcccssary when Soiigro is used? Yes, huililis is licccsszlry as this provides spon- giilcss in the soil which retains moisture and llo Must it be applied cvcry year? It can be with ivilifiiliflgtc‘. Under favorable conditions the bacteria iniihl a reserve supply of plant food bill if llze plains are assimiiating ii and illCfCfio~ lug their productivity rapidly, it is advisable to ilrovidc all-tile food they may require. should Soiigro be mixed? iinlpty thc ilzictcria food first and pour contents 0f Soiigril Cflil onto it and then arid five tiincs thc rlliloiilit of lilc Soilgro can, of clear WJiiCf. (rain wait-r Wilv do you have to lliix it as directed? tight cans and provides food on which they thrive Can part of contents only be lnixcd? Docs Soiigro have a iiiszlgrcczlilic smc ilarnliess gases that have formed in the can colili: in colltzlct with thc air. ihifi M101‘ iuuncdiutciy Docs ii ailiQii wilrll applied lo a lawn? How i0ng‘wiil it keep after mixing? Will lnixturc evaporate.’ “my Should the nlixiufg he Cuvcrcd vpithtildCt-BC cloth? Iiccilusc musqtiitos and ilthcr iii- \\’hat are the different kinds of bacteria I rlmiilollifying. iiitrifying and riecilmposition baricriil. (‘an Soiigrrl be il!~‘(‘(i on all kinds of soil? flow lunch Soiigro should be used to inoculate sccli? \\'ilcri- llirly Soiigro be obtained? Care ? ost onvincing y iieque a 2.l i, ‘Edith Silbey; 2.] nswx itached Olli’ 0S, Space Given _by Prowse BrosqLtd. QLTESTIGNS TM) wANgviliiRS-EVERTNE’gifjChOw i i? it is a scientific culture of various soil bacteria. it changes thc ciciiiirllts in orpaddcd to thc soil ililo available plant What effect has it oil thc plants? liy incrcilsillg thc zlvaiizlbie plant food, it promotes a sturdicr and filsicr growth, ilrttcr root (an it injure or burn lilc plants? ilcvciopull-nt, more extensive yicid and (luickcr illaturify. No, it iliClTiy increases thc natural functions. You Yes, it may be used with advantage on trcrs, pastures. Not necessarily, but the fnilction of Soiigm is Uncc a. season, but It cannot be zlpillicti too often. plant iifc will i-xist wiiilulii iiiUi5illfC. Stir wcii and CUVCI’ with cheese cloth 0r nlilsipiitil netting. Let stand ill a warln shady spot for fivc days. Do not expose lo thc direct rays of the sun as sun This releases the bacteria from captivity in air and iniiiliply. ‘ Yes. but it is better to mix it all at one time as ll? Only when first opened. As soon as thc No. hrolil six lo eight months, Not m any great extent. Wily silouid Soilgro be applied in the evening or on a cloudy day? Ilccausc tile direct rays of thc sun will kill the ilactcria before they ilzivc a cilallcc to work into the soil. \Vho discovered Soiigro? Dr, j, E, Davis, i’h.|’.., ()pll.l)., a Canadian cilcmist and . ._ ., L9,”); h _ _ h No, ii i; rather :1 perfected mvtilild. Bacteria cuitiircs ilavi: been used or: legumes such as alfalfa, clover, vctciics. ileum‘. etc. fur thc past 15 0r more yvzirx “lint is the advantage of Soiigro over ilihrr Cniltlfl‘? is adaptable to all kinds of crops, while other vuiiilrvfi an for spccific crops only. is iilcrc iliorc than oiic kind of bacteria iu Suilgro? ' Yes, numerous others serving u It is cheaper, easier t0 apply all-i i fixing, ‘t ll Soiigro? DiffCfCilbgfOllpS of nitrogen No, it is not injurious to any living thing. MM...‘ Yes, it improves any soil. _ Enough to thoroughly lilOiSiCtl it. From thc Soilgro Selling Agency, I76 Kent Street, (barioilctowil; Murdoch MacKinnon, Manager. G \ of Agriculture has done ovary- thing in his power tlfbritlg about greater prosperity to the rforuloiu of the Province. In everythingthot he has token hold of be seem! t0 have silcceeded admirably. The Egg Circles today are in a better position than ever before. The grinding and marketing of wool has maria great progress. The various 1. clubs which have been organiledi 3. throughout the country in the ln- VY tel-eats of agriculture and l-lve REGAL FLOUR Is the Kind that ‘makes everyone. satisfied. IT SATISFIES IT SATISFIES IT SATTSFIES IT SATISFIES "Tho 8t. Lowronoo Flour Mlllo 0o , Limited, Montreal the'MILLER. who wants to get out of’ Nat- ure s finest wheat the best possible flour. the MERCHANT, who wants to sell a flour that will please his customers. the uousiiwirn. for it la a joy to bake CtREGALOQ. theFAMlLY. for it yields u... moat palat- able and moat nutritious inland in the world.