1 r l Pimples, Blackhea , SWAP ‘and 0 P ‘their tldlllllll, WHY TOLERATE "*“'" Cllticur Y I.‘ “neonatal! CU‘ [Q] u". P‘"“'WII Ind mum vvvq d5 and Dandruff] Ilvrrllrlilvw ‘ "uremia; ' [Potency -..~unna Alfa lfa. Range F0? ‘Ymlng Chicks A.- ‘dliiflr Dominion ' Eflpgflmentll Station. Kapuskaslng, 0n; A‘ well ‘constructed proud" he“, flqiiiPPfl with a modem coal-burn- ISpinlfling and Weaving lend me your wool l0 b, u,“ m", vI-m- I-i us» for tingle and 2a “m! for double. Sizes, flue, Vnaedlum and1 coarse. Send by parcel post or freight. i l pay freight on 100 lb. lots. Weaving1 done with wool warp and double width suitable for blankets-Ail white‘ except border where ‘IQ, m" he used. Wool must be clean. Put lhlly- pen name and Iddresg on m yum, and owners name and instructions in- side otherwise I will not bu mp0“, aide for losses. Send early, WM. LANDBIGAN, Sourie, P. E. L lblb-S-f-tuethurssttmos, LIVEL M i HUGS ‘We are taking live 1102s daily, excepting batu-rday, paying high, est, nlarket prices. Davis‘ 5.? Fraser 3 l s l ~ Two Great Sweedes CARTER’S Prize Haszards Improved (Bffllllfl TOP Swede) g CARTER’S “Millpond” Purple Top Swede The two leading Varietlcl flow-ah PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND. both popular for allililihl‘ to the AMERICAN MARKET! for sale at our S!!!) STORE and by upwards of two hundred Merchants in this Province. ‘IANUBOLM’ varieties in incl. CARTER 8: 00. LIMIIED and other Qvvrvwowvoooo-o-voorore oeeoooeoooeoeooovovoo-ovoooo.oso-o-ouovvvovvvvvvoov vewoow-wooo-ouoooooooo» 40-000 _ evovooeoeoeoooeeoe eoeooooooeooooooes“. leedamen Charlottetown Company! 0e o 0 o0 woo-o 0+ +0004 5352-6-8—tf. FLYTIME IS HERE! When you are having yoursc or repaired, LET US SUPPLY n , We have it in stock from 18 to 48 Wide- We can supply it in either BLACK 0r BRONZE. The bronze. with ordinarysare- ves you a. permanent job. - ' . . e have also a. wonderful line of c i ' A SCREEN Doors to fit any doorway. Doors for sum- mer and winter. and doors for Bummer only. We have also the cheapest price for .. » -- the quality supplied- rllljsillogers Hardware 0o. Ltd. 1whicl-l in some instances has averag- a AAA a ‘an- 311x broader stove has largely. solved e Problem of handling largsnum. bers of baby chicks from the time °I "mm"! "M11 they are old enough to do without artificial heat. At this time the chicks usually require more ‘PR8 1rl Which to take exercise. 1f this additional spsceum be Ihfen m the “y °I Km?" Pllidooks it gives the chicks an excellent means ofget- ling green feed. insects. etc" which i119!’ 9161i lip from the rsngej. At the Dominion Experimental Swim". KlDuskusirlB. Ontario it has 110°“ found that either clover or ai- lalia, particularly the utter. “mug i‘ "°"Y emelieni rmze on which w grow the chicks. Oneorthc-blg ad- vantages of the. alfalfa over the red °1°“" 15 i118 "try rapid growth made by i1" sswnd crop of the alfalfa, ed over 1 Inch per dall- This keeps "it birds supplied with young “n- d" shoots as lfrcnn ma uhtllqulte lilo in the autumn and also furnishes thrm with a certain amount of shade and protection from haw-kg, 11 It I11 Poulble, new clean range should be provided each year in or- d" VJ Wold the danger of interestin- al parasites. Germany shipped aim-why 10g 1g- rlcultural machinery to. the- Americas last year. _ - Dublin. Ireland, ls waging‘; cgm- b81811 against the use _of Irish names in connection with goods m», mggg 1n Irealnd. o o a u-wm-ooewoo-e-ooeaoeo PEERLESS FOX NE TTING "WHAT w: nsvr: ‘Wllillb? noun" “It's Better to be Sure Than Sorry” Your ram an the mostjreltalle investment that you have. An you going to lose them, b! using any other Netting than Pierleu? "Uertalnly not." "Why?" "because? you reel at clue know- ing that the best "QUALITY -NET- TING" la protecting your Foxes.‘ This netting u uni/AHMED l0- fore and after being woven. Bangs Flat without bagging or lag- ging and makes s perfect fepee, Can be erectelfhyau "AMATEUR." SPEClALLY-MADIFOI US. OUR. PRICES ABE THE BEST UN THE ISLAND. The Rogers Hardware reens made THE WIRE. Do0Rs'”* and ul- 1 bad takefaia If u- ’ f a l» "ciiltfl had dongs. in m” “Pa? self-restraint. 2; $3,‘; Adan: ‘,"'°""MH¢ mm“ 1 lbs of m latter may be lubatltuull » wclgh-thc-mulr Ind‘ keep the records! NEWS_Y FARM NOTES By Agricola At the end of the year thrmanager decided to sell two i oftbe- poorest cows and buy one good-one. There was thus less labor, but a- little. more more care had to be exercised in feed ing and this gradually extended to all the other cows as the help became interested too. _ . There was better discipline llso in the milking shed. The workers were quieter. At the end of the second year the total production had increased 5 per cent and the test was about the same. The results were so satis- factorily that; the same tactics were pursued, and the herd though small- er, made a better showing in quantity of milk, appearance and general con- dition at ‘the end .of the third year, when I severed my connectio nwith the farm. ‘It ls estimated that ln districts where cow testing associations are started, 20 per cent - of the dairy cows are sold to the butcher, before the year's work is ‘completed. Al- though such associations make for convenience, any farmer can do the work.hln1self..'I‘he testis not dif- _ licult: There is an excellent bullet- lnii ii" m? who has the Jiidlzmerlt, in to be had from Ottawa, and all 11114 i119 IIidiHiPYi-O Apply it, is sure the spparatusneccsssry is‘ a small of s reward. 3 ' spring scale, a Babcock tester and The right kind of crop is one which glassware, a sample dippersome is _of such a character as to insure its sample bottles, sulphuric acid and a being manufactured if possible upon record pm; ti-lejsrm itself into more expensive Regularity, thoroughness sndaccur- products. Littlcshouldbe produced acy must be exercised or‘ the results which" can only besold off the farm may be misleading. Ln its raw state. ' In this way we rise superior to the vagarlesbf the westller, the uncer- taintlns.of._the ,ma.rksts. and the machinations of corporations; we rendenour fields more fertile, and oui-‘farrrlsmors ittractlve home when we work up our growing. crops into horseswbeef, mutton, pork. poultry. wool and eggs. 1 ' ' GARNET WHEAT A short while ego in this column I- (lmte on the new Garnet; Wheat shied that it was w he tried out by Europeslrbakers this year; and now come word that Professor L. H. New- mlii- 111B Dflminion Cereallst is en roilte't ollingland to observe the tests Dominion officials claim that the flour is of high "strength" and quality , and that bread made from lt does not dry out qiiiflkly. If the testsiare successfill thenOal-rletllas a great future since ll: will extend Canada's wheat fields one hundred rmlles’ farther north because of ifsearllness lnripening. PROFIT/ABLE rltonucrlou Two grest factors in the produc- tion of any crop, are the farmer and the weather: and‘ fortunately, ex- Bélii under very. unusual circumstan- ‘ces, the man is the greater o1 the two. ‘In this Island particularly, the riaht crop sown at the ‘right time, in well prepared land, will give a good return practically every lime. WILD PLANTS 0F P; B. I. In another column will appear the second installment of the list‘ ofour wild plants. Nature students and others will do well to preservathese llstl as they are more complete than any which have previously appeared, and comprise all species added to our. flora. during [the last twenty years- , As an example the list o! the lCruciferae given" in the ‘supplement to sprattorfs Botany contains. 10 ‘ species; the present list mm these plants to 33 species found _wi1d in this province. 1 ._ cow rssrmc v-At one time I worked on ‘a’ farm wherecbw testing was started on a head of, 1i: milk cows and was greatly in because it fell to me to During the summer also. losses fre- quently occur. ‘Much time is’ saved here too, by the beekeeper who his own queens,‘- and whollas spare queens in his mating-boxes’ on which ' Beekeeping: A ., .. Requeening Of ision, Central Experimental F8111, Almost important operation in the Ottawa’ om’ bee-yard, is'th_e giving of a new queen to the colony, or the requeening of a colony. Its importance lies in the fact that the queen is the greatest factor in the production of the honey crop? that u. she produces all the bees oi’ the colony, which in turn pro- duce thecrop; usually bonsidered as Extermination of .1 ' Wild ‘ Flowers- TheBishop of Gloucester, England, one who is watching what is going on must be aware that they are gradual- ly being extermlnated not only the queen is at her- best in her second year, requeen every second year. Whichever of these methods is us- tawru the prllnroses are vanlshiru from the hedgerows, and everirfrom the woods; and as regards the rarer flowers there is a great danger that many of them will disappear entirely. The danger is becoming fllr greatel‘ nowadays than it was for there are few parts of the country which are not accessible by motor car. It ls quite‘ easynto drive almost arlywhere,.l_o'acl a car with roots and flowers, andget sway without being observed. Oils ' year I went. lo a. place to see the‘ wild gentians, and found instead in place where I expected to see s. large nuin- ber, that the ground was wver'ed' with holes, and was informed that a 1 ladyllad come up lrl a motor car and‘ carried away all she could find for‘ her rock garden. There was 'a wood filled with beech fern. A nurseryman came and took it all away. 1n Glouc- - . ; - 1 estershlre some of those who have IQII”. lfliflffll IIQI aura-lull.- and lilles-of-the valley in ' 1'“ ' ' ' ' , their ground have to keeps watch- _ . msn-day- and night to protect them. M ‘H ' h" 1 Round Gloucester the marly rare and lulu ‘Eva's. ‘wriawlwu 1 P‘ towards the latter part of the main flowldurixlgthe last week in July or first, week in August. This gives a young queen ample time to increase the strength o1 the colony‘ in young bees before the winter ssls in, and does ‘not affectthe honey crop. Besides this wholesale method of requeenlng. there are times throughout the season, when necessity demands the giving. ofla new queen unmad- lately.“ In the spring. one sometimes finds ‘a colony ‘queenless or headed by a drone layer. At such a time, the beekeepera who has wlntered-a. few queen been for such an emergency, can immediutclywequeen hia colony. while others, less provident, must send to the ‘south for s queen. llurl . Paipiiaied yhcauilful _orchls which grown there ‘Fiililiiil B! WWII“ ' nr yearly become less common, and wk: “d m, d.” n. msny or them such as the red hel- i1" 19"" ‘Ind W119" l numb" °1 ‘m, , . " leborine, will, 1 fear, be soon lost. illfuhlv’ hlifihtii ""11" ti" "Y" IPP “ - l emu; ls‘ o; ‘. - l . ~ - Vlt la the same all over the country.» ' i As for remcdies, the bishop offers i rl-lE Cl-IARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN. ipreproof Walls s and (Ieilings at N0 Extra Cost For A Basements CST house fires start in the furnace room. ' . It is there that fire usually gets a start and spreads unless stopped by fireproof walls i114 silica» . This hazard can be effectively eliminated '1 by lining the basement walls and ceilings with Gyproc. Why not ‘remove this dangerous risk? And at the same-time whynoc partition ofl‘ the enclre basement into extra rooms-a fruit closer, furnace room, workshop or children's playroom? _ _ Doingso will make a clean, attractive basement _ and keep dust from going through the floors-the walls ‘and ceilings will take any decoration, Ala- ‘ bastine, paint or wallpaper. The basement can be ' made as clean and attractive as any otherfloor in the house. Seeany of 1 (the Gyproc dealers listed below. l1 LIM. POOLE Ill. YLHOLMAN, LIMITED Summerside, P. E. I. _ MORRIS-BERNARD CO. TignlSll, P. E. I. GYPSUM AND ALABASTINE LIMITED, MONTREAL, QUI Head Ofticez- PARIS, CANADA iii-‘inl Proportional 1n size to the advances a timely protest in‘ the _ Q, ‘may; number of honey gatherers present. dumbing of country woods and flue “Walls The‘: ‘The queen, therefore, must be vig- hedgerowa ‘by town motorists. l-le ‘Mu finch]! orous. To secure this quality of vigor. “may . - _ may“, u, » a h, some beekeepers make a practice of 1 mm]; n9 one ‘doubts that} great proved _Gyproc audllolae‘ redueenine their bee colonies (very pm of the beauty of the country ac- ‘1*°°"“°°' YQ!1T1-.W,1,i.11°_°.'-,11§17!W.1‘i° i111"! ihI-i- l’ pends upon our wild flowers, and any ’ We also m “ROCBOARD" ' 94,1119. 9119M" 111 111°“ °°mm°11 "$9 rarer sorts. but many of the ommon MPPEI‘ h 9°" in Canada. is to requeen the colonies one; b150, Round many of our great fw‘ 52d“ '".“q"_““1 and 3/ llch lhifl-e ape- cially eavy board, for use as a lasler base and for lion, from raw materials. < icahhqz or 1 Potato Beetles (mica by lbs SE3... of Publicity, Dominion Department" of Agriculture, Ottawa.) The best. and cheapest poison to . y Toe potato crop will be spoiled ill- lass measures are taken to control the beetle known» as the Colorado Potato Beetle. Thu pest is already lsyin: sen- yolulg gruba will be feeding in a very few days and that the time for your first ‘spray is very near.‘ Experiments have proved that potato beetles are more‘ readily‘ killed immediately af- ter hatching than at‘ any other time. Iherefomlyou should watch the‘ yel- 'low- egg masses on the under aide of This means that th: ye four: 1 1bo forblddvn by law; m the sale of our wild flowers should be prohibit- use is calcium arsenals ‘attha rate o! lli-I pounds ,in_ A0 gallons of Bordeaux nlillturet copper sulphate Gina, lime Alba. water t0 gallons.) If the poison is used alone in water add 2-‘: poulidapf hydrated lime to mil (l) Uprootlng of wild flowers should e; m Bshoobchlldrienlholuld be partment of Agricultural, Otawa. rrlucc Edward island window, in {lrutructed not to gainer them: ('4) botanists iremielvea should learn Greyhound racing in tnglsnd is to gallons for each bami of spray. dying so rapidly that cbcculcmr are -\ Irvine to sell befors the dual slump comes, f " ihouidarsenate of lead or Growers-tint prefer be apply poison in powderform should illae 'a iultcomooseaofllum mgr-man 1 the dzedicated at the evening service in - . 7718' COIOfly he can draw to replace mu.‘ losses. i- For methods of requeenlng see Bul- REQ-UEENING QFITHE COLONIES letln No. 33 issued by the Bee Div- & - A ‘Build to iéid wsaurad-al’ hydrated lime, In dusting best results will be secured if the application is made in the early morning or late evening when the vines are we; with dew and when the air is calm. .121 spraying potatoes the poison should always be mixed with Bardeusx as this mat- erial is not only e valuable fun- gicide but repels the attack of such destructive insects as flea beetles and lealhoppers. Two orthres lpplifiii- tlons in s season should give suffici- ent protection from all insects when applied thoroughly and at a time when the new damage first becomes evident, in each case. In spraying cover both the upper and lower sur- faces of the leaves and use an abun- dance of material; when the plants aresmall 60-75 gallons per acre and when fully grown 100-120 gallons is not too much. ‘ If. further information is desired apply to the Publications Branch. Department of Agriculture. Ottawa. or to the lmtomologiat in Charge of Vegetable Insect lnvutigstlons De- VANOOUVQQB. 0.. June ll-‘Ihe memoryof those who died in the Wbrld‘ War from that. province, was callsclluPMel-hcrlul chapel Sulldly. Mr. A. l. Bslderstorl, who has been in Vancouver for many years, a na- rlrepl-oor Wal boar PAGE mm: . 1 A For Stores and Factories HUNDREDS of modern stores and fac- tories are reducing the fire hazard and adding protection to their stock by erecting ceilings and walls of fireproof Gyproc Wall- board. They are doing this not only because Gyproc is the best fire-proof Gypsum Wall l Board on the market, but because it actually costs less than many materials that have no fire-resisting qualities whatever. 1 Gyproc cannot warp, shrink or buckle and takes any decoration. A perfectly smooth, gflacsurface is assured‘ by filling the joints with ‘ Gyproc joint Filler. No other wallboard ofierssuch ease _of tlpplication, labor saving and economy. Gyproc is 3/8 inch thick, 6 feet to 10 feet long and 32 and 48 inches wide. ll 1 1 ! Charlottetown, P. E. 1 Montague, P. E. I. I PR Gyproc does away with inflammable wood-lined walls, ceilings and partitions. Bum? Vstorfs father’ was a memberflof 1h;‘t-heRIdidmoroI-tjldsma/D Prince Edward Island Legislature for The mlmaer. He“ Gem.“ Q F“ i twenty-seven years. and duripg that 115, 13_ 11, c, B, 1;“ pfggchgd M ,1? time was Speaker of the House for services The Prince Edward‘ island window has for its Biblical motif the story of ‘David's Mighty Men." The his- torical panels show the coming of Jacques Cartier to Prince Edward Island in i534.‘ and Lord Rollo, com- mander oithe first British force, in 1758. Between these two panels is depicted the coat-of-arnls of Prince Edward Island. All Prince Edward islanders, par- ticularly those who served-overseas, in any branch of the service, were invited. The long June evenings made it posible m have a line light for Tennis and Golf Players everywhere use Min- ‘ ad's to ease sore and tired l feet. ' FULL‘ FASHIONED, ALL SILK Stockings a ' $1.39 Square heel or contour. heel, medium service weight. of chiffon weight, 17 most popular colors to choose from, absolutely reliable stockings from the best ‘makers in the Dominion, a. week end value that. you cannot equal. Mailed postpaid, if you can't come _ _' _ tlve 4on- of Prince Edward Island. dOtUCMM the window. Ml‘. Blldtt- I r Moore £3 Ltd. over ten years. in. ' . 1. ‘ a , a l.‘ v