or Varnish e . We have it! “Sherwin A complete lin we have what you need _,,.__,‘,..__.__. .._ u A l Suznwnv-W/Ltuiis Pii/ivrs mi Finn/sues K FOR BARNS. ROOFS. FENCES» OUTBUILDlNG-S, ETC. “5.\\i'. Creosote Paint. if) shades. “S,\\l." Roof andtfiridge Paint,—Red, brown, grey, and black. “5.\\'." Counnonwezilth llurii brighteconotnic Rcd Paint. Sherwin Williams Paint Covers best—lasts longest Most economical lNSIDkl: ALSO IUOOES. "S.\\'." Liquid Printer and Sherwin “lil- lianis’ Paint ready prepared. The best and most economical Paint that can be tirade. Red, a FO it ('1' PROA RDS. HAS E- BOARDS. SIIELVING, ETC. FOR iSllINGLEh‘ "S.\‘\'." Family Paint. V rcudy prepared. A durztlblc oil paint, easily cleaned. FOR CHAIRS. HXABLICS, DECOR- ATING \\'OOD\\'OR~K. FURNI- TURE, ETC. “S.\\'." Sher-Will-Lac. For staining and varnishing at one operation. “S.\\’." Old Dtttclt iinzititcl, High Gloss. FOR SlllNClLPIS. “S.\V." Prcscrvative Shingle Stain —— Matlc with creosote in 13 popular shades. FOR RADIATORS. PIPINGi. ‘l; ‘ v _ v v Srr()"l§s, PwTL-R‘; FRAMES, ton nixnou .\.\I) noon ET“ SCR-EPLNS. “S.\\'." Screen iinzitnel—~lilack and green, —\\"ott't rust. “S.\\'." imperial (llIlil liiirintel ‘Bronze, and Liquid Separate. "S.V\'." Liquid Liold. l"t~r Radiators and similar surfaces. FOR FLOORS FOR INTERIORS. ‘WALLS. . “S.\\'." inside Floor Ithiint. CEILINGS. ' -~.<.\\"." Porch r100. Piilllli. "S.W." Flat tonc. A llnl. oil Piiint for iflnrnot Vnr-nislt- walls. “S.\\'." Crack and Scam Filler. “S.V\'.” Flat tone (ilaze Colors, “S.V\'," Floor Wax. . i511‘... ETC. Ir/FC, ETC. I QULQR, (uAR-Dg FREE ()1\' R.]<jQl'l*1S'l‘. GET OlTR PRICES. We Save You Money on Paint Get ouriprices on Paint Oils, White Lead. P1111? C0101?» Etc- DedorateYoitrllome wit mvnlisco Everybody is Uising MIIRESGO If your walls and ceilings are For Walls shabby you should use Muresco. 1n zzpplying, allithnt is‘ hecesspiy " to o stornxitwt boilng Ceilings water. It dries quickly and shows no laps. llluresco comes in many tints end pure white. We send descriptive literature on request. ' \ Won*t Rub or Show l a i v i i Q .. a: I l’ "MURESCO”-—'the perfect finish for walls and ceilings. Insist on having “Muresco” used by your painter. Gives perfect-Tc- sults. We guarantee satisfaction. Lapsv-Easy to Use We also Stock a Complete Line oi Johnson's Products Johnson’s Wood Dyes, Floor and Liquid Polishing Waxes, Sani- spar Varnish Stain, etc.--all splendid preparations for special purposes. FREE! WRITE OR CALL FOR 32-page booklet, giving full detailed instructions for finishing new and old wood work, floors, furniture, etc. Beautifully illustrated in colors. A valuable treatise. SPECIAL. Weighted floor polishing brush, with one pound can of Johnsoms Floor Wax. Worth $5.00 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - $53-50 e-every need antici- pated-no matter for what purpose- non BL’!LDINGSAHFTSIDE AND _ ..._ INBREEDING l8 NO FOOUS WORK er \vlio has no grasp of the lniws 0f breeding, who is not .1 good There is much confusion rimcnz judge of individual type and qual- ‘beg-mners and novice nnultrydty. who does no; know Just. what breeders concerning lntbreedlng ho is after in his breeding opera-l and the probaible affects it may tlons. hud best. lot line, who is a skilled Judge of breed ty-pe quality, can oftcn resort to mbfefllllllkim t-citnlti and . ‘tuners studiously nvnid lnbreed-Itlcc cross brooding. which is lllltlppgrgflgn i; l“ the in; because they have an idea that mating or unrelated birds. it fir-let not be practise-d sl. ull if But whcrn n breeder has a de- hnlectlnn of they art to snmeetl. in the lnr- finite goal in mind, the very such us re-imost vigorous individuals povivcen us breeders this is prn- cured lti a certain individual or u m with: It It's Pith: /\ or Varnish ’ ( - } or Varnish We have J w, h“, ll g , .. and in-l "lentil"! tr. his great advantage. {There is no crime in inbreeding, tremendous iossl have upon the progeny. Many llP- LllUIIP. He. will (lo llflllel‘ to prac-jln vlialm- and w,“ M, “mg as m‘. I hands of a mkillerl breeder. Kit-cut care ,anii best and . .. must [or semi- nml no long (is they arP trilning the qualities already so» itii- constantly practised. lmwovor. Nature ls u great, lnlirccder, cs- . __ fMncKlnnon. New Wlltshire; E. Roy 18y. Summerslde; C. J. Roost. iAm- l I ~| zinc?” Ii , , . .t; H. It. Morrison. l P“““,‘°';,,,‘.“‘“‘,‘,“"§,v_ Taylor, Hunter l, Doris Ferguson ‘Mon lie 1X R lrogter, Amherst. ‘P / 2. lielen MaoNautthton Rivet. ~ - 3' Ralph Mame“ _______’____-_—-——i-—- ' Miss Altken’; Dept. Grads I. -_-_d bllbly illlwllltlel)’ lflle- Th‘? D7995‘ the intensifying of a certain blood} competent, and a g. John H. J. 0'De'l. Montreal; W. H. How. Y,‘ Pattee, 1i“ i. i .‘ t Cohen. <1 Western Guardian- —OHOP tmiEm-j _mi.i< eon’ sALsI; Lou "" quart. J. B. ultimo, Kdllllllgeql: vie-roam Horst.- C. C. Thomipsoggm . Hessian, Montague; Albeit-ton; A. K. lildscKasey Mono: 3: m"; H. A. Anderson, TruIr°~ c TWIN)’. Toronto; Bruce Simpson; TMQYllQi ‘H- Berry. St. John; 10¢, Sim_ , Montreal; N, B, m“, s"; M“ M- b 0'96". Montreal; *‘"-;M°n~l1\?l1l; E. Carter. ‘Hall/fax; - Frank L. Best. St. John; A. J’. Dug, Halitlax: P. S. Salmon. Montreal; .1-I. E. iMarney. Amherst; A. GarnetLl "Si. Jblin; H. R. Rogers, Buqggmey.‘ side; W. Tauton, Alberton; E. H. _ Momkley, Sumimenslde; N. H. Monk. herst; Colin C. Mobean, Montreal; C. K. Fotherlnghan. Halifax; J. E. Halifax; H. S. Wanamaker. iSt. John; I’. It. Casey. Montreal; F. .8. Lancaster. Jlonoton; A. b. Mann, tj-Moncton; K. N. Madlntiosh, Hali- linx; B. E. Weeks, Halifax; W. S. lNeison, St. John; -P. S. Dallln, ',_|iPetenboro; W. E. Ashrwwn, Trnro; R. S. Curil, Halifax; Geo. H. Per- kins, Mont-ton; J. L. Flemming. Halifax; J. G. Waterbury, ‘Halifax; W. W. Stewart. Rothesoy; E. W. ' .\iliton, -Port Elgin. - QUEEN HOTEL H. D. iMcEwen. Brl-stolfl‘ W. G. Ell-ls, Snmmerside; A. J. lliacNelil. -~‘ Dell River; H.J.HY1!95.iM-3i'ltlflKl193 A. C. Saunders, Summerside; P. (i. Clark. Surnnierside: C- C- Bakel- xi Kenslngtton; F. J. Johnstone. Mon- treal; C. W. Iver, North Tryon; , .\irs. Jeanette MacDDn-nld. B05105? ~51 1.. L. Cheverle. Sourlfl‘. Cact- D» J» MacDonald.- Cardiflflfl- REVERE HOTEL Hermon David, Boston; Abraham Boston; S. Ross. Ottawa: ‘C: C. Dow-son. Salt; S. Brown, Ypfli. ‘n. n. Murphy. train-int; c. MoN en’? Amherst; H- E- lvm‘ Ottawa’ T1‘. r: ' Bailey. Toronto; A. L. LGWlmMO onto; A. L. Adams. Lower ..~.l tnlrue; .1. ‘S. Perry» Summer“ a’ Wm. Piliman, l-iarrlnglnll? Wm- g Houston. l-iarrin lsi ihhh: o. Smith, st. John; n. I» fi lpe-Cllllly iimong fowl life. lllll l" tore the “survival of the fittest“ ltends to incriminate _ only In" Fl strongest and most virus o1 lntlr llhnun "out the undesirable}! that he often ,cornes to grief when he tries to "Jiractire inthreeding. Lino threading, which is the "in~ ‘ti-hsfiflylnl; or the dlntittishlng of @' ;-.'< WflyS tho perpetuation of it, and "fwhich is practised by ‘almost eve- hry successful liive stock breeder the world over, is nothing but an TV ztensivo inbreeding until the “iine" lllos been estaiblishetl. or the de- sirable c-ltarucftorlstdtr, lritensi-flled ‘ in ‘the blood of the progeny after v which it may not, of necessity". be Lhlsuch an intensive act of inbreed- ng. _ The success orjaliure of either line breeding orlnihreoding de- pmulu tin-in the success in select- lni: thr- nmnci" individuals for each Inflllnfi. it tmist be ever kept in itrintl tllnt. whfile you are lniengl. TYlnB the desirable characteristics you are at the some time intensi- lllnk the undesirable qualities oi iour individuals. The breeders “fink at all tlntes is to dlgpnygf the faults of his aflimuls or lowis to anticipate them. and to m maid his stock as to overcome the un- vlcslrzrble Clliirtictej-lgtfqs and a the same time l siraible quulitlcslienpe “Me the de- ‘ mlilllprttahis no more exacting work ind utii e worm no more “W! m‘ than mtiost skill iand caution indeed sciontiiflc breeding. it ‘is . , n science that men spend yfiinrs to muster and that ls why - “Pile rnwrirtls flow to [h9g8 'b"°"d°"“ "h" "n 1n n Position to "will"? the intricate details d ‘millm nrnrrrcss in their work an ‘Blegilln! is no fool's work. Qng crn name th, .. ' hrncricrs in S“, sgcycpsaful m“ lingers cf one hand q-hgv ma: th , . ' - prgnlllfln Who have made tho real -. an in nnulirv culture uni ‘thcr in the tievhlnpmemi of}, L‘ lztymrs or l“ u", developm‘ ‘orgy tr-tnililiilhnrcnl 9M m“ plying“: ltltzn cf desirable breed character- -_IJ-< 10s. And every M9 of them ha" llil. times, ream-led u, ‘nibreedhg '" “m” l" fivrnre the objects "my hnvc had in ml]nd_ $llilifilllgtlllt inbreeding. it is an ln-l ti 4.. ‘ZIWIWTIWI? ‘TZQ 113E \\ l gm“; B. Ben Jain. i rhflnld lie remenlihcrc-d that in na-l vidntais, and it may ‘be because} has failed to ruthlessly wt-cd. la desirable characteristic, but 111-‘ Horton Iteport of Prince strut g ifor April: ch00‘ PrlnclplPl Department. Grade X. 1. Cecilia Stodart 2. Florence Bum; 3. Marion Harris and Norah Longworth. Vloh-Prlnclpalh Dept. Mill 891m Grade IX - ‘i, Florence Owen, 2. Gmce Campbell 3, Nora McKenzie m" "mm Dept. nisii§',l'v||i 1. Gladys Farquhurson 2. Elaine Bennett .,, , fl Miriam Worth and .,(;la,dyg Iliwthleson. , ‘ Miss Irving’; Dept, Grq4tyl| 1. Helen Fnrquharson 2. Margaret Phillips 3. Esther Kennedy Miss Acorn’: Dept. Grads V|. 1, Annie Gornhum Z. iMaibel dtiaitthieson 3, Evelyn Bears Miss Fullertoms Dept. Gradd V. 1. Namcy Weeks 2, Adele MoLiennain 3. Mary iMdMllian Miss Watson's Dept. Dude IV. 1. Mariorlc itivciLcan 2. ‘Lila Vaughan 3. Freda Ncwson Miss Haslam’: Dfipt. Grade Ill i. Marjorie Fraser and Ruth Garnhum 2. Florence Fraser 3. Gwendolyn Rogers Miss Jones’ DoptwGrade Ill 1, Lillian Stewart 2. Tweedy Phillips 3. Evelyn Lucas Miss JOflE8' Dept. Grade ll 1, Norma Ayers 2, Mario Stanton 3, Edith Hill Mia; Klally’s DQpt. Grads ll. ‘l. Marlon Thorns 2. Ruth Young 3. Ruth Acorn Miss Yen's Dept. Grads l. i ,1, Helen Morris 2. ‘Margaret Acorn B, Lemuel Burns - __.__._-o->__-- 400,000 USED CARS IN STOCK l ______ i iST. LOUIS. May 2.—~<Atitomohllc idcalers in the United States tntd 400.000 used cars in stock March .15, with a capital investment of |$152.206,340. according to flgitreo announced at headquarters tiore c! {the National Automobile Dealers‘ Association. "The estimated losses ltho dealers will aihsorb on this -stock and investment tot-al $23.- 591.982 for the first three months 0f 1923, it was added. .Ill MEMlllllflM JENNlE lddl-MA oAss l l l The many friends of Mr. and‘ Mrs. Thomas Gass of Alberton, were grieved on Sunday moi-mm; the 15th inst to learn of the sud. den illness and death of their daughter Jennie Hilmu, at the eunly like 0t‘ six months. Jennie, who was a fbrlght. lovaible child. wlll be much missed in the home as she had always been in perfect health to within nbouttwenty-four hours‘ of her death when she was stiddon- ly called to Him who said, “Suffer little children to come untio iMe. and tor-bid them not. -for of such la the Kingdom of Heaven." , Besides a disoonsolsite father and mathenthere are left to mourn their loss, three little brothersz-Everett Ralph and Eric. On Monday morn-b lng the remains were conveyed to the home of Mr. and Mrs. iifilah Hill, New Glasgow, from whenco the funeral took place at 3 p. m. to New Glasgow Cemetery. Rev. A. P. Hodges officiating. The pail bearers WCTOF-JVIBSSPR. Cecil Laird, Chester Biulmanh Hill‘- old Dlckieson and Eric Stevenson. Go to thy rest, ifslr child; Go to thy dreamiess bed. while yet so gentle, undeflletl ‘With bleslngs on thy head. shini love. with wee-k embrace- Thy upward wing ext-sin? No! gentile angel. seek thy Dllwe Amid the cherub train. nine. James nueesu. The passing sway on the 18th R ROLL" ll O-OO inst of the late Mrs. James Russell of St. Peters to her eternal reward cast a deep shadow of sadness and sorrow over the whole siurroundlnfl neighbourhood. Eaoeclwll! "l" l“ grief felt ~-b.v the rmembersoi lief own folnily to whom she was 0V8!‘ s kind. lovinn a-tirl devoted mother- The into Mrs. Russell was in very ‘ truth n splendid typo ot the ideal l v11 lChristlati woman. (‘titted in a rare iomrbe mourned by her large circle; tin her last illness site was a1- idcgree and knowing her own place oi" frlen . , ‘ lso well and her relationship and ‘duties to her fsuniily and her friends daughters, John Alfred, ‘BT19 ‘W35 WW5?! cllwlllll. frlellllly- George, Emest. Ambrose, (icorgina lcharllnblo nntl ltldy-lllw In wnverqunil itnnlo. us well as four brothers were illid to rest in St. PBIPFE; 09m. lsntlon and conduct. He!‘ death n! and two sisters are the proximate etvry there to await a glorious reti- ltlte iatill early n88 01' 54 YWPB Will friends who are left to mourn. ' D wvvv v tinted... Every man within the reach of this MEN'S STORES service is urged to visit the “MEN ’S STORE” at his earliest opportun- ity and have a look over the smartest as - sortment of Spring Topcoats that has been shown in Charlottetown for many a season. You’l1 ‘say “th-at’s a pretty strong claim”'—So it is--and you will agree that the claim is made good when you see the handsome TOPCOATS that we are opening up each day . v A'A)AAA Grey Tweed Slip-on Fancy Overcheck, 1-4 lined, set in sleeve, $25 Single breasted Full Belt Gabardine, 1-4 lined ...........$21 Fawn Covert cloth Spring Topcoat, Satin lined p.13. Half Belt. detachable -- - - - 4525 The n-ew “SEMCO” heavy Gabardine, 3-4 lined, Double breast- ed, full ‘belt, leather buttons . . . - . . . 1540 I The New “Borsalino” liats For excellence of style-—- for excel- lence of wear—you simply have to “hand it to the BORSALINO." Charlottetown’s great stock of new BORSALINOS is ready. New blocks, new colorings, selling at a grand value . price. " We have a won price, ‘too. ' derful line of lower ‘Moonc a Meteor) L2 “TllE M l§.\"!~'i STOR 1'1.” D, l v v 9 r¢v¢§+Q§O+M v v v": w-vv-vv --~ v e- tended by her parish priest Iii-v A d-ler husband, flve sons and lwo Mat-Aulny‘ who adniiitislercrl lhi iiemtinl last Stiitvramenls of lier (,‘llUl‘('l'l and lon the 20th "her tnortal remains Iurroctlon! May she rest in pesos. Exide MADE IN CANADA BATTERIES ‘Whenthe time comes to buy a new battery A Storage battery is one of those things that nobody cver wants to buy; you get a new one only because you have to. That is only so much the more reason for selecting one that will last for a long time. When you install an Exide Battery in your car Y°ll I are really taking out insurance against annoyflllc” and repair bills and you are putting tht! (183! °f m‘ newal so far ahead that you areexorcising cornrnvll‘ sense economy. ' As for comfort, the willing power of an Exide. teady instantly to whirl your engine or brighten you!‘ ma ' is a satisfaction that you will appreciate as much an the thousands of other motorists who swear bY» “d not at, Exide Batteries. An Exitie Battery in your new cad indicates flint the manufacturer has taken every precaution to msurC your comfort. And when your present battcfY Wefl" out you can offset future battery trouble! bi! "°' placing it with an Exide. IJXIDE BATTERIES 0F CANADA. LIMITED TORONTO. t A majority of the farm power and light plants are equipped with long- llfe Exidc E itteries. L001! for this Sign: , There is an Exirlc Dealer Near You DIS TR! BU TQR ATLANTIC AUTO, COMPANY, LIMITED AMHlllRST, N.S. THE I. (LNG-LIFE BA’ TERY FOR I iY0URCAR' \