MAY 22, 1937 'l‘i"ll£ (JHARLUI'I'E' ruwN GUARDIAN PAGE ELEVEII, E1011 FARMERS’ NEWS Y III AGBIOOLA ,7 A NATURALIST'S CALENDAR, "October turns the leaves all mini, November blows the leaves m rlniin" say the Danes; but in ,w- iiirt of the globe chill Novem- u,,,--_., only blasts blow through ll(‘t‘S ii-aflcss and bare. Neverthe- m; wt‘ have irregular spells Q1’ fin-z Mather. called the Indian Sum- mp1‘, sometime durilrg November. p, may be only for a day or two, n, p, may last for over a. week; ‘m1 it must be looked for, (the ancients tell us) "just after the (i... .~ii\)\V flies". When the wind m, to the N.N.E., which it of- m, p; ‘5 at this time of year, the inoir it brings is “English snow,” lvllll large. moist flakes, altogether lllllflfilil. from the dry powdery mail‘ of the N.W. drift. It l5 be- wminq more and more a custom u, delay taking the turnips into mplw till the first or even second “W1; of November-to the great IPlVLiIFQIlOH of their quality. 1i IS a kind of belief that the QlfllLlI November is a gloomy and perhaps this impres- - been created by pessimis- lit‘ ; "is. like the one who wrote- "N0 lIout-rs. no birds. no bees—No- camber!" (Tom I-Iood. I think?). p..- French (of France) also held the belief that the gloom of the mnnili makes the English melan- chnti- ind inclined to suicide! The tint 1;. that the November varies ii-ziii the year and we in the lvorlli had wet Novembers some roars. and fine ones in other years. ii.» inc Novcmbers often carried iwlliiil of frost rime in the , but never did the ground . lard. We had, as it were, cxtra months of farming lvf (one in Spring and one in while the young cattle could yon. oirt all winter. But to wmr- l).l(‘l(_ to the Island:- Nilienibel" 1st, is feast of All Hal- lows or All Saints. On Nov. 2. 1915, wind south, with fine weather, and w.» wok in turnips. In the fields, M. Nov. 3. I927, I observed the r» in bloom: Yarrow, Fail Dal on. Shepherd's-purse, Barn- yiri! Daisy, Red Clover, Meadow Bililrrvllp, and Pineapple Weed These had withstood the rd frost of October 28th. On Nor. 3. 1924 ,we had the first snow 9t liiil season. Nov. 5, 1921: this night a great gale blew down the rafters of the orphanage then in course of con- mucllori at Mount Herbert. Dur- ing iiie mild weather of Nov. 7. 1923. l noted a common bat hawk- ing lil the dusk and swooping round and round the house. Fine wcatirer and fiurrles of snow alter- nlued on Nov. 7. 1916. Drift and snow from N.W., Nov. l, i915. This day. Nov. I0. 1919, roman-need a week of lovelyweath- er. iiitli the wind S. Indian Sum- mer" Nov. I3, 1915, was a clear dar. with the ground frozen at nigh A flask of Snowflakes (our "snn-rdiirds") observed on Nov. 14, l9’!!! Ali NW. wind brought eight lllPlliuS of snowfall on Nov. 14, I916. "A terrible day" on Nov. 14,- 19182 thi- iiind rose to a gale by 11 a.m.. accompanied by a great snow- slorin The tide flowed over the top of Fullerton Marsh bridge which iras washed away: there was iil=0 .. ivash-out on the railway " ' n: the Marsh. The barometer .\ill‘ll an inch and a half on the pii-riolls day. On the 14th 0f ~ t-r 1920. there was a re- c circle round the sun halo). followed by a luirar hall» at night. Was this a pre- time." oi’ the week of gales, rain, hail. snow and thunder. which fol In iv |‘(l ? GEOI-‘FREY OF MONMOIITII (l) When Brut. rBrute or Brutus, as he is rarioirslv called) arid his com- Damcvs crime tn the Columns of HPTPlllPS (Gibraltar) the ships were almost ovcrwhefd by mon- sters oi the deep called Sirens- a Yfltlllr‘ ungallant way of describing than llnwhcit. says the historian, the niiiiincrs made shift to escape. lillil rime to the Tyrrhenc Sea. Tlllw a. not as bad as Shakespeare's nliu llill to the "coast of Bohemia." for tlivro is silch a sea: but it is noiilnrc near Gibraltar, being Rbonl one thousand miles to the m?“ 1rd! On its shores they found annilnir hand of exiles, whose an- °Pr‘fur=. four- generations before. Md flcd from Troy. Their Duke "'r1rii'riiii€li's“ ‘— QYIHI: to the lalc arrival of Fer- lllm- Steamer we are unalllc in ‘ulllllv mixcll Fcrtilivcrs before IIIINDAY MORNING, MAY l7 l" "if vueantlme we can supply “it'll: rah. "It liilillld Fertilizer Co. l.l.\II'l‘ED. Charlottetown ffflwooooeooowooowooor shrink BOUNTY‘ NOTES W" 011B Corineus, a man mighty l“ Wu» and i! $886 counsellor in W566. _Wh0 in after times was to 8W0 his name to Cornwall! It is he, I think, who is the “Cm-'- of our local legends, a glam whose name enters into many place. names of the North. Taking Corlrreus as second in Wmmnnd. Brut sailed through the Bay 0f Bi-mv. and the fleet enter- ed the mouth of the Loire, cast anchor in Aquitaine Gascony and Guienne) and stay. ed there for seven days. exploring. Four long chapters tells of the wars which ensued when the na- ‘ill/ifs Oblected to the presence of their marauding visitors; wars in which Turonus, a nephew of Brut's, "with his single sword slew no less than six hundred men"? they were good fighters, those tro- jansl But the Gauls kept calling up re-inforcements. while the losses among Brut's men could not be replaced, "he chose rather to retire to his ships while still fresh, and to set sail In quest of the is- land which the divine monitlon had prophesied should be his own.” At last, with a. prosperous wind, the fleet is wafted to the shores of Al- bion, and the crews land at Totnes, in the estuary of the Dart, in Dev- onshire. (It may be noticed here that the poet Milton's "History of Britain" follows Geoffrey's Historic Begum fairly closely; the poet includes the divine monitlon alluded to above, and given In full in a previ- ous article in these Notes. Milton however, concludes that Diana over- slrot her Oracle when she ended the prophecy by vying that "to the race of Brut, Kings of this IJand, the whole Earth shall be subject") At that time the name of the island was Albion, and only a few giants lived in it. The in- vaders drove the giants to the mountains, cast lots for the land. built houses and worked the fields. till 1n a. short time "yet might have thought it had been inhabited from time immemorial". To pre- serve the memory -of his own achievements “Brut calleth the is- land Britain, and his companions Britons, after his own name." The country speech which was afore- time called "Trojan or crooked (corrupted) Greek" was now called British. Corineus on his part. called the region which was alloted to him Cornwall, after his own name. (It was a foible of these early his- torians to draw such conclusions from very superficial evidence!) Geoffrey admits however that this region may have been named from being, as it is, the cornu or horn of Britain. It is certain that In the legends which have gather- ed mund the memory of this fam- ous warrior, we lliave the basis of all the nursery tales of Jack the Giant-Killer, — "for naught gave him greater pleasure than to fight with the giants of whom there was greater plenty there than in any of the provinces that had been shared amongst his comrades." These giants were only the abori- ginal people of the island, magni- fied to give the greater honor to their conquerors. Brut, now King of Britain, found- ed his capital city on the Thames and called it New Troy (‘Prlnovan- tum.) His descendant King Lud, brother of Cassibelaunus, he who fought against Caesar, re-named it Kaerlud, the City of Lud. after his own name. For the present we leave Brut in possession of his new Kingdom. A PUPIL TEACHER (3) To the teacher of the Present dill’- these beginnings must. lonk terri- bly crude; still the system worked fairly well at the time. Thousands of children who had lzwWn u!’ under no restraint. were taken from “off the roads." put into thfi new schools and taught Obedience by the only method they 901115 appreciate. As the younger chil- dren attaiiied school age. UIPY b9‘ gim to look forward to enrolling. and obedience became the custom: long before my term 0f 11111119113196‘ ship ended I noticed that» UK‘ scholars were betlilllllllil l0 “P” prcciate the instruction given. and lo take a pride in their good stand- iirg in class. A few parents still allowed their children to "play truant. but the "truant officer al- ways had the offenders before I magistrate who imposed the m‘ gulation fine of half-a-crowfl (600) for each attendance lost. I believe this regulation is still in existence, though seldom invoked now. I have been so taken up with other matters that I have 011W‘ ivrilcctod what writers term "lorlil color." Wherefore I now 110140111X‘ the school and staff. The rest of the schools in the immediate dis- trict were built of worked $10119- rather resembling the old National School unit 1 hfltl attended; but our particular school was a one- storled building covered externally roof and ali—with corrugated Iron- Inside it was well finished-in yel- low pine. varnished. and wall black- boards ran round three sides of every room. A long corridor rrin from front to back. and on 111!‘ W ARN I N G “The ll. (l. M. P. have recently I'll lnvi-iligatlng a. few cases lir- "mllik lLlIllCS attempting to new"! "l" lnunty on skunks by submitlin; identifications of a purely fraudul- ‘nl "-1"'rr. Waming is hereby glllfll m?‘ ‘"'“ party or parties found "m" practising decepllons of this kind will be prosecuted to "I0 '1" extent of the law. Pliflvlwcou. DEPARTMENT 01-‘ I ilnarcur Tll |across the WHY the side were the girls’ class-rooms. and boys‘ class- rooms. The latter comprised the Ilcadmasters class-room, a room for the Assistant Master. and tW" moms for the two male D1111"- tcachers. Each room was well- lighted and ventilated. and had glass-paneled doors as an aid to supervision. On the girls’ side of the school were the MIstresJs room. two rooms for the two girl pupil-teachers. and the Board Room. which was used as a kind cf office. The schorflvard war a “ll-a-zi-m,“ in” one covered with ballast. (afterwards - llollstngllullis’ GLIIVIPSES 0F EARLY RACING (C. E. MlcKenzle) ‘The ancient Greeks and Roma.‘ were as fond of racing a5 we are at. the present day. and the sporl was held by them in high honor. In Rome the chariot riders were Efefltly admired, and among the 6199115 8J- One time kings and warriors were wont to dispute the different races ln person. The Romans were the first to have jockeys and trainers. Caligula is said to have given for one win 2.000 sesterces ($74,000) to the celebrated Eutychus. At that epoch just as it was later, each stable had its colors. At first jockeys were slaves, but soon the highest per- 501181-185 of the State fulfilled the llllncfrio". Rome had its gentlemen riders. It had also its jockey club. and in the Arena, the club box was- oppcsite Caesar's. Cups and plates were run for. In‘ England and France it would be difficult to give the precise date 0f the institution of horse racing. At all times the English horse has been swath’ admired. The first regular races in England took place in the riegn of James I. The prizes then consisted of a gold or silver bell. which gave rise to the ex_ pression, ‘bearing away the bell." Protector Cromwell had a stable. and history of the turf speaks of his celebrated Arab horse. "White 'I‘urk." _ The York flat races were found- ed in 1711 under George I racing l-’°t l0 hi‘ quite flourishing. Dur- 1112 his reign appeared two of the . most. famous horses the British turf has ever seen, Flying Childers and Eclipse. The first named served as a, hunter until he was six years old, and when he was started rac. 111k he was said to be one oi’ the finest flycrs human eye had ever witnessed. Eclipse for mP-ny years was considered to be the most elevated expression of the equine race. 'I‘his animal was foaied llApril 5th. 1764, in the Duke of Cirmhcrlands stable. his sire Ilvfairfke and his dam Spiletta a Ilfluizhter of Regulus and was sold ‘at the Duke's death for 75 guineas less than $400.00 of our money. One of the greatest treats new market has ever witnessed was on April 17th. 1770 when the then noted racer Buccephaius was matched against the grand chest- nut Elclirxse. Neither horse had suf- fered defeat. and on this occasioni they ran a dead heat. Eclipse terminated bis-brilliant career by n series of walk-overs on New- market heath. it being an impos- sibility to find him an opponent. Captain 0'Kellv who had become sole proprietor of the horse charg. ed 50 guineas as a. stud fee, which was a big price in those days. 0f this noted horse's sons might be mentioned Chiiunter, Don Quixote, Meteor. Pot-s-os. and over three hundred more racers and any of my readers that have studied American perigrecs will note that STOCK, BREEDERS (JARDENERSl AND POOR FARMER i How tough it is on knees to squat To throw spuds In anold tin pot. And all I get for the whole lot. Is 30 cents; i When I could have a dollar got, Had 1 but sense. ‘ HOG owllras ATTENTI ‘l g A new way to feed your hogs, at a much lower cost, and with 1a,- , less labor. l ' When you feed grain, shorts. r-lia. A thousand bucks I might have l» it lakes 103i) lbs. to feed a pig l l i ....| l , from Ibtlllllllg lo market iucvllrlllri; in tlvtuzrl ll'f~l\ at the Alberta made- ~ 1‘ EXPFFlmPnkIl Station on 2M Ill-ail of llIl‘_'\I, \t |1I(lll_\".\’ prim-s this Had I but grabbed my wooden i amount of feed costs you $21.00 iiliwl. is .~.'..oil more than a finished 517849. _ hi1; is worth. On this plan it lakes (i l0 ti‘; months l0 finish ynul- And started my Waters to grade. pigs for market. You have to slop fi-i-rl lllllf Ii requires a lot of lime Three months ago; and labor It serves me right, now I'm get- ting paid’ Compare this with the new l'uriri.i Plan-i .50 total Iced cost m}. being 51ow_ firllilhwefllring to market; all tlil- feed is fi-ri i r__i in a sell’ froth-r. vl rc sues an endless amount of “ink and time, your [I125 g0 l0 market a month sooner at 5 to 5'; niolitlik ril‘ ago, a higher per- I clearly see wild tongues were i loose, , Which made of me a proper _ oentage grade as selects. bringing; yo Ill-re is the. Purina Plan: u an iiililitliirral premium. “llvll nits" are lllrcc neck~ feed I'll; goose, Sturtcna Checkers DRY irr lrlviluii Illilldtl iii a creep ulll-rr- flir- so“ Till now I firmly wish a noose. can't get. to the feed. Ker-p Piu \llli'lf'll.'l (‘liin-lu-r. “mi "-0.1. ,|n,,i,_ Were round my neck; ing W31" before the pies all thi- tinu- nnlil flu-v Zlfl‘ Ill \\|*I'l\\ nlll. Bu; than again; oh “ihatlg the Then change tn Purina Pig (irnllrlilr ll"‘flllll_' ii ltln‘ in a self fi-vd or. Keep the Growena and fie-Jr drinking v continually from 1f) weeks tn market. start them on Pig Grnwcrra and carry ti wall-r hi-lnre your [l|;'\ If PILI\ are If) “ct-ks nlll now rem through on it to nilrrkcr. use. I'll say’. "To heck”. Lamenting never won us aught. or m“ is or .. “-»!:r:':r.':.."'; 0r for us comfort’ 5'“ ha“? , only 500 lbs. of feed and a total fr-cil (‘ll-Ll of only i) per li|-;i'.|l_ all awe? These figures are based on fIWlllll: lists, lllt‘ r-i-sirlls of irliii ii hail- suvrru: ARRANGEMENT ma mom.“ vaao raowaus But makes the battle harder m“ pubmhcd l“ m” m“ “MW” L Early Pink Cosmom 2. Saw,“ Salmon“ a salplglossig_ramst. {Olllglgltéarlv Se?‘ PRINCE EDWARD rsl..\.\"l) l)l,\"l'|lllil"l()ll.\‘ nut; 4. Poppy-Pale Yellow Double. 5 9. Dwarf ed Nasturtium. (All over the world. except in the United States, flowers are planted in front yards. A fashion for lawn and shr-ubbery plantings unrelieved by color has prevailed in American suburbs for a decade or nmre. With business recovery, and the dawn of a happier era, this fashion is being questioned. Our foremost garden anthorities are agreed that the time has come t0 create a livelier, gayer setting for our homes. Mrs. Francis King. author, lecturer and practical gardener. known throughout the world for her gardening skll] and taste. suggests in a series of six articles how front yard flowers can be planted.) By MRS. FRANCIS KING Author of “The Well Considered Garden" In this simplest of possible ar- ranzementfi. we make the rows of Beauty of Oxford Hybrids. 7. Petun‘ flowers run parallel with the walk 6. Verbena- Dwarf. 8. Mlgnonette-Blsma mi. . Gypsophila-Anirual. , _ V Mllllgan & .\lorri.~on Noriham. Pigs raised on this new Purina Plan grow at a. 1110s! Sllrprlglng rate. Death loss of young pigs ls flfilflllllll)’ vllllllllfllvll. Yqu will be more than pleased with lhi- \\1I_\' your pigs iirl- iloirii; every slop of the way. Come in and lcl us giii- _\lill lll" names oi l'riiii-i~ lld- . ward Island hog men who ari- iiri-iiily u-iiii; llllx plan. \\'i- \\ll| aid» . be glad to supply you with lliri Ill'- llll iiuililllii; a slllipii- ll1l'.\‘- . Jlensive self feeder. See us toda) ariil igi-t your pigs started on lllh money saving plan. From all of this I get advice, When spuds are next a hand- some price, Instead of building castles twice As high as skies, I'll say. "By gee, that's pretty nice. Now I'll be wise". l l l Charlottetown Fu r Sn has-J ‘ha riot li-t 1m n l l l land stree Beginning at the Outside of each of the two square spaces into which the walk divides the front yard. sow in the order given the drive from the house to the L . fogcirlwkinfinyagietiesbwermg cosmos. Yollspgiiirfigfliel“ don't 1mg?” this c Watch locals in following issues for news of louder; usliiig hi; , salvia siilmonea, salpiglossis Faust Brit let this ili your deaf ear ""‘“'m" , flzlxxnst black rednahpale rilrg,_ 4 _ ‘l ,.,,.§,,'Bl;§l-.,":,lll..,,.§lli.;;,.l,;; Pegyggly he“ “he we“ - GHABLOTTETOWN FUR snLES LIMITED a dwarf purple petunia, mignonette mat; f; wgrth while; 1' and a red dvrfilif Andstyrolgr won't feel the painful & Tms Plantmg- repeal-Pd 0T1 9311b Of useless toil. fl ~ - ~ - ~ -fle . .,_ ___ side of the walk, will give almost constant blooming, and delicious fragrance 8s one goes from hOIIse to street. ‘The flowers will present a. graded height from the boundar- —Ted. Veget iiiléél 1.55.1.5... srrarumoox woman's ~ m)‘ ‘W111 “and wh- Jng and even radish- fies oi’ the lot to the vralk. lZN‘S'I'ITUTI-l ~ri l l - One plant of Barberry Thunbergi __‘~‘, l. fjwmllw fl use: m or m... The new or Ea‘ 1y Sta“ .2; °.‘.Z.’ ‘:19... .;-; and on either side of the front end filerbmok wmnmfs msmuw was had anything to do with the affair, and the severe judges did all they could to get the Prince back on the heath. In {France no racing of any im- portance took place before the time of Louis XV. There is a record 0i.’ a big bet of 10.000 French pounds having been lost dlitntragues to Montsieur de Sail- lant. when thelatter rode ‘from St. Denis ioChantilly in less than three the acme of perfection in any of the earlier pedigrees was that their horse breed back to Eclipse. Eclipse died at the age of twenty-five years after having credited O'Kelly with $125,000 as a racer. and about $800,000 as a stallion. and never did Eclipse know what whip and spurs The symmetry of his structure, hundred and eighty- the Derby of 1788. but the New- mnrkct Jockey Club warned him of his horse Escape, which- suffered defeat the previous day. It appears it was proved later that neither the Prince and divided intotwo playgrounds. five races and fashioned after Club Vaslstas was perhaps greatest race track in fiance in or his jockey the earlier years axid_th_e_even_t. was hours and thirty less than twenyt-seven times. Lord Pascool won a big bet in 1754 by riding from Paris Pbntainebleau a distance of thirty- five miles, in less than .two hours. When horse racing did start in were, earnest in France betting got to be shown, the so high that nothing short of the about, one in three. rckularity of his form and the out- Revolution put an end to the trainer jockey and the horse him- appointed_ Paper on Canadian planting the‘... ear)‘. "on; ma. ‘"2"? l‘ ward marks of perfection of his scandals the gambling gave rise to self came in for almost as muchi-kade Relations and soda] wvgirk shnd cool weather‘ but nature has‘ ‘ l interior organs, his beautiful eyes Napoleon I re-established the races applause as when a. French horse .0; u“, Lean... n; Nations also given us certain signs such as the lull“ and wide nostrils all denoted the by a. new law in the beginning of Won and no doubt too, on ac-jpaper on “Sm, beans’ were read, i?“ nwrk-s of a. famous racer. the nineteenth century. count of the amount of moneylquestionnajrps‘ m, "P9399" “m. ' ' As Prince of Wales. he who later The French Jockey Club of horse made in bets. wmauonal mmuony and “Agrh 0n became George IV. won one racing was found in 1833 and was Horse racing was primarly es- culture" were discussed and {med cw-market the French the m-eafest winner of the off the turf in I792 after the victory derby when he sold at .100. to .1. in had lhe "great race 0f 1889. Chantilly was possibly the pupil-teachers from a wide range six hours. Mon/tseiur De Salliant accomplished the distance in five‘ after having changed his steed no tory had gone to French horses and 0f the walk greatly enhance the held on ‘Tuesday at the lovely AS QUICK GROWTH _I.\' (“()_0I. I beauty or the effect, home of Mrs, John C. Jack _ _ WEATHER r-noncc s Taxi)- _ Mrs. Jack welcomed her visitors EREST LEAVES AND ROOTS. *— == after which, the president, Mrs. lBy W- R. lll'l.~\'f'l'll-1l Senior Horticulturist, Bureau of Plant Industry , _ U. S. Department of Agriculture lg” l George Harris opened thc meeting with the lirstituite Ode. The nirn- uteg of the last meeting arid the financial statement were read and approved. ‘The roll call was answ- ered by the exchange of flower slips. A communication was read from ‘the Canadian tR/ed Cross Society by Miss Margaret Townsend. 1t was decided that each member bring their donation to next, meet- ing. It was moved and seconded that. Mrs. Albert Boswall and Mrs. .Dalt0n be the delegates to attend ,as much looked forward to as the English Derby and this track ai- ways maintained a very high stamp of elegance. The French Grand Prize de ris was run at Longchamps. just outside this noted city. about the middle of June of each year and when the weather was fine Jrundreds of thousands rode down ftgtsee this great international con- l s. U11 to 1891 the Grand Prize of ‘Paris had been run off twenty- Almost before the snow has clzs- " appeared crops like peas. onion ‘R sets. lettuce and radishes may hi H planted out doors. in fact their 1 crops may be planted just as e ‘ as the ground can be worked. .i comes the planting 0f potatoes which take two or three “'Pl‘l‘§.\ n, Come up after the seed pieces ar- Dlaccd in the ground. The s01 d of parilinrr-irr r covering hill.- of. " and scpiashrxi rm liir- blurs and T‘l7ll‘i'<l()f‘< protect- minutes eight times. Sixteen times the vie-Jule meeting of the district Com of bump Canopy turning “mm,” m H _ " r- u. ndtl .0." r .1» .1! l~- ~ a ~- mne times it was "lptured b? zfiglfloll/lfrsltIllmhmllllhilistltlcrseliglaglig groccolle pxlitlggfolioisaglofilxv uiqwmiri l‘ " , "m" n ‘m’? l" Mm!“ - l‘ migllsh stables and 011cc each by down“, m the annual convention, the heels of the last SIIOIVSIOIYIIwl ‘m? “S m” m" "M Mm‘ ‘American, Russian and Hungarian.‘ The S“), reported getting $250 Tm. Klondjlm gold mine,- “ho, . l?"\\'-< of 11PM‘ 1111i .,,-. " l)» protected from rim When an English horse won atl . , , v_ I mngchnmps and as the above er- g-rang from Q10 government, The scraped auai the snow in ordc. to n ‘Teacher reported getting books to plant radish .‘t"(‘dS had thc r-icrlir.‘ hi" 007d 0f WPnllV-Cltlhli T0995 h“ the value 0f $140- It was moved idea about getting crops‘ in llll‘ , a" ""511 “'1'” W“ and seconded that all outstanding ground earl): .";'"" the “me” bills be paid. Committees were re- No fixed dale can be given forlh" r‘ tablished in England for a. pastime and for the sa-kc of exercise. and by way of emulation. but in France it has almost always bccn a money in by the conveners-A bean contest then took place, Mrs. Alex Chappcl WOn the prize. It was decided to hold the next llirulri never livii-h of country were obliged to sit for examinations at the nearest town. The fourth-or Yearly Examination was a recapitulaflon of the work done at the three previous Exams and was considered stiff. When I signed the agreement. the Yearly The whole was enclosed by a high stone wall. pierced by the usual gates. I have been rather parti- cular in the description because this was really a consolidated School of an inexpensive kind. Well, the month wore on. and I making or a money loosing affair. mwtmg at the home of Mrs, Jamgg l l m" qf""" “m These races are all no doubt Crockett, A very heart‘. “m, of “hi! PW" o ‘ _ worth seeing and as they differ than,“ was exbendPd m M“ Jack ‘n. i! of hoard .. mflteflflll-l’ 110m 5PM "Ollie-W "1 m her kind hospitality. tn.- meet- .. “f"._.,”""‘ “" , our own country they no doubt ing closed with 1h... , Nations ‘ "F" ' fwd‘ "“ would be an innovation to oilr rac- Anthenih ._5_ , ' ” l “”“"l'-‘=‘"" m - mg fans‘ _ _ t"ll‘,)!‘l'1§l'\' frost. inflection, -Speaking of the great foiuldation yREE-rowy yygTrTvTg _ "Wm" “'""-< "r '"‘"'1“j‘~' horses of Enziancl namely Eclipse I w" llffml“? l“'°"-~' and other tinted horses one must. Th, month“, meeting (if the ““’""_"_,”""7' W" notice that. the fact. of th.s breed Birch Grove ' Women-s msmuvi 110i P1111"! I'm/mg be” Mm W" “m1 mm’ met at the home of Mrs. George -.._____,. _. an odd 1 m p ° r l’ a l’ 1 0 n of Jardine Thursday evening. May was notified that my work was satisfactory and that I must at- fend the next Board Meeting to answer airy questions and if mem- ory serves, to sign an agreement ' binding me as pupil-teacher for five _vears. The Sciiool Board, I noted, was as great an experiment as the rest of the educational scheme. The members were drawn from all classes of workers. One, I knew, was a “greaser" who kept the roll- ing stock and the engines of the coliic-ry oiled and cleaned; I do not think he had any education him- self, birt he possessed the art of in- spiring his fellows to vote him to a place on the Board. Another was a small tradesmen, and of the rest I knew nothing except that they were sufficiently shrewd to avail themselves of the services of l. "Clerk to the Board" who seemed to have a good knowledge of the Act as it stood, and who probably saved them from many a blunder. l E quarter of a year. the l _______ ‘ mi WELL IIBILLIN If your water supply ls not just what you would like to have, why not give us a rail? No matter how small or how larle Will‘ I051!- wlrethcr you need a well for domes- tle. manufacturing. fire or town pflrpnsr! we have equipment that will currrspond with the work to be dnnc, skilled nren to operate It and 30 years of cXMrli-nce back ol us. Rpggpnahll‘ prices. All work guar- anteed to slnnd the lest of time. WlASK Well ca. l.td.l VAUGHAN H. GROOM, Manager for P. E. I. Sumlncrslde l n-isai-s-la-re-zz-za-ce-ao-ai-o-n-s. for it. WEIQ Exam was only six weeks away. and in spite of my companions forebodlngs I determined to sit To the surprise of every- body myself included my P119615 returned marked G (for "Good") and I was told that I had by passing this Exam reduced the term of Apprenticeship to four years. We had a regular time-table, by which we taught all day, but our agreement stipulated that we were to be pupils as well as teachers. At first the Hcadlnaster invited us to his house for night-classes, and for a few weeks all went well. But the Master's wife. a sharp-featur- blood no doubt accounts for the t I _. ‘I h ._ Th rash Spinach. a Vegetable to Get iii beautiful sylnlnctly of this race apgegizdllguqflngnlopenfidp the Early. i B I T E S illlldil: lslgvg-(en allsttlieznttlbullgflectlfz mcoling “m1 ‘U19 _0dc and roll swelling o! m? buds 0f U“? mIIIflP-‘i , 1. f k ' peatlng Creed in unison. Roll ca but am” an Just ammo“ sen“ ‘hirfvén-iilsyerugtnuiilglu-l . . strongly on hereditary and judicial mating hence it must be apparent to ollr older horse breeders that the large amount. of thoroughbred l o! Mirrnrd’: ll macaw“ $0 mother, heal; Ind dunner. Draws out the poison I w was responded to by_ 16 members. lvljirnlcs of last meeting were also l‘ “mil 0930mm‘ “mounted m w ‘pcasnnd (llliUll ‘ets to carlr an‘ cents. Reports of committees were we rule Should g9 w 5mm 1),", and experience are our best guides. There is little danger of plantilu; blood in our oldcr mares was the l’ I ’ » keystone of sirccessful breeding of the" hm“! "m" A new Sick soon as the ground is dry i-nnnil. .' ' D‘ olrr- earlier road and speed horses ‘mmmltn’? w“ apmmted’ Mm‘ i0 work. ‘flier-e is a supnaswron in ," l and now when we have such an m!“ MW“ and M“ Eh” some section, that potatoes should Gauthier. Next meetin, to be held at. the home of Mrs. John Jar- be planted on 5/1». Patrick's Dov, toutstanding sire a ailabl as “St. , v e hilt in the south potatoes may he “Eilversterr- we should endeavour to “KING 0F PAIN" ‘fl The “q-jffl- qum. recently had, mittee. Mrs. George Jardine. Mrs. so early. Onion sets are a little dif-l n“, pleasure 0g looking over a 10¢, John Jardine. Mrs. John Lewis. produce horses that not only will: "1"" Pmgmm wmmlm-‘P- MTS- plillltfil long in advance of lvlarrl: make 800d all round farm horses Alfrvd Curie)’. MH- Fmnk DPRCW- 17th. while far tn the north i »,‘ _~ hilt hunters as well. MTS- will Fmncls- Lumh cum‘ would b9 lllVlfdli" disaster tn plant, ' . ed, peevish woman. did not like this ‘ invasion of ber home. and insin- uated that he should be free in the evenings, after his (day's work was done. So he talked it over with his teachers and proposed to meet them at the School at B a.m.. to give the necessary instruction. For a time this worked well. too; but alas for his good resolutions! rie gradually slackened till at the end of six months he would arrive just as his PTs were marshalling the children into school! Finally it dawned on my companion and mo that we must teach ourselves: had good books and made good use of them, winning the "E" mark 3 subsequent ( for "Excellent") in years. No such crudities confront the would-be teacher in the British Isles today. A bright boy or girl. I am told. may pass right along, from the Elementary and Second- iary Schools to the Universities. al- most without expense to the par- ents. Those actually preparifll? T01‘ the scholastic profession undergo a special course of collegiate irein- ing that leaves nothing to chance: In great contrast to the years )ust after the pulsing of the Educa- tion Act. r~r this horses colts bred mm dif-l The program of the ever-ins ’r-rent types of mares and I cani consisted of a contest and two rrfelv say that thre ls not a bad humorous readings. God Save the silt in the lot some of which have King was sling, after which lunch rflrcndy won honors for P. E. Is- was served and a social hour en- [and at Toronto. joyed. gWool—Wool—Woiol 4 The Prince Edward Island Sheep Breeders’ assemble wool for Island Sheep Owners and ship for marketing through the Canadian Cooperative Wool Growers, Limited. Sheep owners are notified that the full market value of the wool will be paid each shipper I as soon as wool has been received. Arrangements have been mule with local agents to assist in collecting and maklng payments at local points. The marketing service of the Canadian Cooperative Wool Grower; ls unexcelled. Experience has indicated that wool growers selling cooper- atively through this organization have invariably profited through- lrlghcr values for their product. Do not dispose of your wool before Investigating this system of mar- keting. Full particulars on pflces. etc" given on request. llnnu/nrlumi [or Ihr Farm 1m (rev 75 years. Plan qour Barn’ b, ‘and equip ii- ‘ 2"" with Stallsoiancllionsleic. Rrghf now, with the new Home improvement Plan in oper- mon, any firm owner can realize his ambition to make his barn more modern for the mpcr housriig of his stotk. Pedlar People will help you p an to remodel or equip iinir burn. Le! us show you how the installation ofthe lavsl r- pr of SIIllS, Snnchlonga Litter (lirlicr complete with Track, Ship wool at any time. Water Bowls. etc, will place you on the road to more profits. Prince Edward Island Sheep Breeders‘ l ' ""“’”’"“"”""“"'""'““""i , Association . THE PEDLAR PEOPLE LIMITED ”",“,*1';'"‘ . HEAD omcs - OSHAWA, ONTARIO CIIARLOTTETOWN Montreal Office-nil llffOlY ‘l \ u ed. 5.?!“ Association will again nfiav-s-ziisl