d MAY 19. 1951. "THE G UARDIAN. CHAKMII'I'l7IUWN 1 . ' - c ' rob Trucks 3,-.1950 VANGUARD BEDANB Liixceilent "condition. Low mile- ”... Fully equipped including licaior, Defroster and Air Con- rii1ionln8- .950 HUDSON SEDAN. Irully equipped including Alr- iguin Seats. Radio and Nylon Seat Covers; registered. This rnr was privately owned and is m excellent condition. Must be srcii In be appreciated. liliii NASH SEDAN. llii? DODGE COACH. 194': Di-:s0'r0 SEDAN. 1939 HUDSON Flour-Passenger ('0UI'I-I. iuziil 1'0NTiA(: SEDAN. TIIIISKS 19:10 1-Ton INTERNATIONAL. Duiil wheels. Low mileage. 1949 1...-Ton FOBI). Pj(-It-up body. Low mileage. 194? '-;-Tim GMC PICK-I.'I'. iii: '2-Ton Form 1947 '1-Ton FORD 11N': l.Ton CHEVROLET. Flziim body. ml 2-Ton CHEVROLET. sizilcn body. mt; 1-j-Ton HUDSON. Pnk-up b0dY- The above Care and Trucks are primal to sell. See them before imiiig if you are interested in a "uni luirguin. ALSO IN STOCK xizw CARS AND rnvcaa AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE . DELIVERY. 1-19.-.1 HUDSON PEACEMAKER 'ni;i.rxr: iSEI:AN. I-i:ll' c uppc . 1-15;.-.1) HIIIDSON HOBNET an- I). . :1 VA. ouaitn sanarrs 1 L110 ES-Ton INTERNATIONAL TRICK-Pick-uP body. 695 it 1 '. l Lilli ',-5-Ton INTERNATIONAL 'rRl'('K-Pick-up body. 8 imx. Ideal for hauling cattle. 1 l,l'.'l'l -Ti-Ton INTERNATIONAL iilli'i(-Pick-up body. 8 ft. I 1JI:i:lii 1-Ton CHASSIS it CAB. 1)u.il u-heels. fall or Phone for a Demonstra- tion Today. Liberal allowance for your old i'sr or Truck. Terms may be an- raiigoil. W. ii. JENKINS (trout George Street Your Hudson and International Dealer. cons IN AND I183 Great George St. You are sure to find your needs at this friendly store. THE BIKE SHOP EVEIIYTIIING IIOR EVERY SPORT Back Stretch (Continued from Page 0) A the way down to Montague. The heatsuare half-mile dashes gm-1 everyone will team right from the word Go. It should be quite an exciting afternoon. In soing over some old papers we found a fire insurance policy on the stallion Parksidc 2.2lii. 1'-Wmd by the late W. A. Brennairi of Summerside. which had been loaned to us by his grandson. w. R. Brennan of this city. It was issued by E. H. Beer of Charlotte- town. the 6th of October. 1805, for OM00. and the premium was 321. Parkside was purchased by Mr. Brennan from senator Leland Stanford of Palo Alto, California. in 1890. and he also bought the stallion Balaton. They were brought here by Jimmy Houghton and trained over the summersidc track. Parkside's sire was the celebrated stallion Clay 2.25. 'by the great family founder Electloneer. out of Maid of Clay by Cassius M. Clay. She was one of the four mares to produce four in the list for the first time. Parkside's dam was Vinta by General Benton, and his second dam was Barnes Idol by Idol. other dams up to the 12th were thoroughbr r. General Ben- ton. the sire of Parkslde's dam. was purchased for 826.000 by Gov- ernor stanton-8l2.000 more than he paid for Electioneer. He was the fastest trotting stallion of his day-became a great brood mare sir trig the dam of sunol 3. 2.10 . a. world's record. He also sired the champion four-year-old sally Benton and was the sire of Dalston. brought here with Park- side from California. Parksidc's fee was placed at 350 -equal in our money today to at least 3200-and even that fee did not keep breeders from all over the Maritime: from patronizing him. Very soon he was founding a family of futurity winners. He crossed particularly well with Her- nando mares. thus combining two of the best I-iambletonian strains. Abdallah 15 and Elcctionecr. A few of his get were Parkland, 1'- Parkwood, Parkiyn, Parklight. Dark Night. Park Campbello and Dannie Steele's great pacing mare Ada Mac 2.1713. holder of the Cliar- lottetown track record for several years. Parkside not only did stud duty but also took part in -the stallion races at our Exhibitions. His blood flows through many oi the best performers raised in this I)l?IlV ' LOOK AROUND Phone 941 I Fishing l.icenee's For Sale lergeins On Discontinued Lines " SPEEDY " ' I ,cl.l.lI oiscounrs Province and Just at this-time we know of many at the Charlotte- town oval whose granddains or great-grariddams were by Park- side. Mr. Brennan was a man who conceived and did things in a big way and certainly it mint have taken a lot of courage and money to purchase such a stallion in far away California with transporta- tion as it was then. and bring him to this Province. There were oth- ers too. who brought in good standard Bred: including chariae Gardiner and Benjamin Hearts. who paid thoussn” for Preceptor. a son of Nutwood. then the lead- ing speed sire of the United states. We were told by Dr. John Blake from whom we got much of the above information. that in 1893 Messrs. Gardiner and Hea.rtsplan- ned on going to the United States to purchase one of the best pro- genitors at s leading stock farm. The panic of that year interfered with their plans and it was some years before harness horse breed- ing and other endeavors got back to normal. A letter from Angie Allen. who is assistant trainer with the Del MacTavish stable at Saratoga Raceway. New York, writes: "Our stable is well iepresented with Iou trust its qualitu Maritlmera as Carl "Cobb" Miller. Clarence "Red" Horne. and Stan- ley "Red" MacPherson all come from there. "Red" Horne wu the caretaker of Brewer's Gallon the last year he raced at home and "Red" MacPherson used to take care of Colleen Scott for W. G. Stewart. we have eighteen head here and I think we have the best stock at the track. We have been working all of them from 2.15 to 220 but will be dropping down from here on. Please remember me to all friends at home." The popular Bob Brown of Woodstock. N. 13.. whose harness horse activities have taken him all through the Maritimes and a large part of the U. S. A.. is paying us a brief visit and was shaking hands all yesterday morning at the track. Bob is the owner of Indiana Bov 2.061.-'.-. Chris Mc- Elwyn 2.12 1'5 and Governor Lee. Bob had a nice win with Indians Boy at Charlottetown Old Home Week last year and other wins elsewhere. Besides being a canny horseman he is also one of the best basketball coaches in Canada. Bob told us that the two colts re- cently' purchased by J. H. Dewitt of Woodstoclnhave turned out real well. The three-year-old Just Peg- gy Clegg. full sister to Rhodola D. 2.11 3T5. and the three-year-old Mr. McGee. also by Abner T. Clogg. dam Mae west. have been miles in 2.37. A two-year-old by Abner T. clegg named Dominion D. has stepped miles in 2.45. but the two-year-old that has really not everybody talking is owned by Bob Ryan of Houlton. Maine. she is named .Iollity's Girl. is by Jai- llty 2.051.; out of Pine Ridge Nor- ma. Bho paced a mile in 2.25 nearly a month ago and no doubt has bettered that since. The night racing plant at Woodstock is coming along rilceIv..Bob says. and opening night will be June 28th and racing will be every Tuesday and Friday nights after that. A real good pacing prospect has been sold by James Oinrien of Elmsdale. to Dr. J. A. Donahoc. Truro. N3. in Freddie Scott. We understand the price was an ex- cellent one and we trust that Freddie will fulfill all the expecta- tions of his former owner and new owner. By the way. Jim was pleased the other morning at the arrival of ii lovely foal from Lee's Nightmare 2.10 ilii. sired by Jai- lity 2.05'i. Lee's sire was Bud Ax- worthy 2.14. full brother to the. , former. world's champion trotter Lee Axwortliv 1.58';i- Bud AXW0l'- lhy had quite as much speed as his famous brother and was timed a half over the summerside track in 1.00 (ml but he would make wild breaks that ruined his racing rhances. when he was fourteen years old he was turned over to the writer to give him a record. We cut his front toes down to 315. inches. gave him a .'i im too be- hind, shod him with four ounces square toe shoe in front and a 73.4 ounce shoe behind and gave him his record over the Charlottetown track. Had he been shod that way when he was young he might have been ii world's champion. Last week at. Yonkers Raceway the trotter F.J.E. 2.13 ml by cal- - BATTERIES Equip your car with a new EXIDE battery proper- ly installed. and enjoy care- free motoring. MALLE'1'T'S BATTERY SERVICE 10 Q! How FA CAN 60"-ggl . Hunters corner (Continued from Page 0) ..........:.:...-.-. the penertating chill of the on- oomi.. night. i heard something that sounded very much like a shot. I dlsiniued the thought for I couldn't. figure why anyone should be abroad with a gun at this time of night. A few min- utes later. while driving over a wooded ridge that skirted the edge of a swamp. I saw a beauti- ful Rusted Grouse atop a poplar tree busily engaged in filling its crop with buds. Etched clearly against a winter sky this lovely game bird was a picture of grace and beauty. At this moment I had a hunch that it was a gunshot I had heard a few minutes prcvI.o1.1sly. I was not long in doubt. As the last. rays of the setting sun faded in the west and a sickle moon rode a stormy sky there drifted to my cars from somewhere in the wooded area along the lower reaches of the Enmore River. muf- fled by distance. the urrmistake- able WHUMP of a heavy gauge shotgun. I may have crossed the Inverne border at this moment. I spoke to my companion: "I wonder what that shot was fired at?" "Probably some of the boys out after 'Natives' having their evening meal". was his casual common-t. As an afterthought be added: "It's ii wonder there's any left”. I made a mental note to keep this out-of-season Rufled Grouse hunting in the records for future action. The next fall, as a hazy mid- November afternoon drew toward evening, I turned the car off the Western Road at West Devon. Somewhere along the road in the Grand Dig I spotted a youth ahead of me riding a bicycle. He turned his head when I was 50 yards distant and then swung the wheel to his right and bounced across a shallow ditch and unto an old wood road. It was then I noticed the 22 calibre rifle held across the lianwe bars. I stopped the car pronto but all I found was the bicycle lying on its side in a bed of ferns. The youthful rider had vanished. Nearing late evening I swung the car oil! the Beaten Road unto the Terry Boylan Road. This is a lonely secondary road that runs for four miles through swamp and woodland till it reaches Cole- man. If my memory serves me correctly there is not a single human habitation along the first three miles. This is natural Ruf- fed Grouse country. A few min- utes iater I picked up a passen- ger. He was an elderly man. quiet and sociable and was hiking through to the Coleman Road. "I-iuntin'?" be queried. "Yes," I replied. and I wasn't l.ellin' lies at that. It depended on the kind of hiintinl I meant. "Am I ever lucky to get this lift" was his comment as he settled back on the cushion. The road was so narrow in spots the elders rat- tled against the car sides bill. it was quite passable. About two miles in we met a lad in his early teens riding a bicycle. As he wdbbied by along the side of the ditch I had a good view of the cheap, single shot .22 calibre rifle lying athwai-t the handle bars. A pair of ferrety eyes looked into mine and then he was behind us. "That's the second youngster I've met this evening carrying a rifle on a bicycle. What are they huntin'-rabbits?" "Nope” ,was the reply; "pat'ridge." I contin- ued: "rheyre a long way from home. they must be anxious to get them?" "Yes. that's the way they get their smokes and chocolate bars. They exchange them or sell them at X's store". "How much do they get for them?" "it de- pends" was his reply: "if they are large and not shot up too much he gives them seventy-five cents each." The fact that the season' was cloud for over two weeks didn't make any difference. in December I dropped in on this .:... Leeper. It was one of my lucky days. He had eight plump Rufied Grouse (Native Partridge) packed in a basket ready for transportation to Char- lottetown. lie was considerably ..m.Lm...m.......m...... uinet iaudlong 2.023;. dam Helen D. 2.1114. was a close third in a 31.000 classified trot won in 2.11 U5. ,He was bred by Urban Giliis, Miscouche...At the saratoga sales Auction a couple of weega ago Bsckdale. a six-year-old brown mare by Victor Dale. went the high bid of Allison Langile. St. Stephen. N. 3. She is eligible to the 2.28 psce....Betty -Rennie, daughter of Frank Rennie. Elms- dala. P. 3.1.. has placed her two- , year-old Betty's Boy by Abner T. Ologg. dam by Bud Axworthy. in Roach MaoGregor's stable at the Charlottetown track for training. He is one of the best Jeveloped and liandsoniast two-ye -aids we have seen in a long time. The Ab- ner '1'. Olegg-Iud Axwoi-thy cross has already moved itself. several with that breeding acquiring ra- oords 1 III&Il0lI. - out of pocket on this shipment after the Court case was over. Two of the birds had .22 calibre bullet holes through them while one had evidentLy been shared as the neck was torn badly. I got to know this (West Prince) pretty well. I've "blled" the kettle on Baptiste Point while the crickets chirped in the noon day heat and listened to bacon and eggs sputtering in a frying pan on a lonely stretch of share at Black Bank: as the gulL-. and plover greeted an August dawn. Yes. and I've watched the smoke from an open fire beside a wood road at McNeill'd Mills curl upward as a soft summer wind rustled the splndling poplars and blueberry pickers filed past in silent wonderment. Yes. I had a fair idea of what went on in that country. Strangely enough. as I type this I find myself thinking of the little doe and the words of a song comes to mind: ”BeautifulZ beau- tiful brown eyes. I'll never love blue eyes again." ....i....... I WINNIPEG. May lii - (CPI - All prices recorded sharp declines in active trade today on the Win- nipeg Grain Exchange, with all contracts of flax dropping the maximum 15-cent limit. October barley and flax hit new seasonal lows. country I A'l' HALIFAX Arrived fa-iday - Brigus. from at. John's. Nfld. I Gronland, Port Alfred. Simon Bolivar. Philadelphia. Harle. Bermuda. Oil Transporter. Trinidad. sailed Frill! Gronland, for Hampton Roads. AT HAINT JOHN Arrived Friday None. Sailed Friday Fort Avalon, for Halifax. l 1 Selling was fairly general, with offerings in oats and barley in- cluding selling for American ac- count as well as hedging. and liq- uidation. Minor recoveries were made in oats as commercial de- mandlcame in on the declines. Flax fell off under heavy hedg- ing and liquidation. support was thin. Rye also dropped off sharply under increased offerings. Export loadings were light. in- volving only -140.000 bushels of Can- adian wheat to the United King- dom. Class two wheat and I.W.A. prices were unchanged from yes- terday. Closing prices: Oats - May 1193213: July 90-H- zs; Oct. am. , Barley - May 1.233; July 1.24 13-51;: Oct. 1.217-Kg. Rye - May 2.07; July 2.06ti- 2.07; Oct. 1.9m-is. Flax - May 4.25AN; July 4.2311; Oct. 4.0011. -.3-o-,1 (ago; E, because PENTOX seals wood against moisture- I prevents WAIIPED DOOIiS' STICKY WINDOWS 'WD ROI Say good-bye lo warped doors. sticking windows, sagging porcine-II. paint failures! All these are caused by moisture . . . and PENTOX seals wood against moisture and rot. IIIORI YOU PAIN? doors. windows. stairs, furniture-any woodwork, use Pentax! PENTOX-the time-tested fully pi-oven penetrating toxic Under- ooutcr and Wood Preserver, keeps wood dry under the paint. It' seals all pores .. . providing I proper foundation for yourpaini jobs. PINTOX-is easy to apply. dries in touch in 10 minutes. and costs less than the coat of paint it saves. Imp. Oi. 11.15-Im . Gal. 88.75. Inquire about PEN FIN, the beautiful soft-lustre finis . Available at better hardware. paint and lumber dealers. OSMOSI WOOD PIISEIVING CO. OF CANADA iTD., MONTIIEAI 0 TORONTO your woodwork can't swell porches, outdoor P1 I2uniiiiu's Most Sensational New British Cur! III II ITS iiililISH-iilllli Tlie-answer to ail-round motoring economy! sh-button door handles, the latest a Never before has any British-built car included ell desired car features In low-cost motoring. On a 100- iach wheelbase (for economy and ease of handling) CONSUL'S advanced engineering offers bifcar spaciousness. Notice the four wide doors--the ii rge areas of safety glass including the In c CIIrVGd one-piece windshield and rear window or wider, iare-free vision day and night. See the CONSUUS Kovviog dynamic body lines. ' Ford's British-built CONSUL ofcrs a combination of advaocedengineei-lag features ihai are SCI1lIEIuu:aI.YOII get an economical, powerful, smooth-runnin 4. iinder engine, (up to 37 miles per gallon) by con- lically operated clutch, pendant foot pedals. steering '11:: com ti 4- cyliader Consu engine with overhead valves is recisioa-buili for long Nfe and economy. miiunucuj 324 at. George st. "R. I I4 Centre-slung scaf- ing. with all passengers ri ingwithinthewhcelh base, avoids b from road bumps. ' Stewart Motors Lfd. . roux miacunr s METEOR nnamit A Phone 881 M'acLean Motors” Ltd. FORD-MONAROII DEALER - 0 . Dial 2929 McGowan .Motors . Hydraulic brakes on all four wheels give smooth rapid stops- maximum at control in say emergency. column gearshift. and most advance type of ii-cab-air ventilating system and a long list of other advanced features. Distinctive interior beauty includes rich finishing and a poinimenis. Upholsteries harmonize beautifully. on ieie, modern instrument panel and coin oriable steering weather and road conditions. Give yourself a pleasant experience-examine and drive Ford's exciting new British-built car-the brand new CONSULI couss 5-sun FEATURES 21.. smooth power, a cradled ride, hydraulic brakes, all-steel body. advanced springing All-steel welded OVER 1100 DEALERS COAST-TO-COASJ Ioao-Inonancu oraius o Mucusv-i.iucoi.u.wisnoa olaisas ' S. R. - Johnston FORD-MONABCII DEALER St. Peter's Road wheel, contribute to the CONSUL'S extra-ease in handling, make this new car a treat to drive. The CONSUL is built for Canadian independent from E , h I . .. 3.?.?.iif.3."iiZi.iI.'2.2 2L..”.i..-..Ji”.'5i.'i.".'i'.?..i.i. with safety. strength. iaciingabock absorbers. rigidity and quietness. for smoother riding. . f-PRICED NEW cans in camps attractive. you Ltd. Phone 262 F. Earle McDonald Ltd. METEOR-MERCURY DEALER sumrnei-side FORD I MONABCII CABS Montague ...1...., Phone 33-21