NOVEMBER 10. 195v ' .. . . ,v"T'-'T OIDTEIB WEAR LONGER For Your H my cleaning Need! Phone 2387 RITE - WAY g I iME1y.... IWHY svrrza than Painful bladder conditions. aris- ing from weak ludeeysl Ban those restless nights. The new magnesia: treatrae.r;t u(KMAGNlRPlLLS) 3, I: boon I erers e on. i MAGNOPILLS you will feel vast illlplrovelnent in your well-being, and VII experience quick relief from neur- ”'l'93ll- Praetraiioa. and dc ecilon. GW" You too. a decided upli t after . MAGN :ll'gutl'Em' Sh"?-PILLS are folroial: " on vault 1951 ,..- , xxwbs g y , ;r:?TSyu' L e sLl”,l.. V P . rs. node"! Ieehvler or he Sh-I-i Me'er Ce. us. at Covellm I-dud 8. ""x'3.'3'a3.'7 -.73.. e or non rs. Iomeul .S.0a1a&ad "ma SKINID" engine lrenoveble cylnder Ieeul gum you top perteneease rtnoghovt he Me of he eer. hi l your dealer about UNI Cathie! ROINVO. I 4 lavdovi IIVJ. EM - '31? Great George Street DISTRIBUTOR: SOLD AND SERVICKD IN 7 Wkrw (sw six in wxuruous couroitr) NlH:I3 VANGUARD IIOW 9.6”” fl" all the lamilil azs-x it's Owner Adjusiedili I l'lOwaer Adjusted Vaaqaordr oorabiae every Ieaiur to make driving pure pleasure. Vanguard has room to spare IeeaIauilyoIeix...yetitiaecoaoraical and practical for a family of two. - "Steed" right, the Vanguard is NOT TOOSMALL--aoitoolarge. ..parh eaeily. Yet it's big and Iaet eaouqh Ier super hiqliwaye. Craiaea with ease at co. - 70 la.p.h. Canadian 3-epeed gear shift co the steering eeluraa is eyaclireneelied Ior perfect eeatrel in traffic. New ehock alseorbers smooth out the roupbeei road. Ask your dealer about the new l2 plus Vanguard Ieahlree. . Drivegyoar Vakaard Ieda1.. . li's Canada's lee! Car Buy! me srmeaeo MOTOR co." (causes) LTD. Toronto, Canada Standard Vaegeerd Cam Ilealerd latete Ceree tended heel helm! Dd whee Trash: 'MeIrhCere. K V1653 W. B. JENKINS Cliarlotrteinwu . Phenee me - 2104 Ilillcreet Motion Limited, Halifax. C0t1Sl 10 COAST IN CANADA vloughi to maintain. HORNE MOTORS Kent St. Charlottetown iii. Stretch W I1 (WXIHDIIOQ XFOIXI PIE! 6) ...........:........... on high when the word G0 was Riven. He also won the third heat in 2.08 Here is the summary-Ab loway (Ryan) 3-1-1; Hal Brit- ton tMacMlllan) 1-3-3: Millie Kal- muclr (Kelly) 2-2-2: Harvest Mei- ody 4-0-5; Dude Potempkln s-'1-4;; Squire Hanover 6-4-6; Lusty Frisco U-5-7; Protestor '1-9-iir: June Evans D-B-dr. Alloway was owned by Bob Ryan. Eathurst, N. B. and Hal Britten by Hugh Stewart, New Glasgow. N. 8. That famous race by no means ended the career of l-lal Britten. that went on to win races and be a worthy competitor until 1046. Since then his efforts have been mainly confined to ice racing. The track trotting record at Charlottetown remained at mm for several years with Waichim and Lee Brewer trotting in the same time. In 1945 Waichlrr. lowered it to 2.0715, where it still remains. 7 O I 0 some recent decisions of boards of review of the United states Trotting Association are .Interest.- ing. Scot Eblis. a freelegged pacer won the third heat of the 3.24 pace at Marshall. Michigan. August 25, 1950. The horse switched to the trot and trotted through the stretch but the judges placed him first and he was announced the winner. There were boos from the crowd. The next. day the judges decided to change the placings and the records were changed ac- cordingly to set him out of the money. The Board ruled that the decision of the-judges at the time was final. An appeal f.r0l;'l the judges' de- ber at Batavia, N. Y. where the judges set Clever Sue back for swervlng at the stretch. The driver was inexperienced and drop- ped the rein coming into the stretch and she swerved towards the rail. Clever sue was two and one half lengths in front of the field and finished in front with- out interference with anyone, ac- cordingito the testimony of the other drivers. The decision of the Judges was reversed. U 0 t First news of a.purchase by a Maritlmer at the Harrisburg sale came through Thursday morning that Sam Kennedy. well known horseman and haberdasher of Charlottetown. bought the six- year-cld pacer Colonel Looker 2.07 U5. He is a brown gelding by Real Frisco 2.0744 and his dam is Maeve by Guy Abbey. dam. Kash- mir 3. 2.03'.& by Belwin z.06”.i. grati- dam Seanna. 2.06-ll by Peter the Great 2.071,-A. is chap's pedigree sparkles with s ed and contains some or the greatest names in the standard list. Last year colonel Looker raced consistently from early spring until late fall, . win- ning 35,067.50 and his total win- nings then were over 38,000. He icok his record 'of 2.07 M5 at Roosevelt Raceway and we tinder- stand won a race at'Yonkers a couple of weeks ago. lie looks like a horse that will do our friend Sam a lot of good. ' e e e i Wal Hennessey has bought it real one-Cheeky Chief, black horse, six years old by Chief Abbedalc 2.00. with a record of 2.04. His dam is Cheeky Red, dam of three in 2.10. she was sired by Braden D!- rect 2.0133. sire or Louis Direct 1.5826 and three others with records of 2.00 or better. His grandam 1939-1945 g REMEMBRAIIOE DAY 1914-1918 As the flags dip in iriI5uie io those who, Uled. and the Bugle blows its mournlul "Last. Post", we pause to honor once again the Brave sacrifice of those who fought so gellanily to preserve the free- dom we hold dear. Let us honor them in the only way they would understand .. .-.. . blylpraciising the democracy they clsions wasmade by Byron Web- . THE GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN - was the famous mare Red Ghat- ham. the dam of Louis 1.6094. Myrtle Mcxlyo 2.0084. 31095 51137 3.0156. Big Black Boy 2-06'a' and she is the grandam of . the famous pacer Grattan McK.lyu 1.59 us that is one of the biggest money winners in the world. He was sold to dissolve a partnership, In 1940 he won 313,733.75 and his total winnings at the end.of that 3!?” were "3.24s.s5. making him Gllsible to the 2.10 pace. we have no line on him this year but no doubt he has shown up well or We! wouldn't have invested in him. Jimmie Power .bo:ght a trotting mare without a record. which we have not been able to get the name or breeding of. but our wine said that she was well thought of, and Roy Bevan while visiting Yonkers. bought the four-year-old pacer silk I-ial zoo Us by Hal Dale 2.0215. Thisvmarc raced as a two and three-year-old. Last year . in her three-year-old form she won 33.91250 and we understand she was a winner at Yonkers at week ago last Tuesday. 0 O I The many friends of Sinclair Cutcliffe are welcoming him back after an absence of several months during which he was employed with the Massey Harris Manufac- turing Co. in Toronto. Ind later was in hospital in Montreal where he was operated on for sinus trouble. Sinclair looks in the pink now and has lost none of the hap- py manner which has made friends for him wherever he is. On holl- day afternoons while in Toronto he saw the racing at Thorncllffe and in Montreal at Richelieu Park. Neither tracks appealed to him as much as Charlottetown which he thinks is tops. also the racing here. A New Zealand horseman. H. R. Brien. has returned home after a 25,000 mile trip around the world. He is the owner of Globe Direct, that was second in this year's Australian championship. and is also the owner of the largest ho- tel in New Zealand's capital. Wel- lington. He left New Zealand a little over four months ago, visited Sydney. Melbourne. Perth in Aus- tralia and was impressed with the crushed oystershell tracks which they are using for night racing in these cities. From Australia he continued to England where he found the trottihg sport at a very low dub. although there is a pos- , sibllity there will be an attempt to revive it by the introduction of night racing there. From England he journeyed to Sweden. Norway and Denmark. He , found several brothers of the cele- braled American sire Volornite 2:01 1-2 in Sweden. They had been ' imported many years ago. In France he found amazing popular- ity and interest in the trotting races and said that the French were making great strides in the production of good trotiers. par- ticularly those for long distance racing. As is well known they have captured some of the prin- cipal stakes on the running race tracks of Great Britain as well. One of the most outstanding French trotiers that he saw was Camden. He said that French breeders con- tinued to receive some of the pro- ceeds of their wins as a certain amount is set aside for the breed- er of the winners at many race meets. Leaving France he went to Italy and saw the trotting races at Flor- ence. Milan and Rome at night. No pacers penform at any of these places - trotting only is allowed. He said that the owners were most- Dirsct g 1.. . Providing of course that they con- duct themselves in the proper manner. . O 0 At Mount Albion lies I spruce bordered gem of a lake that since time immemoriel has had a great attraction for wild geese. The major portion of the north boun- dary of this lake lies on the old homestead property. One evening early in the month I happened to be driving past the old home farm. Six cars and trucks were parked on the highway opposite the lake so I decided to tramp the half mile along the path through the barren and find out just what shooting hours they were keeping. About a dozen gunners were at the lake this night with a tendency to run the time limit pretty fine. One group of seven I checked had two plump geese and both those were ly men of wealth and mostly from the nobility and that was the rea- son they could pay such large prices for American ti-otters. Leav- ing Italy he landed at New York and visited such tracks as Gosihen. Good Time. Roosevelt and Yonkers. He said that these tracks are the most modern. the fastest and that the showmanship - in fact every- thing connected with the sport. was of the highest order and the most impressive he had seen in all his visits. He Enally took in the Kentucky race meet of a few weeks ago and was a welcome visitor at the various stud farms. Hunters corner (Continued from Page 0' ed him up was the fact that the pheasants were shot by hunters who had their own farms posted with "No Hunting" signs. I could go on indefinitely with incidents of this nature. Suffice to say that the general reaction among a great many farmers is this: "Farmer hunters who want to roam all over the country in search of geese or pheasants should be willing to grant the other fellow the same privileges on their own farms". carried by Mount Albion gunners who had their.own farms ”posted.'' 0 O This lake is controlled by four farmers. Two residing in the dis- trict of Village Green to the south and the other two living on the homestead property at Mount Al- bion. Ifound myself wondering just what would be the reaction of those hunters if they arrived at the lake some night and found it ring- ed in with "No Hunting" signs. Forty odd years ago my Dad taught me the art of hunting at this same lake. Ever since it was formed by nature it has been a community lake. Everyone was welcome to hunt there and that's how it should be. Whether this new "fad" that has come into be- ing will effect the status or! the old home lake in respect to public hunting remains to be seen. , I I 0 Some landowners haye good rea- son for closing their properties. Not long ago a lady living in the country wrote and told me of two hunters who shot two of her roost- ers. grabbed them and made for their car ,and drove ofif at top speed. She went on in say that it cost money to raise chickens to the marketing stage and wonder- ed what protection farmers wives were going to receive in respect g straw . ATES MT BE MORE ....e.sT .....a-..-. ........ -. TOO OF THE COULD 0 I68 KENT 8! I CIIIRIOTTITIWI I To be perfectly candid we recommend Home Motors for service at low prices. It's a prom- lse always kept. , Active people know its smart to l'Genuine imported cork to hunters shooting on their farms. This incident happened since Oc- tober 1st. 0 0 0 At the next meeting of the Fish and Game Association I am going to bring up this matter of protec- tion in land owners. I feel strong- ly that penalties should be pro- vided in the Game Act for such incidents as the one described by ihe lady in the country. Any hunter who leaves a farmers gate open and allows his cattle to gain access to valuable crops and cause loss or who allows his hunting dog to chase livestock or kill poul- try. who wounds livestock with shot pellets or bogs his car down in meadow land or drives it ivhrough standing crops should have to pay a fine providing they do not stop and make amends to the farmer who suffered the loss or in- convenience. Make such offences punishable under the Game Act and see how quickly their mar ners toward the public will im prove. Put the finger on iihe one mho commits acts of lawlessness instead of punishing the square- shooter along with the trouble- maker. tr You get more enjoyment and relaxation when you smoke Pall Mall. For the beat tobacooa of all go into PaH Mall-fresh. and mild as mild can be. and- Plain and or cork: tip relax VIRGINIA CIGARETTES . 6 Ultra-srneeih "Wetproof" paper that does net stick to the lips. I Twin bundles wrapped In laminated fell to give you cigarette freshness at its best. . SIIPER SMOOTH . SAFE RIDE Super-Cushion, the new extra low-pressure tire by Goodyear is the first new line! of tire in 15 years. It gives you an unbelievably smoother. softer ride ; : . increases comfort and safety . . . actually soaks up shock and vibrating; Drive in and wclll show you why. WC 6' IIORIIE M H WIIITLOCK E MOTORS TIRE SERVICE BARIOIIR CHFV. In OI.DSl VULF. I REPAIRS DODGE-DESOTO 4 MOI! prone run: on oooofvrsan Till! THAN ON ANY OTHER KIND 7 I s i 1 cm” - 24heaa( .' Days ure geiilng shorter-but not for terriers who hire me to look after their LIGHTING. Don't let nature cut down your productive time or your right to pleasant. briahter evenings. Yep! Modem farmers not only have working from sumip to sundown, but for hours after nature fails to provide GOOD LIGHT in their homes and farm buildings ' You can cut down one of the eausesl of costly accidents and also save Yiwr eyesight. Sure, you work outdoors and eunIight'a good for your eyes-but don't spoil it with dim, inadequate lighting. 4.44, (smart Xevr Elecirie Servaai