“le- i ~r-sas- rl.-. . . ~\ __..;.-egg,-.-..___.,¢¢_.___ llllllllll' Mothersllrwf _:_ -.L ' :‘..;*:.°.‘:'.:‘ili.".i.i:za.“;‘:.li.:12!:.f:.i.‘;':::.°:’2.‘;f‘1- * - _ ' ` .. _ _ _ T; C _ i Sl0han’_s ° iLiniment;__.__[ I Bruiser-Rheumatisin-Neural'giaj ' _ Mothers: “Keep a bottle in your home” H.. ll_lllll_ljllliliiini ing the acheliina‘i:i2ll¥>a°inrV‘ _ A '~,_'.--_ " _ ~ Price asc.. soc. .aa ¢i,oo I S' H N ` _ - """»;‘ Wi; s » _ .-1- r.~-.f .i.'- ,. . ilillllllllllllllllllilla » R°"°' Ph' D" U“"'°'°“" "' P°““°‘Y= summeaeips MAai5 "M-0-'I'-H-E-R.” " " Coi_n'e_Back Dixie. “-'For Killarney and -You. p - Killarney My Home 0'er the Bea ‘ ~ Harmony Bay. She Lives Down in our Alley. ` l I Wanna be the Captain or Iii Won't Play. ' - . _Dead Mountain Flowers. _ (Corrected on Tuesdays aim Fridays) Butter (crehnieryi in prints , 85 Butter (Tub) lb. Butterdtfreahi lb. Eggs, oz. gsarlb. (retail) Fowlsib. Chickens. lb. I-lay, (pressed), ton Straw (preaseul ion -Pork lb., Turbine, bus. Potatoes. bus. _ ‘Oats _(white) bus. _Oats (black) bus. 55 Beats. bus. 40 Carrots. bus. _ 45 3_5 to 40 1% so ill to 85 so an to is 13 to 14 ia to is $14 to tis $6.50 12% to is zo to 25 90 to$1.0o 52 Wool lb. _ , Pai-snips. lb. Geese _ _ ` Ducks -Hides ` ' 15 15 1| tn 15 Turkeys.-ner lb- 20 to 22 y. Buckwheat. (ner bus) '15 ai $1.00 ssrisy (ver pus.) » is to so Butterfcrealhery (per lb.)--“‘ '34 to 35 B\mer,»/dairy. (per ibn - 32 to 34 Cnltskina. (per lim' ‘ ~ 14 Hides, per lb.< < 14 Hay, pressed (per ton) $10 to $13 I-lily. loose`(Der ton')-)- " -$10 to $12 Lamb“»pelt.s (each) ' . .40 to 80 Oatmeal. (-Der 100 lbs) $2.75 to $3.00 Oats, black. per bus.) L 56 Oats. white, peribus.) 62 Potatoes'-(ber bus.) ~- - 75 Turnipa, (per bus.) ) 30 Pork. Organs att. (per lb) 0% .to 12% Straw, pressed (per ton) . $6.60 Wheat, -(per bus.) -$1.20 to $1.40 Wool (1ier‘lh.) ' ~ ~ 26_to 40 r Honsn Norms Good progress lsreported in the 2.20 Island bred stake. 17 O C The two year old trottcra are beat- ing 2.30 down in Georgie. _ ‘ i 9 0 ' Tho $1000 purses for the Juno nicot- ings in Rockport and (Ironwood failed to iill. _ * a Fred Egan, the Colorado trainer, is coming east again with Braden Direct, 2.01%. ‘_ * * ' Earl Jr., 2.01%, is entered in the free-for-all pace at the Kalamazoo Grand Circuit Meeting. ll t 4 The first Canadian race meeting this year will be held at Dufferin Park. To- ronto, April 21 and 22. » 3 4| ll Maritime racing circuit this year des- pite aiinouncements previous to the contrary. * * * Will Fleming is to train Joe Patchen I., 2.03%. It was Fleming who got a- long so wpll with the “big train” four years ago\ a Q * Orwell Belle is now owned iii Monts- gue. "Gar" Ellis having purchased the mare from Frank Mf°N~.,_ll of Summer- side the other day. o e s There will likely be the usual Dom- inion Day racea at Bummerside the coming season. There will also be the usual fall fair races. . Bonnie Boy 2.07%, eamqpaignod by Guy Lee of Uifion City; eun.. has started in 60 races _during the last. six years. winning `26 firuts. 23 seconds. nine thirds, two fourths and `six times unplaced. His wuiltintgl total $0,491. There will be the usual King's Birth- day races on the Charlottetown Driv- ing Park. The programme has not yet been decided on. but it will lkely iii- clude in a freefor-all, a 2.30 pace and a 2.40 trot. , o 4- a The usual matinee races under the auspices of the Charlottetown Driving Club will be held the coming season. Last years races under the same aus- pices were most :u'cc*essfuI. , . 'There will he the . usual racca at Charlottetown in connection with the fall fair. The exhibition dates are September 26-20,' and ‘there will be racing each day.; . A Two' pacers. famous along the Pa- Tliaddie. ' _ _When I leave the world behind. " ' ‘ " l 'want to go Toklo. _ -'t The Littlel Mother who;-. - a waits l _ Isla D'Amou :-1 H2.. 3315; fi if li. One oriti 2.5;. a. “I cific coast. will meet in a $5,000 match race this summer. They are Htai Boy i‘i1:¢elding.‘ and White ' Box, ‘a amous mare. "The pair have met twice be- fore. and honors :rg even, _ ‘ J l*9_\»§._ . four fr"- » -on 'r"0_wN nanxisrs ' l Charlottetown will now be in the . BE RE . _ -, ,».f.-»./- . ~. ~ ~' ~ *; . ._@.».,~‘:_.'.= _ ‘ the NS This _is new s_uit time and there's always more or less risk of your being - stampeded into buying ready-made clothes _that are apparently ir ade by nobody in particular, clothes for which no one is willing to stan sponson, those unnamed garments of unknown quality-The Orphans of the Clothing World. _ ' ‘ ~ These garments will be offered to you under many guises and you will do well to forego the pleasure of wearing a new suit on Sunday rather than take this risk. If you would make sure of Wear and stay=there style, pick your Spring Suit from our fresh, and almost unlimited stock of choice materials. Let us make it to » your' personal measure from the material you will yourself select. We stand Guarantee to your increased satisfaction. ` Suit or Overcoat ' Made-to-Measure Made-to-Measure 158 Richmond Street, Charlottetown i “All Things Comes to Those Who Wait.” It will be greatly to YOUR advantage to have us make your particulargsuit to your measure for delivery in from eight to ten days; To you it means good British Woolens, a very apparent add_ed value at our special price .$l5.00._ We give :you so much value that we convince yo_u permanently that our interest and pride in our Made-to-Measure Tailoring does not by any .means end with ‘ the selling. _ ` L. A. GAREAU, President English and Scotch Woolen Co.1 l l _ ' Our Mail Tailoring Department stands between you and the med- OrderS iocre ready-niades. Mall a post card and by reiuin post you _will receive -our Spring Outfit-samples, self-measuring form you can follow wiih ease, ashions and tape measure-free of charge and no obligation to gurchase. The price to measure by maii,fit guaranteed, $15.00. Ad ress: 415 St. Catherine t. East, Montreal. Tailoring Stores in Ten Canadian Cities “Mill-to-Man _Tailoring Service” £3 N I .p @ ' sg-S Il °__i____r_i s 01' fi, ' n 9 ~ ~.-.»1...ii» .- ~ - .; --.'. ) "`° ' zaisf-contra.. west aQi'ni~n.£.|' -. "digg -l;.,fl,.,..,.|;.,f_ near Bleury. near P ’p__ _=__i_;-./.»'-.‘._,-jg " , sr Sl-Hubgrf, - - A-..,_.~.-. *-Q 2 d,'O we .I-_ “ _'_' 4-_.__ 4 f=`ff_’_' <1, B ‘ € r- fl! 3. Ui \ U1 158 Richmond Street, Charloi_tetow.n, P. E. -I. i ' ' _ Opposite' Post Office .8475-4-29M2i. I | _ L '%ll"i.'=»‘»'.f= ` are 'in' purses and premiums, und they vast a total of one hundred and tweii-- were members. This Club was pro~‘ and has been conducted on tho~ business lines and the mana- are to he congratulated on had such a successful wiuter's the cacc ol the difficulties in with holding races the past season.~, _ I U 0 O ‘ Those who have the mistaken idea the day of the horse is passing must have received a rather severe WI! jolt when Walter Cox paid no loas than fifty-six humlrcd dollars for an nn- devolopod yeurling of standardbrcd trotting blood. While higher prices have been obtained for ysarlings in other days. there has always been a record attached to the natural breed- _lng attractions of the youngster in question. ln this case, however fitf Frusqnln. a son of the noted Ban Frim- cisco-Molisande. has never been driven against time and thus the price estab- lishes a new record on the sales niar._- ° ’ _ ~‘ n it ‘ li. Ii- 1212 7.". r. fi _il :il _ ;;iz::r=r¢f- -i ._ I-l _ i~. ,_ Ii t' . ff __ . _ . '» . I if 1,. i i- it 2'; i *f _- _F I ' 'T "-11., ii ._- F 1; _ i ~ J 1, ix 1.' » l va li . vi 3;.; in gi i "f<`a”-f-?r'=f~$§r¢3= .._f=ne-soggy/mis; if l . i is fi A si iii HI: §. V ii. 5 5' w i » _ l . E Q _ if 2 e. i 5 f l