t‘. i i y, l i i. t .,...».,rw . -. fins guarantee absolute purity, - Crown IR§F3 ... . xscyg, . >-IT—'.-Ififiv-"-—!1—.-"i_’i W. BRITAIN REPAVB LOANS " WASHLVGTON. May 17-410- t-Lpt of $17,080,000 froh Great lBri- z u as the second installment in oijuwnt of the 31.22.000.000 in- ed through silver purchases m; the war. was announced to- ‘ by the treasury. 10!‘ the amount received today, ’ {$00,000 was paid on. the prin- .l~:ti and $4,880,000 represented paid a first installment of #130,000 on the silver debt. ———<-o->-—-—- {do _| NTERNATIONAL DAIRY GON- GRESS i are is harobably no branch of altars in which Canada has \ more progress in recent I’: than dairying. On oworlun-v .'_\ ‘XVIII be afforded next year to ~t Efte world know how far this is i~.- tase, for in the summer is to be .1 wl-t at Chicago, lll.. the Seventh ~..1t.t-h there will be present offic- .\ appointed representatives n. thirty different countries. At sixth congress, held at Berne, Stwzerland- in 1914, Mr. J. A. Rud- . '. Dominion Dairy and Cold >1trage Commissioner, was Can-- "lfis rwresentatlve, among a tot- .’ -»f 800 deglegates representing ztty-nine countries or states. » congresses are organized ter the auspices of the internat- -.l Dairy Federation of which person interested in dairying, i-tporation or association can be- _ ttte a member on payment of the , .t:.:tual fee. which at present is "st-nty francs. Papers are read at ' 1e congresses and the reports are llshed in lmglish, French and ) other languages. Already Mr. ddick is engaged, by authority the Dominion Minister of Agri- 1t.ture, in preparing for Canada's trt-resentatlon at next year's con- ztw-ss in Chicago, and a committee K t-eing formed on which the heads l ‘Wt the dairy branch in every pro- clnce will be invited to act. This ' ttmlttee will arrange for the thhifiOlIS to be discussed and the -~,rs to be read as far as Canada - t-mcerned. A pamphlet will also repared and distnlbuted among . delegates descriptive of the t' industry in this country. It further proposed to establish in >ctlon with the congress a bur- ->f informationat which facts to set forth regarding not only (lit-ll vlng in Canada, but agriculture cont-rally and the manufactures anti -esiurces of the country. ln ad- tiitl tn, leaflets will be circulated so ttvstlng itineraries for delegat- es who might like to visit Canada lit-tore returning home. mo} No Longer Necessary. r. Ui‘ Marshall-The bell on your bone-e been ottt of order for weeks. l should think you would have lt twpaired. Peter-What's the use, Nobody hver rings it these days. Our “ttende lust sit out in th-eir cars it'd honk their motor lwrns until M» come to the door. Jonnolly Estate Scholarships Applications will be received by ‘t-t undersigned until June 11th, $1.1, from all students desirous of t-o-ttpeting in a written examination J t 1m- one oi’ the Connolly Estate scholarships offered annually by tltt- "Trustees Estate of Owen "ttttnolly." This examination, to be tt- Id the third week of July in tin arlottetown and Summerside, t\i!l be open to all deserving JHIIGDI-B who upon investigation -lt.tll have been found eligible ttt . rotnpete in accordance with the trovislons oi’ the Will oi‘ the late liven Connoly. Each applicant sitall state his name in full, age, JdIHQI of both parents, Post Office address, and the nature and ex- it-nt oi‘ his studies dcring the past ittur year. M. J. SMITH, Secretary - " '1 rcstees Estate of Owen Connolly . Kinkora. P. E. l. May 17, 192i. SEALED TENDERS addressed to e Postmaster Getterwl. wl-ll be rec. ivcd at Ottawa until noon. on Fri- iay, the 24th June 1921 for the con- "eyance of His Majesty's Mulls. on a woponed Contract for four years. ix times per week on the route tfllton Station Rural Mail Route ~'o. l from the Postmaster General’: tleasure. Printed notices containing furth- r information as to conditions of woponed Contract may be seen and tlnnk forms of Tender may he ob- ained at the Post Offices of Milton . Hutton. 0 ruler fled Bridge and i‘ Wheatley Iver and at the office of no Poet Office Inspector: , Jfllill r1. vvnnan. i; . Pelt Office Ihspecto Jul! omen Inlpoelor’! u. . k Oherlettotoyn, storms, l"!- '*' hi: ff ' the strong ma" “wrest. On April 15. Great Bri-| l An Adventure‘ in Years t IY CAROLYN BEECH!!! Chapter XXXVI t l St I came home the dafieglnla mrtfitrIted to her worltd. -k‘ severe c0 riled aligltmclttidbledfoig: Sonia realized it slhs was alone. Pneumonia ha’ ' | d now all that was left o set n an who nave: hi: been sick a flay l" M“ me 3y the darkened rootn will}; 531:3‘!- dized. scarcely “m9 wlgmugg out had hanrelled-orlilém“ ° “ltiiedftiarywll gray-find depre“ t 9110i had fallen during the llgm ‘and was now swirling in ll “r8 u wind. She stood at the Zffitgw looking 0M- ‘bm seeing nothing. -She had not wept. '30:: had been no love between. M: for years scarcely any 05")“ 3h") But there was n feeling 0f loss‘ a loneliness she keenly real- lzed. Sonia had many itielllls- “"1 ma‘: intimates. But every one wl kind, even b90019 she scarce y knew sent her notes of condolence. tDora Dclong came with her father. but she did not see them. She ielAt that she wanted to the altme. short, scented note came also frflm Lenore tl-‘leetwood. She scarcely glanced at it. not from illly 1°91‘ lug of the old ieslousy. but from indifference, the same indiffer- ence with which she had treated other communications. __ d tStt-oug was laid away in W00 ~ lawn. Sonia had returned to the lonely house. scarcely "1979 lllnely now that its master was E008 ill“ it had been tbefore. “The wtnnnade years bqore, had been read. ‘it left, her everything, and it was much more than she dreamed he owned, as long as she remained unmarried. Should she marry again all except what the law allowed her ghn twas to lose. She was not at all affected by either the disposition oi’ the small fortune‘ qr by the wording ot the will. It was like Beverly l0 "'3' 1° hold her even after he was Zone. No thought of the change Bev- erly's death might make in her life as regarded Ned Campbell llllll entered Soniaks mind. She wrote him a short account of her hus- band's illness and of his passing. Then she took up her work more eagerly than before. At times a creeping sense o.’ something like shame cattle over her. She was beginning to be hallr py alone, tt- enjoy the fretlont from Strong's gibes and satiric retuarks. She felt as if it were a sort of treachery. She tried to dwell 11p- on Strong's generosity to her in matters of physical comfort and to think of him as a host and as a successful tusiness man. But she could not overcome that sense of pleasure that at times came over her-even when alonewthat islle no longer was made unhappy, .be-_ cause of his attitude towards her. "God forgive nte!"slte said when this feeling came over her. She had an absurd idea that it was a sin to realize happiness front death. She felt that she ought to miss Beverly, grieve for him-and it was impossible. Often as the ‘winter advanced and Sonia looked out of the win- dow she loved the loneliness that enshrouded her. Was it some- thing oueer in her that made her love this solltudeiiA creeping sense of something like fear catme over her now when site thought of Ned. Would God take him, too, and pun- ish her for the way she felt about Beverly? A sense of uneasiness deepened in her. The sontbre ‘black she wore to satisfy convention oppres- sed her at times. Often when at home she would don a rose or blue negligee and only then did the oppression leave her. She scanned the lists of the wounded with an eagerness that showed her interest and her fear. But her letters to Ned had not changed. His to her were still on- ly the friendly ones he had writ- ten when Beverly was with her. A simple recount of the days he spent, an occasional sad note in them as he told of the loss of some companion in whom he had become interested. Always his boyishness which had at first shown itself in his letters. growing less notice- atble as time went on. "He is growing older—lt is the war," Sonia said as she observed the change. Sonia had withdrawn into her- self more completely than ever af- ter ‘Beverly's death. She gave out without any self-consciousness a de- licate aroma of strangeness that held off even those who had known her well. "ou shouldn't shut yourself ull as yQil tlo," one friend said to her. “YOu work to hard to have no re- creation. l believe you have done more war work than any three wo- non‘? no rats: / LIONAID EAR OIL RELIEVE DEAFNESS and STOPS IIIADNOISES. Simply Rab it Back of the Ears and Inuit In Noetrlls. Proof of sue- - "is. iFéitilie?“ ml: 1MB "e Ill! lfllll, I aatauntlmlirs. Illtllmllfi] For ule in Charlottetown ~ by H. W. Toombn it 170., The ‘bro lhcl and Reddln Lrol. N Tragic Events In Ireland Shot to Death by Daughter of Sir Murdered From Twenty Person Sinn Folners: C. Harrington Ambush. Bm-‘FAQF. Mfly li-Miss Ba:- flnlton. only daughter of Sir Charles Harrington. of Glenstal Castle, County Limerick, and head of the Masonic Order in North d Munster and police inspector 3185a were shot dead from am- bush Ssturday night by civilians while motoring from Killoscully to Newport, County Tipperary The father of the dead woman is a fonmer high sheriff of County Limerick. Nine policemen, two soldiers and a number o! other persons were killed Saturday and today in attacks and counter at- tacks at various places. Numerous persons were wounded. al and organized violence, Satur- "lly llllll today ‘Probably were the’ worst since shootings on a large’ iigtlige were inaugurated in January All the cusualties except one oq. curred in the area covered by the southern parliament. The excep- tion was at Dromore. Tyrone. where a Sinn Feiner was shot dead. Miss Barrirngton was travelling with two other women and in- 5119010!‘ Major Bless and a milit- ary officer when she was kille-l. The miltary officer was wounded. Constable Bridges was shnt dead and two other constablesl were wounded while purchasing groceries Saturday at Drumcollar- her. A party of police going to their relief was fired upon and two of the policemen were wounded slightly. - Fierce fighting followed tack on the Bandon police racks. The utiiitary and police swept the streets with macltlnel Bun fire and the people were oblig- ed to lltrou- themselves upon the ground for safety. About the same an at- bar- time armed civilians marched through Dunmanwap“; County Cork. Being followed by auxiliar- ies in motor lorries they shot and killed several horses i" the streets |so as to obstruct the path of their illlfsllerfl. All the roads south and 'tlte machine guns Saturday after-. noon. The attack was repulsed. Four stem-hers of the attacking party were seen to fall. The police suffetioti no casualties. Two gun-i hers of the Royal Marine Artillery stationed at East Ferry_ near Middleton County (lurk. were shot dead Saturday night. This was the ,ilrst attack that has -been made on naval forces. At iCastledown and Burehaveu, County Cork. today two soldiers were shot and killed‘ by armed civilians. Bombs were thrown at military lorries on three occasions in the Dublin district today Some of the occupants oi the lorries were wounded. l The Rosslare pier (‘ounty Wexiord; the Bridgetown Barracks. Wexford; the Spidal barracks in Galway and the Holy ,Cross Barracks, County Tipperary, ,were unsuccessfully attacked Sat- urday night. There was a brisk fight lasting half an hour at the Batmore barracks Saturday. The police resisted the attacks with bomtbs and rifles. 'i‘ltere were no cusualties. ‘barracks r DUBLIN, May 1‘5.—-BOII'|lIS were thrown at a police patrol at Blackpool. Cork yesterday. One 0i’ ,tbe police was killed and two were wounded. Several civilians were wounded". Sergeant Coleman was shot dead while waiting in a shop. The Chief Secretary's car was fir- ed at in Dublin Friday evening |'i'he Secretary was not in the car at the time but the driver narrow- ly escaped a bullet. Three tons of tobacco from the United Slates lheve been thrown into the Liffry because they were consigned to Ulster factories. CORK. May 1‘5.—-Saturday night was a night of terror in Cork fol- lowing the bombing of the police tbarracks nt Blackpool during the ‘day. The home of Liam Roisite, Sinn Feln. member of the British Parliament, was ra-ided. Mr. Rois- lte was absent at the time -but a priest_ Father O'Callaghan, who was slaying in the house, was shot and died inter from his wounds. men l know. l am in a continual state of wonderment at you and surprised that you haven't gone ov- grgeag w lunrse or something now that you are alone.” " Itrled to get over, but I could- n't. it was the first time she had mentioned her effort and her fail- ure to any one. It had been soon after Beverly's death. ‘But she was a little too old rfor anything for which women were needed. She had no training as a nurse. so was obliged to rematin at homo. It had hurt, but she had accepted it quiet- ly. saying nothing when they told her they were sorry, ‘but no place could be found for her. tSbe had never told Nod she tried to get over. zNow there were rumors that peace was not for away. For mon- tlts Ned had been in a. hospital, but he had not told her and in some way lt had escaped mention in the lists ofyvounded. Her fears increased when she neard the rumors-not fears for Ned. fear for herself. She was al- most childish in her dread of meet- ing him. Sudenly the years loom- ed large in her mind. Those years that, now he was older, knew more of the world anti of women, would surely separate them. He was no longer a boy engrossed by his art, but a man of experience who would weigh and measure‘ for himself what he did.‘ itTo Bo Continued.) ‘wlnnf; t.- 1 til/lore lives may have been lost in the ‘Marroon ambuscade, when' seventeen auxilaries were killedJ or on "Red Sunday" but for gener- l‘ west of Cork have been trenohed , at man,- polnts. The belief pre- MAKING SLAEIgFsIZOT/Lsissso valls that relliels intend to carry " out a genera attack on military _, _ and police barracks. _ - {lulu-SI Mint l4rltlM-aldggdltisvfllltft One hundred civilians attackedlce es’ ‘m 3r c c’ l8 v v NAVY cur Patrick Sheehan, a republican. who was newly married. was shot through the heart while in his bedroom. Alter the shooting sergeant Cole- ntan Middleton and f ur policemen while going for a priest were fired. upon. Two constables were killed and another was wounded. At Youghall, 27 miles east of Cork, military" raids were started at eleven o'clock Saturday morn- ing and continued until 3 o'clock Sunday morning. During the raids there were intervals when rifle and pistol shots were heard. Hous- es throughout the town .were searched including the residence of tFatlter Ahearn. Considerable damage was done by the raiders There was fierce fighting be- tween members oi‘ the constabtll-i ary and armed civtilians at Drom- adaleague, in which heavy firing was done by both sides. Three civilians were wounded. No con- stabulary casualties have been re- ported. A constable was shot dead outside the barracks at lnisbatnon. -——-—--<0>—i- SAYIS MIDDl-E AG-ES ART OF' M. Rircharti BurgsthaLa glass manufacturer front the vicinity of Paris, after long research has found the secret of the stained glass windows which has been lost ince the Middle Ages. 'lu the thirteenth century, the. windows were made of particles of glass of different colors, glass colored in the mass, either entire- ly blue, entirely yellow, or entire- ly violet. etc. The windows, now- shatteredpof the , Cathedral ofl IRhelms 'wet'e made in this man- ner. But tittring the fifteenth and sixteenth Lcenturies nothing “'94s ‘used but white glass stained on the suniace. in short painted glllF-ll replaced the glass mosaics. l The original methods of menu-A facture were forEOi-i-Bll. lllllll llel’ lnit-ely lost. For a long tlnla chemists and glass IYIHIIIIIBICI-UTQFS sought in vain for tltet secrets] of the glass workers of Chartres. in a glass factory of the lie tie- France. M. Burgsihal undertook to manufacture glass sitniliar to that n’ the medieval toasters, emvlili" ing modern methods. He operated with temperatures from 1300 tn 1.600 degrees centlgfllile- l" Al!- ril 1913, hie‘ had found the “Char- tres Blues." By Jilly he “all ‘m’ covered the "ruby T903’ The W1" interrupted his work. hi9!‘ i-lle armistice he again took up his investigations and BXDBPlYTlSIllS llllll is now said to have re-estnblifllled the complete scale of shades and colors. ‘M. Louis Vauxcelles has written to the Minister of Bellini-Alw- stating that M. Burgsthal declares himself capabl-c of reconstituting the great rose window of the Rheims Cathedral. SWEET CLOVER FOR PASTUR AND SILO William Radnor of Londesboro, is Huron County's champion boost- er for sweet clover. He has tried it for pasture and he has tried it for silage. and he is aatllsfled that for either purpose it is tlte crop par excellence. "Last year l had sweet clover on the poorest five acres on my farm, a field that previously did not grow- enough teed in a season for two head of stock.“ solid Mr. Redford to the writer last week. "But 1 turn, ed ten cows and a bull into the field about th-e 24m of my nudl they pastured there right through] the summer and until they Could be nut on after-grass in the fall. And during that time t] got more milk from those cows than they ever gave before in the same length of time. i am quite convin- ced that a. field of sweet clove!‘ will produce more pasture and bet- ter pasture for milk cows than will anything else. l am n01 50W nbout its value or fattening stock; it may keep the bowels a little too loose for best results in fattening." iMr. Ratlnor ls of the opinion, fur- ther. that sweet clover sown with the spring grain crop will yield en- ough fall tpasture to make the prac tlce a paying proposition- Lest year also Mr. Ratlnor had his first experience with sweet. clover as a silage croll. but he "its! --<oo-i flvNfiguTudO R IA or Children ill 08E FOR WEI 30 YEARS . b“ -‘ lt.so Wull that this year he is not planting corn at all, but intends io fill his two 14x24 foot silos entire- ly with sweet clover. The crop that was ensiled last year was cut at too young a stage for best results, but it made an excellent quality of feed nevertheless. ‘Mr. Radnor wanted to get a crop of seed in the fall. so he cut the silage crop on June 10th, almost a month before it would have blossomed. He also cut it as high as the binder would cut, so the combined result was that the silo received the most suc- culent part of the plant at its ten d-erest period of growth. So far as the quality of silage isconcerned there is no complaint about that method, tbut it does not utilize the full amount of the crop. This year Mr. Radnor expects to cut the crop just as it is nicely in blossom and expects that at that stage of grow- that six acre field will supply en- ough fodder to fill one of his silos. There wers still several feet of last year"s sweet clover silage left and the writer was shown some of it. While it was quite black in col- or it had a most appetlzing odor, and that it was palatable was evi- denced by the fact that not a scrap front the last feed remained in the oattle's mangers. When he com- menced to feed it Mr. Radnor thought that it was going to induce a continual scouring, bttt when once the animals had become accus tomed to it there was no such ef~ fect. Both cows and young stock appeared to be doing well on the feed. ‘Mr. Rntinor produces good cattle as well as good crops. lie has used a pure bred sire for years, anddi a pure bred sire for years, - and and altho h he has as yet only a few gut’! red females, nls grades show every evidence of gcnerat ions of good breeding. The entire herd ltad a contented appearance 4_.._a _ ....-.- -. greatly at variance with thehppear ance of some herds seen through: t out the country. The Markets MONTREAL,‘ May IL-There was a change in the condition of the local Intarkeis for eggs yester- day. prices being about steady under a good demand for small lots and a fairly active trade was done in a Jobbing way in straight candied stock at 33c, while No. 2 stock sold at 30c, and rt few sel- ects at 87c Der dozen. Car lots oi’ western eggs were offered on the market at~22 1-2c per dozen, f.o.b. Saskatchewan, which figure was about lc per dozen higher than on Wednesday. The receipts here yesterday were 2,850 cases against 3_983 i'or the saime day last week. and 2.112 for the corresponding day a year ago The market for maple product was without any new feature to note, prices-being steady with a moderate time being, and in con- sequence the market is quiet with Green ‘Mountains quoted at 75c to 90c and Quebec stock at 65c to 70c tier bag of 90 lbs, ex-trttek. The tradedn a Jobbing way was report- ed iatr and prices were unchanged 111 90c lwr 1mg 0i’ 80 lbs tax-store. NEW YORK, May tzanaagglttr. "flgulllr- Reflililt-‘l 56.199 cases. gsresh gathered, extra firsts, 27¢ to c; d0. fifsts. 25c to 26 1-20; State Pennsylvania and nearby westernlliennery, whites, firsts to elttriw. 30c to 34c; State Pennsyl. vania and nearby western hennery browns extras, 31c to 32c; do. gathered, browns and mixed colors firsts to extras, 26c to 30c; storage packed extra firsts, 28 1-2o t0 29c; ICORNST ' Lift Off with Fingers Doesn't hurt a tbit! Drop s. little "threesome" on an mining corn, in- stantly‘ tihat corn dtops hurting, then shortly you liilt it right off wtitth fingers. ilrtlily! ' Your drugglet sells a tiny bottle of "Freezers" for a few cents, suf- ficient to remove every hard corn, soft jcornt ,o_r corn between the toes, and the calluses, without sore- ness 0r irritation. AGENTS WANTED Opportunity for men or women, students. teachers and others. to earn 810 Der day or more for hund red days or longer: guarantee COVBI’! IIBOBBBETY BXPBIIIBB; BDBPB’ FORM FOR TAKING ADVANTAGE ' Bl’ Mltii $3.00 ton more for white 200 per cent more tfor This makes the CHARL the CHEAPEST, FIRST-C PAPER IN THE COUNTRY. _ We recognize that thefarmer is receiving reduced prices for IllS products and 1s entitled to a corresponding cut in what he requires to buy. He requires an up-to-diate Illtlfnlng newspaper, more t who take advantage of t PRE-WAR RATE OF -..-----.--.-- Charloitetown Guardian City Delivery $5.00 ’ Notwithstanding that we are still paying $80.00 pet- Daper than we dtd before the war, and postage, the CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN h d t - ' d FOR A P WEEKS to cutfiIte Iogsmlne ERIOD O-F FIVE fl 4m... and reduce its price to THREE DOLLARS BY MAIL AND FIVE DOLLARS FOR CITY DELIVERY OTTETOWN GUARDIAN LASS MORNING hllall ilfnything eise._So to those is o er the CHARLOTTE- TOWN GUARDIAN will be delivered t0 them AT THE $3.00 PER ANN UM OR $1.65 FOR SIX MONTHS BY MAIL. OR $5.00 PER ANNUM DE- LIVERED IN THE CITY. -.----.-...--¢-- 4 4 NEWS- ¢------' .. .. OF SPECIAL OFFER MAY A16TH--—JUNE 18TH To the CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN, CHARLOTTETOWN Enclosed please find $. . . . . . . . . . .0. . Subscription for one year ’( or six month your special offer. “or. Iii“!!! ,4» V . Name . . \ Address......... -»---¢---.-- , . s) according to the terms of -..-.---....--|- -..--¢---.--~¢-- l» I I LIVE 0H0 '" GS H. J. ‘Carver will take delivery of live hogs at Mt. Albion Statlon ‘Wednesday, May 11th inst, paying current market price. This will be the last shipment for us from, this station for this season. Hogs must be fasted, or otherwise taken at ro- duction from regular price. DAVIS & FRASER N OTIGE Take notloe that any person or persons selling or having in their possession beer_ or other drinkable liquids, which contain more than two and one-half per centof alco- hol, vrhich has not been obtained from a vendbr will be prosecuted under the provisions of the Probi- bitlon Act. / (Signed) GEORGE H. BARBOUR Chief Inspector FARMERS Norton We have a few tons of Animal Flesh tankage also a few tons of Dried Blood for sale at our Abat- ton- on Kensington Road, Charlot- tetown. . Farmers wanting a supply of those fertilizers should call at once before we get sold out as we nave only n. limited quantity. v - cantaoum PACKING co, l Lilfi. do. firsts. 27c to 28c time or full time; experience un- J. M. Hoop, Manager p - nctressary. Write for particulars, phone g ___‘ Winston Co.. Dent. 0. Toronto. Plant 53a t MN» Office 532 4+o+oo+0+oo+++oo++o4 54 3'37"" 3"“; > . ' p’ . ' I ~ 4 . _ . Speedy runabout Motor Boat t Engine high speed eight horse power. Baltlrldge clutch. 8. E. HENDERSON ’ Canadian Empress. Auction Sale The undersigned offers for sale the Wightman Hotel, Lower Mon- tague, beautifully situated on the south side oi‘ the Montague River 5 miles‘ from the Town of Mon- tague and l 1-2 from Georgetown. Best of bathin within 50 yilfllll of Hotel. U surpassed facilities for boating, there being a. b01190! river and two wharves, at one oi which the S. S. Magdalene calls three times a week on her way t0 Pictou. etc. Within a few yards also of good fishing. Hotel anti all outbuildlnlu are in sood rev!"- There is three acres of land. p 18in ily orchard of 23 apple; 10 cherry; ‘I plum, raspbe t, and strawberry patches and a good kitchen Ill‘- dsn ready planted. Electric lights in Hotel. Torrists pro- nounce this tho tbeet summer H0181 site on P. E. island and last s08- son less than half the applicanlil could be accommodated. Reason! for selling are not financial, as l am convinced that this might b8 developed into one of the best and largest summer hotels‘ in the Ms- rltrimo Provinces. D. J. STEWART. Lower Montague, P. E. island. m tut stun” KENTUCKY MAROUE, 209% Enrollment No 12.805 No 1n offering the Breeders of P. E. Island the standard stallion Ken - lucky Marque 2.09 1-2, l an offer- ing not only a fut r or and ‘a first class individual winner of championship in llll class, at the Provincial H0110 show, but beet of all a provsn Sire. in met and percentage of mares mat ed to him. The greatest sire ever imported to r s: Island. Sire vi Nloholn 2.0a to, Colonel nmtw years old. record 8.31 1'4 J- later - ‘used ,to 2.15 1-4. - B. Marque 2.10 1-4 and love- rel others. 1f you have a good In!" and want to lot into the 8"“ Peter u» Grout runny. vrltv °l' telephone for oat-d with full ' greo. He will be found, on 151"" t cultural Egfwolonfldl” ‘Entrai- U7‘ table _ .. cub at first "t-"irsa- .':':'.::-"'-&°."‘-" “F” amuoso -