.- .,-,,g-..,;._.ur»"&sa...» I v OOKOQG'OOQ¢- "shoe and Catalog. run cone ion LADIB .0» Isle ‘hv the Hooves-liar Remod- ollilll. Riley Building, Queen St. .. . _ meal-swan. A1’ TH! Auction-st Sprlugton of D. A". MsoLousld. Wednesday. Nov. 8th thereirlll’ be sold zoo bushel of graded ‘mm _mwnwu’ Potatoes. i .-‘".~.(.al - .. . ... irr- 2.103‘ ‘P’ fittltiil-hlti... .4‘; Remodelling, Rlluy mums-l‘. Queen St. 800052-2- lmtll acorn-liner sol-tool..- ma» following is the standing of we‘ Buuthnori sdbbnl idr the month d: October. Grade ll.-—l, Annie Vail; 2. mule Smith. Grade 1l\L—-1, .10.. enh Hayley: 2. Kenneth Muinnis; 3, Mary Hayley. Grade lV.-1. Flor. 90W Mill-ell; 3. Jock iMdlnnis; 3, Marjorie Kelley. Grade V.—1, Eliz- abeth Mclinnis; 2,'Helen Mclllnis; 3, Annie Molnuiis. Grade V1.—1, Emmi! smith; 2. ‘Mary Mclnnls; 3, Annie Kelley. Grade VllL-l, Mary 31mm; 2. Wlnnifred Kelley; 3, Jane Smith-Josephine Harring- ton, teacher. w» assemblies J HARRINGTON SGHOOL- The following is the report for the ‘ month of Oct. Grade Vl1.-1, Nellie Shaw: 2. Margaret Rodd. Grade v. 1, Emily Stewart; 2. Leighton phll. lips; 3. Blanche Jones. Grade IV.» 1. Helen Stewart; 2, Vernon Hughes; 3, Percy Wise. Grade Ill. ~—l- Charley Hughes; 2. Lottie Rob- ertson; 8, Kenneth Stewart. Grade i...‘ _, , i EAV ‘i"i.OUR and Improve Your Baking: BBAVBI FLOUR esatsi ll the riahassa aal [sadness of Oataria Wiatsr Wheat so-hiaad with aansll Wastasa Hard Wheat la jive It straajth. ll l. u. .4. sslsatilaally hlaadad em as the market-sad eaa ha nailed ea ta live the bsst bak- hl rssalts an’ lice. flak for it at year |roaar'a. THE T. H. TAYLOR CO. ~ ullrrso -- ~ulllrllau . ' - . h.‘ ' ONTARIO ll.—1, Hope Rodd. Grade i. Sr.-1. Stanley Shaw; 2. Margaret Hughes; 8, Thelma Wise. Grade l. Jr.—1. Audrey Ph-illips; 2, Vernon Roberts. Perfect attendancw-Helen Shaw, Chesley Hughes, Kenneth Stewart, ‘Hope Rodd, Sta/nley Shaw. Thelma Wise, Audrey Phillipa-Elva.‘ L. Bernard, teacher. . SCHOOL WORKA-Honor roll oi East Royalty School for Ootobe .— Grade lX.—1, Vera Andrew. Grade Vl.-— 1, Ruth Harper; 2, Marjorie Irlhrpcl‘; 3, Earl Bradley. Grade V.— 1, Sarah Gallant; 2, lsabel Andrew; 3, Donald Wheatley. Grade lV.—1. Joseph Gallant; 2, Mae ‘Hearts and “Marion MacWilliams, equal; 3, ‘Rose Bradley and Wallie Andrew ‘equal. Grade lI.>—-1, Will-lam Wheat- lley; 2, Norman MacWl-lliams. Grade 1 (a)—1, Jack Connolly; 2, Vera =Russell and McNalr Robertson. equal; 3, Dixon Holmes. Grade l. (b)—fl, Edward Love; 2, Woodrow Wheatley; 3. Berenice Howatt. Grade l (c)-—1, Edward Dcucette; ‘ l2, Georgie Harper; 3, Mary Love. Perfect attendance.— Vera M’ ldrew, Earl Bradley, lsalbel Andrew, lSarah Gallant, Joseph Gallant, Mary [Chandlen Wallis Andrew. Marion lMacW-llliams, ‘Rose Bradley, Wil- liam Wheatley, hicNair Robertson, Woodrow Wheatley, Georgie Har- - ipar, Edward ’I>oucette. , Monthly ‘laverage attendance 34.4. Percent- ;llge of attendance 86. Following ‘pupils received the Palmer Method iBution. Isabel Andrew, Sarah Gal- ‘lant, Louis .Wiheatley.—B. E. Stewart, teacher. ISLANDERS WED.-A very pret- ty ceremony took place in St. V640 High Priced Peits Prepare your foxes for the peltlnq season. Reduce . meat and Incline Ood-liver-oli for biscuit. This will give your vigorous foxes with glossy pelts bringing highest prices. imperial BlStllli c», Lid.‘ ~ Charlottetown gkkknkkkk wvv ‘ Y NEW YORK FISH ADS ' SHIP YOUR SMELTS RELIABLE FIRM Highest VPricés I rd A LIVE‘ Quick Returns L. GOODMAN & CO. Wholesale Commission Dealers in all ‘ Kinds Fish *- SMELTS out“: {SPECIALTY FULTON MARKET. NEIWiYORK Write idi- wiltélwil ‘ xkknxk. kgékAn Jantes Pro<Cathedral, N. Y., when M-lss Margaret Hughes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. P. M. Hughes, Souris, ‘P. E. 1.. became the bride of Mr. Urban P. Bradley, son oi Mr. ‘and Mire. Patrick Bradley, St. Ter- throughout Canada being an ex- European War of 1914. He fought in the worst battles of the war and and 1914 star for bravery at the ba/ctle of Arras where he was a second time. Miss our Island wounded Hughes being one of in Western Canada has many friends and usqualntances. The bride was dressed in grey crepe de chene with hat to match and was _ attendedby her sister in law» Mrs. M. J. Bradley. while the groom was . ably supported by iul-a brother M. J. Bradley of N. Y. Rev. Edmund J. Reilly W. ‘ the ceremony ai- ter which the happy couple went to the home of iMr. and M-rs. lMich- ael Wilson where a sumptuous sup per was served in Mrs. Wilson's usual good style.The newly married ’ couple left on s. short honeymoon to Philadelphia amid the good wish- es of their many New York friends. Children ' Can he QAAAAAAAA ¢; v , , r v VAL AA THE LARGEST HANDLES AND Dlgylilll _ on TH-lil stimuli-o cllslllo (INOQEPORNIEDl . 0208., 8i ROBBINS BllTORS Oli‘ , . . r .- slmm-my “ma; you: ooueloullnnrs or i ‘SMELTS \ n we ‘l like him t l W h. ‘Anew ibis. . ' r/ " ' 1 I v ‘ma. ‘ Sent litre , Realize that ohlldrsn pra- i for our store to others. It is " > baeallss we treat them right. 1’ I We understand their orders. _ understand their needs. We sales! 2 S =_ 5 '.< : i : 2 your NNHNIIVU I 1 will piano you i both with out: aervias- 4_. llflfliflh . . ~’ ‘till Great l ~ Prion: voun reaerrsoonaltb "l9 spacial dinner‘ Thanksgiving Du! at the Victoria Hotel.‘ wENTifiliTdAlgalb AUTHOR Mrs. ‘ - Elllnvh rm no entertained ‘ ll°ll8htfullyl at the” tea hour on Thursday in honor of the‘ cele- brated author. Mr. ‘Baeil Kip; of Cambridge. Mass, a native oi Charlottetown. P. E._,l.. and slllo lectured before the Canadian Club last evening‘ says the Si. lob Journal. l1‘,.\\-3,, mieed l v‘~"klll‘l 2301.13.27’? “.23., '°..i'.'£°.‘i.7$n‘“.‘.i;.'i Jtartr bloqd canning through . , . tile con l-stcd spot. This rcllcvclrplcs- " fir? an soivni-aa. Tlid pain vanishes.- . i! lllacl- is warm. glomng comfort, . Tl! Sloan's on struincli and bruised "lllwfl- ll allavr nvuraluia and back: _ lrllc- Brcuils up colds in chest. keep ithnlldy, quell-arias are so widely known. 5? Know-ll Joann-new. Thonaaa. Hicks writes recently to Rev. Steele of St. John that he was until a. late date hoping to-he back spin in his adopted country; Jladrin Canada before winter came. At presen » ~ - . helices not expect to be in Cana- slum“ » I da until next spring. His health . . Ohlsrter Oak Purse‘ at Hartford in i-ggVa. being timed separately in ‘Ilbr 1022 E. Colorado has elx seconds. one third. and three fourths to show for eleven starts. At Cleveland he finished second to Nedde when she won in 2.03%. He was also second to Greet Britten when he won at the Columbus summer meeting -in 2.03%,‘Favonl- an defeated him at. Philadelphia and ‘Hartford and lPeter the Brewer in the Transylvania at Lexington. in the second heat of this event E. Colorado was again secondzln miss. ‘ ; Few horses have trotted more last heats than E. Colorado. He has been on the go since he was a hWO-YCBFOIG and at the close of this season he showed that he had as much racing speed as any of bis younger rivals. While he failed to win iu 1922 his chances for next season lock good. lEarly in the season when the three-year-old stake material was ‘llellll F?‘ ’ few overlooked is good as also is that of Mrs. Hicks. He is preaching quite fre- quently and enjcyli-ng his work. iln Manchester he has been prl-vli- eged in hearing: distinzl-llflllifd ~ preachers and lecturers and also in visiting the great libraries. HOTEL ARRIVALS - VICTORIA MOTEL ‘ ‘RP. Blackey, Montreal, Mrs. S- S. Weatherbie, Bollevue, Alfred Weatherbie, Bellevue, W.A.~Stew- nrt, iSt. John, RH. McFurlane, St John, A..K lMacKasey, Moncton, L. The Losers BY W. H. Gocher. 3100i! l-Yllc is reserved for the winners. They get the honors. The losers make the back ground of the picture. Racing requlreg both. One cannot exist without the other. At the average_meeting mere file from ten to twenty win- ners. Each of them has his brief parade before the grand stand, ‘Thelrgrivals who forced them out are led away and forgotten by the average spectator. Suavity and Helen Dillon. These fillies met as two-year-olds at Col- umbus and Lexington. Suavlty won at the Ohio capital in 2.08%, and the Dillon Axworthy filly in the two-year-olil division of the Ken- tucky iFuiurlty in 2.10%, after Suavity had a heat in 2.08%. ‘Four tilirlls is all that Helen Dil- lcn has to show for her trip to the races in 1922. II-n the llintron Stake at Toledo she finished second in two heats to Lee Worthy, one of the miles being trotted in 05%. M Reallvil-le she chased iPeter Earl out in 2.04%. but in the final sum- mary Lee Wynolot ‘was between her mill the winner. Hunter also Orlylworlhy when‘ J. Macdonald, Moncton, E.C. Furn- 'Each season there are a number start on the opening day of the September meeting at Columbus. lie was nnplacsd to Worthy Mary in 2.06%. The following week he forced Czar Worthy out in 2.033,’, finishing in front of Tauirida aull_ The Great Rose. This flash was, followed by defeats in the Walnut‘ Hall Cup and Ashland at Lexlug _ i011. l Blnque only scored once out of, fifteen starts for McDonald on the’ trip from Cleveland to Lexington.‘ On the first time out at Cleveland, Blnque finished second to Bobbin,- and won a heut in 2.10%. Noble! Argot and Baron Worthy bowie-iii him over at the two Toledo meet- ings, and a fourth to Miss Wlllloulzh- ‘by in 2.10% was his tab on his second appearance at _C-leveland.l 0n the iirlp over the eastern loop of the Circuit, llena. Azoff defeated him at ‘Pllliu-ltllplllit, Peter the Brewer at ‘Poughkeepsle, Monarquc at Readville, and Finvarra at ‘Hart- ford and Syracuse. and aea if‘ it ta not the most delicious Tea you ‘ever "Most Tea-DrinkeralThlrak It is.” tasted. “WE WILL CARRY ON IF MR. CRERAR RESIGNS" SASKlVPOON, Nov. Evans, Federal Al. 11,, for Silskzltoon 0n iii» return todayfirom England, i-xpr- ifluli personal opposition to tin» mooted fusion of the Progress- ivc party with the hiberai-i‘rui-‘ii'v‘.~ifi- ire wing in the House of Commons. ivcz. just bo¥ Tilt party's purport- ginning l0 h.‘ ...~f-oiiil.li.~iiieil, ho said and should lilm, 'i‘. . (‘rt-rar, tile party Louder r _n, "w- will wr- ry on," he rlkilitii .__-_-¢v&-—-- OVER $0.000 PAID FOR JACK BENTLEY NEW YORK, Nov. »i.-~Jollu Dunn has finally iul on: mm o! his star players. The Giants hale purchase! Juck Bentley, and iiiu price was $50,000 plus several young players to be turned over to Baltimore not‘. spring. The price asked was the i.---~.lohn ' ell, Amherst, W.A. Holmes, Tor- onto, 0nt., W.H'. Fraser, Halifax. R.J.~ ltfoliionnell‘. St. John, S. 0. of last performers which on ac- count of being engaged where they gut the place from her at Syracuse where Uetcr ‘Earl won again in 2.05%. McDonald made three starts wlthillllginsl HUU-"mi- bl" l") "M" Bmque M Coiumbuk In m; first would think oi‘. it. (‘lfiCUtlhlH iurntvl son's. Mr. Bradley is well known soldier, having served during the was wolinded in the battle of Ypres. He wears a military medal ! teachers and having tang-ht school Martin, ‘Moncton, C. Bishop, St. John, jai... Gravel, Strnttord, Ont. H. Warren, SL-John, H.A Hall, Toronto‘ W.C. McLachlin Toronto, M. Hall, London, Ont., J.0. Mar- tin, Montreal, C.E. Douglass. Mono ton, W.E. IBBFIIOB, Moncton, L. Kennedy, ltfoncton, J. Nicholson. Summer-side, HJl. Bclulard, St. El- eanors, 11G. Rogers, Sunbmerside, D. Gunning, Campbell, J.0.C Camp bell, sununerslrie. S. A. Heitz, Hsliilax; A. L. Mc Lieod, Montreal; H. H. Cox, Mo- rel]; Mrs. ‘H. H. Cox, Morell; C. . Rogers Sumlilersldie; W. G. Church. Suunmerside; J. E. Sin- clair, Emerald; G. S. Inman, city; B. W. Webb Quebec; F. Gotbard, Hamilton; F. B. Bishop, ‘St. John; A. J.-Duff, Halifax; E. Bontet, Montreal; Mrl and Mrs. A. S.’ Gunn Moncton; H. S. Drlnan, Sf. John; A. B. Binns, St. John; A. W. Cook, Halifax; E. A. Wheepley St. John; S. B. Scobell, Mont- cannot win drop out. of sight. Some of them come back and win the following year, while others only add ‘to the number of their starts. Then again there are others which after a few brilliant seasons drop intc a losing streak and cannot win although they can race as fast as at any time in their careers. ‘Oi the fast trutters that have been seen on the mile cracks of late years it would be a difficult matter to find one with as much speed as Taurlda which failed to w-in a race or evena heat. This daughter of Peter the Great: be- gan her turf career as a. three-year- old. Heir first start was in the Matron Stake at Syracuse in 1020. Emma Harvester won the first heat from lDaystar ln '2.09%. lTauridn finished seventh. On the next two trips Taurlda forced Sister Bertha out in 2.07%, 2.06%. Tuuridafis next Biflififl were in the stakes at Columbus. where she was distanc- ed by Sister Bertha. and unpluced ‘Suavliy dld not have as much, speed as she showed in her two- year-old form. Out of nine starts she finished second in two events and there were but two starters in each of them. Alta Evans started at all of the, 1922 Grand Circuit meetings ex- cept Syvrucuse. Rain cancelled herI engagement at the New York State Fair. Her card for the trip shows heats. The first was recorded all the Cleveland August meeting in| 2.07% and the second at Hartford in 2.14% in the mud. Two seccnds,| one third, and six fowrthe is her This roan mare has had s. busy, years Alta Evans took the word iul forty-one races over mile and half-i mile tracks. ivon twelve, was second in ten, unplaced in eight. ‘real; Mrs. R. L. VanMarter, New York; Joseph J. Rapple, Toronto; Summerside; Arthur C. Rogers Summe-rslde. . REVERE HOTEL Geo. lPerryyNewfounliiand; A. ‘McDonald. Sourls; J. N. McEach- ern, Souris; ‘D. L. MacDonald, IMonrrsal; A. W. Sudbury. Bede- que; F‘. B. Lowther, ‘Summerslde; S. E. Clarke. St. John; L. F. Hof- man, Montreal; Mr. and Mrs P. H Jay Boston Jas B. ;ay, Morell; Mrs. W-olfaydr/n and two children, ‘SlIiOWOOIi. .Sask.; iRoddie McAdam West St. Peters; H. Murphy. Halifax; Hilbert Frizzell Frank Jay, St. Peters; Capt A. W. Bus- ben, Cardigan; J. A. McDonald. ‘Cardigan; Wm McDonald, 0‘Leilry ‘Capt John Smith. Georgetown; Thos Nelson. Brantford; R. . Piper, Toronto; A. McDonald. Scuris; M. L. Magee, St. John; J. M. Carmichael Halifax. —-—-<0¢———-— nnonl-errloil m ICELAND caittsn A SHAM ‘OOHENHAGLEN. Nov. 4.~Pro- hibltion in Iceland has gradually come to be a mere sham. accord- ing to the Lord Mayor Zinisen of Reykjavik. the chief city on the island. lnan interview the Lord Mayor is quoted as BBYlIlE.—" - “Iceland: is no longer a prohibit- tion country. Wines of 21 per cent alcohol may now be brought ill- Although the Spanish com-mercicl treaty. which provides for the im- portatlon of wines. is unpopular with man people as having killed prohl-bition. tis only fair to men- tion that the ‘prohibition act work- ed satisfactorily only the first two years. Afterwards smulklinfl M"! home-‘brewin! practically mud‘? the law nonexistent." N<>l12h8.--0 minerals, 'i,Ni'l‘fl,El“i."i Ia: lpraha all Bruises to do when you toipply Wizard's have an lniurv famous Linimeut. ito Ariou Guy when he defeated the A_ G_ Berry‘ Sussex; J_ F_ AmettJDiliou Axworthy -filly in 2.05%. ids. was started in nine races. Jean- iette ‘Rankin defeated her in the ‘first til-rec. made the ‘San Francisco filly trbt|youngsiers ‘that would make a fav-\ is rated among the losers. Next season she may he a winner. After hiss bowing in the Ken- tucky Euturlty won by Rose the Peter Volo gelding Walter Sterling was rated among iin her icur-year-cld form Tauri- » In one of them she _i-n 2.05%. lllld l-‘Qme buck ill ihekrrllble showing against Czan" ieaille notch to whi- Mter helm; Worthy, The Great V010 and the mnplalced to Grayworthy 9-f- Polllill- other four-year-olds tho/t were hill- zkeenhle and Jeanette Rankin Inied ldr a. trip down‘ the line in 1922. ltha Massachusetts at ltecdvlllelllis mm start Oil the mile tracks ‘Taurida finished fourth to iPeterlthis season was in the Ohio Purse ,Daw at Hartford and fourth t0 gt, ‘Clevelgnd in July, when 11g was] i-Yfllle the Great l1! ‘SYYHCIIBB- A1 unpiaced to The Great Volo. After Wlulumbua Taurlda was an acllveibeliig outside the money at Toledo ‘Cfllllllfilll-Ol‘ Wllflll Jeallellfi Rllllklll he ‘finished second to Princess Eta-lllon Stake he divided second and 1 Idefeated Princess Etawah in 2.03%.|wg;h a; Kalgmazgo in lolly“ This |Slie finished third in that heat. The race was followed by a (our-ill w ‘llhillllfln 03118111 ha!‘ when Dick MC- Czar Worthy at Columbus wheiihe llli/léllzllalgizllllfi Gfflyivilfihl‘ hi5 1'99""! won in .2.04'/4. Prince Loree raced O . . . For the past season Tailrida has two thirds and two iourths to show Great V010 “gum defeated him a; for seven starts. in her first racelme Clevaland August meellng, B! Toledo she W" "nlllflceii to When the Grand Circuit stables IPeter the Brewer. At Philadelphia swung easy" igmke; took m5 your. she flashed to the half in a minute yearmld m Springfield’ Qhlgh where ln the heal which ‘Bill Shawn Wvh he won over the half-mile track 111 2-9434- Tfllllldl was dipped '3“ during the fair in 2.12%. This was ‘Czar Worthy when he equalled hi5 followed by another record of 2.03% ‘in the first heat of 297% over the mile mack at 1n. the Empire Stale 510-000 ‘Plllse- didnapolls. Encouraged by this At Columbus she chased Peter the showing Wa-lm Sterling wasshlp. Blew", "l"- lll 293%. Whlla at 119x‘ ped to Syracuse and started in ington she finished third in two of the $10,000 puma The flggmgn the heat-s of the Walnut He" C"? caught him in the first heat. which The Great V010 0°11 l“ Walter Sterling made his next ‘2.03%,~2.03\/g. _ lDurlng die;- three years on the m’ turf Taurida has started in twenty races. Of that number she finish- ed tlrird in six, fourth in six and was unplaced in eight. IShe is still a maiden. lFor the first time since he was a two-year-old E. ‘Colorado failed to win a race or heat in 102-2. l~t was his seventh campaign during ‘i which he took the word in sixty-six races. 0i that number he won twenty-four, was second in twenty. f‘ third in ‘five, fourth in eight and ,, unplaced in ten. " lBeing by Colorado E.. a. three- year-old champion, George Esta- ‘ brook expected considerable from this colt when he made his first 5mm; ln 1916 as a two-year-old. “ The Real Lady was the star that year. She distanced him at Pough- kepsls and Lexington while he was . unplaced to her when she won at ‘Cleveland and Solumbua. flu his three-year-old form E Col- olrado won over the ‘Nebraska half- mlle tracks at Benson and Omaha _ before he appeared in Ohio where he won at Toledo and was tefested by Kelley de Forrest at Marlon . is antiseptic. . i.‘ dili- ,Ey Stra When the lrat message that laasea are seeded la lashed w I the alltla nerve. 10.4 Q linen the WJQ- " ..m~ their eyes din-i u all the ' l II ' “hi. . ‘riot raallaa that’ , ‘ r". ‘ssa all or asce- td avoid . para-sum "ileum as u use ‘ us so us. i _ tracks in half-mile tracks in obld and Miobi- _ . the stable of Walter Cox in ex- l.10% and one at Atlanta ill. 110% although he won a in 2.04% and was third In the 'i‘ran-, ' sylvellia. in which ‘Peter Manning‘ lllefQied ‘Inst y ~_ bot-blot moduli ‘modem and Youngstown. ‘in his two ‘mile track starts that season ‘E. C lorado =finlshed fourth to Miss Bertha Dil- ion at Kalamazoo in 2.08%, and was distanced by Bertha McGlll" in 2:11 sit Pough-keepsle. - - lFour victories over half-ml" Colorado was E. Colora- do's score lu 101:8. "File foliowin! 3 year he was shipped east and won * ten out of eleven starts over the eH wee then moved to Lex- gen. Colorado joined Ina-ton where fill. change for $10,000. , ' l ll l.ii"°'l fi ".‘“2.";.'..i“."‘l°.l'" i“ " ' " ‘ , _ vanced. Made could get, . est from Peter Manning's; 1069i st Syracuse af- ter- forcin] the Atoll gelding out was all that Ill. Oh iNadda in 1.01%. ll, Colorado won at ' Cleveland abdfrolado . Ailey ,. -., -z> J ' ‘ M that she took the word in fifteelvdisappolntmcnts races in which Bile W011 but tWoIstabIe. Purchased after a faattrisl showing in the summaries. Ito Henry Direct at Kalamazoo and turf career. During the past three- where he won a heat Of that number shelbalance of the story. third in five, fourth in eight, anthmember This year she-avan that has still to ealrn laurels Scott; chance in the threc-year-old races. away from Walter Sterling at the, second Toledo meeting while Tlie_ victory in | race he won a heat fvrom Alta Quest 36111195’ 00w" 7901mm 5334115 h“ in 2.07%. In the second he‘ defeat- ell Plain Mac in 2.06%, while that gelding beat him back in the next outing in 2.05%. Two more starts were added at Lexington. Binque finished second in both. This made Binquefs card for the season read one first, five seconds, one third and five fourths out of fifteen races. The Sherwood was one of the in the Murphy without any experience in racing the Norchen gelding fell by the way when he met ‘Robert Direct and Abbedale. Murphy tried him in twelve races. He finished second to Robert Direct at iPoughkeepsie in 2.07%. Three thirds, three fourths and unpiaced in four races tells the The Great Lullwater is another of the Grand Circuit car- on the turf. On his showing at Atlanta in the hands of his owner Ithat colt looked as if he had a lWhen Cox found that he could not. the‘ connect he gave him a series ofigtrlingiihaiid energy. OW races that may line him up for a ibetter showing in his fouuyear-old form. won at Philadelphia The Great Lull- water showed that he was up to three miles in 2.10. i Of the colts that failed to win in the big futurlties none made a better showing than Bunter. At Cleveland in the Ollll-lllllion Stal- a third money with lPeter Earl. He also finished second to Peterdfiarl at Syracuse and at Columbus. An- other second was added at Lexing- ton in the Kentucky Futurity which Lee Worthy won in 2.03%- -i-<0%———- ~ IN BOTH I -A soldier was crossing a barrack square with a pail in which he was going to get some water. A sergeant, passing at the time, ‘noticed that he was wearing a very dlisreliutable-looklng pair of trou- ‘sers. So he stopped him and asked: "Where are you solos?” -In the race Hope l0risco tosit m. liorlmi in tho could not strengthen the team. Well it remains tn bi- seen whether Cin- cy was right. fiicGraw has ‘taken him on, not only as a pitcher, but as a possible sub at first. incident- ally, Bentley; like Ruth, knows how to swing a bat us wellhs throw a ball. Thousands Oi Women Areiiow Taking This Newer Firm Oi ‘iron Worn-out Housewife Tolls How She Quick‘ Regained Her Health and Strength. "Only a short two I WOPkS ago I was so ~ tlrvtl, nurvntl! and xvnrll-nllt i\'oln tile drain nn my ltcrvos and stron lhoillouso- holu dru fury. thuti thought. coulil not kcoll up another day. A sliort two weeks’ treatment of the new- er form iron given me n. marvelous ncrcllso ill lloaltll. rim (lo my wlloln il-JSO without llolll. alilido not have evening "ni -ill" sick null nervous." "'l‘llo above is u typical hypothetical‘ cnsu."snys htJitlilcs I 5 Francis Sullivan. furnlcrly pii}'.'ei"iill of iloliizriln Ii-‘ (Qut-iluor Dept.) Non‘ You'll. z “l-atvlleswr Count‘: lluspit ll. " not be wull ulld strong uni full r4 force and pnwcr itllivafi you: i-loml l n iron. it is your rl-ll llluiri tir l ' you to resist and \>\.‘.i\‘lii\i u; that llnurisllcs m l w. - ma have pains v ind gostlon. h lllill blood with iliiflvillW-Ui‘ nil drug data ilnliillf i\ "To get some water.” ' “What! in those trousers?‘ “Ne, sergeant. ln the pail." A SENSAIOAL OFFERING OF WOMEN’S BROWN BOOTS AT 5-95 ~ This includes every pair of womelfs high class Brown Boots in our store, some of which cost us over tell dollars a pair, wholesale, , some with low heels for the growing girl, medium or fairly high heels, for those a SEE THEM IN OUR WINDOW there are all c? 60., - a rasmonasts iron. wllrll la l u lentils. anti lipplin. I assimilated into t ,. - Got. a lmttl akuit. flu t \- llkc tliouslnnn i .1 prls l: l , mnlullluztlli . i I i money. Th1- l.i.\ii_ lvw‘ scll you Nllxzil l lrun will. lhr. tiun or nlon-‘y ifliWil ' ginulluue. im- sale in tins city ry ‘ri-i. hic- iii-l wit Drug 1"». h 2 .\lll.4.‘5, ililfllPfi Drug Cc... Ltd, and rill nth-tr iii il-plsts. t. sizes in this lot, others with bit more ad- i .. ,1, _.,