ir' unsung lin Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Sigfiiature E _ii .1-_..._.1. al,-'::'u::¢s.mmr 1 ‘ s ||| ei L%f"*‘ ' E-‘Zin -safes*-is 1 Thirty ‘tears --- - llse /.pommnuynroousn neuund Loss orSu:nr. nfsinh snared B.xactCnpy ol’ Wrappa- ,___ .,.,,_.» eu...-ii.. -1- 1--. nw. "WWW For liver ma-rua . . w IN THE STUD The Superlatively Bred Stallion CATALON, 57741 Own brothers of Owaissa 2.06% 11-ll. Enrollment No. 20. Pure Bred (athlon is a handsome 15.3 hands, 1075 pounds mahogany bay Stallion of perfect conformation and absolutely sound. He has trotted a mile in 1141,, last quarter in 32 seconds. He is sired by Bingen 2.06%; sire of 175 in the 2.30 list. including ljhlan 1.58. Admiral Dewey 2.04%. King (`ole 2.04 Owaissa 2.06%. iull sister of Catalon. (`atalon’s dam was the great race mare. lmprovidence 2.12. by Prodigal 2.16. and dam of Owaissa 2.06%, also Prodigal Bingen 1161,. second dam Queen Wilkes, dam of lmprovidence 212, Queris 2.12%.. and Improbable (2) 2.20. This Stallion offers to the breeders of this Province one of the greatest opportunities ever placed be- roro them, as he is the only son of the great Bingen 2061;, standing in this Province. \\'iil make season of 1915 as folio ws:-» At Park Stables, At Catalon Farm. CHARLOTTETOWN SHERBROOKE April 20th to 23rd. April 24th to May flrd, :fe-" -1°»§;|h1 'Lift :stay icuii tu inn. _ ay . o _ s. _ .\ia_\' Cllst to Julie 4th. Ma! Linh to mst' _yum 141|, to 131” June .th to June 14th. June `_’t0i1l‘ 0"' The 'men of Grimbsby Town tspioca and bake in moderate Oven Do their bit on the rolling sea- until warm with sugar and cream. The storm-swept, treach'rousf grey N01-th gm- OATMEAL GOOKIES. Doing their duty unninchingly, Cr m “nt “gm c or \,u¢u,.' Keeping the death rata down. one fun G! mg". yolkmlf an e“_ _.é spoonful vanilla extract, pincl;hof A fifty-foot motor-boat provided “lt Add b°°"° 'blk 9’ egg' en with two gloss-bottomed 'wells, has "'° mm' r°n°di;°t" mth am) wb been constructed for the purpose or \°"’°°“f“l° °! “ug _W5 eg' ing scientific research of the sea bottom h.“" 'mp "mn" Dm” °“ hgh ¥ 1°” °c_ in Bermuda waters, The boat has a tm Phu" 5 5°°d teaspwnu ‘ .abt width 0115 feet, this uuusuui bn-auth ¢<;r<:;1=z t9 lx l;\’°f°"°dimf:::: gin being for the purpose of giving shea- Q “ mm" “ ° mo ' dinws while on the ocean engaged in mf ‘mm U" 'hat 'ith a \‘"“°' 'fhey the work of studying the sea bottom. mu M mn wh” they come mm which is 19 feet long are located on either side or and punuiiei with the “P "°* 'mi T“"°HE5 keel. They are so ari\iged that a .' ,args panv can Study tha sea_,0m_a_ British soldiers in the trencheshsve tions beneath the boat at the same a r-eceip! for making boom waterproof in tim Water b me 1 Dissolve two ounces of yellow wax rc ec ora, and an adjustable search- shredded) in me pmt béned mugged light can be let down with a cord. 0i1_ rpms an be dune in a jar A ¥h*°d M°t°Ph°"- in a slow oven. Then remove from _ p pearl tapl . _ -. Death with a tearing of limb from er, one and onehalf cups boi\il1Z Wi' cculsssoi-romeo soA'rs. 0°* *°““P°°~°f°1' °f mi“‘- 0”* ‘“""° ' 4 r. ._-_-._...._ ,_.........-. strewn with a devilish hate, Cook in a. hot ovm ten or lfteon __ , 8 _ \ minutes. This mcipe will make about Death may coma in a terrible form, one doun. Death in a calm or death in a DENTISTS' records teeth oo your lower .l°‘_" rank decay. And'P5l7l|° ' ologypoh\ts'out-tlihmewon 5' ’1`lxese»aix-naeth18NifD0f¢ ciimmnely irioontactiwith saliva than anyfotherfteeth you own. For-=theyfare thc lowectdnyoumnouth. And mum emu,-ns :nelzwo 'dwn ';_ Your own saliva in the bectpreaervuvofgourteoth. é Forhealtliymalivafmalko- 1ino,neutralizing'_the decay- promoting acid of ‘food -'.'t- 5 The glass bottomed wells, each of °v°”' but °°°“ hudm' ° _ 'kv , lr 1 ly) time Light is thrown upon objects This is It “Q 1 pg;-dates-and rendering lt bm-misss. “fhgg you CIIHW C108!! gufntlik8‘S08fling’ YOU all of yourteeth forthe 01110 in contact with saliva. You make them show in 75° uluckn Wm m given-to~the~-front six. Steriingliirum Y°\l'n Wm' _fm its delicious flavor goes tlirough.lIld'ifhf°U¢h andlataysiandistayl- And all the time y0\!’l'¢ enjoying the delicious Ster- ling flavor-the gum itself is uuiug your-'teeth in-s°°d turn. %\ In iv..-Y \¢’ mmumr venly bodies. ’ ’ . W`E'LL SEND THE FIRST few dmes of Gin Pills to you free-il you have any Kidney or BladderTrouhle. After you see how good they are-get the 501:. une at your dealer's. BARON MACK Pure llred Clydesdale stallion, No. 14361; Enrolment No. 26, will make the season of 1915, leaving owner's stable May 5, to Fredk. Bulman's, Rustico, noon, thence to John D. Dorions, over night, May 6 to E. McKay, New Glasgow, at noon; thence to owners stables where he will remain till the following fort- night. This route will be continued fortnightly, weather permitting, Mares at owner's risk. H. C. MacKAY, Wheatley River, 9833-5~7.\lftu8i. Owner, i THE PURE SHED CLYDESDALE STALLION Lord Winsloe CROWN RIGHTS 10182, Imp. CANAIMAN HORSE SOCIETY 2882. DAM ltosll coittulucirr zms, lap. Brown face and lege white. Foalcd 1008. Ind by Melntyre Iron., Park View. Griffon b leith. Y Sire Cataclynm 11849, by Hlawltha 10067. Prince Robert. by Prince of Wales. 2nd Dam Maid of Grlffen 21085, by Pride of Blacon 10887, by Baron'| Pride 9122. _ 3rd Dom Rosenthal 13681, by Prince of Albion 0178. 4th Dam Ron Lawrence 13682, by Prince Lawrence. ‘ 5th Dam Bute Rose M49, by Spring- hill Darnley 2429. In this stallion ls found as good a blending of tho Cl decdalo ani- ii ' ir ° examined nu ¥§ni°5%‘°l1..”‘l.iu.i°¢°f"el’l‘ii-. ..‘2¢°5‘§§‘?¢'§,’m:_u3~ will ‘ - tuners iThat'af5lh vzllm &Vw mw log V. »llcckenmppl_ie»-t{¢y’1e decidedlysupcriortioothers. Call, write or phone for particulars. y .champions of Great Britain as ln any draft hone In Canada. and that he will move n great sire I fool conddent. He is Ive years old. brown with white trimmings --face and logo. Wlllmakealouonfntheltndat S. Rintfco. Albert Crlwetl, Imager in charge. , ____ Service fee $10. Hare at ownor'| risk. d “Gillian lt. I ' LLLECKII' v m°?' A , . _ , , -.i..ss“ . x ~< .r /or ir. SH' R0b¢l'i Ball. the f8m0“8 HUGH- the tire and add two ounces _pf spirit omer, was rat er fond of tellin the 0( tu ming, U . ' story of a. correspondent who vgrrote _ Asriftfon as lt is cold it can be sp- 'nw sieflml Gum C0' °f Garuda’ Lmmed _ to him saying that, although he was plied. Rub all over the boots, especi- -I _ e grocer's assistant, his great ambi- ally soles and where the uppers are --_ . tion was to become an astronomer. attached to soles not thickly. Allow #_ q J Biit be got his ideas somewhat mix- this to dry ln., repeat, and repent tr , Sé a -,£\_ ed, for this was one of his sentences: SSRN- These "U26 89958830115 ¥““\‘° ' “My mind find; no real; for the mi, the boots quite impervious to rain or of her loot, save for one of the bea- BMW- CARDINAL FACTS. _ This io Cannda'| war. What will the harvest be? Increase of knowledge means in- crease of production. The first essential for the highest _vleld is good seed. Not only grain growers. but breed- ers and all producers are making his- tory at this juncture. Value of the crop is increased if treated for smut prevention. Failure to secure suitable varieties is a frequent cause of poor ensilage. All grain intended for seed should he cleaned and graded, in order to re- tain only the strong kernels. Farmers who have _ separate houses for their laborers have no dif- ficulty in securing help. Good labor is worthy employment in winter as well as in Spring Sum- mer and Autumn. If labor is scarce now, it will not be more plentiful in another year, so it is wise to encourage present help. A bureau of employment could find useful work in every town of size. Austria has decreed that every acre must he utilized for production. Wasting land is the worst form of ex- travagance. `~ Live stock is the foundation of per- manently succesaful farming today, as it has always been. The farmer who conaerves his best stock for breeding will profit greatly in the future. \Vhen manure is piled, and allowed to heat, the vitality of most of the seeds is destroyed; but _when drawn to the field from the stable, or not left long enough in the pile to become well rotted. manure is one of the most im- portant means of seed dispersal. Canada is many times larger in area than Belgium. but in population there is not a great deal of difference. that is. considering Belgium before the war. Britain la the protector of small states. The greater the area. and var- iety of area, the more protection ls needed when emergency arises. DlDN'T KNOW GABTON A New York clubman tells of a quaint character he met while on a hunting trip in Canada last summer. This man was of French extraction and proud of a friend of his in New York, one Gaston Lespinassepf whom he talked constantly. i "You live in New York?" he at once nskledd when tho Gothamite appeared. .. °_.. “You know Gaston Lesplnuse?" m"No. I don't think I ever heard of m." The Canadian seemed disappointed as well as nonplusled. Then he began again: ~ "Yon live in New York?" "Yes." ';'You do not know Halton Leeplnna se. ' "Never heard of him." The Canuck grinned fncreduoualy. Then with an slr of one convincing anioither out of his own mouth, he ca : "Gaston lu the cook at the hotel."- -Chlc'a¢o News. BELGIAN BABES ARI BROUGHT T0 MOTHERS. Hn. Lewis Chun, an author of note, wife of a famous profueor of lfteratnrl at Columbia Univer¢lt.y,_ who hu been acting at a war chap- eronv., escorting gh-le and babioe fron: Belgium and other places on the war-devastated continent to Eng- luad, tl:a|“alx;i;lnvsd 2 New Yorkhgity Ill I \l¢l¢4l ll About the recent work, although she rdatll no tall. To a re- WUVM oh' A 1 O ,C - - ' ` f’ _ ' . . . . _ . H t v aus of z fixed and one ounce or Bm-gandv pitehibotii Mode m, ‘ .l _ . KING ies from Mrs. Chase. she said: “I haven't had any thrilling experiences and I suspect. those who tell of them, So feiv see the fighting line," When asked to describe her work, she threw some sidelights ou the Bel- gians. “ln the relief work for Belg- ium a committee of English women attended to all the real, boring clrudgery, but ol’ course only neiitrals could travel for the Government, and this is where American women came iii." She described bringing deserted Belgian babies to their mothers in England-deserted after the war broke out. by the parents, who fied to England. "I shall never be able F it _ I 1-1 to understand it, but that is what suspect. It. is right for America to they did. After they got. to safety help any starving nation, but there they wanted the children; and that are others who are starving, torr- is why this committee was formed. the peasants of Poland, for instance, Those wishing the children brought or peasants of Brittany. They are no to J-Ingland could apply to the com- more responsible for the war than mittee, then we American women the Belgians, They don't even know would go after them. One woman left. what it is about." Mrs, Chase lays ii two weeks' old baby; and the most that she is the only genuine neutral beautiful boy I ever saw, a child of she knew, because, whatever country foiir years, was left in a hospital. she was in she syn:-pathilcd with the l-le wmilri have been taken to a other side-in the Aiuericiin Red loundlings' hospital il I had not. ar- Cross nurses who became such ardent rived just uheii I did." According to supporters of whatever country they Mrs. Phase the Belgians have a more src in that it is amusing to Bee the complex character than Americans [partisan sprout awaked iiithem after from Belgium and other places on they see active service. ‘ C thrilling pbrtar who expected some lurid stor- lf' r Sha?/£%£P 00 I 2 l i' E _ .' um va \@~. /z.,,‘,‘cf__l.v \,. \ s :mmf l _ SMo;K1 ‘NG Tosacco O 0 I i¢a_lsovutvi>innackazes,au