ll N i _- . _,-. _ __ . _‘gl-F'giQ'.*,._/. » 1 _ _ _ - , , » - ' _ ITM GUARDIAN egos Ninn _ - _ I _Dq1rymen_. F s L 1-aunasaq W .. - f _ _ g - - For Parents. Teachers. Pupils, armer 'ro 1'-w_rlrnMsk Farmers and others interested are invited to contribute to The Farm, °:.'".....~ m roads e e uar mm-_» you tion, correspondence or 2th.,-'wHe. agofgwers wiu he haven by “peru to al questions of geneiri interest and space will he given o ,hy article that will in any way help to advance Prince Edward Island interests. ~ . . I Contributors are asked to have their articles at ,this office early each week, as only' a short emergency item can be handled as late as one p. m. Wednesday, All received after that hour _cannot appear until the following week. ._-ii 1 :THE $CHO0L AND THE HOME Contributims _t for this department should be ad essed to President Teachers Association, Guardian's School and Home, r P. 0. Box 188 Charlottetown. MH § wonliws lusnnrrss FIFTY WORDS OFTEN MISPELLED Test your pupils with these: Grammar. business, potato, po- tatoes, brethren, arctic, several, geography, separate, February, judgment. iron, surprise. except, niece, until, occasion, scissors, believe. biscuit, apinacb,regiment, rhubarb. Britain, college, exercise, forehead, jewels, lettuce, light- ning. necesssry,' occur, pursue, rhyme, seizes, writing truly, formerly, whose, apron, spoon- ful, autumn, bicycle.. column, colonel, describe, foreigner. _sal- mou, yacht, destroy. FOR THE HOUSEWIFE How can I lower the cost of the family food supply? This is a question which many carefuul housekeepers are trying hard to answer. And as the meat bill is usually one of the largest, our at- tentions are. very naturally, first giv- en to it. ' ln her desire to find a remedy the housewife may--decide to try the cuts of meats which retail at low prices. Falling to produces palatable dish she goes back, discouraged, to the well known and easily prepared ten- der steaks. chops and roasts. Although highly nutritious, the cheaper cuts, unless properly han- dled, are generally lacking in flavor, possess long and coari"p fibres, and a large amount of connective tissue which the small boy calls “gristle." To give them the desired flavor these cuts may be cooked with vegetables and carefully seasoned. From such cuts as the lower round, the tail pieces of the porterhouse steaks. and even plate meat we can fashion delicious combination, as Salisbury steak, mock duck with dressing and garnish of vegetables, cannelon of beef, or beef_ loaf with tomato sauce. The fibres of some of the cuts which we do not care to grind, can he broken by pounding with the edge of a ueavy sauce or a specially devised hammer. This allows a large amount of iuices to escape, and_ lose flavor unless we take the precaution 10 hound flour into the meat to nh- sorb these Juices. Upon browning, the flour gives an added flavor. Meat treated in this way is called "Swiss steak." This needs. at first a hish temperature and very careful cooking a a low temperature after- wards. Another variation may be made by using round, chunk. dank or skirt steaks with vegetables, finishing ""'7V"I."”. You to have f Book 0 advertise 'our "HOME 60," FOOD CUTTER, we will ‘send one of these Cook Books fixes rsc¢i_ptof sc. In stam to ver mall ng. ele- Xirite :meet to us. This ll I lnty little- of everyday _ recipaatailing etrtomahesoeres ~ e 2 A " r economical and our 09'"- . _ - /f .=. /-’ I ‘_ _,... . _ 05"' Foul Catidf “X __ ,_ . the cooking at a low temperature in a casserole (a. small round porcelain dilh)-' By cooking a pot roast slowly for_several_liours the connective tis- es are softened and the _meat made more tender. ‘ L The meat is best:if first seared to retain the fiavoring materials, then carefully "simmered" over a very low gas burner. on the _hack of range, or in the tireless cookir for a time de- llendins on the s ze of ‘the piece; Some very good cuts which may be obtained and very auccessfuliy'cooked in this way are cross ribs. boned and rolled' rolled flank; chuck or rump. In tolving the meat problem the housekeeper must keep clearly in mind the retail price, the amount of waste in fat and bone, the time and n w fuel consumed in preparing.-Ada E. Hu t, University of Wisconsin. e MAKING COLORS Red and black make brown. Lake and white makes rose. Red. blue and black makes olive. White. blue and lake makes purple. Blue and lead color makes pearl. White and carmine makes pink. "indigo and lamp-black makes sliver Y. ' White and lamp-black makes lead color.- Black and Venetian red makes choe. olate. V _ White and green makes bright green Purple and white makes French white. Light geren and black makes dark green. White and green makes pea green. White and emerald green makes bril- liant green. Red and yellow makes orange. White and yellow makes straw color. White, blue and black makes pearl grey. White, lake and vermillion makes flesh color. Umber, white and Venetian red makes drab. White, yellow and Venetian red makes cream. Yellow. white and a little Venetian red makes buff. ____ APPLE SNOW. Peel and grate one large sour apple sprinkling over it a cup of powdered sugar as you grate it. to keep it from turning dark; break into this the Whites of two esss and beat all con- stantly for halfi an hour; take care to have it in a. large bowl. as it beats up very stiff and light. Heap this in a glass dish and pour a fine, smooth custard around it and serve. »-Son Francisco Cali. U ____ L_ IDEAL CRUEL. To make gruel successfully, great care must be exercised. To make pae- Bllt Sroats gruel. the required quantity should be mixed very smoothly and carefully with cold water; milk is apt i0 lm-ke if IUIIIDY. says the Washing- ton Herald. When mixed. is should be added to equal quantities of boiling milk and water;boil all gently for 15or 20 minutes. When done, three parts illl a cup and serve with cold milk or cream and castor sugar. *__* TEA ROLLS. b Two tablespoons of butter, one tea- spoon of salt, one yeast cake dissolv- ed in quarter cup of luke warm water, lentirq wheat flour. two tablespoons of sugar, two cups of milk scalded. Put the butter, sugar and salt into the bread pan; add the hot milk and when lukewarm add the yeast and three cups of the flour. Beat thoro- ughly and let rise again. Turn on to a floured board, knead thoroughly and roll with one third inch thick. Cut with a biscuit cutter make a deep crease through the centre of each with a knife handle, brush one half with melted butter, fold the other half over on the buttered half and press the edges together. Place' in a buttered pan one inch apart, let rise until light and well puffed and bake in a moderate oven 20 minutes. ii LEMON PIE. In making a lemon pie the shell should always be baked first in order that it may not soak up the juice. The filling is made in this way: Stir into a cupful of boiling water one table! spoonful corn starch disslove in cold water. Cook until clear. Add one cup- ful of sugar, one tablespoonful butter the yolks of two eggs well beaten and the grated rind and juice of one large lemon. Cook two minutes longer, and pour into the shell. Beat the whites of two eggs stifhusingawire whip to entangle as much' air as possible, add two tablespoonfuls powdered sugar and spreid lightly over the ple. The next step is where so many otherwise succeeiiful cooks fail. Instead of the meringue .proving to be of delicate, foam-like consistency, a tough, leath- ery compound is the result. The trou- ble is in the heat of the oven. The albumen of the egg requires slow cooking, so slow as to resemble a drying rather than a baking. Twenty minutes in an oven with the heat turned off is the usual time. Allow the ailing of the pie _to coo a little he- fore spreading the weriugue. Under these favoring conditions the result will be a tender dotifcate merlngue that will retetn it's e ginui thickness. -'l'odsy's.Mssuine. - _MILK IN IRIAD MAKING llIl° Colo! i Bt Hog Cat Lam - - i - , --_ `_'r9aorrro.`s¢l=1j. ao. . _ ronowro. g I _Ho5s_0i_I Cars .... .... ......$10.00 Ca,le...‘... .. ........ .,... 7.65 Lambs .... .... .. 8.75 r ey .. ....... ..... .........55c . TORONTO. setter .. .. .. ......asc EK!! che .... .... .. ....28c ese _(large) .. ....15c ~l'llnam».¢ T "lu _a covered box until they can be carried to the held. Scald and dis- infect the drinking vessels and boards. Donut allow wet meshes to stand; remove when the chickens dofftuoatsin fifteen minutes. ‘ f e er's work is so strenu- ous tl\l_t__ihe chicken house can not be properly looked after, better let the chickens perch ln the trees rather than roost in a germridden house.__ Prairie- Farm and Home. _.._.._______, » 'rl-is Hsu THAT |.ave.` * Before me__ls the report of the Na. tional Laying Contest for July, 1914. Tliis__c_ontest was in charge of Prof- E. Quisenberry and conducted by A ._ 1 ‘AONTRIALI the State of Missouri, with s. view Hogs Fed and Watered . . . . . .$8.90 Cattle .... .. _... 9.25 Lambs .. .. ..........9.50 Barley ..54c Butter ,... .... .. .... ...28o Ess Cheese (lsrge) .. ....15c r2|oN'rnsA|.'. _ :go to improving laying qualltlgs of ° on Ca" "" "°‘*1°~0° hens. I hav6“Een"in close touch tie.. .. 7.15 _ ... ._ ._ .,........ ggi; fc me °=='-we °°m»°g; since the first one was l gurated more than eleven years at the agricultural college at Richmond, New South Wales, having Butter .. ,... .. . ...31%c served as o mambo, of tho commmoo Eggs ....34c so ~Ch°°°° U°_r5°)) "" " “ “"15%° temationai in its scope. I have long asthat competition was in- ..,.....,. _ .1 had regular reports from all the im- BuFFM'°' ortant com etitions ever held in s .. .... .42c P thi thi are are hens is purely a matter of chance. In seiectihg hens for the Australian competition during the last eleven years, one man has managed to se- lect the winning hen twice. In every other year the prize has gone to a P s country and I am beginning to uk that competitions of this kind valuable to the extent that they teaching that selecting egg-type 19 S 19 19 1 Sa La La T Last; week .. 7.50 'ronoN°ro. ocr. 1. _ ‘_ A ' ' cmle mmf. '* 'rms week .. ._ ........s7.s5 t -is new competition each year and all the have had a winning to their credit. White Leghorns have won oftener principal breeds kept in Australia han all other breeds combined, so it not strange that this breed shows Tw Sam . 1913 .. 2 ._ 6.55 1911 6.55 Th La Two weeks ago Th Sa e week 1914 . 1 O WGBH! HBO ,... ....... . 7.85 .. .... .. 9.00 .. .... 6.85 best' in the. winnings. To get back to Prof. Quisenhe_rry's report he says by way of introduction. "All signs sometimes fail and there are exceptions to the rules, but we are of the opinion that there is a definite type in poultry and there is a sm” M"k°t good dairyman finds that certain me week 1914 12 .. .. H. 1913 .... .. .. 11 ,... .... .... ..4.25 st' week .. ...6.00 Export Ewes. Lambs. is week ....$6.25 58.75 8.40 8.75 8.30 6.75 6.30 5.75 6.50 6.25 5.00 . . 4.50 Hog M-arket. \ 1 ... .. Grain Market. This week Las'tweek...... .. .. Two weeks ago me week 1914 . . . . 1918 .. .. 1912 ..1.00 1911 ....88 .. Top price 3? off cars. is week .. ._ ......$10.00 “ Last week Two weeks ago me week 1914 .. 9.25 1913 .. .. .. 1912 .. 9.00 91 . .. .. . . .. . .. .. 9.90 . . . . . . 10.00 .. . .9.35 7.10 Fail Wheat ....95 - .. ,.96 ....96 ..1.120 . _.90 58 58 52 38 44 50 Butter Market. °` Farmers’ Creamery Q _ Separator Fruits V This week ......26 29 . . . . . 25 stwerek . Two weeks ago.... ....35 Same week 1914 . . 1918 .. ....24 1912 .. ..27 1911 .... .. ..25 .. .. .26 28 27% 27 26 27 25 Ohaeie Market. Top price at Local Boards. Oats. he 45 characteristics and a certain confor- mation in cattle indicate the produc- tiveness or non-productiveness of certain individuals. It is generally a- greed that to be u good milker a cow must be healthy and vigorous; she must have a big body or plenty of capacity, and must have a large milk veins. The more we study pro- ductiveness in poultry the more firmly we are convinced that the same gen- eral priuciplm applyto the productive n; and there is an egg type in poul- y and the day will come, if it is not ow at hand, when we can tell in a general way the good from the bad by certain and definite characteristics Of course in the dairy business the Babcock test` is the final test of the quantity of butterfat, and with poul- try the trap nest will perhaps always he the final test.” ¢~- - ` Then, follows a paragraph about how a certain visitor had by merely looking at the hens as they passed fore him selected the good and bad layers, his judgment being confirmed by the records, adding: "We believe that any man with reasonable intelligence who studies year after year, the question of se- lection and breedingfor ogg pro- duction will get a certain and definite type firmly fixed in his mind. What is this type? That is the question." I am not going to agree with Prof. uisenberry, for to do so would con- ict me of being lacking in ordinary intelligence. I have been studying this question of egg production for so many years that the professor cannot remember back to the time when I began, and up to this date I_ do not know how to pick out of a flock 'the best or the poorest lay- ers. Prof- Quisenberry, having ask- ed a. question, proceeds to answer it by paraphrasing the remarks of his visitor who said that the good lay- ing hen is not level on the back, be- Thgs week __ _ _ _ _ _ _ __14% in hi er in front than behind She Wo week, 350 __ __1413.16 behind and deep-bodied in the rear. same week 1914 . . . . . . . . ._ .-.1415 She is brlsht of eye alert in her s sh - at week _.1411-1s is “iw “°\'f°W in *he breast- wid” In tail and thin, straight pelvic bones. 1911 .... ,... .. .... ..14% \@~-v°C¢I. Egg Market. Nt-rw-laid Eggs. This week .. .. ......Z8 Last week . .. . .. ....28 Two weeks ago . .. . .. ...28 Same _week 1914 ....28 1913 .. ....29 she has not time in which to lay 1912 .. .......27 1911 ..~.. ... ........24 -li-_'ii % ' POULTRY l CLEAN UP. WO lilly *HK-O SWIHII ovements, has a large comb, a high The record-maker lays well in Win- ter. ` Why it was necessary to assert that the good layer lays well in Winter I do not understand. unless the profess- or thinks that most of his readers lack ordinary intelligence. If a pullet hatched in the Spring does not lay well in Winter it follows that she will not make much of a record, because enough eggs to make arworthy record. This is a general rule to which there may be exceptions. Right before me is a letter dated Aug. 13, from Prof. Prentince Moore. poultry illlii-l'\l0i01' at the agricultural college of Idaho. This letter concerns a certain White Plymouth Rock pullet with which I amintimately acquainted This pullet was hatched June 2. 1913, and laid her first egg on January 1, 1914. On Aug- ust' 1 she had to her credit 156 eggs and from that time until the letter was written she had laid 18 more eggs, making 169 in seven months nd 18 da s. With 140 days of the a ‘ Y year left it seems quite reasonable to 'think that she w - duce the 31 a record, of pullet did make a ill be able to pro necessary to make in a__y_ear. This laying iii time to record. visitors Pi‘Of: ,this honor and very foolishly I pro- ceeded to point out the best and poor est layers, giving my reason for do- ing so. At the desk next mine sat a bookkeeper who' did not know one jokingly said he would take a shot at guessing, and I persuaded him to did not agree among themselves and not one of the experts made even an ' a roximate guess as to the good ,and ed that I selected the hen that made the poorest record as being an excell- good a guess as was made. A few yearrago a Barred Rock hen laid 251 eggs at the Maine Experi- n wonder, which she was. I have a_ if believe anyone would accuse her of of the same ty e, nor was either of her, her laying feat tending to this appearance to some extent. have been much discussed as a mean-s booklets describing the manner in which laying qualities might be dis- do so. In due course Prof. Dryden who published the results. The answers in _,_ ment Station, and was heralded as a C photograph of the hen, and I do not a being of the egg type. The hens that for laid 303 and 291 eggs respectively at his the Oregon station last year were not moe at Urbana' m_ 1 O U of selecting layers. Thousands of _ __ _. ‘_ ' AMONG THE HORSES give their reasons for the selections. I happened to be one who received brood of chickens from another. He ' l HH®@ Queen Abbess ‘by The Abbe, 2.04, carries 'a record of 2.03%, made winning race. F. !. 9. lt was all Voigo in the two~year- event at Columbus, _trotting two DD the bad laying qualities. I remember- $21,” Ln 211% and 2_09%_ o a e ` Jones Gentry was a genuine sur- ;:’Bfd;“i°;;‘gfi°g‘:g;‘;f' h1;h$_?‘;';k_§‘x‘;‘:_l;f; prise at Syracuse. when he trimmed _ . half and half, which was about as :ge 2.06 pacers, taking a new brand 2.03%. . ' _ ' Baring’s Comet was ousgide the mo- ey in the 2.17 trot at lem, N. H., ently. The event: was won by ndyke, 2.14%. * .U .0 Old Peter Chimes who has raced nine consecutive seasons, reduced record to 2.071/4 in a winning P them remarkably comely. Both had mghb;_msdb;_}§ ngtgsremaigkably _arg anlginworth 2.251/4. Bara. (2) 2.26%, °°m ’ an 0 'egg eu was ra' ' dard performers for Blngara, that are small and “Hubby when last I “W took their iecords at Hartford. ‘ U . Bellgara (2) 2.28%, are new stan- S i an 208 is oing back to » li. I; Within recent years the position, Calgfguo’ so as to have a Boon of exture and shape of the pelvis bones homo tmfnmg before meeting Peter ott in the $20,000 race in Novem- Y' s e s Miss Perfection the four~year-old covered and predicted by examining trotting more owned by R_ J_ McKen_ the pelvic bones through the skin me have been sold, yet I have never met at a breeder who gave much credit to the m discoveries of this system, although I have met many who have tried it. Prof. Raymond Pearl, of Maine, case, type has not very much to do with egg production. When Prof. breeding pen, and it does not .seem to matter much which hens are used good layers by looking at them, so I have given up trying.- Miller Purvls, l_,_._ b 2. § THE FARM § W* G ivide a. hea ing teaspoonful of tartar fi P li emoticf into eight or ten doses; break off the end of an egg, empty a tored egg. ln an -hour or two he will b be trying to turn himself wrong side give him a second ogg and 8- third if he will eat it. When he refuses to cat the egg and lots it lie by him for 5 throat. Afterward you may trust 1' him in your honhouso.-Jennie Will- 3 son. ‘ A FROST WARNING. in pulling the “rain lever" regardless of la himeslf”’ with the farmers of the m state. _ "snaps" which may injure croiJB Wm be sent to local distributors at 301 9 points in the southern and central. based upon information received from ' i d b reference to tho carefully disturbances advancing across the , plains from the West of North-West get the exact wording of the mes- of to two weeks before vegetation on higher levels is affected. ROOFS AND CHUTEB My experience has been that if the the pelvic bones are wide apart the hen an is lavins. and ir they are close te- her and it is most likely that she will gether she is not. be Prof. Dryden, of Oregon, and a good lt many other investigators are inclin- the ed to believe that fecundity is a sex- 34 linked characteristic, descending in from sire to daughter. If this is the volo made at North Randall track. I U * ' _ in THE see-EATING ooo. I _gl part of the contents and stir into the of remainder left in the shell a dose of day of last weok in 2_03,A_ which is tartar Gmane* Cmmne the dog in B' new time for a fifth heat. He also room or tie him and give him the doc- _ook the next hom in 203%' wbioh Y out. As soon as he is over nausea, a part of Wisconsin fbyhth€I>J0iiIi0§ 3: as H W°‘““°" B“""‘“ ° " “ ° “ th" ki I L i tier it lad gone D"I""*"‘°“° °' Ag?‘§A,“1_'“'° ‘,‘f_“"°"°d dvi. nffts. H-,will-Holi and ‘Fred w. at th” University ° I 500215 ' m bo each got a heat. The best time was Th°““’ “‘"““°°d °’°°“"’ S W 2071/,,, made by it-will-'roll which _of Winnipeg, won the 3.000 stake Hamline, Minn., stepping one mile 2.08%. . _ l Following the mile of 2.04%, by four-year-old trotter Mable Trask offer of $25,000 was refused for Cox's stake trotter next year. O U I took over sixty years to reduce record for four ear old trotters .y _ seconds, the record of Ethan Allen 1853, to 2.02, the record of Peter The get of Baring 2.121/4, are rac- Quinsberry says the trap nest is the ing well. Baring’s Comet now has a reliable wav to discover send layers I wlm-ace of 2.16%, while Brage lately, agree with him. After the use of sire set the record for a Maritime Prov- of the best layers as head of the ince-bred 3 year old trotter at 2.20%. o p is Frank Fox won three races at the as dams, although it is quite probable Reading, Mass., fair recently and also that daughters of good layers would got one fourth money. He drove produce pullets that would prove to John Dewey the fastest heat of the be good layers. After 30 years of meeting and was awarded a chest of poultry breeding, I can not se_lec__t_ silverware. . . . Miss Dorris M., 2.071/1, the 1'. »t in Breeders’ Gazette. . three year old pacer, is now on I.~ -! y Stoughton Fletcher, the Iutl»:~.~.I.= 1 .I -,»; o the daughter' Of Pellet' i-110 *L-nt. is horsemen, having paid $8,~"'» 07%, the other day. ll U l The fastest heat trotted or paced the Maritime Provinces this season as. the second heat of the free for at Chatham last week which A ame of Chance won in 2.13. This is T0 break 3' d°5 from eating eggs also a new Maritime mark for stal- 0118. O l U Russell Boy raced thc fifth heat his race at Columbus on Thurs- the way, equals the best time for sixth heat. * lil ll The mntcll race on the Moncton poedway the other day bctwccn liar- CMac and Tom Arkeel was won by several hours untouched, pry open his FY th fl t med in three straight. The m°“th and tome tha egg down his age wiisxfgr a sldc bet of $50. In none the reports of the race that we f ave seen was thc' time stated. O I O As pointed out elsewhere a. new aritime record for stallioiis was ado at Chatham lust' week by A. The "Weather Mum" who has been game of Chalice when he madc thc at mile of the free-for-all in 2.13. crop wndmons’ is about to ‘square The best previous record was 2.13'/4 ade by Frank Patch nf. Halifax on u ust 1911 ond by Dingo he 31st A g . . ' Warnings of approaching cold lo at Fredericton on the 19th Sept- mber, 1913. * * * The free-for-all at the Salem, N. fairs, the other day was won by on tho first heat. Nowaday Girl w the °“i'H° country' Data wmbg deter' captured the 2.14 trot in 2.11% and aymond G. got away with the 2.20 m no y R prepared weather maps which show not in 2_l5%_ _ _ . Ima Jay concluded her campaign by one or two days before their arrival __ Do_ in the “PPM Mississippi vagay' _ ;gl`gdtI:'§.cl: imgeafniighghrgviff tif? lie NQUWB Wm be sent to t ° var wg was she strung out to her limit. [gba .stations as soon as there is danger o won every start this season and hor frost even in low places. It will therte- earnings moulded two drivers. prizes fore be important for the farmers o _md in an amounting to the tidy Bom $5,683.33 and her owner will stake 593°’ fmm ‘my °° day' “mee fm” M' her in all the rich events on the ten ocurs in low land from a week Grand Circuit next yeah ' O U U The American Horse Breeder in its ”`°°”_'W"’V*'”" report of the races at Brattleboro, ermont sa s W H Mus rav of Many silos are built without roofs. said to be fa e éonc- but this is often is omy. The roof strengthens and top of storms e are open, e a part ofthe door is in cement struc- tronblb of _construct- It is a question if a the side of the to the door. is V , y : . . g e, Halifax, N. S., furnished one of the biggest surprises of the meeting with Baring's Comet, winning the 2.25 trot haudily with the grandson of Bingara. Princess Custer forced the Maritime trotter to step the first heat in 2.17%, but after that he won as be pleased. \ Under the system of having six di- visions of the money, Peter Scott earned $4,000 out of the Hoster-Ccl- umlius $10,000 stake and did it easily. I-le was a prohibitive favorite. Mabel Trask, the next in favor, was twice second without much trouble# Not since 1906 has the best time in this stake been as slow as it was this year. Peter Scott stepped the urst heat in 2.07. _ _ _ _ " Grand Opera won the 2.10 pace at Ogdensburg, N. Y., the other day in three straight, going the miles fit 2.11%, 2.12% and 2.13%, _ George Gano 2.02, reduced his 'sad-I eld record to 2.10% and it is' expect- ed that he will cut a few more seo-I onds off it before the end _of the seg-. B011. O O O Emma Magawan. e yearling sister to U. Forbes (2) 2.12%, worked a. mile in 2.28%, last half in 1.08 and the last in 32%, and an eighth in 16 seconds. . ’ ’ » _ The Huntress, 2.23%, is well repre- sented on the turf this reason in Mar- garet Drufen, 2.04%; Battle King 2.11%, and Atlantika, 2.20, a. two-year- old third in 2.00%. . U 1 Single G. 2.03% has recovered his early form and just romped home at Hartford. Anderson Wilkes 2.22% was twenty-five years old when he sired this fast plicetr. ' The Hull Driving Club will hold its annual programme of ice races, on the Ottawa River, from Jail. 27 to Feb. 2, 1916, twenty-three thousand dollars in purses will loo hung up U A Maritime circuit for 1916 is being talked about. Halifax. Charlottetown, New Glasgow. Sydney, Moncton and St. John are the tracks mentioned. The idea is an excellent one, and it is hop- ed wili materialize. 9 U .C Grand Opera 2.051/4. which has rac- ed since early in June is still win- ning over the half-mile tracks, his last victory being 2.10 pace a $1,000 stake at Malone, N. Y., which he won in straight heats. I O U Nancy Hanks Dewey, 2.22, the bay filly that secured a precautionary re- cord at Narberst, .Pa., recently, is by John Dewey, 2.13%, the double gaited stallion that Frank Fox has been cam- paigining the last two years. A match race between the St. John horse, Corwin Hall and James K. New- bro, the Fredericton horse, for $500 a side, has been arranged. The race will take place at Moosepath Park on the first fine day of the week beginning October 4. ll 1 O Volga, champion two year old trot- ter of this racing season, stepped the last halves of two one mile heats in 1.03 and 1.04 while winning the Chicago Horseman and Spirit of the Times Futurity, one of the principal events of the Columbus meeting. ll il U Volga. champion two year old trot- fer of this racing season, stepped the last halves of two one miie heats fin 1,03 and 1.04 while winning. The Horseman Futurity at Columbus last week. Bingen Silk was second, Wal- nut Tree third and Sandine fourth. Volga won in straight heats. The Chamber of Commerce purse for 2.00 trotters raced for at Col- umbus Iast week went to Lizzie Brown after it had gone the limit. Lizzie won the second, fourth and fifth heats, the first going to Lady Grattan and the third to Peter McCormick. The win- ner‘s best time was 2.08%. il U I Dcrocllo (3) 2.08%. drivcn by Ed. Gccrs, was tllc big surprise at Syra- cusc whcrc lic won the three-year-old event in straight heats, defeating the favorite, Bondella from the Murphy stable. The chestnut son of John A. McKerron was inclined to bc un- steady in his previous races, but Geers seems to have found the trouble and straigiitcncil it out. * l U Mary Putney, who came into prom- inence at the Columbus meeting is said to be the most sought after trot- tcr in the United Seaes today. lt is said that ber owncr can exchange her for $15,000 any time he wants to. Mary Putney is a finished product of the training school conducted at lJovc-r, N. H., by Walter Cox. She was bought at the New York sale of February, 1014, along with three other unbroken two years olds by Cox, James Powers, Ed. Baker and John Walker. Little was done with her last season, just enough to give her a standard record in the fall, but she showed bursts of spend in hor work.” A touch of dis- temper in June nearly caused ber to be loft at home, but she recovered rapidly and was shipped. Her way of going attracted the attention of Billy Andrews at Cleveland, and all the way down tho line he figured on being around when the was trained. Cox asked him to drive her a miie at New York, and she tripped one oil! handily in 2.10. The Pastlme Stable thcn began negotiations for her at $5.000 and were about to close Labor Day evening, when Chauncey Sr.~'.\.°,s fold Cox to charge her up to his uc- cc-unt. That week sho irnttcd in 2.08 and in a following mile came from the half home in 1.01%. (Continued on Page Fifteen.) . IN F t | ...'::°.°....°.~i:x:°:.”.'° hattllcsd ith _.,...- =a.»eva`..»...».»¢-.»»~».».s. ...¢.{--.. .-... .i“ .. gi ‘I 1, _g _ 4 1 I _ ~ E. ii., , ,-_~.‘1_, ittiil _ Nr, _er-..t@...r _-,_ 1 .' 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