FEBRUARY 6. 1936 ill-GS Pig Worm Powdr A very effective treatment for worms in Pigs and Hols. Now i; the time for treatment for war-ml. Recommended by Dominion Dept. of Agricul- ture. ' mos canon-ion r-owmm Ton" up the system. cures all Skin Troubles and gives s glossy coat of hair. For swol- len legs, purifying the Blood and as an ersdioator of worms it is an unfailing remedy, MACS BLOOD FOOD For Pale and Thin People A combination especially valuable in the treatment of more diseases where their origin is traceable to an Im- poverished condition of the blood. One of the greatest remedies in the treatment of Rheuma- tisrn. For those who have lost their amsetite Max Blood Food will prove the restorative. MACS HAIR RESTORER 1t will restore gray hair to its original color, An excellent hair food toning up and invigorating all the glands, blood vessels and nerves of the hair and scalp, thus producing a rich and abundant growth of hair. Promotes new growth where the hair is falling and is re- msrkably useful in preventing dandruff. Get a Bottle todsy- Price 60c. THE 2 MA Co‘ Great George Street Mall Orders Prornptly Attended to. 'Prescrlptions a Specialty XCHANCE (Canadian Press) MONTREAL, Feb. 5—Britlsh and foreign‘ exchange in relaiion to the Canadian dollar as com- piled _by the Royal Bank oi Can- sdo closed today as follows: Argentina. peso .2785- Austrla. schllllng .1908. Belgium beige .1707. Brazil milreis .0580. China Hong Kong dollars .3280. Czechoslovakia crown .0421 Denmark krone .2241. France franc .0669. Germany rcichsrnark .4081 Great. Britain pound 5.0144 4 Greece drachma .0096. Holland florin .6878. Hungary pengo .2990 - India rupee .3798. Japan yen .2933; .. New Zealand pound 4.0464. "Norway krone .2522. ‘Poiond zlotl .1917. South Africa. pound 4.9924 Spain peseta .1387. Sweden krone .2588. Switzerland franc. 3307. United States dollar lent discount. New York Curb (Canadian Press) 1-16 per Stoclu Amer Cyan B Amer Gas 131cc Amer Sup Pow Assoc Gas Efsc. Atlas Corp Can Marconi Cities Berv CreoIePet. ... Eleo Bond S11 Ford of Carr A . .- Cult Oil Pcnn l-lirm0L1Rcf 3m!) 011 . lntPcte Niag l-lud .. Sid OllKcn ... .. Un Light. Pow A . .. ‘in Liizht Pow Pfd ... .. Io 4-1 ll ‘.‘"f"i"°".""‘ manners-asp. moo | s n mambo-bum ossssrssssssssiussn lrCdl-lIl-IGJUI st- ifi-IE ‘ UHARLUFFEIUWN l‘ STO CK Q U0 TA TIONS ‘Morning Stock Letter (Received over Pitfield and" Co's Private Wire) ' NFW YORK. Feb. s-Conrmer- cial Credit reported $6.03. Purity Baking declared regular quarterly dividend oi 25 cents. E-‘orivard sil- ver trading wul be resunwi lr. -London today for the first time in several weeks. This would suggest that the plsibion of the silver market has probably iInpCOVPQ. About the only important divi- dend meeting today is Atlas Power. There are beginning to be reports of siaattered labor trouble in dif. Markets At A Clan-ce (Canadian Press) Toronto and Montreal-Indus- trial stocks lower.‘ Toronto Mines-Lower, New York-Stocks slightly lower. Winnipeg-wheat 1-4 to 1,2 cent higher. New York—Rubber and coffee higher; cotton and sugar lower. Llvssjocx (Canadian Preu) MONTREAL, Feb. 5-~Steady prices continued in light trading during early dealings on Montreal livestock markets today. Cattle was barely steady, calves were un- changed with hogs, sheep and lambs remaining unchanged. Receipts reported by the Domin- ion Livestock Bureau: Cattle 2B; calves 136; hogs 160; sheep and lambs 6. A few cattle were offered but not enough to make a market. Prices were Just steady. Calves remained unchanged from yesterday with medium to good veals selling for $9.50. Com- mon thin llght kinds sold for $8. The sheep section was unchang- ed, bringing from $2.50 to $4. On the hog section most buying with lambs was by contrast. Sows were unaltered. ' (Supplied by Pliflrld and Canrpuny Manlrra of Montreal Stock fi\"llllilgsl llilil Ci rb r-Wrkot) i-rorhs ll A Oi! .. , ,, -llnrn Starr-s . Ford A .. Imp Oil . lirtor 1'0!‘ hlclchcr-J A Wrrlkcr tlucil Open Lust ‘Z-‘l ‘ MONTREAL, Feb. 5—A steadier undertone ruled for butter on Montreal open produce markets to- day with no 1 selling at 22 l-Z to 23 3-4 carts per pound. Lots to retailers were 24 for solids and 25 for prints. Graded egg shipments in carlots or less were 25 to 28 cents a. dozen for A large 23 to 24 cents for A- medlum, and 21 to 22 for A pullets. Cheese receipts, mostly no 1 On- tario colored ai- l2 cents were 28 boxes. Pofatoes were $1.35 to $1.40 for Prince Edward Island mountains and $1.30 to $1.35 for cobblers, per tin-pound bag. In BO-pound bags, P E I mountains were $1.20 to $1.25, cobblers $1.15 to $1.20. New Brnnswicks $1.10 to $1.15. Quebecs $1.05 to $1.10 and Que no 2 whites 90 cents to $1. NEW YORK, Feb. 5—Foreign exchange easy. Great Britain ric- mand high 5.02 l-4; low 5.01 1-4; close 5.01 3-4; 60 day bills 5.00 5-8: France 6.69; Italy 8.06; Belgium 6.69; Italy 8.08; Belgium 17.05; Germany 40.79; Canada 1.00 l-16. - Y1 Honest Grading RANHERS AND TRAPPERS _ we WANT. ilrossfoxes Mink iluskrats The market on these articles ls very tlrm ‘and we will pay you the highest and often while prices are high. interested in eilver- foxes. selected silvers and low IP85" i‘ “m” lilill litiTTti LEVlll Fllll litllflPilill LIMITED 172 KING STREET, East‘ MR. TEA POTT SAYS To Get That Fina Fresh Tea Flavor Use BilMlMlil 018026 PEKOE TEA prices. Ship now We are also The market for Prompt Remittance TORONTO, Ont. lerent sections. Although none of the major industries have report- ed trouble lt is a trend that has to be watched closely. We would not be filllllrised to sec some further profit taking in today's market, but unless volume increases mat. erially we believe the marks; hug to be given a. further chance, Rm; still look higher especially Bough. ern Pacific, Gr. Nor- Pfd. City of New York. Steels held their gains and will probably do better. Farm lmlllcment stocks also act well. Gulf Oil would seem to be behind the other oils. MINING (Canadian Press) TORONTO, Feb. 5—'I'he Tor- onto mirrirrg market skidded today, all groups closing lower. bringing to an end for the present a series oi new record highs over the last two weeks. The gold share index dropped about 2 1-2 points to 182.- 95 and the miscellaneous mines in- was heavimt in the medium-price and penny golds. ' ‘Trading developed considerable volume in Wright Hargreaves and Teck Hughes and those were both down 10 cents at fire close. McIn- tyre lost. 3-4, Dome e point, Holl- inger 1-4 and Pioneer closed un- chanced. Bralome added 10 cents. Heavy selling appeared in Mac- assa. from the opening and a loss of 28 cents to 420 was recorded on turnover oi 26,000 shares. Central Patricia dropped l1 cents, Little Long Lac 30. Airvggj/s 15, Pickle Crow 12 and Perron 8. Losses of I to 3 cents were posted for Sulliv- an, San Antonio, Slscoe, Quebec Mines, McKenzie and God's Lake. (Cnnndlln Press) TORONTO, Feb. 5- Stocks lluff i‘i||r . . Bunk lilll (‘n1 lllllll (‘rrrr .\lrrl . (‘iirllioo .. . . .. (‘nsllc '1‘ (Eon I'M. (Yhi-iu lies . liriirrkllrr .. (hula Lulu: (loirlalc iiiilil 1101i. (lnnrlflslr . illnhrrirr iirurrrrilu ilrccne . (lurrrrrrr Tlrrlvrarv lluril lior-l: . 38 llurkvr 81/, lliriifriizvr 15% llllllliillii‘ lil llilil}, Howey s 70 .1 .\l (‘nus ii‘! Kirk llilil . d0 Kirk lurku . . b8 1411111.‘. Sir . 08% lrnrnrrqiro . 10% . 710 420 420 a lflryurrrrr-rir-r l'i'l‘l'ull lH-t 00h Priiuuilr . . . .. Pick Cro . . Pioneer Prorrrirr .. Pros Alr- . qua-mom . liorui Airth . 11ml Lrrlio iicrro iiolil Jioclrn l. L Wnysirlc White Eng . dex was off 2.12 to 135.45. Volume I =- Exchdnge ‘ (Supplied by Pltfield and Conlban! Members of Montreal stock exchange and Curb Market) Stocks Open Last Abitiirl . 180 Batlrurst 17% '1‘) . . . .. 141i llrurlW/nr 13% llrew _i‘irr'|r (‘on i! Brew Corp Curr . 4 a B t.‘ Pow A 30 Can Nor Pr 23 Can Car Found . 7 (‘on Cement 7% Can lad Al 119;. (‘an Pee .. 13% Celencse 29 Coclrslrirt Plow 8% (‘one i-lnr t . 234 Dom Bridge 38% Dom Stores 5% Dom Tax .. 70 Imp Tob 14% Int Nickel . 481/; Moose Harr-ls 7 lifcCol Front 17% Mont Pr 33 Not Brew 42 Nat St Cur 10 Power Corp 14% Show lrrlgan 20 20y, Sou Cnn Pow 12 121/ Steel of Can . . . . . . . . .. 02% 02' BANKS Bk of (‘an Bk of Comm Pk of Bk of N S Royr-i Bk . Miscellaneous .i- (Canadian Press) MONTREAL, Ebb. 5—A. steady tone ruled during light dealings on the produce section of the Can- adian Commodity Exchange today. Billie: spot: Sales-NO boxzs Que gross, 22 3-8. West rcgraded 22 to 22 1-2. Checsc Spot-Ont whlte 1i.‘ 3-4 to ll 1-2 ~col 11 1-2 to 12. Eggs Spot-Ont. A large 26a, A- medium 24a, A pulleis 22a, B- large 22a. MONTREAL, Fob. 5- Wheat, nor no 2 95. Barley C W no 3 44. Oats. feed no 1 36. Flour spring wheat patents, firsts $5.80. Flour seconds $5.40. Flour bakers $5.30. Flour winter wheat choice $3.80. Flour white corn $4.60. ‘Bran ton $19.25. Shorts ton $2025. Middllngs ton $21.1 Rolled oats bag 90 lbs $2.90. Hay no 2 per ton carlots $9.05. Cheese no 1 Ont col 12. Butter no 1 22 1-2 to 3-4. Eggs in cartons A 1 large 35. Eggs A 1 medium 33. Eggs A 1 puileis 31. Eggs A large 30. Eggs A medium 28. Eggs A pullets 28. Eggs B 28. Eggs C 25. Potatoes 90's P E I nits $1.85- to $1.40. 90's P u 1 cobblers srao to $1.85. 80's P E I mts $120-$125. 80's P E I cobblcrs $115-$120. 80's N B mts $1.10 to $1.15. 80's Que mts 51.05-81.10. 80's Que white no 2 90-3100. patents, Currencies (Canadian Press) NEW YORK, Feb. 5—Low rates prevailed in the foreign exchange markets today. The pound sterling dropped 5-8 of a cent to $5.01 3-4 and the French franc, 001-8 of a cent to 6.69 3-8. The Canadian dollar was quoted at a discount oi 1-16 of one per- cent against 1-8 yesterday. Wllteey C. . ... . . . Wright H . . .. Ynilr 1' G Silver . Total sales -. Aldermac . TILIHIONI 1410 TAKE PLEASURE IN ANNOUNCING THE APPOINTMENT . or MR. CLARE W. ' TANTON t . svmrdnsrop . as REPRESENTATIVE FOR PRINCE COUNTY - IRIIIG, BllElllllI 8r COMPANY LIMI INVESTMENT nuances - EM. BAGNALL ~ sssruiola Bsnkof Nova Scotia Building GUARDIAN Mt’l. Stock 1V. Y. Stock; Elxchange (Supplied by Pltlieid and company Members of Montreal sstovk exchange and Curb lllnrk ct) lfircslorrc .. Gun Eicc Geri Foods . Geri Motor Uililtlflilll irooilycur Tire 20 11ml Mot Cur .. only, 167s 5 ' 34% '- 3%. . . . 39% hiurray Cur-p .. ‘, 10 Nat Cuslr ling . ' 271 Naw 1'0 ' ‘i 11 5% 5'}; Nor- Aruc o -.1/ 29 Nor 1'00 2817 ‘ Puck lilot 8g’ I'm-amount ll ‘ i" u o .. ltodio lii-itli Urp ... Soars lioc i‘ri . . 04,, Shell llulorr oil Cu . 17*}; Sou c . . 30% Std Oil i\' J 50*), Studebaker 10 ‘foxes (furl: 34 Uulteil Uri M,“ 8,- Urrltcrl .\1r 27*’. ' 1 52. 18%. 19h ._' or .. . .. - 1217,; West iirilai . . . . .. S0 \V&st .\l!‘ lirriliu .. till 38H lVcst E104! . i,’ 1251 Woolworth 5 Y, 55% S t c k G a ' Registered On Montreal Mart (C. P, By Guardian's Special Wire) MONTREAL, Feb. Ei-Galns held an edge at the close of Montreal Stock Exchang today after stocks milled around in alternative buyinB and selling waves. r Powers and o. few 5986153195 showed the best advances While papers and liquors were barely steady, Banks and‘ metals dipped while steels and constructions were quiet. International Power Preferred. influenced by high 111601118. 8111111943 12 3-4 points to 88, highest since 1934, following declaration of a dividend by company 111mm"- Canadlan Hydro-Electric Preferred followed with a four-point gain in heavy turnover. Issues to show deolinesranzing w a point included Bell Telephone, Brazilian Canada Northern Power Corporation and Shawiniiiflll Montreal Power wavered and closed even while Quebec Power 8811165 "I little. Papers again thrived in demand and st. Lawrence Paper Preferred touched a new high for a year or’ more of 25 1-8 before closing un- ¢h3nged_ Dryden boosted 1-2 to a new top oi 6 while Howard Smith. Bathurst and St. Lawrence Cor- poration were steady to slightly higher. Metals ran into profit taking and gave up fractions. Intefnfltitmfll Nickel and Noranda were off 1-2 and 3-4 respectively while Smelt- ers sold down five points on odd lot transfers. Hollinger moved slightly higher. Bales totalled 34.052 bonds $17,500. Commuting Oanucks Barred From U.S. (C. P. By Guardian's spec1al Wire) WINDSOR, Ont., Feb. 5.--l-larry J. Irassalinc. Secretary manager of the Windsor Chamber of Commerce today dispatched letters and tele graph messages to officials and parliamentary representatives at Ottawa in the hOPB "me “Wm might. be taken to prevent passage by the United states Bennie vi the bill prohibiting Canadians commut- ing across the border to work. The bill passed the House of RA- n. “ yesterday. About 1.400 Windsor residents work in Detroit. shares; Commuter-"Imfyd this down eggs on the tra .“ Station risen“ If W?” 2°‘ claimed in thirty days theyre youia." TED cannon-flows Stocks Open Laat Allied Cbour . .. 104% 185% Am Curr . 126 125V; Am Pr F0 8% 81/; Am irucu . 20% 30 v Arrr Tel Tel . 103 105" Am Wuiur .. ‘ :.:§(', Airuuurriirr . 30% Ail-bison . 751/; Ati iii-i .. 82 Allllllnil .. 2% Bald lror-o . . . 5'1’ Dali 41.11.. . 10 Berni iv 231/; lie 5.5% 535A 131,4, 100% 55% 95 21 H 3° a 34% Currr Prod . 127g Curtis: Wright ... ilccro . 7J2 Tobacco Co., Ltd. Zlosing Tone Irregular’ On New York Mart (By Frank MacMillen, Associated Press Financial Writ") (A, P. By Guardian's Special Wire) NEW YOR. . Feb. s-m a swift last-minute turnabout, traders 901d stocks today, taking the forward drive out of a stout market in which many new $0118 m!‘ n“ years or more had bee“ 54'4"“ ller. earring closing tone was hiKhlY i!‘- r-egular. The switch. to selling 00105 so lute it failed to spread w at sections, but recessions of a P0111 or more in the last. 10 minutes were fairly common. h Farm equipments, business mac - lne stocks and a variety 01 mall's‘ trial issues were the market lead‘; ers during most. of the 59551011. 1m some survived late selllnfl in 8°°d shape, J_ I. Case. however, endeg a little lower after n snip of Emil“ 3 points for a time. ‘the Associated Press aver-ale 01 60 stocks lost .01 of a. 110i!" l“ 50-1’ despite the fact that. l5 utilities in the compilation edged .2 of a point ahead to a. new 1935-36 peak of 48.3. Turnover in the stock ex- change was 2,927,581 shares com- pared with 3.009.890 sham l“ the previous session- To most observers there seemed to be a cooling of inflation senti- ment which land been apparent- Thr; United States dollar showed strength in exchange market, and while not holding its best. rates ap- paxently shut off gold exports 101' the present. Most of the financial and busi- ness news was fairly constructive, including such items as a. substanl- tlal increase in stations reported by American Telephone, a 25-ocnt. ex- tra dividend by Timkin Roller Bearing and favorable earnings re- port for 1935 by Commercial Credit. Some stocks which held gains of 1 to 2 points included American Telephone at 165 7-8, National Cash Register at 27, Western Union at a0 1-2, Baldwin Preferred at 46. Lima Locomotive at 33 3-4, Am- erican Car 8a Foundry at. 35 l-2 and Deere at 69 1-2. Among others down fractions t0 111016 than "- point were American Smeltlng at 63 5-8, General Electric at 40. Montgomery Ward at 38 1-2. Phelps Dodge at33 3-4 and. Santa. Pb at 75 1-8. ' Amongst Canadian issues Dome Mines dropped 1 1-4 t0 48 1-2. Fractional losers included Holl- gcr, Canadian Pacific, Inter- national Nickel, Dominion Stores. Distiliers-Seagrams, Brazilian and Ford of Canada A. Massey H ris and Canadian Industrial Al ol A were slightly higher. History of Transportation MONTREAL. Qua, Feb. 5—-Rall- way trains operated in Eastern Canada for nearly half s. century and the railway era was fifty years old when a transcontinental rail- way first crossed tho Dominion of Canada, stated Alan N. T ‘ t? Associated Editor of the Canadian National Railways Magazine, in op- ening tonight the third series of na- tional radio talks spo ed by the Young Men's Canadian Club of Montreal. The talks are broadcast at. weekly intervals through eta- tiom in the Canadian Radio Com- missions across-Canada chain. The railway construction BIG railway lines superseded the An enticing new flavour from higher quality tobacco: Made possible because we give no premiums Produced by on independent company-WM; (enedien When you buy TUDOR Cigarettes, you are no: paying a hidden per- eorsge for so-oailecl "free" premiums. Your investment is rezurneclto you in finer, costlier tobaocos . . . tobacco: that are beautifully blended in spotless Canadisd-owned and operated factories. That is why TUDOR Cigarettes have such rich, distinctive flavour; such mild, throat-easy fra- grance. Your firsr package will be a revelation. Buy is today. Rock City FAUIS FIV TLJIIEO“ VIRGINIA CICARETTES . @e,f.'.rdi@ wagon roads which had served the stage coaches and freight vehicles of pre-rallway days. The second part, nearly fifty years later, wit- nessed threc trunk railways built across the Rocky Mountains which brought about the opening and da- velopment of Westem Canada. In this period also came the tapping of valuable mineral fields. In July this year Canada will celebrate the centenary of her first railway train which ran from La- prairie to St. Johns, a distance of 18 miles over the Champlain and St. Lawrence Railroad, now ‘part of the Canadian National System. Contrasting modem railroading in Canada with that of 100 years ago. Mr. Iongstafl stated that Canadian steam roads todary operate 5,000 loco- motives, 7.530 passe r- ears end 200.000 freight cars o various de- scriptions. They employ jointly 120,000 persons and have an annual payroll of $150,000,000. Canadian products and materials are pur- chased annually to a value in ex- cess of $50,001,000. Transportation had made the de- velopment of Canada. possible, said the speaker and with all the new and competing forms of transport, nothing had yet displaced the rail- way as the every-day servant of the Canadian people. Vifhcn waterways were frozen, highways impassable and airplanes grounded by unfav- orable weather, train crews still handled their passenger and freight trains, day and night, over the steel highways which were the arterial of the nation's commerce. The railway companies, Mr. Long- stafl’ said, had been chiefly respon- sible for building up Canada's tour- ist industry io the peak when it produced $300,000,000 revenue in one year. They had laid down a groundwork of advertising before other flilencies turned their atten- tion w this work. Instanclng other ways in which the transportation industry assisted the development of Canada, he said that the rail- ways’ industrial departmcnts. had locatedhundreds oi industries in the Dominion and were responsible Spiritual Offerings, Cards, etrn. 4c per inch; Notices of Thanks nnsl word. Other rates on application. . Jfi-iln- For Sale OLD NEWSPAPERS Apply Guardian Office. FOB. BALE. 1-30-ti’. FOR SALE — 1 YORK BOAR. BEG. MacLean Bros., Milton- L-836-2-6-_3L SCRATCH PADS-PADS 1F I00 sheets 5 x ‘iii. Price 3 cents per pad. Postage extra. C ’ Office. FOB SALE-HEAVY HORSE 0H. will exchange for light -horse. Apply G., Guardian. L-652 FOB BALE - AUCTION I081‘!- Five, Bridge and Wblst Score Cards. Guardian Central Job Printery. FOR SALE-FOX FEED SMILES fresh frooen, also Crushed Shell for poultry very cheap. Earle ‘Fisheries Co. L-885-2-8-6i. ality. All modern cor. E Advertising naiilfi§ illu§w Central Guardian locale, 4o per word; Western and Easter-n loeoia, 2r nor word; Announcements and Coming Events 2e per word; 2o per ward; In lile-morinrn Notices, 70o per inch; Llata of ‘Floral and ' HOUSE FOE SALE-BEST POC- for encouraging the investment of millions of dollars of foreign capi- tal in Canada. Agriculture and colonization departments not‘ only assisted settlers in securing suitable mers in various ways after their settlement. They aided also federal and provincial governments in transferring unemployed families from city relief rolls to farms whero they became producers and assist- ed. in removing farmers from drought-stricken areas to better taming locations in their own and other provinces. , Railroad executives had met the challenge of changing conditions.‘ Passenger trains had been pooled and schedules revised-to avoid du- plication. Extension of low-rate excursion fares had brought many travellers back to passenger ‘trains. Door- to door freight service with pick-up and overnight delivery and handling freight on passenger train schedules had brought in- creased trafllc. Measures of econ- avenues of saving were being ex- plored in the effort to reduce ex- penses without sacrificing service to the public. In many ways the ra-ilwarys have assisted Canada's development, said Mr. Inngstaif. Without efficient transportation there could havo been no Dominion of Canada, just as, without transportation, Jacques Cartier could never have discovered his New France nor- could adven- turers have ventured inland from the seacoast. A DOGS LIFE Counsel (in divorce case)—-“Is it true your husband led a. dog's life with you?" Wiie-“I-Ie did. He came in with muddy boots leaving footprints all over- the carpet. He took the bPst place near the fire and waited to be fed. He growled art the least provocation and snapped at me a. dozen times a day." Cinanlflerl er name: Lottera of (fonrlolence 70c ppreclsrtion, 70c per inch or 4c per lillnlmnm Charge for any aursrtlsensent twenty-five cents, Miscellaneous ESCAPED FROM RANCH I-‘EMAIJ Fox, earmarked c A I 88 N. Re- ward. Notily E. S. Johnston, For- tune Bridge, P .E. I. L-774-Z-4-3E I PAY CASH FOB GOOSE AND duck feathers, new or used. Write me. John R. Mark, New London, P. E. I. 11-844-2-6-81. FOUND - A REMEDY FOB. WOL ries. Safe, sure and lasting con< tenth-rent asured. Sun Life poli- cics are the medium, For partic- Bldg, Charlottetown. Female l-lelp- Wanted '__.i__..____.j—‘ iiazma lsn prlnol es. Protestant. cook; App X care Guardian. ____ - L-sra-rr-s-si. XPIBIKNOED PIACTICAL nurse or housekeeper. Highest ref- erences. Appiy 82 Fitzroy Street. P. O. BOX 43, City. which brought about Canada's greatest expulsion period. should be divided into two parts. Mr. Longstaff stat/ed. The first of these br-ought about the development of WANTID-BOABDIIRB. CENTRAL eastern cities and communities as a network of trunk and b ml; tie 537. Almost new. Priced right. Apply L-m-i-e-T-B-M-oi. _ Boarders Wanted locality. Reasonable rates. Phone L-788-2-4-3i. 1.4m. Lost , M ~ roar n ronmu rvrosmv ,; -—-— night, wrist watch. rso Kent st. i, Reward. _r.-aro-2-s-ai. j_ »- To bet T0 LlT-BID-SITTING I00 Apply 214 Queen Si. land but aided them and other far- ~ crmy had been introduced and all. ulars consult J. A. Moore, Currie Ii WANTID-HMAID WITH CHBISTo , Good r‘