a’ £9.- , r5512 Four. f7 GHARLOTTETOWII GUARDIAN Notes B{_1:h8gwdy_,‘ Pnlldentwinjw. (fhmnfrl I. Ill-Lure. ll. P. lerrrtnry-Lieut. Col. D. Vlcn-Pruldsub-J- l. Burnett A. lluKlnnnn. l). l. 0. Editor Ind Managing Director-J. B. Burnett L llolifng lhllly (founded 1887) Iii-W [QM pi-r your (In advance) unite ____._d-—- THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1930 i Shocking Catastrophes Yesterday's shocking accident at the railway crossing, Mount Ed\vard' Road, has stirred the Province morc| deeply than any tragedy of recent- . years. When the report of the acci-l dent first spread through Charlotte- town, the details seemed too incred- ible to be true. They w-ero, however, Just how the ac.- the the im- quickly verified. cident occurred will doubtless be nibiect of an investigatlom. by coroner's Qiry. The fact that presses itself upon the pubic con- science, is the appalling menace to human life crossing‘- which has taken its toll on other occasions in this PFOYHILY". but nev- er before in such lllPiLrllTi‘. 'i‘liv ten- of the open tier age and sex of the YXCIERIJ, the knpressions of their happy, joyous sountendnccs on im-vrlni: ‘hf-Hie, and sf the tragedy which bcfell them with Such suddennes and completeness. strike poignantly at ones heart. To the bereaved relatives the sym- pathy 0f tho entire Province will go out in overfloiving measure. | Yesterday calamities did no’. come singly, for almost immediately uftei, tho report 0i‘ the level crossing f“ 1i - itiea at Charlottetown the no" » ' " received of a similar catarir fit" .-.t lrqyeiers’ Rest. Ihthislattci JLHLLHICCi an aged father and his iwn so c on’ route from Kensingtcn to “r.i-ii'.ii~r-! sidi- suficrori almost a siiixihir T113 Czmctla. The achievement of literaryi i. Alum-Into Editors-Frank Wllkn and D- K. Currln 9o! In: (In mlvnnrr; rlellvrnfl. d In Canada and Uultul Staten. _. —~ ii the factory mixed product in great- er quantities than hitherto. This, however, is a matter for the farm- ers themselves. The point is that the duty will leave them free, as before, to piircliztsc in the manner most convenient. Canadian Bonk IVeek According to Sir Andrew Macphail in an frticle in the Montreal Ga- ctte on Canadian Book Week, which is bciiiq ibservcd this week, it takes u Canadian author five years to get his works successfully before the public. Marjorie Pickthall was writ- ing her best verse for seven years, read only by a few intimate fricncis. l/Juis Henion was unknown for three The League of Nations is flue biggest gesture for international pcscethewwlid hssever llflLlDd 'iio matter where or how it fails in part, it Ls a. million times better than nothing. The Committee of Fourteen, in New York, has submitted a. report for use in the Appeiate Division's investigat- ions of magistrates and their counts, Ln which m the result of a study of 12,000 cases tried in Women's Court ill the past fours years, it is indicated that commercialized vice has increas- ed steadily sinoe 1020. In every city in which studies were made it was found that a small group monopo- lizes the vice "racket." ‘ The age of chivalry is reported dead - "ma CHARLOTTETOWN ouagniau I7] w|h“-,~- DON'T TRY TO FIGURE OUT APPENDICITIS Perhaps you wonder why some ac- quaintance, attacked by appendicitis, refuses to go to hospital for opera- tion, and gets well, whereas another acquaintance is hurried to the hos- pital and the operation performed u few hours after the attack. He gets .-_------- [Fisheries iiiia Th: Public Forurn Unemployment, This will“ h W“ f" "R i (Toronto anti {L111 Empire) 150$"! 5! v-mfllwliml" i Business can b: stimziftztezi ' and l‘ 119m" "3 ml-"Q" Th“ ‘more work can be found for our own Charlottetown Guardian does H-cxle thmush m? persmen; pm. l" ""51""! ""19"" m" phase of Canadian inttead o.’ Ioriljn "WWII d °'"""~*P'"\4mu goods. In m ophcve cf life can title . .- i policy be more easily followcl or ii:.§ good effects the more quickly felt; than in tiholmuchase of articles of . _ , . , pcvery-day use for the household, es-, slfiu is ‘mama u) “at? matigecially of food. It is strange tiiat there is we ‘nan m“ 1C3“ L‘ Lheithcugh Canada has tile finest fish- countrymthe p353“ c‘. My‘ Rzbemierles in the world, the ‘consumption Jenkins, who snot afraid to give a. of fish M; home is rehimfly smaml piece of his mind to all ccnccrnetzhand, at the same time’ we seem m] Wm‘ we “Win13 and m'""m33m°“tytliink it necessary to buy Cbnsidztwbif.‘ of the Murrcy Iu'&l'iJOi"R2\li‘.‘i'3y. quantities of Imus“ “h yea, “m. I may say that lieisnot the only one year, the imports in 1929 amuuntkm who had similar experience for many ‘- m no 193 than $4|174-'553_ 1g we m- MURRAY ILLRBOR RAILIYAY well also. Still another when attack occurs. superintendent of schools frowning romance out of life-out ofthe school school principals he absence from school by a teacher for the purpose of marriage or a honey- moon trip is “inexcusable" and is re- garded by the superintendent of schools and the board of superintend- ents as “neglect of duty." The school teacher evidently i5 not expected to years after his death, until a trans- lation of "Marie Chapdelaine" brought him fame, and to his heirs- ihe profit upon two million copies of the book. still awzit recognition. "There is now." says Sir Andrew. ' yhcr new writer in Canada, ‘c i. 1'18 in manuscript is bcina: .i-~iiilv read atluimble dinner i. iles ivhilst. the salad is being dressed- No publisher has yet been ‘ i‘. "r the publication of poetry in i." a precarirus business. ' ' ‘ wits, willing to pay .--- it first be presum- w‘. to czar-t.“ A Other Canadian writers '1 his is rnzliei- hard on our budding authors, but i‘. is a state of affairs "whit-it is by iin means confined to as that ivhich befell the Clifirltiti-r-i fan". m New. as‘. has usually been wwn party at Mount Edward Read-i attended by just such discourage- In this instance the father dicci arfl a result of the accident fliifi one of his sons received very srvvcrr ies. in this case also goes. out to the suf- ferers-and the sadly bereaved lativesi f2‘- The Fertilizer Duly 111e,: effect of the taiiii ("‘.'.'.l"'.‘éi Of the‘ Bennett GOVCYHYI‘ it oii filli- price of fertiliser to our ]lO'.f\l();jl‘C7'\'- rrs has been the subject of iriueh ad- verse comment in the Lib. 1i pro-s. The pfedicticn ivas c0111‘ and vised for political an posesfthnt the price of 1-: t": nitric . vl!<_ would-be increased i'-'li'i‘.(.‘i€. c i!l‘.— ‘ pensatlxig advantage to the t: - 51-5, The proposed c='.:t‘:li.-'i"i"" ‘ i n iii-i. fertilizer nixink! iiiunt iv Charlottetown effectively this objection so far as the» irv-ze-l a I13 WCZ‘... produifiiiis concerned, since iv: ':“l i l . drawhaibl! to importing iri""i it.- tilluxgfrom other parts of Canada rathexifthan by steamer from Balti- more been the higher _ . 1i‘. chargQ Wi gkegard to the question of im- portini‘, unmixed fertilizer, the Guardfkn has received authoritative m that the new schedule Di’ dli " will not affect our farmers In t V- lightest degree. There is no duty%atever on any fertilizer in- gredients coming into Canada, with ths single exception of acid phos- phate imported for separate use as l. fertilizer, unmixed with any other inyedient. In that ease its direct lpplication to ths soil brings it into ‘the class of "mixed fertilizer" and i‘. is subject to a duty of 10 per cent Our fiirmers, however, very rarely use sits phosphate in its unmixed gggteufif mixed with any other iii- gredlerit, either by the farmers them- selves or at the point of shipment, it comes in. as before, frcc of duty. It is estimated that uptvards of eighty per cont of the fertilizer im- ported into this Province is classl- fied as "unmixed", and comes direct by steamer from Baltimore, the con- tral manufacturing point on the continent. It will thus be seen that the fer- tilmer tariffs impose no disadvant- ngc upcri the farmers of this Prov- ince, and that, whether they pur- chase mixed fertilizer from the l"l(‘.'|i plant. or the unmixed product direct from Baltimore and mix it for their Own use, there will be iio duty charg- (l. ' If the local plant proves success- fl. i ml! be that mfr farmers tvill 'h-i8 mm profitable to purchase I iitjtiti-j The writer worth his or her I Still. will persevere until the public sii up and take notice. Indeed, the nicnis. The sympflthl’ °f m“ mmmcci unnamed poet to whom Sir Andrew refers may count himself (or her- self) exceedingly fortunate in hav- lng already attracted the attention of u '<.-i~it‘.c of Sir Andrews calibre. The comment above quoted should go a long ivay towardspopularizing the worl: of any versificr in this country. A, least, it would offer a. strong in- ducement to many readers to expend I the dollar necessary to purchase the i printed work. I li{)“.'.‘\.”l'. Andrew's point is iiliut C": innit Book Week presents ; "a rcz-t- opportunity for bringing to 1F; f-.-...t SCIiIC new writer, for has- ‘ t" uni‘: the time when all the world lscard." Ii. is thus essen- "a F551’ ll have tally a cmimerclal enterprise, flank concession to the modern spir- ,,i cf advertising, to do for books Itnt has been clone successfully for ‘ e.hcr commodities." But o. good book is something more than a commodity, arid demands slightly different treat- ment. It is “a living" thing, shy, yet proud, cctitcnt to prevail by quiet- iicss." The therefore should strive "to control the raucous voice that mimics the American magazines, and allow the soft har- monies of the English sp:ccl_i to be heard." The Book Week will then do good; for readers nally do desire troed books, and are the more willing to buy Canadian books "if imply they arc i0 be found." cammitme Many Set-Backs The loss of the 11-101 is by no means the first sot-back to British airship ventures, though bv far the most dis- astrous. Two years ago in Parlia- ment the ill success of some of Bri- tain's earlier efforts at constructing lighter than air craft were cited, as fnlioxvs: R-Sll, cost £350,000, and she flew for 800 hours and burst. R-34 cost £375,000 and burst before she was inflated. R420 cost £330,000, flew for ninety- scveii hours, and burst. R-S‘! cost £350,000, and was never complied. R-Ila cost £500,000. Ehe flew for se- venty hours and burst. R-39 cost. £00000 and was never finished. She was scrapped and used as a. stress test. R40 cost £275,000. flew for seventy- three hours, and burst. i The total for eight ships was £2,- 340.00!) and the actual flying time was 1,540 hour: ‘ fall in love, except with his or her work. i i i v The North Polar territory has been walked over and flown over, and now ,Sir Hubert Wilkins is to venture ‘upon a submarine trip there, perhaps the rnost dangerous attempt of all. ,If “fllkilis succeeds, the world will acclaim him as a pioneer of undaun- ‘ted courage and great skill. To almost all men the state of ‘things in "which they have been used ito live seems to be the necessary state ‘,0! things, and though, in every age, ‘everybody knows that up to his time progressive improvement has been taking place, ndbody seems to reckon on any improvement during the next generation. It cannot be absolutely proved that those are in error who say that society has reached the turning point, that the best days have been seen; but so said all who came before us, with just as much apparent reason. “On what principle is it that if we see nothing but im- provement behind us, we are w expect nothing but deterioration before us?” Macaulay declared in l830~that rulers will best promote the improvement of the people by strictly confining them- selves to their own legitimate duties, by leaving capital in find its most lucrative course, commodities their fair price, industry and intelligence their natural reward, illness and folly their natural punishment, by main- taining peace by defending property, by diminishing the price of law, and by observing strict economy in every department of the state. “Let the Government do this, the people will assuredly do the rest." The news that Rt. Hon. Stanley Baldwin has been confirmed to the leadership of his party will‘ be re- ceived with satisfaction by many in the domiriions. '1‘heir delegates to the Imperial Conference are all of the mind expressed by Rt. Hon R. B. Bennett in his opening speech at the conference. But unanimity is necess- ary for the adoption of the Bennett policy, and the present British Gov- ernment has declared its opposition thereto. The best hope of the believ- ers in the economic unification of ilie Empire by means of tariff prefer- cnces ls the Conservative party of the United Kingdom. The official heads of the Labor party and the Liberal party are still bound to free trade. It may be that other men high in the counsels of the British Conserv- ative party would b: as strong cham- ‘IplOlIS of the Bennett idea as Mr. zBaldwin has declared himself to be, ibut we know Mr. Baldwin by his re- ‘cord in that connection. He was the first prime minister of Britain to give f. tarriff preference to the dominlons ‘as a matter of Empire policy. Mr. Baldwins safeguarding duties were qualified by exemptions in favor oi the oversea countries of the Empire. {Many months ago he declared that if ‘returned to office he would launch iout on a much larger scale of safe- guarding legislation and would give ipreference to the domlnlons. If he_is lrciurncd at the head of another Gov- ,cmmant within the next few months ;hc can be trusted to conform to the ifiennctt policy, to which he recently ‘gave his strong public approval. It ‘imay be, therefore, that next year ‘there will be an Imperial Conference ‘tin Ottawa, as suggested by Mr. iBennct‘, and that that conference will ‘put its seal on the Bennett pro- gramme. Agriculture affords a striking in- ‘stance of mechanization. In the lunited States, Canada, and other countries of broad spaces, results are particularly striking. librmeriy ml- ,chlnerv on the farm reduced drudg- iery. Now it not only does this. but it irepiaras human labor. Where grain [matures uniformly, and ripens wholly ion the stalk. two men with a com- unnahnrvstnomnarmthxvllsud rrid now we have the New York City_ teachers‘ life at aill events. Iri a mi vsi- tii the district superintendents aria l writes that I with acute appendicms, “m”; to gOIclock noon and celclcnt or never on - gcecls made in Canada, Is it not T01- delays calling a physcian, and when he is rushed ofl‘ for operation, gan- grene has set in, and he does not recover. » And still another suffers for days to hospital, has all the dangerous symptoms; and yet recovers. The appendix has drained its pus into the intestine and the pus comes away in the natural way by intestinal movement. 'I‘h‘s is of rare occurance but cases of this kind do happen from time to time. Now what should you do when you feel a pain in stomach or a‘- ‘ en. that seems to naturally shift over to right lower side of abdomen? Call your doctor at once. You see there are other symptoms besides the pain that the doctor will recognize, and so prevent serious rc- suits. In certain ailments you recognize the trouble at once-scarlet fever, diphtheria, typhoid fever, heart dis- ease and others-but in 89091111101015 ‘the symptoms vary according to the condition of the inflammation in the appendix. Dr. D. P. D. Wiikic points out that the onset of the ordinary appendicitis is ribt very striking-just a little sick- ly feeling, pain in abdomen going over and staying on right side, a. little rise in temperature, tongue coated and constipation. This just means that the lining of intestine isinfiam- med, and is likely to get well again just as do inflammations in nose, throat, or elsewhere in the body. However in some forms the iri- fammsti -ii is so severe, that it blocks up the appendix so that it cannot empty its contents into intestine. It becomes blocked or obstructed. This is more serious, but unfor- tunately the pulse doesn't get much faster and the danger is not recog- nized. However the patient himself usually “knows that something is wrong inside" and the anxious look in his face is s warning sign to the doctor, that operation is immediately necessary. i So don‘t try to figure out why some people get well without operation, and others die who do undergo oper- ation. a ‘ There is the amount of infection, the resistance of the patient, the condition of the appendix and intes- tine, the exact place where inflam- mation exists, snd many other fac- tors entering into the matter. >--~ MAY YOU GO SAFE (On the Death of a Mshometan Friend) May you go safe, my friend, across that dizzy way No wider than a hair, by which your people go From Earth to Paradise; may you go safe today i With stars and space above, and time and stars below. fail to reach All that you hoped to find upon the other shore, Where the long centuries go curving up the beach _ And foam away and cease, and there is time no more. And if, from some small door behind our Heaven, should stray A weedy path, from which the ortho- dox refrain. Round to your Paradise, I'll seek it out one day, And sit and hear you tell rare Indian tales again, —-I.ord Dunsany in the Saturday Review. clean ready for bagging on the spot, other mechanical contrivances, in- cluding motor lorries for the haulage ‘of grain to elevators, are brought in- to use. In the half-century the wheat acreage of Canada has increased fifteen times. But is significant that of late years there has been but little land. The corresponding data for the And at the further end may you noti as much as fifty acres of crops per t day. As s result, large tractors and~ addition to the labor employed on the . Ulltiql ‘BMW AN Oqllllly liiniliolht. years. The service rondcrcd by the ' weed the mp0“; o; gm-eggn “sh and institution is long considered as al- ‘e3; more e1 our o“; the 1151;“; in- I'm“ a joke Md 511mm "03 b? "I?" ‘duct-y would benefit enormcuslyg and iaifid- Jim 59110)’ R i -. iiici" train no industry is more ivortlzy of en- 'i°“"i"'=' MUN!’ 311F091‘ 00 Srvcii comimgement. Fishermen, beth inland |thirty a. m, arriving at C11: lottte-‘dnd on the two seaccz-ts, are Iain ‘town the same day after twelve tif-ipec-ple who buy almost exclusively ltimc. a dlfcnto of f1'iy .' ." untenable for consumers in Canada to ,_ ,.._ . . OVEMBER i6, 173D - w 2.1m Wmewrwakce- Rao RossTcti Two Commas ~ ~ KENNEL ‘k (mime 9;“; ihfireflbvlli-S- 01in an: ca". t at up-‘rccitarocate by imking more use of to-date service? I should say “n1.”|Caria'dian fish, and thus to incrzasc I should say it is more like fifty-the purchasing power of Canadian years ago titan up-ic-dtttc. The train fbhcrmen? ‘The industry has an im- hand: may b’: dninr.‘ their brt tiri- ipcrtance which perltaps people who der prcseiit Cl!‘l‘i"il truce; hut t‘;:cy i live inland do no: appreciate. for the‘ cannot _be cxpcqivti to do ‘ihe im-Htflpital invested inlit is nearly 500,-, pmibie. Until 50m: riiriiige l5 mild-c 000.000 and the annual production you need not lock for urn-thing bgt- is worth more than $50,000,000, The, ter than the ststmo 015i grind. A ' ‘Km-lei’ Twlizgd rm"! m3 “sheik-i is‘, change must conic about mid thatiillenii “"10 Illlllllflcturcrs of iron, quickly. You cannot lmtxro on thevblafs- rubber» 0QTdBBB. flflw‘ trxtil ‘ people for-ever wan; “q, the change ‘cnginrs, clothing-in fact its ramifica- i be? Well, 1 might i..- i-iiritrri t» say iilvn-i :18 felt throiizhoutttliieiiburitry. “scrap the Vernon B: .ilf‘h dive" but l and ‘rem!’ m “d3” 3/ gNYS that would be out cf the questirrt: i cmifl°yment t‘) many thmr-ands o‘ evidently it is “Wm w Sh}, To my i workmzn, hundreds of miles away south h, order to reach Elm,“ village‘ lfew more pounds of Canadian fish ii ' vrcuid give a great ctmulus to an Zn- Whioli is a very central spot, where‘ ‘ ‘ _ ‘ a large and profitable bus-neg, Could ‘ a my wh.ch already _c:nt1";:r; .cs ~43 be built up, having new iiaiiiitig fac- i ‘ax-ply w we nrmwpenw or Cmml’ ilities. surrounded by a. country vxhich u ‘hard ti» beat; and better still, is ‘JIOMEN 5M0“ LESS l inhabited by a. class of people you Now DRESSES LONG i would have tremble to dupnmtg. The‘ LONDON, Nov. 5.—Now that wom- Q N_ R_ would have an t) gain m‘, lcirs dresses again covet‘ t‘:c;r knees. nothing m Inge by giving “x3: new": t the fair icr; is smoking less anti more rail service worthy of the name, e:;_ here observed. "Since the return of ; reciallv by 0010s so it Wfllllfi be , serving a double purpasi," ,1“: Mm“ ilie long skirt we have noticed a rc- i mind we only ‘my out o; {he d,“ iililfl the scene of operations. If each , t‘ “cum; wmfld be to extend it farther ; family in the land consumed cven a " v discreetly, a tobacco manufacturer I .- ‘IHE SdFETY 0F GERTAIIITY rli-l the lighthouse on its rock foundation is to the navigator, so is The Great-West Life to each policy- holder. It gives him confidence to shape a course to anywhere. < For thirty-eight years this Company has lighted the iviiy for life's voyagcrs—first for the policyholder himself and r T‘. gvzards for his widow and his children. Food, clothing, shelter, education, independence- ihcse arc what life insurance stands for. Consult our Agents orwrite to- Prince Etivsiivd Island Branch‘ Office Iii-E.‘ 005M’ WEST LiFE ASSURANOE 00 liyittiman 0 . 0e. l..tii., Managers Lower Queen Street Charlottetown my Hams, 1,001.10 and a“ who live _ cluetion in cigaret sales to woniznfl. adjacent to (hat lin-c who will rear) the most benefit of iiii by gifting up‘. to-dateh Railway service ivhlch they never ad nor ever can ox 9c ' , a change will come abautpliicuilntiili Wu m“ be assured or_succ.t::s' ,_ provement caPcd fei- is long overdue I ~ and should not be doubted. The pea- ple who are the government should $- see to it without further delay. The _ management are to blame for neglect- i i l ,. ‘_E_ o ing to lmve the improvement made wcliiile the road was being standwmi’ ' _ ar ized. Th - i 3 ' eie s no just r ason why’ _ the people coitcemed should be de- Z-Z In order i0 look after nied their right-s as this is a verylm] I ,_, our rapidly increasing lli business in Perfection Ice small matters when you (‘cmpitre it; l‘ Cream, we have had in- have tired of masculine women." with Tliill-YT/fldillf; as it is done to-H‘ filly-only a drop in the bucket. In conclusion I say to all my friends ' whoozge mostly interested, you have‘ . stafled in our sun-e an a g case at court if handled in I ‘v “p404 ate v Kelvinatm. a business way: you must not bowl! F Th. V.“ . found sleeping m your rights. Call ;.; "3 stem‘ ls “L msflrs our customers getting meetings all along tho line from, Murray Harbor to Eldon and char-L, their Ice Cream in an ex- cellent condition and lottetown; invite all your represent-i..- place us in a position of being able to cater to atives, Dominion and Local. have - them all bound by pledge to assist i‘: your requirements at all times. you to the limit of their power him secure for you those improvementsil-Z called for in your resolutions adopt- 1W1 ed in your meetings; go at it with all . your might; drop all party lines; present a. solid front, that once done Your orders for Ice Cream Bricks, Jack Frost Ice Cream Bars and Bulk Ice Cream will he prompt- ly taken care of. E. A. Foster Central Drugstore The lilore You Deal at This Store the Better You Will Like the Service SPECIAL Get One For A Hot-Water Bottle, like a Clinical Thermometer. should be in ever; Mme. You never know when such will he sorely needed-even a necessity. Its presence may be the deciding factor In serious Illness and In ~ zuch conditions where heat up- pilcntlon ls Indicated n. good quality [lot-Water Bottle is tho Ideal thing. Shopping Days A To Christmas In other words there (fro. ll days before that "Day of Glving"-- the wise shoppers will start mak- ing the rounds of THE METRO- POLITAN STORE NOW. In order to escape the customary crush of that busy season. Then take into consideration another advantage, at thTs season. The Metropolitan Store has n stock on hand which has not been gone over by eager throngs. and that which ls host, purchusedby gift seekers. START YOUR. CHRISTMAS ‘SHOPPING NOW AT THE Metropolitan Store WE I-IAVII HOT WATER BOTTLES OF HIGH GRADE QUALITY SPECIALLY PRIC- ED AT 91c GET ONE TODAY AT T!!! The Two Macs l0 (it. George Si. ‘re said. "I suppose it is bcmuse men i i; Z~.QDO‘QQOQ')CBI' BRAHMIN TEA When you want a delicious drink Sold only in red, airtight packages; Mediterranean CRUISE ...n sponsored bythoworldb tutu-evalua- mn, includes 20 o the molt "onus beauty- spuuofchiu in an. by lnluul visiu. with l8 days in nicotine and l. Cruise ship Em i-eu o fiuncdfroua NowYork Fe .73 days. Rats up £1)!!! O . ‘World-famed service, ‘r ‘ cuhiun. Roi-anal this’ ' World CRUISE See all the laces most words seei , with the groans! pleasure sndpthe ieasftroublei Cfllizabflplblll Emfareu of Australia hoists anchor n New York Dec. 2 for 37 days of globe-circling thrills. Rates 52,000 up. Descriptive folded an complete rates from your agent or GEO. s". ill-“Zf .l.) st. P255" Agt. Canadian Pacific Railway Hi Wm; fiziect. saint John, N, B Canadian saisifio WOILIVS GIZELTEST TRAVEL SYSTI" Con: Caz-Julian Pacific Eryn-u Trailer: Cheque-Goal 2h: WQIUOII For the Mon Who Cannot Smoke At Work CHE W:- vYour Home NOW , Ilia-Lack Twuiucn EWI u (i 3 '-?'-' Arum: ?.R;z}£r!-".?t1t‘-_.-_\ i: 32L}: _'-:-:i1xe~i:-.2§u.l :-:w;.r.1-. r-_u_._-~.-. -.->41- |.\h¢l\ .11».