l A . hundred years. , PAGE rout! (IOIIIIIII llfl) ‘I410 pa: nag "I advance) Ill I . Iangl DI l0 lllalarlllluo-rgillrIallu and D l. Pnrrle. llflpnnufl nalladlnflaanda I I. Ilsa-Prolific“. d I Barnett IJ-l . Ian-llama, l) I 0 rh-J I Iaracn. I .l l. a advance) dallvud. and Ilnlua sum. THURSDAY JULY 4- 1935 CANADA AND u. s. At St. Lawrerlce University at Canton. N.Y., recently, a conference ion Canadian-American relations was hold and a number of disting- uished men from both countries discussed , oblenls of common in- terest. The object of the conference Ill not to improve the relations of the two countries. The relations ' are of the friendliest and have .beon friendly for more than a. The object was rather to study the basis of this friendliness-to discover, if possible, _ why with a border of 3000 miles along the forty-ninth parallel and mother border half as long on the Alaskan frontier there is practically no friction. The conference was held under » the auspices of the Carnegie E113 "dowment for International Peace and seems to have had its origin , in the fertile brain of Dr. James - T. Shotweil, director of the en- dowments division of economics and history. Dr. shotwell, Canadian- born but long a resident of the United States, has been engaged until recently upon the editing of a monumental Economic and Social History of the War, and in the course of his studies was im- pressed with the lfiiculty of main- ‘ taining unbroken peace between nations living side by side in the crowded continents of Europe. For some time it has appeared to Dr. Shotwell that the key to the problem of Europe might be found in the continued friendly relations between the two great democracies of North America, his own native country and his adopted country. Having the facilities provided by the Carnegie Endowment at his disposal, he has been directing a detailed examination of these re- lations and. within a few years. the results of the survey will be published. The conference at Can- ton was a phase of the survey. It brought together men from the two countries who have been giving some attention to the questions under examination, and enabled them to exchange views in a. con- ‘ genial atmosphere. There are, suggmts the Vancouver Province, a great many factors to be studied in the examination now in progress, the character of the Peoples on the two sides of the international boundary, the charac- ter of their institutions, the econ- omic and social development of the P601119. the influence of that devel- opment, the influence of the frontier and of the pioneering spirit common to both nations, the common lang- uage, the great trade that has been pouring both ways across the boundary, the financial relations of the two peoples, the machinery which has been evolved for the settlement of disputes-nail these things and others are being studied in the hope that somewhere in them may be discovered a. formula which may be applied to the prob- lems of the other continents with a view to bringing them something of the order and peace and hope which this continent has known for more than a hundred years. The factors cited above are all no doubt of importance, but there is another to which recognition is too _ seldom given. That isthe fact that Canada is an integral part of the British Empire, and has for her de- fense, should the occasion arise, the strong arm of the British Navy. SOAKING THE FARMERS Taxing everything tangible and intangible seams to be an old Lib- Irll custom. A Toronto exchange reports that protests are heard -h‘o_m all parts of Ontario against the new tax imposed by the I-Iep- burn Government on amusements. firmer-a north of St. Thomas used co have weekly dances in a new ‘baruontbetarmoflvormanwat- our. Tlhay paid a small admission to cover the coat of music Ind a in- ‘fiel. i" i involving an expenditure of $25,000 has been abandoned because of the levy on low-priced admlssl - tick- ets. The National Soccer League was obliged to pay $600 in taxes from the last game played here by the touring Scottish team. Even girls Playing softball the tax. The tickets are only l0 to 15 cents. but the tax has averaged 16 per cent. o! the gross revenue. EDITORIAL NOTES Our distinguished visitors, Lord the Hons. Heather and Betty Baden- Powell will be tendered an omci and Lady Baden-Powell and reception today. - Among those here for the Scout and Guide Rally are Mrs. Warren, Chief Guide for Canada. and Mr. J.VA. Stiles, chief Executive Chief Scout Commissioner. It will be an anxious time until the political appointments are an- Iwllni-‘ed Bi- Oflflwl- And 9V9" out very clearly. those markings then there will be cause for further which are supposed to be vegeta- mx;ety_ The" 15 always tion. They stretch for four or five something to keep the rabbits tail short. Those paoifists and internal-INI- sincerely believed to wage alists mountains. There will be a review of the British fleet at Spithead on 16th inst. when eight lines of warships will be drawn up, covering than 33 miles. The area which will be reserved for the stretch from Lce-on-Solent to be- yond Southsea Castle. the whole stretch of water between the mainland and the Isle of Wight, with Ryde Pier jutting out about the centre. The previous evening the King will make a Jubilee drivel through Portsmouth. The mile route‘ will take him through the heart of the city. l-le will spend the night aboard the royal yacht. The last occasion when. a relsnlfl! monarch visited Portsmouth ofll- cially was in 1842 when Queen Victoria passed through. The an- cient ceremony of presenting the keys of the garrison was perform- ed then by the Lieutenant-Gover- nor, a post which has long since who Germany was too poor another war must be amazed at the fact that not only has she since i926, according to Mr. Lloyd George. piled up a full complement of air- planes, submarines, big guns, tanks and poison gas, but. according to the Soviet Pravda newspaper, she is concentrating naval units in the Baltic with a view to conquering Soviet territory up to the Ural been abolished. A $50,000,000 program for training young people and supplying them with jobs has been put under way Roosevelt. Officials estimated that the plan would take care of 500,000 young men and wo- men i".".‘v.":-?:l 3f 211:! 2.‘. ‘ilpclzw n the same number are to he help- ed by the Civilian Conservation Corps. The new plan was divided into four sections designed to: Give young persons work in private in- dustry. Train and retain them for private employment. Allow them to finish high school and collesc- Give them work relief on jects. In outlining the plan, the following rates of payment set: $15 a month for youths on work in by President relief; $6 a month for those high school; $15 a month for those would be» asked to irpprentice the youths under arrangements worked out locally. This would cover not only the field of privataernployment. but public works. in college. Curious inequalities in the assess- ment of farms in Quebec are noted in g paper contributed to the Econ- omic Annalist rol- June by Mr- 5- 0- Hudson. field asslmult. 00000111!” ‘branch. Doplrtnrent of Asfidlllhlfi- Ottawa.‘ Recordh of-li fafin busin- caul vme sol-too ml ‘the but: d flflndfloome and the farm taxel ’ unwed u a val-ammo o! farm income for-nob swim. it fauna that formers having inl- Employers come under H. D. more review will comprising eight- youth pro- WBIE Notes By The Way in which we live is in many respects an exceptional one. Over a great part of Europe-In Russia. Italy. Germany, Poland. Austria and else- wher-democratlc government as we know it has been rejected in favor of dicta-torships. _In Britain, France, the Scandinavian countries, and one or two others of the small- er Statu representative political institutions are still in existence like islands in a. sea of change and unrest. In France, as in Britain, National Governments representing men of different political parties working in co-operation have been formed recently to deal with the difficult tasks which confront these respective States-Belfast Tele- graph. A sight-seeing visitor asked why London has no full-sized statue of Charles Dickens. The answer is to be folmd in this quotation from the great novelist's will: “I conjure my friends on no account to make me the subject of any monument, mem- orial or testimonial whatever. I rest my claims to the remembrance of my country upon my published wo:ks."—Daily Mirror. Mars. the planet, was at its near- est to the earth last month and the best view of it for seven years was obtained. Observation disclosed no canals such as are believed to exist on Mars. It is true Mars was 60.000.- 000 miles away at the time; but viewed through a 20-inch telescope it appeared twice as big as the moon does to the naked eye. The dark markings on the planet stood thousand miles. Once those mark- ings were presumed to be oceans, but that belief has been exploded. Mars. like the earth, has Polar caps. The greater part oi’ the plan- et's surface is a dull pink color that suggests desert, and the planet, as seen through the telescope, is by no means so red as it appears to the naked eye-Victoria Colonist. Should Germany renounce aub- >£ Thercisnodoubtthatthoperiod‘ THE THE DISEASE!) TONSIL LIKE ANY OTHER DISEASE!) ORGAN MUST BE RE- MOVED IF POSSIBLE --_. The. statement that the’ tonsils were placed in the body for some Purpose and that they should not be removed is often made and to a great extent is logical, And, as a matter of fact, the tonsils do serve a useful purpose in filtering poisons from the blood stream, and it does not seem good sense to remove one of the body's safeguards. That tonsils have been taken out simply because they were “large" is only too true, and the youngster has thus been left without this natural safeguard. Just to what extent this has interfered with rlls general hefllth and his ability to throw of‘! or endure the illnesses of childhood cannot of course be stated in exact terms. ‘ _ HOWGVE!‘ to leave tonsils in that are diseased or “sick", unable to do their work of cleansing the blood is badenough. but it is a great deal worse. as you will admit, to leave bad or infected tonsils in which act- ually help to infect or poison the blood instead of purifying it. And what can be said about the tonsils can be said about any organ of the body even when , its use is better known than is that of the tonsils. CHARLOTTETOWN GUQQIAP! __ PUBLIC FORUM of Iona o: Interact. ‘Ill Clarglatowa llaudlaa. I00! CBOOKED AS USUAL Sir,-'I'he Patriot tries to callb- lish a similarity of records of New Brunswick with those of this Pro- vflce. 1n real fact they B1‘? 11° "m" alike than chalk is to cheese. ‘Irue enough in the makina 0! 1m- possible and fabulous promises. mil- repzesentation and Deity 505110118. the Liberal propagandlsts were as "similar" as two peas in a P00. but there the comparison l5 shamed- New Brunswick has no old n86 pensions. Liberal leader Dyscrt pro- mised to give them. Prince Edward Island has already given this 8nd paid out $233,042.10 in pensions t0 the aged. Not a. dollar of this Paid under the Lea government. Stumpage fees is one of the major sources of revenue in N. B. The Liberals pledged a readjustment of these as a bid for the vast lumber- men vote, resulting in a heavy turn- over of woodsmen's votes. Our Pro- vince has no lumber forests or sgumpgge dueg with which to offer a “similar” bribe. leader Dysart, urhere hydro-elect- ric is under public ownership. PTO- lnised light and power at actual cost, a bribe to the cities in use of electric current for any purpose. The Mac- Millan Government have no electric plants, and if they had would not use them m this way to corrupt voters. and voters lrl this Province would be quick to resent this method of vote getting. Thus Dr. J. F‘. (YMalley in Prac- titioner, London, says, “we kmyw that any organ may yield to the stresses and strains of life and be- come diseased sooner or later, whence must arise the questions: Can the organ be restored so that it is useful again; if not is it more profitable for the possessor to have it removed or retained. If the tonsil is not diseased and is causing no symptoms harmful to the patients health, retain 1t.' If it is diseaded and causing symptoms of a local character (sore throat or swollen marine warfare against merchant vessels and re-enter the league, France ought to be able to shake off her displeasure with Britain for dealing alone with Germany on the naval question. European peace would be greatly strengthened by an “air-Locarno" embracing Brit- aln, France. Italy and Germany. Hitler has no cause to fear the mutual defensive pacts between the soviet Union and Czechoslovakia. and the soviet Union and France. But all of Europe can 0t be other than concerned by t intensive military preparations being made by Germany and the levy made on German industry to pay for the same, a levy that exceeds the total profits made by industry last year’ by 200 million marks-Toronto exchange. The U.S. Federal government re- cently shipped settlers from the dried out farm areas of Wisconsin illlnds). or Symptoms of a general character likely to produce serious consequences (rheumatism and heart disease) it would be gross negligence to retain it." As a matter of fact there is really no hard and fast rule about remov- ing tonsils. The physician must study all the angles of the case. Operation means expense, 501119 time lost, the use of an anaesthetic, and the removal of tonsils that may still be useful. On the other hand, to neglect to remove diseased tonsils, tonsils that are of no use, but an actual menace to health and to life itself, with the strong possibility of rheumatism and heart disease following neglect of removal, puts a very grave res- ponsibility upon" the physician. In fact his personal and professional reputation are at stake; he must use his best judgment. Michigan and Minnesota to the Matanuska valley in Alaska. Glow- ing reports of the land of promise put the settlers in happy mO0d.i They sailed from Seattle amid a! fanfare of trumpets. It was a case of everything is lovely and the goose honks high. Alas, already the gilt is off the gingerbread. The settlers are homesick for their dried out homes. They complain that their new houses have no founda- tions, wells are not being dug fast enough, there is no shelter for their livestock, no roads to enable them to visit their neighbours, and the prices are too high at the gov- ernment commiasary. It is the same old story which so often has been told. Assisted movements toward settlement do not achieve the suc- cess which marks spontaneous movement. The Western Provinces of Canada may have a few excep- tions to the rule but the uments to failures are many. ltlstime thercwasatruoeio this eternal lecturing and preach- ing at friendly powers. Japan from her geographical position is im- pregnable in the Far East, and no "A few days ago their representa- sane Briton proposes to pick a quarrel with her over the British export trade to China. the value of which last year was only £6,500,000. As for Italy, the world will gain when the Abyssinian chaos is clear- ed up; and she deserves British sympathy, not abuse. Paimess of mind and good will would remove most misunderstandings in into:- national affairs. The touch wanted is that which the Prince of Wales applied in his admirable little speech to the delegates of the British Leg- ion. He approved the suggestion that a. deputation from the Legion should visit Germany in the near future. stating that “there could be no more suitable body or oganisa- tion of men to stretch forth the hand of friendship to the Ger- mans." His kindly words have been welcomed in Germany as a sign of the final reconoilation between two Hereafter the policemen of Paa- saic, New Jersey. must go to church at least onoa every Sunday. This order has been posted on the bulletin board at police headquart- m. As a. check-up t!» chief of poi- ica will quiz each 1c ovary Monday morning u to the service of 81.7 per cant ondthoca valued at uuucd stood; pa: cant. 11M h. low-valued farms over-unload and m"! over-tonal‘ ‘with? 0015* hi!!!" great. pewlw-rlfllléqn. Pailxelfell. Canad-a’s Peat Deposits (Sydney Post Record) A group of British promoters who are thoroughly reqaonsible and represent real money have placed a proposal before the Federal Government for process- ing and marketing the beat deposits of Ontario and Quebec. tlve Mr. Mewyn Brown a former Canadian, explained the whole project at a. dinner which he gave at the Chateau Laurier to Memb- ers of Parliament, Senators and the Ottawa Board of Trade. The developing company will be capitalized at 81.000000, will Dysart further pledged his party to give free school books to every- body, rich and poor alike. The next N. B. bid was to autoists, with a. promised reduction in auto license fees. The Conservative Gov- ernment herc has done this already. The N. B. Liberal party promised to erect cold storage plants in dif- ferent parts of the province. Except as a bribe these are sis-urgently needed as a side pocket for a. toad. The Patriot says: “The Tory GOV- ernment of New Brunswick vastly increased the debt? That may be true, but its "similarity" in this res- pect is to the big Lea debt rather than the Conservative ene. N. B. Liberals assured the unem- ployed of wonk for all. Like the ‘Hepburn, Ontario, and Macdonald in N. s. governments, time will show the workers who took this baited hook to be still looking for a. job. One favorite madness of the local Liberal organ the Liberals of N. B. were not sufficiently demanded to adopt. They did not try to blame any govennment for the inability of the worid to consume the potatoes in the farmers “cellars, unable to get rid of them at ally price." They left that imbecility entirely to the Patriot. ' The N. B. Liberals promised to “balance the blldiiet" by 59911131"! extravagantly on the one hand. 1nd wmng down revenues on the other. The Lea party are trying w I001 Island electors with the same kind ‘of buncombe. But surely our P901316 are too well educated to be mliifid by mathematical impossibility. I am. Sir. etc. STERN FACTS. Fuel-Board has comprehensive re- ports on the subject, and will Dr?- sumably make a recommendation in due course to the GOi/crflmenii as to the commercial feasibility of the project. Meanwhile , it is in- terestlng to note that these Te‘ ports show there are 124,000 acres of peat bogs in Ontario contain- 111g 113,000,000 tons of peat and 110.000 acres in Quebec with M1 estimated content of 76.000000 tons. There are also of course P68‘? bogs of varying importance 1X1 establish a plant at Alfred, some B0 miles from Ottawa, where the richest deposits exist and will start with a production of 50,000 ions oer year selling its output in the domestic fuel markets of Central Canada. The subsidy the Dominion Government is asked to contribute in one dollar per ton, and with this assistance, Mr. Brown says, the peat can be dried processed and sold in brickette form at Ottawa for $7 per ton. And one and a. half tons of this peat, it is claimed. would have the fuel value of one ton of anthracite, which sells in Ontario at prices ranging from $12 to $15 per ton, Among the speakers who at- tended the dinner and spoke in supportyof the project were Mayor Nolan of Ottawa, Hon. H. I-l. Stevens, Hon. Charles Stewart. and Hon. J. D. Chaplin. Recently returned from an investigation of the peat deposits in Europe. Mr. Chaplin declared the Canadaian deposits superior to those in Den- mark and equal to the best he had found in Ireland. All speak- ers were agreed that the Domin- ion Governmcnt should grant the modest aaistamo necem to make peat a factor in the solution of Canada's fuel problem. It is not, generally lmown that raadyspentollilopw experiment- ingwithchaAlfredneatdcposits uldthaltthe Quebec Adminis- trationpayaaborursofw canto Dcrtononallthepcatploduoad inthatprovlnooflrbc al- ~ several other provinces. The question which naturally in- terests Nova. Scotians is what ef- fect the development of peat as a fuel would have on the oolliery industry of this province. The lflflponents of peat as a. fuel maintain that their project would not prejudice Canadian coal min- ing to any appreciable extent, if at all ,and they are probably col‘- rect in their contention as the main purpose of marketing thi-B form of fuel would be to displace anthracite coal, now imported a1- most exclusively from the United States and Great Britain. But if it should also displace as well a. modest quantity of Nova Scotia. coal in Central Canada, the coal trade of this province has no reason to fear such competition, for it would be yea-rs 5950!‘ D0947 sales could amount to even a half million tons per year and. in the meantime, Canadian con- sumption of fuel will probably expand by ten times that quantity. In any case, the attitude of Nova Scotia’: public men should. on grounds of public policy, be o] pathetic toward the “ ‘.,. ment. of Central Canadian peat. for if these deposits can g w‘- peat canreally. be produced in this country at luoh lowooataaswillanahlaittoocm- p. Ma with ant-hm!" I“- demefliv nun Kidney run flu fuel. And dowita tho mar-dinner '0 Ila enthusiasm of its Ottawa, Iranian laltt II pononta, one inclined to in believetiaofmallllm to this m 1'20"...“ question mus n negative. .0180‘! Dill Iarpartancolhowathattb. Iabfimmhblota » - __-_ I mad about the Sonnet’: lasting ASPIBATION Haw fcfiurteen lines. in swiftest swal- W- . Can further words to an empyreal ht, Where thought invokes beyond our carping hour. More truly built than that aspiring ower, 50 soon plunged earthward. awed by akyey might, This lumping scheme of verse sus- tains its light And radiates abroad kind Heaven's dower. Sublimity is in its fond embrace. When Genius holds his breath- then utters fire; Still lesser bards may put therein a. B 0W. That soothes the smart from life's uncertain raoe, Fulfilling thus in port their high desire To give to dreams at least a pat- terned flow. —Amy nedpatll Roddick in Poetry Year Book, i035. Getting The Long View (Vancouver Province) When Mr. Stanley Baldwin re- organized his cabinet recently he appointed Mr. Anthony Eden min- lster for the League of Nations, but the British public, more imaginative than Mr. Baldwin, promptly re- named him minister for peace, and finds rest among the Sh“? i‘ Kingsmcre. Mr. Bennett has-wbut we are afraid it is one of the weak- nesses of Mr. Bennett that he,.has neglgetcq to provide himself with a. retreat in which he could find refuge when the necessity M089- 3 I3 not; by any means lack of brains that prevents statesmen from planning more than they do and from working out policies that are far-reaching and soundly based. It is lack of time, lack of energy to spread over everything. It is lack of opportunity. It is the necessity of yielding to the importunities of the general public. _It has come at last to a choice between delegating the detail or the planning, or neg- lecting the detail or the planning. The detail is lmportunate. It will not be neglected. It dislikes being delegated. so if the planning is to be done at all. someone outside the BRAHMIN TEA Kill GIUWN measurements-finish: active administrators must take it in hand. That is why brain trusts USE OIANGI lwoa and economic councils are be; set _up. It is an interesting widen-lg of the flexibility 0f the British sys. tem of government that it w... found possible to take the brain trust into the cabinet instead q leaving it in an advisory capacity outside. PIMPLH Al“ -. TIME leaving Charlottetown . . 4.00 p.m.g llazelbrook 4.20 p.m. Keefe’: Lake ... 4.85 n.m. 48 Road ........ 4.45 p.n|. Cardigan ....... 5.00 D-m. Bridegtown cacao 5-15 11-m- Dundas ......... 5.20 p.m. HS such they regard him as he moves from capital to capital on his mission. Another minister has also been renamed. Lord Eustace Percy is in the cabinet as minister without portfolio. But it has leaked $222322 Dlngwcll’: 5.40 pan. Arrive Fortune 5.50 P.m. Headquarters in Charlottetown Headquarters in Sunris- out that he has been assigned the task of working out long-term pol- idés for his colleagues. and now he is known as the Brain ‘rrust. There will be aneers at the Brain Trustin London. just as there have been at Washington and Ottawa and Victoria and Vancouver. It is being said that if the government needs abrain trust it is because it lacks brains of its own. But that, of course. is merely cynical and flip, Pant. It is in no sense an answer to LEAVES Peter's Road the argument that one of the faults of government in our modern dem- ocracies is that the men in the gov- ernment are kept so closely tied to the details of administration and are so completely the slaves of Dol- itical exigencies that they have neither the time nor the energy to examine the situation properly with a. view to its adjustme They muddle on from day to day as best they can. They act in response to the demands of the moment. They seize opportunities. or what appear to be opportunities as these present themselves. But they can seldom get the clutter of detail and worry out of their minds long Ml. rray Harbor North . . Riley Comer-GENRE!“ - - New Perth School .. Snmmervillg School . Arrives Peters Road Parcels ' ’ at 25c minimum take a long view of the p " of state, and without the long view there can be no statosmanlike de- cisions. _ Btflteameh. of course. have irl the past employed various devices to protect themselves against the as. saults of detail. and those who have been wise have kept avenues open through which they could escape now and then to places where they could refresh their minds and their souls. Disraeli had Hughenden and his flowers; Gladstone, Hawarden and his oaks; Lord Grey. the birds at IPalIoden. Mr. Lloyd George used to escape to Criccieth and its hills, Mr. Ramsay MacDonald to the moors of Lossiem Mr. Stanley Baldwin goes still to see his pigs at Astley Hall. Mr. Mackenzie King Supposed Good Vision Often Defective -____-_ We aak you parents to real- ile that your children may SEEM to have perfect vision. Ind rot in greatly in need of an eye service. Prudence dictates that you acquaint yourselves with m; flflll retarding your mildren‘: Isht. and acfacoordlngly. G. F. Hutcheson OPTOMETRIST liity llus Souris Elmira Parcels carried at 4_AA A A A A Ir-‘IBDO-fl-ll-tf. » “We have never IMPERIAL FOX retaining their color. ........-.---.--.. Sturgeon Bridge . . . . . . . . Geo. Pooh's Store-Lower Montague Clement's Ofliov-Upper Montalllo ..-..---.-~-.-...--- s--. ......-.-... The Unanimous Verdict of Successful Ranchers fed anything to equal BISCUIT IMPERIAL ,PUPP.Y FOOD in promoting healthy and normal growth of developing sturdy bodies with pelts of lustrous Ibsen, Fardy Bus» Serviced. Taxi Service BIIARLDTIETOWN to FORTUNE ‘ TABLE Leaving Fortune ......... 8.15 a-II. “ Dingwellh ...... l.” mm. Dnndu ......... 8.45 an. “ Bridgetown 8.50am. Cardigan 9.05 a.m 48 Station ...... 9.20 a.m Keefe’; Lake 0.30 am llazelbrook . 9.45 a.m Arrive Charlottetown .. 10.05 a.ln —NOBANA TEA 500MB. LENNOX IIUPEL. __A _ _____.. __ ABLUE BUS LINE SCHEDULE ....--....- -.-- L Bus will atop on signal at any point omroute. Service 0h’town Headquarters Old Spain Tea Rooms,- Clftown Cox Hotel, Souris Loaves Elmira ................ 7J5Leaves Charlottetown .. .. 4-H “ Sourls 8.10 " Mt. Stewart .... .... 5.00 " Dingwells Mills 8.35 " Morell ................ 5-25 " 5t, Peter-g .'........... 8.55 " St. Peters .........--. 5.45 " Mon-ell . . 9.15 " Dingwelis Mills ....... 6.05 " Mt. Stewart ........ . 9.40 " Souril ............ .. 0.30 Arrlveu In Charlottetown .... likiiilArrives in Elmira ............ 7.16 Minimum of 25c. Bus will stop. on signal at any point. A A A A A A A A A A A A A ; A Ar Sand pups and superior thick-skinned and lilEltmuBommo-"i ~ mo.» bamlms agar m luvarc n» i I p