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Vol. 14
Number 8
June 13, 1984

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Westbound potash train 671-188 led by a CP Rail SD40-2F Red Barn near Toketic - 29 May 1995 Blair Kooistra. (NOTE: This photo did not appear with original article.)

Toketic B.C. Siding Extension
By Morrie Zaitlin

Vancouver - CP Rail has awarded Emil Anderson Construction Co. Ltd., of Hope, B.C., the contract to extend its rail siding at Toketic, about nine miles east of Spences Bridge.

Approximately $550,000 will be spent to increase the length of the existing siding by 2,100 feet to a total of 9,230 feet. This will permit the siding to be used as a passing track, enabling the railway to accommodate longer trains and thus improve rail traffic flow in the area.

Excavation

Construction will begin with the contractor's crew excavating more than 83,000 cubic yards of earth, extending a concrete culvert for drainage and preparing subgrade. CP Rail's own track forces will then install ballast, crossties, and 132 pound rail. Existing Centralized Traffic Control (CTC) signals will be relocated.
 

I Remember by Herbert Stitt

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The book cover. (NOTE: The original photo was black and white.)


I Remember
By Herbert Stitt
McBain Publications Inc.
70 Otonabee Drive Kitchener ON N2C 1L6
Paperback, $4.95

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When Herbert Stitt worked for the Canadian Pacific Railway, you could always tell a locomotive foreman was lurking around by the "Christie Hat" the boss wore. Passenger trains of the time featured barber shops and nursery cars, and a mixed train was defined as a consist having both passenger and freight equipment.

Railwaymen had curious nicknames like Profanity Bill, Banjo Eyes Bartello, and Rain in the Face Stinson, and fourteen cents an hour for a gruelling 13 hour work day was an honest starting wage when Mr. Stitt hired-on as a wiper in 1905.

"I Remember" is Mr. Stitt's premier book, a personal account about an eight-year-old son of an Irish music teacher who longed to be at the controls of a steam-powered locomotive.

With remarkable detail and honest emotion, the retired locomotive engineer recalls his 47 years of railroading, the tragedies, the good times, and the unquestionable loyalty among train crews.

The book traces a period of Canadian history when the family unit was a close-knit one, social values were high, and life moved at an easy pace despite the hardships of poverty and war.

Herbert Stitt truly loved railroading and looks back on his life with fondness. Still today he will pause in front of the house on Pears Avenue in Toronto where he and his five brothers, a sister, and his mother joined their dad after an anxious ocean voyage from Belfast.

Sprinkled with humorous anecdotes, "I Remember" will cause even the more crusty of railwaymen to chuckle.

Mr. Stitt wrote this 103 page paperback entirely in his own hand at the age of 86. His view of railway life will make a fine compliment to any rail fan's library.

Timothy R. Humphreys
 


Almost Instantaneous

Time and space were practically eliminated between Toronto and Winnipeg recently when a ten-word message reached the Queen City over Canadian Pacific Lines in exactly one minute from Winnipeg, a distance of 1,227 miles, the words zipping along the wires at a speed of a hundred miles a second. The message was filed at 10:57 in Winnipeg, and it was in the hands of the addressee in Toronto at 10:58. It happens quite frequently that answers to such telegrams are sent back so quickly that transactions, which sometimes involve large sums of money, are completed within two minutes

Canadian Pacific Staff Bulletin
Number 1 - June 1934

 


 
This CP Rail News article is copyright 1984 by Canadian Pacific Railway Limited Image and is reprinted here with their permission. All photographs, logos, and trademarks are the property of the Canadian Pacific Railway Company.