\ FACE FOUR rut: GUARDIAN. Cl-“IARLOTTETOWN AEBRUARY 14. 1950 mm THE GUARDIAN H041! Pull UIIII‘. llurlllilg Illllly lFllullllrd lll Lulhilrlzvd up her-u I (‘lulu llnll. ln-uurlml-ln. Ulluun. Hie lllxlllll tiunrillun Publishing Co lulu" uuu QIHIIMIIII] Dlrnrlm‘, .1 It. Ilurnell. Alana-lute Ifdltur lfrlnln Walker. "The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink" L‘HARLO'I"I‘E'IO\TN. TUESILIH‘. lied Gross Annual Meeting The ‘dlllllll-ll meeting ol" the Red Cross being held at “The Charlottetown" today should be the occasion not only for tile society's various representatives to make their reports, but also for the public to ex- press zlpprcl-izitioll for the oulstalliling pub lic service rrildcrctl by that body. In its cilntribtltion to water satiety alone, the re- cent news stories of life saving awards em- pllzlsizes the value of the llaillillj; and pre- paredness sires-soil by the Rcil Cross. its‘ FEB. I-I. I i150 ‘conll-ibulioltc n) public health and effective- ness ill (lealing witll large scale disasters anywhere at ilnytinlc are magnificent ex- amples of llllnlanitzlriall service. The re- W“ would be read wiill interest by all. Ferry Service Proposals llow lhc wind blows politically lll coll- nqgtjgll with the Wood islands-Caribou service may be indicated ill a recent article appearing in the New Glasgow Evening News. The article notes that in the last nine years this SGITICC has carried nearly half a million passengers, transported about 80,- 000 autos and nearly 25,000 trucks. “In the next nine years," it says. “if growth con- linucs at allytllillg like the same pace. the total will be stupendous and Pictou would like to have a_share of that business which results from the movement of so many people." The article notes that the C. N. R. “ilas discovered that people like to collie over to the Island on their boat from Tormentine and come off the other way, or vice versa; that steps up tourist business, drops the tourists off close to their Pictou Lodge and brings better times leading to greater rail revenues. So down here the rumor is that the C. N. R. is studying things.” This state- ment links up ivith the recent report that the Maritime 'l‘ransport Commission had re- commended (a) a new million dollar ferry for the Wood Islands-Caribou service, and (b) the taking over of its operation by the C. N. R. _ Our New Glasgow contemporary argues that a. bigger ferry would draw more water and would require extensive alterations at the Caribou end or a switch to nearer Pic- tou. “If that, switch is made," it maintains, “the bigger viessel might just as well run all the way into Pictou where extra dockage is needed anyway." It suggests that if the main ferrv service were switched from Caribou lb l"ictou. the boats would be switched in the fall to Georgetown without trouble and maintained until the midwintel‘ freeze-up. This arguincill fails i.o take account of the fact that a boat too big for the Cari- bou terminal would likely be too big for Vl/ood Islands, and would have to be ope_r- ated the year round between Pictou and (‘ieorgctoivlt 'l‘his would mean a trip, one way, of about five hotlrs as against an hour and a half by the present route. This brings us to the nlain reason ‘why the ter-, mlnals were placed at. Wood islands and Caribou. Plugs, fresh meat, fresh fish. but- ler, cheese, livestock and yeast have right of way at all times; they may be bo0ked in advance and ferried from Wood islands and trucked via Cariboil to lialilax. ready t0 b0 shipped for export, ill less time than it would lake to land them at Piciou via Georgetown. The switch-over to the latter route in sunllilcl- would simply kill the business, so far its shipping such perishable products as butter for export is concerned. As for the winter service between George- town and Pictou, this has already been pro- posed by the Northumberland Ferries, Ltd., 1nd it is llOperl will eventually materialize. it is hard to llllflt‘l‘.‘ililllfl why illi magnifi- cent facilities at Georgetown are not used fluring the winter months. If pressure fronl Pictou can help us in obtaining 1] service of this kind, it should prove of much value and convenience. Valentine 0f 1667 Samuel Pepys recorded ill his diary for February 17, i667, that he hail given his wife a valentine ol‘ blue paper with her name in gold. lle also said it cost £5. Love takens of vellum, known as "Valen- tine Pieces", were known in Queen Ann's era. Made for folding into envelope form. they were decorated either with delicate cut- work in paper of a contrasting color or hand-painted with birds, flowers and hearts In gay colors. By the middle of the eighteenth century ' valentines were often love letters in fine cop- per-plate handwriting with a quill on folded shoots made for the purpose, often with a ‘hand-painted picture of a sentimental theme at the top. This type of valentine was truly personal and sentiment was directed to the maiden of the writer's choice, often for life. Valentines had not yet become com- mercialized. , Stationers’ windows first displayed val- entines for sale to the public during the reign of George III. Seine of these were sheets of music surmounted by colored pic- tures and songs. 'By 1800 the selling of valentines be- came popular and engraver-s of that period began to commission paintings to be used for them. When the making and selling of valentines became a trade rather than an art, design deteriorated just as it did in furniture, silver and clothes in tllc nine- teenth century. i-lowever, there are ex- amples of delicate sentiments ol the early nineteenth century and collectors now trea- sure the best 0f them. The earliest valen- tines are the personal olles and are the most interesting. l: Lil IURIAI. NUI l:S St. Valentines Day. The weight of the postmans mailbag would indicate that the world will continue to go around for iluite some time yet. I 0 0 o There is the tidy stun of fliitittotlfl income 'l‘ax refunds clue and payable ti. islanders this year, just as soon as the current tax forms have been returned duly filled up. 0 O O lllal-Gen. A. E. Walford, Montreal, de- clares he knows of many worthy causes, “but none of them was a finer investment than Scouting, for I believe that to build a boy is better than to mend a man." I O O The opening of another furniture store in Charlottetown today and the prospect of other new businesses is an indication of the opinion of business men as to the prospects for this Province. I Fifty Canadian boys, chosen for the sec- ond free tour of Britain promoted by Mr. W. Garfeild Weston, millionaire biscuit manufacturer, will sail froln Quebec on July 12. Their tour will last 23 days. 1n August, the same number of British boys will sail from Liverpool for a tour of Call- ada. A revolution in tooth brushing habits is forecast by the results of a survey reported by the Journal of the American Dental As- sociation. It seems that destructive acids from carbohydrates begin acting on the teeth within as little as three minutes of Q O utes. We may see the tooth brush take the place once held by the finger bowl at, the end of a meal. O I O London speculators are again betting heavily on the results of the Feb. 23 election. One bookmaker accepted lnore than £5,000 ($15,500) in stake money. Another was laying 11 to 10 against a Conservative vic- tory and 11 to 8 on Labor getting in again. A West-End bookmaker quoted 5 to 4 against the Conservatives and 7 to 4 on Labor. Many of the bets, says Reuters, came from stock exchange dealers who stand to lose it‘ heavy selling of securities follows a labor victory. ‘Backing Labor to win may be insurance to cover such losses. fl Q O Captain James Cook, English navigator, died this date 1779. Was lieutenant of the Endeavour which explored the coasts of New Zeaialld and Eastern Australia, of which he took possession in the name of Britain, naming it New South Wales. He returned via the Cape of Good Hope, and as the result of his reports he was sent out as Commander of the Revolution in i772 when he had a marvellous voyage of dis- covery in which the old idea of the south- ern continent was destroyed. In this voyage the llealths of the officers and crew were particularly looked after; anti scorbutie pro- cautlons preventing the usual heavy death rate of expeditions of this kind. Cook was killed at l-lalvaii on his last voyage which lasted from i776 to i779. O o Twice a day fol' the past tllrec weeks, bells in the tower of the villagt church in Lac Mercier, Qua, have called the parish- ioners to special prayer. In the parish hall, led by their gentle country cure, Father Hector ("Tommy"l Deslauriers, the people pray for snow. All across the Laurentian ski country, says Time, the mild winter has brought the worst resort season Ill memory. What little snow fell melted almost immedi- ately; there have been eight thaws in six weeks and only three days of indifferent skiing since nlid-Decelnber. Not a single of- ficial ski race has been held. in the heart of this blighted winter-sports belt lies the parish of Father Deslauriers. Almost totally dependent upotl the tourist business (plus some woodcuttingl, it is the hardest hit ol" the resort areas. In the parish are 13 re- sort hotels, including Joe Ryann sprawling $6,000,000 Mont Tremblant Lodge, rambling Gray Rocks Inn and the Munoir Pmolcilu. eating and may persist‘ fronrfi0 to 90 min-' " ‘BENEFITS OI" vwQ-ollQMi-I-Ollle-t Q PubLIC FORUM l‘hl| column i: open Io lhc discussion by correspondents or question: of Intel-oat. The Guardian doe: not cocoon:- ll? ‘ the opinion ul oorrupeudonll ’ owns-M lo r’- N OIITIIUMBER- LAND FERRIES Sin-Prince Edward Island has l-lllmlgh U19 WOOd Islands-Caribou ilciny" Sci-vice ain opportunity p, place hm" products in Ngwfound. land by truck via North Sydney, and Port aux Basque, on Lhe ex- lSlillg schedule, with-in recently-four hours of it leaving the farmers’ hands. ‘Phi’ writer knows of a farmer \\'IllU 1.. yen-r shipped by this rolllc. fresh earn on the cob, that ilcilleil iiim ln vxccss of $590.00, and who is planning to go into this ll"? l“ a DIE “by in 1960. unless the service should be disrupted, Tile retlurnlng truck, can deliver u; lhi- wusunilr. a load of coal. wilhiii a few hours of its oomlng frc-lil the mine, without the dam- age resulting tliruugh ivepeatgd handling when moved by rail. The saving in time. effort, and expense, to say illotlhing of Che m. vantage of prompt delivery, and tile lJlllCl‘ advantages of the route should not. be lost sight. of, in our sldei-ing the suggestion that this service be returned to the Rail- way. I am Sir, cite" QVICENS COUNTY FARIMER. FA RBIWCIAVSII INCOME Sun-According to the experts, the farm cash income across Can- ada lll I948 was some $40 million _ loner than in 1947, and this not- withstanding the inclusion of a special ll\)ll on participation payunenls by the Wheat Board, which should be credited on a bushelage ratio Io the crops of lhc past four sea- SOILS. Now l realize that. there is l certain time-lag as between cle- clining prices for the farmer and the reflection of same, in terms of lower food costs for the final consumer in your cily and mine, NCVUFIIICIQSS, I find it hard to understand the following points in a year-end news item from OI» tawa, in the Dec. M Guardian: “Fluctuation in the six divisions which go I make up the com- posite tcost-of-livinlz) index show- iid only a few marked trends. Food costs dwindled in the early spring, but quickly rose to an all- lime high in August . . , So, at the latest date, the main culprit in the ‘case of the shrinking dol- lar‘ was food, with an index o! 208.3, Rent, at 123.9 was the least offender . . . 1935-39 average liv- ing costs equal 100. One reason the index is so high is that food plays the most. important role in the cost-of-iivlng The bureau of statistics, in compiling the com- bined index, gives food the weight of 31 Der cent of the total index." Maybe it is time for the “statis- ticians" to dig deeper into this farm revenue — or "food" — st Andwadvise the man-in-the- l what is the farmer‘; share of what I would describe as "the urban food dollar"? I have no Canadian figures; but would like them. Here are the ratios for five major conunoditlcl in the United States, showing the farmers’ share of that final food dollar: eggs, 73c; beef, 65c; milk 63: flour. 50c; and bread, 14c. Obviously, many urban finger: are in this rural income pie? I um, Sir, etc, A. B. C. “f; Old Charlottetown (And r. E. I.) a EDITING UNDER. DIFFICULTIES “Mr. Smith left town on Fri- day for the Wood Islands, for the purpose of making the arduous attempt to cross from thence to Plctou with the Mails, and we are not without hopes of his prov- ing successful, unless the quantity of floating ice proves an insuper- able obstacle, as the extreme cold lately experienced has within this dill’ or two considerably abated. "in the cessation of all inter- course with the opposite shores for these four weeks past. and the consequent dearth of all foreign and colonial intelligence, the con- tents of our paper of this day are necessarily of a very miscellane- ous cast. aild although we are aware, that to a mere ‘quid-mine’ this must appear extremely dry and insipid, we flatter ourselves, that the more indulgent and, m» bral part of the community, of which class the greet mass olf our readers is of course composed, will be less fastidious . , . "To our advertising friend; wt; beg to intimate that we have made arrangements for publish- irle regularly once a week in future. We hope our literary contributors will afford us their assistance, particularly during the winter months, when we are l0 much left to our own resoul-cel." —P ince Edward Island Regis- ter, ebruary 7. 1828. Late-Winter Sun ' ('l‘lle Printed Word) n"? 9'1")’ Purl of February re- tains some features of winter that. are well regarded. Thu main one In that It still is unnecessary to get up curly In order to lea the nun rise. The Blory of its rlalng in available not. only to the work. or who has to be abroad" beilmel, hut Io the loafer who sleep; late. In summer, people bonst that they were u with the aun_ but a; ml; timi- o yenr, anyone with a good appetite finds it» hard to Ila abed Ihllt lung, Tm- sunset may still be lean In the afternoons. It I; much handler to have the sun u; m". Ing the duy, without having to make n lob of sitting up fol- ll lllic into Ilic evening. Another distribution of $210 mil-l 1 ls lle Malling Any Valentines ‘l VALENTINES This day wlllhin the winter's mow. Cold blasts frown North or Bast may blow- But. whet of that‘! No winter's rlme Chills out the thoughts of Valen- tine. From ages past the custcm grow, 0d sending cards with wishes true To someone-someone loved. the best. Her choice or his-from all the rfl. flair words lo Speak the heart's eslre Od-rtimes olf tlhose who would aspire To love and woo-lwlhere one faint heart Oflt.’ kept indeed lihe twain apart. Thus with the beat oif human alrt And 01min. then-e to play lhla part. This day oif Valentina ‘has grown And over all the world is known To someone lovely-someone dear- f send this Valentine to cheer. To live and grow within the breast: Delu- Valentine-I love you best. -—John Qwlibell- good feature of the season is that neither sunrise nor sunset, casual- ly seen during the day like thil, stirs up much comment. It is mainly In autumn when these great glories of tho sky bring forth exclamutlons of Joy. Few things set aback u lovely scene so thoroughly as the overly articulate pleasure of those who would no! notice It if the sight were com- mon. Some lone-deaf folk secretly like this season because there are few birds to wake one in the mornings. There still ls plenty of time for sleep, as in the deep dark of win- ter; but the great fact of early February is the return of tile sun. This process has been going on since shortly before Christmas, but people did not pay much attention to the sun during the year-end holidays, and they despair-ed of it In January. But. now the sun comes out of the earth more and more each dny. It ls something to dwell upon with hope, while resting halfway through snow shovelling, or while having a few frozen finger; thawed out. The sun returns fresh and wonderful out of the earth, all though It. were a new thing-as it’. is, The return of the sun is always n new thing. May the sun always re- turn to shine upon the world, and may there always be people here to welcome it‘. I000 OGOOOOOUODDUOOODUGUO t- ,0 gfhe Age-Old Story u , 8 We may boldly may: The Lord ‘In my helper, lulil I will not fem‘ what mull nlmll flu until me. llayillg The Cows iOttawa Journal) A fourteen _\-elir-olilei~ knew he was expected home frolll district school at a definite time. He could use a. folv minutes to explore the woods for fox tracks and to see i! any mink had travelled along the banks of the creek. in Winter it was different from Siprlng and early Fall WliCll the cows vrere at pasture. Father wanted the cowa haycd at. the same time every af- ternoon in Winter so the evening chores woplil follow an exact schedule. Mr. Webster is very casual about his definition of hay: Grass mown and cured for fodder. After a lad changed Into his overalls and jumper, he climbed the ladder to the mow. fey cold in the hayioft perhaps, but one remembered the stifling heat on a July day when he was storing away as father pitched off. The huge forkfuls came up with discouraging rogu- iarlty; before one could push forkful under the caves, another was waiting. “Keep the forkfuls together, son", ifother would soy. “It will come out a lot easier next Winter." But when the tenlpem- inure was over 100, when sweat. was pouring off the end of ones nose and running down the crease of his blwk. when llayseed infil- trated into socks and around the neck, February seemed a long way off. Each afternoon sufficient hay had to be pitched down for the evening feeding and for the next morning's. A boy tugged and pull- ed, strained and lifted to get. fork- fuls of the long tangled timothy and clover. 1t. took n. good 15 or 20 minutes before the pile on the barn floor was I e enough. The part. that a young young farmer enjoyed most; was pushing a big heap along the alley between the two rows of stock. The cows mooeil impatiently, rattled the stanchions and tossed their heads. They stretched out long. curling tongues for the first. mouthful. six months old calves stilt-k their heads through the slats of the pen and fastened their big eyes on the ap- proaching food. A man of any age who likes livestock gets a deep satisfaction in feeding them. As boys and men feed the stock, they pause B min- ute after all animals are eating and watch the friendly creatures that mean a livelihood for a fam- P ily and food for mankind. Haylng MEN! 25% discount on all suits, top coats and ovcrcoats including some early arrivals of our Spring ord 0i‘. No lay-aways-No refunds-No alterations J.P. MaePllEllSllN & SUN 157 Queen St. Phone 2591-J Pllllllll! Integrity . . - sc-rlrltlun. nuoans DRUG SIOII We DIVQ pfld | tlflou for aqfanzfillfwmfff, l" B. too. In :5" lmnwledle Ind training. | r precision mg ‘ceunq, " "m"! your doctm-‘g p". -: w. rlllsulnlolls lll rllolll Notes By A memorial to 20.000 members of Commonwealth Air Forces kill- ed in operations over Briuin and Norfiwest Europe who have no known graves is to be built over- looking the ‘Fhalucs and Ill»: Home Counties. A site has been given by Sir Eugene and Lady Eflfie MillingIon-Drakc n e a r Coopers-Hill, Surrey. At the fool of the hill the ’,l‘llanll-s skirts the famous Field of Runnymede; a few nlllcs to the northwest Windsor Castle towers above meadows and woods. — London Daily Mall. I‘ o'n'u‘fa"-p something morally wrong as well as economically haywire ill lhc spectacle of the Department of Agriculture being forced Io destroy millions of bush- els of surplus potatoes. The para- dox is remininseellt of the days when little pigs were killed to keep prices up. Yet it is a great deal easier to point oul. the bugs in the potato programwhan to dc- vise a sure-fire corrbctive. Basi- cally the trouble is that potatoes are being grown not for the mar- ket, but for the government. The huge payments to individual Maine farmers illustrate this. Washington Post. Tilerc is There may be a few queer in- divlduals who gel some kind of satisfaction ollI. of standing in line and rubbing shoulders with strangers. Bill Ilic average mall regards this sort oif thing as Ll fearful waste of tlllle and an al- most sure sign of gross ineffici- .eilc_l' somewhere. To a great lllllll)’ people lll Brllrllll lhc mollu- tonous hours spent lll ilucucs for almost every necessity must be the blacker/t nlark against the pre- sent Socialist government. Chur- chill's jibe that. the “Socialist dream is no longer Utopia but queuctopia", \\'Ill go deep. —- To- ronto FIHiiliCiill Post. Surely the Canadian people, If restrictions and controls on mar- keting prices and exchange were removed, would have plenty of opportunities to start bilsiilesses, to increase agricultural produc- tion, to develop the natural re- sources of the nation. Things have not come down to the point where, as the Egyptians did with the Jews. Canadians have to be put to work building pyramids, so as to keep them from starvation. By all means lct us have public works which are needed. but let us not expect them to cure un- employment. -— Vancouver News- Herald. It is estimated by catisticians- if one may coin what seems a suitable word -— that there are 2i million cats in the United States. the cows is Just one or the every- day humble tasks. but boys and men know there's something about It. difficult. to put into words.- ‘V55?-'5'-zfnfi‘:‘u'b'u\'u'o'u'n'v'b\\fi'n'n'h‘u'k'u'u'ful'ln'u'u'n'u'u'u'u'u' The Way Of these nuilions only a ~ . , went to Harvard. "Bin? KW films, an ‘athletic and handsom- brindle animal whose lntelllgqn: fitted him for something “ma. zlcudemic than u look al IIIL‘ 5D,: rows in the Yard. spoilt lung pl}, iods at Cambridge when Pa. Norton lVilliam-s. class of ‘40 ,,.:‘ a student there. At cal Show: where he was often a pFi/Alflhvn‘: ner, Bing, later in lift" mudihe kilowni as “lhc cat with illl‘ w; lcge c ucation." -- New Yoi .1 aid 'l‘ribuiic. k “LL .-.-.-.-.-.-.- " Conditions point to higlm- gm Pt-lccs step by step f,” figural year's ahead. Belief lll this l; b,“ coming more general and lilcr I revival lll gold nlinillg wit“: here. We know of Illlflllcla] groups who,‘ up to a few lli0llihl ago, were certain that. the gql] price wouldn't increase, lmi, a" now UUIIVIIICULI that. the lllgnru m a year will be $70. Wu ulc n," prepared Io go along that for a“ fast, but we strongly feel ma, the people who are exemmn‘ themselves afresh in Canadian gold mining prospects at,» em camped on good ground. _ yum“, em llllncr. Two customs officers, working by torchlight on Dover's doclhm chisclled and drilled througl m; back of a nlllroon Buick ca;- cd from the Oslcilll stculllci- ‘g other officer stood in the back- grouhcl watchin; the reactions Q1 39-year-old Gilbert de Praciere, 1 Belgian garage proprietor who u“ walling with his wife Io time 11,; car to London. Every illllr y" officers moved from the ixlclc to. wards the front of the car Pr“. tare’; relief was obvious. But m. drilling went on. Alter six hour; @025 ivrist watches were found in a cavity behind a sheet of steel welded to the back of 111.; dlclcey. J. L. WIIILS. prosecucng, told the story to Dover mag“. tratea, when Praetera wa| 1&1“ for l year and fined £25,000 foi- attempted smuggling with another year in default of payment. Prat». ten.- claimed that his own car llid broken down and a neighbor had lent him the Buick. 1.911391; Dally Mail. For Foot Ailment _ Consult ’l ll.J..l. ellowll, n. r. . i . Orthopedic y; Clairopodist / "ii it 14S Great George Street clmllLorrl-zrolvx. rm. -' “a l I. l'_\‘ l Eraser PROFESSIONAL CARDS MONEY T0 LOAN B.A., LL.B. BABRISTER. SUIJUPPUII. Eto- Charlottetmvn, P E I. J. S. TAYLOR Optometrist Eyes examined, glasses tel Ill- Corncr Kent 5;. Queen Sis. Office Plump [Mil-House till? Dr. A. l.. Muclsuuc DENTIST Dental X-Ray GLORIA BUILDING I19 Grafton St. Phone ‘£8! John P. Nicholson. , LL.B. BARRlSTlul. suLlitlTon. Etc. I54 Prlllcu SI. PHONE ‘Z838 (Jlftilwn M. Albun Former Palmer 8i Huslam l. l. IIASLADI. 8A.. LL.B. Barrister, Ito. Blnll 0| Nnvn Scolla bhumhere Charlottetown, I'.E.l MONEY TU LOAN Dr. W. R. Ourson A. Wulthen Guudet. LL.B. BARRISTER, SOLIGITUIS, lite. Phillips Building III Grafton ercut Money to Loun UOIIVCIIIIIII e Frederic A. Large. K.C. BAIIIIISTEII, SOLICITWR, NOTARY Royal Bunk ol Cunailu (Jllnluilcrl Charlottetown, I'.E.l. Successor George J. Tweedy, 5.0 MucPhee 8i Trulnor H. F. hIncPI-IEE, J.:\.. KL. E SOMERLED TRAINOR. ILA. Barristers. Etc. Poolnbu Bldg. Hi5 Queen b’! J. A. McGuigon NOTARY I'I'l‘(,‘. BAIIICIWFICR, SULIIJITUN. UURIIII‘) BUILDING i l Joseph R. Muclvlillun. l LL.B. BAIIIIISTEII. SULIIIIIUL" mo. 15 Queen street PHONE 778 ‘ Money to Loan Bell & Mathieson BABRIHTICRS. .\‘()I.lI'I'I‘UIi.\ M‘.- R. R. BELL. SLL. D. L MATIIIICSON. I h. H.0- Attnrneys at Lou LOANS ON (llTV AND FARM PROPERTIES I50 Richmond SI. Clvurlottathsvn. IKICJ ___.__. __-_4 . nllnctlonl ___-. Mutheson 8i Paulie ilhlrllllffllltl" , A w nlnrlllcsolv l\('. Pnlmor Ilifldllllfl" l; || p|l;,\|(|l; 3A l.l..t\ UI-IARLOTTETOWA Bnrflnwn‘ .,|4_ w‘ "In" 5'- Phml" "'5 ollluctlilns Mm: s Ir l-OB" Ml Uwul ‘iuorge street ‘ . (lhlrlotu-tnv-v Chas. It. Mcfiuuid , _- au. , iii" nanllli-lrrlca..ml.iilrlon Guudot 8: Hdlflfil NOTAIII $10., "hwy; flnllfllllrl. Jlllllfll‘! l1" lll-Mn Print vlldlnn lll-unis» mull nl flom IIJI‘ ~ lllIAIlI.0'l"l‘ll’l‘llWl DIDFEY T0 L057‘ I“ Plum? ‘lll ALBERT A IIAIIDIYI‘ BA. b’ t‘ " flnnll 0| Iklmnlvfi ' "M" ll. II IIOMIE and COMPANY rllhlflrlilltrll) M '1 l)llN’lAN‘l‘.\ OFIYIIIPLS: (‘hurlnltvliln-n, llulllull, ltlullvliln I\llIII(‘l‘l-l- 5'“ filling-m. I‘ l. Iivlllvlllr. m UIIAIILUITIGTONN: Randolph w Mum-ml. i=.l\.. Il"‘"""‘ M. Sear» t‘..A., Lnrm- ll Iva-ll (M. W (Arum '|‘ null-ell ‘i’ Pllllllvlt ‘£030 om ' '- llEIl. W. IIIBBIIIS (llllfillflfllllflll M ‘I '0lIN1 ANT (‘IIIIIIDIE BUILDING TN IBM IYIIARLIITTIIHOWN P I l-