“rm: root: \ , ‘HIE llllllllfi-TTETSWII lllllllllllll Iorllln‘ Dally (Iolnllld lll 1887) Frank Walker and Lint. h! A. Barnett, R-C-NJZR. (On Aotlva Service) “The Strongest Memory is Weaker 11.5.. the Weakest Ink." WEDNESDAY, JUHFIS, 104s _>__ __.__...._..i. . The Canada‘ Foundation It is worth remembering that Canada has otflimal as well as material contributions to make to the “brave ncw world" 0f the fut- ure, and. that such contributions tnay well be- come of major importance. As yet, we stiffer in comparison with other countries in our fail- ure to give national recognition or encourage- ment to cultural interests and activities. We have no Federal department intercstetl in stimu- lating and supporting artistic etidcavor, no great endowment llllltlS devoted to the l-ltmian- ltics, no national clearing-house for the ex- lhonfle of itiformation and ideas. Canadian writers, pniiitt-rs, tnudvizins and others must continually plead fut‘ iillvllllull and beg for sup- port; and what attention and support they get is almost invariably regional and inadequate. To meet a long-felt need in this‘ contiec- lion, the Canada Foundation has bet-it formed and incorporated with headquarters at Ottawa. The incorporzttors include such outstanding men as Hon. justice _l. T. 'l‘ltorson, president of the Exchequer Court of Canada, Mr. fjcorge dc T. Glazebrottk, professor" of History at the Llni- versity of >.l‘Ol'tJlll0, .\li‘. .~\. Davidson Duiitmt, editor of the Jlontrutil biltmdard, Dr. E. A. Corbett, director of the Canadian Association for Adult Education, llr. John Grierson, Na- tional Film CUll1llllSSl<\1l('l' for Canada, Mr. Atrthur L. Flielps, director of overseas pro- grams for the CBC, and others. Their initial objective is s foundation fund of one million dollars which will be used to encourage the de- velopment of Canadian literature, music, art drama, sculpture, architecture and other cultural activities; to encourage the exhibition of Cau- sdian artistic and cultural works at home and abroad; to encourage the exchangelof visits of artists, musicians, craftsmen, lecturers and stu- dents of Canada and other countries: to foster goodwill and tnutual understanding between (bnada and other countries, promote exchange of teachers and students, encourage the transla- tion of Canadian literary works, etc. Money from the Foundation's funds Wlll, it is stated, "be ptmipetl into the stream of Canadian cultural activity, largely through co- operation with experienced agencies already es- tablished in the various fields. Efforts willibr. made to stimulate public interest iii every branch of the arts in every part of Canada. Awards, bursaries, scholarships and grants will be tnadc available where they can do the most good." This is indeed a splendid programme, and a much needed one. “Zirtiine needs have tend- ed to mzilte us forget the iniptlrtance of the cul- tural side of life;yet it is as true todav as when the words were ivrittcii that "where there is no vision the people perish." Neither can man live on bread alone. Such an institution as the Cari- ada Foundation (lcserves every support aiirl cu- couragcment. The Record fruit _ cnAizLorri-zjgown sions u- the V-E new: cams out, the Fact Finders Associates were commissioned to inter- view people on the" streets in l1 cities from coast to coast. Siunming up the results of the survey in the booklet, they are characterized as "the people’s profession of faith in their newspapers on the occasion of the biggest news story in s. generation." “Clearly," the stunmary continues, ‘never were people more hungry for newspapers. Never did they register more emphatically their con- fidence in newspapers as their prime source of information on events both great and small. Never was there more positive proof that most people like to see their news in black and white —insist on the detail and illustration that only newspapers can give them." When th'e 9E7 respondents to the inter- viewers were asked, “Where do you expect to get the fullest information about future devel- opments?" 795 mentioned newspapers. Of this number, t-he brochure reports, 502 mentioned newspapers alone ss their prime source of full information, 286 mentioned newspapers and radio, and 27 mentioned newspapers along with other media. Advertisingfs role in connection with the coining of European victory is reflected in the bo0kle_t by four pages of reproductions of sig- nificant ads appearing during V-E week. “Once again," the brochure comments, “as on other great days, newspaper advertising mir- rored the mood of the people . . in messages attuned to the victory and to the drastic need for unremitting effort against the last remain- ing foe." -E DITORIAL NOTES- The Baby bonus will help to offset the separation allowance, of which the wives of demobilized men will now be deprived. s u “tare was no "white glove" presentation at the Supreme Court sitting in Georgetown on the present occasion. There are so many visitors to the town in connection with the sitting that diffi- culty has been experienced in getting accommo- dation, the Aitken House, the favourite hostelry, alas, being now no more. w u c The City Council has done well to adopt Chief Birtwistlek recommendations regarding the reorganization of the police force. Placing policemen on boa-t duty serves a double purpose ——-trains the personnel in punctuality, observa- tion and detection, and the public, especially the rising generation, in wholesome respect for the representatives of the law. at n- c I i A report was current yesterday that a Government Civil Service job was to be found for Dr. Grant, M.P., and that for the King's County vacancy Hon. Cyrus MacMillau would run in the hope and expectations, if elected, of assuming the portfolio of Fisheries. Meantime the I-lon. Cyrus, though not at present a mem- ber, has flown to Ottawa. a i I U Ontario legislature is now in session pre- paratory to the Dominion-Provincial conference. The Federal Parliament (lOes not sit till August 23: tneatitime preparations are being made. to give the Prime Minister an acclamation in Crlengarry in the seat vacated “for a considera- tion" by Dr. W. B. MacDiarmid. n» at i D Tomorrow Flying Officer j. E lligeloiv, B.A., B.D., who has been instructor at the R. C. A. F. here for the past year. and Mrs. Bigelow and son, leave for Montreal and Win- nipeg. They have entered largely into the rc- ligious and social life of the comniutiity dur- ing their stay and Wlll be greatly ntisscrl. Rev. Fact.- l>l1 tiit- \\lli'l\' of the llritisli and Cana- dian hfaiies in (runny duty across the Atlantic, iplrqs-vl iii New York" hi the llritislt informa- tion Services, give tiiorc light oti the brilliant’ performance iii this branch of the service. llrir ‘, liiii-tipcaii zintl (‘zznrulizin Navies. unilcr llriti>li (fi-tllFHl nliil dircctlini. t‘.<:t>t'te<l 75,000 iiicrcl zit ships ll.'l"*>5 tllC‘ .\tl:iiitic in the five vc . Zllltl ciqlit itiviitlis of the Furo- Dczin ivar. (ll tlic~c only 574 ships were lost,‘ which nieaii< out‘ in cvvrv 3i which snilctl. Of the va~t total of szi [>l't|it‘t'l(‘1l ships Cana- dian war>liips t-sc-irzc-l 35.343, '|‘]ii,~ i; “T11 over one-tliirtl of the llllllllPl‘ ctnivoved. lt is a record that (llllfllllillls can be proud of, and those who have kin Wllii .~.'lll(‘tl in those war- ships have t-vrnv riglx. to fccl lllfti tliest- new sailors of t‘:iiial.i'< llil\'t' xiinrt- than shown themselves :i~ u: ‘ant and UUllYZlgCLdlS as their lltfitllvfi in the btiyal Canadtait Air Force and the figlitiitg fll'lll_\'. ltt Illl, tltvrc ucrr 3.2171‘ convoys. The larg- est was niadc iip of lb," ships, which had as it.- sole escort Caitatliatt warships and air cover by the RAF and RCAF. Not one of the r67 was lost. During the rlayvs from April to mid— Septetiibcr, 191.1,, \\'ll(‘ll the lliitisli Navy was elsewhere employ-ed, all convoys between North America and Britain were escorted by Cana- dian vessels. Newspaper Advertising Essential ".\'cvci' did iicu/spztpci"s mean so niucli to so manv" as on the ozcasicn of the announce- ment of Nazi tlcriiiaii_v's surrender, the Cati- arlian llaily- Newspapers Association and the Bureau of Arlvertising, .-\..\'.l-’.A. declare in a new brochure, "Victory in Etirope", which summarizes public reactions to the V-E news throughout Canada and the United States. “From the first flash of the Nazis’ own reports of stirrentlei" on tlirotigh the day of the official proclamations and the days that Ini- mediately followed," the brochure points out, "people turned to their tiewspapers with an eagerness seldom if ever equalled. Publishers who could find the iicivsprint in their war-hit inventories ran off extra copies, at the cost, in- variablv, of printing smaller papers and running less advertising/later on. People's demand sky- rocketed circulations iii many cities. Rut rare indeed was the publisher who came anywhere near met-ting the demand." Mr. Bigeloiv, who enlisted lll I941 immediately after graduating in theology at Montreal Pres- byterian College, where he won a post-graduate >Cll!)l-'ll'$lllp, iiitentls proceeding in the Fall to lftiion Scininary, New York. Rev. John O. Denny, BA, B.D., formerly of Charlottetown, who also won a post-graduate scholarship at the szune college, in I942, will be a fellow-student at lhion. w a 1k ‘I lane Austen, English tiovelist, born this date I775; is outstandingly the best delineator of the workings of the feminine tnind of the liiiglisli upper class, in her day and generation; liad difficulty in finding publishers for her works, but subsequently became the rage as best seller, her genius being commended by Scott, Tennyson, Coleridge, hlacatiiay and oth- ers; her leading novels are Smitt- and Srnri- lii/il)’, Pride rim! Prrjutlirc, Jlmisficlti’ Park,‘ they show remarkable gifts of humour antl satire; she was the daughter of a cler man, and came in contact with all sorts and condi- tions of men and women of the then upper crust in society: “I am afraid,’ replied Flinor,»"that the pleasantness of an employment docs not al- ways evince its propriety." “Where an opinion is general, it is usually correct.” . "To sit in the shade on a fine day and look upon verdure is the most perfect refreshment." n- Spoons and forks, plated according to a new British process, retain a lustre equal to silver without any treatment beyond washing in soap and water. This process, called speculum- coating, has been developed by scientists. It can he applied simply and directly to any metal, giv- ing exactly the appearance of silver. Tests have shown, however, that speculum-coated metal, which has the same reflectivity as silver articles when new, registers 400 per cent high- er reflectivity in one month's exposure under identical conditions. Acids such as lemon juice, and beer, have absolutely no effect on its sil- ver lustre. Other advantages of the coating are that it does not scratch or flake, even when articles are severely bent or twisted. It is so tough that an average coating of one-two- thousanrlth of an inch is adequate to give ex- cellent prntection. Speculum plating is already being used in the United Kingdom nu a wide -Most. families among them are near close of the Firs Ls ently the cure was not. permanent or he has fallen iigatn a vlctlm of high-up Nazis are known to be drug Notes By The Way it Thu “Bong of Norway" has become n Hymn of Hate-toward; the 500.- 000 German troo s atlll there and 1t 1n ff u: _ _ Lgmfonv ""1! fs ‘of the land Well. well. The lrlsls Improve- ment Society of Dublin wants char- lle McCarthy's name changed from the Irlsh one. And what about de Valerak unmet-Brandon Bun. In Moscow. slim reward for brav- ery ln mllltary brass lists ls a spacious new apartment. Almost. anywhere 1n the world today that would rate as just about. the high- est award for anything-Vancouver Provlncs. Shoo an not likely to be h: plan- tlful supply untll Japan 1s defeat.- ed. The Pacific area ‘ls sald to be harder on soldiers’ footwear than tiny other theatre, and American troops alone will r ulre 31 mtl- 11011 lulrs of shoes year which ls the heaviest demand of the-war. -_Hamllton Spectator. Through warfare 1n the put 50 years. Japan has grabbed leld, to- talling 2,798,000 square miles area, with a population of 308,212,- 000, that belonged to eight coun- trles: China, Britain, France. That- land, Russia, Portugal, The Nether- lands and the United States, our territory being Guam, Wake and the Philippines, says Colllerls. In- eluding its own people, Japan therefore controled one year ago. 21 per cent of the population of the world. 5 New Zealand scientists have now produced a new shark-repellant chemical whlch ls to be included the operational equipment of all New Zeala Pacific. When the original shark- repellant was produced tn the Un- lted States, the necessa raw ma- terials were unobtalnabe 1n New Zealand, and Domlnlon scientists, after experimenting with over 1.000 substitutes, found a. suitable one which was tried out at Shark Bay, Western Australia. The new chemical ls an unqualified success and is even more effective than the American formula. - From BBC Newsletter. _When a subscriber called demand- ing to know why this department hadn't sald anything about the weather, we replied that. we had sald plenty but; none was printable, The Minneapolis Stur- Journal reports. There ls another excuse. You fix up an appropriate piece about the backward season and by the time it is before the customer the sun has changed tac- tics and 1s shining beautifully and the reader wonders if the writer ls as wrong about politics as he ls about the weather. When weather turns fellcltous people have a strange way of forgetting 1t ever was anything else. The London Library ls a hlnt at ivhat ls coming 1n the field of the public library. In addition to the distribution of books, the library will be a clearing centre for films and records; lg will foster study and special interest groups such as music and art, says The Iethbrldge Herald. It will sponsor skills and handicrafts among the youth and 1t will have tin auditorium ant; an art. gallery. But that; 1s not all; it will offer to the public concerts and lectures, and ‘.2 you wish a good painting for your home it will pro- vide you with one at a nominal rental fee and you'll have an “op- tion" to buy it. In this way 1t wlll help our artists who too long have "starved in garrets,” or do artists today “starve”? General Eisenhower ls one of the few great men who have emerged in this war. l-le ls shrewd, hu- mane and wide-minded enough to manage men of many different types and natlohs. Hts job has been to not as chairman and co- ordinator of a most difficult team engaged on the most. complicated operations. He has moral courage. One of the memorable stories of the W31‘ ls of his final decision about D-Day. The generals sat around and gave their vlews, their estl- mates of the technical problems, their doubts about the weather and so forth. When they had finished Eisenhower said. "1 am supreme commander and I must make this decision myself. W111 you all leave the room?" A quarter of an liour afterwards he, called them back and said. "We sail tomorrow". There was to be no Dardanelles muddle about responsibility; 1t fell on his shoulders alone. - London New Statesman. No group of people ln the world ls ln sadder plight today than the 200,000 or more Spanish Republican refugees, men. women and children, ln exlle ln southern France. They are the remnants of the half-mtl- llmi patriots who fled out of Spain when Franco. with the help of Mussolini and Hitler, overthrew their Republic. Now, llternlly, they are people without a country, and because Spain ls "neutral" they enn- not qualify for aid from UNRRA. starvation, their menfolk killed, wounded, lm rlsoned, deported or by Vlchy an orltles farmed out, as bond slaves. After 1H9, thous- ands of them joined the French Army and the French Fore Le- gion. Others, battling beside ‘he French Forces of the Interior, he p- ed to liberate many a French town, port and dlstrlct. Hundreds of them, set free from North Africa prison camps, joined General Eisen- ower's armies and went on with our troops through Slclly and Italy. They are today. as they were throughout the European war, “peo- ple on our slde." Yet they are doom- ed to perlsh unless ald comes to them tn proof that the free world has not abandoned them. - New York Times. Apparently, Hermann Goerlng, who ls supposed to have been cur- ed of drug addiction years a510, still ls s slave to the habit. s name of the narcotic la but 1t is lflld that he takes so much that "lf 1t had been taken away from hlm suddenly, he would have become s raving maniac ln 24 hours." says The Niagara Falls Review. Perhaps the best way of handling film would be to get s11 salble information of vslue from film and then withhold the dnag, which would be terrlbla unlsh- merit for such is man. Goo ng was a notorious dru addict. at the Great War. but sald to have been cured at an lnitltutlon in Sweden-but. appar- his nld cravlng. Others of the 9m‘ s factual picture of people's impres- raiiige of products iiicltiding all types of liotise- hold goods and fittings. nddlcls and perhaps fear their aun- bon back of some of the rulcldes ply would be out off ls the real ren- nd slmien ln the- that. Japanese ground defence forces chemical composition. lFEXl-“TB. 001°!‘ "-':'.' .. ..._._..._____._ PUBLIC ' FORUM WOLEUB INSTITUTII TAXED Sin-With regard to the Amuse- ment Ts: how ls tt that the 30v- ernment cm not exempt the Women: Instltutes dances from this tax? Or why did they ever put ti. on an organizations except for church purposes heulon church property? The majority of churches hero hold no property except for their small lawns ln front which soctiils. Llke every other Women: Institute, ours here donates s11 its proceeds to charitable purposes and especially for our boys ln ser- vlce and Red Cross work. We wom- en work long hours sewing om. sf- ter s hard days work on the farm for nothing, while our government officials have their short lwum drawing large salaries, then they have the nerve to tax the Womens Instltutes. Then lf we put up our door fee, the cry is. ‘That's Con- trary to the War Tlme Prices and Trade Board restrictions." And lo —snd behold, when we rend our report of receipt; there we flnd listed "Government grant." the sum of one dollar and eighty flve cents. When our only source of revenue ls from dances. Why tax us? I am. Blr, etc. PAULINE JACKSON, Secretary Lower Montague W.I. In The Pacific COIIJecture varies as the compell- ing reason for Japanese failure to react 1n any substantial way to close-range naval as well a5 alr bombardment of her important northern coastal cities: but falling fuel supplies for enemy ships of air and sea ls as good’ a gues; as B110’. Nor can it be doubted that aside from the Allied hope of bringing Japanese fleets of both categories to act-ion, further impairment. of enemy gasoline and fuel resources Was a prime objective of the bold venturing of the United States 3rd Fleet within easy range of the Jap- anese coast. Recapltulatlons from Guam of the results of sustained sea-air strat- egic attack stress the fact. that three of the cities “erased" 1n the operation Wet-e otl centres Lylnz far to the north on Hokkaido 18- land, the three cities blasted -—Mur- oran, Sapporo and Kushlro — were not only steel-production oen-tzea but links ln Japan's oll reserve llne never before brought under fire. Oll reserves also were the maln targets of far-ranging simultan- ous air attacks by land-based bomb- ers 1n central and spulhem Japan. I That what ls left of Japan's sur- face fleet failed to put tn an HP- pearanee to dispute the Sea. attacks ts not particularly surprising. There ls every indication that the ships are holed up in the inland sea. far to the south. Lack of fu-el and conservation of ntr and sea, power against invasion any can therefore partially account for lack of any reaction. It does not cover failure of enemy coastal 811m to open iip when battleships drove lnto a land-ringed bay on southern Hokkaido to batter Mumran. It ts possible that. Japanese de- fence contcpts in the north P811841 so completely on alr and sea. 011l- posts in the Kurlles to deal with any enemy advance on Hoklwlco unit shore batteries were never in- stalled around Mororan Bu!’ °l' the great gulf that leads to 1t. 'I‘h¢ American shlps were ln easy ranle of even light and medium enemy mobile field guns. however, and why they remained silent ls olf- flcult to explain It could lndtcate have been concentrated to the south where invasion t5, expeclfid BY"! thus were cauzht 11011131118. rusn FERAMIC ruousrnv coma/mo. ceylon — (C?) —- The establishment of an c2090“ trade 1n kaolin. or Dure-vithlte Clilnn clay, is recommended for the post-war development of the min- eral resources of Ceylon- 111 "5 and plasticity the refined Chlfll my of Ceylon l; said to be ewlfll 11° thsystllzitlllslwslégs-c , __._ receded or followed lvhelcr caiilliirep by the United Na- lions, Hitler also ls known to have had almost continual injections of some driiv and perhaps that ac- counts for the hysterical note so often heard 1n his speeches. GUARDIAN .... __.. ...____-_..-¢-—I— certainly would not be suitable for Months. DOMINION STEE will start. September 15th. REQUIREMENTS: common iiov Aviiiisiiirsr" if voun tacit mziitrirs 'Avo1d Possible Disappointment In The Winter By Accepting Deliveries During Tllo Sumner. L s. coat. cont-cannon" LIMITED IALIAI-UYDNII-IAIII’! tom-NONI’!!! - £-~-:::--==—=-' ‘T New Hampshire Flock Owners If you are desirous of shipping hatching eggs to the Delmarva district, U.S.A., starting late fall’ this year's pallets, fllc your application with the Promoter, Box 39, Charlottetown, P. E. I. Blood testln/g Senior Poultry That your flock and premises meet. the requirements of‘ the P. E. I. Approved Flock Pol- icy. That your flock is “PULLORUM CLEAN.” The shipping of hatching eggs to U. S. A. 1s llkely_ to be year around business. Al. Present. Drfidllfiers a" "filling 60c per dozen for eggs accepted for hatchery purposes. 7-13-16-18-81. 144 Richmond St. E. R. Brow & Sun Fire, Auto, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate Agent‘ at Summerside. D. O. Stewart Charlottetown l l l l Armed Forces (l) United Kingdom figures 1n- dlude men from overseas serving ln these forces. ln particular from Newfoundland and Southern Rho- des n. (2) Includes 20,000 officers and other ranks missing but presumed prisoners of war. (3),F.lgure.s of deaths. missing and lntemees Include na/tlonals of the Domlnloris, India and the Colonies serving on British regist- ered ships but exclude deaths of tiatlonala of the United Kingdom serving on ships registered out- side the United Kingdom. It. ls only by a presentation of the flguregdn this form that one can (at s true plctuic of the lin- psct. of tlhe war on the Brltlsh peoples. Killed and mlaslns to- gether amounrl. to a total of 532.- 283. which ls the number of dead and believed dead up to 31st. May last. Of the above losses, most of which have been tn the war scalnst British Casualties Near 1,500,000 Casualty figures issued in London show war losses of the Brit-loll Commonwealth tn 5% years of war, “P W 31M. May, 1946, as follows. Kllled Missing Wounded‘ Pris. of War United Kingdom u) 233,042 51,412 216.915 183-849 can“; . 36,018 2,866 53,073 9,051 Awtraiia 21,415 6.519 37,4117 26,800 New Zealan 9.844 2.201 19.2113 3-435 S. Africa 6,417 1.980 13.773 14.595 India .. . 23,295 12,264 M064 79.602 (I) Colonies .. 6,741 14,811 6,773 8,051 Home Guard United Klngdom 1.206 557 (including deaths from wounds and illness) British Merchant. Navy (S) 30,867 4,090 4252 5.506 Clvlllans .585 06,175 Totals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 4.29.430 102.803 559.372 Kingdom has been heavy. In t/he war against Japan the armed forces of Enigtand and the British Isles will continue to play a greag! part Domlnlons, India and the Brltlslt together with the forces Colonies. For Foot Ailments CON SULT H. J. A. BROWN, DJ’. Orthopedic GIIIRUPOEIST l4! Great George Street CIIAILOTTETOWN. P.l.l. Germany, the ahsrs of the United "COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE” in. it. noerns lgssslss Ltd. Hm 540-441 QUICK IES 836,029 1.427.634 By Ken Reynolds Total 750.338 177 ,3] 5 36.378 1,768 itehso the "If you don't want. to take the chance of putllng under your pillow for a Good Fairy-then 'loolr in the Guard-Ian Want Ads for a blycr of old gold-t’ | 140 Grus George Street L-lttlc brlu of _ “W94 ulna: . Thus are made by lonely for; f tents": c" "ssriiiii- . e wax bouqurg g Fri-UH’: cut W011 n plri, - Llttlomn of man 1mg, Little Flu-r of mm‘ ; Little charts of ourlv seas, _ Little verses. such as these. ; —Doir.oth.v Park"; lisssy Stomach: lllieved prescrlptlo sol! under lb‘: . Ivan; Stomach have the sols rights on this roscrlptton Ind plncg selling have re- ceived numerous testimonial; from satisfied iii-chasm. Prloo Ila m Mt o. l Au you mounts» wrrn LUMBAGO on soiut anon 1' If so we havs one of the but rcsnedles er namely BACK-RITE TABLETS Es lally effective for Lms . Sclatloa, Nmltls, joint rnnscull and other forms of Rheumatism which ordinary treatment fall to reach. Price yer x. m: 2 nucs Mall Orders Given Prompt Attention i' Professional lllflll McLeod I 8 Bentley w. s. arm-mu. n o. l. s. asrrrsu. n. c. nut-um- and swim-n- ' low ,;i_-q_,\_.-q~.;.j,-.~.:._. - = . . Y" .8. one o 0o. Chanson Aeooutsnts ll Grafton Street- Charlottetown non low rm "l Randolph I Mlflllllll. 0A- \ HfiV-HA-E HWJN illorroll and Company Clllrlortni Ar -:r.:::.'-' m, ‘.8 \ ll. F. llllfililllhlll Charlottetown M. ALBAN FARMER BA. , LLB. Osuullan Bank of Commerce Bids MONEY T0 LOAN BAR-BISTER, SOLICITOR. ITO- OIIARLOTTITOWN J.l. Mclilllfiflll, M. anus-rm. soucrroii sunny are. umnmqfls, | * _ ALEX w. MATun-sstlll Oflloo: so Great own:- 81m‘ M s; Logs: Collectlnn o rants souciron. m. Charles R. McQuald I A. lsrrlster, Sollcltor. Notary. Etc. IE] Illlllll}, UIIAIIONGWVI Plums l8! BELL 8 MATHIESQ Astor-m mt-hw LOANS on oil-v arm H" moron-nus connwrrous Olsrlottoowll. P. ll. l- PHlflEll o HASLAM s. s. nasum. as. l-I-l P. 0. __ ,1: Frederic l. l-lfll alumnus. I10- It lll Gvus Georle WM I Phone IOII P- 9- 5" OIIAILOTTI-rfuu l’. E- '- ._ j.