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The Huron Expositor, 1927-04-29, Page 6IntOrri E tetfri are prflflpt1Y relieved by ,De THot4Ast ECIZVIRICOIL'-' ArIvrigtfa/FORSATEriEtairettri24" E 1'A EST MONIAL. THAT ae FQ I 4 UNIEROUb OURATIV Q A M E ROUSE TUAT JACK CANUCK. BUILT There is a missing book tucked away perhaps among the ancient doc- . =elite in the warehouses of the Hud- son Bay Company in London. It is called a "Book Apart," a curious chronicle which, if found, will dis- close many a romantic chapter. , in the affairs of the company's servants in Canada. This was the book which contained the records of the matri- di91•1111.011 beauty o is -waskable as tiL/ n, There's -uch a wnr1,1 ef pleasure int ,potles, wnetl- work anti wll k1 1 Shalihy, faces have nu place in the well kept home i.,terior. 'Why tolcrtte them when Sun Varni.-.1w. will brighten them up for Lily witli a neat, mirror-like, wa-halde beauty. If it', the •A‘esslwnrl: that needs attention, SUN VARNIS11. cuver up the Idyl-el-11es and bring back all it, plea,ing new- ness. And, whenever neces- sary, ynu can wash that Sun Varnished surface with ht water, without injuring it- beautiful finish. Put it on the Ia the cant e et - row boat and porch ceiling-., too. It't- hardy enough to resist the ravage-' tlie weather. A 1-Callv won- derful varnish fer al 1 wntelwerk - except floors. For the latter you have St.N Fl.()OR V.\ RN ISIT, a rich finish that Hot, out war marks from h,ird- wood floor,. Crack,. chip, or heel mark, will neVC1- mar the spelt.— beautythi- flint hard varnish. Leaking radiator, will nut deface it. nor will rain driving through an open window dim its plea,ing lustre. Your local Canada Paint dealer sells Sun Var- nishes. Is,. visit to his -tore will he the fir -t step toward real success in any varnishing joh 3.ou have in view. CANADA PAINT NVrite for Our beautifully illustrated free color book, showing actual color pilot'.of lovely painted homes, to guide you in selecting. color schemes for the interior or exterior of your home or summer cottage. ArldreA-s, canaila Paint Co. Limited 72 \Villiain St., IVIontreal. s,,,,f.ce and tbe all • 6A -,At • gave InC0414 1).111.reOlI of. tha Oettepanye The oompany was deeply ettieeprned With WI that befell its SOIAValita. ttree Wejeded them for'pluck and paid them, 40410elleations for their injurtes as in the case when, according to the minutes of the council meeting, one Of thein got "four pounds, smart money, for a frozen toe." No less did it concern itself with brides for its apprentices, just as New France and New England provided wives for their colonists, though the business was conducted in a, more discreet fa- shion. Agnes Laut, who has picked such priceless nuggets from the archives of the company first came upon a record of a meeting of the General Council secretly called and over which each of the members were sworn to secrecy. The meeting con- cerned a gentleman named Andrew Vallentine. After much searching she discovered a modest entry in the minutes that "all the entries about Mr. Vallentine's office for the comp- any be made in a Hooke Aparte" and that ten per cent. of the yearly divi- dends be set aside as dowries for the brides of the apprentices. Some of these dowries amounted to seventy or a hundred dollars. Mr. Vallentine con- ducted a matrimonial bureau, that is o'bvious. Too bad he did not keep a diary like Mr. Pepys, for many of hrides came of good English families, a relative of the governor of the com- pany being one of them. The Booke Aparte would reveal some surprising origins of old Canadian families. It must have been a flourishing busi- ness while it lasted, for ten per cent. of the company's earnings mounted to a big sum every year, but the of- fice ended with Mr. Vallentinie's death. te • CANADA PAINT 54 PRODUCTS i*e makers oilne fonoug hant Bi -and Genome 0i/dead P'OR SALE BY ee, Indians. On Horseback. A smuggler from the Isle of Wight who became a Hudson's Bay Com- pany servant, was the first English- man, and the only one before the conquest, to explore the southern parts of Manitoba and Saskatchewan and parts of Alberta. Unfortunately for him, he reported that he had seen Indians on horseback and he was laughed to scorn and the entire rec- ord of his journey discredited. Such was the self-satisfaction of the com- pany's officials that they were will- ing to discard the whole of the man's work because some detail of the report ran counter to their pre- conceived ideas. The Indians of the Blackfoot Confederacy had originally obtained horses from the Spaniards, but how were the officials in London to know that? Anthony Hendry watched the hunting of the buffalo, and for dressing a wounded Indian's leg was presented with a great deli- cacy, a buffalo's tongue. In his travels along the South Saskatche- wan he saw outcroppings of a miner- al which probably was a hint of Al- berta's great coal fields. Hendry spent the winter on the North Sas- katchewan and probably was part of the time on the site of Edmonton. By spring time he had collected a flotilla of 60 canoes, manned by As- siniboines, loaded to the gunwales with furs they had traded from the Blackfeet and so he set off with a laughing heart on the way to York Factory to tickle the Governor with the report of his enterprise. Poor Hendry! he was brave, but not crafty, He had to pass two French trading posts and at each of them the court:- eous traders entertained him within doors, while their men wheedled the furs away from the Indians. He ar- rived at Rork Factory with nothing but the furs the Frenchmen did not want. Worse still, his winter's work was laughed to scorn, simply because he stuck to his tale of Indians on horseback. o your own •washing 0 If so, it will pay you to try this Chinese 'Melling Fluid. Front your dxuggist 1uy:-1 can Gillett's Flake Lye (be 'sure it's "Gillett's" and not a cheat) imitation); oz. Muriate of Ammonia; oz. Salts of Tartar; 1 oz. Sulphate of Soda; dissolve in three gallons of water; keep in large glass bottle or stoneware jar. Use a cup of this fluid to each tub of water, allowing the clothes to soak over night. You'll be amazed at how little rubbing is needed to get clothes spotlessly clean and sweet-smelling, and it will not injure the finest fabrics. Get the genuine article—refuse all substitutes ILLETT'S PURE FLAKELVE EATS DIRT in Manitoba, an old French trading post, to Nelson on the Bay, will run the long discussed and nearly -com- pleted railway. If the shade of Henry Hudson ever drifts over the Bay on which he perished it will be elated to see his Bay made the high- way from Europe to the prairies for at least three months of every year. Modern Canada will imitate the fur traders by using the quickest route to the interior, the opening of the Hudson Bay railway will have some astonishing effects. It will shorten the travelling distance between Cal- gary and Liverpool by nearly 1,100 miles, cutting off a long rail journey to the etes for Nelson is no farther from Liverpool than is St. John. it will give a route from Europe to Asia, via Nelson and Prince Europa of 8,000 miles shorter than by way of New York and San Francisco. There an, obviously great possibili- ties in both cargo and passenger traf- fic and perhaps, after nearly three centuries, a way has been found from the Bay to the Orient. If it lives up Le expectations, the route will save prairie farmers several hundred miles in railway transpor- tation for grain and livestock. Running the Gauntlet Strait_ The reeords of the Hudson's Bay Company have been searched by those who press for the use of the Bay route to Europe. There is a wide difference of opinion as to the length of time the route will be avail- able every year. The opinions of nearly ISO well known navigators of the northern sea have been tabulated. One auchority is Captain Coates who sailed from the Thames to the Bay in tht. years before the conquest and another is Captain Bernier of our own lay, while others include those whi, ioiarched for Franklin and trad- ers and fishermen of our own day. The average arrived at as a result of all these opinions is that the Mani- toba -,tiaport will be available for fif- teen weeks every summer from some- time .e July until the first of Novem- ber, These weeks will allow for the t-liiitment of a large part of the crop Dern the prairies. The trip into and out of the Bay is dangerous at any time, but it has been navigated suc- A Stuart Whim Confirmed. tees fully for over 214 centuries. Cap- on Hudson's this strait with its pounding of angry tides and its rush of cataracts and mountain streams down the sides a the hills as the base and treble of some cathedral organ sounding its diapason to the glory of God in a peopleless wilderne,ss. When the ice crashed the winds roared and the tides sucked in this treacherous channel it required a skillful hand, a sure eye and the care of heaven to get a ves- sel safely through. ' S 0r. 1,000 lepers have been harpd s cured. The treatment - 'go•thr ep /ears with a weekly return to. Manila, It wits in the 404*, ef.1,928 ethat the first batch Of 100 eUredleneee was sent back to the vapital thus definitely proving to the fllppinoa - that the disease is curable. The, effeet was. remarkable. Lepers w.b.o, had been hiding presented themSelVeS ter treatment, and the thousands- of lirmartd cues who re-, mained act Colima, .took.heart. The so. called, "leper face nanieb! the hone- less,,tragic expression of, -,the sufferer Who knows that he is 40014031t has all but disappeared from Cullom • ' As leprosy advarteee it is commonly if not invariably complicated hy other diseases, heart disease particularly. Science has yet found no way to cure the.ee cases. The urgent heed is to .apply the treatment at the earliest possible stage, and if the fund is rale - ed, as expected, experiment•will pro- ceed with a view of curing the disease even when it is attended with other maladies. The Culion colony was es- tablished in 1907 by Dr.- Victor G. Heiser, Health Director of Manila. His immediate object was to save those who had not contracted the dis- ease by removing infected person.. The first lepers to be Pounded up re- sisted as best they could, but were forced to leave homes and families and isolate themselves. At. first the non -leprous population was inclined to resist the deportation of friends and relatives, but gradually it ha become known that the segregation • was for the good of both the sick and the well, and now there is better ce operation. The Manila Legislature has been giving one-third of its healtli appropriation to the leper colony which is a large percentage in view o the fact that smallpox and choler are also rampant in the islands. The wife of Governor-General Woo has established herself as a goo angel to the lepers, and they have ala thirty Fillipino doctors and nurses half a dozen French nuns and Dr, an. Mrs. Wade, the former being th medical chief. These are the mil non -lepers on the island. All of th others, including teachers and work ers, are victims of the disease. Mrs Wade is now in the United States act ing as the Governor -General's aide i raising money. Mrs. Wade says tha the most pitiful sight on the island not the lepers themselves, but thei children. When born of leper pal ents they are perfectly clean, and the are as bright as other children, goin to school' as though at home in thei healthy villages. They do not co tract the disease until they are te years old, and then, if they could got off the island, they would escap but Mrs. Wade says that they u-suall stay long enough to become disease Why the children are not forcibly r moved is not explained, but it wou' seem better that their hearts an those of their parents should wrenched for a time than that the should slowly but surely develsp in lepers and thus perpetuate the pro lem. There is some difficulty in re -et tablishing the cured lepers. Of ti first group of 100 discharged in 192 two returned to the island in s months and asked to be taken in, sa ing that it was the only home the had. The non -lepers show reluctan to once more associate with tho known to have the disease. Th know from the experience of gene ations that leprosy does not beco manifest until 15 or 18 years from t beginning of its development., and th do not like to take chances. The c tivation of gardens is one of the chi occupations of the Culion lepersv Ea man has his little patch whei-e raises vegetables which he sells to t Government, and latter consumes rations in addition to the food pr vided by the Government that com from Manila. The lepers have al carpenter shops and fisheries, a they build roads. Their chief jo are in tobacco and chocolate, whi they purchase with the money th earn from the sale of their vegetabl or fish to the Government. Oft dying lepers, according to Mrs. Wa ask for a bit of chocolate as th breathe their last. If the French Canadians had been free to work out their own destiny .their history might have been differ- ent, but a muddle headed king, his N ain mistress and a coterie of worth- less officials of their choice were the undoing of New France. The king in whose name these ardently adventurous Frenchmen were trying to hold all North America was the foolish Louis XV. He would have no prime minister to govern for him, but preferred to allow the country to be governed by Madame la Pompa- dour. For twenty years her boudoir was the council chamber of the kingdom and her frown as effective as a death warrant. All Louis de- manded in return was that she amuse him. One of his favorite en- tertainments was to see birds of prey loosed in a chamber full of sparrows. He thoroughly enjoyed the ensuing carnage. His greatest accomplish- ment was cutting off the top of an egg with one dexterous sweep of knife, whereat his courtiers would shout, "Vive le Roi!" Money was raised by selling blank orders for imprisonment by which the pur- chasers would consign those who had earned their malice to dungeons for life. The aristocrats of France left their estates to stewards and swarmed into the palace at Ver- sailles where men and women alike immersed themselves in the absurdi- ties of fashion and luxury. "Ver- sailles was a gulf into which the labor of France poured its earnings and it was never full." The poorest were ruthlessly taxed for their seig- neurs, the church and the king, while the wealthy went free. The profligacy of the court spread like a plague to Canada and at Montreal and Quebec where men and women as reckless and extravagant as any to be found in the kingdom of Louis, the last French king of Canada. After the merry monarch and his lair Bernier had regularly sa 1 the reckless crew of Stuarts had passed Arctic for a quarter of a century with off the scene in England there were the -time ship without ally serious many who began to question the' nu'hap. The worst bit of the trip is right of the Hudson Bay Company! 400 miles between Labrador and Baf- to the privileges which Charles II. : fin Land. Into that strait named for had bestowed upon it. They began Henry Hudson drifts the ice from th to ask why a Stuart whim shoulde Arctic. Furious seas, suddenly con - lose to England the control of half fid within its narrowness rage a continent which was being main—tidewea weather rs tenon eamuleseh tained as a great private game pre- , ro hr in quret serve. The company, they said, had sele rise cliffs anything up to 2,000 not lived up to its promises to find watchingrriteePrittah;gib struggle he between silentlyeens e the e andele to explore or to colonize. Their ef- - r way to the Orient, and it had failed ! rele: in the 35 to 45 -miles wide chan- forts to rob the copany of its char- nel. Old Captain Coates described ter might have been successful if Verendrye and other intrepid French- men had not already set up trading posts far inland toward the west, tramping and paddling their way there from the St. Lawrence. Already there was a post at Le Pas and an- other on Lake Manitoba and through them they were tapping the fur trade. The English parliament, half inclined to exert its authority over the company, stopped and asked itself: Who will hold the French in check if the authority of the com- pany is withdrawn? Someone must maintain English rights on the Bay and it was easier to let the company do it even if their profits did seem enormous in view of the original in- vestment. So the company kept its monopoly and built itself new and powerful forts, including Fort Prince of Wales on the Churchill, a fortress as strong as Quebec which to -day lies in desolate grandeur under the northern sky. More men and more guns and more goods went out every year and the company prepared for that new aggressiveness which sent Henry to the forks of the Saskatche- wan before the conquest and Hearne to the Coppermine and Alexander Mackenzie to the Pacific after it. Pile Sufferers The Paddle Pointe the Way For the Rail. It was shrewd wisdom which prompted the Hudson Bay Com- pany to build its forts on the west coast of Hudson Bay at the mouths of the great rivers which drained the interior. Fort Churchill, or Fort Prince of Wales stood where the Churchill entered the Bay, Nelson or Fort York as it wee later called, when the Nelscrn and Hayes Rivers floWed into the sen at about the same place. By the innumerable streams and lakes which fed these rivers the Indians travelled with their furs. To- day the 'cot:tatty drained by theSe selfsame rivers proritise to con- sti'tUte the Yield gltab fl of de- Olent in Canada. Front La Pas, erie ',see „el.& eeie. eye. ee (an You Answer These Questions? Do you know why ointments do not give you quick and lasting relief? Why cutting and operations some- times fail? Do you know the cause of piles is internal? That there is a stagnation of blood circulation in the lower bowel? Do you know that there is a harm- less internal remedy discovered by Dr. Leonhardt and known as HEM-ROID, now sold by all druggists everywhere, that is guarantee -d? HEM-ROID banishes piles by re- moving the cause, by freeing blood circulation in the lower bowel. This simple home treatment has an almost unbelievable record for aure, quick and lasting relief to thousands of pile sick sufferers, and saves the needless pain and expense of an operation. Don't delay. Try HEM-ROID to -day. It will do the same for you. MONEY AND TIME CAN END LEPROSY Governor-General Wood of the Phil- ippines is appealing to the American people to provide him with $2,000,000 for a fund to stamp out leprosy in the islands, It seems to be orny a matter of raising the money and of time when this horrible disease will he eradicated from one of its last strongholds. Leprosy can be cured in certain stages almost as certainly as tuberculosis can be cured. Indeed leprosy, uncomplicated with other disease, can be cured at almost any stage, for what is regarded as practi- cally a specific for it has been found in chaulmoogra oil. This treatment has been used in India for many years, but in the Philippine leper colony at Culion it has been improv- ed by the oil being refined into an ethylister. Until recently the chaul- moogra oil was swallowed by the patient, and unless he had an unusu- ally strong system his digestive ap- paratus was seriously upset. Only certain favored lepers could derive the .benefits that the oil contained, but now it can be injected into the muscles with no inconvenience. There are 12,000 lepers in the Phil- lippines, but only 6,000 on the little island where they are being treated. The others are scattered about, many of them being hidden by relatives for fear they will be interned. But Gov- ernor-General Wood believes that if the necessary fund can be raised all the lepers can be segregated and moat of them cured. Those who are too far gone for treatment will not com- municate the disease to others and thus in a generation it will be abolish - UNIVERSITY OF WE$TERN ONTARIO SUMMER SCHOOL, JULY grkia0 AUG.13TH Six delightful creaks of study fold reereatien. "rot tologoation write tfrit., Dr. H. R. • Eleitettne-er the Reght- fra, QtX.P.R. London, Ontario. Speotal Courses for Teachers 1. charge Nature Study and Agriculture. 2. Stevie* Course in 113gb School Otemetry. 3. Cotirse in Library Science. coanmioftertit also 1st Chem- istes,tnelati, rosadit)Geectsai , Greol4 Watery, Latin, Mahe. maticii 'Nth Zoolegy. A spltiidrilt aoctal and athletic Betialltutitaiw tratitertsity atm. Ingatia.A 20) ti4ii Park, ettoe,Oliet :noes RHEUMATIC MISERY Relief Can Only Come Throug Better Blood—Liniments of No Use. In no other disease does the blo become thin so rapidly as in rheurr tism. Not only does it become tit but it is loaded with impurities—sth matic poisons. Without the pro treatment these poisons increase, inflamed joints swell and the pati becomes a cripple. Most treatme simply aim to keep down the pa hence with every unfavorable con tion a renewed attack follows. To cast out rheumatism the bl must be enriched and the rheum poisons driven out with the natu secretions of the body. This can b be done through a course of Dr. Hams' Pink Pills, which have a s oific action on the blood, giving it n richness and redness. Thousands Ile tried this treatment with benefi results. That every sufferer fr rheumatism who does not try Williams' Pink Pills is neglecting Most hopeful means of recovery shown by the statement. of Mr. Da Carroll, Pictou, N.S., says "For years I was troubled" with rh matism. The pains ware not Conti ous, lent they always returned, kept getting worse. I tried so -cal electric belts and many medicines, did not geternore than temporary' lief. Only those TAW ilave suffe front this trouble will realize wha suffered at times. I had begun to pair of getbing-better when a fri urged me to try Dr. P Pills. In a short timekt I coufael medicine helping me so I gladly c tinned taking the pint and' 8 found that evary,trace of the tro had disappeared and there was great iminovement in my gen 'health, It It noW two years sine too Dr.' Pitik Pills an has e not: had. the least twinge of trouble in that time. That is wh Uonfiderttly ret,onanend • the pills 03'030' suiferers,''' You can get these pills from Inedieine deal& or by mail at 6 bidt,fro% The Ef, Medi *V; grbelcOhl• 04. 7,177.7""Stit'',7t."Ss rsiitSfitS - site. DR, p„,4 it: FOASTIO Am W;Almo.,,,d.Throlit Graduatein'NedlOinap Linivereity of Toronto. , ., , Late assistant OW 01,114 mei and Aural InstitUte, Moereliel li Eye and Golden Square Threa* Ais, pitta's, London, Eng. :"At Commercial Hotel, Seaforth, third mmulay In each month from 11 a.m. to. 3' 58 Waterloo Street, South, Strhtfer. Phone 267, Stratford. `e, , - , • per I . LEGAL . Phone No. 91 1OHN J. HUGGARD Barrister, Solicitor Notary Publie, Etc: Beattie Illock - r Seaforth, Ontu R. S. HAYS Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyance/ and Notary Public. Solicitor g9r the • Donainion Bank. Office in'rear of the Dominion Bank, Seaforth. Money to kian. BEST & .BEST l3arristers, Solicitors, Conveyan- cers and Notaries Public, Etc, co in the Edge Building, oppositeThs Expositor Office. VETERINARY JOHN GRIEVE, V.S. Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin- ary College. All diseases of domestic , animals treated. Calls promptly at- tended to and charges moderate. Vet- erinary Dentistry a specialty. Office , and residence on Goderich Street, one • door east of Dr. Mackay's Office, Sea - forth. 1. A. 11. CAMPBELL, V.S. 1 Graduate of Ontario Veterinary > College, University of Toronto. All diseases of domestic animals treated 1 by the xn o s t modern principles. ? Charges reasonable. Day or night r calls promptly attended to. Office on 2 Main Street, Hensall, opposite Town - Hall. Phone 116. .--4 _ MEDICAL 1 t DR- W. C. SPROAT Graduate of Faculty of Medicine, r University of Westere Ontario, Lon- - don. Member of College of Physic - Y :ails and Surgeons of Ontario. Office g in Aberhart's Drug" Store, Main St., r Seaforth. Phone 90. - n . e DR. R. P. I. DOUGALL Honour graduate of Faculty of Y I. Medicine and Master of Science, Uni- e versity of Western Ontario, London. d Member of College of Physicians and d Surgeons of Ontario. Office, 2e600rs :e east of post office. Phone 56, Hensall, Ontario. 3004-tf Y ,o DR. A. NEWTON-BRADY )- Bayfield. Graduate Dublin University, Ire- land. Late Extern Assistant Master e'ie Rotunda Hospital for Women and Children, Dublin. Office at residence X lately occupied by Mrs. Parsons. or- Hours, 9 to 10 a.m., 6 to 7 p.m.; 'Y Sundays, 1 to 2 p.m. 2866-26 te DR. F. J. BURROWS 1y Office and residence Goderich Street, r- east of the Methodist church, Sea- le forth.. Phone 46. Coroner for the ie County of Huron. il- DR. C. MACKAY ef C. Mackay, honor graduate of Trin- ± ity University, and gold medallist of ae Trinity Medical Col:lege; member of ae the College of Physicians and Sur- geons of Ontario. o - es DR. H. HUGH ROSS SO Graduate of University of Toronto id Faculty of Medicine, member of Col- Ys lege of Physicians and Surgeons of ch Ontario; pass graduate courses in ey Chicago Clinical School of Chicago ; es Royal Ophthalmic Hospital, London, England; University Hospital, Lon - le: don, England. Office—Back of Do- ' minion Bank, Seaforth. Phone No. 5. " Night calls answered from residence, Victoria Street, Seaforth. DR. J. A. MUNN Successor to Dr. R. R. Ross h Graduate of Northwestern Univers- ity, Chicago, Ill. Licentiate Royal • College of Dental Surgeons, Toronto. Office over Sill's' Hardware, Main St., od Seaforth. Phone 151. La - lin DR. F. J. BECHELY :u- Graduate Royal College of Dental Surgeons, Toronto. Office over W. R. ,he Smith's Grocery, Main Street, Sea- ent forth. Phones: Office, 185 W.; resi- ts dence, 185 J. 05,5-tf di- AUCTIONE7RS :od tic THOMAS BROWN ral Licensed auctioneer for the counties est of Huron and Perth. Correspondence rill- arrangements for sale dates can be Pe- made by calling up phone 212, Sea- ew forth, or The Expositor Office. Charg- me es moderate, and satisfaction guaran- ial teed. . om Dr. OSCAR KLOPP bhe Honor Graduate Carey Jones' Na - is tional School of Auctioneering, Chi - yea cage. Special course taken in Pure :-._. Bred Live Stock, Heal Estate, Mer- en- chandise and Farm Sales. Rates in 3u.. keeping with prevailing market. Sat- ind isfaction assured. Write or wire, ltlopp, Zurich, Ont. Phone, 01 te9a8r. 2868-52 but TO - red R. T. LUKER t I Licensed auctioneer for the County lis- of Huron. Sales attended to in all end parts of the county. Seven years' ex - ink perience in Manitoba and Saskatche- hig wan. Terms reasonable. Phone No. on- -178 r 11, Exeter, Centralia P.O., R.R. yon No. 1. Orders left at The Huron Me- ta positor Office, Seaforth, promptly at- a tended. 0 4'81 21 - 1 I P. W. AHRENS theLicensed auctioneer for Perth and , Y I Huron Counties. Sales solicited, 10 Real -E 'ate, Parra Stock, Ete. Termer. Onhaif.per Cent on all favi stock L117 Itatileto baut real estate property; it a 0 ,,ellefie cher del s not made. 4' O, R.R. 4, Mtcbe1L Let . • ' . neeeelett 4.• LAMM PhOne MA • a.