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Prince Albert (Sask.)
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Bank of Ottawa

View of the Bank of Ottawa building in downtown Prince Albert. Sign by door on the bottom right reads: "Lamont, Turgeon, B. Lindsay, Advocates"

Bio/historical note: The Bank of Ottawa was founded incorporated in 1874, and merged with the Bank of Nova in 1919

Assistant Nursing Staff

Caption Reads:
Some of the Assistant Nursing Staff at P.A. San
Back Row Left to Right Irene May, Marg. Crashley, Eva Whilly, Ignes Sheshan, Mrs. Brolen, Gilda Goldak, Helen Keith, Eleanor Wick
Front Row Left to Right May Bird, Ruth Humlich, Gloria Ciechi, Mrs. Stewart, Gwen Lyons
Oct 47 VE [Valley Echo]

Arthur Whiteside diary - Prince Albert Presbytery

Typed copy of "A Diary of Reverend Arthur Whiteside, 1850-1926" (108 pages), as presented to Wesley Church by W. Carleton Whiteside, M.D., in 1954. Rev. Whiteside was a Methodist clergyman who, in 1880, went by river boat from Edmonton to Prince Albert, where he established the Wesley Church and worked for three years as a missionary.

Andrew Knox

Member of Parliament for Prince Albert Andrew Knox. Attached note states: "Lived east of Prince Albert about 8 miles on River Road"

Bio/historical note: Andrew Knox (April 26, 1866 - August 4, 1946) was an Irish-born farmer and political figure in Saskatchewan, Canada. He represented Prince Albert in the Canadian House of Commons from 1917 to 1925. He was elected to Parliament in the 1917 federal election as a Liberal-Unionist supporter of Sir Robert Borden's wartime Union Government. After the war, he crossed the floor to join the new Progressive Party. Source: Parliament of Canada Biography

Alexander Stuart Campbell

Portrait of Alexander Stuart Campbell. Reverse reads: "Born in Saskatchewan about 1880, son of Rev Alex Campbell Presbyterian minister in Prince Albert after rebellion of 1885. He also taught high school subjects in Prince Albert before there was a high school afterwards he and his family lived in Wolseley Sask. and in Stonewall Man. Stuart Campbell went to [illegible] Michigan where he practised his profession still alive in 1952 at 654 Huron St."

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