r Everitt Motor Car lanover-Trotter Motor Co. iwroom, 931 View St. Phone 2346 The A British Columbia Newspaper aad PnblUhed at Victoria, B. 6. Hall Sf Walker Agents Wellington Colliery Company's Coal 1232 Gov't. St. Telephone 83 i, IX. No. 37 Ninth Year THE WEEK, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 191 One Dollar Per Annum It Is Her Own Soul That 66 99 Canada Risks To-day "Once that soul is pawned- for any consideration, Canada must inevitably conform to the commercial, legal, financial, social, and ethical standards of the United States," says Rudyard Kipling. By Special Cable from the Special Correspondent to the Montreal Star \ LONDON, Sept. 7—Mr. Rudyard Kipling sends the following message to the Canadian people through the Montreal Star:; Batemans, Burwash, Sussex, England, September 6th "To the Editor of the Montreal Star: "I do not understand how nine million people can enter into such arrangements as are proposed with ninety million strangers on an open frontier of four thousand miles, and at the same time preserve their national integrity. Ten to one is too heavy odds. No single Canadian would accept such odds in any private matter that was as vital to him personally as this issue is to the nation. "It is her.own soul that Canada risks today. Once that soul is pawned for any consideration, Canada must inevitably conform to the commercial, legal, financial social and ethical standards which will be imposed upon her by the sheer admitted weight of United States. "She might, for example, be compelled later on to admit reciprocity in the murder rate of the United States, which at present, I believe, is something over one hundred and fifty per million per annum. "If these proposals had been made a generation ago, or if the Dominion were to-day poor, depressed, and without hope, one would perhaps understand their being discussed; but Canada is none of these things. She is a nation, and as the lives of nations are reckoned, will ere long be among the great nations. "Why, then, when she has made herself what she is, should she throw the enormous gifts of her inheritance and her future into the hands of a people, who by their haste and waste, have so dissipated their own resources that even before national middle age they are driven to seek virgin fields for cheaper food and living? "Whatever the United States may gain, and I presume that the United States' proposals are not wholly altruistic, I see nothing for Canada in reciprocity except a little ready money which she does not need, and a very long repentance.—Rudyard Kipling" The Song of the Sons One from the ends of the earth—gifts at an open door— Treason has much, but we, Mother, thy sons have more! From the whine of a dying man, from the snarl of a wolf-pack freed, Turn for the world is thine. Mother be proud of thy seed I Count, are we feeble or few? Hear, is our speech so rude? Look, are we poor in the land? Judged arc we men of the blood? Those that have stayed at thy knees, Mother,* go call them in— We that were bred overseas wait and would speak with our kin. Not in the dark do we fight—haggle and flout and gibe; Selling our love for a price, loaning our hearts for a bribe. Gifts have we only to-day—Love without promise or fee— Hear, for thy children speak,; from the uttermost parts of the sea: The Song of the Cities HALIFAX Into the mist my guardian prows put forth, Behind the mist my virgin ramparts lie, The Warden of the Honour of thc North, Sleepless and veiled am I! QUEBEC AND MONTREAL Peace is our portion. Yet a whisper rose, Foolish arid careless, half in jest, half hate, Now wake we and remember mighty blows, And fearing no man, wait I VICTORIA From East to West the circling word has passed, Till West is East beside our land-locked blue; From East to West the tested chain holds fast, The welt-forged link rings true! CAPETOWN Hail! Snatched and bartered oft from hand to hand, I dream 'my dream, by rock and hearth and pine, Of Empire to the northward. Ay, one land. From Lion's head to Line! —Kipling. England's Answer Truly ye come of the blood; slower to bless than to ban; Little used to lie down at the bidding of any man. Flesh of the flesh that I bred, bone of the bone that I bare; Stark as your sons shall bc—stern as your fathers were. Deeper than speech our love, stronger than life our tether, But we do not fall on the neck nor kiss when we come together. My arm is nothing weak, my strength is not gone by; Sons, I havc borne many sons but my dugs are not dry. Look, I have made ye a place and opened wide -the doors, That ye may walk together, your Karons and Councillors— Wards of the Outer March, Lords of the Lower Seas, Ay, ta.k to your gray mother that bore you on her knees!— That ye may talk together, brother to brother's face— Thus for thc good of your people—thus for the Pride of the Race. Also, we will make promise. So long as the Blood endures, I shall know that your good is mine; yc shall feel that my strength is yours. In the day of Armageddon, at the last great fight of all, That Our House stand together and the pillars do not fall. Draw now the three-fold knot firm on the nine-fold bands, And the Law that ye make shall be law after thc rule of lands. This for the waxen Heath, and that for the Wattlcbloom, This for thc Maple-leaf,, and that for the Southern Broom. The Law that ye make shall be law and I do not press my will. Because ye are Sons of the Blood and call mc Mother still. Now must ye speak to your kinsmen and they to you, After the use of the English, in straight-flung words and few, Go to your work and be strong, halting not in your ways, Baulking the tnd half-won for an instant dole of praise. Stand to your work and be wise—certain of sword and pen, Who are neither qhildrcn nor Gods, but men in a workl of men I —Kipling. RUDYARD KIPLING !:,!,/y,-,!l!'-!.:.■ ir.'Hin*: r*i.M' THE WEEK, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1911 STREET PAVING—The attention of the public is again directed to the important subject of street paving. It will hardly be disputed that at the moment this is by far the most important item of public works under way. Its extent and the expenditure involved cause it to overshadow all pther works. '!■ The Week has had occasion beforetime to complain of the inspection. There is a case on Fort Street where through lax supervision only five inches of vertical height was left in which to put eight inches of paving material. The effect of this was to save the contractors three-eighths of the most expensive portion of the work. This aspect of the case has been emphasized during the present week by the action of the Chief Inspector who asked that his work should be divided. There is undoubtedly plenty of room for two inspectors; one to supervise the grading, the other the paving. But the point is that there is more than a little reason to doubt whether the inspection up to date has been as thorough in all departments as it should have been. Once a street is paved any flaw underneath the surface is covered up and its weakness will not develop until later. Apart, however, from the question of structure The Week wishes to call attention to the quality and ^composition of the asphalt being used by the Canadian Mineral Rubber Company. There are two factors which chiefly determine the quality of asphalt for paving purposes ; the one is the actual grade of the asphaltum used and the other the percentage of carbonate. With reference to the letter all English authorities are agreed that the percentage should not exceed three or four. A larger proportion causes the asphalt to lose its elasticity and adhesiveness and to crumble. This condition has been evidenced on several occasions during the progress of paving in Victoria, where small quantities have had to be taken out and relaid, for instance, at the lower end •of Cook Street and on St. Charles Street. An examination of the portions removed show that it is "crumbling" and non-adhesive through an over percentage of carbonate. The Week is informed that the average percentage of carbonate in asphalt as laid by the Canadian Mineral Rubber Company is much higher than three or four per cent., in some cases ten or fifteen. The other point, as to the quality of the asphaltum is one that should receive careful attention. It is alleged that the Canadian Mineral Rubber Company is purchasing its sorcalled asphaltum from the B. C. Refining Company of Vancouver, which is simply a refiner of crude Californian coal oil. The Week is informed by a very high authority that this product has been condemned in Vancouver for paving purposes and that it bears no comparison whatever to the well-known asphaltum of Trinidad, which is the standard for paving purposes. These are matters well worth the attention of the City Engineer and the Council and in view of the manner in which the Council has conducted the business of the city with the Canadian Mineral Rubber Company the matter cannot be investigated too soon. It is doubtful whether it is possible to live up to the latest contract ancl comply faithfully with every requirement of the specification at the contract price. If not, the sooner the ratepayers know it the better. It will be poor satisfaction to get a cheap job in which the con-- tractors have to make their profit out of variations in the specifications. EX-CAPTAIN SEARS—The Report of the Special Commission appointed by the Dominion Government to enquire into the loss of the "Iroquois" has been published and no one will doubt that the Court over which Mr. Justice Martin presided so ably, has done substantial justice to all concerned. Captain Sears has been deprived of his certificate for failing to perform his duty in either personally making a more determined effort to rescue the people in the water or alternatively in staying by the wreck to the last, and sending the mate to their assistance. Also for not having ordered any alteration after discovering the negligent and improper manner in which the cargo had been stowed, and finally for allowing the boats to leave the wreck in a damaged and unseaworthy condition. These .are the very points seized upon by the press and the public at the time pf the disaster, and although Captain Sears escaped criminal punishment, he must realise that he was extremely lucky in doing so in view of the finding of the investigating Commission. It is further satisfactory to read the condemnation of the ' all along, anjd,proves cc--ncii|sively tliat the law of supply and demand, in respect to labour only operates upon that margin of the wage which is a surplus'above the cost of living, but that the actual standard is determined by the cost of living. With wages, as with every other marketable commodity the first charge is the actual cost of production and the cost of producing labour is determined by the cost, of living. Apart altogether from political considerations the article in question is invaluable at the present time and should be carefully studied by every wage-earner. DO IT IN VICTORIA — Everybody is so thoroughly ashamed of the fraud perpetrated on the citizens of Victoria that perhaps the' least said, is soonest mended. The Mayor pursued a very proper course in stopping the exhibition in the middle of the week. The only regret is that a more careful investigation was not made before the so-called carnival Was sanctioned. The whole thing was a fraud from beginning to end and the least that can be said is that the authorities and the citizens were imposed upon. Just what the imposition will cost the city in cold cash flUiJLA POORLY BALANCED-Ah Wilf Spills Things manner in which Inspector Kinghorn performed, or neglected to perform, his duties; undoubtedly he has proved himself to be unfitted for his position, and in the interests of the public safety should be dismissed. The outcome of this and the "Sechelt" enquiry cannot fail to be satisfactory, since it condemns the use of vessels of the type of the "Iroquois" and the "Sechelt" in our inland waters, and also emphasizes the important matter of more careful and competent inspection. There cannot be a doubt that the expert finding of such a tribunal will be accepted and acted upon by the Government. COST OF LIVING —The Week wishes to direct attention to a very important article appearing on page 12 of current issue on the relation of the cost of living to wages. The article was written specially for The Week by a Professor of Economics of Oxford University, who recently spent a few days in Victoria. The writer was a pupil of Professor Jevons, undoubtedly one of the highest living authorities on Economics. In England he is a Liberal and a Free Trader. The article is without any political bias whatever; indeed it could not be otherwise coming from such a man. It was written by request, for the sole purpose of elucidating the relation between the cost of living and wages, and does so in a remarkably lucid and effective manner. Those of our readers who will take the trouble to peruse the article will see that it practically endorses the stand which' Ther Week has- taken on this subject remains to be seen and can only be revealed by a careful examination of the accounts, but it has cost a good deal in loss of reputation. Even if the promoters had lived up to their promises it is doubtful whether the city would have benefited, because the class of trippers who would have been attracted by such cheap-jack methods are those who spend little or no money in the town and bring their lunch in a basket. The whole project was a grafting scheme of the worst kind and can never be repeated in Victoria. If our cousins across the Line have any good ideas to offer they will always receive fair consideration, but it is quite obvious that Reciprocity in "potlatches" and "carnivals" would not be a popular move. FRANCE AND GERMANY—The Canadian papers, no doubt owing to the exigencies of an electoral campaign, have hot dealt in an adequate manner with the Franco-German emeute. Instead of keeping the public posted with all the available details of the negotiations pending between the two governments, they have contented themselves with more or less disquieting references and vague predictions. It is doubtful if there has been a crisis or anything approaching one. The disquiet which existed in the public mind was due to the fact that a misunderstanding existed between the two countries which might possibly precipitate a crisis. To one not versed in diplomatic negotiation it would appear fhafr^here*was*no reasonable; ground for alarm and that neither had shown a disposition to provoke hi ties, but the public is never fully equi to form a judgment oh the possible of international differences, and atj times the money market is at once thel sensitive and reliable barometer. Thf turbing elements have been the heavy tuations in the stock market and thej withdrawals of money from Germany! latest advices would indicate an ami settlement which will be due largely firm stand taken by the British Govern supported by both political parties. THE SAANICH LINE—The of the B. C. Electric Compal letting the contract for thei eighteen miles of the Saanich ExtJ removes all doubt as to the early conl tion of what has been wanted for J years past. It is the fair fulfilment promise made by the resident manaa the company when the city conclude Jordan River Agreement and will hal effect of making the whole of the SJ Peninsula what Nature intended it tq the hinterland of Victoria. The eid miles contracted for is to be built wil year and no doubt the balance of tha to Deep Cove, some seven miles, wil low on. This line will alter the wholf plexion of the beautiful country nol Victoria; it will convert large farn fruit orchards and residential homel furnish Victorians with an opportun living in the country while conducting business in the city. Those who havl fortunate enough to secure a little 11 Saanich may now fairly congratulate! selves on their foresight and anticij quick service by the end of next su| FIRE CHIEF DAVIS—A few ago our respected Chief of Mr. John Langley, was honou his compeers by being appointed PrJ of the Association tq which all Chiefs belong. Now it is a veryl pleasure to report that a similar comfi has been paid to Fire Chief Davis, J remarkable record in Victoria is evi known on the outside. It is an old to tell how the Chief has revolutioniJ Department during the last three yea in doing so earned a reputation sec| none in the Dominion. In fact it come a synonym in the city to speak I Fire Chief and Efficiency, and everyd" cognises that the one desideratum in| departments of the public service is : the same calibre—men who thorough! derstand their work, who are fearlel incorruptible and who cannot be intej with in the discharge of their leg! duties even by a Mayor and CouncilJ toria wants more of the same kind vice as the Fire Chief renders and I be a happy day when it succeeds in gelj TENNIS EXPERTS—If Lara Wright play tennis in thanks will be due to Schwengers who secured their cond promise when he was in the East, ail will be the first-fruits of a trip wll many ways has benefited British Col and helped on the splendid game of It is needless to say that Larnel Wright are the two finest exponents [ game on this Continent—possibly world. At any rate they have defeat| English champions and unless the Hans are at their very best the Amd will win the Davis Cup. If we sho| fortunate enough to see them here, be a revelation even to Victoria eJ No such scientific play has ever beel outside the American championship! it is greatly to be hoped that theif will materialise. EMPLOYMENT AGENCIES- action in the local police still pending, emphasizes the of the course adopted by the TacomJ Council in abolishing Employment Ag within the municipality. It is just pd that the exception to this rule will to be agencies for dealing with dol servants. Apart from this, however,! is little doubt that more harm thanl has been done by the almost innuml organizations which have succesT wheedled stray dollars from the pock| -those who' eOtrld ill Afford* to spare THE WEEK, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1911 JTIE ladame Griselda's Concert Iwas unfortunate that the wet ier of Friday night, September should have occasioned a few seats at the concert given by iGriselda at the Alexandra Club, event had been eagerly looked |rd to by the music lovers of Ha and those who defied the ele- were well rewarded. The vis- artiste's wide range of voice, its one and delightful freshness were ntly suited by the Bach-Gounod ation "Ave Maria" and Goetz' sande in the Wood." Madame Ida was ably assisted by Miss s Shrapnel, who played the obligato to the former song Mr. Bynn Alden, Miss Ora Wolf, Miss Margaret Doyle, Mr. Fred Horn. The scenery and properties will be all western in tone, and a complete and effective performance will be given. The Empress Theatre The best turn in a somewhat mediocre bill this week is that contributed by Rice & Cady, two German comedians who excel in cheap wit and eccentricity of costume, the net result being an amusing ten minutes which leaves the audience in high good humour. Weston' & Lynch present a novelty in the shape of a one- act farce entitled "The Fainting Girl," which affords the male member of the a coupon on which to register a guess at the figures and the lucky winner will be the recipient of $50.00. A powerful film has been one produced by Pathe Freres, entitled "Father and Son," whilst the Selig Company have been amusing the crowds with a comedy whereof the name is "Willie." Sousa and His Band John Philip Sousa composed a new march during the tour of his band in Australia and he dedicated it to the commonwealth. It was named by the premier of Australia and it will be one of the features of his tour of the Pacific Coast and the Southwest, when he and his band arrive in Van- it' ' 1 ■Mil Kfgw.-.fSS*.*.*;*?:*-*!---?*! mm ami ______WM^ fM Wm Z:-.__6__..~"— -*.*..,.•.... ..< SCENE OF CORONATION AS SHOWN BY "KINEMACOLOR" AT THE VICTORIA THEATRE, SEPTEMBER 22, 23, 26, 27, 29, 30 feeling, and by Mr. Paul Ed- whose fine baritone voice was |to advantage. Before the close entertainment Madame Gris- vas the recipient of two bou- I Mack-Leone Stock Company k companies are somewhat like ttle girl in the poem:—when ire good they are very, very but when they are bad they Hul. The stock company whicii Victoria this week must of ity be placed in tlle latter cate- and that their engagement was ort is to the credit of Manager im, who was quick to recog- lie type of company that does _me up to the high standard tded by Victorian theatre- The Princess Theatre Ianoke," at the Princess Theatre eek is giving great satisfaction •y large audiences. bill for the coming week is lessee's Pardner," a western Mr. Williams has had several tts for a western play, and in puence has selected the above of the best. It has an excel- Ilot, a beautiful little love story ig all through the play, and of the scenes and incidents are intense. Miss Pinkie Mullally seen as a demure little western Mr. Van Dyke and Mr. Sweat- is partners and joint owners in ine. Mr. Arthur Cyril will be :o good advantage in a comedy Mr. Robinson, the new mem- |f the company, is cast, as also company an opportunity to perform a clever wrestling stunt a la Gotch. Ida Barr made a big hit with her congs and has been responding to repeated encores. A dancing turn and a musical act neither of which make any claim to distinction complete the programme. Romano's Theatre The Tharihauser Company have been responsible for a feature film this week which represents a beautiful story, if not a Shakespearean one, entitled "Romeo and Juliet." The general trend of the story is based on the Bard's play and is well staged. Other attractions have been "The Temptation," a picture based on a short story by a well-known author and a series of picturesque views taken in Colorado. The Majestic Theatre The Majestic Theatre on Yates Street is now open continuously from one o'clock in the afternoon till eleven o'clock at night, fact whicii has been much appreciated by those who have a spare hour to while away before the dinner hour. There would seem to be a little less comedy offering in moving-picture houses lately, and in consequence "The Return of Widow Pogson's Husband," a smart comedy, proved most acceptable. The Crystal Theatre Great interest is being entertained with regard to the guessing compe-' tition as to the majority in the coming election. The purchaser of three tickets at the Crystal is entitled to couver on their return from a tour of the world. Mr. Sousa is frequently asked which is his favorite composition and his reply is invariably the same. "I like all of them," he declares with quiet decision. The House Next Door If Christianity and Judaism took the commandment "Love Thy Neighbour as Thyself," and contented themselves with interpreting the word "neighbour" in a somewhat limited way, by applying it to the one who lives in "The House Next Door" then the sentiment of race hatred around which this beautiful entertaining and morally educating comedy has been woven would be a thing of the past. It could no longer be the mainspring of a modern play. But alas, this is not the case and racial prejudice above all — of Gentile against the Jew—is a sad but real fact in life. Therefore, both Christian and Jew should be thankful for an opportunity to witness a performance of "The House Next Door." It is a play that on the whole should prove an efficient force on behalf of sympathy and Good will between Christian and Jew. Both in seeing it will derive much pleasure and cannot possibly escape moral profit. While it aims merely to entertain it incidentally inculcates mutual understanding and amity between the two. The play as given at the Gaiety Theatre in New York city will be seen at Victoria Theatre Thursday, September 21st. (Continued on Page 13) The Crystal Theatre Broad Street The Largest, Best Furnished and Most Comfortable Picture Theatre in the City Watch Jor Constant Improvements^Appointments and Service. Majestic Theatre Change of Programme Three Times a Week, Monday, Wednesday and Friday High^Class MOTION PICTURES Shown for the first time in Victoria" We Cater to Ladies and Children* ^mpress| WEEK SEPTEMBER 18TH JOHN R. GORDON & CO. Presenting "What Would You Do?" DE ALMA & MAE Classic and Popular Melodies on the Banjo SHECK & D'ARVILLE In Character Songs, Dances and Physical Feats The Country Cut-Up HERBERT HODGE as "The Yokel" KRAMER & ROSS The Nimble-Footed Boys THE EMPRESSCOPE M. NAGEL'S ORCHESTRA Victoria Theatre THURSDAY EVENING SEPTEMBER 21ST Cohan and Harris' Gaiety Theatre N. Y. Success "The House Next Door" By J. Hartley Manners THE PLAY THAT ALL NEW YORK WENT TO SEE Direction Edwin W. Rowland and Wm. T. Gaskill Prices—$1.50, $1.00, 75c, and 50c. Seats on sale Tuesday, September 19. Mail Orders now received. Curtain 8.30 Victoria Theatre SEPTEMBER 22—23—26—27—29—30 (Twice daily except 22nd) Matinees 2.30. Evenings 8.30 First Public Exhibition in Victoria of Kinemacolor Showing the Coronation preparations, ceremonies and processions in NATURAL COLOURS Change of Program Wednesday, September 27 PRICES: Matinees 50c, 25c Evenings 75c, 50c, 25c Seats on Sale Wednesday, Sept. 20th Princess Theatre A. O. U.W.Hall Yates St. Week of Sept. 18th Williams Stock Co. presenting The Great Western Drama Tennessee's Pardner Prices 10, 20 and 30 cts. Seat Sale opens on Monday at 11a. m., Box Office. Seats may also be booked at Messrs. Dean & Hiscocks, Druggists, cor. Yates & Broad Sts. Victoria Theatre Sousa Sousa On Wednesday Evening September 20th, at at 8.30 p.m. The World's Greatest Bandmaster and his Band ol Sixty Prices: $2.00, $1.50, $1.00, 75c, 50c. Seats on Sale, Monday, Sept. 18 Mail Orders Now Received Sousa Sousa THE WEEK, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1911 The Week A Provincial Newspaper and Revi?w published every Saturday by "The Week" Publishing Company, Limited Published at 1208 Government St, Victoria, B. C, Canada W. BLAKEMORE, Editor PUBLISHER'S ANNOUNCEMENT We have pleasure in awarding the $20 prize for the most artistic solution of the puzzle in "The Munificent Gift" to Miss Dorothy E. Patterson, 1318 Broad Street. While a number of other competitors were correct none took the trouble to couch their reply in such an artistic form as Miss Patterson. As suggested in the story the solution is given near the end of the last column. Miss Patterson's solution was neatly written and beautifully bound together with a coloured photograph of the Inner Harbour and Parliament Buildings, which gave special point to the lines which follow: Seattle and Vancouver With many things are blest. "Never-the-less" I like Victoria best. A cheque for $20 has been forwarded to Miss Patterson. Sir James Douglas K. C. B. Written Specially for the Week by Gilbert Malcolm Sproat (Continued from Sept. 9th) But if, as said, above (that is, in your last issue), a little caution, on the part of biographers, in valuing •the testimony of neighbours, is desirable,—on the other hand, owing to the inherent complexity of the subject, rapid characterisation of an individual, by purely outside observers, is seldom informative. Inapt similes and extravagant epithets leave the personage still in the position of a stranger. For instance, John Morley, famous in literature and statesmanship (now Lord Morley of Blackburn), after being at the White House, in Washington City, for a few days, some years ago, said, or was reported to have said, "I have seen two tremendous works of Nature in America; one is Niagara Falls, and the other is the President of the United States," (Roosevelt). This interested me by recalling, in my own experience, before coming here in i860, my vague impression, as the result of inquiries, in England, about this part of the Empire, that . its leading features were the Rocky Mountains, James Douglas, and the Pacific Ocean. Needless to say, that this incongruous collection was not adopted by people here, nor by their neighbours in Oregon; nevertheless, as a fact, ample justice was awarded, reciprocally, to eminent men on both sides of the International line, after the bitterness of putting the Treaty of 1846 in force was more or less soothed by Time. Among our men, Dr. J°'— " <• Laughlin (who had embraced American citizenship) came to be spoken of as the "Father" of the new Oregon. James Douglas, a true Briton1 of Britons, received equal appreciation, though he had been only second in command under McLaughlin, in the Prc-Treaty period. (There was a Board of Management at Fort Vancouver, of which, at one time, additionally to the above named, the "canny" Dr. Tolmie, and the genial "Daddy" Work, well known to old Victorians, were respected members). One of the later Oregonians (Jesse Applegate, I think) in describing the qualities of Douglas, added, as to his personal carriage, that he left, on some interviewers, the impression of a personage who might be seven feet high in stature. That would have overtopped, by nearly half a foot, the magnificent Virginian, General Win- field Scott (diplomatic visitor here at the time of the San Juan difficulty, 1859), whom Sydney Smith, seeing him in London, described as a "Walking Cathedral." Memorable, indeed, as some old "busters" of 181.9 have told me, was it, to follow with the eye, such specimens of manhood as Scott, Douglas, and Harney, slowly striding in Government street, typical sons of Tartaros and Ge, in the Greek, or as described in the more familiar tongue-clicking lingo of the observers,—"delate hy-as se-ahms": Thought I, from the description, not knowing much English then, they Viicht a' bin Gallowa men, the haill three." In fact, James Douglas' height was six feet two inches. He was large boned, but not what is called "bony"; erect, square-built and muscular—hair in youth, black, though, in middle age when I knew him, "Du" "glas," or "dark-grey." All noticed his fine eyes, very dark brown with slumbering lustre, also, his rhythmic, stately walk. I could not conceive Douglas "running" in any circumstances, but the late John Tod of Oak Bay, who knew him in 1825, in new Caledonia, told me that, though not speedy, he, then, like other 22-year- old youths, could "get' a good move on," if necessary. A little reminiscence of my own, after Douglas had retired from official life, shows the effect of his unstinted bearing on a roomful of rather critical observers. Breakfasting, on one occasion, at the Westminster Palace Hotel, London, frequented by many persons of distinction, with Isaac Butt, M.P. (the Irish Home Rule pioneer-leader), my back to the main entrance, I became subconscious—as men, even when busy over their plates, occasionally will—that something unusual was happening, many indeed, looking fixedly towards the door. The attraction was Sir James, who had arrived in London the night before, coming in for breakfast in his quiet, natural way, as he would have done at home. But tell us more of his "manner," says the impatient reader, "manner," which does not go, necessarily, with one's "appearance," but is an invisible something, at its very best, not noticeable at all, either in cottage or mansion! To say true, a few of us youngsters, perhaps poor judges, opined that the good governor's manner, occasionally, was just a little bit pompous. Being in those days wickeder than now, I had repute for "offering an apple" to a supposed visitor, with the correct gubernatorial manner and phraseology. A better judgment, no doubt, however, was that of Lord Dufferin, when here in 1876, "Douglas' manner is exquisite," exclaimed Dufferin in surprise. Where can he have got it?" "Natural in him is it," was the reply, "the manner of a self-poised, grave, kindly man, possibly as natural to him as his breathing, and, similarly, helped by exercise." (I noticed in Duffer- in's own conversation, rather a fondness for superlatives, but anyway, he must have meant, by the term "exquisite," something very good). He seemed interested in my statement that, as the Indians were betetr mannered than the English, and, of course, the Scots (I said nothing of the Irish), frank intercourse with the higher class of natives had an educational advantage in that respect. A story-fragment, which, perhaps, the reader, like myself, may prefer to a whole page of exposition, is the late Joseph Despard Pemberton's account 1" me of his first interview with Douglas—(in 1851, I think)—in order to present his letter of introduction as a new arrival: "Sorry to have kept you waiting, Mr. Pemberton. A little matter of discipline. Take a seat, Mr. Pemberton." He had been pummelilng a French Canadian labourer in the yard of the "Fort," as the courtly George Washington used to thrash poachers on his lands at Mount Vernon, yet, said Pemberton to me, in telling the story:—"Douglas' manner might have suggested that of a British Foreign Secretary, in conference with an Ambassador, instead of the Company's coatless Chief Factor, receiving a letter to introduce a new surveyor." Postcript am only offering a few notes on personality, but I will state, next week, the probable answer of an ordinary Scot to her question, as far as memory serves, being here away from books, and, anyway, too lazy to consult them. That reminds me—but "no," the foot of the page is reached, which is lucky for one who has less hold of his words than of a wet eel by the tail. ii Sotto Voce The Week's Rumours and Humours (By "The Gadfly") 99 That neither of the daily papers recognises the Socialist candidate, who, however, is a good man. That there is no question about it, Victoria was "done." That the Capital City never looked so "cheap" as during the early part of this week. * * * That for once the action of Mayor Morley in stopping the show was unanimously endorsed. * * * That the Victoria subscribers were an "easy mark." * * * That the ex-Lieutenant-Governor came out of his latest law suit with flying colours. * * * That B. J. Perry saved the day, and made an excellent witness. * * * That it was unfortunate for Sir William Mackenzie that he forgot that "wave of the hand." * * * That the case established a record for a speedy hearing and a prompt decision. * * * That if the principals had not been men whose time was precious it would have dragged on for months. * * * That the Junior Counsel on both sides deserve much of the credit. * * * That Mr. Templeman's Brotchie Ledge breakwater will not protect him from the storm on the 21st of this month. * * * That people are asking "If it has taken Mr. Pugsley two and a half years to "endorse the project," how long will it take to build the breakwater?" That the public wants to know when the theatrical season will really open. That he may not cut much ice at present, but he will rob somebody of 400 votes. * * * That Sir William Whyte will be Lord Strathcona's successor as High Commissioner. * * * That this is the best appointment that could be made. That the Times has exhausted its expletives but will have a new stock before election day. * * * That the ex-captain of the "Iroquois" has found his level at last. * * * That the Metchosin peaches which figured at the Fair were grown by Mrs. Dr. Watt. * * * That they taste as good as they look. That with the exception of Henry Miller the companies recently appearing have played "havoc" with the reputation of the Victoria Theatre. * * * That Jove is having a double- header in Victoria. Jupiter Pluvius this week and Jumping Jupiter next- Ball Jove! * * * A kind correspondent writes that she would like to know what the word "Douglas" means, and, also, something about the "Black" and the "Red," of that name. I am That P. C. Dinworthy made a no table capture this week which entitles him to special recognition. * * ■* That the steamship—lemon episode is not yet closed. * * * That the capacity of the tram-cars was not over-stated by the high figures printed in the cars some months ago. * * * That the large cars are now carrying 120 people regularly and the small cars 93. * * * That Victoria is growing. * * * That the Victoria Canadian Club did not entertain the visiting British pressmen, although several of the most notable remained in the city till Monday mid-night. * * * That the Vancouver and Nelson Canadian Clubs were more wideawake. * * * That the Victoria Canadian Club also allowed Sir Walter Philimore to not an authority on such matters, and ■ S"P through its fingers. Beware the Ides of March, 1911 (Anon) The prophetic utterance which applied to Caesar and became fact on 14th March B. C. 44, might well be taken as timely warning by ourselves. The historic parallel loses none of its force simply because what was then intended as a warning to an in dividual now seems to present food for reflection to our Empire, even to nations. In the eras of nations who can tell what a single morrow may have in store for individuals or how soon that morrow may dawn. Six months ago in England private family reasons called the premier away from the House of Commons just when that community commenced its general debate which formed the prelude to the discussion on the Annual Army and Navy Estimates; the duties of acting premier fell on Sir Edward Grey, who woke up the country with a very pointed speech. He talked of "bleeding to death in time of peace"; he paid the American President a great compliment in agreeing with him on a subject of a treaty which would be of far greater advantage to the United States than to ourselves. The press, judging by head-lines alone gave many people the idea that Mr. Balfour, still leading tlle Opposition, agreed with Sir Edward Grey, but when one came to analyse matters one soon found that Mr. Balfour's sympathy amounted to about one ounce in the pound. All were for peace, but all were not for peace at any price; all were for its maintenance, but probably none were for its continuance on the same lines as the writer whose opinion it was that there "never was a holy war nor a disgraceful peace." Just six weeks before the time above mentioned Mr. Haldane, (not yet then a peer) the War Minister, said in a speech at Portsmouth that he regarded the Foreign Secretary as the real Commander in Chief of the Forces; he based his opinion on the fact that the Foreign Secretary (Sir Edward Grey) was the person who knew better and sooner than anyone else the directions the affairs of nations were moving towards, storm or calm. Well, to sum up briefly, Mr. Taft wanted to preserve peace by jabber. Mr. Balfour's method was of the "para bellum" kind, whilst Sir Edward Grey preferred to sail a medium course for the sake of financial economy. Sir Edward Grey's statement brought a resounding echo from an honest German statesman who practically endorsed Mr. Balfour's opinion. This all occurred during the Ides of March. Now to finish with general principles and come to the present moment, let us look at Germany and the chances of war. In the August number of Twentieth Century, Mr. J. Ellis Barker very clearly points out German designs in Africa; he notes the following facts that as far back as 1876 and again in 1884 Bismarck and Paul Kruger discussed the Zululand of Sta. Lucia Bay as a Ga "pied a terre" and relations! tween Germany and the Boer] came so friendly that at a banquet in 1895 Kruger openlj knowledged the ties to be suj are natural between father and j This statement could only the outcome of some very con understanding which doubtlessl existed between Germany anl Orange Free State (not then p{ pink on the map of South Aff 1895 saw the Kaiser building but its construction did not meel very hearty response from his] people and he was in no positij render any form of material hi South African Republics in the [ of any army. Things then went J December (1895) saw the Ja| Raid followed by the Kaiser's tulatory telegram to Kruger abo defeat of British Invaders vi appealing for the aid of fr! powers (German sailors had brought to Delagoa Bay to to the Transvaal and assist in fence) whilst the German Fl Minister officially announced tl tain that the continuance of tl dependence of the Boer Republi| a German Interest! 1898 saw mation of the German Navy The 9th October, 1899, Kruger's ultimatum and thd war, but Germany's fleet was| and the Kaiser groaned, "we bitter need of a strong Navy," and blamed his people being able to further their in| overseas. Mr. Ellis Barker mentions | other facts like the above to "German Interests" in Afrid German designs too, and not f sarily directed against Great and he scores a point by dis| the connecting link between two powers which is the weal the chain of good-fellowshr quotes figures to show that the population of Germany is ing one million yearly that ofl Britain is only increasing 400I two-fifths of that, and whilst til grants from Britain are goingf velop the Empire beyond th those from Germany are abroad and are leaving the land never to return. German statesmen and the] ing German people are bringing to every home in the Fatherlal idea, which must in time appef popular way to every class many, that the real manhood 1 country is running to waste eign countries where their b| terests are being interfered people over whom they can control and that something done to remedy such a state] fairs. Colonial expansion is medy—the idea will appeal J people and become a very one—given time and no otherl of obtaining their object thi have to resort to force alias! just war founded on scientific ing, and therefore religiouJ Against whom?—against th ply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted about one-half mile south of the south end of Pendosy Lake; thence east eighty chains; thence south eighty chains; thence west eighty chains; tnence north eighty chains more or less to point of commencement and containing 640 acres. Dated 29th May, 1911. H. CRRAWFORD COATES. Frank Hallett, Agent, aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Fred. W. Jubb, of Victoria, occupation Real Estate Agent, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted about two miles south of the south end of Pendosy Lake; thence east eighty chains; thence north eighty chains; thence west eighty chains; tnence south eighty chains; to point of commencement and containing 640 acres. Dated 30th May, 1911, FRED. W. JUBB. Frank Hallett, Agent, aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Maurice M. Meredith, of Victoria, occupation Agent, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following describea lands:—Commencing at a post planted about three miles south of the south end of Pendosy Lake; thence east eighty chains; thence north eighty chains; thence west eighty chains; thence south eighty chains to point of commencement and containing 640 acres more or less. Dated 30th May. iqii, MAURICE M. MEREDITH. Frank Hallett, Agent, aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Edward Parsons, of Victoria, occupation Clerk, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted about two miles south of the south end of Pendosy Lake; thence north eighty chains; thence west eighty chains; thence south eighty chains; thence east eighty_ chains to point of commencement and containing 640 acres. Dated 30th May, 1911. EDWARD PARSONS. Frank Hallett, Agent, aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Gideon Hicks, of Victoria, occupation Merchant, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted on the south bank of Atna Bay, Morice Lake, thence south eighty chains; thence east eighty chains; thence north eighty chains; thence west eighty chains, more or less, to point of commencement, and containing 640 acres more or less. Dated 28th May, 1911. GIDEON HICKS. Frank Hallett, Agent, aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Arthur Wheeler, Jr., of Victoria, occupation Insurance Agent, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:-—Commencing at a post planted on the north-west shore of the Narrows between Morice and Pendosy Lake; thence north sixty chains; thence west eighty chains; thence south eighty chains more or less to the north shore of Pendosy Lake; thence following the north shore of Pendosy Lake in an easterly direction eighty chains more or less to point of commencement and containing 600 acres more or less. Dated 28th May, ign. ARTHUR WHEELER, JR. Frank Hallett, Agent, aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Ranee 3 TAKE notice that Richard W. Coleman, of Victoria, occupation Real Estate, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted about five miles south of the south end of Pendosy Lake; thence west eighty chains; thence north eighty chains; thence east eighty chains; thence south eighty chains to point of commencement, and containing 640 acres. Dated 30th May, 1911. RICHARD W. COLEMAN. Frank Hallett, Agent, aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Winifred Codd, of Victoria, occupation Married Woman, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted about one-half mile south of the south end of Pendosy Lake; thence east eighty chains; thence north forty chains more or less to the south bank of Pendosy Lake; thence following the south bank of Pendosy Lake in a westerly direction eighty chains more or less to a point due north of point of commencement; thence south forty chains more or less to the point of commencement and containing 300 acres more or less. Dated 29th May, 1911. WINIFRED CODD. Frank Hallett, Agent, aug. 12 oct, 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Selby A. Codd, of Regina, occupation Merchant, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted about three miles south of the south end of Pendosy Lake; thence west eighty chains; thence north eighty chainsj thence east eighty chains; thence south eighty chains to point of commencement and containing 640 acres. Dated 30th May, iqii. SELBY A. CODD. Frank Hallett, Agent, aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Roswell Park, of London, Ontario, occupation Medical Student, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following clescribed lands:—Commencing at a post planted at the south-west corner of Lot 3i8t Coast District, Range 3; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains to point of commencement. Dated June 7th, iqii. ROSWELL PARK. aug 12 oct 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Aubrey Neff, of London, Ontario, occupation Doctor, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted at the south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence north 80 chains;t thence west 80 cnains; thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains to point of commencement. Dated June 7th, iqii. AUBREY NEFF. aug. 12 oct, 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Laura Lochner, of London. Ontario, occupation Spinster, intends to apply for permission to'purchase the'following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted 2 miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3, thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence northt 80 chains; thence east 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June 7th, 1911. L" aug. 12 AURA LOCHNER oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Betrand La Verne Mc- Caulley, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Fireman M.C.R., intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted two miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains to point of comemncement. Dated Tune 7th, iqii, BERTRAND LA VERNE McCAULLEY. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Roy Rich, of London, Ontario, occupation Office Clerk, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted two miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June 7th, 1911. ROY RICH. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that John Ginge, of London, Ontario, occupation Traveler, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted two miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3, thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June 7th, 1911. JOHN GINGE. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Meredith Dodrre Sud- worth, of London, Ontario, occupation Medical Student, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:— Commencing at a post planted four miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3, thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated Tune 7th, 1911. MEREDITH DODGE SUDWORTH. aug. 12 oct, 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that John Thomson Green, of London, Ontario, occupation Clerk, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted four miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3, thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 cnains; thence north 80 chains; tnence east 80 chains to point of commencement. Dated June 7th, iqii. JOHN THOMSON GREEN. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Robert James Tobey, of London, Ontario, occupation Bank Clerk, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted four miles west of southwest corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3, thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 cnains; thence south 80 chfins; thence east 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June 7th, 1911. ROBERT JAMES TOBEY. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Charles Garland Bell, of London, Ontario, occupation Medical Student, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:— Commencing at a post planted four miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3, thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 cliains to point of commencement. Dated June 7th, 1911. CHARLES GARLAND BELL- aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Fred. Turner, of London, Ontario, occupation Medical Student, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted six miles west of southwest corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3, thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence south 8p chains; thence west 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June 7th, ion. FRED. TURNER. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Morley Clarence Man- hard, of London, Ontario, occupation Bank Clerk, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:— Commencing at a post planted six miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3,1 thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains to point of commencement. Dated June 7th, ion. MORLEY CLARENCE MANHARD. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Reginald Piers Hardman, of London, Ontario, occupation Medical Student, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted six miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3, thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thenc* south 80 chains; thence east 80 cnains, to point of commencement. Dated June 7th, 1911. REGINALD PIERS HARDMAN. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Jack H. McRae, of London, Ontario, occupation Medical Student, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted six miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3, thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June 7th, iqii. JACK H. McRAE. aug. 12 oct, 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Wilfred Stewart Thur- tell, of London, Ontario, occupation Medical Student, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following describea lands:— Commencing at a post planted eight miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3, thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; tnence west 80 chains to point of commencement. Dated June 8th, ion. WILFRED STEWART THURTELL. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Ernal Bice, of London, Ontario, occupation Medical Student, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted eight mites west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3, thence soutli 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains to point of commencement. Dated June 8th, 19 n. ERNAL BICE, aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that John Colbern Grass, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Farmer, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described Iands:—Commencing at a post planted four miles west and two miles north of south-west corner of Lot 3r8. Coast District, Range 3. thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June oth, iqii. JOHN COLBERN GRASS. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Clifford Keillor, of London, Ontario, occupation Medical Student, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted eight miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3, thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June 8th, iqii. CLIFFORD KEILLOR, aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Edgar Thompson of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Lahorer, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted four miles west and two miles north of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains, to point rf commencement. Dated June 9th, ion. EDGAR THOMPSON, aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Sarah Titus, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Spinster, intends to apply for permission to purchase thc following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted nine miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3. thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence south 80 chains: thence cast 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June 8th, 1911. SARAH TITUS, aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DTSTRTCT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Marion Jane Bryce, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Spinster, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted nine miles west of two miles north of south-west comer of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; east 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June 8th, 1911. MARION JANE BRYCE. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that John Slough Haney, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Farmer, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted nine miles west and two miles north of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains, fti point of commencement. Dated June 8th, 1911. JOHN SLOUGH HANEY. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that George Fleckinstien, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Farmer, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted eight miles west and two miles north of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence cast 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June 8th, 1911. ge6rge fleckinstien. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Mary Silverthorn, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Spinster, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted eight miles west and three miles north of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3, thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains, to point of commence- ment. Dated June 8th, ion. "\R" aug. 12 MARY SILVERTHORN. oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that William Cameron, of St. Thoams, Ontario, occupation Farmer, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted eight miles west and two miles north of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence west So chains to point of commencement. Dated June 8th, ion wr aug. 12 ILLIAM CAMERON, oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that John Conley, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Farmer, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted eight miles west and two miles north of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3, thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June 8th, 1911. JOHN CONLEY. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Louisa Clouse, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Spinster, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted six miles west and two miles north of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June 8th, 1911. LOUISA CLOUSE. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Sarah Horton, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Spinster, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted six miles west and two miles north of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence north So chains; thence east 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June 8th, ion. SARAH HORTON. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Ranee 3 TAKE notice that Mabel Styles, of bt. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Spinster, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted six miles west and two miles north of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains to point of commencement. Dated June 8th, iqii, MABEL STYLES, aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Eliza Blackell, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Spinster, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted six miles west and two miles north of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated Tune 8th, 1911. ELIZA BLACKELL. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Blanche Louise Clark, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Spinster, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted four miles west and two miles north of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3, thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence cast 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June oth, 1911. BLANCHE LOUISE CLARK. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Elizabeth Bice, of London, Ontario, occupation Spinster, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted nine miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3, thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence ..ast 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated Tunc 8th, ion, ELIZABETH BICE, aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Roy Washburn, of London, Ontario, occupation Medical Student, intends to apply for permission to purchase thc following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted eight miles west of southwest corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3, thence north 8n chains; ihence west 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June 8th, 1911. ROY WASHBURN. aug. 12 oct. 7 10 THE WEEK, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1911 CANCELLATION OF RESERVE NOTICE is hereby given that the reserve existing over certain lands in Range 5, Coast District, notice of which bearing date of July 13th, 1908, and December 17th, 1908, were published in the British Columbia Gazette in the issues of July 16th, 1908, and December 17th, 1908, respectively, is cancelled in so far as the same relates to lands surveyed as the east half and north-west quarter section 8, west half section 8 and north-east quarter section 9, section 14, north half and south-east quarter section 15, north half and south-west quarter section 16 and section 17, fractional nort hhalf section 18, sections 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 23, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35 and 36, all in township 18, Range 5, Coast District. ROBT. A. RENWICK, Deputy Minister of Lands. Department of Lands, Victoria, B.C., June 16th, 1911. june 24 sept 21 CANCELLATION OF RESERVE NOTICE is hereby given that the reserve existing over certain lands situated in Range 5, Coast District, notice of which bearing date of December 17th, 1908, was published in the British Columbia Gazette, in the issue of December 17th, t9o8, is cancelled in so far as the same relates to lands surveyed as the north half and southwest quarter section 9, north half section 10, north half and south-east quarter section 11; sections 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29 and 30, all in township 19, range 5, Coast District. ROBT. A. RENWICK, Deputy Minister oi Lands. Department of Lands, Victoria, B.C., June 16th, 1911. june 24 sept 21 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Neil Darrach, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Laundryman, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted two miles south and nine miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June 12th, 1911. NEIL DARRACH. aug. 12 oct. 7 CANCELLATION OF RESERVE NOTICE is hereby given that the reserves existing upon Crown lands in Cariboo District, notices of wbich, bearing date of February 15th, 1910, and May _ sth, 1910^ re- Eectively, were -published in the British )lumbia Gazette in the issues of February 17th and May 5th, respectively, are cancelled in so far as the same relate to the lands surveyed as Lots 2978, 2957, 2936, 4318, 4321, 3876, 387s, .1871, 3872, 3873, 3866, 3842, 3865, 3881, 3864, 3882, 3879. 3878, 3639, 3638, W. 'A 2624, 3635, 3634, W. 'A 2617, 3630, 2636, W. 'A 2550, 2635, 2542, 2539, E. I. 2630, 2637A, 255*5, 2*537, 2548, 2549, 2540, 2541, 2532, 581, 580, 582, 583, 584, 585, 86s, 867, 868, 869, 608, 586, 2526, 2525, 2519, 2520, 2510, 2509, 577. 578, 579, 2518, 2662, 2664, 2466, 2465, 2640, 2482, 2666, 2488, 2490, 2489, 266s, 2661, 2471, 2469, 2468, 2475, 2476, 2481, 2487, 2491, N. yi and S.W. 'A 2492, S. 'A and N.W. 'A 2493, N. 'A and S.E. 'A 2480, 2483, 2485, 2496, 2499, 2495, 2502, 2501, 2494, 2229, 2228, 2500, 2504, 2505, 2506, 2216, 2220, 2227, 2218, 2225, 2226, 2221, 2212, 2213, 2404, 2209, 2214, 2391, 2410, 2417, 2420, 2223, 2208, 2215, 2392, 2211, 2412, 2423, 2424, 2108, 2109, 2104, 2103, 2102, 2107, 2106, 2105, 209S, 2100, 4053, 4048, 4047, 4049, 4046, 4050, 4039, 4038, 4041, 4029, 4028, 4030, 4027, 4037. 4036, 4035, 4034i 4031, 4032, 4025, 4026, 2433, 2432, 2431, 2430, 2427, 3790, 3791, 3792, 3789, 3788, 3787, 3786, 3785, 3795, 3794, 3793, 379*5, 3809, 3824, 3816, 3815, 3812, 3811, 3810, 2429, 2428, 2423, 2437, 2438, 3784, 3783i 3999, 3992, 399'. 3989, 3988, 3987, 4001, 4000, 756, 757, 1806, 1811A, 1826, 2912A, 2912, 1837A, 2910, 2908, 2893, 2909, 2175, 2177, 2178, 2741, 2751, 2757, 2758, 2769, 2768, 2770, 2801, 2802, 2806, 2807, 2805, 2804, 2813, 2814, 2815, 2816, 2820, 2819, 2818, 2817, 2852, 2853. 2854, 2855, 2856, 2857, 2858, 2859, 2184, 2188, and 1566A, Cariboo District. ROBT. A. RENWICK, Deputy Minister of Lands. Department of Lands, Victoria, B.C., August 16th, 1911. aug. 19 nov. 18 CANCELLATION OF RESERVE NOTICE is hereby given that the reserve existing upon Lrown lands in Cariboo District, notice of which bearing date of May 5th, 1910, was published in the British Columbia Gazette of May 5th, 1910, is cancelled in so far as the same relates to the lands surveyed as Lots 888, 892, 893, 894, 895, 1554, 3215, 3216, 3217, 3218, 3219, 3220, 3221, E. y2 3222, W. 'A 3223, and 3223A, Cariboo District, ROBT. A. RENWICK, Deputy Minister of Lands. Department of Lands, Victoria, B.C., August 16th, 1911. aug. 19 nov. 18 NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS Provincial Home, Kamloops, East Wing Addition. SEALED TENDERS, superscribed "Tender for East Wing Addition, Provincial Home, Kamloops," will dc received by the Honourable the Minister of Public Works up to 12 o'clock noon of Wednesday, the 20th day of September, 1911, for the erection and completion of an east wing addition to thc Provincial Home, Kamloops, B.C. Plans, specifications, contract, and forms of tender may be seen at the offices of the Provincial Timber Inspector, Vancouver, B. C. -, the Government Agents, Kamloops, New Westminster, and Revelstoke; and at the Department of Public Works, Parliament Buildings, Victoria, B. C. Intending tenderers can, by applying to the undersigned, obtain one copy of the drawings and one copy of the specifications for the sum of twenty dollars |$2o). Each tender must bc accompanied by an accepted bank cheque or certificate of deposit on a chartered bank of Canada, made payable to the Honourable thc Minister of Public Works, for the sum of $5,000, which shall bc forfeited if thc party tendering decline to enter into contract when called upon to do so, or if he fail to complete the work contracted for. The cheques or certificates of deposit of unsuccessful tenderers will bc returned to them upon the execution of the contract. The successful tenderer shall furnish a bond of a guarantee company satisfactory to the Minister of Public Works, equal to ten (10) per cent, of thc contract amount, for the due fulfilment of the contract. Tenders will not be considered unless made out on thc forms supplied, signed with the actual signature of thc tenderer, and enclosed in the envelopes furnished. The lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted. J. E. GRIFFITH, Public Works Engineer. Public Works Department, Victoria, B.C., August 24th, 1911. aug. 26 sept. 16 COAST LAND DISTRICT District of, Range 1 TAKE notice that I, William Waterston, of Vancouver, occupation Broker, intends to apply for permission to purchase thc following descrihed lands;—Commencing at a post planted about 70 chains westerly from northwest corner of L. 530 and about one mile from Homalko River, thence north 80 chainl; thence eaat 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains, to point of commencement, containing 640 acres, more or less. Dated August nth, 1911. WILLIAM WATERSTON. Morton S. Jones, Agent, aug. 26 oct. 21 CANCELLATION OF RESERVE NOTICE is hereby given that the reserve existing upon vacant lands of the Crown in Lillooet District, notice of which, bearing date of May 5th, 1910, was published in the British Columbia Gazette of May 5th, 1910, is cancelled in so far as the same relates to the lands surveyed as Lots 1387, 1403, 1887, 1888, 1889, 1890, 1891, 1892, and 1895 Lillooet District. ROBT. A. RENWICK, Deputy Minister of Lands. Department of Lands, Victoria, B.C., August 16th, 1911. aug. 19 nov. 18 CANCELLATION OF RESERVE NOTICE is hereby given that the reserve existing on cavant Crown lands in Range 5, Coast District, notice of which, bearing date of May 25th, 1910, was published in the British Columbia Gazette of May 26th, 1910, is cancelled in so far as the same relates to the lands surveyed as Lots 1876, 1878, 1879, 1890, 1891, 1893, 1894, 1895, 1896, 1897, 1898, 1900, 2507, 2508, 2509, 2510, 2511, and 2512, Range 5, Coast District. ROBT. A. RENWICK, Deputy Minister of Lands. Department of Lands, Victoria, B.C., August 16th, 1911. aug. 19 nov. 18 RENFREW (VICTORIA OFFICE) LAND DISTRICT District of Renfrew TAKE notice that I, Wm. Joseph MacDonald, a3 agent for Mabel Gresley, of Victoria, B.C., occupation Married Woman, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted on the east side of Nit Nat Lake in the Renfrew District, commencing at the north-west corner post of Lot 391, marked S. E. post, running westerly 40 chains; thence northerly 10 chains more or less to lake shore; thence easterly 40 chains more or less along lake shore; thence 10 chains more or less along shore of bay to point of commencement, comprising 40 acres more or less. Dated July 25th, 1911. MABEL GRESLEY. Per Wm. J. MacDonald, Agent, aug. 19 oct. 14 CANCELLATION OF RESERVE NOTICE is hereby given that the reserve existing by reason of a notice published in the British Columbia Gazette of the 27th December, 1907, over a parcel of land situated on Reed Island, known as Lot No. 452, Sayward District, formerly covered by Timber License No. 36862, which license expired on the 20th November, 1909, is cancelled, and the said lands will "Be opened to location by pre-emption only at midnight on Friday, 13th October, 1911. ROBT. A. RENWICK, Deputy Minister of Lands. Department of Lands, Victoria, B.C., 5th July, 1911. July 15 oct 7 CANCELLATION OF RESERVE NOTICE is hereby given that the reserves existing upon vacant Crown lands in Range 5, Coast District, and in Cariboo District, notices of which, bearing date of December 17th, 1908, February 15th, 1910, and AR"1 3rd, 1911, were published in the British Columbia Gazette in the issues of December 17th, 1908, February 17th, 191,4, and April 6th, 1911, respectively, arc cancelled in so far as the same relate to the lands surveyed as Lots 4.037A, 4,037, 4,o4oA, 4,038, 4,040, and 2,951, all in Range 5, Coast District, and Lots 4,038 A.R., 2,793 A.R., 2,828 K, 4,042 A...., 4,045 R, 4.046 A.R., 4,o44_R. 4,042 K, 4.046 R, 2 827 ll, 2,826 R, 4,048 R, 4,041 R, 4,043 g, 3,047 R, 4,051 R, 2,7835, 2,799 R, 4,049 R, 4;o53R: 4.052 R, 2,782 R, 2,798 K, 2,780 R, 4,050 R, 4,054, R, 4,055 i-, 4,056 R, 2,772 A.K., 2,797 R, 2,796 R, 4,06o R, 4,059 R. 4.058 K, 4,057 R, 4,066 R, 2,776 R, 4,061 R, 4,070 A.R., 4,062 R, 4,063 R, 4,064 R, 4,o65 g, 2,773 R, 2,775 R, 4,070 R, 4,069 R, 4,068 R, 4,067 R- 4,019 R, 2,774 ■*■•■•, 4,oi4 R. 4.015 R. 4>o>6 R, 4,017 R, 4,024 R, 4,023 R, 4.022 R, 4,021 K, 2.379. 2,380, 2,381, 2,382, 2,311, 2,310, 2,301, 2,300, 2,464, 2,463, 2,462, 2,461, 2,460, 2,459, 2,458, 2,457, 2,451, 2,452, 2,453, 2,454, 2,450, 2,449, 2,448, 2,447, 2,446, 2,445, 2,444, 2,443, 2,442, 2,441, 2,388, 2,387, 2,386, 2,385, 2,384, 2,383, 2,373, 2,374, 2,375, 2,376, 2,377, 2,378, 2,360, 2,359, 2,306, 2,307, 2,308, 2,309, 2,302, 2,303, 2,304, 2,305, 2,358, 2,357, 2,294, 2,295, 2,296, 2,297, 2,298, 2,288, 2,289, 2,290, 2,291, 2,292, 2,293, 2,356, 2,363, 3.841, 2,367, 2,364, 2,355, 2,281, 2,282, 2,283, 2,284, 2,285, 2,286, 2,275, 2,276, 2,277. 2,278, 2,279, 2,280, 2,354, 2,365, 2,366, 2,840, 3,843, 3.844. 3.839, 2,353, 2,340, 2,339, 2,326, 2,325, 2,312, 2,287, 2,271, 2,272, 2,273, 2,274, 2,267, 2,268, 2,269, 2,283, 2,266, 2,313, 2,324, 2,327, 2,338, 2,341, 2,352, 3.838, 3,845, 3,856, 3,855, 3,846, 3,837. 2,351, 2,342, 2,337, 2,328, 2,323, 2,314, 2,265, 2,259, 2,260, 2,261, 2,262, 2,263, 2,245, 2,246, 2,255, 2,256, 2,257, 2,258, 2,264, 2,315, 2,322, 2,329, 2.336. 2,343, 2,350, 3,836, 3,847, 3,854, 3,857, 3,853. 3,848, 3,835, 2,349, 2,344, 2,330, 2,321, 2,316, 2,317, 2,320, 2,331, 2,37*. 2,345, 2,348, 3,834, 3.849, 3,852, 3,883, 3,884, 3,851, 3,850, 3,833, 2,347, 2„v6, 2,333, 2,332, 2,319, 2,318, 3,869, 3,858, 3,859, 4,157, 4.160, 4,159, 4,158, 3,860, 3,861, 3,868, 3,867, 3,862, 3,863, 3,880, 3.641, 3,637, 3,667, 3,663, 3,659, 3,655, 3,654, 3.658, 3.662, 3,666, 3,665, 3,661, 3,657, 3,653, 3,652, 3,656, 3,660, 3,664, 3,633, 3,629, 2,66oA, 2,656, 2,652, 2,648, 2,644, 3,642, 2,651, 2,647, 2,643, 2,639, 3,669, 3,678, -,677, 3,668, 2,638, 2.642, 2,646, 2,650, 2,244, 2,247, 2,254, 2,253, 2,248, 2,243, 2,242, 2,249, 2,259, 2,237, 2,238, 2,239, 2,241, 2,219, 2,232, 2,231, 2,230, 2,217, 2,221, 2,335, 2,224, 2,720, 2,719, 1,100, 1,101, 1,102, 1,103, 1,076, 1,160, 1,163, 1,164, 1,166, 1,167, 1.165, 1,097, 1,110, 1,109, 1,108, 1,107, i,i74A, 1,095, 1,171, 1,162, 1,170, 1,099, 1,424, 1,089, 1,182, 1,178, I.I76A, i,t7oA, 1,180, 1,181, 1,183, 1.189, 1.188, 1,719, and 1,775, all in Cariboo District. ROBT. A. RENWICK, Deputy Minister of Lands. Department of Lands, Victoria, B.C., July 7th, 1911. July 15 oct 14 CANCELLATION OF RESERVL NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the reserve existing on certain Crown Lands in Pender Harbour, New Westminster District, formerly held under special Timber License No. 42713, by reason of the notice published in the British Columbia Gazette of the 27th December, 1907, is cancelled, and that the said lands will be open to entry by pre-emption only on and after midnight of November 3rd, 1911. ROBERT A. RENWICK, Deputy Minister of Lands. Lands Department, Victoria, B.C., 31st July, 1911. aug. 5 nov..( COAST LAND DISTRICT District of, Range 1 TAKE notice that I, William J. Cooper, of Vancouver, occupation Electrician, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted about one mile westerly from Homalko River, and at S.W. corner of L. 530, thence west 40 chains; thence north 40 chains;_ thence east 40 chains; thence south 40 chains to point of commencement, containing 160 acres, more or less. Dated August nth, 1911. WILLIAM J. COOPER. Morton S. Jones, Agent, aug. 26 oct. 2i COAST LAND DISTRICT District of, Range 2 TAKE notice that Anker Berntzen, of Vancouver, occupation Shingler, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted about 1 mile southerly from the mouth of Upper Glacier creek, said creek runs into Homalko River about 12 miles from its mouth; thence east 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence south 80 chains to point of commencement, containing 640 acres, more or less. Dated August nth, 1911. ANKER BERNTZEN. Morton S. Jones, Agent, aug. 26 oct. 21 COAST LAND DISTRICT District of, Range 1 TAKE notice that I, James Grey Bennett, of Vancouver, occupation Electrician, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted about three-quarters of a mile westerly from the north-west corner of L. 550 and about one mile from Homalko river, thence north 40 chains; thence west 40 chains; thence south 40 chains; thence east 40 chains, to point of commencement, containing 160 acres, more or less. Dated August nth, 1911. JAMES GREY BENNETT. aug. 26 Morton S. Jones, Agent, oct. 21 COAST LAND DISTRICT District of, Range 1 TAKE notice that I, George Fredrik Fraser, of Vancouver, occupation Electrician, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted one mile westerly from Homalko River, and at S. W. corner of L. 530, thence west 40 chains; thence south 60 chains; thence east 40 chains; thence north 80 chains to point of commencement, containing 320 acres, more or less. Dated August nth, 1911. GEORGE FREDRIK FRASER. Morton S. Jones, Agent, aug. 26 oct. 21 COAST LAND DISTRICT District of, Range 1 TAKE notice that I, Arthur L. Spencer, of Vancouver, occupation Electrician, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted about one-half mile westerly from Homalko River and at the north-west corner of L. 530, thence west 40 chains; thence south 40 chains; thence east 40 chains; thence north 40 chains to point of commencement, containing 160 acres, more or less. Dated August nth, 1911. ARTHUR L. SPENCER. aug. 26 Morton S. Jones, Agent, oct. 21 COAST LAND DISTRICT District of, Range 1 TAKE notice that I, Michel Zattoni, of Vancouver, occupation Miner, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following describea lands:—Commencing at a post planted about three-quarters of a mile westerly from north-west corner of L. 530 and about one mile from Homalko River, thence east 20 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence west 20 chains; thence north 80 chains to point of commencement, containing 160 acres more or less. Dated August nth, 1911. MICHEL ZATTONI. Morton S. Jones, Agent, aug. 26 oct. 21 CANCELLATION OF RESERVE NOTICE is hereby given that the reserl existing by reason of a notice published I the British Columbia Gazette of the 27I December, 1907, covering a parcel of Ial situated at St. Vincent Bay, Jervis Inll formerly held under 'limber License " 40624, is cancelled and the said lands be open for location by pre-emption at ml night on Friday, October 13th, 1911. ROBT. A. RENWICK, Deputy Minister of Lands.| Department of Lands, Victoria, B.C., 5th July, 1911. July 15 octl PUBLIC HIGHWAYS Province of British Columbia NOTICE is hereby given that all Pull Highways in unorganized Districts, and f Main Trunk Roads in organized Districts I sixty-six feet wide, and have a width I thirty-three feet on each side of the ml straight centre line of the travelled roaq THOMAS TAYLOR, I Minister of Public Work| Department of Public Works, Victoria, B.C., July 7th, 1911. july 15 CANCELLATION OF RESERVE NOTICE is hereby given that the resi existing by reason of a notice publisheif the British Columbia Gazette of the T December, 1907, over Lots Nos. 10183 L 10184, Group one, Kootenay District, wl have Deen surrendered out of Timber f cense No. 32590, is cancelled, and the f lands will be open to location by pre-emd only at midnight on Friday, 13th Oct| ROBT. A. RENWICK, Deputy Minister of Lanj Department of Lands, Victoria, B.C., 5th July, 1911. July 15 MINERAL ACT (Form F.) Certificate of Improvements NOTICE Iron Alice, Iron Cross, Iron Hand, and Iron Belle Mineral Claim, situate in the Victoria, B.C. Mining Division of Renfrew District. Where located: Bugaboo Creek. TAKE NOTICE that L. N. Anderson, F.M.C. No. 54082B, Agent for the Estate Sidney Shore, F.M.C. No. 54090B; Alexander Lipsky, F.M.C. No. 49625B; Oliver Smith, F.M.C. No. , intend, sixty days from the date hereof, to apply to the Mining Recorder for a Certificate of Improvements, for the purpose of obtaining a Crown Grant of the above claim. And further take notice that action, under Section 37, must be commenced before the issuance of such Certificate of Improvements. Dated this 24th day of July, 1911, A.D. 1911. L. N. ANDERSON, july 29 sept. 23 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Henry Lindop, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Contractor, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described landB:—Commencing at a post planted two miles south and ten miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June 12th, 1911. HENRY LINDOP. aug. 12 oct. 7 CANCELLATION OF RESERVE NOTICE is hereby given that the reserve existing on vacant lands of the Crown, notice of which was published in the British Columbia Gazette in the issue of May 5th, 1910, and bearing date of May 5th, 1910, is cancelled in so far as the same relates to the lands surveyed as Lots 2317, 2318, 2319, 2320, 2321, 2322, 2323, 2324, 2325, 2326, 2327, 2329, 2330, 2331, 2332, 2334, 2335, 2336, 2337, 2339, 2341, 2342, 2343, 2347, 2348, 2348A, 2349, 2350, 2358, 2369, 2408, 3113, 3114, 3115, 3116, 3117, 3118, 3119, 3120, 3121, 3122, 3123, 3124, 3125, 3126, 3127, 3128, 3129, 3130, 3131, 3132, 3133, 3134, 3135, 3136, 3137, 3138, 3139, 3140, 3141, 3142, 3242A, 3143, 3144, 3145, 3146, 3147, 3148, 3148A, 3149, 3150, 3151. 3152, 3153, 3154, 3155, 3156, 3157, 3158, 3159, 3160, 3161, 3162, 3163, 3164, 3165, 3166, 3167, 3168, 3169, 3170, 3171, 3172, 3173, 3174, 3175, 3176, 3177, 3178, 3179, 3.184, 3186, 3187, and 3188, Range 5, Coast District. ROBT. A. RENWICK, Deputy Minister of Lands. Department of Lands, Victoria, B.C., August 16th, 1911. aug. 19 nov. 18 CANCELLATION OF RESERVE NOTICE is hereby given that the reserves existing over vacant Crown lands in Ranges 4 and 5, Coast District, notices of which, bearing dates of May 5th, 1910, and May 25th, 1910, respectively, were published in the issues of the British Columbia Gazette of May sth and May 26th, 1910, are cancelled in so far as the same relate to the lands surveyed as Lots 785, 786, 787, 788, 789, 790, 791, 79iA, 792, 793, 794, 795, 856, 857, 858, 859, 860, 861, 862, 863, 864, 865, 866, 867, 868, 869, 870, 871, 872, 873. 1158, 1159, 1160, 1164, 1165, 1166, 1162, 1163, 1169, 467, 468, 847, 1174, 1176, 1182, 1189, 1191, 1192, 1201A, 1188, 1187, 1190, 782, 783, 781, 784, 780, 313. 777A, 70, and 1186, all in Range 4, Coast District; and Lots 2188A, 1020, 1023, 3814, and 3826, all in Range 5, Coast District. ROBT. A. RENWICK, Deputy Minister of Lands. Department of Lands, Victoria, B.C., August 16th, 1911 aug. 19 TAKE NOTICE that I, Archie F. nedy, of the City of Vancouver, ProvinJ British Columbia, Waiter, intend to apnl the Assistant Commissioner of Lands fl license to prospect for Coal and Petrol in the vicinity of Sutherland Bay, IF Inlet, on and over the following descl lands, beginning at a post marked A. Ff N. E. Corner; thence running soutl chains; thence west 80 chains; tiience I 80 chains; thence east 80 chains to por] commencement. 14th August, 1911. ARCHIE F. KENNEDY, James Fulton, Ag| aug. 19 TAKE NOTICE that I, Willie S. Kenl of the City of Vancouver, Province of I ish Columbia, Waiter, intende to apply tl Assistant Commissioner of Lands for a lil to prospect for Coal and Petroleum irT vicinity of Sutherland Bay, Drury Inlel and over the following described lands! ginning at a post marked W. S. K., Nl Corner; thence running east 80 chP thence south 80 chains; thence wei chains; thence north 80 chains to poi| commencement. 14th August, 1911, WILLIE S. KENNEDY. James Fulton, Ag| aug. 19 COAST LAND DISTRICT District of, Range 2 TAKE notice that I, Anna MettlJ Vancouver, occupation Married Womal tends to apply for permission to pui the followine described lands:—Commf at a post planted about one-half mile , east of post marked "295 W.P.S. N.W ner," being blazed south to creek abou half mile, said creek running into He] River about 9 miles from its mouth; north 80 chains; thence east 80 thence south 80 chains; thence wd chains to point of commencement, contj 640 acres, more or less. Dated August nth, 1911. ANNA METTLER. Morton S. Jones, A^ aug. 26 RENFREW (VICTORIA OFFICE) DISTRICT District of Renfrew TAKE notice that I, William Josephl Donald, of Clo-oose, B.C., occupation! cher, intends to apply for permission tl chase the following described lands l-f mencing at a post planted on an island \ east side of Nit Nat Lake, comprisinl acre, more or less, situated about on* south-east from the north-west cornea of the Oyees Indian Reserve on thi shore of Nit Nat Lake. f Dated 28th July, 1911. WILLIAM JOSEPH MACDONAD CANCELLATION OF RESERVI NOTICE is hereby given that the existing over Lots 31, 22 and 33, Norl vision of Salt Spring Island, by real the notice published in the British Col Gazette of the 27th December, 1907/ land having been held under Timber II No. 14891, whicii has expired, is cal and the said land will be open to Iff hy pre-emption only after midnight on f day, December 7th, 1911. ROBT. A. RENWICK, Deputy Minister of La] Lands Department, Victoria, B. C, September 2nd, 1911. nov. 18 I sept. 9 r THE WEEK, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1911 11 CANCELLATION OF RESERVE lOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the ;rve existing upon Crown Lands in Cari- District, notice of which was published the British Columbia Gazette of the 15th September, 1877, is cancelled in so far as same relates to lands surveyed as Lots 568, 360, 370, and 422, Group 1, Cariboo trict, and that the lands embraced in said wili be open for pre-emption entry after night of November third, 1911. ROBERT A. RENWICK, Deputy Minister of Lands. Department, /ictoria, B.C., 31st July, 1911. nov. 4 CANCELLATION OF RESERVE ;rt 3TICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the e existing over Lot 110, Rupert Dis- situated within the boundaries of Tim- ricense No. 40892 known as Lot 212, t District, is cancelled for the purpose aking a saie of the said Lot no, Rupert ict, to the Canadian North Pacific Fish- Limited, such cancellation to take effect third of November, 1911. ROBERT A. RENWICK, Deputy Minister of Lands. Department, ictoria, B.C., 31st July, 1911. nov. 4 CANCELLATION OF RESERVE TICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the e existing on Crown Lands in Asoyoos on of Vale District, formerly embraced Special Timber. License No. 31301, -ason of the notice published in the h Columbia Gazette of December 27th, is cancelled, and that the lands em- 1 within the said timber license will be for pre-emption entry only on and midnight on November third, 1911. ROBERT A. RENWICK, Deputy Minister of Lands. Department, .toria, B.C., 31st July, 1911. nov. 4 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 CE notice that William Armstrong, of homas, Ontario, occupation Chief of intends to apply for permission to se the following described lands:— encing at a post planted the following ed lands:—Commencing at a post I two miles south and ten miles west ^th-west corner of Lot 318, Coast Dis- Range 3, thence south 80 chains; thence 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; east 80 chains, to point of commence- _d June 12th, 1911. WILLIAM ARMSTRONG, oct. 7 RENFREW LAND DISTRICT District of Jordan River CE notice that I, Netta B. Moore, of ia, occupation Married Woman, intends ly for permission to purchase the fol- described lands:—Commencing at a lanted sixty chains distant in a west- irection from the northeast corner of Renferw District, being Netta B. s S. E. Corner, thence north 40 chains; west 34 chains; thence south 18.6 thence east 10 chains; thence soutli ains; thence east 24 chains to place of icement and containing one hundred irteen and 6-10 acres, more or less. August 2, 1911. NETTA B. MOORE. By William W. Stonmetz, Agent, sept. 16 "LAND REGISTRY ACT" matter of an Application for a fresh •tificate of Title to that part of Sub- ision Lot 4, of Section 12, Beckley rm, Victoria City, Map 160, of which _ne Lowe is the registered owner. ICE is hereby given of my intention expiration of one month from the first tion hereof to issue a fresh Certificate e in lieu of the Certificate of Title to Skene Lowe on the 5th January, nd numbered 8222 A, which has been destroyed, i at Land Registry Office, Victoria, his 7th day of August, A.D., 1911. S. Y. WOOTTON, Registrar-General of Titles, ■ept. 16 COAST LAND DISTRICT District of. Range 2 E notice that I, Peder Berntzen, of ver, occupation Shingler, intends to ap- permission to purchase the follow- cribed lands:—Commencing at a post about one-half mile north-east of arked "295 W.P.S. N.W. corner," be- ized south to creek about one-half lid creek running into Homalko River, I miles from its mouth, thence south ins; thecen east 80 chains; thence !o chains; thence west 80 chains to [ commencement, containing 640 acres, ■ less. 1 August nth, 1911. PEDER BERNTZEN. Morton S. Jones, Agent, oct. 21 COAST LAND DISTRICT District of. Range 2 E notice that 1, Samuel. G. Mettler, couver, occupation Machinist, intends y for permission to purchase the fol- described lands:—Commencing at a anted about one-half mile north-east marked "295 W.P.S. N.W. corner," jlazed south to creek about one-half lid creek running into Homalko River ) miles from its mouth; thence south ins; thence west 40 chains; thence io chains; thence east 40 chains, to f commencement, containing 320 acres, r less. 1 August 11th, 1911. SAMUEL G. METTLER. Morton S. Jones, Agent, oct. 21 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Almeda Hart, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Music Teacher, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted two miles west and seven miles north of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June nth, 1911. ALMEDA HART, aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Charles Isaac Styles, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Laborer, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted two miles south and one mile west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains to point of commencement. Dated June nth, 1911. CHARLES ISAAC STYLES, aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Peter Dickinson, of St. Thomas, -Ontario, occupation Farmer, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted two miles south and one mile west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains, to point of commencement, Dated June nth, iqii aug. 12 PETER DICKINSON, oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE .lotice that David Henry Gooding, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Farmer, intends tu apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted two miles south and three miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June nth, ton. DAVID HENRY GOODING. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Margaret Neil Bryce, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Spinster, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted two miles south and three miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3, thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June nth, 1911. MARGARET NEIL BRYCE. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Charles Christopher Nickerson, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Farmer, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following describea lands:— Commencing at a post planted two miles south and five miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June nth, 1911. CHARLES CHRISTOPHER NICKERSON. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that William Mann, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Laborer, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted two miles south and five miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June nth, 1911. WILLIAM MANN, aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Mungo Donald McCrimmon, of Toronto, Ontario, occupation Law Student, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:— Commencing at a post planted two miles soutli and seven miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June nth, 1911. MllNGO DONALD McCRlMMON. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT . District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that James Thomas Geddes, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Policeman, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted two miles south and seven miles west of southwest corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence south 80 chains east 80 chains to point of commencement. Date June 12th, 1911. JAMES THOMAS GEDDES. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Andrew John Clark, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Conveyancer, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted two miles south and nine miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June 12th, 1911. ANDREW JOHN CLARK, aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Yin Lee, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Laundryman, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted four miles north and two miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June 9th, 1911. YIN LEE. aug. 12 oct. 7 COAST LAND DISTRICT District of, Range 2 TAKE NOTICE .that I, Simon Mettler, of Vancouver, occupation Hotelman, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted about one-half mile north-east of post marked "295 W. P.S. N.W. corner," being blazed south to creek about one-half mile, said creek running into Homalko River, about 9 miles from its mouth, thence north 80 chains; thence west 40 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence east 40 chains to point of commencement, containing 320 acres, more or less. Dated August nth, 1911. SIMON METTLER. Morton S. Jones, Agent, aug. 2*.* oct. 21 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Charles William Thompson, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Farmer, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted four miles west and two miles north of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains, to point of commencement.' Dated June 9th, 1911. CHARLES WILLIAM THOMPSON, aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Charles Orom Luton, of Belmont, Ontario, occupation Farmer, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted two miles west and two miles north of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3, thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June 9th, 1911. CHARLES OROM LUTON, aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Frederick Sutherland, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Merchant, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands;—Commencing at a post planted two miles west and two miles north of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3, thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June 9th, 1911. FREDERICK SUTHERLAND, aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Charles Treadwell, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Insurance Agent, intends to apply for. permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted two miles west and two miles north of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence north 80 chatns; thence east 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June 9th, ion. CHARLES TREADWELL. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that John Theoplulus Ellis, of Berlin, Ontario, occupation Commercial Traveler, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted two miles west and two miles north of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains to point of commencement. Dated June 9th, 1911. JOHN THEOPHILUS ELLIS, aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that William Samuel Martin, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Cigar Dealer, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:— Commencing, at a post planted four miles north and two miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June 9th, 1911. WILLIAM SAMUEL MARTIN, aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that George Atkins, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Farmer, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at. a post planted four miles north and two miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence north 80 chajns; thence east 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June 9th, 1911. GEORGE ATKINS, aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Hugh McConachie Somerville, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Bank Clerk, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following describea lands.:— Commencing at a post planted four miles north and three miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3, thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June 9th, 1911. HUGH McCONACHIE SOMERVILLE. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range j TAKE notice that Isabella McCrimmon, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Spinster, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted two miles south and nine miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June 12th, 1911. ISABELLA McCRlMMON. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that James Clark, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Laborer, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted four miles north and four miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June 9th, 1911. JAMES CLARK, aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Robert Allen McCully, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Policeman, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted two miles south and seven miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June 12th, 1911. ROBERT ALLEN McCULLY. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that John Irwin, of London, Ontario, occupation Book-keeper, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following; described lands:—Commencing at a post planted two miles south and nine miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3, thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June 12th, 1911. JOHN IRWIN. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Edward John Webster, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Liveryman, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted four miles north and four miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3, thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June ioth, 1911. EDWARD JOHN WEBSTER, aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Daniel Barret, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Farmer, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted four miles north and six miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June ioth, 1911. DANIEL BARRET, aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Frances Tyrcll, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Spinster, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted four miles north and six nines west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3, thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June ioth, ion, FRANCES TYRELL. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Bert Styles, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Laborer, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted four miles north and six miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June 10th, 1911. BERT STYLES, aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Alex. Finlayson, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Farmer, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described Iands:—Commencing at a post planted four miles north and six miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3, thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains to point of commencement. Dated June ioth, 1911. ALEX. FINLAYSON. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Harrison Lynn Martin, of Toronto, Ontario, occupation Traveler, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted four miles north and eight miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3, thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June ioth, 1911. HARRISON LYNN MARTIN, aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range ,*) TAKE notice that Patrick i-'redenck Fagan, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Farmer, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted 4 miles north and 8 miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3, thence south 80 chajns; thence east 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June ioth, 1911. PATRICK FREDERICK FAGAN. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that John Hepinstall, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Student, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted four miles north and eight miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June 10th, 1911. JOHN HEPINSTALL. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Martha Eyeland, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Spinster, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted four miles north and eight miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Ran°*e 3; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June ioth, ior 1. MARTHA EVELAND. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Emerela Fraser, of bt. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Spinster, intends to apply for permission to purchase thc following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted four miles north and nine miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3, thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; tjience south 80 chains; thence cast 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June ioth, 1911. EMERELA FRASER. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Fanny Mitts, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Spinster, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted four miles north and nine miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June ioth, 1911. FANNY MITTS, aug. 12 oct 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Ralph Oswald Babbit, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Clerk, intends to apply for permission to purchase thc following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted nine miles west and six miles north, of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3, thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence cast 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June 10th, 1911. RALPH OSWALD BABBIT, aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Morris Jackson, of St Thomas, Ontario, occupation Merchant, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted nine miles west and six miles north of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June ioth, 1911. MORRIS JACKSON, aug. 12 oct 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Iridell Kilally Johnston, of St.. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Accountant, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted eight miles west and six miles nortli of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence south 80 chains; . thence east 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June ioth, 1911. IRIDELL KILALLY JOHNSTON, aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that John White, of St Thomas, Ontario, occupation Farmer, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted six miles west and six miles north of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3, thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence north 80 chainl; thence east 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June ioth, 1911. JOHN WHITE, aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Josephine Gable, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Spinster, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted six miles west and six miles north of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June ioth, 1911. JOSEPHINE GABLE- aug. 12 oct 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Edward Ellwood Mc- Caulley, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation M.C.R.R. Fireman, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted four miles west and six miles north of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3, thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June 10th, 1911. EDWARD ELLWOOD McCAULLEY. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that John Allen, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Farmer, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted four miles west and six miles north of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3, thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June nth, 1911. JOHN ALLEN, aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Charles Edward Kreiger, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation M.C.R.R. Fireman, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:— Commencing at a post planted two miles west and six miles nortli of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June nth, 1911. CHARLES EDWARD KREIGER. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Harry Joseph Elleson Young, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Reporter, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:.— Commencing at a post planted two miles west and six miles north of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chainB, to point of commencement. Dated June nth, 1911. HARRY JOSEPH ELLESON YOUNG, aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Mary Mills, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Spinster, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted two miles west and six miles north, of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence north 80 chains; thence cast 80 chains; thence.south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains, to point of commence* ment. Dated June nth, 1911. MARY MILLS, aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Donald Campbell, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Farmer, intends to apply for. permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing . at a post planted two miles west and six miles north of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June nth, 1911. DOW aug. 12 •\LD CAMPBELL, oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that James Balkwell Squance, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation, Carriage Builder, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted four miles north and four miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated Tune 9th, 1911. JAMES BALKWELL SQUANCE. aug. 12 oct. 7 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Frederick Brooks, of St. Thomas, Ontario, occupation Farmer, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at. a post planted four miles north and four miles west of south-west corner of Lot 318, Coast District, Range 3; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence, soutli 80 chains; thence cast 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated June oth, 1911. FREDE DERICK BROOKS, oct. 7 12 THE WEEK, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1911 Cost of Living and Wages --A Memorandum Written for the Week by An Oxford Professor of Economics Correspondence The statement lias repeatedly been made, that the proposed agreement with the United States will lower the prices of the necessities of life, and that the benefit of that reduction will go to the workers. Both clauses in tbat statement are false and misleading. The agreement will not lower these prices, and if it did, the workman would not get the benefit of the lower prices for more than the shortest space of time. The first half of this claim is easily disposed of. If the law of supply and demand means anything, it means that when the American worker enters the B. C. market to buy foodstuffs and other natural products, prices will not fall, but rise. The prices of many natural products are already high, because the supply actually on the market is short, and the addition of the American to the B. C. demand is bound to raise those prices still further. But we will suppose, for the sake of argument, that a large increase in the supply of natural products follows the agreement, and prices fall. Even in that case the workman cannot hope to reap the benefit of the lower scale for any length of time, because wages will inevitably accommodate themselves to the lowered cost of living. The usual argument is something like this; "You B. C. workmen get high wages, but you have to pay so much for your keep that your wage is not nearly as good as it looks. Pass Reciprocity and the cost of your living will go down, while you pocket the difference." All this is very charming, but unfortunately quite illusory, for the price of labour is determined not only by demand and supply, but, like every other price, by the cost of production. A manufacturer cannot go on selling at an average price lower than the average cost of production of the thing he is making. The cost of production of labour is the amount of money which it takes to feed, clothe, and house the worker, besides supplying him with any luxuries he may refuse to do without. If prices are low, then that production—cost of labour,—the minimum wage—,will be low: if prices are high, then the minimum wage will be high also. This is the reason why wages are normally higher where prices are higher, as in the towns, and lower where prices are lower, as in the country these are facts well known to all who do business in any form, but they could be supported by the authority of the most eminent economists, including Karl Marx. In England living costs about two- thirds of its cost here, and wages are proportionately lower. They are further depressed by the over-supply of labour, especially casual labour, so that in this particular case the actual wages paid are not only influenced, but absolutely fixed by the minimum upon which a man can keep body and soul together. Let one instance suffice to illustrate the conditions in the Old Country. The unskilled labour of Glasgow is among the worst paid labour in the United Kingdom. Some time ago a number of well-meaning people tried to help these men by providing them with cheap housing at non-commercial rates. The only consequence was a further reduction of wages to follow this decrease in the cost of living. Or take an illustration nearer home: Asiatic labour is normally cheaper than European. If you care to ask the next workman you meet why that is so he will tell you pretty vigorously that the Asiatic can live on next to nothing. In other words, the wage he is prepared to take is regulated by his low standard of living. He may make more in times of exceptional scarcity of labour, but he can always be obtained at a lower rate than a white man of equal efficiency, because whether through lower prices or parsimonious living, he can exist on less. To state the case quite generally: Here is an employer wanting to buy labour and a prospective employee wanting to sell it. They meet in the market, which is any place where men are engaged. The employer thinks of the most he can afford to give, and of the least whicii the man can be induced to take. These two mental reservations, call them reserve prices if you like, fix the limits inside which the wage will fluctuate according to that law of supply and demand so often quoted. The workman also fixes the least he will take, at an amount governed by just the same consideration, namely, what it costs him to live, and will generally include his little luxuries in his minimum. There are certain things he will have. If their price is high the minimum wage whicii he will accept is high. If their price is low he will take a lower minimum. Even while a man may be thinking of the current rates rather than of these maxima and minima, the wage which he can get is none the less surely lixed between those limits. Within these two the law of supply and demand has play. If there are a few labourers and many jobs, wages are high and the workman does well. But he does well out of the margin above his minimum, and not out of the whole. If there are many labourers and few jobs then wages will come down to the minimum level, which is the normal state of affairs in most countries, since a rise of wages anywhere attracts an inrush of labour whenever it becomes well known, and down comes the margin to zero. All this is very elementary, and it should not be necessary to dwell upon it at any length. Neither is it necessary for us to point out how that margin may be affected by the action of trade unionism. All that we are here concerned with is that the normal rate of wages in an open market tends always to the actual figure which represents the cost of living, and in any case is absolutely greater or less according to the amount of that first charge. We deny that an increased demand on the men who are even now making an insufficient output of food can do anything but increase price. We assert without hesitation that the most we can expect is an increase in the supply to meet the new demand and keep prices level; and we maintain that even if these prices should fall, wages must inevitably take the new scale as a minimum, and fluctuate somewhere above that, as they did somewhere above the old. If you lower prices you will soon lower wages to match. The Week accepts no responsibility for the views expressed by its correspondents. Communications will be inserted whether signed by the real name of the writer or a nom de plume, but the writer's name and address must be given to the Editor as an evidence of bona fides. In no case will it be divulged without consent. THE CHORAL SOCIETY Phone 2235 The B. C. Funeral Furnishing Co. Successor to Charles Hayward Funeral Director and Embalmer 1016 Govt. St. Established 1867 Victoria, B. C. To the Editor of The Week. Sir,—On behalf of the Choral Society, Victoria, B.C., I desire, through the medium of tllis letter in your columns, to bring the needs of the society to the notice of those persons in this city who arc interested in the doings of musical people who give their time, talent and money for the purposes of entertaining others and bettering their own knowledge of choral singing. The Choral was formed in January, 1910, due to the indefatigable efforts of a few music-lovers and has since, under the able direction of Mr. Gideon Hicks, given three concerts April, 1910, November, 1910, and May, 1911. Every person connected with the society gives his or her services gratuitiously, and I merely mention this to impress the fact that the society is not trying to make money. All the members subscribe for their music and receive no tickets for concerts. In May last an extraordinary general meeting of the society was held at which it was unanimously decided to double the membership fee and either give future concerts to a house guaranteed on the same lines as those for instance of the Arion Club, or go out of business. Personally, and my opinion is the same as many others, I think it would be a great mistake to give up the work the society has so ably undertaken. The City Council evidently appreciates the fact that a well conducted Choral Society is a distinct asset to any community and therefore allows us the use of the Council Chambers free of charge for practices. Unfortunately the society has lost money at both of the last two concerts and it will take all the subscriptions of the members for the current year to clear up the indebtedness of the society. Within the next few weeks it is my intention to mail to as many persons as I know, notices in connection with the proposed guaranteed houses for concerts in future. Unfortunately, however, I do not know everybody who would be interested, nor can I get the information necessary, and I have therefore taken this method, believing that you, sir, are thoroughly in accord with the aims and ambitions of the society. Subscriptions will be asked for two concerts per annum to be given in the Victoria Theatre, one in mid-winter and one about May ist. Tickets for same will be allotted at $3.00 for two tickets for each concert and so on in proportion. I desire those who do not receive notice direct to communicate with me, care P. 0. Box 167. Only the very best music will be taken in hand, the programme for our next concert includes Coleridge-Taylor's "Hiawatha's Wedding Feast" and glees by such authors as Mendelssohn and Sir Edward Edgar with possibly the unsung portions of "Bonbon Suite," by Coleridge-Taylor, which work we partly rendered last May. There are openings in the society for active members. We want readers, if possible, and good singers, and the younger ones particularly, for no doubt they would derive great benefit as well as pleasure from taking part in the rehearsals. ARTHUR WHEELER, JR., Hon. Secretary. MISTAKEN IDENTITY The teacher, after having taken great trouble to explain the difference in the meanings of the words "dream" and "reverie," addressed the class. "Now could any of you give mc a sentence with the word 'reverie' in it?" A small youth put up his hand. "You John!" she uttered in astonishment. "Well, what is it?" "Please, ma'am," said the urchin, "the 'reverie' blew his whus'le and stopped the game." E. S. STILES, Auctioneer W Valuator] Upholstering, French Polishing, Packing and Removing Leather Work and Special Designs Made to Order Loose Covers and Boat Cushions nog Fort St., Victoria, B. C. Phone 2I4Q\ Genuine! Bargain; R. RUTLE^ Ladies' Tailor] is offering for sal^ some very smart anu elaborate suits whicfl will be sold at a greal reduction. These garl ments are made o| English material and they are well tailored. Prices from $18| to $40 Come, see and be cor vinced. All our wor| is guaranteed. Sayward BU Rooms 408 & 40l Cor. Douglas & Vie] Sts., Victoria A fence of this kind od to 23c. per running! Shipped in rolls. Al can put it on the posts out special tools. We] the originators of this! Have sold hundreds of| for enclosing parks, gardens, cemeteries, chu station grounds, etc.l Supplied in any lengtlj sired, and painted white or green. Also "■ Farm Fences and Gatesf ting, Baskets, Mats, Tools, etc. Ask for oui catalog, the most coif fence catalog ever pub! MESSRS. E. Q. PRIOR & COMPANY Victoria and Vancouver, B.O. LIPTON'S TE; OVER 2 MILLION PACKAGES SOLD WEEKLY THE WEEK, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1911 13 MUSIC AND STAGE Continued from Page 3) Kinemacolor Commencing Friday September [nd, 23rd, 26th, 27th, 29th, 30th, exhi- [ions will be given at the Victoria peatre of the work of Kinemacolor, process for the presentation of mov- pictures in the original colors of Iture. lany have seen coloured moving Jtures before, but those were col- red by artificial means either by lid or by machinery. Only simple Itures could be so treated. In the [nemacolor pictures there is no lid work of any description, for the |ouring is done by the sun. Jumping Jupiter ichard (Himself) Carle is said to I at his funniest in his new musical nedy "Jumping Jupiter," in whicii |will be seen here for the first time /ictoria Theatre on September 28. SOTHERN-MARLOWE WEDDING fhe following extract from the fly Mail, Over-seas Edition, bear- date of August 26 (Thursday Ition), will be of interest to the liy admirers of these two Shakes- Irean artists: [Mr. E. H. Sothern, the leading lerican Shakespearean actor, and \s Julia Marlowe, the equally fa- US American actress, whose names |e been associated on the stage i many years, were secretly mar- last Thursday at the offices of Registrar of Marriages for the fsh of St. George's, Hanover- ^re, London. The honeymoon is lig spent in Devonshire. Nlr. Sothern is a son of the fans actor who created the part of |d Dundreary and originated the indreary whiskers." He was edu- |d at Dunchurch, Warwickshire, Marylebone Grammar School, |made his first stage appearance in York in 1879. lliss Julia Marlowe was born at [lbeck, eight miles from Keswick, Cumberland. She went to Ameri- |ts a child of five, and first ap- |ed in Irontown, Ohio, as a sailor Pinafore' in 1882. [n a very few years she had estab- ld for. herself a position as the Jug Shakespearean actress in the led States." lorrespondence }he gulf mail service Victoria, Sept. n, 1911. Editor The Week, Victoria: har Sir,—To show how much the terate and inevitable "kicker," JG. W. Dean, knows about the Ids freight and passenger service [lesire to say that our boat, the adi," went into service on this some little time before the C. , so that his statement that the R. put on a boat before we did, fcs that he knows little of the Dean's other statements are labout as reliable as this and as the only one known to us who Iraised an objection to our serine won't do much to help the R. think it would be well if Mr. would confine his "prattling" Is own estate, furs truly, 3ECKETT, MAJOR & CO., Per Frederick C. 'Beckett. ■HE GULF MAIL SERVICE lEditor of The Week: [ar Sir,—I noticed a little while letter in your columns from the (rs of the "Tuladi" gasoline boat the Islands mail service, and, |mr last issue a reply from Mr. W. 'Dean, of Ganges. I quite with Mr. Dean that the Gov- lent could have quashed the con- Jfor the Islands mail delivery had ■wished to do so. I am also quite ped that Mr. Ralph Smith will j they had each time he holds a Hng on these Islands, and more ■ill on the 21st inst. am informed that only a few (ago the S.S. "City of Nanaimo" ered a bag of mail to Victoria, Itten on one of the wharves here. they did deliver it is only one of the many instances the C. P. R. have shown of their desire to oblige the people they serve. We are now enjoying (thanks to the C. P. R.) an admirable service at reasonable rates, and we fully appreciate this, after all the inconveniences we have suffered since the "Iroquois" disaster. If, through failure to obtain the mail contract, the C. P. R. is compelled to abandon this service, you can imagine with what gratitude we shall hail the next Liberal candidate. If you do any prophesying do not forget Mr. Shepherd as the man for Nanaimo. W. J. L. HAMILTON, R.S.M., R.C.C., London. TAKE NOTICE that I, Michel Zattoni of Vancouver, B.C., Miner, intend to apply to the Assistant Commissioner of Lands for a licence to prospect for coal and petroleum on and over the following described lands:— Beginning at a post planted at the south-east corner of Claim Number Three (3), which lies between the extreme end of Drury Inlet and Bradley Lagoon and the extension of Blunden Harbor, thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains to point of commencement, containing 640 acres, more or less. Dated July 18th, 1911. MICHEL ZATTONI. James Fulton, Agent, sept. 16 oct. 14 TAKE NOTICE that I, Michel Zattoni, of Vancouver, B.C., Miner, intend to applv to the Assistant Commissioner of Lands for a license to prospect for coal and petroleum on and over the following described lands:— Beginning at a post planted at the northeast corner of Claim No. 4, which lies between the extreme end of Drury Inlet and Bradley Lagoon and the extension of Blunden Harbor, thence west 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence north 80 chains to point of commencement, containing 640 acres, more or less. Dated July 18th, 1911. MICHEL ZATTONI. James Fulton, Agent, sept, 16 oct. 14 TAKE NOTICE that I, Michel Zattoni, of Vancouver, B.C., Miner, intend to apply to the Assistant Commissioner of Lands for a license to prospect for coaj and petroleum on and over the following described lands:— Beginning at a post planted at the southeast corner of Claim No. 5, which lies south and adjacent to Drury Inlet, tnence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains to point of commencement, containing 640 acres, more or less. Dated July 13th, 1911. MICHEL ZATTONI. James Fulton, Agent, sept. 16 oct. 14 iaKE NOTICE that I, Michel Zattoni, of Vancouver, B.C., Miner, intend to apply to the Assistant Commissioner of Lands for a license to prospect for coal and petroleum on and over the following described lands:— Beginning at a post planted at the south-west corner of Claim No. 6, which lies south and adjacent to Drury Inlet; thence east chains; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence south 80 chains to point of commencement, containing 640 acres, more or less. Dated July 18th, 1911. MICHEL ZATTONI. James Fulton, Agent, sept. 16 • oct. id TAKE NOTICE that I, Michel Zattoni, of Vancouver, B.C., Miner, intend to apply to the Assistant Commissioner of Lands for a license to prospect for coal and petroleum on auvd;'over the following described lands:— Beginning at a post planted at the northeast corner of Claim No. 7, which lies south and adjacent to Drury Inlet, thence west 80 chains; thence south So chains; thence east 80 chains; thence nortli 80 chains to point of commencement, containing 640 acres, more or less. Dated July i8th, 1911. MICHEL ZATTONI. James Fulton, Agent, sept. 16 oct. 14 TAKE NOTICE that I, Michel Zattoni, of Vancouver, B.C., Miner, intend to appl" to the Assistant Commissioner of Lands for a license to prospect for coal and petroleum on and over tlie following described lands:— Beginning at a post planted at the northwest corner of Claim 1N0. 8, which lies south and adjacent to Drury Inlet, thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains to point of commencement, containing 640. acres, more or less. Dated July 18th, 1911. MICHEL ZATTONI. James Fulton, Agent, sept. 16 oct. 14 TAKE NOTICE that I, Michel Zattoni, of Vancouver, B.C., Miner, intend to appl" to the assistant Commissioner of Lands for a license to prospect for coal and petroleum on and over thc following described lands:— Beginning at a nost planted at the southeast corner of Claim No. 9, adjacent to Bradley Lagoon, thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains to point of commencement, containing 640 acres more or less. Dated July 18th, iqii. MICHEL ZATTONI. James Fulton, Agent, sept. 16 oct. 14 Ta.. NOTICE that I, Michel Zattoni, of Vancouver, B.C., Miner, intend to apply to the Assistant Commissioner of Lands for a license to prospect for coal and petroleum on and over the foUowing described lands:— Beginning at a post planted at the southwest corner of Claim No. 10 on Bradley La- goon and north-west of the extreme end of •rury Inlet, thence east 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence south 80 chains to point of commencement, containine 640 acres, more or less. Dated July 18th, 1911 M~~ sept. 16 ICrfEL ZATTONI. James Fulton, Agent, oct. 14 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast TAKE notice that Minnie Anderson, of Vancouver, occupation Married Woman, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted at the north-west corner of Lot 546, Salmon River Country; thence north 40 chains: thence west 80 chains; thence south 40 chains; thence east 80 chains to point of commencement. Dated July 13, ion, MINNIE ANDERSON. J. R. Morrison, Agent, sept. 16 nov. 11 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that G. MacDonald, of Vancouver, occupation Labourer, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted about 120 chains west of the N. W. corner of Lot 547, Salmon River Country; thence west 80 chains; thence north 80 chains: thence east 80 chains; thence south 80 chains to point of commencement. Dated July 13, ign. GEORGE MACDONALD. J. R. Morrison, Agent, sept. 16 nov. n VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that J. W. Macfarlane, of Vancouver, occupation Timber Broker, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted about 80 chains west of the north-west corner of Lot 404, Anaham Lake Country; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains to point of commencement. Dated July 11, 1911. JOHN WALTER MACFARLANE. J. R. Morrison, Agent, sept. 16 nov. 11 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Christina Morrison, of Vancouver, occupation Married Woman, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted at the N. W. corner of Lot 546, Salmon River Country; thence west 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence north 80 chains to point of commencement. Dated July 13, 1911. CHRISTINA ABERNETHY MORRISON. J. R. Morrison, Agent. sept. 16 nov. 11 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Malcolm MacDonald, of Vancouver, occupation Labourer, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted about 40 chains west of the S. W. corner of Lot 547, Salmon River Country; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains to point of commencement. Dated July 13, 1911. MALCOLM MACDONALD. J. R. Morrison, Agent, sept. 16 nov. 11 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Allan R. Macfarlane, of Vancouver, occupation Commission Agent, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted about four and one-half miles in a south-westerly direction from Lot 404, Anaham Lake Country, and near the south shore of Ardroil Lake; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains to point of commencement. Dated July n, iqii. ALLAN R. MACFARLANE. J. R. Morrison, Agent, nov. n sept. 16 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Harry Anderson, of Vancouver, occupation Teamster, intends to apply for permission to purchase t the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted about 120 chains west of the north-west corner of Lot 546, Salmon River Country; thence west 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence south 80 chaii s to point of commencement. Dated July 13, 1911. HARRY ANDERSON. J. R. Morrison, Agent, sept. 16 nov. n VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Rachel Macfarlane, of Vancouver, occupation Real Estate Agent, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted about 20 chains west of the S. E- corner of Lot 405, Anaham Lake Country; thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains to point of commencement. Dated July 12, 1911. RACHEL MACFARLANE. J. R. Morrison, Agent, sept. 16 nov. 11 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Eric L. Stenstrom, of Vancouver, occupation Assistant Land Surveyor, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:— Commencing at a post planted near the south shore of Charlotte Lake, about 15 miles south of the Salmon River and about 2 miles west of the head of the lake; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains to point of commencement. Dated July 14. 1911. ERIC LAURENCE STENSTROM. J. R. Morrison, Agent, sept. 16 nov. VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Marie C. Stenstrom, of Vancouver, occupation Nursemaid, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—CommencinK at a post planted at the east end of Charlotte Lake, south of Salmon River, about 15 miles; thence east 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence north 80 chains to point of commencement. Dated July 14, 1911. MARIE CHRISTINA STENSTROM. J. R. Morrison, Agent. sept. 16 nov. 11 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Lome M. Macfarlane, of Vancouver, occupation Lumberman, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted about three and one-half miles in a south-westerly direction from Lot 4041 Anaham Lake Country; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains to point of commencement. Dated July n, 1911. LORNE M. MACFARLANE. J. R. Morrison, Agent, sept. 16 ' nov. 11 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that R. R. Macfarlane, of Vancouver, occupation Broker, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted on east shore of Ardroil Lake and about 3 miles west of Lot 404, Anaham Lake Country; tnence east 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence north 80 chains along lake shore to point of commencement. Dated July 11, 1911. ' RODERICK R. MACFARLANE. J. R. Morrison, Agent, sept. 16 nov. 11 CANCELLATION OF RESERVE NOTICE is hereby given that the reserve existing over Crown lands on the Morrice River, Range 5, Coast District, notice of which bearing date of May 5th, 1910, was published in the British Columbia Gazette of May sth, 1910, is cancelled in so far as it relates to the lands surveyed as Lots 3881, 3882, 3883, 3884, 3885, 3886, 3887, 3888, 3889, 3890, 3891, 3892, 3893. 3894, 3895, 3896, 3897, 3898, 3899, 3900, 3901, 3902, 3903, 3904, 3905, 3906, 3907, 3908, 3909, and 3910. ROBERT A. RENWICK, Deputy Minister of Lands, Department of Lands, Victoria, B. C, September 12, 1911. sept. 16 dec. 16 CANCELLATION OF RESERVE NOTICE is hereby given that the reserve existing by reason ot the notice published in the British Columbia Gazette of the 27th December, 1907, covering a parcel of land situated on Redonda Island, formerly held under Timber License No. 4404^, which has lapsed, is cancelled, and the said lands will be open to location after midnight on the 14th December, 1911. ROBERT A. RENWICK, Deputy Minister of Lands. Department of Lands, Victoria, B. C, September 12, 1911. sept. 16 dec. 16 "LAND REGISTRY ACT" In the Matter of an Application for a fresh Certificate of Title to that part of Lot 4 of Section 23, Spring Ridge, Victoria City. Map 743, of which William Moore and Ernest W. Whittington are the registered owners. NOTICE is hereby given of my intention at the expiration of one month from the first publication hereof to issue a fresh Certificate of Title in lieu of the Certificate of Title issued to Wililam Moore and Ernest W. Whittington on the 25th of April, 1902, and numbered 7704 C, which has been lost. Dated at Land Registry Office, Victoria British Columbia, this 30th day of August 191X' S. Y. WOOTTON, Registrar General of Titles, sept. 2 sept. 23 COAST LAND DISTRICT District of. Range 2 TAKE notice that I, William Brown, of Vancouver, occupation Sign Painter, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted about 1 mile southerly from the mouth of lower Glacier creek, said creek runs into Homalko River about 9 miles from its mouth, thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence south 40 chains to river; thence meandering the river to place of commencement, containing 400 acres, more or less. Dated August uth, 1911. WILLIAM BROWN. Morton S. Jones, Agent, aug. 26 oct. 21 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that T. K. Macfarlane, of Vancouver, occupation Farmer, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted about 120 chains in a north-westerly direction from Lot 545 A, Salmon River Country; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains to point of commencement. Dated July 12, iqii. JAMES K. MACFARLANE. J. R. Morrison, Agent, sept. 16 nov. 11 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Malcolm MacLean, of Vancouver, occupation Labourer, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted about 80 chains west of the northwest corner of Lot 547, Salmon River Country ; thence west 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence cast 80 chains; thence south 80 chains to point of commencement. Dated July 13, 1911. MALCOLM MACLEAN. J. R. Morrison, Agent, sept. 16 nov, 11 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Donald MacLeod, of Vancouver, occupation Labourer, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted about three miles in a north-westerly direction from Lot 546. Salmon River Country; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains to point of commencement. Dated July 13, 1911. DONALD MACLEOD. sept, id J. R. Morrison, Agent. nov. n VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that Alexander MacAulay, of Vancouver, occupation Motorman, intenas to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted about 80 chains west of the S. W. corner of Lot 547, Salmon River Country; thence west 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence south 80 chains, to point of commencement. Dated July 13, 19"- ALEXANDER MACAULAY. J. R. Morrison, Agent, sept. 16 nov. 11 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast, Range 3 TAKE notice that D. M. Macfarlane, of Vancouver, occupation Lumberman, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted at the N. W corner of Lot 404, Anaham Lake Country; thence south 80 chains; thence west 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence cast 80 chains to point of commencement. Dated July it, 1911. DUNCAN M. MACFARLANE. J. R. Morrison, Agent, sept, 16 nov. 11 CANCELLATION OF RESERVE NOTICE is hereby given that the reserve existing upon the lands on Cracroft Island, formerly held under Timber License No. 31882, now expired, bjr reason of the notice published in the British ' Columbia Gazette of December 27th, 1907, is cancelled and the said lands will be open to location by preemption only after midnight on Thursday, November 30th, 1911. ROBT. A. RENWICK, Deputy Minister of Lands. Lands Department, Victoria, B. C., August 30th, 1911. sept. 2 n ov. 25 NOTICE NOTICE is hereby given that an auction sale of lots belonging to the Crown in the Townsite of Quesnel will be held on Mon- day, the 16th day of October next, at Quesnel. All lots will be offered subject to an upset ?rice which will be announced at the sale, 'he terms of payment which will be one- quarter cash at the sale and the balance in three equal annual instalments with interest at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum. Plans of the Townsite may be seen at the Land Office, Victoria, and at the oflice of the Government Agent, Quesnel. ROBT. A. RENWICK, Deputy Minister of Lands. Lands Department, Victoria, B. C, September 5th, iqii. sept. 9 oct. 14 CANCELLATION OF RESERVE NOTICE is hereby given that the Reserve existing over the foreshore abutting on the East Coast of Vancouver Island from the head of Saanich Inlet to the 50th parallel of north latitude, as well as the reserve of the coal under the sea fronting the said foreshore, notice of which bearing date January sth, 1910, was published in the British Columbia Gazette on January 6th, 1910, is cancelled, except in so far as the said reserve relates to the foreshore in front. of Nelson and Newcastle Districts and to the coal under the sea fronting such foreshore. ROBT. A. RENWICK, Deputy Minister of Lands. Lands Department, August 30th, 1911. sept. 2 dec. 2 "PUBLIC INQUIRIES ACT" HIS HONOUR the Lieutenant-Governor in Council has been pleased to appoint thc Honourable Albert Edward McPhillips, K.C, President of thc Executive Cuuncil; the Honourable Price Ellison, Minister of Finance; Charles Henry Lugrin, of the City of Victoria, Esquire; and William Harold Malkin, of the City of Vancouver, Esquire, to be Commissioners under the "Public Inquiries Act" for the purpose of enquiring into and reporting upon the operation of the "Assessment Act, 1903," with respect to its practical bearings on the financial requirements of the Province. The said Commissioners will hold their meetings on the dates and at the places mentioned hereunder, namely:— Victoria at the Executive Council Chamber, Parliament Buildings, Monday and Tuesday, 25th and 26th September at 10 a.m. At the Court-house or the Government Oflice at the following places:—■ Nanaimo, Wednesday and Thursday, 27th and 28th September. Vancouver, Friday and Saturday, 29th and 30th September, New Westminster, Monday, 2nd October. Revelstoke, Wednesday, 4th October. Golden, Thursday, 5th October. Cranbrook, Saturday, 7th October. Fernie, Monday, 9th October. Nelson, Wednesday, nth October. Rossland, Thursday, 12th October. Grand Forks, Friday, 13th October. Princeton, Saturday, 14th October. Merritt, Monday, 16th October. Kamloops, Tuesday, 17th October. Summerland, Thursday, 19th October. Penticton, Friday, 20th October. Kelowna, Saturday, 21st October. Vernon, Monday, 23rd October. It is requested that all persons who are interested in the matter aforesaid, and who desire to be heard, will not fail to be present at the meetings of thc Commissioners. PRICE ELLISON, Chairman. Treasury Department, 13th September, 1911. sept. 16 oct. 21 14 THE WEEK, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1911 Society i i Mrs. Rowley Heyland was a visitor in Vancouver during the past week. * * * Mrs. Samuel McClure and children are leaving shortly on a visit to Germany. Mrs. and the Misses Lindsay from Sarnia, Out., are visiting friends in Victoria. * * * Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Wrench, from Vancouver, were guests in the city during the week. * * * Mrs. T. 0. Mackay and Miss Ross Arbuthnot are visiting friends in Vancouver. * * * Mr. John Cambie is enjoying a holiday at "'Finnerty's Beach." * * * Mr. Wm. Monteith and the Misses Monteith have returned from a visit to Cowichan Lake. * * * Mrs. J. K. Rebbeck from Vancouver is making a visit to friends in the city. * * * 1 Mrs. John Hope, Vancouver, is the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Dunsmuir, Hatley Park. * * * Mrs. Burke, from Toronto, is visiting friends in the city, and is a guest at the Alexandra Club. Miss Keast of this city, is visiting Mrs. Hubert Keast, Cowichan Lake. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Charles Geiger are the guests of Mr. Thomas Geiger, Riverside Inn, Cowichan Lake. * * * The Misses Macdonald from Vancouver, who have been visiting Miss Troup, left for home on Tuesday last. Miss Walker from Vancouver, is the guest of Mrs. Fletcher, Carberry Gardens. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Townshend have returned to their home in Nelson, after a short stay in Victoria. Mrs. John Pigott has issued invitations for an at home on Wednesday next at the Alexandra Club. Mrs. F. S. Hussey, who has been making an extended visit to her rela-1 tives in the city, left on Saturday for Vancouver. * * * . Mrs. Day and Miss Lily Day, who have been visiting Mrs. R. S. Day,* Rockland avenue, have left for their home in Kelowna, Ireland. * ■*■< it- Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Cotton and family, who have been making an extended visit in the city, left during the week for England. Mr. and Mrs. Daniels and the Misses Daniels, Esquimalt, are enjoying a couple of weeks holiday at Shawnigan Lake. * * * Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Girdwood, Cowichan Lake, are guests in the city and are leaving shortly on a visit to the Old Country. The committee and members of the Pacific Club of Victoria have issued invitations for an at home to be held in the Club House on Thursday, September 14th. * * * A poster-dance will be held in the Alexandra Club ball-room ou Tuesday, October 3rd, under the auspices of The Daughters of the Empire. Mr. and Mrs. Thornton Fell and family have returned from their cottage at Cadboro Bay, where they have been spending the summer months. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Morte Harley Craig, Prince Rupert, have issued invitations for the marriage of their daughter, Emilie Lysle, to Mr. Douglas Duncan McTavish on Thursday evening, September 28th, at St. Andrew's Episcopal Church, Prince Rupert, B.C. An at home will be given after November ist at 1022 Pendergast Street, Victoria, B.C. * * * A very pleasant birthday party was spent at the home of M. W. Beik, 1026 Yates street, on September II. Amongst the invited guests were Misses H. Longland, L. Peacock, E. Peacock, F. Roberts, L. Roberts, Mrs. Peacock, Mrs. Davis, Mrs. Finerty and Miss M. Davis. Messrs. R. Smith, T. Liddiard, W. Patterson, H. Davis, C. Lancy, T. Savage, A. Long- land and Mr. Finerty. * st- * Mrs. E. H. Fletcher, Carberry Gardens, was hostess recently of a most enjoyable tea. The tea table was daintily decorated with pink sweet peas and gypophelia, with a centre-piece of pale pink silk. Among the guests present were: Mrs. Alister Robertson, Mrs. Stuart Williams, Mrs. Solly, Mrs. Lindsay (Ottawa), Mrs. Rome, Mrs. Blaiklock, Mrs. Paterson, Mrs. Gavin Burns, Mrs. Richard Jones, Mrs. Gresley and others. * * * A very pretty wedding was celebrated recently at the home of Captain and Mrs. Mcintosh, McBride avenue, when their daughter, Miss Ethel. Maud Mcintosh was married >.- -'-.?,-_ \. _»•■■< . «* ' *_>■ *!- -* AlexandraCafe iTJti COURTNEY STREET, TWO BLOCKS EAST OF POSTOFFICI OPEN EVERY DAY AND SUNDAYS Phone 2978 Good Service, Moderate Charges, Dainty Meals, Quiet Situatiotj Table D'Hote or A La Carte Breakfast 8 to 10 a.m.; Luncheon 12 to 2.30 p.m.; Dinner 6 to 8 p.m| Afternoon Tea Strawberries and Cream Ice Cream Special Dinners Catered For Contracts Taken foi Entertainment! to Mr. B. F. McKim of Vancouver. The marriage ceremony was performed by the Rev. Leslie Clay. The bride looked very pretty in a beautiful gown of white crepe de chine over taffeta trimmed with lace embroidered in seed pearls. She wore a wedding veil over a wreath of orange blossoms and carried a bridal bouquet of stephanotis, bride roses and ferns. The bride's sister, Miss Helen Mcintosh, made a charming bridesmaid and was tastefully gowned in champagne-coloured satin with an overdress of embroidered mousseline cle soie. She carried a bouquet of pink roses and ferns. The bridegroom's brother, Mr. F. H. McKim, of Winnipeg, undertook the duties of best man. The dining-room where the guests were received was carried out in decorations of pink ancl white sweet Mrs. S. Shelton Ye Old Country Dry Goodi_ Store, 734 Yates St. English Ser^e Dress Skirts, navy ad black. Machine stitched bottoms! $2.25 each. Come and see. peas and ferns, while the drav room was a mass of white tions, white asters and ferns, and Mrs. McKim are spending honeymoon travelling through | United States and the Canadian On their return they will make home in Vancouver. The bride veiled in a smart navy blue ts| made suit. r>. What Furniture, are You Going to Put Under Your Roof? What sort of furniture are you going to put under YOUR ROOF? That's a big question for everybody ancl you should ponder before making any purchases. Perhaps you have been planning all sorts of "economics" and have decided that you won't get elaborate but just cheap pieces. Well, it's all right to dispose with the elaborate styles for they are not popular now, but it's mighty poor economy to get "cheap" furniture. Hundreds of people haye found that that "Weiler Quality" furniture is the right sort to buy. It doesn't cost any more to completely equip the home from these stocks—the fact is that it costs less, because Weiler'Fumiture lasts longer. Our styles are distinctive, materials and finish superior. You can furnish your home complete from here; everything necessary is to be found under one roof—Carpets, Curtains, Linens, China, Glassware, Cutlery, Whiteware and Kitchen things. All these are here in great variety. Come in and see these stocks and learn why so many peoplehave found it pays to deal where thc most Furniture is shown and sold. 25c & 50c a Bottle GLOSSINE FURNITURE - POLISH ■.ryrrrtr VICTORIA'S Popular flOML RJRNIMRS' ■**^5iM •r**wr MM-, EILER •THE 11 ROS. WMMgmmmM .mpjMv'l J^_____WW^__[W^___w^_\ "'""■ Victoria's Popular Nome rjrni5her5 GLOSSINE FURNITURE POLISH 25c & 50c a Bottle THE WEEK, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1911 15 Tie White "Six" for 1912 Believing that there was a demand piled for an American .car of prac- llly unlimited power and speed— pt according to the best engineer- practice; a car that would be Inomical to maintain and easy to Irate—the White Company has It for 1912 a six-cylinder "sixty" Ich has all of the features whicb |e individualized the White Gaso- Car since its appearance, this car with its predecessors, the Irty" and "forty" models and the jety of open or enclosed bodies Ich may be had on the various psis, permits the White Company present a most complete line for |he reason why the White Gaso- cars have performed faultless- lind cost so little to operate and Intain is traceable to the design of |engine which is of the long-stroke : with cylinders cast en bloc. With , construction, the fuel is made to the maximum of power and the Ine is so simplified—so many plly troublesome parts are elimin- -that fuel economy goes hand in with economy of maintenance. ie new White "six" has an engine liis same design, with all the sim- Ity and ease of operation which Imarked the other White models. Ise features will make the White I' a desirable car to own—a car the advantages of a "six" with- Ithe disadvantages. wrrespondence \ny port in a storm Victoria, Sept. 15. Dr The Week: J,—The writer derived some com- Ifrom the Hon. Mr. Templeman's lof Victoria harbour improvers but the Times' announcement Evening has utterly dispelled the Dn that the hon. gentleman has Igiven the matter serious corjsid- jin. jy boy in a ward school could such plans as those presented |would naturally place the piers ght angles to Dallas road. It is a simple proposition. But why, JI ask, is a sea-wall being built I? It.is well known that with*a pouth-west gale the spray washes houses on Dallas Road at that Just think what beautiful clean a vessel would get under such Itions along side piers as Mr. lleman proposes. If Mr, Tem- ln had studied his subject he |l have placed his piers at right to the Brotchie Ledge break- along side which vessels could j perfect shelter at all times, and ners would also give additional kth to the breakwater. tn we are told that the electric Blow run within two blocks of jroposed new piers and that this m can be made a feeder for all Us reaching Victoria and util- these proposed shipping facili- JHas the Hon. Mr. Templeman Idea of the length of trackage red for the standing room only Irs sufficient to carry the cargo le fair size over-seas vessel? If ■then let him make some en- Is and then try to picture the Ible service under his proposals. Tilly appears incredible that an Itant subject like this should be Id in such an elementary manner (man in the Hon. Mr. Temple- | position. Brotchie Ledge project has lalked of for years and if it has pen positively "knocked" by the I Mr. Templeman and his party certainly been treated as too place seriously before th.e Govr lnt of Canada up tp the present In that Government there are Ibright and intelligent men and ltizens of Victoria may only ex- kssistance from that source by lg a strong case in behalf of this It, and it is unfortunate that the IMr. Templeman has proclaimed Iter unfitness to have anything Iwith it. DALLAS ROA.D.,, Messrs. Stewart Williams & Co. Duly instructed by Commander G. W. Vivian (on behalf of the British Admiralty) will sell by PUBLIC AUCTION on £gH3 Monday and Tuesday, October 8th and 9th at 11 o'colck each day at the Naval Yard, Esquimalt, near Victoria, B.C. THE SINGLE SCREW SLOOP OF WAR, H.M.S. "EGERIA," also a quantity of Naval Stores, etc., including Steam Launch, 28 ft. overall; Seven Boats and equipment, Diving Dress (complete), a quantity of Ward Room Electro Plate, Wire and Manilla Rope, Hair Mattresses, Ward Room Furniture, Pillows, Blankets, Curtains, Old English Copper Coal Scuttles, Brass Boiler Tubes, Tents, Awnings, Large Sails, Lanterns, Old Brass, Copper, Books, Compasses, Tripods, Under-clothing, Provisions, Electric Cable and other goods too numerous to mention. On View Friday, October 6th, all day Further particulars later, or can be obtained from THE AUCTIONEER - - STEWART WILLIAMS 637 Fort Street, Victoria, B. C. IMPORTANTJAND SALE Messrs. Stewart Williams & Co. Duly instructed by the Hon. Edgar Dewdney, will sell by PUBLIC AUCTION at their Auction Mart, 637 Fort Street, on Thursday, September 28th at 11 o'clock sharp the well known "COGAN'S" Farm, situated between the Happy Valley Road and the Sooke Road, adjoining the Luxton Ranch, through which the Canadian Northern Railway are now building their road. It contains upwards of 410 acres, over 80 of which are now under grain, producing crops unequalled on the Island. There is a good Orchard, containing upwards of 100 trees, all fruit bearing. It is one of The Ideal Spots on Vancouver Island for a Milk Ranch, or it could easily be subdivided into small holdings and sold at an enormous profit to poultry raisers, small fruit raisers, milkmen, etc. Further particulars can be obtained from the Hon. Edgar Dewdney, owner, Willow Park P. 0., or from THE AUCTIONEER STEWART WILLIAMS 821 Cormorant Street, 14th September, 1911. To the Editor of The Week: Dear Sir,—I beg to enclose herewith a copy of the resolution passed by.the Men's Own,Class of the First Congregational Church on Sunday, loth inst., copies of whicli were sent to Hon. Richard McBride, and Hon. Thos. Taylor, Minister of Public Works. We would be glad if you would publish this in your next issue". In name of the class. ■"■'• Yours respectfully, '"'•••' WM. PATTERSON, Sec'y. Resolved, "That this meeting desires to express its sense of the wrong done to the public of Victoria and district by the flagrant trespass upon the rights of the people, the gross pollution of the waters of Esquimalt Harbor, by dumping of crude oil and other smelling material, and beg to request that the Government of B. C. as custodians of the people's rights, take such steps as will effectually prevent any further pollution of the heritage of the people, especially in the interests of private gain." THE FOUR BILLS Sweedish Massage Medical Gymnastics Vibratory Treatment G. Bjornsfelt, S.M. Phone 1856 - ' 821 Fort St. TELEPHONES "S48 AND"249 A. E. KENT PROPRIETOR Pacific Transfer Co. Trucking and Expressing Baggage Chtcktd and Furniture Rimtvtd to any part of City 504 tf 5*06 FORT STREET VICTORIA, B. C. The fact that there are four Williams in the Cabinet at Ottawa—William Templeman, William Pugsley, William Fielding and William Patterson—is meat for the platform wits. According to the campaign joke they are the four Bills, and each has a nickname of his own. The Hon. William Templeman, Minister of Mines and Inland Revenue, is Sleepy Bill; the Hon. William Pugsley, Minister of Public Works, is Slippery Bill, and the Hon. William Fielding, Minister of Finance, and the Hon. William Patterson, Minister of Customs, are the two Bills who went to Washington and brought back the Counterfeit Bill which they are now trying to pass.r^-Collier's Weekly. VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT District of Coast TAKE notice that Neil Sinclair Walker, of Vancouver, occupation Clerk, intends to ap***. ply fo*H permission to purchase" the follow-' ing described lands:—Commencing'at • a -post planted at the S. W. corner ,of ' Lot _4j, Salmon River Country, thence west 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence east 40 chains; thence south 40 chains to point of commencement. Dated July 13, 1911. NEIL SINCLAIR WALKER. J. R. Morrison, Agent. $®kM___Y7w.;....; km ■;*;; txm .;;*■• SSWft Roy's Art Glass Works and Store 848 Yates St., Victoria, B.C. Albert F. Roy Over thirty years' experience in Art Glass LEADED LIGHTS Sole manufacturer of Steel-Cored Lead for Churches, Schools, Public Buildings and private Dwellings. Plain and Fancy Glass Sold. Sashes Glazed by Contract. Estimates free. Phone 594 TAKE NOTICE that I, Michel Zattoni, of Vancouver, B.C., Mirier, intend to appl" to the Assistant Commissioner of Lands for a license to prospect ior coal and petroleum on and over the following described lanas :— Beginning at a post planted at the northwest corner of Claim No. n, lying between Drury inlet and Braden. Harbor, thence south 80 chains; thence east 80 chains; thence north 80 chains; thence west 80 chains to point of commencement, containing 640 acres, more or less. Dated July 18th, iqii. MICHEL ZATTONI. James Fulton, Agent, sept. 16 oct. 14 VICTORIA LAND DISTRICT . ■ \ District of Victorlk f ; TAKE notice that I, James Lawson Raymur, of Victoria, B.C., occupation Accountant, intends tot apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:—Commencing at a post planted at high water mark at the southerly extremity of an Island lying distant ninety-five (95) feet frjom, the intersection of. the southerly boundary-6f ,Lot 1290/. Victoria ,City, and high; water^ mark; thence following 1 high ('water mark nbrth-fehstqfly,1 40 feet;1 thence: north-westerly 50 >feet;-thence south-westerly 50 feet; thence south-easterly along high water mark to the point of commencement and. containing one-twenty-fourth (1-24) of an acre. Datea 13th September, iqii, EDGAR SAXELBY PARR Agent for James Lawson Raymur. i^_^Mi_mmm/^m_m_9A_m.^ The Kardomah Tea & Coffee Store L. Overton, Prop. 1107 Fort Street Phone 2645 Oh Ladies, in thy hours of ease Drink only of Kardomah Teas, Whose qualities are unsurpassed And keep their flavour unto the last. Phone, or when passing call in and take 1 lb. of our Tea or Coffee home. You will be satisfied. The goods are of the best. Phone Orders Promptly Attended To 99 The "Modern French Dry Cleaning SPECIALISTS IN LADIES' FINE GARMENT CLEANING AND PRESSING Oflice and Finishing Rooms 1310 Government St, Opp. The "Grand" Phone 1887 Call us up in regard to prices or any information desired. Four car tickets given free with each order of One Dollar or more brought to us. Men's Suits Cleaned and Pressed HANAN The Best of All No one would willingly buy an indifferent painting when for practically the same price a real masterpiece could be secured. Neither would anyone; if he or she knew it, buy a shoe of indifferent style and incapable of comfort when they could just as well own a HANAN—a real masterpiece. It is to you, who do not know it, we ire speaking, HANAN Shoes need simply an introduction—that's shapes. All styles, all H. B. Hammond Shoe Company Broadwalk Scuffers for Children Sole Agents: Hanan & Son, Wichert & Gardiner, N. Y. N. Y. Pemberton Building, 621 Fort Street Military Hair Brushes for Gentlemen With solid wooden backs of genuine Ebony, Rosewood, etc. The bristles are of the best the world affords, including the celebrated Russian variety-*-**- tightly secured, therefore will stand washing in hot water. Every gentleman should possess a pair of these, as a good brush prevents dandruff and stimulates growth of the hair. Price $2.50 up ' . Cyrus H. Bowes Chemist 1228 Government Street Tels. 425 and 450 .'. *. 1 ...j. ...m Kjtgg 1 ...n. Moving Sale We are obliged to move and have taken a store in the Sayward Block. For the next three weeks we will allow 20 per cent discount off all cash purchases This is only the second sale we have held in forty-nine years—is it not worth attending?; Redfern & Sons Oldest Diamond and Jewelery House in Western Canada 1009 Gov't St. ! 16 THE WEEK, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16,1911 N III i 'i1-) I i THE CAMPAIQ^J—The last week of a vigorous campaign is wearing on. The enthusiasm increases at every point; the leaders are s.s vigorous as ever and in spite of his "age and grey hairs" it looks as if Sir Wilfrid will be able to continue to the end of a fight which cannot fail to recall the historic Midlothian, cam-- paign of Mr. Gladstone. For a man who appealed to the voters of Quebec on the ground of age and infirmity he has made a remarkable showing. The Week doubts, however, whether he has gained many converts and it does know that he has lost many supporters. Double Policy The necessity of preaching a double policy in Quebec and Ontario has proved a heavy tax and it looks as if Sir Wilfrid's plaintive plea to his fellow-countrymen that after all the tidvy was "only a little one" has failed to lull their susceptibilities, while such a statement in Quebec made it impossible to appeal to the loyalists of Ontario with a claim that the -■navy was anything more than an abortive product. Handwriting on tlie Wall, . The most significant handwriting on the wall is to be found in the columns of the Montreal Herald, a Government organ, owned by the Hon. Sidney Fisher and managed and edited by Mr. J. S. Brierley, one of the most capable and uncompromising Liberals in the Dominion. After carefully summing up the situation, the Herald concludes that Sir Wilfrid cannot have less than thirty of a majority. An admission from such a source that he will lose thirteen seats in the aggregate possesses the highest significance, and may well be taken to presage defeat. Estimating thc Result It is known that Mr. Borden has gained ground in the Maritime Provinces and that the Government will lose at least three seats. Of course Quebec is an unknown quantity, and it is idle to predict what the result will be except to say that some inroad will undoubtedly be made on the Government majority. Assuming that the West does no better for Mr. Borden than it did last time, this leaves the battle to be won in Ontario, and that is where both political leaders are concentrating their energies. There are several indications that Ontario will give a large, if not an overwhelming majority against Reciprocity. Desperation of the Globe One indication is the obvious desperation of the Toronto Globe, which has never been so dogmatic and illogical. Another factor is the tremendous influence of some of the leading business men of the Province who for the first time in their lives will cast a Conservative vote; and the third factor is the growing conviction in the minds of the Ontario farmers that they would lose more through the invasion of their own home market than they would gain by being able to send their products across the Line free of duty. Industrial Considerations To this no doubt must be added the determined opposition of the manufacturing and industrial interests which recognise that the exploitation of Canadian natural resources under. the Reciprocity Treaty would be the beginning of a movement to the other side of the Line, depleting Canadian cities and building up new industrial centres in the American states. This appeals especially to the Province of Ontario because it has become the great manufacturing province of the Dominion and it is the development of manufacturing industries which has created the home market. It will be a great surprise if Ontario does not go overwhelmingly against Reciprocity and furnish the majority which will turn the scale in favour of a Conservative Government. Haultain's Conversion In Saskatchewan a noticeable incident has occurred during the week. Mr. Fred. Haultain, easily the most brilliant politician in the Prairie Provinces, has come out flat- footed against Reciprocity. He frankly admits that six months' investigation has convinced him that second thoughts are best. When he pronounced in favour of Reciprocity in March last he did so under the belief that the farmers of Saskatchewan and Alberta were in favour of it to a man. He now finds that this is not the case and further that its National and Imperial aspects are so important that he must in any event oppose it. The attitude of Mr. Haultain may fairly be regarded as a victory for those who have always maintained that in the ultimate issue Reciprocity would be settled on this basis, and it cannot be doubted that he is only one of many who were at first enamoured of its economic features but ultimately convinced that its National and Imperial aspects far outweighed every other consideration. Kipling's Message Is it too much to say that the one event of the week has been the publication of Rudyard Kipling's magnificent message to Canada? No man can read it without a thrill, and no man who reads it should for-' get that Kipling has at all times proved himself to be the one man with his finger on the pulse of the Empire, and the one man able to interpret the aspirations of the British people. He was the first on the occasion of his visit to Canada five years ago to raise the standard of nationality and to urge that the main duty of Canadians was to subordinate personal gain to National interests. There could be no better time to apply this great principle than in the present crisis. It is essentially a time for subordinating the possibility of a small material gain to the maintenance of the high ideals and the working out of the loftiest destiny. Templeman's Debacle In Victoria there is no doubt of the result. Mr. Barnard will have a substantial majority, thanks not only to the zeal and enthusiasm of his own workers but also to the ineptitude of Mr. Templeman, the convincing manner in which he has monstrated his inability to protect the terests of the Province. It now turns that Mr. Templeman knew nothing abi| the circular which was issued at the exprj wish of the railway companies to ena them to evade the Alien Labour Act, wh means that in a matter directly affect] British Columbia its only Minister was consulted by his colleagues and was left] ignorance of a matter which directly fected his interests until he read it "in I newspapers." It is a humiliating posit) for him and one which shows how li| there is in the cry of the Victoria Tir, "Vote for Templeman and a Portfolio.) His Influence Nil Mr. Templeman's failure to secure provision for the building of a warship the Canadian Navy on the Pacific C' The Car That Beats Them All A White "Six" for 1912. Ask for Demonstration White Pleasure and Commercial Cars Cars of Quality ■ THE WHITE GARAGE 1218 Wharf Street, Victoria, B. C. Telephone 2Q08 I Our Repair Shop is one of the finest in the City. All wort is guaranteed. If you are looting for a sptare deal, bring your work to us. Jl n the part of the Government able us to reach them. It is liecessary to secure the estab- lnt of regular steamship con- lis. There the profits would be Id in dollars rather than in cents the case of the American mar- IAnd it is only dawning upon people in New Brunswick that pal is a better market for their Is than can be found in the States and that American po- lare brought there, in the face 1 duties, in quantities sufficient |ern prices. the individual and local point Iv is a small-souled one, and jild be a small man indeed who I count the cents per barrel on jnips one way or the other in |:e of a question affecting the [and well-being of his country, all know how dead St. An- r&s twenty years ago and how Iges were here and how seldom liese low wages could be got. live seen your young men goto the States and in later you have seen them coming bain to their old homes or to larts of Canada; and all over ritime Provinces you have seen |d towns of twenty years ago to life and activity. This In due to the general prosper- [anada. have seen our Canadian mer- harine, including the tramp and fed vessels employed in our ncreased in tonnage about six per cent., in the last twenty- ars and its character vastly bd at the same time—such an as has never occurred with ler country—and you have seen Iway mileage increased within lyears 309 per cent., an in- jikewise unequalled. these great things have re- Irom the wise trade policy of Jintry, whicii has been main- lb y both political parties all with all our manufacturing and commercial interests, are now endangered by the proposed change in that policy. Canada is now the most prosperous country on the face of the earth ancl is increasing in prosperity from day to day and I say let well enough alone and don't monkey with the machine that has worked so well. "We have seen recently in a certain section of the Canadian Press much about the millions that are being sent to Canada by the American Trusts to defeat reciprocity. There was never a more absurd and impudent story. I know a good deal of these trusts and I do not hesitate to say that there is not one of them, with the exception of the International Paper Company, that is not hotly in favour of reciprocity and that any election contributions they might make would go to carry it. "We hear a great deal just now about this, that, and the other prominent Canadian having at some time favoured reciprocity. It does not matter a rap what anybody thought of reciprocity twenty or thirty years ago, and it is silly to quote utterances of that time. The situation of Canada has entirely changed since then. She has found herself and scorns the crumbs of her neighbours. "And that Canada has found herself is largely due to the unneighbourly policy of the United States in their McKinley tariff and their Ding- ley tariff, the latter having been especially aimed at Canada and intended to exclude her products. "In such a thing as this reciprocity agreement one party must lose what the other gains. Do you imagine for a minute or have you seen anything in the commercial policy of the United States towards Canada to indicate that they would press upon us such a bargain for our advantage? Not a bit of it. We shall lose in money, in trade, in manufactures, in independence, in self-respect and in the respect of others. "I do not wish to be understood as saying anything disrespectful of the United States. Far from it. They have grown great by taking care of their business just as we ought to do. They very properly seek every advantage just as we should do, and in the present case they are trying to take advantage of us just as we would, no doubt, take advantage of them if we had a good chance. "It was a saying long ago 'Beware of the Greeks when they bring gifts.' We here in Canada may well beware of the Americans when they bring tariff concessions. "I may sum up the whole situation in this: Our trade is about $97.00 per capita, and theirs $33.00 per capita. In other words, the water in our millpond stands at 97 and theirs at 33\ ancl they want us to take away our dam. Shall we not say: 'Not by a 'dam sight!'" But it is no new thing for the Americans to disregard both the spirit and the letter of a treaty. We have a case in point today. The Food Fisheries Treaty of 1908 is to be dropped by our Government because the Americans will not live up to their agreement. Under that treaty, a Joint Commission was appointed to draw up uniform regulations for the control of the fisheries in waters contiguous to the two countries. The Commission did its work. The regulations were not what we would have liked, but they were better than the old confusion and dangerous disputes. Our Parliament at once authorised the Government to put them in force. But the American Senate, in spite of the fact that its own Commissioner had helped draw the regulations, refused to put them in force where they pinched any American interest, but was willing to accept them in Eastern waters where no American felt that they would be hurt. So our Government, it is now said, will tear up the entire treaty. Then there is the Rush-Bagot Treaty intended to keep the Great Lakes, lying between Canada and the United States, forever free from warships. That was a noble idea. But how has it been carried out? Wc have faithfully kept our side of it. We have put no warships on the Great Lakes. But the Americans have turned its provisions into an exasperating farce. They have been constantly sending dismantled warships of considerable power up through the canals to the Great Lakes, and then shipping their guns to them overland. The consequence is that there are warships on the Great Lakes. They are American warships only. Mr. Barnard has taken a stand which will be highly appreciated by organized labour. He has promised to consult with the duly authorised representatives of labour on all matters connected with the welfare of the working-man. This will at least ensure his being posted as to their wishes. MR. HENRY CHAPLIN, THE GREAT BRITISH AGRICULTURIST, ON RECIPROCITY ■ears, and both our merchant Mr. Templeman thinks that Chinese immigration could be regulated by "a friendly agreement" with China. Mr. particularly" tiie '"feelings Poniard _,-.._, "U.!,-... ...- 1_ 111 _. . ° Barnard says, "What we have we'll hold," which suits the temper of the people of British Columbia somewhat better. MR. HAULTAIN'S CHANGE Ex-Premier Haultain of the Northwest has come out squarely against reciprocity. He has been moving among the people and making investigation, and is now convinced that the treaty will do no good, even to the Saskatchewan farmer. It will be remembered that Mr. Haultain at first declined to consider the imperial aspect of the question, contending that the prairie people had a right to study their own interests alone. This was too narrow a view for a man of Mr. Haultain's position to take, but he has found that even a Saskatchewan First politician must condemn Mr. Chaplin says:—"As one of the pioneers of tariff reform and of the opposition to our present so-called free trade system long before these questions were taken up by Mr. Chamberlain, I am deeply interested in the question of reciprocity. Tariff reform is the first great constructive policy to which the Unionist Party in this country is pledged, and the sister policy, if I may so describe it, of Mr. Chamberlain's great scheme for Colonial preference, is and always has been, the backbone of tariff reform. I do not hesitate to say that the reciprocity proposal so greatly favoured by Sir Wilfrid Laurier cannot be otherwise than most detrimental, if it is not fatal to the policy of Colonial preference between the United Kingdom and Canada, and to that extent, prejudicial also to the continued and increasing unity of the Empire. In saying this I represent of the Unionist party as a whole, and I believe, a large majority of the country also. Annexation, we know, looms largely in the most influential quarters in the United States and the policy of reciprocity, if accepted, must inevitably tend to closer unity between Canada and that country and lessen the relations between Canada and the Motherland, leading as times go on, to a diversity of interests." Mr. Templeman's speakers tell us that they favour Reciprocity because it is the first instalment of Free Trade. In Free Trade England according to Professor Mallock, there are 350,000 families, comprising 1,- 750,000 persons, or four times the population of British Columbia, whose family income averages $150 a year. Booth says that in London 35.2 per cent, of the population earn Mr. G. H. Barnard's Address to the Electors If I am elected as the Conservative member for the City of Victoria on September 21st, the following will be my policy: — 1. I pledge myself to make a standing fight on every opportunity which presents itself for the construction of all ships to be stationed on the Pacific Coast at British Columbia shipyards. The fact that higher wages are paid on the Pacific Coast than on the Atlantic will not deter me from making a strong fight against the construction of all the ships for the new Dominion navy on the Atlantic Coast. 2. One of my first efforts shall be to secure a new post office for Victoria. This is a need which has grown out of the rapidly increasing population and the present building is entirely inadequate for the requirements of the city. 3. I shall strongly advocate the payment to post office employees of wages commensurate with the services rendered. The present poor wages paid have led to the local post office being; inadequately manned, and the service being consequently ineffi-i cient, involving delays in the handling of mail matter which have caused considerable inconvenience to the business community. 4. The need of harbour improvements in keeping with the growth of the port is a matter of vital importance. This port handles the second highest tonnage of any port in the Dominion. I will use my efforts to secure adequate appropriations for harbour improvements which will enable this port to take its proper rank among the ports of the Dominion. 5. Included in the scheme of harbour improvements which I will strongly advocate will be the building of a breakwater off the harbour entrance. I consider that the time has arrived when this scheme has become a port necessity, and even if it should cost the Dominion Government the sum of $2,000,000 or more, I will endeavour by every legitimate means to have it undertaken at the earliest possible moment. 6. In the last Dominion House I outlined my attitude on the need of an efficient fishery protection service. The wholesale poaching carried on by American fishermen during the past few weeks has further proved the utterly inadequate patrol which is maintained on this coast. I shall urge that this fishery protection patrol be increased by one or more fishery protection cruisers of a thoroughly up-to-date character, and of a speed of not less than sixteen knots. 7. I will urge with all my power that the fortifications of Esquimalt shall be restored to and maintained at a strength satisfactory to the Imperial War Office, and will strongly advocate the increase of the present force at Work Point Barracks to at least the point of strength at which it was maintained by the Imperial authorities. 8. The present Ottawa authorities have not lived up to their promises to the men on board the cruisers Rainbow and Niobe in the matter of giving extra pay for extra services. My policy shall be to urge in the new Dominion House that these promises be implemented, and that a similar scale of wages shall be maintained both in the naval and fishery protection services of the Dominion. 9. I am in favour of the absolute enforcement of the Alien Labour Act. 10. I shall oppose with all my power any effort which might be made to do away with the $500 head tax on Chinese coming into Canada. I do not consider that it would be possible for Canada to make a similar arrangement with China as exists with Japan because the Government of the former Oriental power is so unstable. 11. As in the past in all matters connected with the welfare of the workingman I will consult with the duly authorised representatives of labour in this city and wherever possible I will urge that the wishes of these, as they affect labour, shall be given the utmost consideration. 12. I shall oppose by every means in my power any relaxation of the Immigration Laws, and will use my utmost endeavours to see that they are carried out in their entirety. 13. In the matter of railway construction in British Columbia I will urge that the Dominion Government shall bonus all legitimate undertakings which make for the benefit and prosperity of the people of this Province and of the Dominion as a whole. 14. My attitude on Reciprocity between Canada and the United States is well known. I shall continue to oppose Canada entering into any trade arrangement with a foreign power which may have a prejudicial influence on the ties which bind this country to the Motherland. 15. Lastly—I am for British connection first, last and all the time. I believe in Canada for the Canadians, and people of the British race, and I believe that the highest destiny which we can imagine for our country is to become the predominant partner in the greatest Empire that the world has ever known. G. H. BARNARD. SUPREMEST FOLLY To enter into a bargain with the American Nation, whicii can only be worked at all under a generous interpretation and in a spirit of mutual concession, would be an act of the sttpremest folly, ignoring the entire history of thc relations of that nation with our people, relying upon a faith that has never been kept and seeking a friendliness that has never ex- When Mr. Barnard stated in the House that alien labour was being illegally imported from Seattle, Mr. Mackenzie King denied it, but at the same time he knew that the notorious circular had been issued. Mr. Templeman says he never knew of the circular issued by the Dominion Government which varied the Immigration regulations until he "saw it in the newspapers," which shows how foolish Victoria would be to vote for "Mr. Templeman and a THE WEEK, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1911 Labour Unrest Real Causes of Social Dissatisfaction By Hector Macpherson Now that the great strike in England is over it may not be amiss to search for the causes of the widespread unrest among the working classes. According to Lord Londonderry, in a speech the other day, there is no mystery about the unrest. It is all due to the wild utterances of the Chancellor of the Exchequer during the Budget controversy. Anything Mr. Lloyd George said during that controversy was mildness itself compared with the incendiary language of leading Tories on the Home Rule qesution. If the Tories think it right to fight in Ireland over a measure which they detest, how can it be wrong for the workers to fight in England to get redress of their grievances? Let the Cecil section of the Tories, the physical force section, take the beam out of their own eye before they attempt to take the mote out of the Trade Union eye. No; the causes of the strike lie deeper than platform talk, however heated. To find some of these causes one has only to read Mr. Ramsay MacDon- ald's new book, "The Socialist Movement," a book written with outstanding ability and displaying profound insight into the economic situation as it exists today. One great cause of the unrest is the unequal distribution of the national income. Mr. Mal- lock, who is an apologist for the capitalist class, has tabulated figures on this point. Mr. MacDonald presses him into his service as follows:—"Mr. Mallock has to admit that 350,000 families, containing 1,750,000 persons, have a total family income of £30 per annum., which works out at a fraction over 2s. 3d. per head per week, from whicii everything has to be paid. There are in addition 1,200,- 000 with an average family income of £94 per annum. In this figure Mr. Mallock includes the incomes of the members of those families who are living out as domestic servants. Without them the income is £71, or about 6s. per head per week, an altogether unsatisfactory figure, and a somewhat miserable one even if it were earned by a single breadwinner." Under a Guinea Per Week More reliable than Mr. Mallock's are the figures of Mr. Booth and Mr. Rowntree, to which Mr. MacDonald also refers. Mr. Booth found 35.2 per cent, of the people of the North of London living on a family income of under a guinea per week, and Mr. Rowntree found that of the people of York nearly thirty per cent, were living in poverty. No one denies that there has been improvement in working class conditions, but even in the matter of wages die improvement of several years ago has not been maintained. On this point Mr. MacDonald, quoting from Board of Trade figures, shows at the end of 1909, amongst the larger groups of Labour, excluding agricultural labourers, seamen, and railway servants, nearly £100,000 per week less were paid in wages than in 1900, whilst increases in 1910 only improved the 1909 figures by £14,000, so that the workers today are still well over £80,000 per week less well off in respect to wages than they were in 1900, Another causes of the unrest whicii calls for notice is the changed relations between masters and men by the limited liability system, which has cut in two the old personal tie. In the old clays masters and men came into daily contact, and, as in the case of Robert Owen and John Bright, in times of dull trade the works were run at a loss, so that the men would not be the losers. Now, when orders run out, the first consideration is the effect on the dividends. The interest of the shareholders, not the workers, is the prime consideration, and thus intimations are at once issued to discharge hundreds of men, who go to swell the large army of the unemployed. When he looks around the worker finds large numbers of his fellows employed by Municipalities, with good wages, steady employment, and pensions, and his mind naturally turns to the question of the Muni- A Paradise for Workers He wants the State in some way to come between him and the huge capitalistic combinations. In other words, he wants to get the State to aid him in freeing Labour, just as the manufacturers sixty years ago got the State to aid them in freeing trade. Over and above that, the spread of education has made the working classes more acutely sensitive of the hardness of their lot. Education creates new desires and fosters a spirit of discontent. In presence of the glittering display of the rich, they ask why they should be compelled to remain in the position of hewers of wood and drawers of water to idlers who do nothing but eat, drink, and make merry on the unearned increment. Rightly or wrongly the workers cherish feelings of bitterness towards the capitalists, who are now reaping a harvest of retribution for their heartless despotism in the day EVEN WITH DUTY U. S. APPLES FLOOD WESTERN MARKETS If apples are already being dumped upon the Winnipeg market by U. S. fruit growers, what will happen to the hapless Canadian grower if reciprocity goes through? The query naturally rises from the statement made by President Elmer Lake at the meeting of representatives of the Co-operative Association of Fruit Growers of Ontario at the Toronto Exhibition lately. Mr. Lake said that the Winnipeg apple market was being fairly flooded by apple., from the United States.- "J. J. Hill has reduced the freight rate on apples from Arkansas and Missouri to Winnipeg by one-third the former rate. That serves to equalize the 40 per cent, duty so that the United States producers can compete there with Canadian products," he declared. Mr. Templeman is trying to bribe the constituency with a $3,000,000 breakwater to Brotchie Ledge. Mr. Sorby, the Secretary of the Harbour Commission, says it would be of no use. Which is right? The Full Dinner Pail A Liberal Seer Who, for many a year, Had been having his will in the land, Met a Wise Workingman With a full dinner can And grasped him with warmth by the hand. Said the Liberal Seer To the Workman: "Look here, "Reciprocity'll benefit you. "If you vote for the pact "Rest assured, it's a fact "You will cut your expenses in two." Said the Wise Workingman With the full dinner can: "I reckon I'll stick by the Crown. "Reciprocity may "Help my living today— "But my wages would also come down!" Said the Liberal Seer With a trace of a sneer: "What matter if living is cheaper?" Said the Wise Workingman: "If I struck to your plan "In the mire I'd sink deeper and deeper." Now, the Seer has his say And the Workman his pay And a mighty nice home in the town. And we know how he'll vote For he wisely took note That his wages would have to come down I of their power. Capitalists complain of the present Government for its legislation on behalf of the poor .They dislike what they term the grandmotherly schemes of Mr. Lloyd George. Had they done their duty, had they followed the noble example of Robert Owen, who transformed his works at New Lanark into a paradise by treating his workers as human beings and using his surplus profits for their elevation in the scale of being, there would have been no need for Lloyd George. In my book, "A Century of Political Development," published three years ago, I made some remarks Which, in view of recent events, have a ring of prophecy. I said: "Whether we like it or not —and some of us do not like it and see social and industrial anarchy ahead—we are on the eve of a revolution. Let the capitalist class take warning. Unless they give greater prominence to their duties, ancl be less anxious about their rights, they will find themselves face to face with another revolution—an economic revolution. It will be bloodless; it will be fought with political weapons; but before it is over it will shake the industrial world to its foundations." Coming events are assuredly casting WHAT EDWARD BLAKE SAID The opinion of Mr. Edward Blake, who left his party because he saw that Unrestricted Reciprocity meant Annexation, is worth considering at this crisis. He said, in his famous letter to the Liberal Convention of West Durham: "Whatever you or I may think on that head, whether we like or dislike, believe or disbelieve, in political union, must we not agree that the subject is one of great moment towards the practical settlement of which we should take no serious step without reflecting on, or in ignorance of what we are doing? Assuming that absolute free trade with the States, best described as commercial union, may and ought to come, I believe that it can and should come only as an incident, or at any rate as a well-understood precursor of political union, for which indeed we would be able to make better terms before than after the surrender of our commercial independence. Then, so believing—believing that the decision of the trade question involves that of the constitutional issue for whicii we are unprepared and with which you do not conceive yourselves to be dealing—how can I properly recommend you now to decide Full Information for the Workingman In the face of a common danger, menaced men get together and take common counsel. At the present moment, a common danger menaces every man who depends for his profits or his wages upon a Canadian industry. It is no more than common sense, then, that these men—employers and employes—should get together and come to a mutual understanding as to the situation which confronts them. This is no time for the most secretive "master" to stand on his dignity. His men have as many rights as he has. The workingman or the book-keeper, whose job is at stake, has as much to lose—if not more— than the manager or stockholder or President of the Company. The managers of our industries should lose uo time in taking their men fully into their confidence. If they see storms ahead which are likely to dismantle or wreck the ship upon whicii they are all embarked, they should warn the crew; for, in this case, the crew can lend signal and decisive assistance in averting the storm. This they should do for their own sakes, for the sake of their men, for the sake of the country. It must be remembered, too, that the employes of an industry cannot, in fairness, be asked to take their employer's word for the imminence of the danger. There is an election in progress in this country; and the heads of manufacturies may be suspected of having "party leanings" as well as the rest of us. If they depend upon their "say so" in dealing with the men, they run the risk of being suspected of trying to deceive them into casting a party vote, and they leave themselves open to this insinuation from the canvassers of the opposing candidate. The way to escape this peril, finally and fully, is to be perfectly frank with the man whose job is in danger. He must not only be told that the menace is there; but he must be told what tiie menace is, why it is a menace, and in what way it will cripple the industry upon which he depends for his wages. In two words, he must be given complete information upon whicii to make up his mind for himself. Then he can decide as an intelligent citizen which way he desires to vote. ifi , j-JC >fi afC 3(s We began by saying that, in this matter, the workingman has as many rights as his employer. We do not take that back. But we propose to amplify it by saying that, in this matter, it is even more important that the workingman be convinced of the danger than that the employer be convinced. The reason is clear. The employer has one vote. The men in his employ may have a thousand. This is a case in which the safety of the ship rests with the crew. In nine cases out of ten—in ninety-nine cases out of a hundred—the reverse is true. When it comes to a question of markets, of prices, of machinery, of methods, of selling devices, of all the manifold ramifications of a big business by which the product of the workingman's toil is turned into money, the employer is the man who must do the judging. He must decide which is the best course to take. He is an expert in planning his work and marketing his goods. That is his business. That is his contribution to the success of "the works." But, in this hundredth case, the employer ceases to be the important man. Knowing all the details of the business and the intricacies of the markets, he can see the effect of such a change as Reciprocity would bring, much more clearly than men confined to one part of the productive work. The danger is plain to him; but he cannot save the ship. Let him turn the helm as he will, the vessel will go to disaster if the men do not join in and save it. He is the expert navigator; he knows the shoals ancl he is weather-wise; but this is an instance in which the ship must liter- no better at the oar than the wc paid man in his employ. * sts * * * We are apt to think chiefly of I loss which the closing of an indu;| brings to its owners. They h&ve barked their fortune in it; and t\ fortune is lost. It is a striking gedy, ancl our sympathies are toucj But what of the workingman has just nicely settled in life, I pending upon his job in this in| try? Possibly, he has venturecj buy a home, and is calculating paying for it in a few years, children are going to school his wife has her friends and herl sociations here; this is "home"| him and his. Then the factory on which he pended drops to half-time or lay! half its men, himself among t| Or it may close altogether, cru by the competition of a huge Ail can concern which is minded firj capture the market and the "charge all the traffic will bear.'! not the case of the evicted worl man quite as tragic as that ol employer? He is tied by the le| cause of his payments on his and because of the associatioi| his wife and family. It is a and costly thing for him to gof where to seek work. Proball means that the little surplusesl decade will be wiped out, and h| have to begin life again. If hi abroad, he will start once more] "job-seeker" at the end of th$ and will be compelled to take J miserable wage may be flung h| an "out-of-work." The tragedy in the working! home far surpasses that in th| ployer's palace. *T* ****** *N* 'r ■*!*■ So we say that the workil should be dealt frankly withl should be told exactly how risk for him there is in this prd Reciprocity. The men with the[ gation charts before them, share their knowledge with thi in the engine-room and on thel decks. It is only fair—it is oii| —it is only right between ma man. Mr. Barnard has gone on reel being in favour of Harbour) provements" and would maid toria the finest port on the PJ Mr. Barnard fought the ba| the working-man on the fioor| House at Ottawa. Mr. Ten "passed by on the other side.j A VERY LITTLE ONI There can be no doubt tl| most unpopular law on the \ book from the French-Cl standpoint is that respecting t\\ service of Canada whicii Sir Laurier forced down the throal eleventh Parliament during tl| ion of 1909-10. The Premier recognizes this solid wall pathy, and his re.cent tour in | tive province had for its ob removal of these prejudices. his audiences that the navy amount to much; that it wasj little one, and would not figh| Empire's wars without being with an order in council rati Parliament. But even the p| "it was only a little one" succeeded in mollifying the Canadians, and fanned by tl tionalist wind the flames off ment threaten the Laurier citl Nothing has yet been heard Templeman demanding an from his colleagues for keep| in the dark about the Imn circular. Mr. Templeman's appeal Pugsley came "too late." All! propriations had been allotte| John. In his telegram Mr. Pugslel that he had shown Mr. Temn telegram to Sir Wilfrid, but] Wi]