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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" iJOY'\n' 1l9]Q     -  |\nThe Prince Rupert t^rtimist\n^\n,li*\ufffd\ufffd^\nDAILY   EDITION\n\/OL I. NO. 156\nPrince Rupert, B.C.. Tuesday, November 8. 1910.\nPrice. Five Cents\nOTY FATHERS DISCUSS THE OFFER OF PRESIDENT HAYS\n[AS KILLED BY\nHIS OWN RIFLE\nICHARLIE CYR  MET  HIS  DEATH\nOUT DUCK SHOOTING\n|Crim Termination to Expedition\nYesterday to Tucka Inlet -Hopeless Race in Row Boat Against\nDeatli    Has Brother in Skagway.\nYesterday afternoon Charlie Gyr,\nlulong with two friends, Ed. Kohse and\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLouis Swedor, went across to Tucks\nllnlel duck shooting. This morning\n|('harlie Gyr lies dead in Hayner's\nI in \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-.-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd with a dreadful wound in the back\n|i.{ his head behind the left ear.\nAfter tiring at a goose he had reloaded\nIhis rifle and placed it in the bottom of\nIt he boat. The wind freshened, the\nIboal Was tossed about, and the rifle\nlrolli.il. GjtT stooped to pick it up and\n1 place ii more securely holding it by the\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd barrel. The boat lurched suddenly.\niTIie hammer caught somehow, and the\nIplcLsiiii little expedition was turned\nJ'.:.'.'.. pitiful tragedy.\nWilli all possible speed but realizing\nIthai their comrade was terribly hurt,\nIthi two others pulled hard for the hoa-\nIpitiil. They were overtaken by a gaso-\nlline launch when crossing the harbor,\nland towed to the hospital. But it was\nItno lute. The doctor came down to the\nI boat only to confirm what the men by\nIthis time knew. The wounded man\nKm dead. He had lived unable to\nI move or apeak for about two hours\nI after the accident but even had the\nj hospital liecn nearer there waa small\nI chance of his life.\nLast night Coroner McMullin held an\nI enquiry and  decided  that  an   inquest\nI \ufffd\ufffdas unnecessary.   Messrs. Hayner Bros.\nhave taken charge of the body and funeral\nI arrangements.\ntattled was \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd German Swiss, was\nI only 22 years old. He was in partner-\nj'hi|i with Joe Kelwassar, in the grocery\nbusiness in this city. He had been\nabout eighieen months in Prince Rupert.\nHis brother who resides in Skagway\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdill be noli lied of the occurrence.\nAldermen Get Their Wits to Work Last Night on the Problem of Grand Trunk  Assessment.---Many Men and\nMany Views.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAid. Lynch Made Strong Stand\nfor the Assessment as   a   City Asset.\nThe letter of President C. M. Hays\nOf the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway, in\nwhich he offered to settle the question I\nof the company's assessment for the\nMSt twenty years with an annual!\npayment of $5,000, brought about one\nof the meal interesting of debates at last\nnight's meeting of the city council. It\ndisclosed the varying points of view\nof the different aldermen, showing them\nto be far from united in their ideas of\nwhat is best to be done for the city in\nthe matter. The closing speeches were\nmuch less conciliatory than the opening\nspeeches, due principally to the strong\nattitude taken on the question by Aid.\nLynch.\nOldest Member's Advice\nThe debate was opened by Aid. Mclntyre, who as \"the oldest member of\nthe council,\" urged that negotiations\nbe kept o|>en but not rushed. He\nsuggested that if a railway company-\nwere wanting to come in to Prince Rupert instead of being already here, the\ncity might be glad enough to make\nconcessions to induce it to come. The\nproper thing now WW for the G. T. P.\nto send down some one with power to\ntreat with the city. The sooner the\nmatter was settled the better as industries, he knew, were waiting the\nsettlement oi this matter to come in.\nA flour milling concern had just com\nmunicated with him from Winnipeg\nregarding Prince Rupert on this very\nquestion.\nMight Work  Both Ways\nThe title of \"The Nestor of the\nCouncil\" was bestowed upon Aid. Mclntyre by Aid. Harrow, who thought the\nPremier's advice was good on this\nmatter. If the city levelled down with\nthe G. T. P. it might also level up with\nits subsidiary companies who might be\nconsidered too lightly assessed.\nWas  It a Mistake!\nAid. Naden said he, too, knew of\ncompanies and capital who were waiting\nto come in to Rupert. After all there\nwas only \"a little matter of a few millions\" involved in the differences between the various ideas of the assessment. He strongly nnpacted that that\nunaccountable mistake on the part\nof the Grand Trunk Pacific in not\nputting in an appeal against their\nassessment at the proper court, was not\nsuch a blind miRtake after all. If the\ncompany had appealed in due form,\nwould it now have been in a position\nto seek the intervention of the Provincial Governmant?\n\"Trade Land, for Taxes'\"\nAid. Hilditch enunciated a plan by\nwhich the city might barter assessment\nrebatement for lands it required from\nthe G. T. P., in other words \"trade\nlands for taxes,\" he said. He thought\nthe plan would satisfy everybody and\neverybody would be getting something\nthey wanted.\nLynch'.  Strong Stand\nIn an emphatic speech Aid. Lynch\ndeclared himself considerably less conciliatory towards the G. T. P. than his\nbrother aldermen appeared to be. He\nwould approach the question as a purely\nbusiness proposition on purely bus ness\nlines.\n\"Not for \"one minute would I give\nthem the idea that we would grant\nexemption fro twenty, for fifteen, for\nten, for five\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdno, nor for even one\nyeur!\"   He said with rising voice.\nHe wanted to see a new Court of\nRevision appointed and regretted that\nthe Premier had not been inclined\ntowards this. I^et the city collect\nI from the G. T. P. thc taxes they owed\n1 the city. He did not approve of any\n| system of the bartering of one value\nI for another.\nThe principle that the city might\ngladly encourage an outside railway-\ncompany to come in did not, he thought,\napply to this question. The G. T. P.\nwere here.    They  were assessed.    Let\nLOOKS LIKE A\nBIG BARGAIN\nMIKE   GURVITCH'S   OFFER   FOR\nTHIRD AVENUE GRADING\n(CONTINUED ON PAGE 8.)\nNEW REPUBLIC\nUP AGAINST IT\nHUMBLE FOLLOWERS WANT THE\n\"SPOILS \"DIVIDED\nthe government's appointees to position\nof trust on the ground that the new\nofficers are incapable. Disorders in the\nprovinces on the occasion of election\nfor members of the constitutional assembly are feared.\nCITY HALL PAY ROLL\nAmounting to $1216.15 la Pas.ed for\nPayment\nMen Who Helped Overthrow Monarchy Demand Promotion, and Pension, a. Compensation -Provincial\nPeople Refuse Recognition to Appointee..\nTt>e City Hull pay roll for the past\nnmh amounting to $1216.15 has\nPassed the Bruno, committee and council\nPayment, also an account of $168.70\nlor\n .    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*    asm    uiU'lllll     Wl     filll', Ill\npom ih, graph* Publishing company.\n['\"\"following charges come into the\n\"faith committee's province. Mias Raw-\nl,nP HIM, C. H. Orme $20.36. They\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Passed for layment.\nT''P to the Brickyards\nT- r>- Pattullo, J. Home, and others\nPasted in the Prince Rupert  Con-\nni kT   company-   8\ufffd\ufffdt   'n   late   last\nKM  from  the company's  brickyards\nKayak, some thirty-five miles up the\nZT  Thpy had made the trip for the\n,7;7' \"' r>\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdK things up at the brick-\nha*. lor th, winteri operatjon8 havin\nI *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd dosed down for the season.\nM\ufffd\ufffd*\"ng of Chin... P.rli.m.nt\nWtta N\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdv. 7.-(Special)-An official\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdar \"nnounce9 -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- the flrat imperial\n'lament will be convoked in 1913.\nLisbon, Nov. 4.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe new republic\nof Portugal is threatened with a military revolution. The Second and Fifth\nregiments today addressed a \"round\nrobin\" to Provisional President Braga\ndeclaring that they were prepared for\nan insurrection if they were not granted\nthe promised promotions and pensions\nfor helping overthrow the monarchy.\nThe government probably will yield.\nThe royalists who have adhered to\nthe republic demand the same rewards\nas the revolutionists proper seek to\nexact.\nThe revolutionary crew of the cruiser Sao Raphael, which bombarded\nthe royal palace during the revolutionary\noutbreak, has been dismissed. The\ncrew of the cruiser Adamaster, which\nalso fired upon the home of King Manuel,\nhas refused to leave the vessel unless\nthe men are guaranteed a\npension of $100 a month each for\nlife. In order to avoid disorders it ia\nlikely that the government will grant\nall of these demands.\nThere are bIbo troubles in the provinces where the people refuse to recognize\nCITY  IMPROVEMENTS\nCity   Engineer   Reports   Sum.   Due\nContractors to Date\nThe city engineer reported last night\nregarding the grading contracts at\npresent in hands for the city stating the\namounts due to the various contractors\nfor work to date to be as follows: Second\navenue, to S. H. Watson & Co. $2284.16;\nS. P. McMordie $969.74; same contractor for Section 3, $1200; for Section\n4, $3174.19. To John Viereck $229.90.\nP. J. Swanson for work on Beach Place\n$1674.32; Hays Cove and Eighth avenue. Mclnnes & Kelly $3872.14. Reilly\n& Robarts $385.84. A. McLean for\nwork on Fraser street, Fifth, Sixth,\nSeventh and Eighth streets, $286.76.\nC. W. Tankley, piling Second street,\n$197.84. The report does not mean\nthat these amounts are immediately\npayable.\nCan't Have Big Sign\nAn application for a large sign on the\nDawson Block extending over the sidewalk has been turned down by the\nstreets committee. Only light banners\ncan be allowed in such a position.\nA petition for a 16-ft. plankway on\nSixth street lane between First and\nSecone avenues was referred last night\nto the streets committee.\nMAY TEAR DOWN\nDUNEDIN BLOCK\nCITY FATHERS DECIDE ON DRASTIC ACTION\nWill Give the Owner. Ten Day. in\nWhich to Strengthen the Structure\nor It Come. Down\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdClaim It I.\nDangerou. to Public.\nThe owners of the condemned Dunedin\nBlock are to be given the chance of\neither tearing down or strengthening\nthe structure to the satisfaction of the\nauthorities. Unless the owners do one\nthing or the other within ten days thc\ncity will set a gang to work at tearing\ndown the building, charging the cost of\nthe tearing down operations to the\nowners. It is claimed by the building\ninspector that the building is a danger\nto the public and liable to be blown down\nin a high wind storm.\nThe matter came up before last night's\ncouncil in the form of a motion drafted\nby the city solicitor and put by Aid.\nLynch.   It was carried unanimously.\nREADY   WITH   FUNDS\nFor That $540,000 la.ue of City Debenture.\nSeveral enquiries from firms anzious\nto finance the proposed issue of $640,000\nworth of 4 1-2 per cent debentures have\nbeen received by the city clerk, and\nwere read at councuil last night. The\nissue is meantime in abeyance.\nBut Aid. Hilditch Ha. Hi. Doubt, and\nThey Spread to the Other Aldermen. Gurvitch'. Price. Will be\nCon.idered    Further.\nCan Mike Gurvitch possibly do all\nthe grading of Sections D and G of\nThird avenue at the price he asks for\nthe work? That is the question that\ntroubled Aid. Hilditch at the city council\nlast nighi when the report of the streets\ncommittee was read giving Gurvitch\nthese two sections as the lowest tenderer.\nAid. Hilditch calculated that Gurvitch was $10,410 below the next lowest\nman on a contract of $31,000 and $6,100\nbelow the next lowest tenderer on a\ncontract worth $23,000. He was $17,-\n500 below the city engineer's estimate\nfor Section U, and $9,9-i0 below the\ncity engineer's estimate for Section G.\nThese were considerable diflerences\nsaid Aid. Hilditch and he did not think\nthe contracts should be let to Gurvitch\nunless the city engineer were satislied\nI that he could do the work properly at\nthe price. If he could do it, then the\ncity was certainly getting badly stung\non other contracts. But Aid. Hilditch\nbelieved that Gurvitch was only inviting\nruin by tendering so low. He did not\nthink he could get guarantee bonds in\nany case, and thought il almost foolishness of the city to give the contrail*\nto Gurvitch at all. It was only risking\na pile of trouble in taking them oil his\nhands later.\nAid. Lynch in defence of the decision\nof the committee of which he is chairman, said lhat if the man had put up\nhis cheque and made his tender fairly,\nit was all right to award him the work.\nHe thought it a bad principle to set\nup the idea that a man might quote*\nlowest for work and then not gel it.\nThe pitiful picture drawn by Aid.\nHilditch of Mike Gurvitch rushing\nheadlong lo ruin over the grading of\nThird avenue did not appeal to Aid.\nBarrow. He probably remembered Aid.\nHilditch's peculiar aversion to names\nending with \"vitch\" on the city pay roll,\nfor he reminded the council lhat if\nthis particular \"vitch\" were liable to\nreach red ruin on the job he was certainly\nnot going to ruin the city over the price\nof it. \"As a matter of fact,\" said Aid.\nBarrow, \"some of these 'vitches' maybe able to carry out the work all right.\"\nHowever, Aid. Barrow was inclined all\n' the same to favor Aid. Hilditch's idea\nthat the matter of the granting of this\ncontract should be held over for a day\nor two, until the city engineer and\ncommittee have looked into it further.\nAid. Naden in agreeing with Aid.\nHilditch told of a small bit of contract\nwork done for himself. The prices for\nrock excavation had ranged between\n$1.26 and $4.26 and the work was\nfinally done for $1.50 per cu. yd. Something might be learned to the ratepayer's advantage if Gurvitch could\ncarry out the work at the price however.\nAccordingly the question of Third\navenue grading is delayed for a day or\ntwo.\nSection E contract, on Third avenue,\ngoes to E. Horrigan unquestioned by\nAid. Hilditch. THE   PRINCE    RUPERT    OPTIMIST\nSAMUEL HARRISON\nV. F. G. GAMBLE\nSamuel Harrison & Co.\nReal Estate and Stock Brokers\nPortland Canal Stocks and Claims a Specialty\nAgents for Stewart Land Co.\nPrince Rupert and Stewart\nThe Royal\nCorner of Third Avenue and Sixth Street\nHOTEL\nTHE BEST\nSITUATION\nTHE FINEST ROOMS\nTHE BEST\nEQUIPMENT\nSTEAM HEAT\nHOT AND COLD\nWATER BATHS\nCORLEY 6 BURGESS\nCAFE\nOur Lunch Counter and Restaurant are superior in appointments, service and cuisine to any in the City. It ia\npopular with diners of taate,\nand the rendezvous of parties\nQUICK  LUNCH        MODERN PRICKS\nIf you try the Royal\nyou  will  go   again.\nProprietors\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd~-\n(.**\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nLYNCH BROS.\nDEPARTMENT STORES\nPHONE No. 2\nGroceries\nThe Big\nCrockery\nFrails\nSupply House\nlinoleuns\nProvisions\nBoots and Shoes\nof\nHouse Funushinfs\nGlass\nGents' Furnishings\nPrince Rupert\nSash tad Doors\n4\nPrompt Delivery Courteous Treatment\nA Square Deal\n*t\nThe Optimist\nDELIVERED TO ANY ADDRESS\nIN SECTIONS 1, 5 AND 6\nEVERY DAY FOR\n50c PER MONTH\nr\nI - THE COSY CORNER =\nj     DEVOTED   PRINCIPALLY  TO  THE INTERESTS  OF  WOMEN\nThis is a little section of the paper, which from day to day will be devoted\nI to subjects of special interest to women.   Any and all of the ladies of Prince Rupert\n, are invited to contribute to its columns, and to take part in its   discussions.   Suggestions and criticisms are invited by the editor.   The hope is expressed that \"The\nI Cosy Corner\" will fill a social need.\nSocial to  each  other.    We  quote  from   the\nThe question of woman suffrage  is j head lines of the Times:  \"Tries to Kill\nto be debated tonight by the Preaby- j Her Husband.    Fresno Woman Shoots\nterian Club, which meets in the Presby-' at  M\ufffd\ufffdn  Repeatedly.    Couple are De-\nterian church.   The meeting is open to \\ voted But Cannot Agree.\"\nthe public.   The meeting tonight is to\ntake the  place of  the  meeting  which | Invitations by Telephone\nusually   takes   place   on   Wednesday!    Women   who  entertain   much   agree\nthat   to   have   an   immediate   answer\nevenings.\nThe ladies of St. Andrews Church\nare to provide the supper at the men's\nbanquet on Thursday night. The\nproceeds are to go to the Church Extension Fund.\nMrs. E. A.  Woods will not receive\nagain until further notice.\nAn interesting phase of the woman\nsuffrage movement ia the fact that\nobjections to the proposition seem to be\nurged quite as freely, and even more\nforcibly, by women as by men. One\nof the most recent and ablest of the\n\"amis\" ia Miss Molly Elliott Seawell,\nwho in a recent issue of the Atlantic\nMonthly deplores \"the superficial and\ninadequate manner in which the matter\nhas been discussed by both sides.\" She\ncriticizes both sides for arguing aa if\nthe whole revolution will be over when\na woman can walk up to a ballot box\nand deposit a vote.\nAnaylsing the plea of a brilliant and\nprominent advocate of woman suffrage\nthat: \"Woman suffrage stands for\nsanitation and education,\" Miss Seawell\nproceeds to pick the following flaws in\nthe argument. She says:\nFirst, is the universal fallacy on the\npart of the suffragists that all women\nwill vote alike, and will vote right.\n\"Second, neither sanitation nor education can be the lirst or even the moat\nimportant object of government. Good\nlaws well administered, a pure and\ncompetent judiciary, internal order, national defense, and many other things\nmust take precedence of sanitation and\neducation. Neither sanitation nor popular education was known to the founders\nof the United States Republic; yet these\nfounders added more to the forces of\ncivilization than any group of sanitarians\nor educators that ever lived.\n\"Third, neither sanitation nor education is a national affair, but both are\nthe business of states and municipalities.\n\"Fourth, sanitation and education are\nalready well attended to by men, and\nas large a share of the public income ia\ndevoted to them as the people will bear.\"\n\"Suffrage\" she declares, \"is neither a\nphilanthropic scheme nor an economic\nmeasure, but a registering machine. The\nstock argument of the suffragists has\never been, that the suffrage would\nenable a woman to get the same pay\nfor the same work as a man. What they\nprobably mean by this is, that a woman\nworking thc same number of hours at\nthe same employment as a nwn should\nreceive the same pay. But it has been\ntested, and needs no test, that the work\nof women for the same time at the same\nemployment as men is not so good in\nquality or quantity, and for obvious\nreasons. A woman cannot stand physical effort and nervous strain as a man\ncan; nine hundred and ninety-nine\nwomen out of every thousand go into\nwork with the fixed intention of abandoning it at the first possible moment;\na woman at the period of her greatest\nenergy is liable at any moment to make\na contract of marriage, which vitiates\nother contracts; and women are less\namenable to discipline than men.\"\nto an invitation, as is possible by the\nuse of the telephone, saves a hostess\nmuch nervous strain. But at the same\ntime they admit that, however formal\nthe occasion may be, if the persona are\ninvited by word of mouth there is a\ncertain casualness which a written request can never acquire. It is as though\nDame Etiquette said, \"You may, but I\nwouldn't.\"\nOne strong argument against telephone invitations is the danger of misunderstanding the date. This has happened more than once on the occasion\nof formal dinners, and one or more\nguesta have arrived the wrong evening. That is why an invitation so\ngiven must be followed by a written\nanswer, in which day, date and hour\nare repeated. Such a communication\nia regarded as imperative, even though\na positive answer has been given over\nthe telephone.\nNor should there be any delay in\nsending such a note. The person invited\nshould go directly from the instrument\nto her desk and write the prospective\nhostess, as though she were answering a\nnote.\nIf any error has been made in time,\nher note, containing the hour and day\nas she understands it, will receive an\nimmediate response from the other\nwoman, making right the mistake.\n(anadianPacificRailway\nSOUTHBOUND\n^'Princess Royal November 124.\nPrincess Beatrice November 26tk\nFor Vancouver, Victoria and SetU.\ncalling at Swans,,,, Bay'\nNORTHBOUND\nPrincess Beatrice November 21st\nFor Port Simpson.  Ketchikan\nJuneau  and Skagway.     '\nJ.G.McN.b . G.n.r.lA,,,,\nSteamer, for\nVancouver\nVictoria\nAND\nSeattle\nConnrvtiiur with\nEASTBOUND TRAINS\nNEW ROADS FOR\nTHE ISLANDS\nTHIRTY-TWO     NEW     SETTLERS\nFOR GRAHAM\nPrince Rupert sails 8.30 p.m. Thuudsr\nBRUNO SAILS FOR STEWART\nAfter the arrival of the Prince Rupert,\nWednesday, and returning to connect\nwith same steamer southbound.\nFor Port Simpton, Naas and Msiiet\nMonday      -     1 p.m.\nSkidegate and Moresby Island Pointi\nThursday    -    10 p.m.\nA. E. McMASTER\nFREIGHT  AND   PA8SHN0B8 AGENT\nThe Boscowltz S. S. Co.\nwill despatch two steamers\nweekly between Victoria, Vancouver and all Northern B. C.\nports, calling at Prince Rupert\nand Stewart\nS.S. Vadso    S.S. Venture\nclassed    100   Al   at   Llvods.\nLeaving Prince Rupert South\nbound on Fridays.  Fur further\nparticulars apply to\nrax, \ufffd\ufffdoore * co.. prince un\nHaad Oflks st Victoria. B. C.\nmmMmjimmmmmmPmmmtmtmm**\nWork for Season Nearly Ended\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNew\nTrail. Located for Next Season's\nWork\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLarger Appropriation. Promised for Road. Next Year.\nMarried   couples   in   Fresno   have   a\nunique way of proving their devotion\nJ. Gillingham, superintendent of public\nroads, got in yesterday from Queen\nCharlotte City, and says he has only\none more trip to the islands to make, and\nthen ro\ufffd\ufffdd work will be shut down for\nthe winter and he will resume his residence in Prince Rupert.\n\"I have a few bridges to close up,\" he\nsaid, \"and then the trail work will be\nover for the season, with the exception\nof locating a few more traila to be pue\nin next year. On Graham island wt\nhave put in thirty two miles of new\ntrail; on Moresby island the work has\nbeen the repairing of the old ones. A\ngreat deal of work has been done and\nwe have expended the whole of the\nappropriation of $25,000.\n\"A new bridge has been put in over\nMiller creek and one at Long Hill.\nThese are on the east side of Graham\nisland and establish communication between Skidegate and the Tel'el river.\n\"Thirty-six new settlers came in last\nmonth on Graham and all the islands are\nlooking up. With the many big enterprises under way on the Queen Charlotte\nislands I look for rapid development\nnext year. We shall certainly need\nmore roads and I am glad to say that\nHon. Thos. Taylor, minister of public\nworks, when he was here during the\nsummer promised us a larger appro-1\npriation for next year.\" |\nTOJENT\n3-roomed House\n$15.00\n8-roon.ed House\n$4000\nBOTH IN SECTION 6\nG.R. NADEN COMPANY\nSecond Ave..\nLimited.\nPrince Rupert.-*\nlittle's NEWS AgaW\nMagazine. :: Periodicals :: Nrtjjjj\nCIGARS   ::  TOBACCOS \ufffd\ufffd FRU'\nG.T.P. WHARF\nW. J. McCutcheon\nCarries Complete Stock of \"g\nSpecial attention paid t0\nprescriptions.\nTheatre Block   ph\ufffd\ufffdnb no.\nSecond W\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.E.   EBY   ^ 0>-'\nREAL IESTATB\nKitsumkalum Land.For\nKITSUMKALUM\nSale THE   PRINCE     RUPERT    OPTIMIST\nft\nm\n|\nrff\nBaa\nft\nft\nm\ni\nft\ns\ni\nS\nft\nS\nft\ni\nft\nft\nft\nV\"\nIfS\nft\n|\nft\nft\ns\n\ufffd\ufffd\nft\ni\nft\nft\nft\nft\ni\ni\ni\ni\nft\ni\nGREAT NOVEMBER\nCLEARANCE SALE\nMonday-starting November 7-Monday\nwe will place before the public the largest Furniture Sale ever attempted in Prince Rupert.\nNever Before has furniture been offered at these temptation prices.\nOUR SPECIALS FOR MONDAY, TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY\nRegular price $16.50. This serviceable\ndining tame, exactly like the picture,\nfinished in golden, has 8 foot extension,\nspecially priced for Monday, Tuesday\nand Wednesday at $9.75.\nChiffoniere, mission. Regular value\n$16.50. Specially priced for Monday,\nTuesday and Wednesday at $8.45.\n$11.95\nAn exceptionally good value, 8-foot\nextension table, large neatly turned\nIfgs. nicely finished golden, regular\nprice $19.00. Specially priced for Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday at $11.95\nBlankets\n$4.75\n7 pounds. White. Regular $7.00. ..\"Specially priced for Mondav, Tuesday and' Wednes-\nday.at|$4.76.\n$3.25\n6 pound silver grey, regular $4.50. Specially\npriced for Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday\nat $3.25.\nComforters\n$2.95\nRegular value $5.00. Specially priced Tor\nMonday, Tuesday and Wednesday at $2.95.\nSheets\n70c\nRegular value $1.50. Any size. Specially\npriced for Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday\natfTOc.\nToilet Sets\n$1.35\n5 pieces. In White. Regular value* $2.25.\nSpecially priced for Monday, Tuesday and\nWednesday at $1.35.\n$19.85\nLace Curtains\n$1.10\nRegular $2.25 pair. Specially priced\nfor Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday\nat $1.10 pair.\n$2.10\n0  pair.   Spe\nTuesday and\n$6.25\nRegular $3.50 pair. Specially priced\nfor Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday\nat $2.10 pair.\n$3.45\nRegular price $32.50. A splendid desk and\nbookcase similar to picture, in ea.ly English\nsolid oak. FRENCH MIRROR. Handsomely carved top, adjustable shelves, regular price $32.50. Specially priced for Monday. Tuesday and Wednesday $19.85.\nRugs    Rugs\n$6.95\n9x9 Tapestry. English make. Regular\nvalue $11.60. Specially priced for Monday,\nTuesday and Wednesday a*4$6.96.\n$5.75\n7x9 Tapestry. English make. Regular\nvalue $9.50. Specially priced for Monday,\nTuesday and Wednesday at $5.75.\n$1.35\nRegular value $1.76. A well made durable chair. Specially priced for Mon-\nday.fTueaday and Wednesday at 95c.\nRegular $12.50 pair. Specially priced\nfor Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday\nat $6.25 pair.\nExactly like picture. Regular $6.00. Specially priced for Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday at $3.45.\nRegular value $2.25.     Specially  priced  for\nMonday, Tuesday and Wednesday at $1.36.\n\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\nto\n\ufffd\ufffd\nTiT.\n\ufffd\ufffd\nto\n\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\nto\n\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\nto\n\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\nto\n\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\nHi\n\ufffd\ufffd\nBRIN FURNITURL CO.\nPrince Rupert's Leading Furniture Store Third Avenue, near Sixth Street\n<*\ufffd\ufffd THE   PRINCE    RUPERT    OPTIMIST\nThe Prince Rupert Optimist\nDAILV  AND WEEKLY\nTHE OPTIMIST is the leading newspaper of Northern British Columbia.    It\nhas grown up with the city.\nADVERTISING KA'i ES are one price to all - 25c per inch each issue for display\nmatter. This rata applies to all advertising without distinction of quantity\nor time of contract. .\ufffd\ufffd\nReading Notices and Legal ADVERTISING are 10c per line.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES-Daily, f*lc per month, or $5.00 per year, in advance.\nWeekly. $2.00 per year. Outside CANADA-Daily, $8.00 peryear; Weekly,\n$2.50 per year, strictly in advance.\nDaily Edition.\nTuesday, Nov. 8\nABOUT THAT ASSESSMENT\nWith all good feeling towards President Hays and the Grand Trunk Pacific\nRailway, the citizens of I'rince Kupert must protest against the company's assumption lhat the city is hard upon the company in regard to their assessment.\nThat the company is entitled lo some consideration no one disputes. That\nthe assessment is s high one, most people are agreed. But to throw the onus for\nthe deadlock which baa arisen u|h>ii the city council is a course not warranted by\nthe facts.\nWhat ia the actual position of affairs? In March 1909, two months before the\ncity council came into being, au assessor was appointed by the Provincial Gov-\nvernment. He was not an appointee of the city council, which for two months\nafter his appointment did not come into being. His assessment rolls were completed\nand handed over to the registrar on March 31st, over two weeks before the council\nwas elected. To suggest that the council is in any way responsible for the fixing\nof the assessment is unwarrantable.\nWhat then was the council lo do with the assessment they inherited? From\ntheir own point of view as trustees of the people they had no quarrel with it. A\nCourt of Revision was held in due course to hear assessment appeals. The\ncompany apparently acquiesced in the assessment for they allowed the court to\nend its business without entering an appeal. What were the council to do? No\none would suggest that it was their business to enter an appeal on behalf of the\ncompany even were they clothed with the power so to act.\nIt cannot be too clearly understood that in this matter the council could\nnot take the initiative.   It would have !>een a fine piece of presumption on their\nCondensed Advertisements.\nARE YOU IN NEED OF HELP?   Doyouwsat\nto buy. i.r sell, or hire, or loan?   Try The\nOptimist Condensed Ad. route.\nCOLLECTIONS made in any part or the world.\nUniversal   Collection   Agency.    6th    Street,\nPhone 75.\nDONT  Hawk  Your  Lots I\nright 1 have the huyera.\nAlder Block.\n134-tr\nir the price   is\nChss. M.  Wilson.\n149-wl\nFOR LEASE-For rooming house. Fifteen\nrooms with bath and all conveniences, in centre of business district, rent reasonsble. W. J.\nAlder, Alder Block. 1B2-1S8\nFOR LEASE-Store 24 x 50 with or without\ntuiHcment, on 3rd Ave. near Hth St., will be\narranged to suit tenant. W. J. Alder, Alder\nBlock. 152-158\nPOM SALE-A Rooming House.\n*     ply George Leek.\nFOR Sale lit a Bargain \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Gramophone and  records.    Apply G. R. T. Sawle. Optimist Office\ntpOUND-A Float, with home. Owner niuy\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffds have same by paying for this notice and lor\ntrouble of towing.   Apply Optimist Offloe.   138-tf\nSITUATION WANTED-By strong young man\nCan do any manual labor.\nA Snap.    Ap-\n141\n771\nApply  P. O.   Box\n161-157\nMEDAL FOUND-Silver Medal, granted Pte.\n^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- R. Harford for services in South Africa.\nApply st Optimist Office. 147-wi\nTO LET-Fine office suite of .three or four\n*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd rooms, also one single office for $15. W. J.\nAlder, Alder Block. 152-15K\nWANTED IMMEDIATELY - Young lady to\n\" clerk in grocery store in city, light work,\nhours f i \"in 9 a.m. to 6.SII p.m., state salary expected.   Apply at once P.O. Box 100, City. 155-158\nAXTOM AN\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTo do cleaning two days a week. 25c\n\"    per hour.   Apply Knox Hotel 1.16-tf\nWANTED-Old woollen rags snd underclothes.\nHighest price paid. Apply J. H. HofTaCo..\nNo. 18 Fifth Street. Telephone 128 blue. P.O.\nBox 660. 148-tf\nWANTED .Suits to clean and press, 11.00 each.\n\" Room 13 Westenhaver Block, 2nd Ave. and\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdth Street. 144-lm\nWANTED-Porter. also dish-washer. AtSs-\n\"    vc\nIS BACK AGAIN\nFROM NINE MILE\nPHONE 130\nP.0, B0.lt*\nCHAS.\nO'NEIL  TALKS  OF    \"SUNRISE\" MINE\nForty Ton. of Ore Sacked on Sunrise\nGroup \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFirst Rate Showings on\nVarious Other Claims\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMr. O'Neill\nTell. What He Ha. Actually Seen.\nvoy Hotel.\n153-tf\n\ufffd\ufffd26 REWARD\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFor return of suitcase containing camera, compass, etc., taken from  Prem-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdm|ts\nly la.\npart, and would have laid them open to the charge of   betraying the   people's in- j tor Hotel on Sunday last.  R. F. Congdon. Premier\ntercsts.    Premier McBride rightly sensed the situation when he told the council,\nTo Water Takers\n\"Any proposition should come from the company.    There is no reason for you\nto be suppliants.\"\nNow that  the company has oiamed negotiations with the council, despite I   _ _,   .   .       .\n.. \ufffd\ufffd.....\ufffd\ufffd. l j        .    ,    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  .. li  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_     .      l Parties having private aervices which are not\nthe terms of Mr. Hays  offer, the groundwork is laid upon which   further   ne-  protected rrom frost are notified that the pipes\nI'liti-it'.ih- mr    In. conducted must be properly covered forthwith.\ngotiations maj   IH   COnauClCO. i    All such services will be inspected by the Wat\nerworks   Foreman  on the 14th  Inst, and  those\nwhich have not been covered will be cut off.\nWM. MAHLON DAVIS.\n166-159 Supt.\nTHE NAPOLEON OF QUEBEC\nThe Monetary Times, a staid financial journal is the latest combatant in the\nfray which is raging in Quebec between Henri Rourassa and the Quebec Liberals.\nHenri ha* been urging the French-Canadians to confine their investments and\nsavings lo French banks saying:\n\"Let us lirst place our money with our own people in order that they may     Notice is hereby given that, on the first day or\nl.  ,    ,,    . , .    , Decemlasr next, application will  be msde to the\niicciimc solid institutions and able tn  encourage our commerce and our  industry, superintendent ur Provincial Police for renewal\nBy all means let us place our small sums, as well as our large capital, in the hands | ^^^^^.i^^t^^iiS!\nLiquor  Act, 1910\n(Section 42)\nof French-Canadian financiers, and before long very we will see the wisdom of\nsuch a policy.\"\nA new  French Republic with the melo-dramatic Henri as President is the\nvia.'on the Monetary Times pretends to see ahead.\nset, Q C. I., in the Province or British Columbia.\nDated this 10th day of October, Ivlo.\nARTHUR IVES.\nOct. lo-30d Applicant.\nTREADG0LD IS\nWINNER NOW\nLiquor Act, 1910\npipes used for the Guggenheim electrical j   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  .   , .     . (Sectlon 42>\n.,..., , ...    I    Notice I. hereby given that, on the first day of\nand   hydraulic   plants,   and   toward   this    December next, application will be msde to the\nlo -it urn      Troiirlo-nlrl       iu       rlrivino     hlo   Superintendent or Provincial Police ror renewal\nlocation     ireangoia     is     driving    ms of hllU| hcen\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd liqu\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdr by r<,uU ln th, nuWl\nbie    dredge.      Should    Treadeold      tear   known aa the Caledonia  Hotel situated at Port\n,      ,      ,      ,   , '     \" , .      Esslngton, B. C. In the Province of British Col-\nuway  the  banks of the stream  al  this   umbii\nDatnt I M<Jki   nil.   I'lln\nSUSAN KIRBY\nTURNS TABLES ON GUCGENHEIM , l\ufffd\ufffdhit. he will force the Guggenheims to ; 0\ufffd\ufffd,fi^clu,,er \"\"'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd19ln\nMONOPOLY ' e'lm'r suspend operations of their hy- : \t\n, draulic plants or buy a right-of-way for\nYoung Londoner Ha. Now An Enter-   \" r\ufffd\ufffd!,,ly trwtle-\t\nL\nPUBLIC STENOGRAPHER\nprise as Large on Klondike and\nManage, to Place American Corporation at \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Disadvantage.\nTHE  FOOD WAS  PUTRID\nG. T. P. INN\nG. T. P. INN\nTon. of Cold Storage Turkey Seized\nin Seattle\nDawson, Y. T., Nov. 6. -To A. N. C. \t\nTreadgold.  manager  of  the  Treadgold      Seattle.    Nov.    6.-Application    was'\nGold Mining company of Dawson. Yukon   ma(i\ufffd\ufffd ^ tru, Su|k?rior Court yesterday\nTerritory, goes the distinction of bot-  afternoon    by    State    Food    Commis-'\ntling  up the Guggenheim,   so   tightly  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdjoner  Davis  for  an  or,|t.r  l0  destroy j\nthat   it   will   la-   practically  impossible  a ton of turkeys and live tons of smelts, I\nfor   the   multi-millionaires   to   extend  Rtt|mon, crabs and lobsters ship|>ed here\ntheir   development   plans   in   the   far  ^l  May  by  a  California  firm  to  be\nnorth unless he, Treadgold, is agreeable.  p|ace(i  jn  cold  storage  here  and   held\nFollowing a dispute over the man-j for the family trade. The stuff was\nagement of some claims, whirh, as an | seized last week. Analysis showed\nengineer in the employ of the Guggen-. that the smelts contained 416,000,000\nheims, he purchased for the big cor-, bacteria per gram, and thc turkeys\nDOnUon, Treadgold obtained the aasia- j 18!>,000,000 per gram. No one will\ntance nf English capitalists and went | admit ownership of the stuff. Much\ninto (he dredging business in opposition\nto the Guggenheims, buying up gold\nmining machinery and claims in rapid\nsuccession.\nAfter tying up the Guggenheims on\npractically every creek in the district j\nand forcing them into positions where\nit will be necessary for them to reconstruct '.heir big dredging machines in\norder to work the ground, Treadgold\nfollowed with the strongest blow at\nthe Yankee* by obtaining the Boyle\nconcession on thc Klondike River.\nCrossing this concession are the water\nF. W. HART\nUNDERTAKER A EMllAI.MER\nSTOCK   COMI'I.ETR\n1\nForty tons of high grade silver ore is\nready sacked on the ground of the Sunrise group of claims on Nine Mile mountain. Twenty tons more were in sight\nfor sacking when the snow came on\nand overtook the packers. The snow\nstopped operations temporarily but\ncamps are being built and it is intended to carry on the work on these\nclaims during the winter in spite of the\nsnow.\nThis is the latest report regarding the\nSunrise group brought down by Chas.\nO'Neill who has had charge of the\ngroup all summer. He is now in Prince\nRupert, having come down river part\nof the way by canoe.\nOf the Silver Cup claims Mr. O'Neill\nspeaks very highly. \"I have seen them,\"\nhe says, \"and they are undoubtedly\nbeyond the pros|)ecting stage. The Silver\nCup is a mine. It is a mine in which\nthe values run higher than those of\nthe St. Eugenie at Moyie, H C, and I\nconsider the Silver Cup will rival and\nperhaps surpass the St. Eugenie as a\nprofitable producer.\n\"I was very close to the Lead King\ngroup,\" said Mr. O'Neill, \"and actually\nexamined about 2,500 feet of this property. The silver was plainly in sight\nright on the surface and I could follow\nit along for the whole distance. They\nhave eight men working there for the\nwinter, and should have something\ngood showing by spring. I may say\nthat as far as surface showings go, there\nis nothing to beat this on the mountain.\n\"That latest strike of the Harris boys\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nthe American Boy, on the west slope of\nNine Mile mountain\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdgives a magnificent showing. The ore is cube galena\nof values running between $90 and $100.\nThere are four distinct leads, from one\nfoot to three feet wide, and showing\nthese values, all well down in the timber\nabout six miles from Hazelton.\n\"About 400 feet on these claims have\nbeen stripped and the operations show\nthat the coarse galena changes to a\nfiner grain the farther down they go,\nwhich indicates a higher run of values.\nI consider the American Boy a particularly promising pro|>eity.\n\"About the Hudson Bay mountains\nI may say that I have heard reliable\nreports of the very best regarding this\ndistrict. There are some splendid\npro|>crties giving magnificent showings\nthere. Already several bonds have been\ntaken out on properties there, at good\nprices, by men who know what they are\ndoing, and next year will see big things,\ndoing on these properties.\"\nGEO. T. STEWART\nBook-keeping,  Accounting and faf^\nBooks Balanced and Statements Made I\nTHEATRE BLOCK       Cor. 2nd Ave.. 6t. S\ufffd\ufffd\nWHOLESALE\nPRODUCE AND FRUIT\nAND\nHORSE CLOTHING\nH. N. MORTON\nTHIRD AVE.\nPORTLAND CANAL STOCKS.\nLatest   Quotation.   From V.ncoti\nver Eaching..\n(As reported by S. llsrrm.in * Ovi\nHIU  \\sm\nPortland Canal  U M     25\nStewart M. & D. Co    2.40    WO\nRedClilT       87     X\nMain Reef 9\nPlumbing, Heating\nj and  General  Steam Fitting\nWM. GRANT\n8HOP-Basement orH>l\ufffd\ufffd.raon BV\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nSIXTH STREET. PsaatlM\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdKK**a*ot***\ufffd\ufffdujoota\ufffd\ufffdHMtwn8\nStalker & Wells\nGROCERS\nSacoad At.. N.sr McBns.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdmtwmiw*\nPhone 187|||jj\nxitxxxxxxxxKxX\nputrid   food   was  found   in  other  cold\nstorage warehouses.\nRapid   Work   on   Ballasting\nThe big steam shovel has been taken\nfrom Mile 66 to the gravel bank near\nKitsumkalum and is there installed. It\nwill load one hundred cars a day with\nballast, so that in a short time the whole\nof thc one hundred miles of road out\nof Prince Rupert will be ballasted.\nSee the flickerleas motion   pictures\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nthe silent drama\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdat the Phenix theatre.\nTHE IROQUOIS\nPOOL\nEnglish and American Billiards\nEight Tables Centre Street\nOPEN FOR BUSINESS\nA Complete Stock ot Liquors on Hand\nDOM Agent, fi.r\nNorthern U. U,\nBudweiser  Beer\nThe chlcr c.r them .11\nNanaimo Beer Thconb\"lhelonf\ufffd\ufffdrk,e?r\nKincaid, Scott & Co'ys  Scotch Whiskey\nAil tho lerullnii hrsnils >.f Scotch, Irish.\nRye. Oin, Hrsnily, Wine, Etc., always on\nhsntl.\nCLARKE BROS.\nNotice\nAm now prepared to do all kinds of\ngrinding, knives, scissors, etc. Keys\nmade for all kinds of locks, and umbrellas repaired. Special attention to\nnovelty work. Shop next to Talbot\nHouse in rear of shoe store. Second\navenue, W. A. Miner, the One-arm\nWonder. 156\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd161\nI. Promoted Ira, Rank\nLieutenant Charles Unwin, R.N.R., R.\nD., has received notification of his\npromotion to the rank of commander\nin the Royal Naval Reserve. The\nadvancement comes as recognition of a\ntoag period of special service for which\nhe was presented with the Royal Decoration aboard H.M.S. Shearwater at Esquimau last December.\nTHE  WEATHER\nTwenty-four hours  ending 5   a. m.,\nNovember 8.\nMAX. TItMP.\n44.0\nKIN. TRHF. HAS.\n34.0 29.674\nIN. IIAIN\n.28\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGroceries\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Provisions\n-Fruits\n-Vegetables\nKJoocxxxxxxxxxxxxxrtK!\nj     FAMILY TRADE\nOUR SPECIALTY\nknnim<>OmimJO^\ufffd\ufffd^n>0^\n*m\nmm THE   PRINCE    RUPERT    OPTIMIST\n,.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nINSURANCE\n....\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd<\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nDON'T WAIT\nUntil you fall and sprain\nyour ankle or break your\n|,.g before you inquire into nur\nAccident Policy\nWe pay weekly indemnity\nfor full or partial loss of\ntime through any accident.\n*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ni: ;\nF. B. DEACON\nAccident. Ufa, Fire. Health,\nEmployer's Liability\nINSURANCE\nHHIII     Alder Block, Silt. Stmt\ni'l I n  KVKNINO.\nFILLINC OF SMALL BAYS\nAid. Naden Will Move that Railway\nCommission Be Approached\nDOW RESIGNS\n(Special to thc Optimist)\nLAND PURCHASE NOTICE\nLAND  PURCHASE  NOTICE\nAid. Naden gave notice of motion\nat last night's city council, that he\nintended to move that the city approach\nthe Railway Commission on the subject\not the filling in of Hays creek, Camerons\nBay and Seal Cove by the G. T. P.\nRailway company. The advisability of\nhaving some small harbors for launches,\netc., was generally approved by the\ncouncil.\nSkeen. Land IMstrlrt- .District ol Queen Chsrlotte ' Sk\"M Und 1,i,trict [gg* \ufffd\ufffd' l,u\"n Ch\",ol,>'\nTake notice thst   Man   Wlkorson. ol Vlclorta.\nInlands\n.. a] .1\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  i    .      \ufffd\ufffd.       7 T.   .   ...,_.     j ..     '      'sse notice tnsi   Msr>   Vtlkorsori. ot   \\ ictorla\nLondon,   Nov. 8. -Inspector  Dow has    , Notice  is  hereby  pen  that   th rty  dsy. after , married wom,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd, i\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdu,nds to spply lor permission to\n-      ....      . ' ''st* I intern! to npply to the ( lie! Commissioner   Ilur,ha\ufffd\ufffd* th* (\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd!!,, .m,. .imeriini l.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,l.\nresigned from Scotland Yard to become | \ufffd\ufffd' Lands snd Works lot s license to prospect\n :     .     j .    . i.   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd u  al * i.      tor cos'  snd  petroleum  under the  tollowinif  dell private detective.    It is said that he  acribed lands:\nreceived n tin from liii ninaiHon thnt his      Commencing at a post planted one mile east of\nrtcuvtu a tip irom ms Miptnors mat nis  K Noblo,a j-j up|l||^tll)^ Sh|n|(|o \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     MorMhy\nresignation   would   save   him   from   em-   Island, and msrked \"E. Noble'a N.  W. Corner,        , ,p|   ,   ,\nbarrassing questions as to his conduct in I gffi. SSS? wM -* -*-*-' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd--- \"--\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'' - ' -W-July 2-3' 19,\ufffd\ufffd-\npurchnne the following (.mmbod lands:\nCommune, nit at \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd poat plantml thnw milea north\nand one mile weat from tin- north-wwt corner uf\nT. L. U9,762, thenoe wait mi chain*., thunce north\n80 ehaina, thence eaat 80 ehaina. thenre itouth 80\nehaina to point of commencotnent, containing 640\naiTtt* mure or ..'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\nthe Crippen case.\n80 chains,   th'-neo   north   80 i j^i, s^\nI chains to point of commrnctimont.\n!      Ni.'jin-d thix 17 day of September, 1910,\nBLU  \"\nArthur Robertaon, Agent\nCRIPPEN REPRIEVED\nSt. Andrew. Men'. Banquet\n(Special to the Optimist)\nLondon,  Nov. 8.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe execution of\nPub. October!I.\nEf.LA NOBLE, locator ! skeens Lsnd District    Diatrict ol Queen Chsrlotte\nO. W. Rafuse, Agent Ialands\nTako notice thst Jsmes McAilam Christie, of\nPrince Rupert, bsnk mansger, intends to spply for\npermission to purchsae the following doscribed\nIsnda:\nI'm'. ,..,SM\ufffd\ufffdM\ufffd\ufffd.tls\nSkeens Land District-Diatrict of Queen Chsrlotte\nIslands\nNotice ia hereby  given  that  thirty  daya after j     ('ommencing st s post plsnted three miles north\ndate 1 intend to apply to the Chief Commissioner   and one mile west of the north-west corner of T. L.\nof I jimls and Works for a license lo prospect for ' 311,762,   tbence  east   SO  chsins.   tbence  asuth   SO\nDr.    Crippen,   who   was   to    be   hanged   mm   snd   petroleum   on   the   followingadescribed   chsins,  thence west  80 chsina.  thence  north   SO\nAt   the   lirst   annual   banquest   of   the'.i,:.   mnrnin<r    h\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdv   rttawi    .uvitiinnwl   in   ' '\"I\"?' l.u  u   ,      ..      ;'\"\"'\"s '\ufffd\ufffd isiinl of commeneement. contsinlng \ufffd\ufffd40\nM | tills   morning,    fills    Deen    postponed    in-        < nmmoncinh at a post planted on the fereshore I seres more or less.\nmen  of St.  Andrews clliurch  to  be  held   ,.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdiv     Th.. ..*.!.,* hnsi lha usntin   \ufffd\ufffd' mTmmjm Hay, Moreaby Islund. about one mile ! Date July 23, 1910.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,       . .sj.cmi \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdu .  tle\"mul>'    \ufffd\ufffdm-order irom tne secretary   MUlh o( San<5 S|li[   ,.,, ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd, ..Kn, Nobl\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.,, JAMKS McADAM CHRISTIE\non   1 nursdll.V evening at  r..W, a nUmDer I 0f   st.(te   seoms   to    |nt|mBte,    however, ' s-   w-  Corner,'\"  thence running eaat  80 chsins, j Pub. Sspt. 1. Arthur Robertson, Agent\nnt   uiw.iiboru    u-ill    rotilv    tr.    t hi,    traudrma I   , , , ..... . '! thence  north   HO chains,   thonce  west   HO  chsina,!\nOl    speakers   will   repi>    to   tne   various   tha(     thp    doetor    W|U    ,)(,    |langea    on ! thence south 80 chains to point of commencement.\ntoasts. Mr. W. H. Mitchell will preside\nand the speakers will include Bishop Du\nVernet, Colonel Davis, T. II. McMullen,\nDr. Clayton, F. H. Dowling, Rev. T. C.\nDes Barres and W. (J. James, and Mr.\nL. Crippen. Dr. Tremayne will reply\nto the toast of \"Reminiscences of\nPioneer Days\" Mr. M. Craig to \"The\nTrail of '98\" and Captain Hamar to\n\"Military Experiences in South Africe.\"\nAn orchestra will furnish music.\nLADIES!\nATTENTION!\nNot   Drunk   But   Rattled\nKarl Ericscn was apparently drunk\nlast night, but his story before the\nMagistrate this morning helped him out.\nHe said he had not tasted liquor, but\nhad stumbled or  been  pushed  over a\nNovember 22.\nFIFTEEN MEN I\nARE KILLED!\nWHOLE   MINE   WRECKED   NEAR\nSEATTLE\nBlack Diamond Tear Out Shaft,\nand Completely Wreck Work, at\nLo.. of Quarter Million.\nLocated this 17 dsy of Sepleml\ufffd\ufffdcr, IS10.\nELL\t\nPub. < >.t. !.. r 1.\nSkeens land  Diatrict -DUtrict ol Csaalsr\nKl'.l.A NOHI.E. Locator '     Tske notice thst Clsyton  Aldridge of SestUs,\nO. W. Rafuse, Agent j Wsah.,   V.  S.   A.,  oecupstion  broker,  intends  to\nspply  for  permiasion  to  purchsse  t be following\ndescribed Isnds:\nCommencing st s post plsnted on the right bsnk\nSkeens Land District \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDistrict ol Queen Cahorltte i of the Kinskooch River, sbout two miles from iu\nIslands I confluence with tho Nsss River, said post being\nNotice  is  hereby  given  thst   thirty  days after . at the south-oust corner thereof, thenc.. north SO\ndate 1 intend to apply to the Chief Commissioner j chains,  thence  west  HO  chains,  thence south   SO\nof Lsnds snd Works lor s license to prospect for , chsins, thence eaat R0 chsins to point of commnnce-\ncosl   snd   iHtrolcum   on   the  lollowing   duscribod ! ment snd contsining Mi) seres  more or leas,\nlanda: Dale Aug. IS. 1910. CLAYTON ALDRIDGE\nCommencing at a post plsntisl on the foreshore j Pub. Sept. 7. John Dybhavn Agent\nof Shingle Hay,  Moresby  laland, about  one mile !\naouth   ol   Sand   Spit  and   marked   \"1:11a   Noble's\nN.   W.   Corner,\"   ihence  esst   80  chsins,   thence ,        Skeens  Land  Diatrict -DUtrict ot Ceaalar.\nTwo   Ktnlosinns   in   I awson   Mine   at    *\ufffd\ufffdl\"L'   S?  5h\"ln\"'   lhe,nc\ufffd\ufffd  J1\"\"1   80  ch,in\"'   \"\"\"\"* i     T*K* noUc\ufffd\ufffd '\"as William Osle ot Seattle. Wssh..\n1 WO   explosion,  in   Law son   Mine  at    norlh su chn,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffds l0 point o( commencement. u. S. A\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd occupation carpenter. Intenda to apply\nl.ocatod this 17 dsy of September. IB* for permUsion to purchase thc following doscribed\nhi.I.A Nlllll.i:. Locator   lands:\nPub. October 1. O. W. Rsfusc, Agent j     Commencing st s post plsnted one mils wsst ol\n. point on the Kinskooch Itivor. two miles frosi its\nconfluence with the Nsss River, aaid poat being\n,  . .      , _    ...     at the south.esst corner thereof, thence north SO\nSkeens Und DUtrict \"District of Queen Chsrlotto ! chl|nl-  ln.nc\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,(  80  JQ^  u,,,,,, ^^  M\n^Imi'ls I chai a, thence sast HO chsina to poi t of commenca-\nI    .   ..\".      BV.  .      ..*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-*    .jv   .   ii.aiM-i    (ir    uvi      .    Ul    .\"lllllll\nNotice is  hereby  given  thst thirty dsys sfler   m,nt lnd contsining S40 scras. more or leaa.\nthe Chief Commissioner | r),t\ufffd\ufffd Aug. IS. 1910. WILLIAM O\n(Special to the Optimist)\nSeattle,  Nov.  8.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFifteen  men  were\nplankway at the Grand Hotel.   The fall  killed  at  the  Lawson   mine  at  Black  \ufffd\ufffdj*J. *** petroleum on the (oliowink diiKrib\ufffd\ufffdi {\nhad dazed him.   He went to the police\ndste 1 intend to spply to\nof Lands snd Works for s license to prospect for i p,,i, s,.p\"i. 7.\nALE\nJohn Dybhavn. Agsnt\nfor help, and his efforts to explain the\nmatter in the neighborhood of the police\nstation had been mistaken for bad\nlanguage. Chief McCarvell, anxious\nthat no injustice shoulti be done with\ni drew the charge and Ericson will return\nI to Smith's camp.\n-JUST RECEIVED-\nNEW   SILK   AND\nFRENCH  FLANNEL\nSHIRTWAISTS\nDiamond   this   morning.     There   were     Commencing st s post plsnted two miles south\n. . ., .     , , j   of  Ells   Noble's cosl  application   No.  8,  Shingle\ntwo expolsions, said to have been caused I Uiy, Moresby Islsnd. snd msrked \"Ells Noble'.\nby fire damp and the destruction done j g ^c-mjr\/ ***. .^o^nst^ce^uth\nwas very great.   The shafts were scat-1 chsins to point of commencement.\n. .   ..      .    .... ..      ,      , Located thU 17 dsy of September, 1910.\ntered and the buildings on the banks\nwere wrecked. The whole property is\nruined at a loss of over a quarter of a\nmillion dollars.\nDRYDOCKS ON PACIFIC\nAn opening for a bright lady stenO-\ngraphs*? who knows something about\nbook-keeping is available with  a  firm  United State, to E.tabli.h Two New\nin the city.   Enquire at Optimist Office.\nOnes Near San  Francisco\nMrs. S. Frizzell\nBringing Pope to Time\nMadrid, Nov. 7.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd(Special)\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe sen\ufffd\ufffd\nI ate has passed a bill which prohibits the\nj creation of further religious establishments in the country until a revision of\n1 the Concordat, with the Vatican, is\n' accomplished.\n(Special to the Optimist)\nWashington, Nov. 8.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIt is announced\nby Secretary of the Navy Meyer that\ntwo   new   naval  drydocks   will   be  established on the Pacific coast, probably\nPub. October 1.\nELLA NOULE. Locator\nO. W. lUfuae, Agsnt\nSkeena Lsnd DUtrict\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDUtrict ot Cassiar\nTske noUce thst George Lewis of Seattle, Wash.,\nU.  S.   A.,   oecupstion  money  loaner,  Inlands  to\nspply  for permission  11  purchsss  the following\ndescribed lsnds:\nCommencing st a post plsnted sbout 70 chsins\nwsst ot s point on ths Kinskooch River shout (our\nmiles form Its confluence with ths Nsss River, said\npost being st the south-east eornsr thereof, thenee\nI north SO chsins, thence west 80 chsins, thenca\nI south 80 ehslns. thence east SO chsins to point of\nSksens Lsnd DUtrict\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDUtnct of Queen Chsrlotte : comm-ncsment snd conUining 610 seres, more or\nlalanda ' Uav\nNoUco ia  hereby  given  thst thirty  dsys after   DaU Aug. 17, 1910. GEORGE LEWIS\ndata I InUnd U spply U the Chief Commissioner   Pub. Sept. 7 John Dyhhsvn. Agant\nof Lsnds snd Works for s license to*prospect for\ncoal   and   petroleum   on   the   following   deacribed .\n\"Commencing at a post planted two miles south '; T.t.\"n;a\ufffd\ufffd\"tlu.^C^l^el^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdrfo?',oi,U-\nof Ells Noble's cosfspplicalion No. 8 Shingle wT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffds .^\"\/\"\"JFJ^on^uTn*f\" * - ****\nHay.  Moresby Islsnd. snd msrked \"Ells Noble'.   Was'u. I_   ^A-p^Ps'ionplumUT. Intends to\nspply  for  permUsion  to  purchse  the   following\nRupert Marine Iron Works\n-AND-\nSupply Company, Limited\nHAYS  CREEK\nJ\". 0. BOX 515    -    PRINCE RUPERT\nMillionaire   I.  Acquitted\nNew York, Nov. 7.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd(Special)\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEdward Rosenhaimer, the millionaire, the\nfirst man to be tried on a charge of murder for an automobile accident, in which\na girl was killed, was acquitted this\nmorning.\nS.   W.  Corner,\"  thence running east   80  chsins.   ~,Snh^\\JZl.\nthence  north  80 chains,  thonce weat  80  chsins,       r'\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd '\"\ufffd\ufffd,'., \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,       ,i ,.   i .l\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd..i -n   aha.\nthenccutb 80 chain, to point of commencement.   ^T.'^nt'on* K? ftrlt\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd%\ufffd\ufffd. .bo\"\nLocated thU 17 day of l***t**a*l\ufffd\ufffdyat- , four gjm f^ ilM confluence with the Naas  River.\nd k n*.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdk\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. i n  w   iiafol.THS\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   m,i Post being  st the south-west  corner thereof.\nPub. October 1. O. W. Refuse  Agent   tn.nwnorth go chsins, thenc. east 80 chsins. thenca\nsouth 80 chsins, thence west 80 chsina lo point of\ncommencement and ConUining 640 acres, more or\nQueen    CharlotU    Islsnds    DUtrict\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDUtrict   of   |\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,.\n8ksana D.u Aug. 17. 1910. CHAS. SARRA7.0N\nnear   to   San   Francisco,   and   that   work       Take notice that I, WlUon Gowing of Vsncouver,    Pub. Sept, 7. John Dybhsvn. Agent\n, ' ! oecupstion  prospector,  mund  to spply  for  per-\non them will Start soon. mission to prospect for cosl snd petroleum on 640\n .  , \"^\"L1\"!!!,. ., . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,_. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-k _... Skeens Und DUtrict  -District of Csaslsi\n|     Commencing yt a port planudone-fourth mils      Take JJ,*- lhM j\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-ph  ,,onni.|ly of jS^\nSENSITIVE WORKMEN\nwest   side   nf   lions   River,   covering  Section   22\nTownship 4,  thsnee  SO  chsins,  west,  thence    80\nDislike   Publicity   of   the   City   Hall\n\"Want Work Sheet\"\nMAILS FOR THE SKEENA\nWitih.,  U.  S.  A.,  occupeation lahorcr,  int-pridr-  to\nchain, south, thence 80 chain, eart. thence 80 'J^J^.r.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdplH'mi\"\"lon l\ufffd\ufffd purchMe ,he ******\nchsins W point of commencement ConUining 610 CommPn(.in|t'.t , ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd., p|,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1K) ,lK)ut lso rn.in,\nacres, more or less. mttmma .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdiiojlMr-    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdt of a  point on  the  Kinskooch   lllver,  about\nST wcti\ufffd\ufffd1, WILSON uowino  (our mltai t>nm m m^mSm wilh ,hc N.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd P4_\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"' \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,B\" said post being st the Kuth^aurt corniT thereof,\n' thence  north   HO  chsina,  thenca wsst  80 chains,\nit 80   '\nnlsg i\nJOSEPH DONNELLY\nJohn Dyhhsvn, Agent\nSome  working  men   who  want  em- r^Mn Ch^lotu w.nda Und District-District o Ig^,,^ l^lSSmStitlfaZ\n| ployment apparently don't like to have     ^ nolire thll,_ ^Son\ufffd\ufffdGowllv of v.,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd, i \"J\"\" \">\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ntheir names displayed on the list which occupsUon prospector, inund  u spply for per- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd... SS 7 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n, ..     *_J. ,       _..      \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd mission  to prospect  for cosl snd  petroleum  on     \"\"' '^,\"'   '\n1 hangs  on  the  wall  at  the  City  Hall. 640 seres of lsnd: \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nI Aid.   Hilditch   espoused   the  cause  of Stn-STraX .W[?cgS?-^.e^^\nHAYNOR BROS.\nUndertakers\nCorner Third Ave. and   Sixth   St.\nOld German Lager\nSchlitz Lager\n\"MM sre the beverages that\nmake health, strength and hap-\nP'\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd your lot. Prices are\nv,ry reasonable and your or-\nw Will receive prompt atten-\nSkoena Und DUtrict    DUtrict ol Cassiar\nthese    sensitive    ones    at    last    night's Males A. Oowaf'. Coal License No.;bo,oo\\wlng       Tskei notice thst Frank Rjshop of S.'sttle. Wssh.\nineoc    ncnou..vc    oura    \ufffd\ufffdi \ufffd\ufffd        b s.^Uon 29,  Township  4,  thonce 80 chsina esst,    occupation Isborer, intends U. spply for iMTinUsion\ncouncil.      He   suggested    that    the   City thence  80  chains  north,  thsnee  80  chsins  west,   to purchase the lollowing described lands:\n i__  .    0L\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi,i    .,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    .u.    lla\ufffd\ufffd       Tu\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd thence   80    chains   to   point   of  commencement.       Commennng at a poat planted alwut 140 chsina\nenginner   Should    Keep    the    list.       I lie JJ^atetal 4\ufffd\ufffd0 seres more or less MM \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   west of \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd point on ths Kinskooch River. sl\ufffd\ufffdut five\ncltV  Clerk  approved  of  this  idea,  as  he Dated Oct. 11. WIO. WILSON GOWINO   mUeafmrn iu conlluence with the Naas River iodd\ntity   Lieie.  \ufffd\ufffdi>piw.cu  oi   .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>  '\ufffd\ufffd\"i  \"^  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>- p^h. Oct. 18. | post being st the south^\ufffd\ufffdst corner thereof, thenca\nhad to send the men to the city engineer north so chsins. tbence west so chsins thence south\n., ,   .,.,,.    ,       ., . ,,   ,. i 80 chsins, tbence taut R0 chsina to point of com-\n, anyway.    Aid. Hilditch said he WOUlan t i | mencement and conUining 64(1 acna. more or lass.\nlip   river   points.     Harney   goes _ only M | ^ ^ own nump tQ appear Qn tho cjty   Quean Chsrlotte Uan.UUnd DUtrict-DUtrict of   Date Aug. 17, .910. ruVM-   ,:.   H,,\ufffd\ufffd\nHall wall Tske notice thst I, Wilson (lowing ot Vancouver\n1 occupation prospector, InUnd lo apply for    per- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nFir.t Start of the Sea.on in Canoe to\nCarry Mail Up River\nBarney   Mulvaney  started   out   this\nmorning in a canoe with the mail for\nfar as Port Kssington and there his\npartner takes hold, the ma* contract\nbeing  held  by  Beirnes  and   Mulvaney llent|me|lt when  hp said no man need\nJohn Dybhsvn, Agsnt\nAid.   Nlldell  expressed   a  good   honest | mission   to   pnn|>ccl   for   coal  and   petroluom   on i\n640 acres nf land:\nCommencing at  a  post  plsnted  one snd  nne-\n., i     ....       a    ...     blu   .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.,;!    '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"'    \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"    \"\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     '      l ommencing  at  a  post  pismen   one  an.i   one-        lake notice tnat ( harlcs I\nthe same as  last  year.     A   weeKiy  mail   . , ,     . \\wv[ne |,jh  name appear ; fourth mile form Slau Chuck creek north, adjoinlne   Waah., II. S. A\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd occupation\nis  called   for  and   the  next   mail  will  _e 7Z , ......\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.  ...\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.t'     ir  k teJ^^.tfg^&A'Sgra'g'g *JKSJf^9\"\ufffd\ufffdmSi \"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd pu\nj is called for and the next mail will ^ ^.^ of doJnK honegt work If\n, probably leave on Monday. The next hp hjmgelf wanted work> he sa,d hc,d\n; after that will be on Sunday, and on ; ^ p8me wherp j(. cou,d be Men and\nthat day for the balance of the HMOtl. L,d ^ \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd better chance of \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdetting\n' the object  being  to save  all   possible |      .\nti\"n.\nAll   varieties  of\nWines and Liquors\n\"!\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"' kept in stock.\nSutherland & Maynard\nn  \"A.VDLBM FOR   NORTHERN   B. C.\nPHONE 123\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Avenue, Near McBride\ntime between thc delivery of the mail\nhere and it? delivery to its destination.\nFrom  Port  Essington  Beirnes  takes  Z^^\nthe mail to Kitselas, and from there it\nwill be taken in canoes as long as possible to Hazelton and later by dog team.\nPossibly   as   Aid.   Barrow   suggested\nthe keeping of two lists may solve the\nCzar Visit. With Kaiser\nPotsdam, Nov. 7.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd(Special)\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe Em-\n30. Township 4, Ihence 80 chsins weat, Ihence 80\ncnains north, thence 80 chsins esst, thence 80\nchsins to point of commencement, cnnUlninr 640\nacres more or less.\nDsted Oct. II, 1910. 3 WILSON OOWINO\nPub. Oct. 18\nQueen ChsrlotU Islsnds Und District    DUtrict of\nSkoena\nTake notice that I, Wilson I lowing of Vsncouver,\noecupstion prospector, InUnd to spply for per-\ninii.inn to prospect for cosl snd petroleum on 640\nacres of land:\nCommencing at a post plsnted 8 quarter of a\nmile from SleU Chuck creek, west, sdjoinng A\nCowing's Cost License No. 00, covering Section 19,\nTownship 4,  thence  80  chsins  north,   thonce   80\nHilditch Favor. Day Labor\nAid. Hilditch was after S. P. Mc-\nMordie again last night about the\nsewer work he is doing now for the city.\nAid. Hilditch would much rather see\nit done by day labor, under city supervision, he said. Aid. Lynch told him\nthat if he could find a sewer foreman\nthe city engineer was on the lookout\nfor one. S. P. McMordie wasn't any\ntoo anxious for that bit of sewer work.\nThe matter remains in the hands of the\nstreets committee.\nperor     Nicholas,     With     Sasonoff,     the I chsins  west,  thence  SO  chsina south,  thence  80\ni fl      . ,. .., 19 t        ,1 chains to point ot commencement, conUining 640\nI Russian   minister  of  foreign  affairs,  is\nhere on a visit to Emperor William.\nLAND  PURCHASE NOTICE\nSkeens Ui.d DUtrict\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDistrict of Coaat\nTake  notice thnt  I,   Thomas   Dunn  of  Prince\nKupert, occupation morchsnt, intend to spply tor\nfterniissinn   to   purchaso   the   following   described\nsnds:\nCommencing at a post planted on the west bsnk\nof Kyiox River, thenco running west 20 chsins,\nthonce north 80 chsins, thence esst 20 chsins,\nthence south 80 chsins to place of commencement,\nsnd conUining 160 acres more or leas; post msrked\n\"T. D.'s SE. Corner.\"\nDsU Aug. 2S, 1910    THOMAS  DUNN. I.ocstor\nPub. Sept. 7. J. K. Itstomsn, Agent\nseres more or loss.\nDsted Oct. 11, 1910.\nPub. Oct. 18.\nWILSON COWING\nQueen CharlotU lalsnds Land DUtrict\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDUtrict    f\nSkeena\nTako notice that I, Wison Cowing of Vsncouver,\noccupaton pronpector, inUnd to apply for permission to prospect for coal and petroleum on 610\nacres of land:\nCommencing at a poet planted a quarter of a\nmile from SI.U Chuck crook, wnt and adjoining\nA. Gowing's Coal License No 00, covering Section\n18, Township 4, thence 80 chains south, thenco 80\nchsins esst, thenco 80 chains north, thence 80\nchains to point of commencement, conUining 640\nacres more or less.\nDsted Oct. 11, 1910. WILSON GOWING\nOct. 18. Pub.\nSkssns Und  DUtrict\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDiatrict of Caasiar\nTake notice that Charles M   Ussier of SeatUe,\nbarrister, inUnds to\npurchsse  tbe  following\ndescribed Isnds:\nCommencing st s post plsnted shout 60 chsins\nwest*of s point on the Kinskooch River, sbout six\nmiles from iu confluence with the Naas River, aaid\npost being at the south-west corner thereof, thenca\nnorth 80 chsins, thence east 80 chsins, tbence south\n80 chsina, thence west 80 chsins to point of commencement snd contsining 640 ncres, more or less.\nDste Aug. 18, 1910 CHARLES M. I1AXTER\nPuh. Sept. 7. John Dyhhavn  Agent\nSkeena Und District -District ol Cnast\nTake noUce that George R.  Putman of Prince\nRupert, oecupstion timekeeper, intends to spply\nfor permission to purchsse lhe following described\nIsnds:-\nCornmencing st s post plsnted st the south\neast cornpr of lot 1712; ihence south 40 chains,\nthence west 80 chnins, thenco north 41) chains,\nthence east 80 chsins to point of commencement,\nconUining 1120 seres more or less.\nDste September 6,  1910. Gen.  It.  Putmsn.\nPuh. Sept. 20.\nSkeena  Land   Diatrict\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDistrict of  Hanks  Islsnd\nTake notice that E. R. lAomU of Barry, Minn.,\noccupation fsrmer, intends to apply for permission\nto purchsse thc following doscribed laniU:\nCommencing at s post plsnted sbout six miles\neast and one milo north from the mouth of so\nInlet, which nofnt Is sbout Un mile, south and two\nmiles west from End Hill, Hanks Island, thence\nesst 80 chains, thence south 80 chains, thence wsst\n80 chsins, thence north 80 chains to point ot\ncommencement.\nDsted Sept. 7, 1910. E.  R.  LOOMIS\nPub Oct. 11. B. L. Tingley, Agant THE  PRINCE   RUPERT   OPTIMIST\nThe Westholme Lumber Co.\nLIMITED\nFirst Avenue Telephone 186\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd WE   HANDLE   EVERYTHING IN \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nLUMBER\nPLASTER\nAT $17 PER TON,   DELIVERED\nLIME\nAT $2.40 PER BARREL,   DELIVERED\nCOAL\nJ. R. BEATTY\nCARTAGE and STORAGE\nLARGE FEED STABLE\n....IN CONNECTION ...\nSpecial Attention Paid lo Moving\nOFFICE:    -    THIRD AVE.\nWITH NICKERSON & ROERIG\nPhone No. 1\nCITY SCAVENGING\nHI DEAL\nCall 'Phone 18 Provision House\nOrders Promptly\nAttended   to.\nOffice: 6th Ave. and Fulton St.\nThird Ave.    Next Sixth St.\nPHONE  190\nWe Have Moved\nTO OUR NEW OFFICE\nIN   THE\nHelgerson Building\n6th STREET\nUnion Transfer & Storage Co. Ltd.\nAgents for Imperial Oil Company\nTelephone 36\nB.C. BAKERY\nIf you want that sweet, nutty flavored\nBREAD   try  our  FRENCH-the kind\nthat pleases.\nThird Aye., between 7th and   8th   Su.\nA large shipment of Diamond C Bacon\nwith the sanitary covering has\narrived.\nGreen Tomatoes  4c lb.\nFancy Eating Apples  2.25 box\nNew Idaho Honey  30c lb.\nFancy N. Y. Concords  60c basket\nHave a look at our Heinz 57 Varitiesof\nPure Food Products.\nA full line of Cheese in stock.\nWE DELIVER\nAlso remember our Fresh\n\"C\"   Stamped    Eggs    at\n70 cents a Doz.\nLAND PURCHASE NOTICE\nSk\ufffd\ufffd-?n\ufffd\ufffd Und District Dirnn of Cot* Kane* 5\nTake notice that Georft Owen Jokniton of\nMelbourne, Aim., occupation painter, intenda to\napply (or penniaaon to purchaae the following\ndenrribed landa:\nCommencinK *t a poat planted one mile up\nEatrewt River on eaat bank, thence eaat 40 ehaina,\nthence north 80 ehaina, thenee Weat 60 ehaina,\nmore or lea to tbe bank of Extrewa River, thence\nalong bank of Kirrewi River aouth to point of\ncommencement, containing 840 acrea more or leas.\nGEORGE OWEN JOHNSTON\nDated Sept. 12, 1910.\nPub. Oct. 17. A. H. Johnaton, Agent\nSkeena Land Diatrict    Diatrict of Coaat Range 5\nTake notice that Ernestine M. Grable, married\nwoman of San  Fn.na.co,  V. S.   A., occupation\nma-wenae, intenda to apply for permiaaion to pur- i\nchaae the following deacribed Unda:\nCommencing at a poat planted on the aouth aide\nof the G. T. P. right-of-way 78 1-2 milea from !\nPrince Rupert on the north lide of the Skeena\nRiver, thence aouth 20 ehaina more or leaa to the\nbank of the Skeena River, thence 80 ehaina more or\nleaa along the bank nf the Skeena River In a northwesterly direction to the G. T. P. right-of way,\nthence 60 ehaina more or tea* in an easterly direction along the G. T. P. right-of-way to the point\nof commencement and containing 120 acrea, more\nor leaa.\nDated Sept. 12. 1910.  ERNESTINE M. GRABLE\nPub. Oct. 17. A. H. Johnston, Agent\nSkeana Und Diatrict\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDiatrict of Coaat Range 6\nTake notice that Brent U. Grable of San Fran-\ncicos. U. S. A., occupation accountant, intends to\napply for permission to purchaae the following\ndescribed landa:\nCommencing at a post planted on the south aide\nof the G. T. P. right-of-way mils 78 1-2 from Prince\nRupert on the north aids of the Skeena River, thence\naouth 20 ehaina more or lesa to the bank of the Skeena Riverth\ufffd\ufffdnce 80 ehaina mora or leaa along the\nbank of tho Skeana River In a northeasterly direction to the G. T. P. right-of-way, thence 60\nehaina more or lean along the G T. P right-of-way\nIn a waste.ly direction to the point of commencement and containing 120 acrea, more or less.\nDated Sept 12, 1910. BRENT  U.   GRABLE\nPub. Oct. 17. A. H. Johnaton. Agent\nSkeana Land Diatrict\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDiatrict of Coaat Rang* 6\nTake notice that Arthur Henry Johnaton of\nPrinoa Rupert, occupation builder, intends to apply\nfor permiaaion to purchaae the followng described\nlands:\nCommencing at a post planted 20 ehaina east of\n74 mile poat on the G. T. P. right-of-way on north\naide of same and Skeena River, thenee 80 chains\nnorth, thence 80 ehaina weat, thenee 80 chains\nsouth to G. T. P. right-of-way, thenoe 80 chains\neast along G. T. P. right-of-way to point of commencement and containing 640 sores more or less.\nDated Sept. 12, 1910.\nARTHUR    HENRY  JOHNSTON\nPub. Oct. 17.\nPHENIX THEATRE\nMOVING PICTURE\nVAUDEVILLE\nShows Continuous From 6.30\nto   10.30 p.m.  Every Day.\nMONDAY   AND   TUESDAY\nLove of Lady\nBeautiful Drama Full or l.if*\nCardboard Baby\nGood l.ivrly Comic\nPopular Price\n15c\nA. HEINEY. Maaaiar\nTea   FUcsstIm.   Picture   Show\nOnly Ileus* with Hot and Cold water In rv.r> room\nBeat r'urnl.hsd Hotel in City\nCorner Firth and Fraser St.\nSAVOY HOTEL\nA. J. Prudhomme, Prop.\nAmerican and European plan. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDining Room Service unsurpassed. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Best Brandi of Liquors and Ctgara.\nINSERT YOUR LAND PURCHASE\nNOTICES IN THE\nOPTIMIST\nSMOKING CHIMNEYS\nCURED\nSTOVE PIPES      ELBOWS\nCRUISER   RAINBOW'S FIRST WORK\nTO PROTECT   PACIFIC'S  FISHERIES\nf\nI\nl\nm N ,,\ufffd\ufffd ,, .i I, i. ,i '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd <\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\"*\"*\" '\nIn all probability the people of Prince\nRupert will have the pleasure of seeing\nthe first of the Canadian naval fleet to\nreach the Pacific coast at a very early\ndate, as the Canadian cruiser Rainbow,\nwhich reached Esquimau from England\non Sunday, is to protect this coast from\nthe American fishery poachers as an\nimportant part of her work. The fisheries\nof British Columbia are estimated to be\nworth some twenty-five millions annually, and with the present protection\nafforded by the government against the\ndepredations of poachers the latter\nannually obtain many million dollars\nworth of fish.\nThat better protection was needed is\nshown by an article written by Britton B.\nCooke, the representative of the Toronto Daily Star who accompanied Sir\nWilfrid Laurier on his recent visit to\nPrince Rupert. He hits the Government steamer Quadra, which is well\nknown in this harbor, pretty hard, but\nnot without some truth. In the course\nof this article he writes:\nShe looks like a man-eater, but then\nshe can do only the eight knots, and\nthat is the first of the tragedy. It is\nbreaking an honest skipper's heart.\nThe engineer is risking wrecking his\nboilers and his soul every time she tries\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdand cannot. And the gunner mopes\nover her one little brass cannon; pets\nher and polishes her and oils her with\nsewing machine oil till the crew is af\n~7\nThey are no small fry, these British Columbia poaching vessels, but\nare agents of a powerful corporation\nin the land of corporations, the United\nStates. They obey the masters of the\nFish Trust. The Fish Trust has made\nthem swift and has given them the\nMarconi machine, by which one warns\nthe other of the police boat's approach,\nand with a showing of white petticoats\nunder the stern and the wheel hard over,\nthey get out of it, swiftly, for the open\nsea, while the Canadian ship drops tears\nfrom her nose as she sloshes into the sea.\nProbably one day she discovers a\npoacher hovering near the forbidden\nline. She watches him, scouts all his\nmovements, and he, leading her on\nprobably for the whole day, sends\nribald messages by his wireless to the\nother poachers: \"Have got the old\nbattleship watching me.   Fish like !\"\nWhereupon the other poachers fish\nwith a will, and haul out the honest\nCanadian halibut to be taken to Seattle\nand fried by Yankee housewives in New\nEngland.\nAnd this is the final cruelty of the\nthing.\nOne day in the narrow channel between two islands, the \"battleship\" saw\na poacher sneaking down the lane. It\nwas in indisputable Canadian waters,\nnot three miles wide.\nSkipper passed the word to the engineer;    engineer   swore   lovingly,   and\nraid he may develop a mania and lose the gunner produced his sewing machine\nhis Witt some day. But it is of no|0'| and '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdted th* -'-tie old cannon to\navail to any one of them.   It is the trag- i \"h^\ufffd\ufffdr uf:'\nedy of the officers, the tragedy of the|    The   skippers    b.noculars    absorbed\nof  the  whole  British   Columbia | everything.    Not a man on the dock\nj of the poachers.    Poacher running low\nin the water with Canadian halibut.\nStove   Pipes   put  up,\nCleaned and Repaired.\nFurnaces  put in  and   Repaired\nDon't throw  away  the old stove until you have seen us.   We repair\nand make as good as new.\nOnly First Class Tin Shop in City\nPrmce rupert sheet metal workS\nPhone 108\n2nd At*.\nship,\ncoast.\nShe is only wood, but she has a\nlovely bow, with an aggressive cutwater like the lower three-fourths of\nthe letter \"S\". Her funnel sits low\nand has a rakish slant. Her foremast\ngives her a grave bold front. Her decks\nare white as holy-stone can\nmake them, and they have painted her\na dull steel grey, so as to help poachers\nin Canadian waters, and she do, with\nonly eight knots an hour, when the\nPacific comes rampaging across Queen\nCharlotte Sound, and half a hundred of\nthe sneaking beggars are forever sailing\nrings round her and making unholy\nAmerican jokes about her by their\nwireless equipment? They say she\n\"waddles\" and call her \"The Battleship\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwhich is a galling insult for a\nrespectable vessel of the Department of\nMarine and Fisheries, and, besides, she\nhas not any wireless and she simply\ncan't help her eight knots an hour.\nThe half a hundred are American\npoachers in Canadian waters and she\nis the Government's representative, stationed outside Prince Rupert to catch\nthe sinners. Last year the halibut\ncatch in the Canadian Islands and off\nthe coast was 35,000,000 pounds, and\nout of that 26,000,000 are alleged to\nhave been taken by the American poach-\nres, the fellows the Government vessel is\nset to catch. But she can't catch them,\nand she knows it, and the whole coast\nknows it, and the poachers know it, and\nthat is where the shame comes in. It\nwould break the heart of any ship.\nDay after day she does her best.\nThe skipper takes her, sneaking, catlike, into unexpected places on the\nhunt for poachers. The chief engineer polishes her engines and fills the\noil nips; and he talks violence to the\nstokers till they love him. The gunner, for practice, draws beads on imaginary poachers, and rubs the cannon down with chamois. But it counts\nfor nothing. For they only see the\nheels of the quarry beating out beyond the three-mile limit which the\nInternational law allows, and where\nthey can't be touched. It is written\nin the book of Vancouver, where she\nis registered, that she can do so many\nknots and no more, while the poachers\nare good for about twice as much, and\ncan warn one another by wireless,   .\n\"Fire!\" he whispered to the gunner, and\nthe little old brass gun coughed a bit of\nlead across the American bows.\nNever a bit of heed did the Yankee\nshow; never turned an eyelash.\nSkipper got red about the ears at\nthat insolence.\n\"Fire again,\" says he, after a due\npause, \"and get his mast this time.\n\"Aye, aye sir,\" said the gunner and he\nprepared.\nDown below the engineer was petting each valve and coaxing each bit\nof straining steel. The stokers heaved,\nthe boilers hummed, and the shaft\ntook the last ounce of expansion out of\nthe steam till the thrustcollar came near\ngetting too hot, and the engineer opened\na little more cooling water on her and\nlistened hoplessely. He knew by the\nvalves that she was doing her eight\nand no more. Outside her skin he\ncould hear the Pacific sloshing past at the\nsame old gait.\nAbove, the gunner calculated his\ndistance and the wind. He allowed\nfor the speed of two vessels and the\npitch, and then he fired. And the\npoacher's foremast pitched over the\nside.      s>\nShe heaved to, humbled suddenly.\nHer captain and her cook stuck their\nheads out and threw up their sneaking hands, so to speak, for mercy.\nAnd they received it. That was\nwhat almost finished the tragedy. For\nit cost over $600 to tow her and her\nheavy cargo to Vancouver and carry\nout ths departmental routine and\nin the end the poacher paid\na fine of about $100.\nOf course there is an explanation\nbut that does not save the captain\nor the engineer or the gunner. They\nnever say a word. They never tell.\nOnly the dreary monotony of the departmental reports officially confirms\nthe story. But the Government knows\nthat a question of international law\nhangs in abeyance and that It would\nnot be wise, by the imposition of drastic\nmeasures on the poachers, to bring\nmatters to an undiplomatic crisis. They\nhave created the Canadian navy, and\nthe Rainbow and her aids will do what\nthe present vessel just now cannot do\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\noverawe the poachers.   But It is hard\nProfessional Cards\nW. L. BARKER\nArchitect\nSecond avenue and Third street\nOver Westenhaver Broi.' Office.\nDR. W. BARRATT CLAYTON?\nDentist\nWestenhaver Block, cnr. Second An\nPhonb Green \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nand Sixth st.\nMUNRO  A   1.A1I.KY\nArchitects,\nStork Building. Second Avenue.\nALFRED CARSS,        c. y, BENNETT I L\nor British Columbia ,lf i!C..n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdh\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.Su.\nand Manitoba Bars. ksirl...,,, arid U.\nIx'rta liar..\nCARSS & BENNETT\nBarristers, Notaries, Etc.\nOffice\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdExchange block, corner Thinl . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd . ui\nSixth street. I'rinc- Runrl     | (T\nWM. S. HALL. L.D S\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd U.D.S.\nDentist.\nCrown and Bridge Work \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Specialty.\nAll dental operation, skilfully tret*). ,,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd',.)\nlocal anasthetica silnimist,'!,-,! for tht |>amWia>\ntraction of teeth. OoMulUtkal free. Officer If\nand 20 Alder Block. Prince Rupert, ii-ij\nLUCAS C& GRANT\n.Civil inn! Mining ftngtnMri UkdSarnyvC\nReports,   Plans.   BpfOtttttioiU,  ettlMttl\nWharf ('onstructior, Kir,\nOffice: -2nd Ave., near First Street\nP. O. Box 82 PRINCE RUPERT\nPrince Rupert Lodge, IMF.\nMeets in the Helgerson Block\nEvery Tuesday Evening\nAll  members of the order in the city\nare requested to visit the lodge.\nC. V. BENNETT,R&\nG.   W.   A KNOTT. Set\nNew Knox Hotel\nARTAUD & BE8NER\nproprietors\nThe New Knox Hotel is run on to\nEuropean plan First-class service U\nthe latest modern improvements.\nTHE BAR keeps only the best brwdi\nof liquors and cigars.\nTHE CAFE is open from MKJJ\nto 8 p. m. Excellent cuisine: tirst-cm\nservice.\nBEDS 50c AND UP\nFirst Avenue. Prince ROT*\nCos.*'\nGRAND HOTI\nJ.   GOODMAN,   Proprietor\nSpring Beds 86c.\"    Roomi Mfc\nand    $1.00.      BMl   beds and\nroom, in town for tbl money.\nFIRST AVE. AND SEVENTH STREET\nPrince Rupert. B.C.        ''\n>0 CARTAGE a*.\nST0RAGE\nG. T. P. Transfer Agents\n[Orders promptly filled.   W\nOFFICE-H. B. Rochester. OaatWat\nfhcsnaV\nP. O. BOX 230\nPHONE*\nF. W. HART\nHouse Furnishings Compl* |\nnm*m FURNITURE^\non the little ship, for j\ufffd\ufffdJ *  \"\nand wants to do her\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* j.  ^ ^i\ncan any ship when her   pip \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi\ngood  for eight knots U   \ufffd\ufffd   ^l\ndare not shoot as he wo-ld 1 \ufffd\ufffd I\non account of internal tonal *\ufffd\ufffd\naaaal aSaa\natkri. T H B   PRINCE RUPERT   OPTIMIST\n-U J ti*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdiV VaTf -**\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd f I * *l\"' f I \" 1*'l\" ft ~ VtQ\nJUST   A   FEW==\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nLots\nBlock\nSection\nPrice\nland  2\n5\n1\n$8000\n21\n12\n1\n9500\n20 and 21\n27\n1\n7500\n17 and 18\n30\n1\n10,000\n63 and 64\n34\n1\n12,500\n13 and 14\n5\n5\n2150\n15 and 16\n45\n5\n1050\nland  2\n3\n6\n3000\n7\n49\n7\n400\n27 and 28\n28\n8\n750\nC. D. RAND, Broker\nmmmmmmP*&*Mwmtmmm,llm*mm0m1mt^\n<sav^a^afs\/s\/VvyVV\ufffd\ufffdV^^*\ufffd\ufffd*s*^*l*l'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdl* *r* \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd**i\ufffd\ufffd*i*ia\ufffd\ufffd*>-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffdi*rS*i-V\ufffd\ufffdf\ufffd\ufffdrVi\nLOTS \ufffd\ufffd25 SALE\nin\nEllison and\nPrince Rupert\n2 Lots, Block 31, Section 1, Fraser Street\nto settle Estate.\nHOUSES, STORES, OFFICES TO RENT\nMONEY TO LOAN\nC. D. NEWTON\nNotary Public\nREAL ESTATE\nLOOK INTO THESE\nLota 26 and 27 Block 7 Section 6\n$2300 Cash $835\nBalance  6,   12 and  18 Monthe.\nLots 23 and 24 Block 48 Section 8\n$525 Cash $200\nBalance  6 and  12 Montha.\nLot 3 Block 24 Section 7\n$525 Cash $300\nF. B. Deacon\nOpen Evenings\nSIXTH ST.\nJULIUS LEVY\nJobber of High-grade Havana Cigars\nTobaccos Wholesale and Retail\nAdvertise in The Optimist\n-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd+\nCHIPS FROM THE\n.humorists!\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* sssa..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffdt SaasaBaSI SaaasSBavaas, aaaa \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd**\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nBennera\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThat's the second time you\nhave used the phrase \"aching void.\" I\nwish you would tell me how a void can\nache.\nJenners\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEasiest thing on earth; don't\nyou sometimes have a headache?\nmark\nNurse--What's  that  dirty\nyour leg, Master Frank?\nPrank\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHarold kicked me.\nNuree\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWell, go at once and waBh it\noff.\nFrank\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWhy?   It wasn't me what did\nit.\n\"Ralph,\" said a mother to her seven-\nyear-old boy, \"you must not interrupt\nme when I am talking with ladies. You\nmust wait till I stop. Then you can\ntalk.\"\n\"But you never stop,\" said the boy.\nOld Gent\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHave you a vanishing ink\nthat disappears quickly?\nClerk\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdYes, sir. Going to make sure\nof no breach-of-promise suit?\nOld Gent\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOh, no, going to give my\ndaughter a check for a hundred thousand\nas a wedding present.\n\"I'm afraid,\" said the critical friend,\n\"that you will never be able to make\nanything out of Miss Screecher's voice.\"\n\"That's all you know about it,\" retorted the vocal instructor. \"Why, I've\nmade over $200 out of it already.\"\n\"Say, Mayme, did you ever have any\nturtle soup?\" asked the rawboned youth\nof the girl beside him.\n\"No,\" admitted the maiden; \"but,\"\nadded she, with the conscious dignity of\none who has not been lacking in social\nexperiences, \"I've been where it was.\"\nTHE CHAVEZ EXPLOIT\nSome time ago a dauntless soul went\nsoaring o'er the snowclad Alps, and folk\nwho saw his pinions roll had tingling\nfeelings in their scalps. He landed on\nthe other side upon a cruel heap of\nstones; and shortly after that he died,\na poor bruised mass of broken bones.\nHerioc soul! Had I the fire of Austin,\nI his praise would sing! But when I\nneed it, my old lyre is sure to have a\nbusted string. To tell the truth, that\nbrave man's deed does not enthuse me\nworth a dam; I'd rather write a humble\nacreed about the man who paints the\nbarn. A man may fly to beat the Dutch,\nacross the Alps, across the sea, and not\naccomplish half as much as some plain\nguy who plants a tree. Some aviator\nrisks his neck, defying gravitation's\nrules: but let me praise the human\nwreck who hitchea up a span of mules.\nFor some gaudy men aad gaudy deeds\nthe bards will always twang their lyres,\nbut who'll supply the soulful needs of\nthose who light the kitchen fires?\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWalt Ma*o n.\nHARCOUT'S APPOINTMENT\nSubject  to Graat  Criticism  by   th*\nPolitical Press of England\n(Special to the Optimist)\nLondon, Nov. 7.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHarcout's appointment as secretary of state for thc colonies.\nThe Conservative papers criticise the\nappointment because of Harcout's opposition to colonial preference, while\nshe Liberal press recognizes his many\ngood ()' iities without any distinct\npraise of his fitness for the position to\nwhich eh has been promoted.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBIHMI\nGood Real Estate Buys\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\nI have decided to place on the market for immediate sale the following valuable lots,\nwhich will pay the purchaser big profits\nwithin  a year.\nLots 21, 22, 23, 24,\nBlock il.\nSec. 7\n\"   30, 32,\n\"   21,\n\"  7\n\"  18, 19,\n\"   23,\n\"  7\n\" 68, 69,\n\"   34,\n\"  8\n\"  11, 12,\n\"   46,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'  8\n\"  10, with a house\n\"    3.\n\"  8\n-FOR FULL PARTICULARS APPLY TO-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n* W. L. BARKER, architect S\n***} OVF.H    WF1TFNMAVFH    OFFirP m\\\nOVER  WESTENHAVER  OFFICE\nBetween 2nd and 3rd Avea.\nPHONE 89     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMH\nPrince Rupert Hardware & Supply Co. Lid.\nA complete line of Sporting Goods, Guns,\nRifles, Revolvers, Ammunition, Fishing\nTackle, Prospectors' Outfits, and General\nHardware, Kitchen and Hotel Ware\nSHERWIIN CS, WILLIAMS PAINTS\nOILS AND VARNISHES\nPrince Rupert Hardware & Supply Co.Ltd.\nTHOS. DUNN, Manager\nI'nntorium\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPioneer Cleaners\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPhone\nNo. 4. tf\nBiggest Gate Receipts Yet\nChicago, Nov. 7.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd(Special)\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe attendance at the, world's baseball series\nwas the greatest ever for the five games\nplayed, and also the gate receipts.\nSee the flickerleae motion   pictures\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nthe eilent drama\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdat tbe Phenix theatre.\nNOTICE Is hereby given thai Application will\nba mads to the Parliamsnt ot Canada, al its nest\neeasion, (or sn Act Incorporating s Company under\nthe name ol THE HRITISH Ctll.t MI1IA AND\nWHITE KIVER RAILWAY COMPANY\" with\npower lo ponstnict and opersle s line ot railway\nrunning from s point In the Province ol British\nColiimhis on the Inlernstionsl lloundsry where\naaid boundary crosses Hear Creek, s tributary\nto lbs Chilksl River, or near thereto, and thenee\nealending north-westerly towards ths Aba*\nRiver and thence through the Shskwsk Valley to\nLake Khiane and thence along this lake via ths\nOonjek Valley lo the White River and thence, il\ndesire.!, hv the most leasible route to the International Boundary between the Yukon Territory\nsnd Alssks between the sittysecond snd ality-\nlourths psrallels ot Istltude.with power to generate\nand use clectricsl snd other energy, snd to dispose\nol Ihs surplus thereof; tn construct snd opersle\ntelegrsph snd telephone lines, snd to chsrge tolls\nlor the use thereof, slso tiling the smount nf\nsecurities to be used with respect to such line,\nalso suthorirlag amslgamation with other companies, with other ususl snd customary powers.\nDATED st the City of Ottawa in the Province\nat Ontario this 20th dsy of Octo^A. OWO.\nSotitiior for USt Apptifntt\nPub. Not. 6.-*t\nLAND TURCHASE NOTICE\nSkeena Und District -District of Cout Range 6\nTask* notice that P. W. Gilbert of Seattle, Wash.,\noccupation clerk, inlands to apply for permission\nto purchase the following described lands:\n< 'mnmi'nring at a poat plsnted about 10 chains\nin a southerly direction from the N I- corner of\nLot 618, thence east 20 chains, thence south 20\nchains, thence east 20 chsina, thenre muth 60\nehaina, thef.ee w,\ufffd\ufffd,t 20 chains more or leaa to the\nrailway right-of-way, thence fallowing the railway\nright-of-way to point of commencement, containing\nabout 200 seres more or learn.\nDated Sept. 24, 1910. F. W. QILBBBT\nPub. Oct, 1. Manoell Clark, Agent\nCoast Und District -District of Skeena\nTake notice that J. W. Scott of Prince Rupert,\noccupation  merchant,  intends  to  apply   for  per-\nmismon to purchase the following described landa:\nCommandng at a poet planted one half mile\neast ot Gflbert Burrow's oorner poet, thenoe 80\nchains north, thence 80 ehaina west, thenca 80\nehaina south, thenca 80 ehaina east to point ot\ncommon cement.\nDate Aug. 9,1910. J. W. SCOTT\nPub. Sept, 16. Numa I>eroara. A get* T 11\nE   PRINCE   RUPERT    OPTIMIST\nI\nsgpX-X-JC\nI\n~X~X\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJC\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdKK\nLADIES'\nGLOVES  I\nThink this Over\nARCTIC BROTHERHOOD\nGrand Camp Officer. Elected at Annual Meeting In Vancouver\nAt the grand camp meeting of tbe\nArctic Brotherhood, held in Vancouver\nlast week the following officers were\nelected for the ensuing year: Past Grand\nArctic Chief, James W. Hill, camp\nFairbanks No. 16;  Grand Arctic Chief,\nVice-Arctic Chief, James Gaflney, camp\nNome No. 9; Grand Arctic Chaplain,\ni Sitka\nRecorder, J. M. Keller,\ncamp Skagwuy No. 1; Chief Arctic\nKeeper of the Nuggets, F. T. Salsbury,\ncamp   Dawson   No.   4;    Grand   Arctic\nALDERMEN TALK\nON ASSESSMENT\nCONTINUED PROM I'AGE 1\nthem pay their taxes from year to jl\nlike other citizens und corpomiou\nowning properties within th,. city |jmiu\nand if the city wanted land from thm\npay for it at market price.\nWant. Peace With Honor\nUp rose the \"Nestor\" of the council,\nAid. Mclntyre.    He admired the vigor\nof Aid. Lynch's opinions, but he regarded\nthe city as in a pioneer position, and\nliable   to   endure  the  hardships of i\npioneer.      I'rince   Rupert   could  not\nt Camp Cook, Frank H. Knowles, camp , afford to wait Indefinitely for i\ni Nome   No.   9;    Grand   Arctic   Trail  to be settled up.   The\n! Guide, Mike O'Connor, camp Treadwell;, terrent   to   the   inflow\n! Grand Arctic Trail Blazer, Fred Rosen-1 industries and capital.\n: berg   camp   Skagway   No.   1;    Grand j\nThere are few things in\nthe way of Ladies' Gloves\n) that we cannot now supply,\nlate additions to our stock\nin this line making it very\ncomplete.\nWhite Kid Gloves for\nevening wear, in 16\nbutton lengths.\nDress Kid Gloves.\nSuede Kid Gloves.\nSilk-lined Gloves.\nEvery dollar that you have stored away represents so much stored-re-\ntarded energy.   Do you know that these same dollars can be placed in a sound\nmining enterprise that will make you larger profits, more quickly,   more easily ..,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd, .-     ,.\nand more safely than you could possibly hope for in ordinary industrial invest-1 <*?W_M. MM* \ufffd\ufffdmP Da\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>n No.J,\nments.    To tliOBe who would employ their money where it  will  combine safety\nand profits to the greatest possible degree, the mining industry offers unrivalled\nopportunity.   There exists now a combination of conditions favorable to the in-  Bishop I . T. Howe, camp Sitka No. 6;\nvestor.   The metals are selling at high prices, some of them higher than  for a |Grand Ar<-',lr\nthird of a century.    Every known mineralized region is being explored  foot by\nfoot, and the prospector is pushing out into untried fields; never before has the\nsearch for mineral wealth been so keen   so persistent-so intelligently directed.\nThe rich discoveries in the Hazelton district are attracting widespread attention. Men of judgment and successful mining experience confidentially predict thin district will astonish the world in the 'production of mineral wealth.\nThe industry is fast moving  forward  on  the  flood  tide of  prosperity  and  a\nthorough and searching investigation will convince even the most conservative i Arctic K\ufffd\ufffd,per of the Inner Tollgate, E.\nand .skeptical of its tremendous money-making prospects, and the practically ' L Kavanagh, camp Fairbanks No. 16;\nunlimited future. t Grand Arctic Keeper of the Outer Toll-\nIt is'the duty of our citizenship to lend continued assistance to the devel- '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd gate. Homer Ii. Banta, camp Haines No.\nopment of this great mining field, and it can be done with a very selfish motive, 117; Trustees, F. Helig, Fairbanks No.\nbecause ofgthe great possible-we might say positive-returns on investment in 16; J. S. Cowan, Dawson No. 4; A. G.\nwell-selected mining shares. This involves the integrity of the management, Shoup, camp Sitka No. 6; J. S. Greene,\nthe actual and substantial merits of the company offering stock, ! camp   Dawson  No.  4;    G.   D.  Travis,\nWe have consistently urged our friends and clients  to  buy   \"Silver Cup ; camp Dawson No. 4.\nMines.\"   We believe in the management of this company  that  the   safety  of,     Portland,   Ore.,   won   the   honor   of\nthe investor's money is absolutely assured.    We believe furthermore that there : having the grand camp next year.\nis great value in the property holdings far and above the present selling price ol\nstock-looking a few months ahead we venture the opinion that Silver Cup will\nseli formally times the present price of shares.    Big profits are  immaterial  to\nyou if you do not participate in them.    Put your judgment into  action  and  secure for future profits an interest in \"Silver Cup Mines.\"\nTOO EASY  MONEY\nJ. R. Talpey Co.\nLeads to Trouble and a Long Term in\nGoal\nWool-  \ufffd\ufffd\nMining Investments\nPattullo Block\nFur-trimmed and\nlined Gloves. I\nX\nThe prices run from\n$1.5ti and up. and we\nguarantee all our gloves,\nthose found defective being\nreplaced with perfect ones.\nWHAT'S IN A NAME\nNEW SOCIETY FORMED\nYo\nung\nj TWENTY   DOLLARS   IS   OFFERED!\nFOR A GOOD ONE\nMen'.    Hebrew\nOrganized\nAssociation <\nMessrs. W. S. Ben.on and the Law-\nButler Co. Offer Prize for a Good\nName for a New Town They Are\nPromoting in Pleasant Valley.\nixx\n1 H. S. Wallace Co. ?\nPhoas 9 LIMITED\nFulton St. and 3rd Ass.\nX\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd}(~\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdX-\nX\n1\nI\nI\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdx\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdx~48.\nNOTICE\nTo Our Customers\nThese two firms have acquired a\npiece of land for townsite purposes\nin the famous Pleasant Valley (a valley\nwithin the greater Bulkley) on the line\nof the G. T. P. Railway, about thirty\nmiles east from Aldermere, and eighty-\nfive miles from Hazelton, at the junction\nof the Bulkley and Buck rivers. It\nis the natural townsite of Pleasant\nValley, which is one of the richest\nvalleys and contains some of the best\nland in the interior of British Columbia.\nThe land in the valley is all taken\nand the greater portion settled on. The\ntrail to Francois, Fraser and Olosa\nlakes runs within a mile of the townsite, I tary.\nAt a meeting held in the Mclntyre\nhall last Sunday it was decided to\norganize a Young Men's Hebrew Association in Prince Rupert, its object\nbieng for the physical, social, and\nintellectual betterment of the young\nmen of this city.\nThere are at present some forty Jews\nhere nearly all of whom attended the\nmeeting and enrolled themselves as\nmembers. Judging by their enthusiasm\nit is evident that the association will\nprove a success.\nThere are Young Men's Hebrew\nassociations in New York, Detroit,\nMontreal, Winnipeg, and Vancouver. It\nis intended to run the Prince Rupert\nassociation on simliar lines to those of\nthe Y. M. C. A. A Board of Directors\nwas elected their names being as follows:\nMr. J. Levy, president; Mr. K. Brin,\nVice-president; M. Soskin, secre-\nThe Executive Council consists of\nArmand   Parent   whose   manner   in\ncourt betokened \ufffd\ufffdn evident familiarity\nI with   the   situation,    appeared    before\ni Magistrate Carss this morning, charged\nwith having obtained $9 by false pre-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd tences.     He   admitted   it.     Magistrate\nI Carss said he had heard too many cases\nI of this sort of thing lately, and would\nimpose   a   sharp   sentence   of   twelve\nmonths.      There   were   other   charges\n! against the accused.    The next case of\nobtaining   money   by   false   pretences\nwhich   comes   before   Magistrate  Carss\nwill   probably   be   punished   with   the\nmaximum penalty including hard labor.\nFIRE IN ASYLUM\nSix  Hundred\nIn.titution\nPatient, at  Manitoba\nAll   Safely   Rescued\n(Special to the Optimist)\nBrandon, Man., Nov. 7.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe insane\nasylum of the Manitoba government\nhere was burned to the ground last\nnight, the loss being estimated at $250,-\n000. There were six hundred patients\nand all were safely rescued, only a few\nsuffering from slight injuries or exposure\nto the inclement weather.\nThe lire was traced to a woman patient who was childishly playing with\nmatches.\nNO WAR WITH PERSIA\nOn and after Dec. 1st\nCash must accompany\nall orders for Coal, or\nit will be delivered C\nO. D. only.\nWe are compelled to adopt this\nsystem the same as in vnj\ufffd\ufffdue in\nall the cities on the Coast on a\nstrictly cash basis, and. trust\nthat our customers and friends\nwill appreciate the necessity of\nthis rule in the proper spirit.\nYours for businers,\nROGERS  &   BLACK\nSteamer Senator Tonight\nThe new Pacific Coast company's boat\non the South-eastern Alaska run, the\nSenator, which takes the place of the\nCottage City, will be here this evening,\nand will have a nujmber of passengers\nfrom this port for the south.\nand will be diverted to this town. The\nsite is surrounded by the richest agricultural lands, as well as coal lands, is\nonly five miles from the famous Barrett\nRanch, conceded one of the best in\nBritish Columbia. Engineers and surveyors are now on the ground planning\nthe site, and the above firms anticipate\nputting the lots on the market by January 1st. They have not, however,\nquite decided on a name for the town,\nand believing thoroughly in the old\nadage that \"everything's in a name\"\nare going to offer a prize of Twenty\nDollars ($20.00) in Gold, for the most\nsuitable and appropriate name for\ntheir new town.\nConditions are as follows: Contest\nopen to the world. The name must be\none word, not to exceed ten letters, and\na reason given why the contestant\nconsiders it an appropriate name. The\ncontest closes on Friday, November\n26th, at six o'clock p.m.\nAddress all communications to either\nW. S. Benson, or the Law-Butler Co.,\nPrince Rupert, B. C.\nMr. I. Director, Mr. Sheimman and Mr.\nWeinstein. House Committee M. B.\nCohen, Mr. Rudneick and Mr. Shein-\nman. By-law Committee I. Director, I.\nSimon and Mr. Rudneick. The promoters commend the objects of the association to all young men of the city\ninterested, as worthy of every support.\nNew Zealand Mail Contract\nOttawa, Nov. 7.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd(Special)\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe tender of the Union Steamship company of\nNew Zealands for the Pacific mail\nservice to Australia which expires August\n1 is the only one received, and it will\ntherefore get the contract but the exact\nproposal that has been accepted is not\nyet known.\nBorden Street Want. Sewer\nA petition from the Borden street\nresidents for a sewer tb be put in under\nthe Local Improvement Scheme and\nconnected with the proposed Fraser\nstreet sewer, came up before the council\nlast night and was referred to the street*\ncommittee.\nBritish   Troop.  Had   Only   a  Slight\nBru.h With Afghan Gun Runner.\n(Special to the Optimist)\nLondon, Nov. 7.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA despatch from\nTeheran reporting the British invasion of\nPersia turns out now not to relate to\nPersia in any way. It was simply a\nbrush which sixty men of the British\ncruiser Proserpine had with Afghan gun\nrunners in Beluchistan, a point three\nhundred and eighty miles from Linaha,\nthe Persian frontier.\nthe matter\neffect was de-\nof  capitalized\nWhat the city\nwanted was peace with honor.\nU.e  Assessment  A. Whip\nAid.   Hilditch  declared himself the\nhappy medium between Aldermen Lynch\nand Mclntyre.   He pointed out that the\n| city   was   pretty  well  I sit tied hy the\nG.   T.   P.    No sooner did they find\nI anything they wanted than they also\nj found themselves up against the G. T. P.\n' They had better hang on to their asses-\nj ment  power\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdit  was all they had to\nI use against the restriction! upon then.\nAid.  Naden rose URiiin with a little\nparable concerning the benefit! of the\n| bartering  system  ami asked that the\nsame principle be applied to the city\n! and the G. T. P.   A little give and uke\nI on both sides and the problem was Mind.\nWould Affect Borrowinc Powen\nThe assessment regarded in the light\nof one of the city's fantaal xsseti *\nincreasing its borrowing power, \ufffd\ufffd*.\nthe theme of Aid. Lynch* next remarks.\nIf the city were allowed to uurrw up\nto 20 per cent, of the assessment ths\nthe bigger the assessment the pester\nthe city's power to command capital\nIt would be far better for the city to hud\nI out two hundred thousand dollars cub\nto the G. T. P. for the property tbe?\nwanted than to cut down the assessment\npiecemeal by bartering.\nMust   Develop   Waterfront\nHe spoke of the tremendous importance to Prince Rupert of early -ater-\nfront development, showing that miny\ngreat industries, fisheries, lumlier. sugtr\nrefinery, grain, and others must be\nestablished along the waterfront. Tbe\nG. T. P. had the best of tb* waterfront.\nIf they had to pay good taxes or. that\nwaterfront they would certainly I*\nbusy sooner and make that waterfront\npay by getting industrial concern*'\ufffd\ufffd\nto it. Hs said it would be just \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\nfinancing to give the 0. T. P. M50.000\nas to reduce the assessment roll.\nDiogene. Found Them\nAid. Pattullo here came in at \ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\nfag end of the discussion, hearing \ufffd\ufffd\nlighted lantern as if to illuminate t\ufffd\ufffd\nsubject literally. He did not speak on\nthe matter, but Aid. Harrow made\nsuggestion that the city must\nevents reserve the right to \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nG. T. P. if need be. \"You shall pa)''\nWill Re.ume Di.cu.sion\nActing Mayor Mobley in a few \ufffd\ufffdJ\nconcluded the discussion \ufffd\ufffd'\"'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nto be re-opened at another meeting\ncouncil.\nEIGHTH STREET SEWER\nWork Will commence on Construction Tomorrow\nThe work of constructing the sewer on\nEighth street which is to be done before\nthe filling of this street up to grade is\ncommenced, will start tomorrow morning. The nem have been engaged on the\njunctions for the Fraser street sewers\nwith second avenue mainline, and this\nwork is now satisfactorily completed\nunder the supervision of the city engineer.\nat -II\nto the\nTO TEACH AVIATION\nPropo..l to Introduce Study in American Naval and Milit.ry Seho*\n,o introduce\nthe l\ufffd\ufffd>lei\nin\n(Special to the Optimist)\nWashington, Nov. 7.   C***1\nmond   Hobson,   proposes\nin the  forthcoming\nthe   study  of  aviation\nStsate naval and militBry schools,\ngress  will  no doubt next  \ufffd\ufffd*p\nmore   attention   to  the  P JJJ m\naviation knowledge, and rsji \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,,\nthe lines of establishing aviation\"\nCon-\nsession Pve\nfor officers in thc prainc\ncountry''","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Prince Rupert (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"The_Prince_Rupert_Optimist_1910-11-08","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0227589","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"54.312778","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-130.325278","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"Titled The Prince Rupert Optimist up to and including April 29, 1911; titled The Daily News May 1, 1911 and thereafter.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Prince Rupert, B.C. : [publisher not identified]","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Digitization Centre: http:\/\/digitize.library.ubc.ca\/","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1910-11-08 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1910-11-08 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Prince Rupert Optimist","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}