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Blakemore","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/contributor","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:contributor"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/contributor","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource.; Examples of a Contributor include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"DateAvailable":[{"label":"DateAvailable","value":"2017-03-21","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DateIssued":[{"label":"DateIssued","value":"1909-10-16","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"label":"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord","value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/pwv\/items\/1.0344491\/source.json","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:aggregatedCHO"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The identifier of the source object, e.g. the Mona Lisa itself. This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"FileFormat","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":"FullText","value":" rronrrovvv b v_ _ b bb BTmnnnrj\nLet us show you the new \u00a3j\nPocket Edition\nGillette Safety Razor\nTERRY= CASH] CHEMIST\nS.E. coiner Fort and Douglas\n>\u25a0\u00bb \u00bb \u00bbt V 9 t_tSUUUUU_SUUULSLX\ntSLtJ\nThe\nWALKER\nR British Columbia Review,\nPublished at Victoria, B. 6.\njS^O iS Agents\nV^' ELU\"CT0\" C0LUERY\n'^ COMPANY'S COAL\n1232 Government St. Telephone 83\n8 B 9_9-9_9S__XXSlS_9 \u00bb B \u00ab M.IJUUU\nVol. VI. No\n_____\nTHE WEEK, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1909\nOne Dollar Per Annum\nMr. William Jennings\n\/illiam Jennings Bryan visited Victoria\ntyan- this week, was enter\ntained publicly and pri-\nately, and delivered three addresses. Mr.\n'\u25a0ryan has been proclaimed to be the great-\nit orator in the United States. After\nearing him The Week is not inclined to\nispute the claim. The first thing that\n,rikes the observer is that Mr. Bryan is\ntypical American, who could not for\nmoment be mistaken for a citizen of\nny other country, and who presents all\nie earmarks of the American of his class.\n[e is a big man, of burly build, and im-\nressive appearance. He is the picture of\nealth and strength. His hands are thick\nnd square, his head is high and dome-\nbaped, being singularly elevated at the\npex. A line drawn straight from point\n> point of the jaw or anywhere beneath\n(he ear, would be much longer than one\njrawn through the head above the ears,\nIrom which description it will be gathered\n|hat Mr. Bryan presents a study in the\njiilancing of temperaments. He has a\nliard* mouth which, when it is shut pre-\nlents almost a straight line across his face.\nVhen his mouth is open the upper lip\n.urves, and shows itself to be a little\nonger than the lower, which it overlaps.\nh. short, he has the typical mouth of\nCharles Bradlaugh. He has a goocl eye,\nlark and piercing', and one which lights\nnto kindliness as he becomes interested.\n)f his voice, assuming that yesterday it\nvas in its usual form, one could only\n[peak with disappointment. It is strong,\ns produced naturally and even raucous.\n.8 limited in range and tends to a\nllrone. It is entirely devoid of the sympathetic quality, and has not one tender\nliote. When one remembers the melody\npf Beecher's voice for instance the contrast is very striking. It is not improvable that the exigencies of political\n(.tumping have forced Mr. Bryan to adopt\nstyle of speaking which he finds it impossible to abandon under other circumstances, and it is difficult to resist the conclusion that his voice has deteriorated,\notherwise he could never have produced\nJthe sensational effect of which history\n\u25a0tells. Compared with many of the lead-\nling English speakers Mr. Bryan will have\nIto take a back seat. He is not in the\n(same class as Lord Eosebery, Mr. Balfour,\n\u25a0Sii* Edward Grey or Mr. Haldane. Coin-\nting to the subject matter of Mr. Bryan's\naddresses one can only express satisfaction\nvvith their tone. They were admirable in\nspirit, and unexceptionable in sentiment.\nIn a sense Mr. Bryan was handicapped by\nhis mission, which was to advance the interests of the Y.M.C.A. On this ground\nhe was competing with men who have devoted their lives to advocating the Christian religion, and he was placed at a disadvantage. As an argument his address\nin the theatre could not be taken seriously; it was neither logical nor sequential,\nand iv. many places was sophistical. Tho\nverriest tyro in in theological debate would\nfind no difficulty in turning it inside out.\nAs an outspoken, manly declaration in\nfavour of Christianity, and an appeal to\nthe young men of the City to identify\nthemselves with the higher life it was admirable. The chairman, Mr. R. B. McMicking, quite involuntarily betrayed his\nown verdict, and that of the audience,\nwhen at the conclusion he asked them to\nsing the doxology instead of God Save the\nKing. That Mr. Bryan is a good man of\nhigh character and pure life, ho one can\ndoubt. In this respect he is an ornament\nto public life, and should be a power in\nhis party, but after seeing and hearing him\nit is not difficult, to understand why his\nown countrymen have decided on four occasions that he is not of the calibre of\nwhich Presidents are made. In spite of\nsome obvious deficiencies, he is far better\nadapted for tlie Christian ministry than\nfor political life. He stated that he had\nbeen a lay preacher since he was fourteen\nyears of age. He could not do better than\ndevote himself entirely to a work which\nobviously lies near his heart, and for the\nprosecution of which he possesses many excellent qualifications.\nA New\nLeader.\nThe political sensation of\nthe week has been the formal assumption of the toga\nof leadership of His Majesty's loyal Provincial Opposition by Mr.\nOliver, member for Delta, in the local\nHouse. Needless to say, the occasion has\nbeen one of much speech making, and also\nfor what St. Paul so feelingly denounced\nas \"vain repetitions.\" There were some\nsimple souls, unacquainted with the peculiar material of which the local Opposition Liberal Party is composed, who px-\npected. that the new leader would announce a new policy. No such interesting thing has happened. The bottle is\nnew, but the wine is old. To those who\nwent to hear him Mr. Oliver repeated\nlike a parrot the same terms of vague\nabuse of the Conservative Party in general, and of Mr. McBride and his Cabinet\nin particular, as he has been pouring\nforth for the past six years. About the\nonly thing of interest or novelty in his\nobservations\u2014and one which seems to us\nto be a hint at a course of Liberal action\nwhich is likely to cause a tremendous row\n\u2014was Mr. Oliver's open advocacy of Provincial subsidies for railways. This is\ndropping the mask with a vengeance. Not\nthat it has been a very effectual mask because, for the past four years the public\nhave been fully aware that the Provincial\nLiberal Party is and has been bound hand\nand foot under instructions from their Ottawa paymasters to spare no endeavour to\nsecure large slices of British Columbia\nland and large chunks of British Columbia\nmoney for the construction of the Grand\nTrunk Pacific in British Columbia. The\nfact that the McBride Government has\nsteadily felled this conspiracy is the fact\nthat lies at the botto mof all the bitter attacks which have been made by the Liberal Party, both here and in Ottawa, upon\nthe Provincial Conservative Government.\nIf Mr. Oliver is going to lead his little\nbunch of lambs in the local House into a\ncampaign for the adoption of a policy of\nProvincial railway subsidies\u2014and it does\nnot seem that any other construction can\nbe placed on his remarks\u2014why, all we can\nsay is that the good gentleman is going\nto have his hands very full indeed.\nThe Liberal press is de-\nRailway nouncing Premier McBride\nPolicy. anc| his colleagues for having a \"nebulous\" railway\npolicy. If, dear reader, you will look up\nthe meaning of the word \"nebulous\" in 0\ngood dictionary, you will find that it means\n' cloudy.\" Tliere is no doubt that Mr. Mc\nBride's railway policy is very \"cloudy\"\u2014\nfor the Liberal party. You see, it provides no pickings for charter-mongers,\nopen-handed politicians, railway contractors with friends in Parliament, or any\nother of the proper Liberal adjuncts to a\ngenuine active Liberal railroad policy, as\npracticed in Canada by the well-known\nfirm of Laurier, Hays & Co. Mr. McBride's railway policy was regrettably devoid of all this patriotic ornamentation.\nHe simply told the House, when he and\nhis colleagues assumed the reins of office,\nthat he would not do any more business\nin the railway line with anybody who\ncould not show absolute guarantees of\nfinancial ability to construct any line for\nwhich they might be asking a charter. He\nhas never made any change in his policy\nthen announced, and railway construction\nin British Columbia has progressed with\ngreat activity and without costing the\npeople anything for cash or land subsidies.\nBut it has kept the Liberal Party and\ntheir friends horribly poor, because it is\ndifficult to steal anything from a country\nthat won't leave its property lying out\nover night when there are Liberals and\nrailway promoters prowling around. So\nthey call the McBride railway policy\n\"cloudy,\" and really, from a Liberal point\nof view, you can hardly blame them.\nThe particulars of the dis-\nThe Girls' cussion on Thursday even-\nCentral. ing of Trustee Christie's\nremarkable motion in connection with the Girls' Central School, under the motion for reconsidering the same,\ndo not make very pleasant reading. The\nmatter was finally referred to a committee,\nbut not until after a considerable amount\nof discussion and, on the part of Trustees\nMcNeil and Mcintosh, of some quite uncalled for abuse of the lady who is the\npresent very capable principal of the\nGirls' Central School. Moreover, one of\nthe main points in connection with Trustee Christie's original motion, to which\nattention was called by The Week, was\nwholly ignored. We refer to the infliction upon the ratepayers of a heavy extra\nexpense by the proposed new appointment,\nwithout any adequate reason having been\nshown for incurring such expense. The\ntrustees will be well advised if they allow\nthis matter to die a noiseless and painless\ndeath. There are circumstances connected with it which The Week has no desire\nto drag into the light of day, but there\nhas been far too much already of this\nbusiness of piling additional expense on\nthe taxpayers of Victoria for purposes\ndoubtless beneficial to private interests,\nbut in no way of service to the public\nwelfare.\nA Good\nExample,\nKing Alfonso of Spain has\nplaced thc decent section of\nthe civilized world under a\nheavy obligation to him for\nthe prompt execution of the notorious\nagitator, Franciso Ferrer, to whoso inciting and doctrines the recent atrocities at\nBarcelona were largely due. The man\nFerrer carefully avoided any active personal participation in the crimes and outrages of the rebellion into whicli he urged\nthe base elements whom he controlled, but\nhe was far more guilty than they. His\nexecution will have a wholesome effect in\nchecking the spread of the pestilent breed\nof agitators, by showing those cowardly\npersons, who make an easy living out of\nthe money they draw from the credulous,\ntliat the authorities whom they denounce\ncan strike quite as promptly and quite as\nhard as the most unsoaped anarchist that\never waved a red flag. Up to the time of\ngoing to press tlie truth-telling news-cables\ninform us tliat the air of Europe is full\nof the threats made by the friends of the\nexecuted criminal. These threats are all\nin ons line, to the effect that the anarchists\nand socialists\u2014those bold, fearless, clean-\nliving champions 0 fliberty\u2014will murder\nKing Alfonso, will murder his Queen, and\nwill murder their two little helpless babies.\nHurrah for Liberty.\nOnce again\u2014for the third\nPoor time 111 three years\u2014comes\nVancouver. the ne\\vS that the Carnegie\nLibrary museum at Vancouver has been burglarized and a large\ncollection of valuable coins stolen. Just\nhow this remarkable institution is run\nwould make rather interesting reading.\nDo they have a watchman? And if not,\nwhy not ? And if so, what does he do for\nhis wages? Now the City of Vancouver,\nwe are informed, is going to be asked to\nprovide a guard in the museum and to\nprotect the entrances with iron gateways.\nTliis will cost the taxpayer considerable,\nbut, unless the guard goes to sleep, it will\nprobably prevent further theft\u2014the more\nso as tliere is very little left now worth\ntii king. Personally we should like to see\na very searching investigation made into\nthe manner in which this building is conducted. Three burglaries in three years\nhave altogether too much the appearance\nof coincidence.\nWhite\nLabour.\nReally, Sir Charles Rivers-\nWilson, President of the\nGrand Trunk Pacific Railway, ought to be more careful how he words his public remarks.\nHere we have him speaking in London and\nstating that he has never been able to\nappreciate the position of the people of\nBritish Columbia with regard to Asiatic\nlabour. This is hardly surprising, since\nSir Wilfrid Laurier, who may, in some\nsense, be called Sir Charles Rivers-\nWilson's partner in the construction of the\nbig railway, has already informed the people of British Columbia that he did not\nsympathize with them in their views on\nthe matter. But Sir Charles should never\nhave said that. The people of British\nColumbia have seen fit to state emphatically that they will not permit the importation of Asiatic labour for any purpose whatsoever. It may be a matter of\nopinion as to whether they are right or\nwrong in taking this stand, but the fact\nremains that they have taken it and, being\nthe will of the people, they have a perfect\nright to take it. The lack of sympathy\nof Sir Wilfrid Laurier fl deplorable; the\nlack of understanding of Sir Charles\nRivers-Wilson is grievous; but neither of\nthese two regrettable things are likely to\neffect the attitude of the people of British\nColumbia. THE WEEK, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1909\niftyfytytyfytfatyijlf^'fy'ijif'tyf\n% MUSIC AND I\n*\nTHE STAGE |\n9J^?|f5^^^9^^^^^^^*?j?\nChauncey Olcott in \"Ragged Robin.\"\nOccasionally in the life of the players impromptu scenes are acted which\nleave a lasting impression on the memory. It is not likely, for example,\nthat any person at a Wednesday matinee recently will ever forget a scene\nwhich occurred after the curtain had\nfallen upon the first act of \"Ragged\nRobin,\" Chauncey Olcott's new play,\nin which he will be seen at the Victoria Theatre on Monday evening.\nThe dramatic climax to the first act\nhad been acted, and the audience was\nvociferously applauding when the\nIrish comedian appeared before the\ncurtain, and, instead of bowing his acknowledgments as usual, raised his\nhand, command silence. He held a\nletter which he stated had been sent\nto his dressing room and asked the\nindulgence of his hearers as he read\nits contents in a voice charged with\nemotion.\nIt stated that the writer, an old\nlady, had for many years been a regular attendant at Mr. Olcott's performances and that she was past seventy years of age and suffering from\na malady she felt would prove fatal;\nthat one of the choicest pleasures of\nher life had been in listening to the\nsweet singer's moving ballads, and\nthat she would be present that day in\na seat in the balcony, probably her\nlast visit to a theatre, and would be,\nfor the sake of an old lady whose\ndays were numbered, sing once again\nthe song she so dearly loved\u2014\"Sweet\nMolly O?\"\n\"Is the writer of this letter present?\" asked Mr. Olcott.\nEvery eye in the house swept the\nbalcony, but there was no response\nuntil Mr. Olcott saw in the upper gallery a little old lady in a black bonnet, supported by an anxious faced\nyoung girl, who had risen to her feet,\nand was waving her handkerchief at\nMr. Olcott, feebly announcing her.\npresence.\nThe comedian cleared a lump from\nhis throat and remarked that it had\nbeen years since he had sung the song\nin question, but that he would try,\nand, with the sole accompaniment of\nhis leader at the piano, his voice\narose in the familiar strain. He never\nin his life sang better or sweeter and\nas he finished there was not a dry\neye in the house. But the old lady\nin the gallery had heard her favourite\nsong and was gently borne from the\ntheatre.\nLo.\nAt the Victoria Theatre on Tuesday, October 19, this city will see\nwhat is probably the most pretentious and highest class attraction\nwhich Mr. Roberts will offer this season. It is a musical comedy entitled\n\"Lo,\" with John E. Young, who endeared himself to the theatre-goers\nof this city last year in the role of\nHappy Johnny Hicks in \"The Time,\nThe Place and The Girl.\"\n\"Lo\" is the combined efforts of O.\nHenry, the most sought-after and\nhighly-paid short story writer in the\nworld, and Franklin P. Adams who, as\nthe epigrammatist and humourist of\nthe New York Evening Mail is regarded as the most brilliant and funniest newspaper man in New York.\nThe music of \"Lo\" was written by\nA. Baldwin Sloane, composer of \"The\nGingerbread Man,\" \"Jack and the\nBeanstalk,\" \"The Mocking Bird,\"\n\"Lady Teazel\" and a dozen other of\nthe big successes of the past decade.\nMr. Sloane has written eighteen numbers for \"Lo,\" so catchy, swingy and\ntinklcy that although \"Lo\" is a new\nproduction, they are already being\nsung along the streets. Among them\nare: \"Tammany On Parade,\" \"Little\nOld Main Street,\" \"Love Is All That\nMatters,\" \"You Can Always Be My\nSweetheart,\" \"Yucatan\" and \"Long\nAgo.\"\n\"Lo\" marks a distinct departure, an\nepoch in fact, in musical comedy, for\ninstead of the usual hodge podge of\nnonsense which is called the book in\nninety-nine cases out of a hundred.\n(Continued on Page Seventeen)\nDID YOU SHOOT A HUNGARIAN PARTRIDGE?\n\"I see they have arrested some men for shooting Hun\ngarian partridges on the wing,\" said Scroxton to his wife,\nyesterday. \"Serve them right,\" said she, \"they should\nshoot them on the head or on the foot. You men have no\nidea how ugly a spoiled wing looks on a hat.\"\nWhen a man shoots a bird by mistake he has to keep\nmum about it for his own sake. Lots of men, however,\nwho are not sportsmen keep \"Mumm\" for their own sakes,\ntoo. They keep this best of all brands of champagne in\nthe house for themselves and their guests. They keep\n\"Mumm\" from a health standpoint, because G. H. Mumm\n& Co.'s \"Selected Brut\" and \"Extra Dry\" have absolutely\nno bad after effects. Discerning ones\u2014men who know\u2014\nlay aside the idea that the best brand of champagne is\nextravagant. They realize that the best is the most\neconomical in the long run. Economy is a revenue, and\nMumm's Champagnes, by reason of their goodness and\npurity, pay a premium on their cost to your health.\nInferior champagnes are really expensive as a gift. A\ndealer will sometimes offer another brand, as a substitute\nfor G. H. Mumm's Champagne, because the greater his\npercentage. Don't be mum when you want \"Mumm,\"\nspeak up and demand the best. If your dealer does not\nhandle Mumm's \"Selected Brut\" or \"Extra Dry,\" 'phone\nor write Pither & Leiser for the name of a dealer who does.\nSomething New\nWe are now able to offer to our patrons\nA GUARANTEE\non our splendid line of PLATED KNIVES, FORKS and SPOONS.\nThis line which is specially made for us is guaranteed to have\nMORE SILVER than any other standard make and we GUARANTEE to replace\nFree of Charge\nany of these goods which, a ter use, do not prove satisfactory. This\ncondition we believe accompanies no other flatware made.\nPrices as follows:\u2014\nCOFFEE SPOONS per doz. $2.70\nTEASPOONS \" 3-\u00bb5\nDESSERTSPOONS \" 4-95\nTABLESPOONS \" 5-\u00bb5\nDESSERT FORKS \" 4-95\nTABLE FORKS \" S-85\nDESSERT KNIVES \" 4-95\nTABLE KNIVES \" 5-4\u00b0\nChalloner & Mitchell\nDiamond Merchants and Silversmiths\n1017 Government Street Victoria, B. C.\nHeadquarters for choice nursery stock.\nApple, pear, cherry, plum and peach trees\nand small fruits, also ornamental trees,\nshrubs, roses, evergreens, etc. Largest and\nbest assorted stock in British Columbia.\nTen per cent, cash discount on all orders\nabove $10.00.\nPRICE LIST AND CATALOGUE ON\nAPPLICATION.\nGood Skates\nGood Instructors\nSKATING\nAssembly Rink, Fort St.\nMorning\nAfternoon\nEvening\n10.00 to 12.00\n2.00 to 4.80\n7.45 to 10.00\nGood Music\nGood Time\nThe Dominion Ban!\nCapital Paid-up $ 3,980,000\nReserves $ 5,300,000\nTotal Assets $53,400,000\nVICTORIA, B.C., BRANCH\nTemporary premises at the corner of Fort and Broad Streets.\nSAVINGS DEPARTMENT\nDeposits will be received of $i and upwards. Interest credited\nor paid half-yearly, 30th June and 31st December.\nAccounts of merchants, manufacturers and individuals are\nsolicited and will receive prompt and careful attention.\nBranches, agents and correspondents in all parts of the world.\nDrafts, Travellers' Letters of Credit and Travellers' cheques\nissued available everywhere.\nC. E. THOMAS, Manager.\nI\nIB. C. Funeral Furnishing Co'y\nit\nI 1016 Government Street, Victoria, B. C.\n% At A Chas. Hayward, Pres.\n... __, ___^ R. Hayward, Sec.\nI_ \\_\\_\\ \\m4Hi F, Caselton, Manager\nOldest and most up-to-date\nUndertaking Establishment\n., in B.O.\n_i iHfTJ-RRsSr V^___A Established 1867\nTelephones\u201448, 594, 1905, 305, or 404.\n'ii_mmmmmmmmm\u00a5m\n_A machine That Has No Equal\nThe Underwood Typewriter\nSold by Baxter & Johnson\n809 Government Street - Office Supplies\n'Are all in harmony here\nA. K. VAUGHAN\nPROPRIETOR\nVICTORIA, B.C.\nJAS. 'BUCHANAN & CO.'S Red Seal and\nJ Black and White Scotch Whiskies have that\ndelicate, fine flavor that denotes Age and Care\nin production.\n%ADIGER & JANION\n8 and10 Yates St.\nWholesale Commission Agents\nINSTANTANEOUS\nHOT WATER\nJust turn the Hot Water Faucet and the RUUD GAS\nHEATER does the rest.\nNo home is complete without this wonderful Heater. For\nparticulars and demonstrations see\nVICTORIA GAS COMPANY, LTD.\nCorner Fort and Langley Streets THE WEEK, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1909\nOCIETY\nMr. and Mrs. J. Figleeve of Regina,\nre spending a few days in town.\n* * *\nMr. and Mrs. Johnson of this city\n.re spending a fortnight visiting the\nound cities.\nw * *\nOne of the latest arrivals in town\n\u25a0om England is Captain Philip Ba-\nan of Colchester, Essex.\nj*. jd ^\nMrs. T. J. Jones, corner of Linden\nnd Rockland avenues will not re-\neive until the first Thursday in\n'fovember.\n* * *\nMr. James Thompson from Winnipeg, who has been spending the sum-\npier months touring the coast cities,\n.ft town last Monday on his return\n|o the East.\n* * *\nMr. and Mrs. Walter Seroobie from\nI-Jottingham, England, are touring Canada and spent last week end in town.\n* * *\nMr. and Mrs. Christian and child\nIvho have been spending the summer\nIn Montreal, have returned to Victoria.\n* * *\n\u25a0 Mrs. Tilton and her daughters are\nleaving Victoria for Los Angeles\n|vhere in future they will reside.\n* * *\nMrs. John Pears returned last Sun-\nlllay from an extended visit to her\nrnother, Mrs. James Arsnell of Toronto.\nw * *\nMr. and Mrs. Barry Wingfield,\nl.'rom Essex, England, are among the\nl31d Country visitors at present in\nItown.\n* * *\nGeorge Ross, chief inspector of\nhost offices, is on his usual tour of\n(inspection.\n* * w\nLady Lumsden, of Aberdeen, Scotland, and Mrs. R. B. Tatersall of\n[London, Eng., are visitors in Victoria\n[and registered at the Empress.\n* * *\nMrs. S. O. Redgrave and daughter\n(Nellie left last Sunday on the Prin-\nIcess Charlotte to visit the former's\n\u25a0second daughter, Mrs. Grace Poul-\n|ger of Winnipeg.\n* * *\nJohn T. McAin, a prominent coal\n\u25a0operator of Manchester, England,\nlspent a few hours in the city last\n(Sunday. He left in the afternoon for\n\u25a0Seattle, and will return this way, pay-\nling a visit to the different coal properties on the Island.\n* * *\nMrs. John A. Rithet will be at home\n|on Tuesday, the 19th October.\n* * *\nC. Lovick returned to Victoria\nIby the Charmer last Saturday even-\nling. Mr. Lovick has been away to\n[England on a three months' trip.\n* * *\nMr. and Mrs. P. J. Riddell are home\nlagain after a most enjoyable trip to\n|Great Britain.\n* * *\nMrs. J. G. Cox, who has just returned from California, is staying\n\u25a0with her daughter, Mrs. (Captain)\n\u25a0Harris.\n* * *\nS. Baxter, provincial boiler inspector, left on a tour of inspection\n(through island centres by the E. &\nIN. Railway last Wednesday. He\n|vvill be away until about the 20th.\n* * *\nC. S. Youle, A.H.I.M.E, A.M.I.E.E.,\nlin ex-naval engineer, who served\n\u25a0with H.M.S. Vengeance, Rocksbor-\n|>ugh, ancl Minotaur, has opened a\n* * *\nA quiet wedding took place last\nMrs. John\npost nuptial\nOctober 19.\n* * *\nThe Arion Club will give one of\ntheir popular concerts on November\n24th.\n* * *\nMr. Gordon Campbell from Vancouver spent a few days in Victoria on\nbusiness.\n* * *\nA very pretty but quiet wedding\ntook place yesterday afternoon at St.\nAndrew's Presbyterian Church, when\nHenry E. Jackson, assistant manager\nof the Empress Hotel, was united in\nmarriage to Miss E. M. Hill, of Edinburgh, Scotland. The Rev. Leslie\n\u25a0Saturday afternoon at the Metropoli-' Clay officiated at thc ceremony. The\nIan Methodist Church when Mr. F. groom's best man was Mr. W. E.\nWilcox, a prominent business man : Burris and Miss E. Carrol made a\ntil Vancouver, was united in marriage | very pretty bridesmaid. A dainty\nto Miss Ailer Catherine Laidley,\ndaughter of the late Rev. R. B. Laidley of Nanaimo. Mr. and Mrs. Wilcox left on the Princess Charlotte\nfor Seattle. When the honeymoon is\nover they will take up their residence\nin Vancouver. The Rev. T. E. Hol-\nling performed the ceremony.\n* w w\nMr. Frame of Victoria is spending\nthe week end at Cowichan Lake fishing.\n* * *\nAn organ recital will be given at\nSt. John's Church on the evening of\nMonday, October 18th.\nJudge Lampman paid Seattle and\nthe A.Y.P.A. a visit last Saturday.\n\u2022**<**\nThomas Brown, son of P. R. Brown,\nleft last Monday evening for Montreal\nto resume his studies at McGill.\n* * *\nRev. A. Stanley Ard is on his way\nhome from a visit to the Old Land.\nMr. Ard will arrive in Victoria on\nthe 15th inst.\n* * *\nMr. and Mrs. J. K. Cupp of Toronto, who have been spending several\ndays in town left last night for Vancouver en route to their home.\nMrs. George Lawrence, wife of\nGeorge Lawrence of the Scotch\nBakery, Douglas street has returned\nto won after spending three months\nwith friends in Aberdeen, Scotland.\n* * w\nThe marriage of Miss E. M. Hill\nof Parliament Square, Edinburgh,\nScotland, to Mr. H. B. Jackson, assistant manager of the Empress\nHotel, took place at St. Andrew's\nchurch last Tuesday afternoon at 1.30\no'clock.\nMr. and Mrs. Roderick Oliphant-\nGrautier from Fittleworth, Sussex,\nEngland, who have been making a\ntour of Canada for the benefit of Mrs.\nGrautier's health, spent the beginning\nof the week in town and left for Seattle Friday, whence they will proceed to New York en route for their\nhome in the Old Country.\n* * *\nMrs. Slater, Pemberton Road, has\nreturned to the city after an extended\ntrip to the East.\n* * *\nMiss Connie Goodfellow of Seattle\nis the guest of Mrs. D. M. Eberts,\nGorge Road.\n* * *\nMr. Blanchard Bell, who has been\nenjoying a brief holiday at Cowichan\nLake, has returned to town.\nMiss B. Gaudin left for Tacoma\nlast Saturday to spend a few weeks\nwith friends.\nMr. R. Marpole of Vancouver spent\na few days in town during the week.\n* * *\nA. Rithet\nreception\nwedding breakfast was afterwards\nserved at the bachelor home of the\ngroom, only the most intimate friends\nof the bride ancl groom being pre\nsent. Many handsome presents were\nreceived by the young couple. Mr.\nand Mrs. Jackson left on the Princess\nCharlotte for California, where they\nwill spend their honeymoon.\n* * *\nJudge Lampman paid a visit to the\nexposition at Seattle on Saturday\nlast.\n* * *\nMrs. W. E. Scott of Ganges Harbour is in the city for a few days.\n* w w\nMiss G. Bridgman, who has been\nattending school in the Old Country\nfor the last three or four years, has\nreturned to Victoria after finishing\nher education.\n* * *\nMr. and Mrs. George Gillespie, who\nhave been spending a few weeks at\ntheir cottage at Sooke, have returned\nto town, after enjoying the shooting.\n* * *\nMr. W. A. Ward spent a few days\nat Cowichan Lake during the week.\n* * *\nMrs. Marvin is the guest of Mrs.\nGeorge L. Courtney, Scoresby Street.\n(Other Society Page Sixteen)\nFRIDAY AHD SATURDAY,\nOCTOBER 22 AND 23.\nJOSEPH M. WEBER\nPresents\nTHE LASTING MODERN COMEDY\nWITH MUSIC\nThe Climax\nBy Edward Locke.\nMusic by Joseph Carl Breil.\nHERALDED BY THE NEW YORK\nPRESS AND PUBLIC AS THE\nPUREST PLAY OP THE DAY.\nFOR MOTHER, PATHER, WIPE AND\nDAUGHTER.\nAN OFFERING THAT PULLS AT\nYOUR HEARTSTRINGS.\nPrices\u20142So, 50c, 75c. $1.00, $1.50.\nBeat Sale Wednesday, October 19th.\nYOUR MONEY BACK\nAny time during- tbe performance or\nafter i tif you're not satisfied.\nEIGHTEEN MUSICAL NUMBERS\nTHIRTY-TWO amazingly pretty young\nGirli and LAUGHS.\nJOHN E. YOUNG\n(The original Johnny Hicks in \"The\nTime, the Place, and the Girl.\")\nIN THE BIG MUSICAL COMEDY\n\"LO\"\nwill hold a\non Tuesday,\nBook and Lyrics by O. Henry and F.\nP. Adams.\nMusic by A. Baldwin Sloane.\nPrices\u201425o, 500, 75c, $1.00, 1.50.\nSeat Sale Saturday, October 16th.\nAugustus Pitou Presents\nCHAUNCEY OLCOTT\nIn His New Play\nRagged Robin\nBy Rida Johnson Young in collaboration\nwith Hita Olcott.\nKcenes Laid at Innishannon\u2014Time 183U.\nHEAR OLCOTT'S NEW SONGS\n\"The Eyes that Come from Ireland\"\n\"Sweet Girl of My Dreams\"\n\"If You'll Remember Me\"\n\"The Laugh With a Tear In It\"\n\"I Used to Believe in the Fairies.\"\nSEE The Good Little People\u2014The Fairy\nHost\u2014The Banshee\u2014The Will-o-the\nWisp\u2014and tlio Wealth of Beautiful\nScenery, including The Big Bog\nScene.\nPrices\u201450c, 75c, $1.00, $1.50.\nSeat Sale Friday, October 15th.\nInteresting\nInstructive\nROMAN\u00a9\nTHEATRE\nA visit to our amusement house will prove that we have the best\nin Moving Pictures and Illustrated 'Songs.\nDaily from 2 p.m. to 5.30 p.m., and 7 until 11 p.m.\nSaturday performances commence at 1 p.m. sharp.\nComplete change every Monday, Wednesday and Friday.\nADMISSION\u2014Ten Cents; Children at Matinee, Five Cents.\nORCHESTRA IN ATTENDANCE.\nA PLACE OF ATTRACTION FOR THE\nYOUNG AND OLD IS\nEMPRESS\nTHEATRE\nThe strides made in the improvement of Moving Pictures are\nnothing more than marvellous.\nThey are not only interesting to look at but instructive and\nimpressive and oftentimes portray a lesson worth learning.\nComplete change of programme on Mondays, Wednesdays\nand Fridays.\nContinuous performance: 2.00 to .30\u20147.00 to 10.30 p.m.\nChildren's Matinees: Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday\u2014Five Cents.\nAdmission -. Ten Cents\nriflJEJTIC\nTHEATRE\nYates Street, near Governn)egt\nwhere the old Edison Theatre used to be.\nA new house showing the latest ancl most improved\nanimated pictures.\nLengthy films portraying what has been accomplished\nin moving pictures.\nMatinees, 2 to 5.30 (Children 5c)\nEvenings, 7 to 11 p.m. Admission ioc.\nChange of Programme Every Monday and Thursday\nUP=TO=DATE BILL\nWEEK OCTOBER 18\nThe New Grand\nTelephone 618\nSULLIVAN * CONSIDINE, ProprUters.\nManaicmtnt of ROBT. JAMIESON.\nEDW. GALLAGHER & CO.\nIn His Gorgeous Scenic Travesty\n\"The Battle of Bay Rum.\"\nM'LLE MARTHA\nRefined and Graceful Gymnast.\nSTEELEY & EDWARDS\nFunnily and Charmingly Musical.\nDOROTHY DAHL\nThe Versatile Comedienne.\nTHOS. J. PRICE\n\"Niagara.\"\nNEW MOVING PICTURES\nOUR OWN ORCHESTRA\nPANTAGES\nTHEATRE\nWEEK OCTOBER 11\nPOLLARD-FISCHER\nCOMPANY\nDramatic Players.\nYOUNG'S DOGS\nCanine Circus.\nSHALE & COLE\nDancing Vocalists.\nJESSIE BLANK\nUp-to-Now Comedy.\nARTHUR ELWELL\nDescriptive Ballad.\nBIOGRAPH\nAnimated Pictures. THE WEEK, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1909\nThe Week\n\\ Provincial Review and Magazine, published every Saturday by\n\u2022THE WEEK\" PUBLISHING\nCOMPANY, LIMITED.\nPublished at VICTORIA and VANCOUVER\n1208 Government St., Victoria, B.C.\nW. BLAKEMORE, Editor.\nPlaces Popularized by the\nNovelist's Pen\nAmerican tourists abroad have a\npenchant for hunting out the sites ancl\nscenes of incidents figuring in novels\nof great writers.\nThe novelists and the poet can\nthrow a glamour over scenes and\nplaces which are in themselves by\nno means remarkable, and can even\nadd a fresh charm to those which\nhave already many claims to notice.\nScott is probably unrivalled as a novelist of locality. How many tourists, for instance, would make pilgrimage to Kcnilworth but for Scott's\nnovel of that name? Doubtless a few\nwould, for it has beauty and distinction which are independent of fiction,\nbut it may be safely said that where,\na hundred people visit it today one\nvisited it before Scott lived and\nwrote.\nThere is no doubt also that Scott\ndiscovered the Trossachs and the\nHighlands of Scotland. When Dr,\nSamuel Johnson and James Boswell\nmade their celebrated tour through\nthe Highlands, that magnificent re\ngion of mountain and lake was much\nless known than is the Soudan today,\nand Johnson's celebrated diary of his\ntrip was not calculated to persuade\nmany people to follow in his footsteps. It remained for the poems and\nromances of Sir Walter Scott to reveal to the world a region of almost\nunrivalled beauty and wild grandeur,\nand since his day visitors to the\nHighlands have increased ten-thous\nandfold.\nKirriemuir is an excellent example\nof what a novelist can accomplish in\nthe way of glamor. Net even a Scotsman will claim much beauty for the\nvillages and small hamlets of his native charm of English villages, and\nKirriemuir is neither better nor worse\nthan a hundred of its village composers\nYet as Barrie's \"Thrums\" it is famous in every English-speaking community the world over; and Americans especially make a point of visiting it, and perhaps trying to see\nthrough some \"window\" there the\nidyllic scenes which Barrie saw. Alas!\nthey cannot. They may be there to\nsec, but it would take another Barrie\nto see them. In the same way Crockett's books havc made the Galloway\ncountry, hitherto almost as little\nknown as Connemara, quite a tourist\nresort, and many people nowadays go\nlovingly over thc ground which is the\nsetting for such fine novels as \"The\nRaiders\" and \"The Man of the Moss\nHags.\" '\nProbably the most disappointing\nplace in England is the Doone Valley.\nThere are few books which possess\nthe mysterious quality of glamor so\nunmistakably as Blackmore's famous\nnovel \"Lorna Doone.\" It grips the\nimagination and paints mind-pictures\nwhich never fade. The stronghold of\nthe robber clan, the Doones, makes\nan especially vivid impression upon\nthe sensitive plate of one's memory,\nand when one compares his imaginary picture with the real thing the\ndisillusion is sad. It is exactly like\nseeing a favorite novel badly drama\ntized. It seems all so inadequate, so\nsmall, so unromantic. Yet tens of\nthousands of people go to see the\nplaces mentioned in this famous novel,\nand even the railways advertise it as\nthe Lorna Doone country.\nThere is a room at the Royal Hotel,\nBideford, which is kept today just\nas Charles Kinsely used it when hc\nwas writing his famous novel, \"Westward Ho!\" Thousands of people\nhave stayed at this hotel, simply on\nCharles Kinsley's account and in order\nto make it the centre from which\nthey can cover the scenes mentioned\nin the famous romance. It cannot be\nsaid that Kinsley made Bideford, because it was a famous old port in\nElizabeth's day; but it can be truly\nsaid that lie resuscitated the old town\nand made it a modern place of resort\nand pilgrimage, though it would probably take more than a novel to restore its old seafaring glory.\nGlen, in the Isle of Man, though\nplaces pretty in themselves, have been\nmade doubly famous by Hall Caine in\n\"The Manxman\" and \"The Deemster.\" whilst Saxton, near York, and\nBattle, near Hastings, both owe their\npopularity with tourists to Bulwer\nLytton, for the first is the scene of\nthe Battle of Towton, so magnificently described in \"The Last of the\nBarons,\" and the second is the scene\nof Harold's death, described in his\nnovel, \"Harold.\"\nThousands of people go every summer to see the battlefield of Towton,\nand the selling of old axe-heads and\n\"relics\" has afforded good business\nfor years, whilst Lytton has woven\nso much romance around Battle Abbey and the field of Senlac that thousands of brakes and chars-a-brancs\ngo out of Hastings during the season\nladen with curious sight-seers, although it must be confessed there is\n*ne of the Spanish beauties in \"Lft\"'\nMusical Comedy at the Victoria Theatre next Tuesday.\nSir Frederick Bridge\u2014\"Westminster\" Bridge, as he is facetiously called, because he is the organist of\nWestminster Abbey\u2014tells how he\nused to meet Charles Dickens, walking out with his dogs on a Sunday\nmorning, when the young organist\nwas going past Gad's Hill on his way\nfrom Rochester to his church appointment, eight miles away. Dickens\nhad a great liking for Rochester, and\nthe old city is referred to over and\nover again in his words. \"Pickwick\"\nespecially is redolent of the old cathedral city, and lovers of Dickens\u2014and\ntheir name is legion\u2014love to trace the\nperegrinations of Pickwick, Winkle,\nSnodgrass, and Co. through its streets\nand in its near neighbourhood.\nThe village of Fordingham, in Dor-\ne.st, is imperishably connected with\nThomas Hard's great novel, \"Tess of\nthe d'Urbervilles.\" Here lived Vicar\nClare's family, of whom the original\nwas the father of thc present Bishop\nof Durham. Kirkmichael and Sully\nnot a great deal to see when they get\nthere.\nSeasonable Ematrimony.\n\"Mother, I want to get married this\nwinter.\"\n\"Very well, my daughter; but don't\nthrow yourself away.\"\n\"Oh, no; I am going to marry a\nnice man.\"\n\"I must say, dear, I think a coal\nman would be more seasonable.\"\nIn Mourning.\nThe Lady\u2014I haven't much in the\nhouse to give you, my poor man, but\nwould you like a piece of pie?\nThe Hobo\u2014No, lady; but have yer\ngot a old black coat?\nThe Lady\u2014Why do you want a\nblack one?\nThe Hobo\u2014De feller yer gave a\npiece o' pie to de odder day was a\npal 0' mine.\nWhat She Wanted.\nGrocer\u2014\"Do you want sugar-cured\nham, madam?\"\nMrs. Newed\u2014\"No, I want some\nthat has never been diseased.\"\n'Phone 220\nwill connect you with the\nLargest and Best Equipped\nPrinting, Ruling and Binding\nPlant in Victoria ** Rush\nOrders are our Delight. Too\nbusy to say more. %h Don't\nfail to get in touch with us for\nyour printing. ** 'Phone 220\n'Phone 220 * 'Phone 220\nTHOS. R. CUSACK\nCOR. GORDON & COURTNEY STS.\nHer Experience.\nMrs. Brown\u2014Do you believe that\nmarriage is a lottery?\nMrs. Green\u2014No; I consider it more\nof a faith cure.\nMrs. Brown\u2014Why, how's that?\nMrs. Green\u2014Well, I had implicit\nfaith in my husband when we were\nfirst married and now I haven't.\nAt The Pearly Gates.\n\"Your harp,\" said a polite attendant.\n\"Thanks.\"\n\"Your halo.\" The attendant,\" commanded Mrs. De Style, with well-\nbred hauteur.\nKinwood\u2014How do you like your\nnew suburban home?\nBarquis\u2014Fine. There's only one\ndrawback to it.\nKinwood\u2014What's that?\nBarquis\u2014I can't find a buyer for it.\nbutcher hasn't come with the me\nNow run and play.\nStubb\u2014How funny that an Itali\nduke should get the mitten!\nPenn\u2014I should say so. Now, if\ngets another mitten and a fur c\nhe will be all ready for a polar e\nploring expedition.\nEasily Explained.\n\"We alius seems to pick a tin\nwhen our Congressman is powerf\nbusy to come to Washington,\" sa\nSi Similing.\n\"That ain't it,\" answered Farm\nCorntossel. \"Our Congressman alii\nturns to an' gits busy when he se\nany of us comin'.\"\nm;\nWanted Something Different.\n\"Here's a new volume of fairy\ntales,\" said the bookseller, \"that\nmight interest you.\"\n\"No, I prefer something different,\"\nreplied the woman customer. \"I've\nbeen married ten years.\"\nThe Boiler's Reason.\nMother\u2014Don't tease me, Johnnie.\nCan't you see I'm in a lot of trouble?\nThe boiler has sprung a leak.\nJohnnie\u2014What makes it leak?\nMother\u2014Because it's my day at\nhome, your father has asked two men\nto dinner, the cook has left and the\nReminded.\n\"Does your husband forget to\nthe letters you give him?\"\n\"Never. I put them in his cig\ncase.\"\nMother\u2014Dear me! Did that b;\nboy hit my little son inadvertently?\nEager Street Chorus\u2014No, mum; 1\nhit 'im in de stummick.\nMrs. Gunner\u2014\"Henry, you wou\npersist in calling that last cook\nvision. There was nothing pretl\nabout her?\"\nMr. Gunner\u2014\"Not at all.\"\nMrs. Gunner\u2014\"Then why did yc\ncall her a vision?\"\nMr. Gunner\u2014\"Because visions fac\naway. She remained only two days THE WEEK, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1909\nPROVINCIAL ELECTIONS ACT\nESQUIMALT ELECTORAL DISTRICT\nTAKE NOTICE that objections have been filed with me against the following persons' names being retained on the List of Voters for the above district on the\ngrounds set forth.\nAND FURTHER TAKE NOTICE that I will, on Monday, the ist day of November, 1909, at the hour of 10 o'clock in the forenoon, at the Court House, Bastion\nSquare, Victoria, hold a Court of Revision for the purpose of hearing and determining said objections.\nUnless the person objected to or some other Provincial Voter on his behalf appears at the said Court and satisfies me that the said objection is not well founded,\nI shall strike the name of the person so objected to off the said list.\nDated this 6th day of October, 1909.\nHARVEY COMBE, Registrar of Voters.\nChristian Name and Surname of Voter\nAUSTIN, HENRY JAMES\t\nBAHLMAN, OTTO JOE. FRED'K\t\nBARDET, ALICK \t\nBAYLES, THOMAS \t\nBETTS, HERBERT \t\nBLAIR, THOMAS \t\nBRADY, MICHAEL\t\nBROOKS, JOHN HENRY \t\nBROWN, GEORGE \t\nBROWN, WILLIAM \t\nIBRYAN. JAMES \t\n'BURGESS, PHILIP \t\nBURN, EDWARD \t\nBYRNE, JOHN \t\nCAIN, THOMAS \t\n;CAIN, THOMAS\t\n'CARMICHAEL. JOHN \t\n\u25a0CATO, CHRISTOPHER\t\nICLARK, GEORGE RAE\t\nCLARK, ARTHUR WILLIAM \t\nCLARKE, ROBERT \t\nCLEGG, ROBERT ...\t\nCOBB, HERBERT EDWARD \t\n.COLLISTER, RICHARD \t\nCONNOR, FRANK\t\niCOOK, HARRY ORME \t\n.CORNER, WILLIAM ERNEST \t\nCOTTLE, JOSEPH JAMES \t\n;DALES, JOSEPH \t\n,DAVISON, JOHN \t\nDAVISON, JOHN \t\n:DEPRES, RICHARD \t\nDEVINE. JOHN \t\nDICKSON, ERNEST NORMAN \t\nDIXON, FRANCIS JOSHUA \t\nDONALDSON, ALEX. DAWSON ....\nDONOHOE, THOMAS \t\nDORAN. JAMES JOSEPH \t\nDORAN, STEPHEN \t\nDRAKE, SAMUEL \t\nDU BERGER, ALDERIC\t\nDUFTY, SAMUEL \t\nDUMBLETON, CHARLES D\t\nDUNN, ALFRED \t\nEDWARDS, WILLIAM JOHN \t\nEDMUNDS, BERNARD OLIVER ....\nELLIOTT, JOHN KEITH \t\nEMSLEY, HARRY \t\nEVANS. EDWARD \t\nEVANS, ROBERT GEORGE \t\nFEA, THOMAS \t\nFIELD, CHESTER GIBB \t\nFIELD, EDWARD SPELMAN \t\nFORSTER, DAVID \t\nFORSYTH, JOHN \t\nFRAME, DAVID\t\nFREDERICKSON, OLE FERDINANT\nGABRIEL, WILLIAM WILLMOTT .\nGARLAND, JOHN\t\nGIBSON, FRANK \t\nGIBSON, RALPH FULLARTON \t\nGRAY, JOHN \t\nGREENWOOD, HAROLD \t\nGREY, ROBERT \t\nHARMAN, JOHN \t\nHARVEY, LANCELOT W. FRED'K .\nHASLETT, JAMES \t\nHOAD, PATRICK\t\nHODSON, JAMES \t\nHOLT, JAMES HENRY \t\nHOOPER, CHARLES WM. W\t\nHOWDEN, GEORGE \t\nHUDSON, JOSEPH \t\nHUSBAND, ROBERT ANDERSON .\nJENNINGS, GEORGE GERVASE \t\nJOHNSON, GEORGE NATHANIEL .\nJOHNSON, GEORGE HERCUS \t\nJOHNSTON, JOHN \t\nKILTY, DAVID WILLIAM \t\nKING, THOMAS \t\nK1NNEAR, JOHN \t\nK1RKWOOD, DAVID \t\nLACE, JAMES \t\nLAMPSH1RE, EDWIN \t\nLEDINGHAM, FRANCIS \t\nLESLIE, DAVID BRUCE \t\nLESLIE, JOHN \t\nLLOYD, GEORGE \t\nLYNCH, JEROLD \t\nResidence\nFlorence Road, between Lampson and Pine\nBlake Street \t\nWork Point Barracks\t\nCoach and Horses Hotel\nCoach and Horses Hotel\nWork Point Barracks\nColwood \t\nDunsmuir Road \t\nWork Point Barracks ..\nPike Lake Road \t\nDuntze Head \t\nWork Point Barracks\t\nWork Point Barracks ....\nWork Point Barracks\nCoach and Horses Hotel \t\nOld Esquimalt Road \t\nCoach and Horses Hotel\t\nWork Point Barracks \t\nCoach and Horses Hotel \t\nCoach and Horses Hotel \t\nColwood \t\nColwood \t\nSignal Hill\t\nCorner Arcadia Street and Craigflower Road .\nCoach and Horses Hotel\t\nWork Point Barracks \t\nColwood\t\nS. W. corner Dominion and Craigflower Road\nSec. 97. East Sooke\t\n1 Coach and Horses Hotel\nCoach and Horses Hotel\nWork Point Barracks ....\nWork Point Barracks\t\nColwood\t\nRod Hill ....;.\nEast Sooke \t\nWork Point Barracks ...\nEsquimalt Road \t\nEsquimalt Road \t\nColwood \t\nWork Point Barracks\nHead Street \t\nPike Lake \t\nWork Point Barracks ..\nWork Point Barracks\nColwood \t\nWork Point Barracks\nWork Point Barracks\nWork Point Barracks\nEsquimalt\t\nWork Point Barracks \t\nMt. Verc Farm, Metchosin\nMt. Vere Farm, Metchosin\nCoach and Horses Hotel ..\nCoach and Horses Hotel ..\nCanteen Road \t\nMetchosin\t\nEsquimalt Road, near Half Way House\nCoach and Horses Hotel \t\nWork Point Barracks\t\nViewliekl Gardens, Esquimalt Road \t\nCoach and Horses Hotel \t\nRod Hill \t\nWork Point Barracks \t\nHalf Way House, Esquimalt Road\nHappy Valley \t\nCoach and Horses Hotel \t\nWork Point Barracks \t\nWork Point Barracks \t\nColwood \t\nSignal Hill \t\nCoach and Horses Hotel \t\nRod Hill \t\nCoach and Horses Hotel \t\nCoach and Horses Hotel \t\nAdmiral's Road, Victoria Transfer Co.'s Ranch.\nCoach and Horses Hotel \t\nOld Esquimalt Road \t\nWork Point Barracks ...\nEsquimalt \t\nCoach and Horses Hotel\nEsquimalt Road \t\nCoach and Horses Hotel .\nSignal Hill \t\nCoach and Horses Hotel\nWork Point Barracks\t\nWork Point Barracks \u2014\nWork Point Barracks\nCoach and Horses Hotel\nProfession, Trade or Calling.\nPurser\nEngineer ,\t\nSoldier \t\nRivetter \t\nLaborer \t\nBombardier, R. C. G- A.\nLaborer \t\nClerk\t\nSergeant P. A. M. C,\nPoultryman \t\nGunner, R. C. G. A\t\nSapper, R. C. E\t\nGunner, R. C. G. A\t\nGunner, R. C. G. A\t\nIron Driller \t\nLaborer\t\nBoilermaker's Helper\nGunner, R. C. G. A.\nLocomotive Fireman .\nPainter \t\nLaborer\t\nLaborer \t\nPrivate, C. O. C\t\nMarine Surveyor\nLaborer \t\nPrivate, P. A. M. C. .\nLaborer \t\nLaborer \t\nFarmer\t\nLaborer\t\nIron Worker\t\nGunner, R. C. G. A\t\nBombardier, R. C. G. A\t\nLaborer\t\nActing Bombardier, R. C. G. A.\nFarmer \t\nGunner, R. C. G. A\t\nIron Moulder \t\nMechanic\t\nPlasterer \t\nPrivate, C. O. C. .'.'.'.'..\t\nLaborer \t\nFarmer \u2022..\u25a0._\u2022.\t\nSapper, R. C. E. ..'.'._\t\nSergeant, R. C. E.\t\nLaborer \t\nActing Bombardier,' R. G. A.\nSapper, R. C. E\t\nGunner, R. C. G. A\t\nMaster Mariner \t\nS. C.\nPrivate, A.\nFarmer \t\nFarmer \t\nBlacksmith's Helper\nPainter \t\nArchitect \t\nFarmer \t\nBoilermaker \t\nLaborer \t\nGunner, R. C. G. A.\nSurveyor's Assistant\nBoilermaker \t\nGunner, R. C. G. A. .\nPrivate, P. A. M. C.\nBarkeeper \t\nFarmer \t\nLaborer \t\nGunner, R. C. G. A.\nSapper, R. C. E.\nLaborer \t\nSoldier \t\nEngineer \t\nGunner, R. C. G. A.\nCarpenter \t\nGentleman\nTeamster\nBartender\nMiner \u2014\nGunner, R. C. G. A.\nCarpenter\nMoulder ..\nIron Ship Builder\t\nPrivate, O. S. C\t\nLaborer \t\nBombardier, R. C. G. A.\nGunner, R. C. G. A.\nArtilleryman \t\nBoilermaker \t\nNature of Objection.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Dead.\n. Ceased\n. Ceased\n. Ceased\n. Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n. Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n.Ceased\n. Ceased\n.Ceased\n. Ceased\n. Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside,\nto reside\nto reside\nin the District,\nin the District,\nin the District,\nin the District,\nin the District,\nin the District,\nin the District,\nin the District.\nin the District,\nin the District,\nin the District,\nin the District.\nto reside in\nto reside in\nto reside in\nto reside in\nto reside in\nto reside in\nto reside in\nto reside in\nto reside in\nto reside in\nto reside in\nto reside in\nto reside in\nto reside in\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District.\n Ceased to reside in the District.\n Ceased to reside in the District.\n Ceased to reside in the District.\n Ceased to reside in the District\n Ceased to reside in the District.\n Ceased to reside in the District\n Ceased to reside in the District\n Dead.\n Ceased to reside in the District.\nAlien and Ceased to reside in District.\nAlien and Ceased to reside in District.\n Ceased to reside in the District.\n Ceased to reside in thc District.\n Ceased to reside in the District.\n Ceased to reside in the District.\n Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n\u2022 Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\nin the District,\nin the Distcit.\nin the District,\nin the District,\nin the District.\nin the District.\n.Ceased to reskle in the District.\n\u2022 Alien.\n\u2022 Alien.\n\u2022 Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Alien.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n\u2022 Ceased to reside in the District.\n\u2022 Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n\u2022 Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n. Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n.Ceased\n. Ceased\n.Ceased\n. Ceased\n.Ceased\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n... .Ceased to reside in the District.\n,. ..Ceased to reside in the District.\n Ceased to reside in the District.\n Ceased to reside in the District.\n Ceased to reside in the District.\n Ceased to reside in the District.\nAlien and Ceased to reside in District. THE WEEK, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1909\nESQUIMALT ELECTORAL DISTRICT\u2014Continued\nChristian Name and Surname of Voter\nMcBETH, ALEXANDER \t\nMcCRAE, DAVID \t\nMcDONALD, ALEXANDER \t\nMcDONALD, ANGUS \t\nMcDONALD, ARCHIBALD \t\nMcDONALD, JAMES ELDRIDGE ..\nMACKENKIE, DONALD \t\nMACKENZIE, DONALD \t\nMACKIE, WILLIAM \t\nMALBON, EDWARD JOHN \t\nMALENBERG, HENRY \t\nMANNING, JOSEPH MONTAGUE .\nMANUEL, STEWART MENELAWS .\nMARSH, JOSEPH EDWARD \t\nMELVILLE, JOHN \t\nMILES, JAMES \t\nMILLER, JOHN HENRY \t\nMITCHELL, DAVID \t\nMOODIE, HARRY STRUTHERS ...\nMOORHOUSE, SIDNEY JAMES ....\nMORGAN, DANIEL PETER \t\nMORTIMER, JOSEPH HENRY \t\nMUIR, JOHN \t\nMULLENS, CHARLES HERBERT .\nMURRAY, JOHN ROBERT \t\nNELSON, ROBERT \t\nNICHOLSON, ANTH PEARSON ...\nNICOLAYE, JOSEPH\t\nOGILVIE, JOHN \t\nO'HARA, ROBERT\t\nOWEN, THOMAS W\t\nPHILLIPS, CLEMENT \t\nPRESS, HENRY ALFRED \t\nPRICE, HENRY \t\nPRITCHARD, GIL HY. BEV AN \t\nPROVINS, HARRY WILFRID \t\nPURVER, THOMAS \t\nRAPLEY, CHARLES\t\nRAYMOND, JOHN, JR\t\nRAYMOND, JHILIP HENRY \t\nRICHARDS, WILLIAM JENNINGS .\nRICHMAN, RICHARD \t\nROBERTSON, WM. H. MONCRIEFF\nROBERTSON, ANDREW \t\nROBERTSON, JOHN RODERICK ..\nROBINSON, GEORGE WATSON ....\nROBINSON, ROBERT \t\nRODGERS, CHARLES \t\nROWE, JAMES PATRICK \t\nROWSON, WALTER WILLIAM ....\nSAYER, JOHN \t\nSCOTT, ALEXANDER\t\nSCOTT, ALEXANDER DAVID \t\nSHARCOTT, WILLIAM\t\nSHEARLOW, JOSEPH\t\nSMITH, WILLIAM H\t\nSMYTH, FRED\t\nSMYTH, FREDERICK \t\nSORTON, SAMUEL\t\nSTEADMAN, GEORGE \t\nSTEPHEN, RONALD H\t\nSTOUT, JAMES ANDERSON\t\nSTUART, GILZEAN ROLAND W. ..\nSURRIDGE, RICHARD THOMAS ...\nSWANSON, AUGUST \t\nTAIT, DAVID SPRAGGE \t\nTEMPLE, WILLIAM \t\nTENNESON, HAR. WALDEMAR ...\nTERRY, D. LOSS \t\nTHOMAS, JOHN JOSEPH \t\nTHOMSON, DANIEL\t\nTHORMAHLEN, THEODOR \t\nTRICKETT, STEAD \t\nWALKER, RICHARD \t\nWALL, HENRY \t\nWALL, WILLIAM GEORGE\t\nWALTON, ROBERT \t\nWELSH, GEORGE \t\nWHEELER, JOHN PHILIP \t\nWHITESIDE, ERNEST \t\nWILKINSON, ARTHUR HENRY\t\nWILLIAMS, JAMES\t\nWILLIAMS, JOHN HENRY \t\nWILLIAMSON, WILLIAM \t\nWILSON, THOMAS\t\nWILSON, EDWARD VICTOR \t\nWILSON, JAMES \t\nWRIGHT, AMBROSE \t\nWRIGHT, ERNEST \t\nResidence\nWork Point Barracks\t\nWork Point Barracks \t\nCoach and Horses Hotel \t\nWork Point Barracks \t\nOld Esquimalt Road \t\nOld Esquimalt Road, near Head Street\nConstance Cove Road \t\nConstance Cove Road \t\nConstance Avenue\t\nWork Point Barracks\t\nCoach and Horses Hotel\t\nWork Point Barracks \t\nSignal Hill\t\nSignal Hill\t\nCoach and Horses Hotel \t\nEsquimalt Hotel \t\nSignal Hill \t\nCoach and Horses Hotel \t\nWork Point Barracks\t\nNo. 2 Florence Road \t\nWork Point Barracks\t\nWork Point Barracks\t\nWoodside, Sooke \t\nWork Point Barracks\t\nHatley Park\t\nCoach and Horses Hotel\t\nHead Street, Work Point \t\nRoman Catholic Parsonage, Esquimalt\nCoach and Horses Hotel\nWork Point Barracks ...\nEsquimalt \t\nHalf Way House, Esquimalt Road.\nCoach and Horses Hotel\t\nParson's Bridge Hotel\t\nWork Point Barracks\t\nWork Point Barracks\t\nWork Point Barrack.. \t\nNo. 3 Cottage, Wharf Street, Esquimalt\nRosebank, Sec. 96, Esquimalt District\t\nWork Point Barracks \t\nEsquimalt \t\nCoach and Horses Hotel\t\nWork Point Barracks \t\nCoach and Horses Hotel\t\nOld Esquimalt Road \t\nViamede, Esquimalt Road \t\nWork Point Barracks \t\nCoach and Horses Hotel\t\nCoach and Horses Hotel\t\nWork Point Barracks \t\nWork Point Barracks\t\nOld Esquimalt Road \t\nSignal Hill\t\nWork Point Barracks\t\nCoach and Horses Hotel\t\nCoach and Horses Hotel\t\nCoach ahd Horses Hotel\t\nCoach and Horses Hotel\t\nEsquimalt Road, near Half Way House\nWork Point Barracks \t\nWork Point Barracks\t\nHatley Park\t\nEversley, Esquimalt Road \t\nFlorence Road \t\nSooke \t\nSouth Side, Douglas Road \t\nColwood \t\nMetchosin \t\nWork Point Barracks \t\nColwood \t\nCoach and Horses Hotel _\t\nStanley Street, between Dunsmuir and Head.\nGore Street, off Head Street \t\nCoach and Horses Hotel\t\nCoach and Horses Hotel\t\nWork Point Barracks\t\nOld Esquimalt Road, Viewfield Estate\nThetis Lake\t\nCorner Wharf and Queens Streets\t\nWork Point Barracks\t\nSignal Hill \t\nWork Point Barracks\t\nNaval Yard, Esquimalt \t\nCoach and Horses Hotel\t\nCoach and Horses Hotel\t\nEsquimalt Hotel \t\nCoach and Horses Hotel .\nCoach and Horses Hotel\nCoach and Horses Hotel .\nProfession, Trade or Calling.\nCorporal, R. C. G. A.\nBombardier, R. C. G. A.\nBoilermaker \t\nR. C. G. A\t\nIron Moulder \t\nSeaman \t\nLaborer \t\nLaborer \t\nSeaman \t\nGunner, R. C. G. A\t\nCarpenter \t\nPrivate, P. A. M. C\t\nArmourer, Ord. Sts\t\nPrivate, 0. S. C\t\nBlacksmith \t\nLaborer \t\nPrivate, O. S. C\t\nMiner\t\nR. C. G. A\t\nSupt. Clerk, R. E\t\nGunner, R. C. G. A\t\nGunner, R. C. G. A\t\nFarmer \t\nSergeant, A. S. C\t\nLaborer \t\nMachinist\t\nSeaman \t\nR. C. Clergyman\nMiner \t\nSergeant R. C.\nLaborer \t\nG. A.\nLaborer\t\nBoilermaker \t\nFarmer \t\nSapper, R. C. E\t\nBombardier, R. C. G. A.\nPainter \t\nChief Engine Room Artificer\nLime Burner \t\nSapper, R. C. E\t\nShip's Carpenter \t\nButcher \t\nSergeant, M. S. C\t\nPainter \t\nTeamster \t\nMerchant \t\nGunner, R. C. G. A\t\nShip Fitter\t\nShip Builder \t\nSergeant, R.C.A., S.C\t\nGunner \t\nFire Clay Worker\t\nPrivate, 0. S. C ,\nSoldier \t\nCarpenter \t\nShip Fitter \t\nLaborer \t\nLaborer\t\nLaborer ,\nGunner, R. C. G. A.\nActing Bombardier, R.\nStonemason .\nRancher \t\nLaborer ,\nFarmer \t\nC. G. A..\nStudent at Law \t\nLaborer \t\nFarmer\t\nBombardier, R. C. G. A.\nLaborer \t\nMachinist \t\nMiner\t\nCarpenter *..\nIron Worker \t\nCarpenter \t\nGunner, R. C. G. A\t\nMiner \t\nCaretaker, Esquimalt Waterworks.\nClerk \t\nSoldier \t\nCorporal, 0. S. C\t\nGunner, R. C. G. A\t\nCaretaker \t\nShipwright \t\nLaborer \t\nShip Fitter's Helper.\nFireman \t\nLaborer \t\nJoiner \t\nNature of Objection.\n Ceased to reside in the\n Ceased to reside in the\n Ceased to reside in the\n Ceased to reside in the\n Ceased to reside in the\n Ceased to reside in the\nDuplicate. Ceased to reside in\nDuplicate. Ceased to reside in\n Ceased to reside in the\n Ceased to reside in the\n Ceased to reside in the\n Ceased to reside in the\n Ceased to reside in the\n Ceased to reside in the\n Duplicate.\n Ceased to reside in the\n Ceased to reside in the\n Ceased to reside in the\n Ceased to reside in the\n Ceased to reside in the\n Ceased to reside in the\n Ceased to reside in the\n Dead.\n Ceased to reside in the\n Ceased to reside in the\n.Ceased to reside in\n.Dead.\n.Ceased to reside in\n.Ceased to reside in\n.Ceased to reside in\n.On Victoria City L\n. Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n.Dead.\n.Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n. Ceased to reside\n.Ceased\n.Dead.\n. Ceased\n. Ceased\n.Ceased\n. Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Dead.\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n. Ceased\n. Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n\u25a0 Ceased\n.Ceased\n. Ceased\n.Ceased\n. Ceased\n.Ceased\n. Ceased\n.Ceased\n. Ceased\n. Ceased\n.Dead.\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\n.Ceased to reside in\n.Ceased to reside in\n. Alien.\n\u25a0 Ceased to reside in\n\u25a0 Ceased to reside in\n\u25a0 Ceased to reside in\n\u25a0 Ceased to reside in\n. Duplicate.\n.Ceased to reside in\n.Ceased to reside in\n.Ceased to reside in\n.Dead.\n.Dead.\n.Ceased to reside in\n\u25a0 Ceased to reside in\n\u25a0 Ceased to reside jn\n. Ceased to reside jn\n\u25a0 Ceased to reside jn\n\u25a0 Ceased to reside in\n. On Victoria City\nCeased to reside in\n\u25a0 Ceased to reside in\n\u25a0 Ceased to reside in\n.Ceased to reside in\n. Duplicate.\nDistric\nDistrici\nDistrici\nDistrici\nDistric\nDistrici\nDistric\nDistrid\nDistrici\nDistrici\nDistrict\nDistric\nDistric\nDistric\nDistric\nDistric\nDistrid\nDistric\nDistric\nDistric\nDistrid\nDistrici\nDistric\nhe Distric!\nhe Districi\nhe Distric\nhe Distric\nst.\nhe Distrid\nhe Districi\nhe Districi\nhe Districi\nhe Districi\nhe District\nhe Districi\nhe Districi\nhe Districi\nhe Districi\nhe Districi\nhe Districi\nhe Districi\nhe Districi\nhe Districi\nhe Districi\nhe Districi\nhe Districi\nhe Districi\nhe Districi\nhe Districi\nhe Districi\nhe Districi\nhe Distric\nhe Distric\nhe Distric\nhe Distric\nhe Distric\nhe Distric\nhe Distric\nhe Distric\nhe Districi\nhe Districi\nhe Districi\nhe District\nhe Districi\nhe District\nhe District\nhe District\nhe District\nhe District\nhe District\nhe District\nhe District\nhe District\nList ane\nhe District\nhe District\nhe District\nhe District\nPROVINCIAL ELECTIONS ACT\nISLANDS ELECTORAL DISTRICT\nTAKE NOTICE that objections have been filed with me against the following persons' names being retained on the List of Voters for the above district on the\ngrounds set forth.\nAND FURTHER TAKE NOTICE that I will, on Monday, the ist day of November, 1909, at the hour of n o'clock in the forenoon, at Ganges Harbour, hold\na Court of Revision for the purpose of hearing and determining said objections.\nUnless the person objected to or some other Provincial Voter on his behalf appears at the said Court and satisfies me that the said objection is not well founded, I\nshall strike the name of such person off the said list.\nDated this 8th day of October, 1909. FRANK G. NORRIS, Registrar of Voters.\nChristian Name and Surname of Voter\nResidence\nSTEWART, THOMAS GILCHRIST North Saanich\nFORFAR, THOMAS JAMES \" '' c \"'\nMEUNCH, JOSEPH \t\nDOWNEY, JOHN HENRY \t\nNorth Saanich\nNorth Saanich\nNorth Saanich\nProfession, Trade, or Calling.\nFarmer ..\nMerchant\nFarmer ..\nFarmer ..\nNature of Objection.\n\u25a0 Ceased to reside in the District\n\u25a0 Ceased to reside in the District\n\u25a0 Ceased to reside in the District.\n\u25a0 Ceased to r.eside in the District. THE WEEK, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1909\nPROVINCIAL ELECTIONS ACT\nVICTORIA ELECTORAL DISTRICT\nTAKE NOTICE that objections have been filed with me against the following persons' names being retained on the List of Voters for the above district on the\ngrounds set forth.\nAND FURTHER TAKE NOTICE that I will, on Monday, the ist day of November, 1909, at the hour of 10 o'clock in the forenoon, at the Court House, Bastion\nSquare, Victoria, hold a Court of Revision for the purpose of hearing and determining said objections.\nUnless the person objected to or some other Provincial Voter on his behalf appears at the said Court and satisfies me that the said objection is not well founded,\nI -shall strike the name of the person so objected to off the said list\nDated this 6th day of October, 1909.\nHARVEY COMBE, Registrar of Voters.\nChristian Name and Surname of Voter.\n.DAMS, JOSEPH MASON \t\n.DAMS, WILLIAM HERBERT \t\nALEXANDER, CHARLES \t\n|_NDERSON, ANDREW \t\nANDERSON, GEO. WILLIAM, SR. .\nJ-.NDERTON, FRANK ERIC \t\nvRMBRUSTER, ALBERT ERNEST\nARMSTRONG, JOHN \t\ntvSPINALL, THOMAS \n_ULD, ALLEN JAMES \n_ULEY, HERBERT PHIPPS \t\nOJSTIN, FREDERICK \t\nlOJSTIN, WILLIAM \t\nJAIN, ALEXANDER THOMAS \t\n3ALLENTINE, JOHN STEEL \t\nJARBER, JOHN\nJARNES, SIDNEY JAMES \t\nJARNSWELL, JAMES AUGUSTUS .\n1ARR, GEORGE EMMERSON \t\nURRETT, CHARLES WM\t\nSARRETT, JOHN \t\n1ARTHOLOMEW, ROBERT \t\nJARTON, THOMAS\t\n1ATCHELOR, FRANK AUGUSTUS\niATCHELOR, JOE HARRISON ....\nBATES, CHARLES\t\niECKENSELL, CHARLES HENRY ,\nJEE, WILLIAM NEILL\t\nBEECH, LIONEL \t\nBEECHER, PETER \t\nBEEGAN, FREDERICK WILLIAM \t\n,3ELYEA. ARTHUR DOUGLAS \t\nBERKELY, CHRIS MAURICE \t\nGERMAN, WILLIAM \t\nBEYGRAU, PAUL THEODORE \t\nBERTWISTLE, WILLIAM \t\nBISHOP, RICHARD PRESTON\t\nBLACK, CHARLES MELBOURNE\t\nBLAKE, WALTER\t\nBLOOMGUEST, JOHN ...\t\n30EHMER, NELSON \t\nBONNETTE, HERBERT WILLIAM \t\n300RMAN, HARRY EUSTACE \t\nBOOTH, GEO. ALFRED HENRY \t\nBOURGOURD, THOMAS \t\n30WEN, DAVID \t\nBOWMAN, OVID HENRY \t\nIBOYER, EDWARD WARNER \t\n\u25a03RADFORD, JAMES \t\n\u25a0BREEDS, ROBERT HENRY \t\n[BRENDON, ERNEST\t\nBRENNAN, HENRY\t\n(BRIDGES. GEORGE STANLEY \t\nROMLEY, GEORGE \t\nROOKER, THOMAS CUTHBERT\t\nBROOKES, JOHN HENRY ...\nIBROWN, CHARLES ELRIC OWEN \t\nBROWN, FRED\t\nIBROWN, HENRY ORBLE \t\niBROWN, JAMES ;...\nBROWN, JOHN ALEXANDER\t\nIBROWN, ROBERT HENRY\t\nROWN, THOMAS EDGAR \t\nBROWN, WILLIAM VINCENT \t\nIBROWNE, HARRY \t\nBROWN, HARRY \t\nBROWN, JOHN ALFRED \t\n8ROWNLOW, JOHN WILLIAM HENRY\n[BRUCE, JOSEPH\t\nBRYSON, HUGH\t\nBUDDEN, CHARLES THOMAS \t\nBUDDEN, EDWARD WALTER ALFRED\niBULLY, ALFRED HENRY \t\n;BULLEY, ARTHUR BENJAMIN \t\nBURKE, CLARENCE BALDWIN \t\nBURNETT, HAROLD\t\nBURNETT, WILLIAM HENRY \t\nBURRINGTON, GEORGE \t\nBURROUGHS, HY. RANDLE _\nBURT, ARTHUR HAYES\t\nBURTON, WILLIAM HENRY \t\nIBURY, CHARLES ARTHUR \t\nBUTLER, CLIFFORD FREDERIC \t\nIBUTTERWORTH, GEORGE ALLEN\t\nIBYRNELL, GEORGE CHARLES \t\n:ail, frank wilson \t\ncameron, ewen joseph \t\nicameron, john alex\t\nzampbell, colin lorne ....\nicampbell, wm. elliot \t\n:amus, emile\t\n:ard, JAMES\t\nZARDEW, HAROLD WOOLMER\nICAREW, JOHN \t\nZAREY, THOMAS \t\nICARMICHAEL, DUNCAN McL. ...\nResidence\n44 Rae Street \t\n30 First Street \t\nS. S. \"Queen City\" .\nS. S. \"Oscar\" \t\n634 John Street \u2014\n63 Superior Street\n2000 Store Street ..\n2802 Bridge Street\nD. G. S. \"Quadra\" .\n309 Douglas Street\n88 Pandora Street .\n11.3 Oswego Street .\n110 Johnson Street\nCor. Rae and Blanchard Streets \t\n20 Cadboro Bay Road \t\nS. E. corner Niagara and Oswego Streets\n41 Burdette Avenue \t\n1148 Johnson Street \t\nDominion Hotel, Yates Street \t\n16 Pembroke Street\t\n130 Government Street \t\nEmpire Hotel \t\n107 Michigan Street\t\nMacGregor Avenue \t\nMacGregor Avenue\t\n42 Herald Street\t\n151 Vancouver Street \t\nS. S. \"Amur\"\t\n300 Richmond Avenue\t\nGrand Pacific Hotel, Johnson Street \t\n36 Frederick Street\t\n6 South Turner Street \t\n23 Burdette Avenue\t\nSavoy Hotel, Government Street\t\nCrescent Street '(near Irving Street)\t\nWestern Hotel .\u2014\t\n46 Dallas Avenue\t\n304 Dallas Road \u2014\t\nGrand Pacific Hotel, Johnson Street ... .\n40 David Street\t\n510 Superior Street\t\nClarence Hotel, cor. Yates and Douglas\t\n129 Michigan Street\t\n120 Vancouver Street\t\nPoint Ellice Boat House\t\n126 Vancouver Street\t\n826 Caledonia Avenue \t\n720 Heywood Avenue\t\n9 Johnson Street\t\nOsborne House, Cor. Pandora and Blanchard Street ,\nOsborne House, Cor. Pandora Street and Blanchard Street\nLouvre Saloon, Johnson Street \t\n729 Courtney Street \t\n13 Francis Avenue\t\n15 Bellot Street\t\nStreet _______W_______________________.t_______m\n454 Superior Street ....\nEsquimalt Road, North ^_mmmmm__mmmmmmmmmm_______mm___________M_mm\n5 Esquimalt Road\t\n45 North Chatham Street \t\n5 Pioneer Street\t\n59 Pandora Street \t\nRock Bay Hotel \t\n106 Johnson Street\t\n43 View Street\t\nS. S. \"Venture\"\t\n36 Cadboro Bay Road \t\n138 Blanchard Street \t\nBums Block, Bastion Street \t\n10 Harbour Cottages, Store Street\t\n89 Henry Street \t\n109 Pandora Avenue \t\n104 View Street \t\n104 View Street \t\nCherry Bank, Victoria Crescent \t\n27 Government Street\t\nOsborne House, cor. Pandora and Blanchard Streets\nCor. Langford and Catherine Streets \t\n22 Scoresby Street \t\n56 Vancouver Street \t\n26 Pioneer Street \t\nCarberry Gardens \t\n1288 Gladstone Avenue \t\n22 Kane Street \t\nCor, Oak Bay Avenue and Foul Bay Road\t\nProfession, Trade or Calling\nDruggist .\nMerchant .\nTailor\nMariner ..\nGentleman\nClerk \t\nLaborer ..\nTeamster .\nSailor \t\nCarpenter\nSteward ..\nPlasterer .\nMiner\nBookkeeper \t\nBroker \t\nFisherman \t\nBank Clerk \t\nWoodman \t\nCarpenter \t\nMarine Fireman ..\nShip's Carpenter .\nSteamboatman \u2014\nCarpenter \t\nAccountant \t\nReal Estate Agent\nSide\nEmpire Hotel, Johnson Street .\n314 Johnson Street \t\n242 Fort Street \t\nDominion Hotel \t\n65 King's Road\t\n1305 Government Street\t\n104 Fort Street \t\nCor. Oak and Jubilee Avenues\nCalifornia Hotel \t\nTelegraph Hotel \t\nOrchard Street \t\nFireman \t\nButcher\t\nMarine Engineer \u2014\nSurgeon-Colonel \t\nCarpenter \t\nTeamster \t\nClerk \t\nLaw Student \t\nLaborer \t\nDecorator \t\nDriver \t\nLand Surveyor \t\nLaborer \t\nFireman \t\nBoilermaker's Helper\nJeweler \t\nBartender \t\nBookkeeper \t\nFreight Clerk \t\nFisherman \t\nPiano Agent\t\nPlater \t\nBank Clerk \t\nMarine Fireman \t\nGentleman\t\nGentleman \t\nSeaman \t\nTeamster \t\nLaborer \t\nBookkeeper \t\nBank Clerk \t\nCarpenter \t\nAgent E. & N. Ry ...\nSoda Water Mfr\t\nRetired \t\nGrocer's Clerk\t\nTeamster\t\nFireman \t\nFreight Clerk \t\nEngineer \t\nFreight Clerk \t\nFur Dealer \t\nTram Car Conductor\nBarber \t\nLaborer \t\nArtist \t\nTram Car Conductor\nSeaman \t\nSeaman \t\nInsurance Agent \u2014\nNews Agent \t\nChemist \t\nWarrant Officer R. E.\nInvestor \t\nTeamster \t\nFireman \t\nBarrister-at-Law \t\nPainter \t\nSteamboatman \t\nSalesman \t\nCarpenter \t\nLivery Stables Keeper\nClerk \t\nMiner \t\nCarpenter \t\nCook \t\nShoemaker \t\nProv. Police Officer ...\nLongshoeinan \t\nFireman \t\nPainter \t\nNature of Objection\n. Ceased to\n.Dead.\n\u2022 Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n\u2022 Dead.\n.Ceased to\n. Duplicate.\n.Ceased to\n. Dead.\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\nreside in the District.\nreside\nreside\nreside\nin the District,\nin the District.\nin the District,\nreside in the District.\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nin the District,\nin the District,\nin the District,\nin the District.\n.Dead.\n.Duplicate.\n. Dead.\n. Dead.\n. Duplicate.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Dead.\n.Dead.\n.Duplicate.\n.Duplicate.\n.Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n.. Ceased to\n.. Ceased to\n,. Ceased to\n.. Ceased to\n.. Ceased to\n.Dead.\n..Ceased to\n. Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Duplicate.\n. Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Duplicate.\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Dead.\n.Ceased to\n.Dead.\n. Duplicate.\n.Duplicate.\n.Duplicate.\n.Ceased to\n. Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n\u2022 Duplicate.\n. Dead.\n.Duplicate.\n\u2022 Duplicate.\n\u2022 Ceased to\n\u2022 Dead.\n. Dead.\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Dead.\n. Duplicate.\n. Ceased to\n.Duplicate.\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Duplicate.\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n. Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nn the District.\nn thc District.\nn the District,\nn the District,\nn the District,\nn the District,\nn the District.\nn the District,\nn the District,\nn the District,\nn the District.\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nDistrict,\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nn the District,\nn the District,\nn the District.\nreside in the District,\nreside in the District,\nreside in the District.\nreside in the District.\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nthe D\nthe D\nthe Di\nthe D:\nthe Di\nthe D:\nthe Di\nthe D\nthe D\nthe D\nthe Di\nthe D\nthe D:\nthe D\nstrict,\nstrict,\nstrict,\nstrict,\nstrict,\nstrict,\nstrict,\nstrict,\nstrict,\nstrict,\nstrict,\nstrict,\nstrict,\nstrict.\nreside in the District.\nreside in the District,\nreside in the District.\nreside in the District.\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict. THE WEEK, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1909\nVICTORIA ELECTORAL DISTRICT\u2014Continued\nChristian Name and Surname of Voter.\nCARMICHAEL, JOHN HENRY \t\nCARROLL, SEBASTION CHARLES ..\nCARROLL, WM. HENRY \t\nCARTER, ALEXANDER \t\nCARTER, JOHN WILLIAM \t\nCARTER, RICHARD HENRY \t\nCARTHEW, JOHN ALEXANDER \t\nCECIL, HENRY \t\nCHAFFER, JAMES CROSSLEY \t\nCHAFFEY, EDWARD \t\nCHESTER, ARNOLD \t\nCHRISTENSEN, OLE \t\nCHRISTOPHER, FRANK THOMAS ..\nCHURCHILL, WILLIAM \t\nCLARE, WILLIAM \t\nCLARK, FRANK \t\nCLARK, .JOHN \t\nCLARK, JOSEPH \t\nCLARK, LAWRENCE \t\nCLARKE, FREDERICK ST. CLAIR ...\nCLARKE, HARDNESS \t\nCLARKE, NICHOLAS SHOULDICE ..\nCLAY, REGINALD \t\nCLAYTON, THOMAS FRANK\t\nCLEGG, BENJAMIN \t\nCLEGG, JOHN PERDI \t\nCLEMENT, FREDERICK ERNEST ...\nCLUTE, ARTHUR HORACE \t\nCLYDE, ARCHIBALD \t\nCLYDE, EDWIN \t\nCOBAIN, JAMES\t\nCOCHRANE, JAMES \t\nCOGHILL, JOHN \t\nCOLDWELL, GEORGE ALEXANDER\nCOLLINS, JOHN \t\nCOLLINS, JOHN GEROME \t\nCOLLIS, JOB WEST \t\nCOLQUHOUN, ARCH ALEX \t\nCONKE, FRANK \t\nCONNOCHIE, DANIEL \t\nCOOK, EARL NICHOLAS\t\nCOOK, WILLIAM MATTHEW \t\nCOOPER, WALTER \t\nCOPE, JOSEPH HERBERT\t\nCOPE, JOSEPH HERBERT\t\n, CORBET, JAMES BLAKELY \t\nCORBET, JULIUS INCHES EVERET\nCOUSINS, JAMES \t\nCOWLEY, JOHN JOSEPH\t\nCRAWFORD, JAMES \t\nCRAWFORD, JAMES \t\nCREEDON, JOHN \t\nCREGG, WILLIAM PATRICK\t\nCROFT, ROBERT\t\nCRONYN, VERCHOYLE FRANCIS ...\nCROSSLEY, CHARLES JOHN \t\nCRUICKSHANK, GEORGE \t\nCRUICKSHANK, GEORGE \t\nCRUISE, WILLIAM EDWARD \t\nCULLIN, WILLIAM MARTIN \t\nCULLIN, WILLIAM MARTIN\t\nCULLUM, WILLIAM ROBERT \t\nCUMING, LAURENCE \t\nCUNNINGHAM, ROBERT \t\nCURCIO, CALOGRO \t\nCURRIE, JOHN \t\nCU-RTEIS, EDMUND CROFT\t\nCURTIS, ANDREW \t\nCURTIS, PETER STRATIS \t\nDAKIN, EGBERT LE ROY\t\nDALBY, JOHN A. VALENTINE ....\nDALY, WILLIAM \t\nDANIEL, CLARENCE BLACK\t\nDAVIES, HENRY EDWARD \t\nDAVIES, JOHN \t\nDAVIES, JOHN \t\nDE FOE, EDWARD FRANKLIN\nDICKIE, JAMES ALEXANDER \t\nDICKINSON, EDWIN \t\nDICKINSON, GEORGE DURRANT .\nDICKINSON, TOM \t\nDISLER, CHARLES\t\nDIXON, ALFRED \t\nDOAN, GEORGE ROWLAND \t\nDOAN, GEORGE ROWLAND \t\nDODDRELL, VICTOR \t\nDODDS, FREDERICK WILLIAMS ..\nDON, DAVID \t\nDONKIN, GEORGE EDWARD \t\nDONKIN, HARRY \t\nDORIA, ANGELO \t\nDOUGLAS, JAMES ANDREW\t\nDOWSE, WILLIAM ARTHUR\t\nDOYLE, JAMES \t\nDUDLEY, JOHN COLMAN\t\nDUFF, JAMES \t\nDUMBLETON, HENRY \t\nDUNCAN, ALEXANDER \t\nDUNCAN, WILLIAM, S. D\t\nDUNCAN, WILLIAM WHITFIELD\nDUNN, CHARLES HENRY\t\nDUNN, GEORGE IRONSIDES \t\nDUPEN, WILLIAM LESLIE \t\nDURHAM, ALEXANDER \t\nDYSON, WILLIAM \t\nEASTON, JAMES \t\nEDWARDS, HENRY \t\nEMERSON, PERCY JAMES ...\nEMERY, GEORGE THOMAS ..\nESCALET, ERNEST \t\nESMOND, FREDERICK JOHN\nEVANS, WILLIAM CHARLES\nEVANS, WILLIAM EDWARD .\nEWING, ARCHIBALD \t\nFAHEY, THOMAS \t\nFAHEY, JAMES EDWARD \t\nFALCONER, DAVID \t\nFARMER, DANIEL JAMES \t\nFARMER, EDWARD \t\nFAULKNER, HOWARD SPRAGGE\nFEENEY, JOHN LAWRENCE\t\nFERGUSON, JOHN HENRY \t\nFERRIS, NEIL FRANK \t\nFINCH, SOMERSET ALFRED GEO.\nFINLAYSON, GEORGE G\t\nFIRTH, HANSON \t\nFISHER, ARTHUR GORDON \t\nFITZGERALD, JOHN JOSEPH \t\nFLANAGAN, PATRICK\t\nResidence\nOrchard Street \t\n52 Pandora Street \t\nHeadquarters Fire Dept\t\nl\\V_\\ Chatham Street \t\nCalifornia Hotel \t\n85 Fort Street \t\n162 Menzies Street\t\nDominion Hotel \t\n3 Luxton Avenue \t\nTelegraph Hotel \t\n134 Johnson Street\t\n134 Johnson Street\t\n2 Bay Street *\n65 Fourth Street\t\n36 Store Street \t\n66 Second Street\t\nQueens Hotel\t\n25 Vancouver Street \t\n571 Henry Street \t\nBalmoral Hotel\t\n2 Stanley Avenue \t\n136 Menzies Street \t\n300 Dallas Road \t\nYates Street, Fire Hall \t\n13 Humboldt Street \t\n32 Rae Street \t\n99 Quadra Street \t\nDriard Hotel \t\n\"ji'6 Henry Street \t\n28 Rock Bay Avenue \t\nEmpire Hotel \t\nOccidental Hotel \t\nBrunswick Hotel, Yates Street \t\nCor. Hereward St. and Old Esquimalt Road\nSt. Joseph's Hospital \t\n72 Frederick Street \t\nBeacon Street\t\n38 Simcoe Street \t\n68 Pembroke Street \t\nColonial Hotel\t\nOccidental Hotel\t\nClarence Hotel \t\n1726 Government Street \t\n13 Humboldt Street \t\n13 Humboldt Street \t\n103 Carr Street \t\n92 Simcoe Street \t\nVictoria Hotel \u2022<\t\n134 View Street \t\n40 Belleville Street \t\nTelegraph Hotel \t\n15 Harrison Street \t\n176 Yates Street \t\n230 Yates Street \t\nElford Street, West Side \t\n140 Joseph Street \t\n876 Humboldt Street \t\n716 Humboldt Street \t\nBadminton Club, Gordon Street\t\n99 Toronto Street\t\n7 Princess Street \t\nBrunswick Hotel \t\nBurnes House, Bastion Street \t\nGovernment House (Street) \t\n857 Johnson Street\t\nEmpire Hotel \t\n80 Pandora Street\t\nCalifornia Hotel \t\nHarbour Cottages, Store Street \t\n104 North Chatham Street \t\n19 North Park Street\t\nRoyal Hotel \t\nRoccahella, Victoria Crescent \t\n65 Michigan Street \t\n38 Johnson Street \t\n3 Humboldt Street \t\n67 Superior Street \t\n106 Fort Street \t\n26 Henry Street \t\n208 Moss Street \t\nBrunswick Hotel, Yates Street \t\n43 Humboldt Street \t\n95 Quebec Street \t\n1813 Oak Bay Avenue \t\n1813 Oak Bay Avenue \t\nf66 Government Street \t\n80 Kane Street \t\nLighthouse Hotel, Store Street\t\n21 Bellot Street \t\nCor. Oak Bay Avenue and Belcher Street ...\n70 Humboldt Street \t\nCameron's Farm (Beacon Hill) \t\n169 Johnson Street \t\nGrand Pacific Hotel \t\nRoom 6, Hartman's Cabins, Humboldt Street\nBrunswick Hotel \t\nRocklands, Rockland Avenue\t\n17 St. James Street \t\n833 Johnson Street \t\n6 Douglas Street\t\nCalifornia Hotel \t\nOccidental Hotel \t\nRoyal Arms Hotel, Store Street \t\nNo. 4, Harbour Cottages, Store Street \t\nS. S. Venture \t\n70'\/2 Fort Street \t\n142 Johnson Street \t\n8 Amelia Street \t\nBrunswick Hotel \t\nBurns Block, Bastion Square .\nCor. Superior and Menzies Street\n135 Douglas Street \t\n73 Pembroke Street \t\n175 Menzies Street\t\n133 Fisguard Street \t\n90 Douglas Street \t\n3 Grant Street \t\n88 Douglas Street \t\nBrunswick Hotel \t\nAtlantic Hotel \t\nStrand Hotel \t\n\"Manor House,\" Yates Street ..\n15 South Turner Street \t\nGordon Hotel \t\nAngel Hotel \t\nPowderly Avenue\t\nS.S. City of Nanaimo \t\n55 Store Street \t\nCalifornia Hotel, Johnson Street\nProfession, Trade or Calling\nNature of Objection.\nMiner \t\nMusician \t\nBartender \t\nFireman \t\nMusician\t\nPhysician and Surveyor\nSpeculator\t\nMining Engineer \t\nMusician \t\nSeaman\t\nLongshoreman \t\nFireman \t\nClerk \t\nFarm Laborer \t\nCook\t\nCarpenter\t\nShipwright\t\nBlacksmith \t\nIron Ship Worker\t\nClerk \t\nGrocer \t\nMiner \t\nClerk \t\nFireman \t\nMiner\t\nClerk \t\nMerchant \t\nBartender \t\nBoilermaker \t\nBoilermaker\t\nEngineer \t\nSteamboat Fireman\nCarpenter \t\nPrinter \t\nGardener \t\nMiner\t\nMachinery Agent \t\nClerk and Salesman ...\nMoulder \t\nPainter\t\nQuartermaster\t\nBridge Carpenter \t\nFireman\t\nOiler \t\nOiler \t\nBank Clerk\t\nBank Teller \t\nShipwright\t\nGentleman\t\nCom. Merchant\t\nMining Engineer\t\nSteward\t\nTravelling Salesman ...\nCom. Merchant \t\nAccountant \t\nCarpenter\t\nJoiner \t\nCarpenter\t\nGentleman\t\nPrinter \t\nPrinter \t\nTelephone Laborer\nPhotographer\t\nFootman\t\nShoemaker\t\nFireman\t\nStorekeeper \t\nFireman \t\nLaborer\t\nBaptist Minister \t\nMiner \t\nMachinist \t\nAccountant \t\nDruggist \t\nBoilermaker's Helper\nMiner \t\nOptician \t\nGrocer \t\nMoulder \t\nClerk \t\nPainter ,\nLaborer \t\nHardware Merchant .\nBuilder\t\nBuilder\t\nSailor \t\nGardener \t\nFireman \t\nCutter \t\nBroker \t\nMiner \t\nGentleman \t\nSteward \t\nLongshoreman \t\nMillman \t\nRetired \t\nGentleman \t\nCabinet Maker \t\nWaiter\t\nCom. Traveller \t\nFireman \t\nHotelkeeper \t\nBartender \t\nLaborer \t\nChief Steward \t\n.Ceased to\n.Dead.\n.Ceased\n. Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n. Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n. Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Duplica\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n. Ceased\n. Ceased\n. Ceased\n.Dead.\n. Duplica\n\u2022 Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n. Ceased\n. Ceased\n. Ceased\n.Dead.\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n. Ceased\n. Ceased\n.Duplica\n.Duplica\n.Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n. Ceased\n.Ceased\n\u2022 Dead.\n\u2022 Dead.\n.Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n. Ceased\n\u2022 Dead.\n\u2022 Ceased\n.Ceased\n. Duplica\n.Dead.\n. Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n. Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n. Ceased\n\u2022 Duplica'\n. Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n. Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\nreside in the District]\nMotorman \t\nLaborer\t\nNurse \t\nFarmer\t\nRestaurantkeeper\nElectrical Engineer ..\nHack Driver\t\nDriver\t\nPresbyterian Minister\nAgent\nInsurance\nBricklayer\nJournalist \t\nTailor \t\nMarine Engineer\t\nFireman \t\nMusician \t\nHack Proprietor\t\nBank Clerk \t\nNewspaper Proprietor\nSeaman \t\nStonecutter \t\nFireman \t\nHotelkeeper \t\nLongshoreman \t\n\u2022 Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n. Ceased\n. Ceased\n. Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n. Ceased\n\u2022 Dead.\n. Ceased\n. Ceased\n. Ceased\n. Ceased\n. Ceased\n. Duplica\n.Ceased\n. Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n\u2022 Dead.\n\u2022 Ceased\n. Ceased\n\u2022 Dead.\n\u2022 Alien.\n\u2022 Ceased\n. Ceased\n. Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n\u2022 Dead.\n. Ceased\n\u2022 Duplica\n\u2022 Duplica\n. Dead.\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n. Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Dead.\n.Ceased\n. Ceased\n.Dead.\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n. Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n\u2022 Dead.\n. Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n.Duplica\n.Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nDistrici!\nDistrict]\nDistrict!\nDistrict!\nDistrict!\nDistrict)\nDistrict]\nDistrict]\nDistrict]\nDistrict]\nDistrict!\nDistrici\nDistrict\nDistrici\nDistrict\nDistrici\nDistrici\nDistrici\nDistrici\nDistrici\nDistrici\nDistrici\nDistrici\nDistrici\nDistrici\nDistrici\nDistrici\nDistrici\nDistrici\nDistrici\nDistrici\nDistrici\nDistrici\nDistrici\nDistrici\nDistrici\nDistrici\nDistrici\nDistrici\nDistrici\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\no reside\no reside\n0 reside\no reside\n:o reside\no reside\no reside\n0 reside\no reside\no reside\n0 reside\n0 reside\n0 reside\ne.\n0 reside\n0 reside\n0 reside\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nDistrict\nDistrict\nDistrict\nDistrici\nDistrict!\nDistrict!\nDistrict!\nDistrict]\nDistrict!\nDistrict\nDistrict]\nDistrict]\nDistrict\nDistrict!\nDistrict!\nDistrict!\nDistrict!\nDistrictT\nDistrict!\nDistrict!\nDistrictT\nDistrict!\nDistrict!\nin the District!\nin the District!\nin the District]\nin the District!\nin the District!\nin the District!\nin the District!\nin the District!\n0 reside in the District!\n0 reside in the District!\n0 reside in the District!\n:o reside in the District!\n0 reside in the District.!\n0 reside in the District.!\n0 reside in the District.l\ne.\ne.\n0 reside in the District,]\no reside in the District!\no reside in the District!\no reside in the District.]\no reside in the District.]\n0 reside in the District!\n0 reside in the District]\no reside in the District.]\n0 reside in the District!\n0 reside in the District]\no reside in the District.\n0 reside in the District]\n0 reside in the District.l\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\n0 reside\no reside\n0 reside\n0 reside\nin the District.]\nin the District]\nin the District!\nin the District!\nin the District.]\nin the District]\nin the District]\nin the District.]\nin the District.]\nin the District!\nin the District! THE WEEK, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1909\nVICTORIA ELECTORAL DISTRICT\u2014Continued\nChristian Name and Surname of Voter.\nFOOT, EDWARD CHARLES \t\nFOOT, LEONARD \t\nFORSYTH, ALEXANDER FINLAYSON\nFOX, ALBERT JOHN \t\nFOX, BEAUFOY HOWARD \t\nFOX, GEORGE OSCAR M\t\nFUGL, ALFRED FEONELEY \t\nFULCHER, ARTHUR \t\nFULLAGER, LOUIS HENRY \t\nFULLUM, EDWARD AUGUSTUS \t\nFURNELL, CHARLES \t\nFURNESS, WILLIAM HENRY\t\nGAIGER, GEORGE \t\nGALBRAITH, ANGUS \t\nGANNON, THOMAS FRANK \t\nGARNETT, LOUIS ORMOND \t\nGERRISH, ARTHUR\t\nGIBBONS, NEIL \t\nGIBBS, JOSEPH \t\nGIBSON, WILLIAM WALLACE ....\nGIRAND, EVELYN HARVE B\t\nGIRLING, EPHRAIM \t\nGOODCHILD, WM. MILD HOOPER\nGOODMAN, JOHN \t\nGOODRICH, EDGAR F\t\nGORDON, JAMES DOUGLAS H. ...\nGOSLING, FRANK JOHN \t\nGOUGH, FRED\t\nGRAHAM, ALLAN \t\nGRAHAM, EDWARD ALEX\t\nGRAHAM, JOHN \t\nGRAHAM, JOHN ANDREW \t\nGRAHAM, CHARLES ROBERT \t\nGRANT, GORDON FRASER \t\nGRANT, JACOB \t\nGRAVLIN, HARRY JACOB \t\nGRAY, EDWARD WALKER \t\nGRAYSON, ALBERT CRUTH \t\nGREEN, ABRAHAM \t\nGREEN, FRANK \t\nGREEN, GEO. ROBERT \t\nGREEN, JOSEPH FORD\t\nGREEN, MORRIS \t\nGREEN, ROBERT \t\nGREENWOOD, GEORGE ROBERT .\nGRESTOCK, HOWARD \t\nGRIFFIN, WILLIAM JAMES \t\nGRIFFITHS, EDWARD \t\nGRIFFITHS, THOMAS \t\nHALL, ROBERT \t\nHALL, THOMAS BRIGHAM \t\nHALL, WILLIAM NESBITT \t\nHANBURY, JATRICK \t\nHANN, JEM\t\nHARDIE, GORDON HENRY \t\nHARDING, FREDERICK JAMES\t\nHARLOCK, WALTER HENRY \t\nHARPER, HOWARD MEDLEY \t\nHARPER, JOHN \t\nHARRIS, ARTHUR \t\nHARRIS, ROBERT \t\nHARRISON, JOHN \t\nHARRISON, WILLIAM HENRY \t\nHARTLING, ANGUS \t\nHARTNAGLE, GUST AVE AUGUST ..\nHARVEY, FRANCIS \t\nHASKINS, EDWIN\t\nHAWORTH, FREDERICK W. B\t\nHAYNES, JOSEPH JAMES \t\nHAYS, JOSEPH \t\nHAZELTON, CHARLES STIRLING ...\nHEATH, AUGUSTUS LIONEL \t\nHEATH, JAMES \t\nHEATHER, GUY GILLIAM \t\nHEMMINGS, WILLIAM HENRY\t\nHENDREU, ALBERT \t\nHENDRICKS, NICHOLAS HERMAN ..\nHENLY, WILLIAM GREGORY \t\nHERAPER, CHARLES \t\nHERBERT, ROBERT JOHN \t\nHERMER, HERBERT \t\nHEWITT, JAMES THOMAS \t\nHIGGINBOTTOM, GEORGE HENRY\nHILL, FREDERICK \t\nHILL, JOHN EDWARD \t\nHILL, JOHN EDWARD \t\nHILL, ROBERT JOHN \t\nHILL, THOMAS ROWLAND \t\nHILL, WILLIAM \t\nHILLYARD, JAMES \t\nHILLYARD, SYDNEY \t\nHINKSON, EVAN ALLEYNE \t\nHISCOX, WALTER \t\nHITCHENS, REGINALD ELLIOTT ...\nHITT, FREDERICK GABRIEL \t\nHITT, THOMAS GABRIEL \t\nHODGINS, ADAIN \t\nHODGES, WILLIAM THOMAS \t\nHODGSON, GEORGE NELSON \t\nHODGSON, SAMUEL BOOTH \t\nHOFFMAN, PETER\t\nHOLDEN, BURTREN ALEXANDER ..\nHOLDEN, FREDERICK CLARK \t\nHOLDERNESS, CECIL ARTHUR \t\nHOLLAND, JOSHUA \t\nHOLMES, WILLIAM JAMES \t\nHOLT, JAMES \t\nHOMAN, FREDERICK \t\nHOPKINS, JOHN CASTELL\t\nHORNELL, JAMES \t\nHORTH, CHARLES HENRY \t\nHOWARD. GEORGE BOTSFORD ....\nHOWAT, GEORGE \t\nHOWE, ERNEST JOHN \t\nHUBBARD, FRANK \t\nHUGHES, EDWARD \t\nHUGHES, RICHARD \t\nHULME, TOM \t\nHULME, THOMAS \t\nHUNT, WILLIAM EWART\t\nHURLEY, JOHN \t\nHURST, BERTRAM HAWORTH \t\nHUSON, ALDEN WESLEY \t\nHUTBER, EDWARD \t\nHUTCHERSON, WILLIAM \t\nHYGH, ERNEST CHARLES \t\nHYNES, FRANCIS \t\nResidence\n12 Belleville Street \t\n12 Belleville Street \t\n204 Superior Street \t\n45 Menzies Street \t\n828 Rae Street \t\n828 Rae Street \t\n\"Roccahella,\" Victoria Crescent \t\nDominion Hotel, Yates Street\t\nRichmond Avenue (South Side) \t\nBehring Sea Cabins, Discovery Street\n29 Princess Avenue \t\n48 Boyd Street \t\nINNES, BURT \t\nIREDALE, WILSON\n314 Langford Street \t\n56 Belleville Street \t\nKing's Head, Johnson Street \t\n47 Bellot Street \t\nClarence Hotel \t\nEmpire Hotel, Johnson Street \t\n362 Douglas Street \t\n146 Clarence Street \t\nPhipps Cottage, Oak Bay \t\n52 King's Road \t\n148 Fort Street \t\nAngel Hotel, Langley Street \t\n48 View Street \t\nYates Street (King Edward Hotel) .\nAtlantic Hotel, Johnson Street \t\n3 Humboldt Street \t\n42 Vancouver Street \t\nS.S. City of Nanaimo \t\n32 Rae Street \t\nOccidental Hotel \t\n41 View Street\t\nSaanich Road \t\nBrunswick Hotel, Douglas Street\t\nHulton Street \t\n113 Fisguard Street \t\n43 Victoria Crescent \t\n180 Cook Street \t\n43 Humboldt Street \t\n32 Rae Street \t\n1250 Johnson Street \t\nOsborne Hotel \t\nMoss Street, South of Fairfield Road\n23 Taunton Street \t\nRoyal Cafe, Fort Street \t\nKing Edward Hotel \t\n98 North Pembroke Street \t\nSt. George's Hotel \t\n1425 Store Street \t\n69 Superior Street \t\n207 Robertson Street \t\n4 Humboldt Street \t\nOccidental Hotel \t\n3 Bridge Street \t\n1 Humboldt Street\t\n333 Johnson Street \t\nBurns House, Bastion Street \t\n5 Humboldt Street \t\n144 Chatham Street \t\n95 Hillside Avenue \t\nOsborne House, Pandora Street \t\n90 Pandora Street\t\nStrand Hotel \t\nDriard Hotel \t\nBrunswick Hotel \t\nCedar Hill Road, north side, near Cook Street \t\n1602 Douglas Street \t\n152 Johnson Street \t\nCalifornia Hotel \t\n23 Ellis Street \t\nFrank's Cabins (next Rice Mills) \t\n'95 Johnson Street \t\nWindsor Hotel, corner Government and Courtney Streets\n28 Mary Street \t\n21 Bellot Street\t\n13 Niagara Street \t\n\"Cliff House,\" Clover Point \t\nInverness House, Pandora Street \t\n5 Amelia Street \t\n6 Bridge Street \t\n45 Quebec Street \t\n49 Johnson Street \t\nCorner Humboldt and McClure Streets \t\n73 Henry Street \t\n18 Third Street \t\n203 Quebec Street \t\nEmpire Hotel, Johnson Street\t\n129 Fisguard Street \t\n50 Alfred Street \t\n50 Alfred Street \t\nS.S. Princess May \t\nHereward Street\t\nDredge Mudlock \t\nMary Street, off Esquimalt Road \t\nEsquimalt Road, opposite Russell Station \t\nEmpire Hotel, Johnson Street \t\n86 Store Street \t\n256 Johnson Street \t\nBurnes House, Bastion Street \t\n6 Johnson Street \t\n203 Douglas Street \t\n95 Mears Street \t\n85 Yates Street \t\n298 Dallas Road\t\nEsquimalt Road, north side \t\nColonial Hotel \t\n6 Rae Street\t\n22 Quebec Street \t\n14 Nortli Road, Spring Ridge \t\n58 Princess Avenue \t\nStrand Hotel \t\nSteamer Danube \t\n23 Grant Street \t\nSt. George's Inn \t\n254 Johnson Street \t\n18 Edmonton Road \t\nClarence Hotel \t\n255 Johnson Street\t\n132 Johnson Street \t\nTelegraph Hotel \t\nRussell Street, south of Esquimalt Road \t\nRoom 9, Collin's Building\nProfession, Trade or Calling\nPhysician \t\nClerk \t\nClerk \t\nWatchmaker \t\nMechanical Engineer\nAccountant \t\nFur Buyer .\nFarmer \t\nBarrister-at-Law\nTrackman\t\nBarber\t\nFireman\t\nMotorneer\t\nMiner \t\nHorse Trainer\t\nGentleman\t\nHotel Clerk \t\nCanneryman\t\nSurgeon \t\nReal Estate Agent ...\nAccountant \t\nClerk \t\nCollector \t\nBricklayer \t\nLaundryman\t\nPaper Maker \t\nFreight Clerk \t\nSeaman \t\nAccountant \t\nFireman \t\nClerk \t\nBlacksmith's Helper .\nFireman \t\nMarine Engineer\t\nMarine Fireman \t\nPaper Hanger \t\nDeckhand \t\nEngineer\t\nFarmer\t\nLongshoreman \t\nCommercial Traveller\nContractor\t\nStationary Engineer .\nGardener \t\nBoiler Maker \t\nClerk \t\nHardware Merchant ..\nCarpenter \t\nSaloon Keeper \t\nCook\t\nAssessor and Collector\nCarpenter \t\nLongshoreman \t\nFireman \t\nEngineer\t\nGardener \t\nMarine Engineer \t\nCarpenter\t\nMiner \t\nLaborer \t\nLaborer \t\nCarpenter \t\nClerk\t\nFireman \t\nHotel Manager \t\nClerk\t\nLaborer \t\nLibrarian\t\nSteward \t\nSeaman \t\nTeamster \t\nSeaman\t\nEngineer\t\nTaxidermist\t\nMaster Cooper \t\nClerk \t\nPhotographer\t\nFarmer\t\nMachinist\t\nCutter\t\n6 Maynard's Cabins, Pandora Street\n20 Pioneer Street \t\nEsquimalt Road and E.\n75 Menzies Street\t\n& N. Station\nEverett's Exchange\n107 Pandora Street\nReporter \t\nSteamboatman \t\nBoilermaker \t\nEngineer\t\nSteward \t\nSalesman \t\nTeamster\t\nDriver\t\nClerk \t\nClerk \t\nMariner\t\nPlumber \t\nSeaman \t\nFireworks Manufacturer\nChemist\t\nEngineer \t\nStoker \t\nBookkeeper \t\nShoemaker\t\nLaborer\t\nSaloon Keeper \t\nClerk \t\nTailor\t\nContractor\t\nTeamster \t\nTeamster \t\nStable Foreman \t\nGentleman\t\nLaborer \t\nTeamster \t\nHotel Keeper\t\nSeaman \t\nBookkeeper \t\nLaborer\t\nCook\t\nLongshoreman\t\nMiner\t\nGrocer \t\nTeamster \t\nMiner\t\nInsurance Agent \t\nMiner\t\nEngineer\t\nTeamster \t\nBrakeman \t\nCarpenter \t\nNature of Objection\n. Ceased\n.Dead.\n. Ceased\n. Ceased\n.Ceased\n. Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\nto reside in the District.\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto resjde\nto reside\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\n.Duplicate.\n.Dead.\n.Dead.\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n\u2022 Dead.\n.Ceased to\n.Duplicate.\n. Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Dead.\n.Ceased to\n. Ceased to\n. Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Dead.\n. Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Dead.\n.Dead.\n\u2022 Ceased to\n. Duplicate.\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Dead.\n.Dead.\nreside\nreside\nin the District,\nin the District.\nreside in the District.\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nin the District,\nin the District.\nin the District,\nin the District.\nin the District,\nin the District,\nin the District,\nin the District.\nreside in the District.\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nPainter\nNone ..\n..Dead.\n..Ceased to reside\n..Duplicate.\n.. Ceased to reside\n..Ceased to reside\n.. Ceased to reside\n..Dead.\n..Ceased to reside\n..Duplicate.\n..Ceased to reside\n.. Ceased to reside\n..Ceased to reside\n..Ceased to reside\n.. Ceased to reside\n.. Ceased to reside\n..Ceased to reside\n..Ceased to reside\n.. Ceased to reside\n..Ceased to reside\n.. Ceased to reside\n..Ceased to reside\n..Ceased to reside\n..Ceased to reside\n..Dead.\n..Ceased to reside\n. .Ceased to reside\n..Ceased to reside\n..Ceased to reside\n..Ceased to reside\n..Ceased to reside\n.. Ceased to reside\n. .Ceased to reside\n..Ceased to reside\n..Ceased to reside\n..Dead.\n.. Ceased to reside\n..Ceased to reside\n.. Ceased to reside\n..Ceased to reside\n..Duplicate.\n.. Ceased to reside\n..Ceased to reside\n..Ceased to reside\n..Ceased to reside\n..Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n.Dead.\n.Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n.Dead.\n.Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\nin the District,\nin the District,\nin the District,\nin the District,\nin the District.\nin the District.\nin the District,\nin the District,\nin the District.\nin the District.\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nin the District,\nin the District,\nin the District,\nin the District.\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Dead. 10\nTHE WEEK, SATURDAY, OCTOBER x6, 1909\nVICTORIA ELECTORAL DISTRICT\u2014Continued\nChristian Name and Surname of Voter\nIRELAND, JOHN\nJACK, ALEXANDER\t\nJACKMAN, HENRY ISHAM \t\nJACKS, WILLIAM \t\nJACKSON, GEORGE \t\nJACKSON, OLIVER \t\nJACKSON, ROBERT EDWIN ....\nJERGER, REGINALD \t\nJAMIESON, JAMES ROBERT ...\nJAVIS, SYDNEY \t\nJEEVES, ERNIE \t\nJEEVES, FRED. EPHRIAM \t\nJEFFS, THOMAS \t\nJENKINS, GEORGE \t\nJENKINSON, HENRY \t\nJENKINSON, ROBERT \t\nJENSEN, JOHN PETER \t\nJOHNSON, JOHN ABERT \t\nJOHNSON, LIONEL CAMPBELL\nJOHNSON, WILLIAM \t\nJOHNSON, CHARLES \t\nJONES, ALBERT EDWARD \t\nJONES, CHARLES OLDBERRY .\nJONES, GEORGE FREDERICK ..\nJONES, WALKER \t\nJONES, WILLIAM \t\nJONES, WILLIAM \t\nJONES, WILLIAM \t\nJONES, WILLIAM HERBERT ...\nJORDAN, WILLIAM \t\nJOST, JAMES STANLEY \t\nJOYCE, GEORGE* NELSON \t\nKELLY, ANDREW \t\nKELLY, GEORGE \t\nKELLY, ROBERT LINDEN \t\nKELLY, SAMUEL LEON \t\nKELLY, WILLIAM JOSEPH\t\nKEOWN, JAMES HENRY \t\nKERNOHAN, JAMES \t\nKERR, GEORGE JOSEPH \t\nKING, RICHARD BERTRAM ....\nKING, WILLIAM \t\nKING, WILLIAM HENRY \t\nKINGSLEY, ARTHUR BRADY ...\nKNIGHT, ANSON \t\nKNOTT, HORACE JAMES \t\nKNOTT, WALLACE JOHN \t\nKOELLE, HERMAN HARVEY V.\nKUNZ, EMIL BENJAMIN \t\nLAIRD, JAMES ALFRED\t\nLAKIN, ERNEST AUGUSTUS \t\nLAMB, HAROLD MORTIMER \t\nLAMBERTON, WALTER HUGH \t\nLANCASTER, ISADOR MICHAEL\t\nLANDERWAY, JAMES WM\t\nLANDSBOROUGH, ALEX. AVERILL\nLANGDON, KENNETH \t\nLANGSLOW, JOHN OWEN \t\nLA PLANTE, JOHN PIUS \t\nLATIMER, LAWRENCE BRUCE \t\nLAW, HARRY SIMMONDS \t\nLAW, ROBERT KEATINGS \t\nLAWN, JAMES \t\nLAWRENCE, JOHN WM\t\nLAWRENCE, JOHN WM\t\nLAWSON, CHARLES ALFRED \t\nLAWSON, GAVIN \t\nLAWSON, JOHN \t\nLEA, ROWLAND \t\nLEAHY, JOHN \t\nLEAHY, ROBERT ANDREW \t\nLEAHY, WILLIAM JOHN \t\nLEAVITT, HENRY WARREN \t\nLEE, THOMAS CAMPBELL \t\nLEFEVRE, CHARLES \t\nLEONARD, FRANCIS HENRY \t\nLE PAGE, SAMUEL \t\nLEWIS. WILLIAM LAMPLEIGH \t\nLIDGATE, FREDERICK ALEX\t\nLIDSTON, THOMAS \t\nLINN, CHARLES SAMUEL \t\nLITTLE, JOHN THOMAS \t\nLITTLEBACK, FRANK \t\nLOGIE, DAVID \t\nLONGHURST, JARVES \t\nLOSSE, ROBERT BURNE \t\nLOWLE, FRANCIS FRED. WM\t\nLUCAS, MELVILLE FRANKLIN \t\nLUCKEY, CHARLES \t\nLUKER, EDGAR, CARL LEOPOLD ..\n48 Michigan Street \t\n125 Quadra Street \t\n13 Cedar Hill Road \t\n99 Fort Street \t\n95 North Park Street \t\nThe Hermitage,\" corner Richardson and Moss Streets.\n99 Quadra Street \t\n36 Bridge Street \t\n195 Yates Street \t\n65 First Street \t\n129^ Douglas Street \t\n|8 Cedar Hill Road \t\n135 Menzies Street \t\n96 Fort Street \t\nJubilee Hospital \t\n124 Yates Street \t\n100 Quadra Street \t\n6 Edmonton Road \t\nNorth Side McClure St., near Humboldt Street\t\nCalifornia Hotel \t\nClarence Hotel \t\nCor. Discovery and Blanchard Streets \t\nI44 Pembroke Street \t\n50 Yates Street\t\nWork Street, corner of Bridge Street\t\nWork Street, corner of Bridge Street\t\n9 Pioneer Street \t\nSt. George's Hotel, Esquimalt Road \t\nEmpire Hotel, 38 Johnson Street \t\nRoom 67, Five Sisters Block \t\n24 Duchess Street \t\nResidence\n42 Bridge Street\nSteamer \"Josemite\" \t\n86 North Pembroke Street \t\ngo Pandora Street \t\n203 Superior Street \t\nI26J-4 Oswego Street \t\n180 Douglas Street\t\nBrunswick Hotel\t\n135 Pandora Street \t\n112 Pandora Avenue \t\n46 Frederick Street \t\n(9 Bodwell Street \t\nSi Fort Street \t\n202 Fort Street\t\n19 Harrison Street \t\nIda Street, between N. Pembroke and William Streets.\n227 Johnson Street\t\n123 North Park Street \t\n108 Menzies Street \u25a0\t\n153 Montreal Street \t\n\"Dilkusha,\" Pemberto\" Road \t\nSkinner Street, Victoria West \t\n166 Yates Street \t\n45 Blanchard Street \t\nDredge Mudlark\t\n25 Parry Street \t\nW. C. T. U., Yates Street \t\n51 St. Lawrence Street \t\n127 Government Street\t\n35 Rae Street \t\nOak Bay Avenue, cor. Amphion Street \t\ngyi Wallace Street \t\n368 Johnson Street\t\n302 Pandora Street \t\n243 Johnson Street\t\nS.S. City of Nanaimo \t\n220 Douglas Street \t\n'Roccahella,\" Victoria Crescent \t\n109 Pandora Street \t\n75 Menzies Street \t\nto6 Fort Street \t\n2126 Spring Road \t\nClarence Hotel \t\n19 Rae Street \t\nS. S. Venture \t\nSuperior St., near Birdcage Walk \t\nBrunswick Hotel \t\n67 First Street \t\n32 Edmonton Road \t\nCabin, cor. Humboldt and Blanchard Street.\n24 Rae Street \t\n56 Pembroke Street \t\ni42^2 Bridge Street \t\n36 South Park Street \t\nProfession, Trade or Calling\nTeamster\nGentleman\t\nStorekeeper \t\nNo Occupation\t\nLaborer \t\nTinsmith\t\nBarrister-at-Law ...\nBookkeeper \t\nMaster Mariner ...\nTeamster \t\nBlacksmith \t\nMarine Engineer ...\nPainter \t\nSailor\t\nGardener\t\nSteward \t\nMiner \t\nTheatrical Manager\nIns. Solicitor \t\nLaborer\t\nLongshoreman\t\nRancher\t\nConductor \t\nLaborer\t\nButcher \t\nSeaman \t\nSeaman \t\nAuctioneer \t\nLaborer \t\nSealer \t\nElectrician \t\nSteamboatman\t\nCoal Passer ..,\nLaborer\t\nCarpenter \t\nRetired \t\nLongshoreman\nDriver \t\nGentleman\nCabinet Maker .\nCom. Agent ...\nLaborer\t\nPacker \t\nClerk \t\nManufacturer .,\nSupt. Loan Co.\nMinister \t\nBanker \t\nElectrician .'...\n372 Johnson Street\n59 Heywood Avenue\nI91 Fort Street \t\n44 Pembroke Street ..\n26 Humboldt Street .\nMerchant \t\nDriver\t\nJournalist\t\nPreserve Maker ...\nMerchant \t\nLaborer\t\nSailor\t\nTeacher\t\nLaborer \t\nLaborer \t\nReal Estate Agent\nGrocer \t\nIronmoulder \t\nCarpenter \t\nClerk \t\nSalesman\t\nEngineer\t\nOiler \t\nDriver\t\nMine Owner \t\nMiner\t\nCarpenter \t\nMiner\t\nPowder Maker ...\nGentleman \t\nSteward\t\nSeaman\t\nFish Dealer \t\nMariner \t\nClerk \t\nLaborer \t\nSeaman\t\nSecy Y. M. C. A.\nLaborer\t\nSteamboatman\nRetired\t\nClerk\t\nClerk\t\nPhysician \t\nSeaman\t\nCar Conductor ...\nMcALPINE, FREDERICK Rock Bay Hotel\nMcAULAY, ARCHIBALD MUIR 7 Scoresby Street\nMcBRADY, JOHN HERBERT 44 Rae Street\nMcBRIDE, JAMES -- \u00ab|\u2014\nMcBRIDE, JOHN WALKER \t\nMcBURNIE, HARRY \t\nMcCALLUM, JOHN\nMcCARNEY, JAMES AUGUSTUS\nMcCXRROLL, JOHN\t\nMcCarthy, michael j\t\nMcCLUSKY, WALLACE GREER .\nMcCOWBIE, WILLIAM \t\nMcCORMICK, ANGUS \t\nMcCOSKRIE, EDWARD \t\nMcCREA, LORENZO \t\nMcDONALD, ANGUS CHARLES .\nMcDONALD JOHN DAVID \t\nMcDonnell, harry\t\nMcdowell, joseph \t\nMacFARLANE, THOS. FLEMING\nMcGILLVRAY, ANGUS \t\nMcGREGOR, MALCOLM WM\t\nMrCREGOR, PETER L\t\nMcGUIRE, ELISHA TURTLOTTE\nMclNTOSH, THOMAS \t\nMcKAY, HORATIO LOW \t\nMACKAY, JOHN \t\nMACKAY JOHN CAMPBELL ....\nMcKAY, JOHN HARRIS \t\nMrKENDRY. THOMAS \t\nMcKENZIE, COLIN CAMPBELL .\nMACKENZIE, HUGH BLAIR ....\nMcKENZIE, THOMAS \t\nMACKIE, WILLIAM\t\nMcKINNON, MICHAEL -\u2022-\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u25a0\u2022\u2022\nScWNNOrf MICHAEL JAMES\n_.onore Hotel \t\n97 Toronto Street \t\nOld Esquimalt Road \t\n53 San Juan Avenue \t\nHorseshoe Saloon \t\nOsborne House \t\n19 Johnson Street \t\n1034 Burdette Avenue \t\n71 David Street \t\nBalmoral Hotel \t\n354 Dallas Road \t\nCor. Pandora and Douglas Streets\n127 Cormorant Street \t\n22 Store Street \t\nEmpire Hotel \t\nGrand Pacific Hotel \t\nClarence Hotel \t\n45!^ View Street \t\n175 Chatham Street \t\n2 View Street, McGregor Block .\n4 Erie Street \t\nColonial Hotel \t\n5 Cameron Street \t\n-jo Fisguard Street \t\n171 Johnson Street. Room 5 \t\n32 Rae Street \t\nBurnes House, Bastion Square ...\nr 19 Fort Street \t\n27 Labouchere Street \t\n224 Catherine Street \t\nTelegraph Hotel \t\n59 Henry Street \t\n59 Henry Street \t\n50 Henry Street\nMcKINNON', RODERICK THOS ..-. ^.^\nJEaSS!k?!S^%6y6LA8'::::::::: ;.... U s,. ^ *\u00ab,\nShip Carpenter \t\nPainter \t\nSalesman \t\nFireman \t\nCarpenter \t\nShip Carpenter \t\nClerk \t\nBartender\t\nDriver\t\nLongshoreman\nCarpenter \t\nFactory Foreman ..\nHotel Agent \t\nMaster Mariner\nSaloon Keeper \t\nCarpenter \t\nLongshoreman \t\nMarine Engineer ..\nMarine Fireman ...\nMerchant \t\nDrayman\t\nMusician \t\nReal Estate Agent\nMarine Engineer ..\nSailor \t\nMariner \t\nCarpenter\t\nCarpenter \t\nClerk \t\nBookkeeper \t\nElectrician \t\nBank Manager\t\nFarmer\t\nLaborer\t\nSchool Teacher \t\nLaborer\t\nSealer \t\nBlacksmith \t\nTelegraph Clerk ..\nNature of Objection.\n. Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Dead.\n.Ceased to\n.Dead.\n.Dead.\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n. Duplicate.\n.Duplicate.\n.Ceased to\n. Ceased to\n.Dead.\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n. Duplicate.\n.Duplicate.\n. Duplicate.\n. Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Dead.\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\nreside in the District,\nreside in the District.\nreside in the District.\nreside in the District\nreside in the District,\nreside in the District.\nreside in the District,\nreside in the District.\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nreside in the District,\nreside in the District.\nreside in the District,\nreside in the District.\n.Dead.\n. Ceased\n.Dead.\n.Dead.\n. Ceased\n. Ceased\n. Ceased\n. Ceased\n.Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n.Ceased\n. Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Dead.\n. Dead.\n.Dead.\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n. Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n. Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Dead.\n. Ceased\n. Ceased\n.Ceased\n. Dead.\n. Ceased\n. Dead.\n\u2022 Ceased\n. Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Dead.\n. Dead.\n. Ceased\n.Ceased\n. Dead.\n. Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Dead.\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\nto reside in the District.\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nn the District,\nn the District.\nn the District,\nn the District,\nn the District,\nn the District,\nn the District,\nn the District,\nn the District,\nn the District,\nn the District,\nn the District.\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nto reside in the District,\nto reside in the District,\nto reside in the District,\nto reside in the District.\nto reside in the District,\nto reside in the District,\nto reside in the District,\nto reside in the District.\nto reside in the District,\nto reside in the District.\nto reside in the District,\nto reside in the District,\nto reside in the District.\nto reside in the District,\nto reside in the District,\nto reside in the District.,\nto reside in the District,\nto reside in the District.\n..Ceased to\n.. Ceased to\n..Ceased to\n.. Ceased to\n..Ceased to\n..Ceased to\n. .Ceased to\n..Ceased to\n. .Ceased to\n..Ceased to\n.. .Ceased to\n... Ceased to\n, ..Ceased to\n,. .Ceased to\n,.. Ceased to\n...Dead.\n... Ceased to\n. ..Ceased to\n. ..Ceased to\n,., Ceased to\n. ..Ceased to\n...Dead.\n... Ceased to\n.. .Ceased to\n. ..Ceased to\n.. .Ceased to\n.. .Ceased to\n... Dead.\n.. .Ceased to\n.. .Ceased to\n. ..Ceased to\n.. .Ceased to\n...Dead.\n.. .Ceased to\n.. .Ceased to\n.. .Ceased to\n... Dead.\n.. .Ceased to\n...Dead.\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District.\nreside in the District,\nreside in the District,\nreside in the District,\nreside in the District,\nreside in the District.\nreside in the District,\nreside in the District,\nreside in the District,\nreside in the District,\nreside in the District.\nreside in the District,\nreside in the District,\nreside in the District,\nreside in the District.\nreside in the District,\nreside in the District,\nreside in the District.\nreside in the District. THE WEEK, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1909\n11\nVICTORIA ELECTORAL DISTRICT\u2014Continued\nChristian Name and Surname of Voter\nResidence\nProfession, Trade or Calling\nNature of Objection.\nMcLATCHIE, WILLIAM NEILL \t\nMcLEAN, MALCOLM \t\nMcLEAN, STEWART \t\nMcLEOD, ALLAN \t\nMcLEOD, JAMES \t\nMacLEOD, SAMUEL JAMES \t\nMcMARTIN, GLENN DAVID \t\nMcMUNN, JAMES FRANCIS \t\nMcNAUGHTON, DUNCAN \t\nMcNeill, daniel \t\nmcniffe, charles irvine \t\nMcPHEE, DONALD \t\nMcSWEENEY, JOHN \t\nMcTAVISH, DONALD \t\nMcTAVISH, DUNCAN DOUGLAS \t\nMcWILLIAMS, THOMAS \t\nMADDEN, LARRY \t\nMADDEN, ROBERT GEORGE \t\nMAIRS, CHARLES WALTER \t\nMAJOR, WILLIAM \t\nMANSON, JAMES SINCLAIR \t\nMARSHALL, JOHN \t\nMARTIN, ANDREW CHRISTIAN \t\nMARTIN, GEORGE WM\t\nMARTIN, JOHN \t\nMARTIN, WILLIAM JOHN \t\nMARTINDALE, HENRY CLINTON ....\nMARTINDALE, THOMAS WHARTON\nMARWICK, ROBERT \t\nMASON, GEORGE EDWARD \t\nMASON, ROBERT WILLIAM \t\nMASSA, JOSEPH \t\nMASTERS, THOMAS \t\nMALYLE, HENERY MERTYN \t\nMEINERT, ALFRED JAMES \t\nMELBERG, ROBERT \t\nMELLIAN, WILLIAM \t\nMELROSE, FRED. WILLIAM \t\nMENNIE. JOHN TURNBULL \t\nMERCER, WILLIAM HENRY \t\nMETCALF, CHARLES \t\nMICHAEL, JOHN ALEX\t\nMICHAELIS, GUSTAVE \t\nMIDDLETON, BERTRAM \t\nMIDDLETON, HERBERT BEN \t\nMIDDLETON, GORDON LORNE H. ...\nMIDDLETON, JAMES \t\nMILLER, ANDREW SAMUEL\t\nMILLER, CHARLES SEPTIMUS \t\nMILLER, DAVID \t\nMILLER, HARLEY D\t\nMILLER, MANSON HENRY \t\nMILLER, LOUIS \t\nMILLER, WILLIAM THOMAS \t\nMILNE, HUGH\t\nMILNE, REGINALD CHAS. E\t\nMILTON, JOHN WALTER\t\nMINCHIN, GEORGE MELVILLE \t\nMITCHELL, JOHN DEWAR \t\nMOBERLY, FRANK \t\nMOBERLY, GEORGE \t\nMOORE, GEORGE RICHARD \t\nMOORE, WILLIAM \t\nMORAN, PETER JOSEPH \t\nMORLEY, WILFRED JOHN\t\nMORRIS, FREDERICK GEORGE \t\nMORRISON, GEORGE GUY \t\nMORRISON, WILLIAM JAMES \t\nMOUNCEY, WILLIAM JAMES \t\nMOWAT, ROBERT \t\nMUHRER, FRANK\t\nMUIR, DAVID HODGE \t\nMULLEN, WILLIAM \t\nMUNROE, ROBERT DUNCAN \t\nMURPHY, JAMES ERNEST \t\nMURPHY, PATRICK \t\nMURRAY, HARRY WHITFORD \t\nMURRAY, JAMES \t\nMURRAY, JOHN \t\nMURRAY, MARSHALL\t\nMURRAY, WILLIAM\t\nNASH, FRANCIS\t\nNEAL, ARCHIE DEVILLE \t\nNELSON, EDWARD \t\nNELSON, JOSEPH \t\nNELSON, NELS PETER \t\nNELSON, RICHARD \t\nNETHERBY, STEPHEN BRITTAIN ..\nNETHERBY, WILLIAM ALBERT \t\nNEWBIGGING, JAMES HENRY \t\nNEWSOME, HENRY \t\nNEWTON, SYDNEY, ALBERT P\t\nNEWTON, WILLIAM \t\nNEY, JOHN WESLEY \t\nNICHOLAS, ELIAS \t\nNICHOLS, WILFRED \t\nNICHOLSON, SAMEUL HEATH \t\nNIXON, FRANK \t\nNIXON, HERBERT \t\nNOBBS, ARTHUR RICHARD \t\nNORRIS, JOHN THOMPSON \t\nNOWELL, RICHARD \t\nNOYE, JOHN \t\nNOYE, THOMAS \t\nNURSE, THOMAS OLDMEADOW ....\nO'BRIEN, JAMES \t\nO'BRIEN, THOMAS \t\nO'DAY, MICHAEL \t\nO'DELL, SEYMOUR HASTINGS \t\nO'FARRELL, HENRY PERCY \t\nOGDEN, JAMES DAVID \t\nOGDEN. NELSON REABURN \t\nOGILVIE, JOHN \t\nO'KEEFE, MICHAEL \t\nO'LEARY, JOHN \t\nO'LEARY, WILLIAM \t\nOLSEN. CARL \t\nOLSEN, LOUIS \t\nOLSEN, PETER ANDREW \t\nO'NEILL, EDWARD \t\nORMOND, GEORGE \t\nORMOND. JOSEPH \t\nORTEGO. FRED \t\nO'SHEA. DANIEL \t\nOVERELL, CHARLES HERBERT \t\nOWEN, WILLIAM GASKELL \t\nPADDON. WILLIAM FRANCIS LOCKE\nPALMER. EDWARD \t\nPANKHURST. ALEX. HINKLY \t\n110 Johnson Street \t\nColonial Metropole Hotel \t\nOccidental Hotel \t\n7 Alfred Street \t\nEmpire Hotel \t\nKing Edward Hotel \t\n100 Pandora Avenue \t\n718 Johnson Street \t\nCor. Edmonton Road and Charles Street\n46 Herald Street \t\n93 Cormorant Street \t\n18 Erie Street \t\n177 Douglas Street \t\nStanley Avenue, near Pandora Avenue....\n11 Heywood Avenue \t\nio6j4 Yates Street \t\nBlacksmith\t\nMiner\t\nCarpenter \t\nMiner \t\nNurseryman \t\nInsurance Agent\t\nBarber\t\nArtist\t\nContractor\t\nBoilermaker's Helper\nBooking Agent \t\nShip Carpenter \t\nGrocer \t\nRetired\t\nClerk \t\nCook \t\n5 Pioneer Cabins, Store Street \t\n42^ Bridge Street \t\n17 Spring Road \t\nSt. Charles Street, near Fairfield Road \t\n57 View Street \t\nQueens Hotel \t\nJames Street, near Esquimalt Road\t\n24 Rupert Street \t\nRear 33 Chatham Street \t\nWestern Hotel\t\n37 Birdcage Walk \t\n66 Kome Street \t\n18 Niagara Street \t\n151 Richardson Street \t\nAmphion Street \t\n43 Humboldt Street \t\n56 Pandora Street \t\nD. G. S. Quadra \t\n112 Johnson Street\t\n139 Pandora Street\t\n823 Cormorant Street \t\n28 Farquhar Street \t\nColonial Hotel \t\nBrunswick Hotel \t\n77 Discovery Street \t\n221 Cook Street \t\n221 Elliott Street \t\n197 Chatham Street ,\t\nCor. Mary and Edward Street\t\n1138 Johnson Street \t\n197 Chatham Street \t\n15 Chatham Street (Room 33) \t\n1 South Park Street \t\n99 Douglas Street \t\n158 Chatham Street \t\nTelegraph Hotel \t\n43 Humboldt Street \t\nBalmoral Hotel \t\nEarle St., between St. Charles and Fernwood Road\t\nThe Badminton Club \t\nBrunswick Hotel \t\n220 Johnson Street\t\nti2-Johnson Street \t\n277 Yates Street \t\n277 Yates Street\t\nRockland Avenue, near Oak Bay Ave\t\n13 Milne Street \t\n50 Yates Street \t\n50 Alfred Street\t\nCor. Craigflower and Russell Streets \t\n1141 Fort Street \t\nCalifornia Hotel \t\nDriard Hotel \t\n46 Cadboro Bay Road\t\nCalifornia Hotel \t\n1 South Park Street\t\n166 Johnson Street \t\nCherry Bank, Victoria Crescent \t\nQueens Hotel\t\nEmpire Hotel \t\n6 Amelia Street \t\n36 Kane Street \t\nNo. Cabin, cor. Humboldt Street and Blanchard Street.\n47 View Street \t\n16 North Park Street \t\nFireman \t\nEngineer\t\nCarpenter\t\nGentleman\t\nTailor \t\n\u25a0 _ ;*.;\u2022).enter\t\nCom. Merchant \t\nM '-er\t\nLongshoreman \t\nShipwright \t\nPainter \t\nFinancial Agent\t\nMiller\t\nAccountant\t\nChemist \t\nLaborer \t\nCarpenter \t\nSeaman\t\nFireman \t\nSeaman \t\nConductor\t\nMariner \t\nAccountant\t\nTallyman \t\nElectrician \t\nBaker\t\nMerchant \t\nCarpenter \t\nConductor\t\nBookkeeper \t\nCarpenter\t\nLaborer \t\nDruggist\t\nCar Conductor\t\nTelephone Inspector .\nSeaman \t\nSeaman \t\nProvincial Manager .\nCarpenter \t\nStudent at Law \t\nSeaman\t\nLineman \t\nHackdriver\t\nCivil Engineer \t\nSailor\t\nSalesman \t\nCarpenter\t\nPlumber ;..\nBarber\t\nPainter \t\nBank Clerk\t\nLaborer\t\nReal Estate Agent ..\nGrocer \t\nSeaman\t\nBookkeeper\t\nLaborer \t\nMerchant\t\nCivil Engineer \t\nBoilermaker's Helper\nBlacksmith \t\nMiner \t\nFireman\t\nWheelwright\t\nBlacksmith\t\n32^2 Government Street No Occupation ..\nEmpire Hotel Electro Plater ...\nOccidental Hotel Seaman\t\nClarence Hotel Laborer \t\nWestern Hotel Longshoreman ..\n22 Kane Street Longshoreman ..\n142 Chatham Street School Inspector\n142 Chatham Street Clerk\nUS Quadra Street\n54 Pandora Street \t\nD. G. S. Mudlark \t\n6 Labouchere Street \t\nUpper Pandora Street \t\n88 Vining Street \t\n9 Erie Street \t\nin Superior Street \t\n152 Chatham Street \t\n13 Humboldt Street \t\nOak Bay Avenue, near Haughton Street\n175 Douglas Street \t\nEmpire .Hotel \t\n110 Johnson Street \t\n110 Johnson Street \t\nEmpire Hotel, Johnson Street \t\nN. E. Corner Pandora and Douglas Streets\n423 Bridge Street \t\n126 Yates Street \t\nBalmoral Hotel \t\n74 Cook Street \t\n58 North Park Street \t\n119 Blanchard Street \t\nCoach and Horses Hotel \t\n122 Yates Street \t\nS. S. Danube \t\n57 Third Street\t\n40 Kane Street \t\nTelegraph Hotel \t\n88 Pembroke Street \t\nOccidental Hotel \t\nS. S. \"Princess May\" \t\nCalifornia Hotel \t\n1017 Burdette Ave \t\nCalifornia Hotel \t\n109 Blanchard Street \t\n1023 North Park Street \t\nBoilermaker\t\nSurveyor's Assistant\nSeaman\t\nClergyman \t\nReal Estate Agent ..\nLaborer\t\nMiner\t\nTraveller \t\nLongshoreman \t\nBookkeeper \t\nBookkeeper \t\nTinsmith \t\nMarine Fireman\nMiner \t\nMiner \t\nElectrician \t\nFireman \t\nLabourer \t\nLabourer \t\nGentleman \t\nProspector \t\nCar Conductor\t\nWholesale Clerk \t\nMiner \t\nContractor and Builder\nSeaman \t\nMaster Mariner \t\nClerk \t\nSealer \t\nColourmaker \t\nFireman \t\nSteward \t\nFireman S.S. \"Danube\" .\nLabourer \t\nFireman \t\nMachinist \t\nOiler \t\nCarberry Gardens (North Side) Clergyman\nUnion Club Gentleman\n171 Johnson Street Painter ...\n. Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n. Ceased\n. Ceased\n. Ceased\n\u2022 Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Dead.\n.Dead.\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n. Ceased\n. Ceased\n. Ceased\n.Ceased\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nin the District,\nin the District,\nin the District,\nin the District,\nin the District,\nin the District,\nin the District.\nin the District,\nin the District,\nin the District,\nin the District,\nin the District,\nin the District.\nin the District.\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Duplicate.\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n\u2022Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n\u2022Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Dead.\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n\u2022 Duplicate.\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n. Duplicate.\n\u2022 Ceased to\n\u2022 Duplicate.\n\u2022 Duplicate.\n\u2022 Dead.\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nin the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict\nDistrict.\nDistrict\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict\nDistrict.\nDistrict\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nreside in the District.\n... Dead.\n. ..Ceased to\n. ..Ceased to\n. ..Ceased to\n...Dead.\n. ..Ceased to\n. ..Ceased to\n. ..Ceased to\n... Ceased to\n.. .Ceased to\n.. .Ceased to\n... Ceased to\n... Cosed to\n. ..Ceased to\n...Dead.\n. ..Ceased to\n...Dead.\n... Ceased to\n.. .Ceased to\n... Ceased to\n. .Ceased to\n... Dead.\n. .Ceased to\n..Ceased to\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict\nDistrict.\nDistrict\nDistrict\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nreside in the District.\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrici.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\n.Ceased to\n.Duplicate.\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n. Dead.\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Duplicate.\nreside in the District.\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthc District,\nthe District,\nthe District.\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District. 12\nTHE WEEK, SATURDAY, OCTOBER i6, 1909\nVICTORIA ELECTORAL DISTRICT\u2014Continued\nChristian Name and Surname of Voter\nPAPA, VONGALIA \t\nPARKER, GEORGE \t\nPARKER, HENRY BROOKS \t\nPARKER, JOHN \t\nPATTERSON. EDWARD \t\nPATTISON, JOHN WILLIAM \t\nPATTON, PATRICK \t\nPENDRAY, ERNEST CARTHEW ..\nPENKETH, GEORGE WILLIAM ..\nPENKETH, GEORGE WILLIAM ..\nPENKETH, RICHARD \t\nPICKLES, FRED \t\nPIGOTT. JAMES RICHARD \t\nPILGRIM. JAMES \t\nPINKERf ON, JAMES H\t\nPLOWRIGHT, WILLIAM GEORGE\nPOFF. JOHN HAROLD \t\nPOLLARD. ERNEST \t\nPOLLEY. ROBERT CLIFFORD ....\nPOLLOCK, RODERICK\t\nPOOLE, WALTER \t\nPOPE, WILLIAM FORBES CAREY\nPOTTINGER. JAMES\t\nPOTTS, CLAYTON WILBERT\t\nPOTTS, GEORGE GERALD \t\nPOWELL, CHARLES GRIFFITHS .\nPOWELL, LEWIS SMITH \t\nPOWELL. ROBERT BRANKS \t\nPOWER. GERALD WILLIAM \t\nPRESTON, THOMAS GEORGE ....\nPRIOR, BASIL GAWLOR \t\nPRIOR. JESSE ROBERT \t\nPROCTOR. HARRY SEWELL\t\nPROCTOR. SIDNEY HERBERT ....\nPROUT, WILLIAM \t\nRAESIDE, WILLIAM \t\nRAMLOSE, EMIL \t\nRAMOUS, HENRY \t\nRAMOUS. SAMUEL \t\nRAMOUS. WILLIAM \t\nRANDOLPH, JOHN JOSEPH \t\nRANSFORD, CHARLES HENRY G.\nRAPER, ARNOLD OWEN \t\nRATCLIFFE, JOSEPH \t\nRAUSCH. JULIUS FRANCIS\t\nREED. ALFRED STEPHEN \t\nREECE, WILLIAM \t\nREID, JAMES \t\nREID, ROBERT \t\nREID, WILLIAM BENNETT \t\nRENNY, HUGH \t\nREUTER, EDWARD \t\nRICHARDS, JOSEPH \t\nROACH, GEORGE \t\nROARKE, WILLIAM CHARLES ...\nROBERTS, JOHN \t\nROBERTS, THOMAS DYER \t\nROBERTSON, GEORGE \t\nROCHON, ADOLPHE\t\nROCHON, FRANCIS\t\nRODGETT, CHARLES \t\nRODGETT, JESSE \t\nRODGERS, PETER \t\nROPER, DELBERT\t\nROSE, JAMES\t\nROSE, SYDNEY \t\nROSS, DANIEL \t\nROSS, MURDOCK \t\nROSS, NEIL \t\nROSS, PHILIP \t\nROWDEN, NATHAN \t\nROWE, ELLIOTT SPROULE \t\nROWNTREE, JAMES MELVIN ....\nROYDS, CLEMENT \t\nRUSSELL, WILLIAM \t\nRUSSWURM, WILLIAM LAYE\nSALTER, DONALD \t\nSANDELL, ARDWELL NEWTON \t\nSANDERS, CHARLES \t\nSANDERS, CHARLES WILLIAM \t\nSANDIFORD, WILLIAM HENRY \t\nSARANTIS, TRIANLAFILOS P\t\nSCALING, HENRY DRUB\t\nSCHAUB, HENRY \t\nSCHOLES, RICHARD ALBERT \t\nSCHWABE, VINCENT H\t\nSCOTT, CECIL WRAY \t\nSCOTT. GEORGE \t\nSCOTT, WALLACE FREDERICK \t\nSEA, SAMUEL, JUNR\t\nSEABROOK, BAGSTER ROADS \t\nSEGUIN, JOSEPH EVERETT \t\nSEIBEY, GEORGE \t\nSHAKESPEARE, WILLIAM BRIERLEY\nSHANNON, HENRY \t\nSHAW, GEORGE CHESTER \t\nSHEARER, JAMES RONALD \t\nSHEATHER, AUSTIN HERB. A\t\nSHEPHERD, FRANK JAMES \t\nSHERBURN, SAMUEL \t\nSHERWEM, RICHARD HENRY \t\nSHIELD, REGINALD \t\nSHELL1NGLAW, WM. WATSON \t\nSHOEBRIDGE, WALTER \t\nSIMMONDS, JOHN CHARLES \t\nSIMON. JAMES \t\nSiMPSON, GEO. LAWRENCE \t\nSIMPSON, GEORGE YALE\t\nSIMPSON. PHILIP BLYTHE\t\nSINCLAIR, JOHN EDWARD \t\nSLOAN, ROBERT \t\nSMALL, PETER FRANCIS \t\nSMITH, ALEXANDER \t\nSMITH, ALEXANDER FAIRNEY \t\nSMITH, FRED. MEREDITH B\t\nSMITH, FREDERICK NAPIEZ \t\nSMITH, ROBERT GILLON \t\nSMYTH, WILLIAM \t\nSOLOMON, ARTHUR \t\nSPEARMAN, JOSEPH WILLIAM \t\nSPEDDING, HARRY \t\nSPENCER, NORMAN FRANCIS \t\nSPINK, HARRY \t\nSPRINGETT, ARTHUR RICHARD \t\nST\\RK, JAMES LOCKHART \t\nST. CLAIR, ROBERT \t\nSTEELE, DANIEL\t\nSTEELE, GEORGE \t\nSTEPHENS, JOHN CROSSMAN \t\nSTEVENS, GEORGE \t\nSTEVENS, GEORGE DANIEL\t\nResidence\nProfession, Trade or Calling\nNature of Objection.\n408 Herald Street \t\nCalifornia Hotel \t\n87 Fort Street \t\n2g Johnson Street \t\n203 Esquimalt Road \t\n162 Government Street \t\nOccidental Hotel \t\n92 Belleville Street\t\n135 Quadra Street\t\n135 Quadra Street\t\n135 Quadra Street\t\n13 Humboldt Street \t\nQueen's Hotel \t\n54 John Street. Rock Bay \t\nKlondike Hotel \t\n1116 Yates Street \t\nVernon Hotel \t\n1013 Blanchard Street \t\nRock Bay Hotel \t\n25 Princes Avenue \t\nCalifornia Hotel \t\n107 John Street \t\n\"Hillside,\" King's Road \t\n88 Pandora Avenue\t\n20 Russell Street \t\nInvertavish Nursery, Park Road \t\n74 North Chatham Street \t\n\"Oakdene,\" Burdette Avenue\t\n160 Fort Street \t\nClarence Hotel \t\n\"The Priory,\"' Pemberton Road \t\n246 Fort Street \t\n1036 Burdette Avenue \t\nCorner Johnson and Vancouver Streets\nWindsor Hotel, Government Street\t\n23 Harbour Cottages \t\nEdward Street, between Russell and Mary Streets \t\n134 Fort Street \t\n13 Oriental Alley \t\n145 Fort Street \t\n1 Princess Street \t\nClarence Hotel.\t\nColonial Metropole Hotel \t\n135 Douglas Street\t\n168 Fort Street \t\nThe Cecil Hotel\t\n36 Superior Street \t\n54 Fourth Street \t\n1134 Caledonia Avenue \t\nStrand Hotel \t\n171 Johnson Street\t\nRusta's Cabins, Store Street \t\n129 Fort Street \t\n109 Blanchard Street \t\n273 Johnson Street\t\nTelegraph Hotel \t\n119 Blanchard Street \t\n23 Erie Street \t\n45 View Street \t\n45 View Street \t\n(Room 5. 752'Humboldt Street \t\n76 Humboldt Street \t\nEdmonton Rd., between Chambers St. and Cedar Hill Rd,\nEmpire Hotel\t\n18 St. Louis Street\t\n59 St. Lawrence Street \t\nColonial Hotel \t\n221 Cook Street \t\n45^ View Street \t\n81 Humboldt Street \t\n5 Green Street\t\n91 Blanchard Street \t\n1034 Burdette Avenue \t\n291 Yates Street \t\nStrand Hotel\t\n21 Harbour Cottages, Store Street \t\nFisherman \t\nFireman \t\nLabourer \t\nBartender \t\nClerk \t\nMotorman \t\nLabourer \t\nSoapmaker \t\nBoilermaker \t\nBoilermaker \t\nBoilermaker \t\nLabourer \t\nBottler \t\nBoilermaker \t\nLogger \t\nMusic Teacher ...\nInsurance Agent .\nSailor \t\nBrakeman \t\nTinsmith \t\nSteamboatman ...\nStationer \t\nFarmer \t\nTailor \t\nPhysician \t\nGardener \t\nMoulder \t\nPrivate Secretary\nAccountant\t\nMiner \t\nClerk \t\nMiner \t\nSalesman \t\nClerk \t\nHotel Keeper ...\nLabourer \t\nSeaman \t\nPipe Repairer ...\nSailor \t\nTeamster \t\nPrinter \t\nClerk \t\nLongshoreman ..\nTeamster \t\nGrocer \t\nGentleman \t\nLabourer \t\nTea Merchant ...\nAccountant \t\nBartender \t\nLaborer \t\nFireman \t\nSaloon Keeper ..\nWatchman \t\nCigarmaker ....\nMarine Fireman\nMotorman \t\nFisherman \t\nLithographer ...\nConfectioner\nLaborer \t\nCigarmaker \t\nBricklayer \t\nSealer \t\nDrayman \t\nHackman \t\nSeaman \t\nBaker \t\nSalesman \t\nLaborer \t\nLaborer \t\nClergyman \t\nContractor \t\nM.-ister Mariner .\nFireman \t\nFireman \t\nTelegraph Hotel \t\n52 King's Road \t\nCabin No. 5, View Street \t\n8 Humboldt Street \t\n292 Richmond Avenue \t\n101 Johnson Street \t\n54 Discovery Street \t\n7 Pendray's Cabins, Humboldt Street \t\nBrunswick Hotel \t\nSt. Charles Street, W. side, Rockland Ave.\nBrunswick Hotel \t\n73 Blanchard Street \t\n1317 Broad Street \t\n20 North Park Street \t\n147 Gorge Road \t\n120 Douglas Street \t\nCalifornia Hotel \t\n52 Second Street \t\nGrand Pacilic Hotel \t\n18 Michigan Street \t\n634 M ichigan Street \t\n5 First Street \t\n14 Farquhar Street \t\n19 Oscar Street \t\nCor. Stanley Avenue and Vining Street ...\nLonore Saloon, Johnson Street \t\nBrunswick Hotel _\t\n132 Johnson Street '\t\nClarence Hotel \t\nRockland Avenue (near Oak Bay Avenue)\n15 St. Louis Street \t\n8 St. John Street \t\nOccidental Hotel \t\n110 Johnson Street \t\nClarence Hotel \t\nVictoria Hotel \t\n228 Michigan Street \t\n161 Montreal Street \t\n32 Rae Street \t\nBank Montreal Chambers \t\nClarence 1 lotel \t\n48 South Turner Street \t\nAnderson Block, Johnson Street \t\nBurns Block \t\n79 Douglas Street\t\n29 Johnson Street \t\n117 Menzies Street \t\n73 Richardson Street \t\n253 Yates Street \t\nStrand Hotel \t\n715 Market Street \t\n50 Yates Street \t\n165 Cook Street \t\n132 Yates Street \t\n55 South Road \t\nLaborer \t\nManager Factory \t\nLaborer \t\nCook \t\nMine Engineer \t\nFruit Dealer \t\nLaborer \t\nLaborer \t\nM;irine Fireman \t\nCivil Engineer \t\nM;iciiinist \t\nLaborer \t\nPastry Cook\t\nHatter and Furnisher ..\nManufacturers Agent ...\nWaiter \t\nSeaman, C. P. R\t\nJeweller \t\nMusician \t\nCom. Merchant \t\nClerk \t\nLetter Carrier \t\nGen. Mgr. P. J. Ins. Co.\nBartender \t\nClerk \t\nSeaman \t\nSteamboat Steward\nLaborer \t\nCarpenter \t\nAsst. Bank Mgr. ...\nCarpenter \t\nClerk \t\nWaiter \t\nSteamboatman \t\nGentleman \t\nBartender \t\nCooper\t\nLaborer \t\nClerk \t\nBank Clerk \t\nLaborer \t\nShoemaker \t\nMusician \t\nGentleman\t\nPattern Maker\nPainter \t\nCarpenter \t\nAgent \t\nClerk \t\nLaborer \t\nSealer \t\nMaster Mariner ...\nMiner \t\nGentleman \t\nTeamster \t\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n. Dead.\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Duplicate.\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Dead.\n.Duplicate.\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n. Duplicate.\n.Ceased to\n.Duplicate.\n.Dead. '\n.Dead.\n.Dead.\n.Duplicate.\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Dead.\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to*'\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Dead.\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Duplicate.\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n. Duplicate.\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District.\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District.\nthe District.\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District.\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District.\nreside in the District.\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District.\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District.\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District. ^\nthe District.\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District.\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District.\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n. Duplicate.\n.Ceased to\n. Dead.\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Dead.\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n. Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Dead.\n\u2022 Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n\u2022Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n. Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n. Dead,\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\nreside in the District,\nreside in the District.\nreside in the District.\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nin the District,\nin the District,\nm the District.\nin the District.\nin the District,\nin the District,\nin the District.\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin thc\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nreside in\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe Dist.wct.\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District,\nthe District.\nreside in the District,\nreside in the District,\nreside in the District,\nreside in the District. THE WEEK, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1909\nn\nVICTORIA ELECTORAL DISTRICT-Continued\nChristian Name and Surname fo Voter\nI.TEVENSON, WILLIAM GORDON\nI TEW ART, FRANK McLEOD \t\nITEWART, JAMES HUMBER \t\nIlTEWART, JOHN WALTER \t\n'TEWART, WALLACE DAVID ....\nJTICKNEY, RICHARD EDWIN ....\nI TILES, HARLOW MARSHALL ....\nITONEY, THOMAS \t\nI.TONHAM, ERNEST\t\nliTACHAN, ROBERT THOMAS \t\nI'.TROMGREN, CARL \t\n'.TRONG, JOSEPH \t\n1'TRUTT, MARTIN \t\nIlULLIVAN, PATRICK\t\n[SWEETSER, HERBERT FOSTER ...\nr.WITZER, THOMAS ALBERT \t\n.YMES, CHARLES HAROLD \t\nIrALBOT, JOHN HENRY \t\nKATE, ROBERT \t\nIrAYLOR, ARTHUR WILLIAMSON\nTAYLOR, DOUGLAS \t\nIrAYLOR, FREDERIC IRVING \t\nIrAYLOR, GEORGE AITKEN\t\nIrAYLOR, JOHN \t\nIrAYLOR, JOHN \t\nIrAYLOR, RICHARD \t\nIrHOMAS, ALFRED JAMES \t\n[THOMAS, FRANCIS \t\n{THOMPSON, GEORGE \t\nJTHOMPSON, HAROLD JOHN \t\n(THOMPSON, SHEFF \t\nITHOMSON, FRANCIS ANDREW ...\nITHOMSON, JOHN GORDON \t\nTHURSTON, ALVA EDISON \t\nITHRALL, HERBERT ALFRED \t\nlTOMLINSON, WILLIAM JAMES ...\nITOWNSEND, FREDERICK JAMES .\n[TOWNSEND, JOHN ORMISTON ...\n(.TOWNSEND, THOMAS \t\nTRAINOR, ALEXANDER CHAS\t\nTREZONA, WILLIAM \t\nTURNER, FREDERICK \t\nTURPIN, SIDNEY \t\nTWISS, JAMES BOND \t\nTWOSE, THOMAS\t\nTWYMAN, HENRY \t\n'TYSON, ALFRED HENRY \t\nTYSON, PETER \t\nUPPER, DAVID ARTHUR\nURE, EDWARD JOHN ....\nVAN DECAR, ALBERTUS BATES \t\nVAN GOETHEM, GEO. CHARLES \t\nVERNON, JOHN\t\nVICHART, JOHN FREDERICK \t\nVON HAGAN, ALEXANDER THEOBOLT\nWADDELL, JAMES \t\nWAGG, JOHN WILLIAM \t\nWALES, DAN \t\nWALKER, ALFRED ATKINSON \t\nWALKER, ALFRED HENRY \t\nWALKER, ARTHUR RICHARDSON ..\nWALKER, FRANK GREVILLE \t\nWALL, JOHN \t\nWALLACE, ARTHUR BUCHAN \t\nWALLACE, ERNEST BASIL \t\nWALLACE, JAMES DANIEL\t\nWALLENSTEIN, LARAMIC FRED'K.\nWARD, JOHN WM\t\nWALTERS, TOM ORLANDO \t\nWARD, EDWIN THOMAS \t\nWARD, ROBERT GEOFFREY\t\nWARD, WILLIAM \t\nWATT, JOHN \t\nWATT, WILLIAM \t\nWEBER, PETER\t\nWELSH, JAMES \t\nWENER, CHARLEY \t\nWEST, GEORGE \t\nWEST, JULIUS \t\nWEST, WILLIAM STAR\t\nWESTLAKE, RICHARD \t\nWHITE, FRANK\t\nWHITE, FREDERICK GEORGE \t\nWHITE, THOMAS HENRY \t\nWHITE, WILLIAM CHARLES \t\nWHITESIDE, JOHN EDMOND\t\nWHITEFIELD, GEORGE\t\nWHITLEY, THOMAS RICHARDSON .\nWIGHT, WILLIAM JONES\t\nWILKERSON, GEORGE EDWARD ...\nWILKINS, LEWIS MORRIS \t\nWILKINSON, JOHN \t\nWILK, STEPHEN \t\nWILLIAMS, JACK \t\nWILLIAMS, JOHN \t\nWILLIAMS, JOHN OWEN \t\nWILLIAMS, JOSEPH \t\nWILLIAMS, WILLIAM MAY \t\nWILMOT, GEORGE \t\nWILLSHER, JOHN \t\nWILMER, FREDERICK LOUIS \t\nWILSON, HARRY EDWARD \t\nWILSON, HENRY ARNOT\t\nWILSON, JAMES \t\nWILSON, JOHN THEOPHILUS \t\nWILSON, THOMAS \t\nWILSON, THOMAS \t\nWENDLE, HARRY WALSHE \t\nWINTER, GEORGE, JUNR\t\nWOOD, ALFRED EDWARD \t\nWOOD, ERNEST \t\nWOOD, JOHN BRADSHAW \t\nWOOD, JOHN BRIERLY \t\nWOOD, JOHN JAMES \t\nWOOD, JOHN PATTERSON \t\nWOOD, THOMAS \t\nWOODS, WALTER JOHN \t\nWORDINGHAM, WILLIAM HYDE ...\nResidence\n69 Carr Street \t\nBrunswick Hotel \t\n12 North Park Street \t\n74 Cook Street\t\nFire Hall, Victoria West \t\nBrunswick Hotel \t\nKing Edward Annex, Yates Street \t\nStrand Hotel \t\n146 Kingston Street \t\n10 Rae Street \t\nOld Esquimalt Road (near Russell Street)\nHarbour Cottages, Store Street \t\n13 Humboldt Street \t\nColonial Hotel \t\n64 Humboldt Street, Room 7\t\n14 Rupert Street \t\n74 Menzies Street \t\nS. S. Baroda \t\nLangford Street, S. side, last house \t\nRoccahella \t\n316 Yates Street \t\n58 Quadra Street \t\n16 Montreal Street \t\nHarbour Cottages, Store Street\t\n54 Discovery Street \t\n56 Pembroke Street\t\n858 Pandora Street \t\nCalifornia Hotel \t\nNo. 2, Lawson's Cabins, Humboldt Street\n32 Rae Street \t\nLouvre Saloon \t\nBoyd Street (near Menzies) \t\n129 Yates Street \t\n814 Johnson Street \t\n92 North Park Street \t\nBrunswick Hotel \t\nBurnes House, Bastion Square \t\n15 Centre Road \t\nTelegraph Hotel \t\n93 View Street \t\n13 Humboldt Street \t\nJubilee Alley, Johnson Street \t\n54 Discovery Street \t\nStrand Hotel, Johnson Street \t\n166 Johnson Street \t\nSenate Saloon \t\n9754 Johnson Street \t\n28 Market Street \t\n47 First Street .\n8 Alfred Street\nDriard Hotel \t\n109 Yates Street ..\nEmpire Hotel \t\n141 Chatham Street\n13 Frederick Street\nYOUNG, HARTLEY SCOTT ...\nYOUNG, WILLIAM MATHEW\nCor. Stanley Avenue and N. Chatham Street\n26 Mason Street \t\n75 Kane Street \t\n9 Sayward Avenue \t\n43 View Street \t\nBrunswick Hotel \t\nVernon Hotel \t\n37 Douglas Street ;\t\n229 Pandora Avenue .;\t\n12 Scoresby Street \t\n529 Johnson Street \t\n21 Green Street \t\n154 Chatham Street \t\nS. S. \"City of Nanaimo\" \t\n62 Collinson Street \t\nDriard Hotel \t\nOccidental Hotel \t\n132 Blanchard Street \t\nHenry Street, off Esquimalt Road \t\n547 Hillside Avenue \t\nHarbour Cottages, Store Street \t\nRock Bay Hotel \t\nConnaught Road (near Craigflower) \t\n50 Vancouver Street\t\nFive Sisters' Block \t\nHumboldt Street \t\nTelegraph Hotel\t\n15 Menzies Street\t\nClarence Hotel ,\n163 Cook Street ,\n30 Beechy Street \t\n139 Cormorant Street\t\nRoccahella, Victoria Crescent ,\n170 Cook Street \t\n244 Yates Street \t\n23 Douglas Street \t\nSayoy Theatre \t\n9 Rae Street \t\n61 Pandora Street\t\n110 Johnson Street \t\n58 Douglas Street \t\nExcelsior Hotel\t\nOccidental Hotel \t\nLighthouse Saloon \t\n12 Amelia Street \t\n146 Kingston Street\t\nEmpire Hotel \t\nOccidental Hotel \t\n56 Harbour Cottages, Store Street \t\nBrunswick Hotel\t\nInverness House, Pandora Street \t\nLeland House, Douglas Street \t\n41 Burdette Avenue \t\nCraigflower Road, Sunnyside \t\nBrunswick Hotel \t\n56 Pandora Avenue *.\t\nSteamer \"Lome\" \t\nNo. 1 Fire Hall, Cormorant Street \t\nFairfield Road, opp. Cemetery \t\nGrand Pacific Hotel \t\n14 Caledonia Avenue \t\nSteamer \"Rithet\" \t\nKlondike Chambers, Johnson Street\t\nProfession, Trade or Calling\nManager \t\nMachinist \t\nBricklayer \t\nMariner \t\nFireman \t\nClerk \t\nJournalist \t\nEngineer \t\nBank Teller \t\nCarriage Builder\nMaster Mariner .\nLogger \t\nFireman \t\nFireman \t\nLaborer \t\nPiano Salesman .\nStorekeeper \t\nMaster Mariner \t\nBrewer \t\nInsurance Agent '\t\nLinotype Machinist\t\nAccountant \t\nMgr. Royal Bank of Canada\nLongshoreman \t\nLongshoreman \t\nLongshoreman \t\nDentist \t\nFireman \t\nLaborer \t\nClerk \t\nBartender \t\nDraughtsman \t\nSaloon Keeper \t\nBarber ,\t\nTeamster \t\nSchool Teacher \t\nCarpenter and Joiner\t\nMaster Mariner \t\nPlasterer \t\nSteward \t\nMiner \t\nCook \t\nLaborer \t\nSawyer \t\nLaundryman\t\nBartender \t\nSaloon Keeper\t\nSealer \t\nMgr. Telegraphs\nMillhand \t\nClerk \t\nClergyman \t\nMarine Fireman ...\nClergyman \t\nTent and Sail Maker\nBalmoral Hotel\n35 Alfred Street\nGardener \t\nPainter \t\nBricklayer \t\nLaborer \t\nSteward\t\nCook \t\nBartender \t\nTailor \t\nTeacher \t\nFreight Clerk \t\nWatchman \t\nUpholsterer \t\nBaggage Master \t\nAsst. Purser \t\nOrder Clerk \t\nClerk \t\nBartender \t\nProspector \t\nShip's Carpenter \t\nLaborer \t\nLongshoreman\t\nLaborer \t\nLaborer \t\nContractor \t\nTobacconist \t\nLaborer \t\nSeaman \t\nAccountant \t\nBricklayer \t\nHack Driver \t\nBookkeeper \t\nMerchant\t\nBank Manager\t\nCollector \t\nGardener and Florist\nClerk \t\nLaborer \t\nLaborer \t\nTrader \t\nMiner \t\nMariner \t\nLaborer \t\nMiner \t\nBlacksmith \t\nClerk \t\nMining Engineer\t\nConstable \t\nHotel Clerk \t\nLongshoreman\t\nAccountant \t\nMachinist \t\nMaster Mariner\t\nTraveller \t\nCoachman \t\nClerk \t\nBartender \t\nFireman \t\nFireman \t\nHack Driver \t\nCarpenter \t\nMiner \t\nSteamboatman\t\nJournalist \t\nNature of Objection\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Duplicate.\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n\u2022 Dead.\n. Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n. Ceased to\n. Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n.Dead.\n.Dead.\n.Ceased to\n.Duplicate.\n.Ceased to\n\u2022 Dead.\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n\u2022 Dead.\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n. Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Dead.\n. Ceased to\n. Ceased to\n. Ceased to\n.Dead.\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Dead.\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nreside in the District,\nreside in the District.\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict\nDistrict.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n. Duplicate.\n\u2022 Ceased to reside in the District\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\nSalesman\nLaborer .\n..Dead.\n.. Ceased to reside in the District)\n..Dead.\n.. Ceased to reside in the District.\n.. Ceased to reside in the District.\n.. Ceased to reside in the District.\n.. Ceased to reside in the District.\n..Ceased to reside in the District\n.. Ceased to reside in the District\n..Ceased to reside in the District\n..Duplicate.\n.. Ceased to reside in the District\n..Dead.\n.. Ceased to reside in the District.\n. Ceased to reside in the District\n.. Ceased to reside in the District.\n..Ceased to reside in the District.\n..Ceased to reside in the DistnU.\n..Dead.\n.. Ceased to reside in the District.\n.. Ceased to reside in the District,\n.. Ceased to reside in the District.\n..Dead.\n..Ceased to reside in the District.\n..Ceased to reside in the District\n..Ceased to reside in the District.\n..Ceased to reside in the District.\n..Ceased to reside in the District.\n.. Ceased to reside in the District.\n..Duplicate.\n..Ceased to reside in the District\n..Ceased to reside in the District.\n,. Ceased to reside in the District.\n.. Ceased to reside in the District.\n..Dead.\n.Ceased to reside :\n,. Ceased to reside i\n\u2022 Ceased to reside :\n\u2022 Ceased to reside\n\u2022 Ceased to reside\n\u2022 Ceased to reside\n\u2022 Ceased to reside\n\u2022 Ceased to reside\n\u2022 Ceased to reside :\n\u2022 Ceased to reside :\n\u2022 Ceased to reside ;\n\u2022 Ceased to reside\n\u2022 Ceased to reside\n\u2022 Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n\u2022 Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n.Ceased to reside\n.Dead.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Dead.\n\u2022 Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Dead.\n.Ceased to reside in the District\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\nn the District\nn the District,\nn the District\nn the District,\nn the District,\nn the District\nn the District,\nn the District,\nn the District,\nn the District,\nn the District,\nn the District,\nn the District,\nn the District,\nn thc District,\nn the District,\nn the District,\nn the District. THE WEEK, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1909\nPROVINCIAL ELECTIONS ACT\nSAANICH ELECTORAL DISTRICT\nTAKE NOTICE that objections have been filed with me against the following persons' names being retained on the List of Voters for the above district on the\ngrounds set forth.\nAND FURTHER TAKE NOTICE that I will, on Monday, the ist day of November, 1909, at the hour of 10 o'clock in the forenoon, at Tennyson Avenue, May-\nwood, hold a Court of Revision for the purpose of hearing and determining said objections.\nUnless the person objected to or some other Provincial Voter on his behalf appears at the said Court and satisfies me that the said objection is not well founded, I\nshall strike the name of such person off the said list.\nDated this 6th day of October, 1909.\nWILLIAM GRAHAM, Registrar of Voters.\nChristian Name and Surname fo Voter\nADAMS, JOHN THOMAS\nAITKEN, WILLIAM \t\nBAKER, DAVID \t\nBAKER, THOMAS HENRY \t\nBAKER, GEORGE \t\nBARNES, ALFRED GEORGE \t\nBARTON, ARTHUR SHEPPARD ...\nBRUCE, JOHN, JR\t\nBULMAN, WILLIAM \t\nBUBB, EUSTACHE WASHBOURNE\nBOSTOCK, JOHN JOSHUA \t\nCADMAN, SOLOMAN \t\nCAMERON, DANIEL \t\nCAREY, JOSEPH WILLIAM \t\nCARLOW, WILMOT WESLEY \t\nCRACKEN, HENRY \t\nCLODE, WILLIAM JOHN EDWARD\nCOX, ANDREW ALEXANDER \t\nDE CROSS, GERALD HERBERT\t\nEKINS, EDWARD GEORGE\nFERGUSON, AGUSTUS GEORGE\nFISHER, JOHN R\t\nHOLLINS, WILLIAM ALFRED\nHOPKINS, HENRY RUSSELL ..\nHUTCHINS, WILLIAM \t\nHUTCHINSON, JOHN\t\nResidence\nCor. Holland Avenue, Colquitz P. O.\nGlanford Avenue, Victoria P.O\t\nCarey Road, Maywood P. 0\t\nStrawberry Vale, Colquitz P. 0\t\nStrawberry Vale, Colquitz P. O\t\nGlanford Avenue, Maywood P. 0\t\nOak Bay Avenue, P. 0. Box 173, Victoria.\nLake District, Royal Oak P. O. \t\nMt. Tolmie, Mt. Tolmie P. 0\t\nSection 79, Lake District, Sluggett P. 0.\nFoul Bay Road, Box 611, Victoria\t\nO.\nHead of Elk Lake, Royal Oak P.\nMt. Tolmie, Mt. Tolmie P. 0\t\nCarey Road, Colquitz P. 0.\t\nCedar Hill Road, Mt. Tolmie P. 0. ..\nLot 123, West Saanich, Sluggett P. 0.\nGlanford Avenue, Colquitz P. O\t\nMt. Tolmie, Mt. Tolmie P. O\t\nCarey Road, Colquitz P. 0\t\nProfession, Trade or Calling\nMoulder ...\nFarm Help\nClerk \t\nButcher \t\nButcher \t\nFarmer \t\nGentleman \t\nFarmer \t\nLumberman \t\nFarmer \t\nCommission Agent\nFarmer \t\nFarmer\t\nFarmer \t\nRailway Employee\nFarmer\t\nGentleman\t\nFarmer \t\nFarmer \t\nCadboro Bay Road, Victoria P. 0.\nClerk\nCadboro Bay Road. Victoria P. O. Trainer\nPart of Sees. 21 and 78, Victoria District, Victoria P.O... Farmer\nFairfield Road, Victoria P. 0 Teamster\nGlanford Avenue, Victoria P. 0 Nurseryman\nSaanich, Young P. 0.\nCedar Hill, Box 458, Victoria\nJONES, HERBERT LOCKLY Feltham Road, Mt. Tolmie P. O Seaman ...\nJONES, SANFORD S Ardersier Road, Maywood P. O. Gentleman\nJEUNE, PHILLIP JOHN Section 27, Cordova Bay, Victoria P. 0 Sail Maker\nLaborer\nMilkman\nKEATINGE, WALTER HERBERT Block 4, Section 67, Gordon Head P. 0.\nMANNIX, LEONARD NIAL \t\nMERRIMAN, WILLIAM \t\nMUNRO, GEORGE E\t\nMACDONALD, HENRY ALEXANDER\nMACDONALD, PETER STUART\t\nMACDONALD, WILLIAM JOSEPH ...\nMcHUGH, WILLIAM \t\nMcKEON, WILLIAM JAMES \t\nMcMUNN, JAMES FRANCIS \t\nMcPHEE, JOHN JAMES \t\nMcRAE, ARCHIBALD ANGUS\t\nMcMORRAN, ALEXANDER WALLACE\nMILLER. THOMAS MUNRO \t\nMURTON, FREDERICK JOHN\t\nMORTON, HARVEY ELLIS \t\nNEWCOMBE, ARTHUR .\nNICHOLL, ROBERT ....\nNORTH, JOHN HENRY\nORMOND, JAMES RICHIE\nPEARSON, THOMAS BULMAN\nPERKINS, GEORGE S\t\nREGAN, WALTER IRWIN\nSHERE, FREDERICK HENRY \t\nSEATON, HENRY FRANCIS \t\nSIMPKINS, ED. THOS. HIGLEY ....\nSMITH, ARCHIE WILLIAM \t\nSPROAT, THOMAS ALEXANDER ...\nSTEBBINGS, WILLIAM HERBERT\nTAYLOR, HENRY KIDD ....\nTUBMAN, JOHN BENJAMIN\nTURNER, FRANK TOPP ....\nUNDERWOOD, FREDERICK\nVIRTUE, JOSEPH DAVID\nWALKER, SAMUEL \t\nWEBB, FRANCIS WILLIAM ....\nWEST, JAMES \t\nWEST, FREDERICK \t\nWIGGS, ALFRED \t\nWILSON, BIGGERSTAFF \t\nWILLIAMSON, DAVID\t\nWODD, JOHN GEORGE CORRY\nYOUNG, WILLIAM \t\nYOUNG, ALFRED EDWARD\nReporter\nElk Lake, Royal Oak P. 0 Farmer\nSection 56, Cedar Hill, Mt. Tolmie P.\nGorge Road, Victoria P. O. ...\nCarey Road, Maywood P. O. ...\nMaple Street, Maywood P. 0.\nTolmie Avenue, Maywood P. O.\nElk Park, South Saanich, Young P. 0\t\nCedar Hill, Box 244, Victoria P. 0\t\nElk Lake District, Royal Oak P. 0\t\nBurnside Road, Maywood P. 0\t\nCedar Hill Road, Mt Tolmie P. 0\t\nCedar Hill Road, P. O. Box 658, Victoria .\nSouth half of Block C, Mt. Tolmie Estate\nLake District, Victoria P. 0\t\nCordova Ba yRoad, Victoria P. 0\t\nVictoria Dairy, Cedar Hill Road\nFoul Bay, Victoria P. 0\t\nCadboro Bay, Victoria P. 0. ...\nFarmer ..,\nMerchant .\nFarmer ..,\nDairyman\nMiner \t\nFarmer \t\nFarmer\t\nPainter \t\nSeaman\t\nDental Student ....\nClerk\t\nBarrister-at-Law ...\nFarmer\t\nLicensed Victualler\nTeamster\nFarmer ..\nButcher ..\nCor. Hampshire Rd. and Oak Bay Ave, 96 Govt St. Vicorial\nWilkinson Cross Roads, Colquitz P. 0\t\nSection 10, Glanford Avenue, Victoria P. 0.\nOak Bay Avenue, Victoria P. 0.\nBoleskine Road, Maywood P. 0\t\nCadboro Bay, Victoria P. O\t\nCadboro Bay Road, Victoria P. 0\t\nBurns Street, Oak Bay, Victoria P. 0. ...\nOak Bay, Victoria P. 0\t\nByron Street, Foul Bay Road, Victoria P.\n0.\nOld Oak Bay Road, Victoria P. 0.\nCement Works, Tod Inlet \t\nGlanford Avenue, Maywood P. O.\nGordon Head, Gordon Head P. O.\nOak Bay, 657 Victoria P. 0.\nP. 0.\nGordon Head, Gordon Head\nCarey Road, Maywood P. Oi\nWilkinson Cross Road, Colquitz P. O.\nStrawberry Vale, Colquitz P. O\t\nCarey Road, Maywood P. 0\t\nOak Bay Avenue, Victoria, B. C\t\nTennyson Road, Maywood P. 0\t\nLake District, Box 519, Victoria \t\nRoyal Oak, Heal P. 0\t\nSouth Saanich, Young P. O.\nWatchmaker\nAccountant .\nGunsmith ...\nContractor\nTinsmith \t\nFarmer \t\nStudent \t\nHarnessmaker\nFarmer \t\nConductor\nCoachman\nCarpenter\nFarmer ...\nFarmer\nClerk\nNil \t\nMiner \t\nFarmer\t\nLaborer \t\nEngineer \t\nCommission Agent\nShoemaker \t\nFarmer \t\nLaborer\nFarmer .\nNature of Objection\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n. Ceased to reside in the District.\n. Ceased to reside in the District.\n. Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Application objected to.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased\n.Dead.\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\nto reside in the District.\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nin the\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict\nDistrict.\n. Ceased to reside in the District.\n\u2022 Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n\u2022 Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n. Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n\u2022 Ceased to reside in the District.\n. Ceased to reside in the District.\n. Ceased to reside in the District.\n\u2022 Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n. Ceased\n.Ceased\n. Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\n.Ceased\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nto reside\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\nreside in the\nreside in the\nreside in the\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\nreside in the\nreside in the\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\n\u2022 Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to\n. Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n. Ceased to\n.Ceased to\nreside in the District,\nreside in the District,\nreside in the District,\nreside in the District,\nreside in the District,\nreside in the District.\n. Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n. Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District.\n. Ceased to\n. Ceased to\n. Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n.Ceased to\n\u2022 Ceased to\n.Ceased to\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nreside\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nn the\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\nDistrict\nDistrict.\nDistrict.\n. Ceased to reside in the District.\n.Ceased to reside in the District. THE WEEK, SATURDAY. OCTOBER 16, 1909\n*5\nGet a\nDoor Mat\nAND KEEP THE HOUSE FREE\nOF MUD.\nBEST QUALITY COCOA\n14x24 in., at $1.25 and 9\u00b0c\n16x27 in., at $1.50 and $1.25\n18x30 in., at $1.80 and $1.75\n20x33 i\"-> at 2.25 and $1-75\n22x36 in., at $2.75 and $2.00\n24x39 in., at $3.25 and $2.50\n26x42 in., at $3.75 and $3-00\n28x45 in., at $4.50 and $3-50\n30x48 in., at $5.00 and $4-oo\nSkeleton Cocoa Door Mats are very popular with\nmany. We show some excellent mats in this\nstyle. Quite a choice of prices, for we have\nthem at 85c, $1, $1.25, $1.50\nWire Mats\u201416x24 in $1.25\nWire Mats\u201418x30 in $1.75\nWire Mats\u201422x36 in .$2.50\nWool Bordered Cocoa Mats make a very attrac-.\ntive mat style and are much favored door mat\nstyles. We show an excellent range with the\nprices ranging at ....$1.25, $1.50, $2, $2.50, $5\nWire Mats\u201426x48 in $4.00\nOthers up to $7.00\nBy the Yard, at $3.75\nNOW IS THE TIME TO PUT IN A\nSUPPLY OF WARMER BEDDING\u2014\nCOOL NIGHTS NOW \u2014 AN\nEXCELLENT ASSORTMENT HERE.\nTHE POPULAR\nWEDDING GIFT\nLibbey Cut Glass is the popular wedding gift this season.\nWe are selling more of this popular glass than ever before.\nOur showing is one of the finest collections of Cut Glass\nto be seen anywhere in Canada. Nothing like thc display is to\nbe seen in Western Canada. We have built a special room for\nthe purpose\u2014conceded to be the finest in Canadian territory.\n\"Libbey\" Cut Glass is the standard of the world\u2014there is\nnothing to equal it. See this grand showing and choose a gift\npiece from it. You are welcome to look.\nPRICES ARE DECIDEDLY EASY\u2014INVESTIGATE.\nSOLE VICTORIA AGENTS\nThe New Way to\nClean Lace Curtains\nWe would greatly appreciate an opportunity to show you our offerings\nin carpets and carpet squares\u2014suitable for fall and winter furnishing. Our\nstocks of these lines comprise the very newest and best in floor coverings.\nWe can and do guarantee their quality and you are assured perfect satisfaction if you purchase your carpets from this stock of ours.\nDon't dread the work of washing curtains-\neliminate the dread and the work by doing this\nwork the \"new way,\" with the \"No-Piece\" curtain stretcher.\nIt simplifies the drying of lace curtains\u2014turns\nthe work into a pastime. The curtains can be\nset in the stretcher in a few minutes, the strain\nequalized and the curtains dried as perfectly as\nif they had just come from thc shop.\nThe \"No-Piece\" curtain stretcher will save\nyour health, your lace curtains, your money,\nyour time, labor and worry, and produce results\nnot attained by any other stretcher on the\nmarket.\nPriced at $3.50 and.\nOther Stretchers at .\n.$2.50\n\u25a0$i-75\nIf you are planning the purchase of new lace\ncurtains, don't purchase until you first see our\nsplendid offerings in these. Visit the second\nfloor and get acquainted.\nIngrain Carpets, from per yd 60c Velvet Carpets, from per yd....$1.50\nTapestry Carpets, from per yd 75c Wilton Carpets, from per yd.. ..$1.90\nBrussels Carpets, from per yd 85c || Axminster Carpets, from per yd..$1.90\nNew Linoleums\nPUT SOME ON YOUR FLOORS.\nThere is nothing quite so good as linoleum for\na winter floor covering. Put a good linoleum on\nyour kitchen or hall floor and much of your floor\nworry and labor is gone. Linoleum is easily\nkept clean and free from thc winter mud and\nmuss and looks much better than bare floors.\nIt lasts for years\u2014inlaid will last almost a\nlifetime. Our offerings are only of the best\ngrades\u2014the best from, the World's leading\nmakers and we guarantee you satisfactory service.\nPrinted Linoleums, from, per yard 50c\nInlaid Linoleums, from, per yard 75c\nCOUNTRY ORDERS\nPacked and Shipped\nYour only shipping charge Is freight\nWEILER BROS.\nHome Furnishers Since 1862, at Victoria, B.C.\nSOLE AGENTS FOR THE\nFAMOUS \"LIBBEY\"\nCUT GLASS\nSOLE AGENTS FOR THE\nOSTERMOOR MATTRESS\nPRICE - - - $15.00\nThe Lonely Road.\nWe used to fear the lonely road\nThat twisted round the hill;\nIt dipped down to the river-way,\nAnd passed the haunted mill,\nAnd then crept on, until it reached\nThe churchyard, green and still.\nNo pipers ever took that road,\n\u2022 No Gipsies, brown and gay;.\nNo shepherds with their gentle flocks,\nNo loads of scented hay;\nNo market-waggons jingled by\nOn any Saturday.\nThe dog-wood there flung wide its\nstars,\nIn April, silvery sweet;\nThe squirrels crossed that path all day\nOn tiny flying feet;\nThe wild, brown rabbits knew each\nturn,\nEach shadowy safe retreat.\nAnd there the golden-belted bee\nSang his sweet summer song,\nThe crickets chirped there to the\nmoon\nWith steady note and strong;\nTill cold and silence wrapped them\nround\nWhen autumn nights grew long.\nBut, oh! they brought the lonely dead\nAlong that quiet way,\nWith strange procession, dark and\nslow,\nOn sunny days and gray;\nWe used to watch them, wonder-eyed,\nNor care again to play.\nAnd we forget each merry jest;\nThe birds on bush and tree\nSilenced the song within their throats\nAnd with us watched to see,\nThe soft, slow passing out of sight\nOf that dark mystery.\n* * *\nWe fear no more the lonely road\nThat winds around the hill;\nFar from the busy world's highway\nAnd the gods' slow-grinding mill;\nIt only seems a peaceful path,\nPleasant, and green, and still.\n\u2014Verna Sheard, in The Canadian\nMagazine for October.\nNautical Error.\n\"I am sorry to hear, captain, that\nyour wife left you so unceremonious-\nly.\"\n\"My mistake, sir; I took her for a\nmate, and she proved to be a skipper.\"\ning to the sand lot. \"For goodness'\nsake, Tommy, what has happened to\nthe baby?\" said she, trying to soothe\nthe wailing infant.\n\"There was a naughty fly biting\nhim on top of his head, and I killed\nit with the shovel,\" was the proud\nreply.\nCancelling the Obligation.\n\"You have saved my life,\" said the\nold man, whom the tramp had saved\nfrom drowning. \"As your reward,\nyou may have my daughter there.\"\nthose ladies your seat, Tommy?\"\nTommy\u2014\"Why don't you get up\nancl give them all your seat?\"\nVICTORIA LAND DISTRICT.\n5*\nDistrict of Chatfleld Island.\nThe Sorrows of Man.\n\"For ten years I've been trying to\ndrown my sorrows\u2014and they won't\ndrown!\"\n\"No wonder. They've had time to\nlearn to swim.\"\nFrom His Pa's Folks.\n\"She doesn't know where the baby\ngets his bad temper from.\"\n\"She doesn't?\"\n\"No.\" .\n\" That's strange. Most young\nmothers can place that sort of responsibility in a trice.\"\n\"The Climax,\" at the Victoria, Friday and Saturday, October 22, 23.\nThe Result.\n\"Now, Willie, you know I told you\nnot to go in swimming, and yet you\nhave been in the water.\"\n\"I know it, ma; but Satan tempted\nme.\"\n\"And why did you not tell Satan\nto get behind you?\"\n\"1 did, and lie kicked mc in.\"\nOf One Mind.\n\"The soil,\" remarked the political\neconomist, \"is what supports us all.\"\n\"Yes,\" rejoined the lawyer, \"I must\nadmit that real estate is at the bottom of three-fourths of all litigation.\"\n\"And.\" added the doctor, \"a great\ndeal of sickness is due to the effluvia from the ground.\"\nTommy to the Rescue.\nTommy's mother had made him a\npresent of a toy shovel and sent him\nout in the sand lot to play with his\nbaby brother. \"Take care of baby\nnow Tommy, and don't let anything\nhurt him,\" was Mamma's parting injunction.\nPresently screams of anguish from\nbaby sent the distracted parent fly-\nThe lifesaver glanced at the daughter, then bent again over the old\nman.\n\"What are you doing?\" asked the\nperplexed father.\n\"Going to drop you in again.\"\nThe Seats of the Mighty.\nLarge and Dignified Uncle\u2014\"Why\ndon't you get up and give one of\nOut Of His Line.\n\"Good morning, sir,\" says the lady,\nentering the studio of thc famous\nportrait painter. \"I wish to engage\nyou to paint my portrait.\"\n\"I shall bc delighted, madam.\"\n\"I want it painted with my new\nhat on.\n\"Pardon me, madam, but I am not\na landscape artist.\"\nTAKE NOTICE that George A. Foster,\nof Merrill, Wisconsin, occupation, a\nBanker, Intends to apply for permission\nto purchase the following described\nlands:\u2014\nCommencing at a post planted 40\nchains south of a little creek ln a bay\non the north end of Chatfleld Island\nand due south of Bullet Channel; thence\nsouth 100 chains; thence east 80 chains;\nthence north 40 chains; thence S. W.\nmeandering the shore of an unknown\nbay to a small creek; thence meandering the shore in a N. E. direction; thence\nN. W. and W. to the point of beginning.\nDated June 24, 1909.\nGEORGE A. FOSTER,\naug 28 By W. C. Juneau, Agent.\n*M\nCANCELLATION OF RESERVE.\n53\nNOTICE is hereby given that the Reserve on Lot 4,836, G. 1, Kootenay District, notice of which bearing date of\nFebruary the 3rd, 1909, was published\nin the British Columbia Gazette of February 4th, 1909, ls cancelled, in so far\nas the said Reserve prevents the acquisition of said lands by pre-emptors, under the provisions of section 33 of the\nLand Act.\nROBERT A. RENWICK,\nDeputy Commissioner of Lands.\nLands Department,\nVictoria, B.C., August 3rd, 1909.\naug 28\nI A CLEAR, PROFITABLE I\n(IDEA\ng often comes to a man while en- \u00ab\njij joying a quiet smoke of g\nI Dudleigh's Mixture |\nI If you smoke it you know\n8 what satisfaction is.\n$\nP \t\n|\u00a3Se. Richardson\nK Phone 346\nfe:*:-:*:-:*K\u00bb:^:-:**:-j*K*:.:\u00bb\u00bbi9:H i6\nTHE WEEK, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1909\nA Word to the Autumn Brides\nAll those who do not should know the comfort, convenience and cleanliness attendant upon the use of Gas for cooking purposes. You will then realize why the\nhousewife with a Gas Range takes pleasures in doing her own cooking and baking. You can regulate a Gas Range to a nicety, it will boil, broil or bake better than either\na coal or wood fire. With Gas there is no kindling to chop, no coal to carry, no ashes to sift,\u2014no worry, none of the old-time difficulties to contend with. Be sure\nto try a Gas Stove or a Gas Range in your new home.\nIf you use Gas for cooking purposes you will\nfind your kitchen spic and span, your fuel (just\na match-scratch) ever ready and your expenses\ngreatly lessened. A Gas Stove or a Gas Range\nis a boon all the year round, but in the matter\nof cleanliness it is indeed a blessing. Why not\nmake your new kitchen an ideal one with a good\nGas cooking apparatus?\nIf you have not hitherto looked into the merits\nof Gas for cooking, we cordially invite you to\ncall and inspect our large stock of new Gas\nRanges and Gas Stoves. Visit our warerooms\nand let us show you the different styles and\nexplain their merits and their price-reasonableness. It is a pleasure to us to explain the simplicity of cooking with Gas.\nVictoria Gas Company, Limited\nEasy Payments If Desired\nCor. Fort and Langley Streets\nA Word to the Autumn Brides\nlit 4-t\ni, Social and *\nt Personal. $\n*r if\n_,4f4fifififif'lfif'if'lfilf4f\nThe H.M.S. Shearwater left last\nTuesday for a trip to the North.\n* * *\nMiss Edith Davie went over to Seattle on Wednesday to visit the A.\nY. P. Exposition.\n* * *\nMiss M. Little left last Wednesday\nfor San Francisco to pay an extended\nvisit to relatives.\n* * *\nMr. Daryl Kent, of this city, left\nfor Vancouver on Sunday last where\nhe will take a position in the music\nstore of M. W. Waitt & Co., Ltd.\n* * *\nMrs. Beresford Hogg of Esquimalt entertained a few of her friends\nat a small tea last Monday.\n* * *\nMrs. Frank Hannington of Vancouver, accompanied by her son, Mr.\nFrank Hannington from Fernie, paid\n* * *\na short visit to friends in Victoria.\nMr. Richard Jones of Head Street,\nspent a few days of last week in Nanaimo on business.\n* \u00bb *\nMr. and Mrs. P. J. Riddell have\nreturned to their home in Victoria\nafter paying a most enjoyable visit\nto Great Britain.\n* * *\nMrs. A. F. Griffiths is leaving during the week on a visit to relatives\nin England.\n* * *\nMr. Hugh Cornwall, who has been\nout on a survey for some months, has\nreturned to the city again.\n* * *\nMiss N. Bell and her mother, Mrs.\nH. P. Bell, of Vancouver, have come\nover to this city to take up their residence on St. Charles St.\n* * *\nThe mepib?rs -of the Alexandra\nClub, on Wednesday, gave a large tea\nfor Mrs. Tilton, who left for the\nSouth this week. The Club rooms\nwere beautifully decorated for the occasion with autumn flowers and foliage. Among those present were:\nMrs. Rock Robertson, Mrs. Langworthy, Mrs. Cuppage, Mrs. Griffiths,\nMiss Bell, Mrs. Harold Robertson,\nMrs. Bevan, Mrs. R. Wilby, Mrs.\nFred. Pemberton, Mrs. Arthur McCallum, Mrs. W. S. Gore, Mrs. McCurdy, Mrs. Spratt, Mrs. Shore, Mrs.\nCharles Rhodes, Mrs. Chatman, Mrs.\nHarry Barnard, Miss Wark, Mrs. G.\nCourtenay, Mrs. S. Maclure, Mrs. C.\nTodd, Mrs. S. Hind, Mrs. Hebden\nGillespie, Mrs. Marvin, Miss Cameron, Mrs. Hasell, Mrs. Cecil Roberts,\nMrs. Blackwood, Mrs. Berkeley, Mrs.\nTilton, Mrs. Warner, and others.\n* * *\nMr. T. F. Monteith came over from\nVancouver to spend a week in the\ncity with relatives.\n* * *\nA pretty wedding took place on\nTuesday evening when Rev. Dr.\nCampbell joined in the holy bonds of\nmatrimony Mr. Harold Davey and\nMiss Annie Mittelstadt, second\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gustave\nMittelstadt. The bridegroom was\nsupported by Mr. Edward Mudge, and\nthe bride's little sister acted as maid\nof honour. After they return from\ntheir honeymoon, Mr. and Mrs. Davey will take up their residence in\nVictoria.\nSporting Comment\nThe Vancouver Island members of\nthc All-B.C. soccer team which is\nscheduled to play in San Francisco,\nleft on Thursday for Seattle where\nthey were joined by the Mainland\nmembers and together they sailed\nSouth yesterday on the S.S. President.\nThe team that has been selected is\na good one and should well uphold\nthe honour of B. C. in the South.\n* * *\nThe ten-mile Marathon race at thc\nExhibition grounds last week sprung\nseveral surprises, the victory of Stanley over Rowan and Burn was hardly expected and the time for the ten-\nmile was such as to lead any one to\nthink the course was perhaps a little\nbit short. This marked the initial\nappearance of Frank Baylis as a professional and although he made good\nin the race, his advent into professionalism was not marked as a very\ngreat financial success; his share of\nthe prize being about ten dollars while\nStanley is said to have cleared up as\nmuch as fifteen dollars, or in other\nwords he ran the race for one dollar\nand a half per mile.\n* * *\nThe Montreal lacrosse team has\nwon the championship of the National league and has lost no time in\nchallenging for the Minto Cup; it is\nhardly likely, however, that the games\nwill be played this season as the\nweather is now getting such that it\ncannot be depended on and to bring\nthe team from Montreal to play in\nthe rain would be out of the question\nas it would mean such a loss to both\nteams that it would take several\nyears before they recovered. If the\ngames are arranged for the early part\nof next season there is no reason why\nthey should not be interesting and\ndraw good crowds, but I hardly think\nthe Montrealers will take back the\nsilverware.\nThe football season was ushered in\nlast Saturday, while the Rugby players did not take part in a game they\nheld their field sports as a curtain\nraiser for the season. Their first\ngame will take place this afternoon\nwhen the J.B.A.A. team will try conclusions with the Victoria fifteen.\nThe soccer players held high carnival no less than one hundred and\nseventy-six players being scheduled to\nplay. With the exception of one\ngame every scheduled match took\nplace, making one hundred and fifty-\nfour players in action. This is saying\na great deal for soccer and its outlook in this city is very bright. The\none thing, however, that is required\nto make the game better is a little\nmore attention to the game on the\npart of some of the;.elder players.\nThe games that were played last week\nwere far below the form shown last\nseason and unless all teams improve\nit will not be much of a team that\ncaptures the championship.\nThe race meeting at Vancouver has\ncome to the end and there are no\nbetter pleased men than the horse\nowners themselves. The manner in\nwhich the meeting was conducted was\nanything but satisfactory; the management apparently trying to see how\nbad they could really do if they tried.\nFinancially I am given to understand\nthat it was a success, but from a racing standpoint, it is hard to find another meeting that has so far failed\nin its object to promote racing than\nthe Vancouver meeting.\nUMPIRE.\n73\nSATURNA ISLAND.\nNOTICE is hereby given that I intend\napplying to the Assistant Commissioner\nof Lands at Victoria, for a license to\nprospect for Coal under the following\narea:\u2014Commenolng at the north-west\ncorner of the South half of section IB,\nSaturna Island, thence north one mile;\neast one mile; south one mile and west\none mile to place of beginning.\n. October 2nd, 1909.\nLORENZO ALEXANDER,\noct 9 Per A. W. McVittie, Agent.\nSATURNA ISLAND.\nNOTICE is hereby given that I intend\napplying to the Assistant Commissioner\nof Lands at Victoria, for a license to\nprospect for Coal under the following\narea:\u2014Commencing at the north-west\ncorner of the south half of secticn l(i,\nSaturna Island, thence north one mile;\nwest one mile; south one mile; anu\neast one mile to place of beginning.\nOctober 2nd, 1909.\nC. C. L. ALEXANDER,\noct 9 Per A. W. McVittie, Agent.\n75\nSATURNA ISLAND.\nNOTICE is hereby given that I intend\napplying to the Assistant Commissioner\nof Lands at Victoria for a license to\nprospect for Coal under the following\narea:\u2014Commencing at the north-east\ncorner of section 11, Saturna Island,\nthence north one mile, west one mile,\nsouth one mile and east one mile, to\nplace of beginning.\nOctober 2nd, 1909. .. .......\nL. S. COKELY,\noct 9 Per A. W. McVittie, Agent.\n72\nSATURNA ISLAND.\nNOTICE is hereby given that I intend\napplying to the Assistant Commissioner\nof Lands at Victoria, for a license io\nprospect for Coal under the following\narea:\u2014Commencing at the -nortli-wesi\ncorner of the south half of section 10,\nSaturna Island; thence south one mtle;\neast one mile; north one mile and west\none mile to place of beginning.\nOctober 2nd, 1909.\nETHEL M. KINU,\noct 9 Per A. W. McVittie, Agent.\nThe rapid progress\nwe are making\nserves as a good\nindication of how\nwell we please\nour customers.\nM. W. WAITT & CO.\nLOOTED\nHERBERT KENT, Manager\nRUPERT DISTRICT.\nNOTICE is hereby given that I intend applying to the Assistant Commissioner of Lands at Alberni tor \u25a0_\nlicense to prospect for Coal under the\nfollowing area north of Quatsino Sound,\nviz., Section fifteen (IB), Township\ntwenty-seven (27), the initial stake being at the North-West Corner.\nSeptember 27th, 1909.\nALFRED E. PILLING,\noct 9 Per A. W. McVittie, Agent.\n09\nRUPERT DISTRICT.\nNOTICE is hereby given that I Intend applying to the Assistant Commissioner of Lands at Alberni for a license to prospect for Coal under the\nfollowing area, north of Quatsino Sound,\nviz., commencing at the South-East coiner of section 21, township 27, thence\nnorth one mile; west one mile; south\none mile and east one mile.\nSeptember 27th, 1909.\nCHRISTIANSEN NORDSTROM,\noct 9 Per A. W. McVittie, Agent.\nNOTICE.\nRECTIFICATION OF CROWN GRANT\nNew Westminster District.\nNotice is hereby given that in pursuance of Section 98 of the Land Act, an\napplication will be made to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands\u2014three months\nafter date\u2014to have the Crown Grant oi\nLot 22G, Group 1, New Westminster\nDistrict, issued on the 17th day oi\nApril, 1875, to J. Roland Hett cancelled,\nand a corrected Crown Grant of sam\nlot 220 issued in lieu thereof.\nDated at Victoria, B.C., this 9th na-v\nof October, 1900.\nPOOLEY, LUXTON & POOLEY,\nSolicitors for the Owners or\noct. 16 said Lot. THE WEEK, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1909\n17\nDID YOU REMEMBER TO\nORDER SOME OF THESE\nPerrier, the finest Mineral Water, per dozen $1.75\nGilbey's Invalid Port, per bottle $1.25\nPenfold's Doctors' Port, per bottle $1.25\nRanier Beer, quarts, per dozen $2.00\nBlue Funnel Scotch, per bottle $1.25\n3-Star Glenlivet Scotch, per bottle 85c\nImperial quart bottle $1.25\nMaple Leaf Rye, Imperial quart $1.00\nBurke's Irish Whiskey, Imperial quart bottle $1.25\nMitchell's Heather Dew Scotch, per bottle $1.25\nDIXI H. ROSS & CO., Independent Grocers\n1317 Government Street - - - Tels 52, 1052 and 1590\nMusic and the Stage\n(Continued from Page Two)\nthe plot of \"Lo\" tells a gripping,\nthrilling story, told with all the charm,\nthe humour and human interest which\nhave brought O. Henry to the posi-\ntiontion he now occupies as America's\nforemost magazine contributor. Notwithstanding its plot, however, \"Lo\"\ncontains as many fun-making lines\nand situations as the most frivolous\ntheatregoer could desire, while its\nchorus contains thirty-two of the\nmost amazingly fascinating, pretty,\nyoung girls ever seen in one organization. The cast includes Dorothy\nBrenner, Elizabeth Goodall, last seen\nhere with Mr. Young in \"The Time,\nThe Place and The Girl,\" Annette\nHall, David Kirkland, James A. Reynolds, Robert Wilson and a dozen\nothers. The entire production is\nstaged by Edward P. Temple, who.\nproduced all the spectacles of the\nNew York Hippodrome for its first\ntwo years.\nThe Climax.\n\"Say, did it ever occur to you that\nit takes two to make a 'knock'?'\nasked Joseph M. Weber, the genial\nactor-manager. \"Of course in your\nown mind you are always telling\nyourself what you think of the other\nfellow. You may say very good\nthings of him, but you are thinking\nvery bad things of him. But it takes\ntwo to make a good substantial\nknock. If you knock the other fellow in the presence of a third party,\nunless the third party acquiesces to\nyour sentiments, you will find that\nyour knock will fall flat and maybe\nyou are praising the other fellow ere\nyou know it. But let the third party\nagree with you and the \"knock\" will\ncome to a head.\n\"And it takes two to enact a play.\nAnd did it ever occur to you that a\ndrama is built up of a series of\n'knocks?' Take 'Othello'\u2014take 'Hamlet'\u2014take 'Romeo and Juliet\u2014take\n'The Climax.' All founded on knocks.\nConsider the modern tank melodrama\nwith its midnight bridge and salt and\npepper dinner and newsboy hero and\nknocking villain and female accomplice. Heavens I How the latter\nknocks the poor sad-eyed heroine.\nThere are knocks in \"The Great Divide\" and \"The Three of Us.\" There\ncan be no drama without knocks and\nknocks and some more knocks. And\nyet I can recall no knocs in \"The\nMusic Master.\" The story of thc\nplay is constructed upon the instance\nof the past. The fellow who stole\nthe old Music Master's wife must\nhave done some strenuous knocking.\n\"And so the world wags and wags,\nind knocks and knocks.\n\"And recently out on the real life\nstage the knocker has been knocked\nmost religiously. And as a consequence, there has been a reformation.\nThere is now* a general inclination to\nboast and boast. You hear men\nwhom you would like to knock highly praised, and you must bend the\nknee and praise too. But for the\ndrama's sake, we must go on knocking to the end.\"\nAt the Victoria Theatre October\n22 and 23.\nMme Jomelli.\nMesschaert, who has long been\ncalled the \"Lamperti of Holland\"\nwill, since the successes of Mme. Jomelli, be called upon to change this\nappellation to that of \"Instructor of\nJomelli,\" for while the honour is only\nimplied in the first, it is an absolute\nand indisputable fact in the second\ninstance. And it is an honour of\nwhich none can rob him, for while\nthis charming singer has studied under some of the world's greatest masters, she gives first credit to Messchaert. Too many singers at the\ntime of their great successes give the\ncredit to the latest and best known\n\"coach,\" under whom they have studied, and many a famous and much\nadvertised teacher has been given\ncredit for having brought out a voice\nwhich was sent them fully equipped\nand so well grounded that, doing\ntheir worst, they could not break it\ndown.\nThe exactness of Mme. Jomelli's\nphrasing, the purity of her tones and\nthe absolute ease with which she accomplishes the most difficult feats of\nvocalization all reflect great credit upon her early master, and it is a tribute to her real greatness that she\ndoes not hesitate to place it there.\nIt is at once apparent to her auditors that Mme. Jomelli did not just\n\"happen,\" but that her flawless art\nis the result of the constant and continuous application of a healthy and\nactive brain, to the work of bringing out a voice which was, in itself,\na thing of beauty, The statement\nthat \"True art is to conceal art\" was\nnever more sure than in her case, and\nshe stands today as one of the greatest exponents of the doctrine of simplicity in singing and brings home\nmost forcibly the well known saying\nof the elder Lamperti\u2014\"The singer\nhas no throat.\"\nAt the Victoria Theatre Monday,\nOctober 25th.\nNew Grand Theatre.\nThe New Grand is to have a twenty-minute comedy next week that will\nraise the roof with laughter according to accounts from the other cities\nwhere it has been presented. In the\nhands of Ed Gallagher and his company, \"The Battle of Bay Rum,'\namusing as it may seem from its\ntitle is said to infinately more funny.\nThe show is also unique for its splendid stage effects and is really a gorgeous scenic presentation. It will undoubtedly prove one of the Grand's\ngreatest drawing cards the coming\nweek.\nA woman gymnast, \"M'lle Martha,\"\nfrom the London pavilion and with\nthe Keith and Procter circuit will\npresent a wonderful rope decension\nas a feature in her unusual high acrobatic work. This feat has been spoken of as the most famous ever accomplished in the air by a woman.\nAll her critics speak in terms o_\npraise for the woman's daring\nstrength and capability for athletic\nhard work.\nDorothy Dahl, a very versatile comedienne with a winning manner and\na clear voice, will have three songs\nand Steeley and Edwards, musicians\nand comedians will offer a musical\nand comedy turn of merit. As a piano\nplayer Steeley has won great renown\nin the States. They also play the\ncornet and render selections on the\nsazaphone. Thomas J. Price will sing\na new song, \"Niagara,\" and the usual\norchestral selections and the moving pictures will be heard and seen.\nArion Club.\nThe first concert of the twenty-\neighth season of the well known\nArion Club will be held on the 24th\nof November, and well attended re-\nhearsels which have begun in earnest go to show the interest taken for\nthe coming season. Associate members have also been awake, and the\nSecretary has been kept busy in answering the circulars for new members applying for membership, and it\nis not at all surprising, as the class\nof entertainment given by this Club\nhave always been a marked success,\nand they may be sure of a banner\nyear this season. Rehearsals are held\nevery Monday evening in Waitt's\nMusic Hall and out of fifty singing\nmembers there were only ten absent\nlast practice night. Seeing that the\nrirst concert will soon be upon us, it\nis earnestly requested that new associate members will send in their applications as early as possible.\nGeographical Centre of\nProvince\nThere are thousands of acres of\nland within an area of one hundred\nmiles of Fort George, which is situate\nat the juncture of Nechoco and Fraser Rivers, near the Geographical\ncentre of British Columbia and on the\nmain line of the Grand Trunk Pacific\nRailway, now under construction. If\nyou are interested in these lands, subscribe for the \"Fort George Tribune,\"\nprinted at Fort George on Saturdays\nby John Houston. Subscription rate,\n$3 a year. sl\nDO IT NOW\nSubscribe for The Week\n*,++_*O_t*_*0_*O_*O_*O,*O'tO,1*