{"@context":{"@language":"en","AIPUUID":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","AlternateTitle":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/alternative","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AIPUUID":[{"@value":"b11c9e12-af6d-4882-8c1d-e51fccd9d503","@language":"en"}],"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"AlternateTitle":[{"@value":"[The Prince Rupert Optimist]","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2015-12-10","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1911-11-22","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/princero\/items\/1.0227845\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" THE  WEATHER\nT'i_ t.y-four hours ending5 a.tn.,\n,.v. 22\n4(i.u    bjtf>.*0     20.751     .52\n-X-\nThe Daily news\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nNEXT\nMAILS\nFor\nsouth\nPrince\nRupart\n..Fri.luy, 8\nu\nni.\na.\nin.\nFormerly The^PrincejRupert Optimist\nVOL. II,  NO. 267\nPrince Rupert, B.C.. Wednesday, November 22, 1911.\nPrice Five Cents\n*$&\nCm.\nCHINESE MISSIONARIES\nARE FOULLY MURDERED\n(Canadian Tress Despatch.)\nPekin, Nov. 22-The killing of\nforeigners at Sian Fu has been\nfurther confirmed by Chinese\nstudents arriving from -there.\nThey say that during the fighting a city mob attacked the\nChina Inland Mission outside the\ncity and murdered Mrs. Breck-\nnian.   an  American  missionary\nand five of the Mission children.\nMr. Breckman escaped with\nwounds. The surviving foreigners are being sheltered by the\nChinese Christians.\nNow is the time to get Xmas\ncards for friends oversea. Your\nevery wish can be supplied at\nMcRae Bros.\nNEW STEAMER \"PRINCESS SOPHIA\"\nWILL BE PUT ON THE ISLAND RUN\nThe new steamer 'Princess\nSophia', which the C. P. R.\nis having built at Bow Mc-\nLachlan's yards at Paisley,\nScotland,for the Queen Charlotte, run was launched last\nweek. She is expected to\nmake her maiden trip in the\nfirst week of April. In appearance she much resembles\nthe Princess May. Her\nlength is 245 feet., 44 foot\nbeam, and 1,200 tonnage.\nShe will have oil burners and\nmake 14 knots an hour.\nAs a passenger vessel the\nPrincess Sophia will be one\nof the best in the northern\ntrade. She will have 80\nstaterooms opening on deck\nand seating arrangements\nfor 108 passengers. There\nwill be accommodation for\n150 second class passengers\naft on the main deck and\nspecial apartments on the\norlop deck forward for Orientals.\nHON. A.G. MACKAY\nGETS NOMINATED\n(Canadian  Press Despatch.)\nOwen Sound, Nov. 22.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nHon. A. G. Mackay, who recently resigned the leadership of the Liberal party in\nOntario, has been again given the unanimous nomination for North Grey.\nDr. W. A. Henderson has\nbeen given the Liberal nomination at West Lambton to\noppose Provincial Secretary\nW. J. Hanna at the Ontario\nelections on Dec. 11th.\nCAPT. DAN LINDEBURG IS ONE OF\nTHE BEST SEAMEN ON THE COAST\nThe stranding of the launch\nIndependence at Halibut Bay the\nother day is an example of the\ntrying conditions under which\nseafaring work is done on the\ncoast here during the winter.\nDan Lindeberg, the owner of\nthe launch, waa one of the very\nbest seamen on the coast. He\nhas been in these parts for fully\nfive years or more. He built the\nlaunch at Port Simpson in 1907,\nand has sailed her a grcat deal.\nThe boat is 30 feet long  and\nbuilt to sail as well as her gasoline auxiliary drives her.\nBefore regular steamers were\nrunning up to Stewart and Port\nSimpson Mr. Lindberg did a\ngood deal of work ferrying pas-\nfsengers in his boat This is the\nfirst time he has had a mishap,\nand the reason for the trouble in\nthis case is said to be the excep-\nseverity of the squall which\ncaught the boat. Navigation of\nthe waters around Prince Rupert\nis no child's play as launch owners here know.\nV.C. HERO HELD\nAS A SUSPECT\nBANK REWARDS\nLUCKY FINDERS\nAnxious to Fight\nVictoria, Nov. 22\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAt the annual banquet of the British Campaigners Association here strong\npleas were made to prepare for\nthe defence of British Columbia.\nIMMIGRANTS ARE\nCOMING IN FAST\n(Canadian Press Despatch.)\nOttawa, Nov. 22\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDuring seven\nmonths of 1911 a total of 265,833\nimmigrants arrived in Canada.\n172,260 were from Europe, and\n93,973 from the States. In the\nperiod of 1910 the total was 227.-\n805, being 142,529 from Europe\nand 85,276 from the States.\nMORE MINERS\nFROM GOOSE BAY\nInclement weather and snowfall are retarding development\nwork at Goose Bay mines. The\nG.T.P. s.s, Prince Albert brought\nseventy-seven men from\nlast night.    The men\nWOULD ABOLISH\nWARD SYSTEM\nThe Victoria Trades and\nLabor Council has passed a\nresolution favoring the abolishing of the ward system\nand has sent a request to\nthe Victoria City Council\nasking that they submit a\nreferendum to the people at\nthe coming municipal election dealing with the abolition of the ward system of\nvoting.\nthat they were laid off eleven\ndays ago, but could not get transportation and had to board themselves. This is the main grievance at Goose Bay.\nCol. Sam to the Rescue\n(Canadian  Press Despatch.)\nVictoria,   Nov.   22-Col.  Sam\nthere Hughes, Minister of Militia,  has\ncomplain j promised to use his influence to\nsecure the cancellation   of\nlease of Deadman's Island.\nthe\nLadies' Home Journal patterns. Wallace's.\nGOVERNMENT WILL NOT\nGO ON WITH THE NA VY\n(Canadian   Press  Despalcli.)\nOttawa, Nov. 22 - Following\nPremier Borden's intimation yesterday that the people of Canada\nwill have the naval question submitted   to   them,   Hon,   J.   D.\nment to spend over eleven million dollars in six years to construct four cruisers and six destroyers would not be accepted.\nHe said the whole question from\nfirst to last will be taken up with\nthe British Admiralty and a plan\nHazen, Minister of Marine stated announced later that will appeal\nin the House today that the to the interests of Canada and\ntenders offered the late Govern- the Empire as well.\nCAPT. WALBURN IS AN AUTHORITY\nON THE BRITISH COLUMBIA COAST\nCaptain Walburn who has\ntaken charge of the Dominion Govt. S.S. Quadra, light-\nNew Westminster, Nov. 22\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA\nreward of ten per cent, has been\npaid by the bank of Montreal to\nthe six workmen who found $24.-\n370 of stolen money recently.\nEach man gets a little over $400.\ni sp.-e i.iI lo Dally News 1\nSan Francisco, Nov. 22-John\nR. Swat^ who won the Victoria\nCross in the South African war,\nand who has received presentations here for life saving, is under arrest.   He is thought to be\nwanted for murder in Bloemfon-i pap CTCAMFR IS\ntain.   A charge of cruelty in con- Dill J>j JA\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\nnection with his children led to\nhis arrest, and a search through\nhis papers led to his connection\nwith the fugitive from Blocmfon-\ntain.\nMAY NOT PRESS CHARGE\nFriend* of George Alexander'*\nAre Anxious to Give the\nYoung Man a Chance and\nAre Recovering the Diamond\nRing.\nGeorge Alexander, the young\nman who got into trouble yesterday over his handling of a\ndiamond ring valued at some\n$175 and the property of 3, S.\nGray, Jeweller. Sixth street, is\nlikely to be released from his\nposition under arrest. A few\ngood friends of his have got together and planned that by the\nrecovery of the missing ring.\nWhich can be located easily\nenough. By its return to Mr.\nGray, the trouble for George can\nbe got over. Mr. Gray was not\ndesirous of pressing the charge\nagainst the young man.\nON THE ROCKS\nJit (Haxtiiiui lay, the father of printing\ntoiled over his types, setting each single\nletter by hand.\nlEi.iUui, the expert compositor with the latest form multiple type-setting machine--\nthe kind the News is having installed--\nsits on a stool in front of his complicated machine and by pressing on his keyboard commands a range of five hundred\nand forty types.\nWhxt, fc. a few days, while effecting the\nchange, the News will have to fall back\non the Caxton method of hand set type.\nIt will be a novel newspaper. It will\nhave all the local stories and the news\nof the world, as usual, but compressed\ninto tabloid form.\niJbr present and succeeding copies of the\nNews will be well worth treasuring\namong your keepsakes of the evolution\nof Prince Rupert.\nevery island and point on the\ncoast. This work took some\neighteen months or two\nhouse and buoy tender for | years to prepare, the Captain\nthis coast, had command of being continuouslv engaged\nthe Quadra previous to 1002 ;on it at Victoria\/ It is In-\nwhen he was tra^s en;ed to erestj Q note ^ three\nthe Marine and F.shenesDe-1 oftheisfelan(l3 .     R.\npartment He knows this ers -^ are JJJd _fte_\ncoast better than most men memhm q{ c in w\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.,\nnavigating it, and was the burn>s fami,\nauthor of the official work \t\npublished giving the names. See Howe & .McNulty for the\nand origins of the names of I famous Kootenay Ranges.\nARE TRYING HARD TO GET WORK\nSTARTED ON WOODWORTH SCHEME\nThe City Council is working\novertime these days trying to\nget some work started on the\nWoodworth Lake scheme. Excavations for the pipe line within\nthe city limits are necessary. In\na few days Col. Davis expects to\nbe ready to call for tenders on\nthis work. The Acropolis Hill\nreservoir, which but for absurd\ninterference would have lieen\ncompleted years ago, can be recommenced shortly, and there is\nthe blasting out of the Shawatlans Lake natural rock shelf at\nits outflow to the passage. This\nlatter work also requires Government sanction, which it is hoped\nmay lie obtained swiftly and\nwithout hitch. A meeting of the\ncauncil is called for Thursday.\nNew Fish Sheds\nTo cope with increasing business in their fish trade with\nVancouver, the company operating the Trawler Kingsway has\ncommended the erection of a new\nfish shetl on the Davis wharf\nwhere the Kingsway berths.\nK'nnnilinn Pros Despatch.)\nNew York, Nov. 22.-The\npassenger steamer Prinz\nJoachin, which sailed for\nJamaica, is reported on the\nrocks two hundred miles\nnorth of Hayti. She carried\na large number of excursionists.   No details are avail-\n\ufffd\ufffdbieyet.        LONDON SUFFRAGETTES WAGE\nReciprocity Not Dead\nll-anadlaii ***** Dm****.)\nOttawa,   Nov.   22  Several of\nthe  leading   Liberal   members ^       stoned the Windows of the Liberal Club,  the Public Offices, the Post Office\nhere have expressed their belief Bank ^ England   Worst Riot of Recent Years-223 Arrests Made\nthat Reciprocity is not a dead is*\nPRINCE RUPERT       NO DAMAGE WAS\nWASN0T LATE   DONE LAST NIGHT\nThree hours tote in leaving Prom an early hour yester-\nVancouver according to offi- j day evening the wind and\ncial report, and likely to be rainstorm increased in viol-\nstill longer delayed by stress ence until exposed residences\nof weather on her way north' trembled in the gale. This\nthe S.S. Prince Rupert kept morning a heavy sea was\non schedule time, reaching running on the opposite side\nport before noon today. of the harbor, but the hills\nbehind the townsite have so\neffectually sheltered the wa-\nASK FOR HELP ,to,'fron-t that P\ufffd\ufffd (lamap ha,s\nbeen  done  there,    though\nnews of wrecks was quite\nMINING MEN\nsue.\nFrom England   new shipment of ladies' rain coats.    Wallace's.\n(Special I\" Hally News.)\nLondon, Nov.  22. - The\nA Good Move worst riot that London has\nAid. Hilditch has taken up res- ^^ fo\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd gom\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  yearg  took\nIdwCS next door to thei News __. ht       ft wag\noffice and give, promise of a good  ^^ by the suffragettes.\nneighbor^^_____ ^ took *m  policemen to\nDon't vou  forget  the regular _ueU the disorder.     In con-\nweekly Dance tomorrow night in se(1-,ence, 320 female and \ufffd\ufffd\n(Cnnn.llan  Press llespnl. li l\nNelson,    Nov.    22.   The existed.\t\nMining Convention has pass- Kingsway Faced Gale\ned resolutions asking the j\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdst i^md the Prince Rupert\nFederal Government to ap-, today the trawler Kingsway\npoint a commission to invest- st-oamed into harbor washed from\nigate the silver, lead and j 8U'm ,,>9torn b-v th*-' spray last\nzinc industry, and to (Kate \"g*; Captain Brown's remark\n*\"_, .. , . 'that it was fine fishing weather\na separate portfolio of mines | out8jde may be taken as just a\nr> a rTf c   Ar^ ata rcn   i onn r.r\\i j^r*\\io be heId w \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Minister who 8hll(le ironica|.\nBA TTLE A GAINS I   1800 POLICE\\ will devote his entire time to\nIthe Work. Bring Your Pur*e\ufffd\ufffd\nA nice variety of candies and\nPrincess Pat Coming isome   other   good   things were\nMontreal, Nov. 22-News has | left over from the sale of work\nin UlS Presbyterian church yesterday. These will be put on\nsale tonight on the occasion of\ngreat Council vs. Commission\ndebate.\n,he Mclntyre Hall.     Best fl\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nand music in town- Come and\nM    Gent's S1.00. iad.es free.\nmale suffragists are now in\ncustody.\nThe riot started when the\ndemonstrators tried to storm\nthe House of Commons which\nwas in session. Having failed to gain an entrance to the\nHouse they turned their attention to smashing the windows of the public offices,the\nLiberal headquarters, the\nNational Liberal Club, the\npost office an dthe Bank of\nEngland.      They   were   ac-j been received here that Princess\ncompanied by a gang of male 'Patricia of Connaught will leave\nrowdies, armed as well as i England to join her parents in\nthe women with large stones. ('\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' >'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* i-\ufffd\ufffd\nSeveral of the women\ninjured.     The  battle\nfierce but short.\nwere\nwas\nNew chinaware hundred., of pretty\ncups and saucers 1 '..'.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd i.r to $,r>.00 each.\nWallace's. The ring was\nPantorium PlonMf CImmts, Thonc 4. Gray.\nDiamond Ring Case\nThe charge against George\nAlexander of having obtained a\ndiamond ring from J, S. Gray,\njeweller,  was today dismissed.\nDon't Buy Coal\nWait! The first week in December tho Westholme Lumber\nCompany,   Limited,   will  begin\nreturned to Mr. (selling Ladysmith Coal for $8.60\n, per ton, delivered. THE DAILY NEWS\nThe Daily News\nThe Leading Newspaper and the Largest Circulation in Northern B. C\nPublished by ths Princa Rupart Publlihing Company, Limited\nDAILY AND WEEKLY\nTRANSIENT DISPLAY ADVEltriSING-50 cents per inch. .'Contract rates\non application.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES-To Canada, United States and Mexico-DAILY, 50c\nper month, or $5.00 per yenr. it\\ advance. Weekly, $2.00 per year. All\nOther Countries-Daily, $8.00 per year; Weekly, $2.50 per year, Btrictly\nin advance.\nHEAD OFFICE\nDaily News Building, Third Ave., Prince Rupert, B. C.    Telephone 98.\nBRANCH OFFICES AND AGENCIES\nNew York-National Newspaper Bureau, 2111 Eaat 23rd St., New York City.\nSeattle\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPuget Sound News Co.\nTHE\nBy.\nLouis\nTracy\nPillar\nof\nLight\nA waiter interrupted their Joyous\n.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdhan. i- iU lis IiIkIichI. He bent over\nMr.   Traill  and  discreetly   conveyed\nI.,111,'   COIIIllllllll, UllOll.\n\"I am delighted,\" cried the million-.\nLONDON, BNOHNO\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTh* Clougher Syndicate, Grand Trunk Building, Trafalgar  ft*..,. |u.ni*tll.v.   'Show him In at once,\nSquare. -.-,, ,.080 flunl ),*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,.|ia|r t0 do honor\nSubscribers   will greatly oblige by promptly calling up Phone 98 in case of t0.\"\"uU*R$\ufffd\ufffd*\\ K-d to hoar.\" he\nnon-delivery or inattention on the part of the news carriers\nDaily Edition.\nWednesday. Nov. 22\nTHE TRUNK SEWER BY-LAW\nIn their forthcoming public statement about the trunk\nsewer scheme the Board of Public Works should make it\nclear that the resolution moved on Monday night is not\nbinding on any future council. All that is binding is contained in the by-law, which makes the sewer terminate at\nmanhole 28, some 600 feet above the Hay's Creek bridge.\nThe extension sewer mentioned in the resolution will\nhave to be made the object of special expenditure by a future council.\nTo make the extension sewer part of the scheme, would\nmean a new by-law and two or three week's delay, and\nwould take the letting of the contracts for the trunk sewer\nout of the present council's hands, and place it in the hands\nof the council who will have the carrying out of the scheme.\nTABLOID EDITORIALS\nThe Empire was badly scooped yesterday,\na line about the new morning newspaper.\nIt had not\nThe hardware dealers of the city have arranged to\nclose every evening except Saturday at 6 o'clock. Why\nnot the boot stores, the groceries, the dry goods houses, etc.\nTrade would go on just the same, and we'd all have a\nchance to get to know each other this winter. It's a good\nidea. Get busy, you boot dealers, grocers, etc.\nWho says Aid. Newton is lacking in a sense of humor.\nNotice how he published Aid. Clayton's letter about his\n\"political martyrdom\"  alongside \"The Land of Great Sor\nrows.\nIS Commission Government Better ^\nHian tbe Old-style City Council   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nA   PUBLIC    DEBATE\non the above question will be held in tlie Presbyterian Church\nWednesday Evening at  8   o'clock\nMr.   J. S. Cowper, Editor of the Daily News will\ntake  the  affirmative.\nEx-Alderman W. P. Lynch will take the negative.\nThis is an grand opportunity to hear this great question discussed\nS=== ADMISSION IS FREE TO ALL\ns>snssss\ufffd\ufffd\n******\nThe Graham Island Oil Fields, Limited\nCAPITAL STOCK $1,000,000\nWe are offering for sale a very limited\namount of shares of stock at 25c per share;\npar value $1.00. These shares are going\nquickly and will soon be off the market    :   :\nTHE MACK REALTY & INSURANCE COMPANY\nSELLING AGENTS\ni\ufffd\ufffd*444\ufffd\ufffd44\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdK4\ufffd\ufffd444\ufffd\ufffd44444444\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd4444444\ufffd\ufffd4\ufffd\ufffd44\ufffd\ufffd44444\ufffd\ufffd$\nSubscribe For The Daily News\nexplained, \"Hint  Mr. llrand is ashore,\nitnil lias come io see us.\"\nMrs. Vnnsl'.tart stifled the cry on\nlur lips. The slight color which had\ncrept Into her pale cheeks yielded lo\nlhe deathly hue. ll chanced that Ihe\nLibera were looking expectantly to*\nwinds lhe door nnd did not notice her.\nllrand entered, lu ncknowleduiiiK\nMr. Traill's cordial welcome he smilingly explained his presence.\n\".My superiors sent mu emphatic\norders (o clear out.\" he said, \"so I\nhad no opllon but to oh.'y. I conveyed\nMr. Emmett to suitable .piaM.-i's mid\nhastened home, bui found that the\ngirls were playing truant. My house-\nkeeiK-r InslHied iluii I Hluuld eal. elite\nshe would not be satlstled lhal I Mill\nlived, but I came here as quickly as\npossible.'\nAt that Instant his tilance. IraveliiiK\nfrom one to unolher of ihos.. pri suit,\nfell on Mrs. Vanslttnri.\nHe stood as one petrified. The\nkindly words of his host, the outspoken glee of the girl* at his appearance, died away In his ears Iu hollow\nechoe*. His eyes, frowning beneath\nwrinkled brows, seem to ask If he\nwero i.r'i the victim of soma unnerving\nhallucination. They were fixed on\nMrs. Vanslttart's face with au all\nabsorbing Intensity, and his set lips\ntnd clenched hands showed how utterly Irreslsilble was the knowledge that\nIndeed, he was not de.clved\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthat lie\nwas gazing ai a living, breathing per\nsodality, and nol nt some phantom product of a surcharged brain.\nShe, too, yleldlUR before the suddenness of au ordeal she had striven\nto avoid, betrayed by her laboring bosom lhal she was under Ihe spell of\nsome excitement of overwhelming\npower.\nShe iiiamii:, ,1 to gain her feet. The\nconsciousness that Constance, Enid\nI.ndy Margaret even, were looking at\nher ami at llrand wiih amazed ntix-\nlety, served to strengthen ber for a\nsupreme effort\n\"Mr. Stephen Brand\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdand I\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdare old\nacquaintances,\" she gasped. \"He\nmay misunderstand \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd my presence\nhere\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdto-night. Indeed\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdln this Instance\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdI am not to blame. I could\nnot\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdhelp myself. I am always\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtrying lo explain\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdbut somehow\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdI never\nsucceed.    Oh\"'\nWllh an ngonlzed sigh she swayed\nlistlessly and would have falen had\nnot Pyne cm ght her.\nHm she was desperately determined\nnol to faint\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthere. This was ber\nworld, (he world of society. Sbe\nwould nol yield In lis presence.\nHer eyes wandered vaguely, helplessly, from ihe face of ihe man to-\nwarda the olher*. Constance had hastened to her assistance, and the knew\nledge lhat litis was so seemed to stimuli!'<\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd her lo a higher degree.   With fine\nI courage  she  grasped  the  back  of a\nchair and summoned a wan smile to\nher aid\n\"You   will   forgive   me\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIf I leave\n1 you,\" she murmured.   \"I am so tired\nso very tired.\"\nShe walked resolutely toward* th*\ndoor. lira-id drew aside that ah*\nmight pass. He looked at her no more.\nIlls wondering daughter saw that big\ndrops   of   (K-rsplratlon  stood on  hi*\n. for In   d\nMr. Tt-nlll. no led astonished than\n' ihe .. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. offered to conduct Mr*. Van-\nslllarl  to her room\n\"Xo.\" she said, \"I will go alone. I\nam  used   lo  ll  now, after   *o many\n, years.\nThere wns n ring of heartfelt bluer\nnrss In li'.r voice which appealed to\n, more ihnu one of the silent listener*\nAh    the    door    closed  behind  her,\n' Hu.i.,I seemed lo recover hi* lenses.\n\"I un.s. ask your pardon, Mr,\nTriiHI.'' he said, quietly. \"I assume\nlhat lhc liiily who has just left us did\nnet expect to see me here tonight\nIl would he idle lo deny that the meet-\nIng ..ii- a shock to both of us. It re-\n\\lve d painful memories.\"\ni     Mr. Traill, scarce knowing what be\n' said, sn lukcu nl.ack was he, exclaim*\n. ,>! hastily:\n\"Mrs. Vnnslltarl claimed you as an\ni,Id ncq.iali.ifli.ee. The odd thing 1*\nthai you. at any rate, did not discover\ndial fact earlier.\nThe llghllioiisekeeper looked round\nlhc Inhle. He saw pain In many eyes,\nbut  In   Pync's steady gaze there  was\n- elieoiirng.'i.i'.nl.\n\"Mrs. Vanslttart!\" hc said slowly\n\"Is Hint her name? I did not know.\nHow should I, the recluse, hear of her?\nAnd In yonr first message to the rock\nyou call, d hi r Ktla.   When I knew her\n[ her niune  was Nanette, for the lady\nwho calls herself Mrs. Vunslltart was\nmy wife. Is yel for aught I know to\nlhe contrary.\"\n\"Father!\"    Constance clung to him\ni in  utmost  agitation,    \"bo you mean\nlhat she Is my mother?\"\n\"Ves, dear one, she Is.    Dut let us\ni go now. I f- ar my home-coming has\nbrought misery In Its train. I am\nsorry indeed. It was wholly unexpe \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nted.     Poor   Nanette!     She   ever  d \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n| celved herself. I suppose she hoped\nto avoid mc. as If fate forgot the (can\nI In the comedy of life.\"\n\"Can I not go to her?\" asked Con-\n' stance white-faced and trembling.\n\"No, my child, you cannot. Hns\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdhe claimed you? She cast you off\nonce. I might have forgiven her many\nthings\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnever that. Come, Enid!\nWhat need for your tear*? We faced\nworse troubles together three days\nago, and you, at any rate, can look for*\nward to happiness. Qood-by, Lady\nMargaret, and you, too, Mr. Traill. I\nwill see you to-morrow, I hope.   For.\ngve me for my unconscious share In\n1* night'* suffering.\"\nCHAPTER XVII.\nMRS. VANSITTART QOES HOME\nStephen llrand and the two girls'\npassed silently down the broad stairs\nOf the hotel unaccompanied by anv nil\nthe others. There was nothing Incomprehensible In this, nor any savor ot\ndiscourtesy.\nln tho first place, Mr. Traill was so\nprofoundly allocked by tho llghtbOUIW\nkeeper, revelation that lie collap\ufffd\ufffded\nInto a chair and remained there, bowed and wordless, for tunny minutes,\nRoth Pyne and Stanhope did move lo.\nwards the door, but Enid, watchful,\nself-sacrificing, eager to save thoso\nshe loved from further pain, telegraph-\nid an omphalic order to Stanhope to\nremain where he was, and I'yne murmured to him:\n\"dues* she's right, anyhow. We'll\nill feel a heap better In the morning.\"\nThe person who exhibited the clear\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdst signs of distress was Lady Margaret. Her poaitlon wa* one of extraordinary difficulty. Three of the actors in Hie breath less scene which had\nbeen sprung on her with the suddenness of an explosion were absolute\ncl rangers in her life before that evening.\nUrand she knew, Indeed, but only by\nsight. She had met Constance and\nKnld occasionally, at arm's length, so\nlo speak, regarding them truly as dangerous young persons where marriageable sons were concerned. Knld had\nJustified her suspicions, and her ladyship had yielded so far as to give her\napproval (o an engagement Bhe could\nnot prevent.\nCircumstances had conspired to\nforce her hand. Stanhope, being an\noutspoken young man, had made no\nsecret of his desperate resolve to rescue Enid, so the newspapers supplied\nthe remainder of the romance, and\neven Lady Margaret herself had contributed to It under the magnetic influence of the hour.\nIt was ono thing, however, to be\nthrilled with the adventures of the\nrock-bound people, but quite another\nto figure prominently In connection\nwith a social scandal of tbe firsl magnitude. She knew Penzance too well\n(o hope that the Incident would sink\nInto oblivion. Ohviously, tbe matter\ncould not rest In IU present stage.\nShe must expect disagreeable disclosures, significant head -.-bakings of\nihos.' who knew little ana wanted to\nknow more. All the tea-table artillery ot a small town would be focused\non her defensive position were she\nloyal to the girl whom her son had\nchosen as his helpmate.\nThis same son, too, after he had recovered from iho amazement of Mrs.\nVansiltart'a dramatic departure and\nHum,is admission, betrayed a composure that was distinctly Irritating.\n\"You won't mind If we smoke, mother,\" he win I. \"The situation require*\ntobacco. Don't you feel like that,\nPyne?\"\n\"If Lady Margaret doesn't object, I\nadmit thai different sorts of poison\nmight act as tonics,\" answered Pyne.\n\"Here, uncle, try a brandy and soda.\n1 ail. Margaret, a glass of champagne.\nI've been expecting a disturbance, but\ndidn't look for lt to-night.\"\n\"Why do you say that. Charlie?\"\nasked Mr. Traill, rising and stretching\nhis limbs as a man who tests his bone*\nafter a heavy fall.\n\"It waa hanging around, Just as one\nprophesies a siorm after an electrical\nfeeling in the air. Mrs. Vanslttart recognized Urnnd, and made her calcu-\nlatlona accordingly. Lei us give her\nlhe credit Sue to her. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd As soon as she\ndiscovered him, the marriage project\nwas off.\"\n\"I had that kind of Impression myself.   (Had I mentioned It to you, now.\"\n\"Of course you aro. I'll bet any reasonable sum that Mrs. Vanslttart Intended to leave I'enzance to-morrow\nas soon aa she had made you understand (hat she could not, under any\ncircumstances, become my aunt.\"\nA ghost of a smile flitted across Mr.\nTraill's face. His nephew's way of\npulling things was delightfully unequivocal.\n\"What we arc apt to lose light of,\"\ncontinued I'yne, \"I* Hie manner ln\nwhich Brand received what must have\nbeen a Daggering blow. He met his\nwife to-nlght afler a separation of\nmore than twenty year*. And how he\nlook II! When hc spoke*. It was really\nIn her behalf. Thc thing la too amazing. Of course, now that the thunder\nand lightning have started, the sky\nwill clear all the sooner.\"\n\"Unhappily, such affairs do not arrange themselves so readily,\" snapped\nLady Margaret. She was becoming\nmore angry with each wave of reflection. \"Young men like you do not\nrealize the effect of auch\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdsuch unpleasant exposures on family life.\nHow will the early history of her parents aiieet tbe future of Constance\nHi innl '   As for lhe other girl\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\nHer ladyship threw up her bands In\nhelpless abandonment. To her mind,\n(he adoption of i\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,nr Raid, the Bea-\n*..ail. assumed a darker appearance\nnow ihnl Miami's matrimonial adventures i,v, al, ,l sinister features.\n.in, k  Stanhope .aught  her by  the\n:-.*,<> I.!. I, -1*.\n\"Mother,\" hc cried, \"before you say\nanother word let me tell you something you ought lo know. Enid ls Mr.\nTrni11 s daughter!\"\nNow this good woman loved her son\ndearly. All her thoughts were of him\nand for him. Her look of blank Incredulity yieldid to the confirmation\nshe saw writ on all three faces.\nShe burst Into (ears.\n\"Apparently I am the last person to\nbe taken Into anybody's confidence,'\nshe sobbed.\n\"Madam,\" said Mr. Traill, bending\nover her, \"in this Instance, at least,\nyou have no cause to feel aggrieved.\nNeither the girl herself, nor her sister by adoption, nor Mrs. Vanslttart,\nto whom, until the past half-hour, I\nconsidered myself to be engaged, Is\naware of the undoubted fact which\nyour son has just told you. Let me say\nthat I, as her father, am proud to\nthink she has won tbe affection* of\nsuch a man as Stanhope. There Is no\nreason why you, his mother, should\nnot be equally satisfied with the pedigree and prospects of my daughter.\"\nHI* calm assumption of a rank\nequal If not superior to her own was\nconvincing to a woman of her temperament. Assuredly that evening was a\nmemorable one to her ladyship. The\nrepose of Vere de Vere was rudely\nshocked for once. Nevertheless, the\nknowledge that her lifelong ambition\nhad boen realized In a way little\ndreamed of by any of those moat concerned was In Itself consoling. Mr.\nTraill, quite unconsciously, loomed\nlarge In the social eye of Penzance,\nand the widowed lady had not been so\nlong withdrawn from the wealth-worshiping world of London as to bo\nwholly unleavened with the worship\npf the golden calf.\nSo It waa with qulokened Interest\nthat she set herself to listen to the\nstory of Enid's parentage, and, If her\nfear of local gossip-monger* shrank as\nber perception of Mold's real so- ia!\nbohi_U.ii Increased, much may be for\nliven to tne motherly sentiment Hint\npo wife can be too good tor an excellent ion.\nMeanwhile Brand and the sorrow-\nladen glrlB, ushered by obsequtou* servants lo the entrance-hall, were constrained to comfort themselves with\ntrue Drltish phlegm ln view of the Interest caused by their appearance.\nThe hour was not late, about half-\npast nine. Even whilst the hall porter\nwas aumimnlug a cab the new*\nspread, wltbin and without that the\nlighthouse-keeper and his daughters,\nwhose exploits filled the minds of all\nmen, were standing near the door.\nSeveral people, complete stranger*,\ncame to them and offered warm congratulations. A smart Journalist\npressed forward and wove hll own\ncomplimentary utterances int. an in*\ntervlew. A crowd gat heron quickly on\nthe pavement. Policemen, those mar\nshalla of every English demonstration,\ncleared a path for them through the\nthrong. So, with smiling words on\ntheir lips and anguish in their hearts,\ntbey made a triumphal exit. How\nlittle could the friendly enthusiasts\nwho cheered them realize that these\nthree had been atrophied by the\ndeadly malevolence of fate in the very\nhour when a great achievement had\nended happily.\nEnid Buffered almost as keenly a*\nBrand and hla daughter. Their joya\nand sorrows were hers. The startling\nnature of Brand's avowal rendered it\ndifficult for either Enid or Constance\nto piece together certain fragmentary\nmemories of Mrs. Vanslttart's odd behavior during her enforced sojourn on\nthe rock. So thoroughly had she shattered those dimly outlined Impressions\nby the quietly vivacious charm of ber\nmanner at dinner that they both experienced a Jumble of sensations. A\nterrified woman, In wet and torn\nclothing, cowering ln the gaunt Inter\nlor of a Btorm-glrt lighthouse, ls a very\ndifferent being when attired in expensive garments and Burroundcd by the\nluxuries of a first-class hotel.\nIt was a relief to drive to their cot\ntage in silence, yet, so easily moulded\nI Is our human clay, it was a greater\n[ relief when the tension of the noisy\nrattle of tbe cab was relaxed.   It cost\nsome effort to assure Mrs. Sheppard,\na buxom,   motherly soul of sixty or\n, thereabouts, tbat tbey could not poa-\nI slbly eat any supper.   Tbe effort wa*\n{ forthcoming.   They pleaded weariness,\nand at last they were alone.\nConstance knelt by her father's sld*\nwhen he dropped listlessly Into the\narmchair placed ln hi* accustomed\ncorner.\n\"Now, dad,\" ahe said, bravely unemotional, \"there will be no more tear*.\nTell me all that I ought to know.\"\nKnld drew a hassock to bis feet and\nseated herself there, clasping her\nhands about her knees,\n\"Whatever she did I am sorry foi\nher,\" said the girl decisively. \"And\nshe cannot have been a really bad\nwoman, dad, or you would not have\nloved her once.\"\nllrand sighed deeply. His strong\nwill had deserted him for a little\nwhile. He shrank from the ordeal be*\nfore htm. Why should he be called od\nto sully thc mirror of hts daughter'*\nInnocence by revealing to her the dis*\ngraee of her mother?\nConstance caught something of the\ndread in his soul.\n\"Don't tell me If It hurts you, dad.\nI am content to bear more than I have\nborne to-night if lt lessens your sufferings,\" she whispered.\nHe placed au arm around each ol\nthem.\n\"It Is God's will,\" he said, \"that 1\nshould have to face many trials at \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nperiod when I expected nothing but\nsome few yeara of quiet happiness.\"\n\"Nothing in this world can part ul\nfrom you,\" snid Constance.\n\"Oh, nothing,\" agreed Enid solemnly nestling closer. Her earnestness\nwas helpful.    He smiled wistfully.\n\"You forget, Enid, that there is \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ngrave chance of you, at auy rate,\nleaving me for another,\" he said.\nShe blushed.\n\"That Is tho worst of girls getting\nmarried,\" she protested. \"They ar*\nsupposed to be delighted because they\nare going to live with Btrange people.\nGirls who are of that mind cannot lis\nhappy at home. If I thought that being married to Jack implied separation\nfrom you and Constance\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\n\"You would give blm up and weep\nyour eyes out.\" He pressed ber pout-\nIng lips together as he went on:\n\"Now, my dear ones, I wish both of\nyou to be prepared for very unexpected changes. Two most Important\nevents ln your lives have taken plac*\nwithin a few ho-irs. Constance, If you\neaw your mother to-night, Enid also\nsaw her father. I have known for two\ndays that Enid's father Is Mr. Traill.\"\nPor an Instant, lt must be confessed,\nConstance and Enid alike feared that\nthe mental and physical attain he had\nundergone bad temporarily deranged\nhim. It wai not sheer incredulity but\nreal terror he saw In their eyes. Some\nhow, their self-effacement ln his behalf touched blm more keenly than\nanything else bad done during this\ntroubled period.\nHe bowed his head. A strong man\nin agony cannot endure the scrutiny\nof loving eye*.\n\"Enid,\" he said brokenly, \"my wordi\nto you must be few. Good fortuns\nneeds but slight explanation. Th*\nproofs of my itatement I do not possess, but Mr. Traill's letter to mi\ncould not have been written by such *\nman If he were not sure of bi* fact*,\nHere It Is.   Read It aloud.\"\nHe handed ber her father's plain-\nspoken communication. Constance\nIncapable ot deeper depths of amaze,\nment than those now probed, lookot)\nover her sister's shoulder. Togethel\nthey deciphered the somewhat dlffl\ncult handwriting of a man whose chiel\ntask for years had been to sign hit\nname.\nThis drawback was good ln Its re\nsuit. They persevered steadily to th*\nend. Then Enid, the comforter, brok*\ndown herself.\n\"It cannot be true, dad,\" she cne-i\n\"I have been one of your daughters all\nmy life. Why should I be taken from\nyou now?\"\n\"I believe it Is quite true,\" sal-J\nBrand quietly and the need there wai\nto console her was beneficial to him\nself. \"Mr. Traill speaks of proof*\nYou have met him. I exchanged bare\nly a word, a glance, with him, but 11\nI* not believable that be would raak*\nthese solomii statements without Hi*\nmolt undeniable testimony.\"\n\"Indeed, Enid,\" murmured Con\nstance, \"It sounds like the truth, els)\nhe would never have spoken so defl\nnltely of my father'i claim on youi\naffectlona.\"\nTlie Best\nProcurable.\nAbsolutely pun\nfTO BE CONTINUED)\nADVERTISE IN THE\nNEWS\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*4\ufffd\ufffd***s\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd+*-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd%\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd+\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd t0.-\ufffd\ufffd.l.-^,^\ufffd\ufffd,\ufffd\ufffd^<r.\n*\"\"*-* ~''*'-*-_,k\nLYNCH BROS.\nGeneral Merchandise\nLargest Slock\nLowest Prices in Northern B. C.\nSAMUEL HARRISON\n(NOTARY PUBLIC)\nV. K. 0. GAIIBU\nSamuel Harrison & Co.\nReal Estate and Stock Broker*\nAPPROVED AGREEMENTS FOR SALE PURCHASED\nPrince Rupert\nand\nStewart\nm**-** *t*******a*W***mt* * \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' **'* ***'**} **^**^ml*^ ******* tl<*t-ai ***** *-***mt * \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd**\"- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd l*a*m**m*m*'*** \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*****%\nFIRST: \"CATCH YOUR PRINTER\ntt\nS-3-SfiSfl\nDIRECTIONS FOR COOKING A HARE.\nFIRST\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \"CATCH VOUR HARt\"\nese-s-e*..\nTo produce good printing you must \"first catch your\ngood printer. . . You can't get ijood printing from a\npoor printer, even if he work with never so good an\nequipment. If he lacks the \"knack,\" the trained\n, taste, the single-minded fondness for his work which\n| real printers have, he will do poor printing for you.\nIf he has all of these, and in addition to them nde-\n3uate modern equipment,  your printing will  have\nistinction, salesmanship, the lure of typc-benut.v.\nAs this office produces good priming you may infer\nthe presence of a good printer\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwho is \"catchable.\"\nFOR   HIGH CLASS PRINTING OF ALL KINDS SEE THK\nDaily News Building\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd I i~mn~n ii i ii mh ******* n~a n~\ufffd\ufffd i ~i \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"*  '*\"n7\nIt Is Hie Trained Man or Woman\nWho Rises to the Top of the Ladder!\nTo fit your son or daughter for a business   career you must gr \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nthem a business training.   The best place to send them to is tin\nNanaimo Business College\nIt is the nearest business\ncollege to Prince Rupert.\nIt s fees are within reach\nof everyone. Its tuition is\npersonal, and develops the\nindividuality of the pupil.\nRoom and board is cheap\nin Nanaimo. The pupils\nare away from the distractions of the larger'cities   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nOil ik.rtlu.. etmu inf Mr. lutlioo ll\nThe Ben Pitman System of\nShorthand\nBusiness English nnd Letter writing\nCommercial Arithmetic\nOfflce Routine\nSpelling\nTypewriting\nPenmanship\nIt May Mean alljhejiflerence Between Succets ind Failure lo You    jj\nAsk at Dally News -forour booklet teaching how to write shorthand\nTHE NANAIMO BUSINESS COLLEGE\nC. E. Perry, Principal\n8\nRead The Daily News\nAnd Get All the News THE DAILY NEWS\ntk>6600eOQ60Qafl6<5==5S-=-~=====-.===\n==>00<>00000000000000<X\nGrand Trunk Pacific Railway\n^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_.,____\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_______.\nTownsite at Hazelton\nThe Grand Trunk Pacific Railway Townsite at Hazelton is situated on\nLot 851, as per above plan. It will be registered as SOUTH HAZELTON and it is the intention of the company to build a station on this\ntownsite in the spring of 1912.\nThere will be no station at Ellison,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdone mile west.\nPurchasers  of lots  at Ellison will be  fully protected.\nSurveys are completed and plans will be published just as soon\nas  the  government  makes selections  of lots.\nThe Land Commissioner of the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway will\nissue  all  agreements and deeds.\nH-sTir-  to the public.\nThe Grand Trunk Pacific Townsite ot South Hazelton\nis situated on Lot 851. and it is the intention of the\nCompany to buxld a station on  thus Townsate in the\nSpring of 1912.\nland  Commissioner.\nWannipeff,\nMov. 6th. 1911\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCt. U. Ryley-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdn.    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd!         I  r**r*A\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSMSSSSSSK\nGrand    Trunk   Pacific   ^ij^j^^^\n. ITEMS OF.\n, SPORTl \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nTill': Itld FIGHT\nFrom many angles the biggest\nfight lhal has taken place In Kngland\nin years will he ihat between Jem\nDriscoll, Bngllih featherweight champion, and Owen Moran, it is to be\nheld December *: at Birmingham,\nMoran1* native illy, and preparations\nare being made fur the battle upon\nmuch the same scale ns for a world's\nchampionship affair 111 the Stales.\nAnd In one rasped at least the two\nwill be very much alike. Kxchanges\nsay the men In charge of the Drls-\ncoll-Moran ufralr are having tickets\nprinted that arc thu exact replica of\nthose for the Johnson-Jeffries mill.\nNothing of that sort bns ever been\nBeen in Kngland. There will be accommodation for something over 17,-\n000, and the price sale of seats will\nrun all the way from five shillings to\nfive gulnens, the latter being, of\ncourse, the price for the choicest box\nond rlngsldo seats. The building Itself will be 260 feet long by Just\nabout one-half that width. Although\nthe boxers are to make weight lhe\naffair Is not for any line. Driscoll\nhas already gone Into active training. The featherweight champion Is,\nas usual, ut Cardiff, while Owen Moran Is quartered Rt Malvern.\nThe bout is to be referced by Eugene Corri, und Curri'a very pres*\nctice ln the ring will give It any lone\nIt might otherwise lack through be\nIng staged oulside of London nnd\nlhe National Sporting Club.\nI.OIIII  IIKKIIV AS  -iVIXM'.ll\nKngllsh sporting pnperB to hand by\nyesterday's mall .ontnln u stalstlcal\ntable of thc winning breeders, own\ncrB, trainers and Jockeys on the turf,\ncomplied from .March *>0 to Novcm\nber 3, inclusive. Lord Derby heads\nthe list of winning owners (his totnl\nwinnings amounting to \ufffd\ufffd41,460. During the scusoii his nine horses won\ntwenty-eight big events. J. II. Joel,\nowner of the Derby winner this year.\nIs second with winnings aggregating\n\ufffd\ufffd34.61-9. Mr. Joel entered seventeen horses during the season nnd\nwon thirty-five races. Lord Derby\nand Mr. Joel arc the only owners\nwho won nbove \ufffd\ufffd10,000 during the\nseason. Mr. Joel leads among winning breeders, while the leading\ntrainer was Hon. U. I .amhi.m F.\nWoolen was the leading Jockey, wiih\na percentage of I6.S9. He had 68..\nin,,iin;- during (he season. Ills record shows 171 firsts, i:tG seconds,\n112 thirds nnd 260 unplaced. Mr.\nKalrie. who led lhc list of winning\nowners Inst year. Is fourth on (he\nlist this year, his winnings during\nlhc season aggregating \ufffd\ufffd!>,60\". Third J\nplace on (he list Is occupied by C. K\nHoward, who won \ufffd\ufffd10.014.\nG LP. Weekly Service\nS.S. Prince Rupert\nKor\nVancouver\nVictoria\nAND\nSeattle\nFridays, at 8 a.m.\nS.S. PRINCE JOHN\nFor I'ort Simpson   Naas and Stewart,\nWednesdays at 1 I'. M.\nFor Masset  and Naden  Harbor every\nalternate   Thursday   at   10   P.   M.\ncommencing November 9th.\nFor   Skidegate,   Jewday,   etc.    every\nalternate   Thursday   at   10   1'.   M.\nCommencing November 2nd.\nW   L, BARKER\nArchitect\nSecond uven.ie und Third street\nOver Westenhaver BroB.' Office.\nII. Gurelnn Munro\nW. Nii-Ii.-Is.,i. l.iiile'y\nMUNRO & LAILEY\nArchitects,\nStork Building, Second Avenue.\nSTUART &\nSTEWART\nACCOUNTANTS\n:- m inputs\nl.aw-Hutler Building\nPhone No.\n28b\nI'rince Kut.erl\nP.O. Box 351\nRailway service to Vanarsdol, mixed\ntrains from Prince Rupert Wednesdays and Sat unlays 1 P. M., returning\nThursdays and Sundays 4 P. M.\nOn your Christmas visit East travel\nvia the Grand Trunk Railway System\nfrom Chicago. The finest and best\nservice over Double Track Route.\nConnections with all roads East and\nWest. Atlantic Steam -hip bookings\narranged.. Full information and\ntickets obtained from thc oflice of\nA. E. McMASTER\nKREKIHT   ANI)   PASSKNGKK   AGENT\nA\nB.C. Coast service - Famous I'm-cess\nLine\nPrincess Mary\nSaturday, November 18th. al 9 a-in.\nFor Victoria. Vancouver \ufffd\ufffdn.| Seul.\nJ. C McNab \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Central Agaal\nAl.KKKI) OABI8, 0,  V. HKNMETT, B.A.\nof llrlll.h Columblu of ll C , ii.li.rlo. See-\nm,,l Manltobu Ham. lealctiewan  and Al>\nla-rlie Bar..\nCARSS & BENNETT\nBarristers, Notahies, Etc.\noil!,-,-   l:..-!,;,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>\/>\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd block, ,-i,r\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,-r Third avenue and\nSixth BtN-K. Prince Ituuert. 8\nWM. S. HALL, L.D.S., U. D. S.\nDentist.\nCrown and Bridge Work a Specialty.\nAll dental operation, skilfully treated. Ga. and\nlocal inn,-1!:,i I,- adniinlatereel f\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdr ihe palnl-M. ex-\ntra.-tee.n of teeth. Con.ultalion free, Olllce.;\nll.-l.-.-r-..ir Block. PflMS Ituuert. ii-l_\nAlei.M.Mane-.ni ii.a..     W.E.W<lllam..n.A.,l..L.D\nWILLIAMS   &   MANSON\nBarristers, Solicitors, etc.\nBox 285\nPrince Itupert, B.C\nl'.;o. BOX \ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdRINCE RUPERT\nJOHN E. DAVEY\nTEACHER OF SINGING\n111 II. Of WU.  I OXON,   I  .., . A R.A.I... ION., SMO\nGEORGE LEEK & CO.\nMERCANTILE    AGENCY\nCOLLECTIONS AND REPORTS\nFire, tit* aad Accid.nl In.oran. \ufffd\ufffd-.\nSIS Srd Avenue Phone Sua and Green US\nPRINCE RUPERT\nA. M. BROWN\nHARNESS *  8ADDLERY  MANUFACTURER\nRepairing a Specialty.\nComplete Stock Carried.\nOutside Orders Promptly Filled.\n2nd Ave. between I oil. and 11th Sts\nPrince Rupert Lodge, I.O.O.F.\nNO. 63\nMeets in the Helgerson Block\nEvery Tuesday Evening\nAll  members of  the oitlrr in the city\nare requested to vi-.it the lodge.\nTHE IROQUOIS\nPOOL\nEnglish and American Billiards\nTwelve Tables SECOND Ave\nJ. P. CADE. N. G.\nJ. CLUCK. Sec.\nFor row boats and launches\nTelephone 320 green. Davis\nBoat House.\nHOWE & McNULTY\nGENERAL HARDWARE\nStoves and Ship\nRanges   ,,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,_,,\ufffd\ufffd   Chandlery\ngW\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdB\nPrevention of Eye\nTrouble\nPrevention is better than cur*.\nIt is cheaper. It is possible\nwhen euro is impossible. Eve\ntrouble may be avoided by lh-\ntimely use of glasses, averting\ndiscomfort, suffering and per-\nmuin.it impairment of nighl. W*\nare properly i .pupped to adjust\nglasses and guarantee satisfaction.\nFEED STORE\nW* rAiry rrvrylhlntt In lhv (****l Un**. ftUog-ftr*-\niliti M\ufffd\ufffd-nl\ufffd\ufffdat tt-f lii*m*i**\\ m*r*r< phcr*. at Collart \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nnU Ki\ufffd\ufffdJ Slot*. Market Viae**\nPONY EXPRESS\nFRED. STORK\n-General Hardware\nR. W. Cameron & Co.\nC.T.P. Official   Walch   In.peclor.\nCor. 6th SL and Second Avenue.\nPIK.NE KI\n41 \ufffd\ufffd* SOI\nPIANOFORTE LESSONS\nFor Beginners and Advanced Pupils\nMia* Vera Greenwood\nPupil at Fran. W.I.---V. Pari, and Berlin.\nRoom 28.  Alder Btock Upstair*\nBEE.  EBY   Ok*  Ca__=_\ni:i -M    i m.v*.\nKitsumkalum Lap I For Sale\nKIT-t'MKALttM . fl  C\nBuilders' Hardware\nValves & Pipes     Oxford Stoves\nCi.mil,ware        Tinware\nSECOND - AVENUE if\nrutins: tni r.o. aos \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd<\nPONY EXPRESS\n.. \"I. maiii* xi \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ... hts   illi n nil  .ravin\nFor\ntstaxfl* Hume* \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd! *\/** w.-lmi Arent.\nRlr. or Mot--. Car .lar OT Meht\nHevOTilh A\ufffd\ufffde. and Fullon\nPh..-. V|\nwe buy emm\nWe Pay  Highest Price*\nfor Brass. Copper, Lead,\nRubber   Boots,    Solder,\nDross and Bottles\nPrince Rupert Casli Store\n735 THIRD AVE.\nB O YS !\nSTART IN BUSINESS\nSell the Daily News.\nIt's the easiest and quickest way of earning money\nnf your own.     Apply al\nTHK      NKW8      tlPPlr*.\nS. O. E. B. S.\nThe Pun.- Rupert ls.lt*. No. SIS. Un, at\nKiwl.nl. m--l. ib. i,r\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,| ,h,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd| Tue\ufffd\ufffdta,\ufffd\ufffd In\n\ufffd\ufffde*-h n*.-nlh In lh. Hon. of EtwUnsI Halt SI* tad\nAve ai * |. m\nF. V. CI.AIIK    See.\nERNm a \ufffd\ufffd*Wk\ufffd\ufffd2iSY' *,\"~n\nMISS ELSIE  FROUD\nA.L.C.M.\nTeacher nf Piano. Vi.ilin and\nVoice Culture.\n2t\ufffd\ufffdl Ave,\nlietween Tth A Nth Sta.\nPryice Rupert\nTO LET\nFlal in Hand Blork, corner Sixth Avenue\nand Fulton Street.\nAlso stores in same blork.\nTwo collaget corter Second Avenue and\nNinth Street.\nFOR  SALE\nIx.lp in all perl*, ol thc City.\nFIRE   INSURANCE\nWe represent some ol the largest Com-\npanii\". doing business in thc City,\nSMITH  & MALLETT\nTIIIRI. avi:\nPlumbing, Healing, Steamfitting hi*,I\nSheet Melal Work\nOdlee: \ufffd\ufffdtd A-.*-. WOTk-h-r\nPhemelTI fnd Are. het. TH.aml.lti HI.\nE. L. FISHER\nFuneral   Hire, inr  and   Embalmer\nCIIARllKS REASON A RLE\nTHIRD   AVENUE     PHONF.  JM.\nOPEN DAT AND MOOT\nHAYNER BROS.\nUNDERTAKER.*! MM IM I! \\ I ME IIS\nFuneral  Dlreetnr.\nIM Are  i' ,r *XXs St. Ph-vne *fta. M\nNew\nKnox\nHotel\nJ\n..Grand  Hotel..\nWorkingman'* Home\nFree Labor Rorni ia ('onnrrlio*\nPhone ITH 1.| Avi*   and Tth St.\nGEO. BRODERIUS. r,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdr,,.,_.\nUtile's NEWS Agency\nC. D. RAND\nSecond Av..\nHKSNKU A  BESNER,   PMHMMM\nThe New Kno. ltoi\ufffd\ufffdi .. nin ,m ihe F-i-n-wn I Mamtlnes :: Periodicals :: Newspsper*\nplan    Hm-rlae. nerrlee.   All the l.a>e.t Mortem       ^ rr\nImprrnrement.. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd :-:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 1IKOS We UP I\nCI0AR8  :: TOBACCOS :.  FRUITS\nPhon. 112 j FIRST AVENUE. PRINCE RUPERT QiT.p  WHARF THE WEEKLY -NEWS\nFREE\nTRIP\nROUND\nTHE\nWORLD\nSALE OF WORK\nWAS A SUCCESS\nWe have j_*t arranged with one\nof our client* to place forty-:wo\nlots on the market under exceptional\nadvantages to the purchaser*. The\nlots are some of the best in Sections\nT ar.d j. The prices are as low\nas any on the market, and the\ntami so easy\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdmonthly\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthat anyone can buy. Along with this\ne.Te*-ep;:onal offer, each lo; adtr.:*.s\nthe purchaser to a drawing for a\nFREE TRIP ROUND THE\nWORLD, tl y \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd *. id the lucky\nticket the trip is yours: or ;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ncan surrender it for a cash cor.-\n-. ;t.-.,:: : r.. The chances are good\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nr.e   :-.   : :*;.-\": .      'otr.e  in   -**.:\nH.F. McRAE\nAND COMPANY\nA Good Booster\nJ. H. Kugier. \"Uncle Jerry\"\nwas on board the Prince Ruper:\nthis morning. Mrs. Kugler accompanied him. Mr. Kugier\ncomes to attend the sale of section iwo.\nThe Presbyterian Church\nLadies Aid sale of work was\nheld last night in the church\nhall. Sweetmeats, cakes,\ndainty fancy work, etc..\nformed the bulk of the wares\nexposed. Both branches of\nthe Ladies Aid united to\nearn- out the sale. Rev. F.\nW. Kerr with effective persuasiveness helped along the\nsale. Very pretty was the\nBethany Girls'stall, decorated in white and gold, and\nthe musical programme with\nsong, recitation, and instrumental music was delightful.\nIn spite of inclement weather a large number attended\nand enjoyed the sale.\nGift Goods\nThe genuineness of values in gold\njewelry, cut glass, sterling silver and\nl of kindred lines all in direct\nkeeping with the Christmas spirit, arc\nbeing displayc-i al Waric's Jeweiry\nstore on Third Ave.\nThose who are buying early to send\nto friends in Eastern Canada or to the\nold land are delighted with the assortment ar.d values which are so extietn-\nely reasonable. They possess a distinctiveness not found els* where at\npopular prices.\nThis nrm are also selling cut rto a**-.-*-.\nThese are obtained from the largest\ngrower on the coast. Deliveries on\nWednesdavs.\nil\nil\nil\nu\nw\nI)  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nu\ns\ufffd\ufffdt \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nKM\t\n\"The News\" Classified Ads.\n;0ne Cent A Word For Each Insertion^\nz& ******<^*****j****t*^e|,:.,..:,,^,;\n-THEY   WILL   REPAY\n***W*am*t************\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd%mJI\n g\nA   CAREFUL   LOOKING   OVER\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n_te\n-*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\"\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd l\ufffd\ufffd ~> I. assm-***\n*-*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*-\nPhone 150\nThe Insurance People\nFire\nLife\nMarine\nAccident\nPlate Glass\nEmployer's Liability\nC    tractors ar.d Personal Bonds\nPortd** PrepareJ While You Wait.\nTHS\nMack Realty & Insurance\noomjnr.\n. .*. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd _- i :.. - u'\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdI ******* ^**9**ssm**t*<m~mmtr*\nFor Rent\n_ n...\ufffd\ufffdi*\nNice Furni.hed Rooma.  Mr.   elreenwoe**!. A-ler '\nBlock. Third Are. ITS-tt '\nFor  Rent-Farainhed  Room\nI-  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  week up.\nFoe Rent-Two roomed cab-\nfre\ufffd\ufffdlYy papered and clear.\nH F. McRae A Co.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBuckley  Bk-ck\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd i\n. e*me to McBride.\n- . 11   t-er mo-n.h. I\nt-f    !\nr\nT\nNotice to Ratepayers\nHay's Creek Sewer By-law\nThe following is  a resolution of the\n.* a-.i passed re the above Sewer By-\nlaa.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'That ir. carrying out the provisions of the Hay's Cr-fek\nSewer By-law, the city engineer be instructed to construct a\ntemporary outlet before the\nsewer is u\ufffd\ufffded.\"\ntRXEST A. Woods,\nCity Clerk.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Insurance \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nf\"*\ufffd\ufffdii*^i.*\ufffd\ufffdii'\ufffd\ufffd ii-\ufffd\ufffdii\ufffd\ufffdih>ii\ufffd\ufffdii \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ***** urns *m <***%\nOCR G rap\ufffd\ufffdiu\ufffd\ufffd_ are noted to prompt ttod ftat\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdettitftneaU. We write every known (Um uf\nInsurant*. Tbe Mack Re*.:, aai Iniurance Co.\nf11* \" *^H  *--fcH WH-\ufffd\ufffdSS-^II-<.II-\ufffd\ufffd| ******* I ****** m\ni\ni\nCanadian\nEXTRA GOOD VALUES\n2 grades in a variety of patterns to be sold this we*\n35c and 45c\nThese goods are after the style of English floor dotl \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  _\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ngood substitute for linoleum\nSPECIALS\nCrockery a.-id Glassware for the Bolldan\ni\t\nWanted\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -_...*-_,ii*-*_i'-w 1^\nMaternity aunt op\ufffd\ufffdn   f r er.parement   from\nNov. 15th.   Apply Boi 215& New*. ^VJ\ufffd\ufffdil\nWanted-Ser. ant to do genera! housework. Other\n- . . kept.   Mr\ufffd\ufffd  L W. Patmore. t-f\nWanted - Girl for reneral h-?u*ework. Atply\nMr*. Laaey. l_0_ 2nd Are MMA\nWar-.*.! \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Dresaxaak.&t. el**nie* \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*>-. pm\ufffd\ufffd-\nicj. repair. G* for men an. w.rver. Mra Charles\nPerrher. s3J \"Hiird Ave.   Phot* X Red.     if\nft\nft\nft\nft\nDo away with this.    Patronize a white ^^^^^^^^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^^^^^^-^r*^::;*:*';:-.*..,,.,\nlaundry.   White labor onlv at t         .       -       *'* \"^\nPioDeer Laundry. Hm usf-WI\"^^\nNOTICE!\nF. W. HART\n2nd Ave. and 6th St Phon. -*>2\nLINDSAY'S\nCARTAGE and\nSTORAGE\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffda******* ****.* ******\n<^***m***m\\t\nLost and Found\nG. T. P. Transfer Agents\nOrder, prompt!.* filled.   Pnee. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_kk__I_\nOFFICE-H. B. Rocbetter. Centre St.    Phone ft.\nMr. Pattullo to Preside\nIt is expected that Mr. T.\nD. Pattullo will preside at\nthe debate on commission\ngovernment in the Presbyterian church to-night.\nNew School Magazine\nThe children in the higher classes have received copies of the\nnew school magazine, which will\nbe published monthly by the B.\nC. department of education.\nCapt. Clive Phillips-Wooley who\nwrote \"A Ten*Jerf<\ufffd\ufffd,t's Wooing\"\nwhich appeai-ed recently in the\nDaily N'ews. is the editor.\nNEW HOUSE\nBLOWN DOWN\nIn the height of the gale last\nnight, a new house being built\nFOUND-! Small Key-.   Inquire at New. Office\nIS-lf\nFourd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLadle.' opal aet brooch.    Owner -*- :\ndMcnptxe to E-J.M.. Daily Newa      2S--2ta.\nReal Estate\n>-_.\t\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nI\nFIERCE STORMS\nRAGING OUTSIDE\nLot for Sale in Sa\ufffd\ufffdioen S. Block 42. Lot IV Tth\nAve.   Apply Mike Ranch. Box &S> City.      tf\nAt 11 o'clock last night the\nS.S. Vadso berthed at the\nwharf after a rough passage\nT\"    y \ufffd\ufffdu T     ,T J^i_tfi^rS5W____rla!S at the mouth of the Skeena.\nthrown down by the force of the '*f^Jh. *-*^F0 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ** ****\ufffd\ufffd**\"* _ , \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n__\";_\"_ _. Tremendous   squalls   were\n#i~fc-i \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdM-.^w**^*-*---!'**  ts**m\\*at -^11%1-wrv.i-S..^ *\nI        _,_ , \/ driving down the river and\nwind, the framing being laid\nflat. N'o one was anywhere near\nat the time to run any risk of\ninjury, and the structure can be\nspeedily re-erected. Had construction been a little further\nadvanced the building would\nhave stood alright.\n!\nStenographer\niA>>- \ufffd\ufffd: vn; ..<\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd f m -:* expermice want.\npovuoo. Ai*dreaa \"Stec--ami ber. t*5* Coe*\niiiaSL. Vancouver, B.C. t-f\nI the steamer was swept fore\nand aft with spray.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nA\nWork\nof Art! Free!\nT.-.t -MM Jemtlrj Cau-\niofje produced i.: .\ufffd\ufffdoer.ca\ncan > ha. -ree for the it*:: {\nll cantl-W tit pa-fcs o:' Oia-\n.T.Or._< JilWllJ, -liT-.-a-a.-t.\nCM Om Leather Goods\nac- Ko\ufffd\ufffdt:-jes soae of the\nsrt-c.es br.r.j reproduced in\nas -str.j as fourteen colon\nWr.-.e fo: :t today :: -rakes\ngift choosir.f tAsj Voc ran\nno rjk w.-at'rver is sealing\nar.y Htid*, for mt fonrard it\na: ou: exper.se ftia.-ar.tee\nsafe dejrti-y. asd cheerfully\n:\ufffd\ufffd:'*_.- d you: money if yoo are\nco: perfectly satisfied.\nRyrie Bros.. Limited\nC\ufffd\ufffdM*U \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 1.4'tMt 1.-.1I-.   11.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n,     -,. -*..,\n\"       *.      ,* J.\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd!\n134-135-138 Yonge St\nTORONTO\n\\\nJoins New* Staff\nBy the Prince Rupert today arrived Mr Glenn Searle.\nwho will operate The News\nnew multiple typesetting\nmachinery.\nr\nFor Sale\n1\n* 1... aa\nNew  fashionable  fall waists.    Wa..\nApplication* will be received\nup to .November 25th, 1911, by\nthe Board of Director* of the\nPrince Rupert General Hospital\nAssociation from women wishing to take a full course of\ntraining in nursing. 12:\nFoe Sale - Complete cab I f Artnshir.rs. ir.clu:-\n, r.r c-ook \ufffd\ufffdto%c table*, ch. .-.. tableware, cook.\nip.-f *.t#n_'.. (.*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd... with : .1 and pronator.. 125\nC Durant. Har. B\ufffd\ufffdU. SM-ro\nJerry  Built\n\"Uncle Jerry's\" huge sheet\nmetal sign across Hays Creek\nwas levelled completely by the\nforce of the wind last night.\nTors, dol's. games, sleighs and fancy\ngood* are to hand and we are busy\na* bees unpacking, pneirg and dis-\n- g these goods. Greater variety, bigger and better value* than\never.\nMcRae Bros., Limited\nEverything for the office\nSavoy Hotel\nCor. Fr-aaer and Mh.        Choke Wine, and Clsv.   earl V date.\nRUPERTS   PALACE    OF   COMFORT  -\nWill Also Hold an Election\n.Canadian Pre?s Despatch.)\nCharlottetown, Nov. 22\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThere\nj are rumors that a general election will be held in P.E.I, at an\nit**n*^m.*m.**.*<m..m*,.mK.^.mxxi\ufffd\ufffd+.0\\.0\\i\nCoc.rdAr.\nand -th St.\nThe James\nNice!\/ f-*rei\ufffd\ufffdhed r-y\/tti*. Goad table board\nBe_.dl.r5 Rem mt Beard \ufffd\ufffd7 00\n\ufffd\ufffdr~U7T hi ;h raiccs low\nH.I.O\nMLMORAMDUM\nOPEfN     tVENlNGS   UNTIL  9   O'CLOCK\nWe   Loaned\nMoney\nat\nWe    Loaned\nMoney\nat\nPer Cent, to\nBuild This\nHouse\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.rMi   '.*?.**\n****%.**%.\nPer Cent, to\nBuild This\nHouse\nGRADES  IN   SECTION  2\nBefore the auction of lots in section 2.\nintending purchasers should carefully\nStudy the Lot Grades\nYou can only do this satisfactorily bv\nobtaining a ropy of tbe large map 13 ft\n*5 in. by 2 ft. I complied from official records by J. H. Piiisbury. CE. This\ngives full details of contour*, topographical features, street grades and\nlot elevations.\nMUCE-TWO DOLLARS\nFor Sa'e at the Office of\nC B. SCHREIBER 4 CO.    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    Pract Riptrt\n:* -! A>. I   '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  Boi \ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Phone <'\nIntending Purchasers   \ufffd\ufffd\nof Section 2 Lots\nNov. 29th is the date set for\n.r.e selling by auction of Lots\nin section 2. If you wish to\nget a lot send us your instruction, to buy. together with the\ncash for tbe amount you care\nto put in.\nTerms of Sa'.e -One quarter\ncash and balance in I, 2 and 3\nyears at <5 per cent.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi.*a.**-*,.a\ufffd\ufffd\\\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffda\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffds\ufffd\ufffd#w\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd**.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffda\ufffd\ufffdaa*i\ufffd\ufffd,\nion\nT\n-THE  MOST  BEAUTIFUL SECTION  OF-\nPRINCE RUPERT TOWNSITE\nAt the entrance to the  Harbor,  to be sold at\nPublic   Auction\nIN THE EMPRESS THEATRE. PRINCE RUPERT. B. C.COMMENCING ON\nWEDNESDAY, NOV. 29,1911\nTerms  of Sale:-One  quarter  Cash,   balance  1.   2 and  3  years at  6~per cent,\nG.R. NADEN COMPANY.I\nI\nLirr.ted.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdves-ond Are. Priac* Rupert, B.C\nLet us loan you the monev to buv or^ build a  house or pav off a mortgage\nCANADIAN HOME INVESTMENT CO.\nMclntyre Block. Third Avenue. Prince Rupert.\nHead Office: Pacific Building, Vancouver. B. C.\nQri\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdey Swttykt Mj fauct OgJM\nPrepare for wirter by getting your fr-r\nrdi\nraces snd flues put in order by\nr*\ufffd\ufffd ...\nC. H. CUTTING\nPhone 71\nti\nShoes..\"\nJOHN CURRIE\n.aoooo a ran. a\nThe palatial G.T.P. Steamer \"Prince Rupert\" leaves Seattle at 12\no'clock midnight each Sunday: Fare, including meals and stateroom. $18.00. Leaves Vancouver 11 p.m. each Mondav: Fare,\nincluding meals and stateroom. $16.00. Arrives in Prince\nRupert Wednesday a. m.\nii)\nB\nB\n...\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi\n}::\nill\nB\n...\n{!i\nm\n*.*\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*i\nn\ni *\"\nI\n*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_\nHi\n**>\n_\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\n(:\n...\nill\n\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nJ'\n9.\nI\n**t\n(jj\n\ufffd\ufffd?\nI*\nADE AND\nEPAIBED\nCOME AND   SEE   THE   \"WONDER   CITY\"   OF  THE   PACIFIC   COAST..-\n-For full particulars and maps of townsite apply to-\nDAVID   H.   HAYS f\nSole Agent for G.T.P. Development Co\nPrince Rupert. B.C.   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nrails*.* r.rui","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Prince Rupert (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"The_Prince_Rupert_Optimist_1911-11-22","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0227845","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"54.312778","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-130.325278","@language":"en"}],"Notes":[{"@value":"Titled The Prince Rupert Optimist up to and including April 29, 1911; titled The Daily News May 1, 1911 and thereafter.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Prince Rupert, B.C. : [publisher not identified]","@language":"en"}],"Rights":[{"@value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Digitization Centre: http:\/\/digitize.library.ubc.ca\/","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1911-11-22 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1911-11-22 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The Daily News","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0227845"}