{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0344728":{"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/terms#identifierAIP":[{"value":"b0a5f636-3b7c-4821-a60b-7e6b06c71c74","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2017-04-11","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1913-10-18","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/fgherald\/items\/1.0344728\/source.json","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format":[{"value":"application\/pdf","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note":[{"value":" y-u** pw^jip ^m\\mw>-\nSUUTH FORT GEORGE', B. C, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1913.\n$3 PER ANNUM\nrral1k A. Ellis, Representing\naiiway Company, Sells\n,ul First List--Has Sent\n,, Additional Allotment.\n LOT!\nFIREMEN'S BENEFIT\nRESPONSE WAS\nMOSJJENEROUS\nCitizens at Basket Social Con-\ni tribute to Aid of Five\nMotherless Children\nIKrunk A.\n\u25a0Hi\nWelc\nBHiBi of Prince Rupert,\ntctioneer who Bold the\n,. townsite by auction,\nh s week from Winnipeg.\nDrought with him n lisi\nh he was commissioned\nby private sale. He first\nlots to the employees of\ncompany and of Messrs.\n& Stewart, at the con-\ntUiuarters on the Prince\nrsatlon\nMr.\nnew town\nwith The Herald\nis said that every lot\nrchased at the Foley\nio keen was the de-\nIwavmen to invest in\nA benefit for the Fire Department That the people of South FortGeorge\nhas been arranged for next Monday 'tempcr their ',ursuit of P,easure with\nEvening in the Fort George Theatre. \\ comPassion towar,ls the afflicted and\nA special programme has been ar. distressed and that they will pay hand-\n, , ,, _ , , Isomcly and with pleasure towards the\nranged by Manager. Boehncr, and as1 . . , ', , ,...\n, ., , assistance of motherless children, was\nthe success of the evening will be of ; r cha , ,\u00bb, , \u2022 , ,\nh forcefully demonstrated Thursday night\ngreat help to the local fire depart-1 at tho bagket social neld in lhe Burch\nment, it is hoped that there will be\na large attendance,\ni for these lots is so\nsaid Mr. Ellis, that he\nic G.T.P, officials ad-\nto cancel tlie proposed\nof lots in Winnipeg and\n\u2022 sell all thc unsold lots\nMr. Ellis receives new\nfrom Winnipeg he will\n: of lots to people in\n\u2022 y private sale.\n: ol unsold lots in the\nit very large,\nannounces his Intention\ni real estate office here\nhas completed his worn;\nif the auction sale, Mr.\nlat it was the most suc-\n,11. Interest in the new\nstated, Is still at fever\n\u25a0 hcrever he hears from.\nAn Englishman named Fred. G. Taylor, twenty-five years of age, a native\nof London, who has been in Canada\none and a half years, was killed by a\nfalling tree near Fort Goorge last\nTuesday. The fatal accident occurred\nthrough the falling of a tree which\nlodged in another, and in breaking off\nit struck Taylor, killing him instantly.\nW. Sommerton and S. J. Watson,\nwho arrived here tbis week from Prince\nRupert, via the grade all the way, are\nopening an office in the Gore & McGregor building here for the sale of\nthe townsite of Smithers, the first passenger divisional point on the G. T. P.\nwest of Prince Rupert, and probably\nthe most important point between here\nand tbe coast.\nThe next ^ame in the series for the\nMontgomery football shield will be held\non the recreation park tomorrow afternoon, weather permitting. Tne game\nscheduled for last Sunday was called\noff on account of the baseball team appropriating the ground ahead of the\nscheduled football teams. It appears\nto The Herald that tbe ball players,\nwho have enjoyed a most successful\nseason, aro outstaying their welcome\nby failing lo realize that their season\nis now a thing of thc past.\nThe all-night service by the Northern Telephone and Power Company,\nLtd., over their lighting wires commences tonight. The company is now\nsupplying to all the principal business\nhouses and the lines have been extended to the outskirts of the city. The\n, company is offering for sale a limited\nOrt George Herald : amount of its stock at par, in order\nU' remove fl'Oni its \u25a0tnat lne consumers may have the op-\nnnnt-l..*. \u201e\u00bb T7\u201e..\u201e4-U portunity to become financially inter-\nocation on Fourth ^ J the projeet which gupplieg\nUO new quarters in the | lhem with light. Particulars may be\nobtained at the otlice.\nThe following is the passenger list\non the steamer B.X. which left yesterday for Soda Creek :-B. Kates, F.\nTrevane, F. G. Scott, D. McDonald,\n0. Kaldah, Mrs. J. Witherspoon, Miss\nA. Witheaspoon, G. A. Webb, C. A.\n\u25a0PETE HTH\nARCHIVIST REPORTS\nON THIS SECTION\nSometimes Bivouacked by Road\nin Heavy Rain\u2014Gathered\nInformation.\nTO OUR READERS.\nlair Bros, building on Ham-\nIon avenue, opposite Hotel\nlorthern. The Northern In-\n'ior Printing Co., Ltd.,\njstablished 1908) publishers\nmhe Herald, have in prep-\nI'atiim p'\nIon ol\n,...ins for the publica- Coulson, C. Thorburn, Jose Otalla and\na daily paper StO be i Party of six, Miss Florence White,\ntown as the \"Prince George! *\u2022 <\">dr %B; ?nakeTr\" *\u00a3 H-f e\nV-iK. II l l \u00bb nn iv :Kng, C. B. lippin, J. Woods, t. fc.\nlailj Horald.' lhe pilbll- J Bes*,M*ke Solomon, G. A. and Mrs.\n(|1* \"1 tlllS daily will COm- Stsvens, S. Johnson, Eddie Dean, Mrs.\n'Slice as SOOll as cirClim- Stillingfleet, Miss E. Stillingfleet, Miss\nwees will permit, and its d. suiiingfleet.\nMiry will be a progressive\ntort towards the upbuild-\ngoi Prince George and its\nBaity environs.\n1(1 publication of the\nnice George Daily Her-\nifl will go forward at Prince\nleorge when circumstances\nratify. The Herald will re-\nlai\u00ab in South Fort George.\nTHE WEATHER\nThe winter season has just begun\nto put in an appearance here, snow\nfalling here for thc lirst time\ntoday. The preliminary flurry, however, is not regarded ns the commencement of the cold weather, as\nwe may expect two week's more of\nthe \"Indian Summer\" if things work\nout according to schedule.\nHall, on Hamilton Aveiue, in aid of the\nalmost destitute children of a foreigner,\nthe mother of whom died recently in\nthe outskirts of the city.\nTho basket social, organized by Mr.\nH. W. Gross and Mr. A. Buchel anil\nseveral ladies, was undoubtedly one of\nthe most successful entertainments\never held here. The large hall was\ncrowded to its capacity by the dancing\ncouples, and a three-piece orchestra,\nled by John Senior, a local harpist,\nrendered most excellent music.\n. The auctioning of the 1 askets brought\nby the ladies commenced about midnight. The rules of the sale, similar to\nthe rules of all auctions, were that the\nhighest bidder be the purchaser. Auctioneer Walter Austin, who performed\nthe duties of his office in a most capable and bu-iinesslike manner, announced the fact that each basket\noffered contained the name of its fair\ndonalor and that the purchaser was\nprivileged to share the contents with\nthis lady in the alfresco luncheon which\nwould follow the auction.\nBidding began briskly, when a bottle\nof Murnra's Extra Dry, in a blue setting which gave promise of many hidden delicacies, was offered for sale.\nThe prices ranged from $10 to $60 and\n$75 for each basket; but the highest\nprice paid for a basket was the sum of\n$100, bid by Mr. \"Mike\" Burr, a Prince\nGeorge real estate operator, for a basket which the auctioneer represented\nas of especial benefit to the children\nfor whom it was offered for sale.\nTears rolled down the fair cheeks of\nmany of the ladies present as the auctioneer, in a voice hoarse with suppressed emotion, brought to a close an\nimpassioned appeal for a high bid on\nthe basket which meant so much to the\nmotherless children. Amid dead silence\nthe voices of the bidders, shaking with\nfeeling, commenced to compete for the\nbasket. \"Twenty dollars I'm bid, gentlemen, fur this basket: this basket\nwhich will bring joy to the poor little\nchildren back in the little old log cabin\nby the hill,\" said the\" auctioneer.\n\"Fifty,\" \"seventy-five,\" \"one hundred,\" gasped the deeply impressed\nbidders amid the wild cheers of the\nbrilliant assemblage. \"Sold to Mr,\nBurr for one hundred dollars,\" said\nthe auctioneer amid a salvo of applause.\nMike grasped tbe basket. Wnen opened it Was found to contain a live rabbit, which hopped out and did marathon\nstunts round the room which wonld put\nLongboat to shame. Mr. Burr was entirely contented with his bargain, and\nannounced his intention of rearing his\n$100 bunny with care and solicitude in\nsickness or in health.\nAs will be seen from the statement\nhereunder, which we publish at the request of the gentlemen and ladies in\ncharge of the event, tho substantial\nsum of $527 was realized for the benefit. The large success of the enterprise owes much to the efforts and assistance of Mr. and Mrs. Gross, Mr.\nBuchel, Mr. Wilson of the Club Cafe,\nand thc many ladies who provided the\nhandsome baskets.\nFollowing is a statement of the receipts and disbursements :\nTotal receipts from sale of\nbaskets .... $527.00\nExpenses:\nMusic\nunches\nManager Leighton States\nThat New Company Will\nOperate Elaborate System.\nWill Open Office Here.\nAdditional\nPrinting\nSurplus\nThe sum\n$30.00\n12.50\n2.50\nlalized\n$45.00\n. $132.00\nfor the children's\nWith reference to his recent tour\nof the central interior, Mr. Scholefield, provincial librarian and archivist, stated to a representative of the\nVictoria Times, that he had been\nvery successful in gathering information respecting that historic section\nof the province. Mr. Schofidld was a\nvisitor here recently during bis tour\nof this section,\n\"One is liable to forget,\" said Mr.\nSchofield, \"that New Caledonia, as\nthe central interior was called in\nearly days, is tbe oldest part of the\nprovince in point of settlement.\nHaving established Fort McLeod, on\nMcLeod Lake in 1805, Simon Fraser\nproceeded the following year, by way\nof the Parsnip River, Bad River, the\nNorth Fork of the- Fraser, the Nechaco and Stuart Rivers, to Stuart\nLake, where he built a rude post,\nafterwards the famous Fort Saint\nJames, for many years the capital of\nNew Caledonia. Then the intrepid explorer founded Fort Fraser on Fraser\nLake, so named in honor of his\nchief.\n\"Fraser named Stuart Lake and\nStuart River after bis able lieutenant. Hence the names which we see\non the map today. In 1807, the energetic partner of the Northwest Company built Fort George at the confluence of the Nechaco and Fraser\nrivers. It was from this port that\nSimon Fraser started in 1808 on his\nhistoric exploration of the Fraser\nRiver. New Caledonia soon became an\nimportant domain of the Northwest\nCompany, and Fort St. James on\nStuart Lake achieved some distinction as the capital of the new district. New Caledonia was, and had\nlong been, a flourishing district when\nVictoria was founded in 1843. So you\nwill see that the central interior\nof the province must always have a\ngreat attraction for the historian.\nHence my visit to that quarter.\"\nMr. Scholefield was very hospitably\nentortained by Mr, Murray and Mr.\nBunting the officer in charge of Fort\nSt. James and Fort Fraser respectively. The settlers and ranchers wherever\nhe stopped also gave him a very cordial\nwelcome. The trip itself was not all\n\"beer and skittles,\" however, as exceptional rains had made the roads\nvery heavy, and as the storing places\nin that district are few and far between, it was often necessary to\nbivouac by the roadside, sometimes in\ntorrents of rain.\n\"I am not a farmer or an agriculturist,\" Mr. Scholefield declared, \"but\nI venture to prophesy that in the\ncourse of a very few years there will\nbe an enormous development in that\nsection of the province. I saw great\nstretches of rich poplar bottom, all of\nwhich will he cultivated in a very\nshort space of ti.ae. The country seems\nto be well watered with streams and\ncreeks, and the whole of it is dotted\nwith beautiful lakes. I should judge\nthat just as soon as the Grand Trunk\nPacific Railway is opened thousands of\nsettlers will take up homesteads in the\ncentral interior, where, it is ir.ceresting\nto recall, the first gardens and fields\nweie ever cultivated on what is now\nthc mainland of British Columbia.\n\"Along Mud River, about Government Meadows, Butcher Flat, Bobtail\nLake, Stony Creek, Zinkut and Stuart\nLukes, and along the beautiful Nechaco river, are thousands of acres of\nSuperintendent Leighton, who is\nin charge of the system of the new\nImperial Express Company, Iietween\nthis point and Quesnel, called on Tho\nHerald this week. Mr. Leighton\ngave us an insight into the int*. n-\ntions and aims of the Imperial Express Company in regard to the important matter of the carrying on of\nthe Cariboo mail contract, which\nthe new company have been awarded.\nMr. Leighton requested that we\ncorrect an impression created by a\nprevious reference in these columns\nto the Imperial Express Company,\nin so far as the article referred to\ngave the impression that Mr. Geo J.\nHammond, of Vancouver was associated with the contractors in the\ndelivery of the mail. Mr. Hammond\nhas nothing whatsoever to do with\nthe mail contract according to Mr.\nLeighton, except that his Steamboat,\nthe Robert C. Hammond, being the\nbest boat available, was chartered to ,\ncommence the new service. Mr. Leighton requests that we make this correction in justice to Mr. Hammond\nand his company.\nSpeaking of the plans of his company Mr. Leighton stated that the\ncompany would have offices in both\ntowns. They will compete for passenger and express traffic against the\nB. O. Express Company, and they\nintend to distribute all over the\nroutes which they cover, a most\ncomplete outfit of vehicles, and horses\nfor the conduct of a first class service.\nFor the immediate requirements of\nthe mail service Mr. Leighton has\nchartered, two of the fastest and best\ngasoline boatB ton the river, the \"P.\nR. T.\" and tne \"Kicking Horse.\"\nThese two boats will carry the mail\nboth ways between Soda Creeit and\nhere just as long as navigation will\nlast, after which the company will\nbe in readiness to make the all-overland journey.\nMotor cars will be used on the\nCariboo road as far north as possible all winter, and from the point\nwhere the motor car service is discontinued the horse drawn vehicles\nwill take the traffic northward.\nThe new company have already 100\nhead of horses in Ashcroft, and more\nare en-route to them there. The\ncoaches used will be the thorough-\nbrace waggon, better known as the\n\"Concord Coach.\"\nTHEATRICAL MEN COMING\nEdmonton, Oct. 9.\u2014Messrs. Rube\nWaddell and Theodore Goodrich, recently of the Keith & Proctor circuit\nand formerly \"the Kubeliks of Vaudeville 1910-11\" have been in Edmonton\nlooking over the musical prospects in\nthis part of the country. FortGeorge\nseems to be their aim and they will\nleave shortly to establish a musical\nbusiness there: They will open a small\ntheatre and feature musical specialty\nact3. This is another incident of the\nwell-educated musical talent from the\nEast coming West on account of the\nexceptional opportunities offered in this\nfast developing Western Canada.\nbenefit hus been deposited in trust at j ^ ^ waiting for the farmer. I do\n(Zz \n\u00bb Grand\n'.*_\\k_\n,\u201e.\u201e;>\u2022 in the Ootaa Lake District, between this point and Smithers, on\n\"'''liunk Pacific main line. A dairying company has recently been\n'orute in this district.\nthe Bank of British Norlh America to\nbe utilized judiciously for the children,\nwhose ages range from one and a half\nyears to the age of six.\nWaller H. Gregg, district representative for the firm of Qorefi McGregor,\nleaves for Victoria early next week for\nthe winter.\nnot mean to say that the whole district\nis of this description, for there is some\njack pine country which may not\namount to much; at the same time it is\nnot unlikely that some use may yet be\nfound for a considerable portion of\nthese jacli pine lands. Generally\nspeaking, however, there is a vast extent of fine land, which will oni day\ni\nbe turned to good account.\"\nIn conclusion, Mr. Scholefield urged\nthat everyone who possibly cot d\nshould visit thc interior. \"The average\nresident,*' said he, \"of the seaports of\nBritish Columbia knows very little of\nthe magnificent resources of the great\ninterior of the province. The country,\nindeed, is delightful in every sense of\nthe term, and will in the near future\nbe the playground of the people as it\nwill be a centre of production. Nothing can be finer than the climate und\nthe scenery of that almost boundless\nexpanse which is the interior of the\nprovince of British Columbia.\" FORT GEORGE HERALD\nPublished by the Northern Interior Printing Company, Limited\nJ. B. Daniell, President.\nDevoted to the Interests of the Fort George District and the Northern\nInterior of British Columbia.\nSubscription $3.00 i Yen in AJmim\nAdwtisici Ratu on Application\nWE have received through the mails from the city of\nChicago a copy of the book by Mr. John Hill, Jr.,\nof the Chicago Board of Trade, entitled \"Gold Bricks of\nSpeculation.\" The last reference we made to this book\nwas prior to a libel suit brought against this paper last\nyear by Mr. George John Hammond, president of the\nNatural Resources Security Company, Limited, of Vancouver. Our previous references to the book by Mr. Hill\nwere in the nature of. quotations from its pages, and references to the affairs which led up to its publication and\nthe part it played in a strenuous campaign against the\nbucket-shop evil in the United States before Mr. Hill's\nwork, and the work of others like him, largely eliminated\nthe evil from the commercial conduct of those states in\nwhich it was prevalent. The name of Mr. Hammond\nfigured prominently in the book as one of those who had\norganized and conducted large systems of these bucket-\nshops. These references of ours, together with statements of our own, as they appeared in the past, landed\nus into a great deal of trouble. We were sued for\ncriminal libel, forced to a great expenditure to protect\nour liberty, and finally found guilty by \"twelve good\nmen and true.\" The court, ruled by Judge Morrison,\nwho charged the jury strongly against us in spite of the\nfact that much of our vital documentary evidence was\nexcluded on technicalities, passed a nominal sentence upon us and requested that we apologize to Mr. Hammond\nfor the blemish which we cast upon his character\u2014something which we have never done, and under no circumstances will we ever do, as we value, even above our\nliberty, the uncompromising principles of journalism\nwhich, in our code of ethics, preclude the repudiation of\nthe written word contrary to the convictions of the\nwriter.\nThe book which we have received, however, from\nwhomsoever it came, contains supplementary pages to\nthose which were contained within its covers the last\ntime we read it.\nThe concise and explicit statements which we find in\nthe supplementary pages of the book, aforesaid, refer to\nMr. Hammond, they are a direct attack upon his\nCHARACTER AND HIS PAST; WILL MR. HAMMOND TAKE\nSTEPS TO REPUDIATE THESE EXACT CHARGES AGAINST\nHIM?\nWe bear no animus, but if the charges brought by Mr.\nHill be true where does it land the judge, the \"twelve\ngood men and true,\" and the editor of the Herald, who\nwas convicted of criminal libel ?\n^HE passing of the frontier in Western Canada marks\nthe progress northward of development and the migration of the people on this great, restless continent to\nnew lands of promise, where things are less settled, and\nthe various branches of human endeavor are afforded\ngreater opportunity for a ground-floor start than in the\nOld World, where ambition is suppressed by a system\nwhich, through the accident of birth in either a high or a\nlow estate, and the corresponding advantages or disadvantages ahead of one, largely rules destiny and leaves\none to follow a routine through an eternal cycle.\nGradually the great, intricate commercial system of\nthe south is absorbing the raw northern portion of the\nNorth American continent. Throughout Canada the\nnorthern latitudes, which a few years ago were in the\nwilderness, are now falling into the settled state which\ncomes with the advent of railroads. The Fort George\ndistrict five years ago was an Indian hunting ground,\ntrade was for furs, and land which today is selling for\nhundreds of dollars an acre was open to the world at\nlarge for purchase from the provincial government at $1\nan acre.\nThe last chance for the man who wants to start on the\nedge of things and make good appears to lie in the Peace\nriver valley. The Herald believes that with the advent\nof transportation to this point over the G.T.P. steel here\nnext spring a general movement northward into the\nPeacs River valley, by way of the Giscombe Portage\nroute, will commence. South Fort George, as the natural outfitting place for the Peace River country, should\nnow take up seriously and make an issue of the necessity\nof having a road opened up to a navigable point on the\nPeace River waters, so that this natural route may be\ntaken full advantage of.\nNOTICE.\nALL PERSONS are hereby warned\nagainst trespassing upon any property\nof the Crown in the Subdivision of Lot\nSs Grouo 1. Cariboo District, and\nknown asThe Townsite of Princ Geeoge.\nAny person disregarding this notice\nwill be prosecuted in accordance wh\nthe provisions of Section 134 and following Sections of Chapter 29 of the\nRevised Statutes of British Columbia,\n1911\n'Anv person or persons in illegal occupation of Crown property in the said\nTownsite will not be permitted to remain in such occupation, and no protection will be given to the owner of anv\nimprovements that may exist upon sucn\nproperty at the time oi thebaic.\nMinister of Lands.\nLands Department,\nVictoria, B.C.,\n22nd September, 1913. novl\nCr\nRitchie & Clark\n: : JEWELERS : :\nWALTHAM,\nHAMILTON\nand HOWARD\nWATCHES.\nFine Jewelery\nSouvenir Goods, Clocks,\nEtc., Etc.\nWatch Repairing\nTelephone and mail orders\npromptly attended to.\nSatisfaction Guaranteed.\nHAMILTON AVENUE\nSouth FortGeorge, B.C.\n^\n_J\nKennedy, Blair\nand Co., Ltd.\nAppeal to the citizens of South Fort\nGeorge for their support.\nNot because we are the pioneer\nmerchants of this city, but purely\non account of our prices, treatment\nand the merit of our goods.\nWhen we came to Cariboo first\nthe Fraser river waa merely a\nstream.\nThe Nechaco had just been dug,\nIn those days Fort George was lying in embryo, waiting to be fertilized by the industries and population of a great city, and the Ken-\nnedy-Blair Co., Ltd., was unborn.\nSince then we have watched all\nthree grow to maturity.\nThe Fraser a great river;\nSouth Fort George budding into a\ngreat city; and\nThe Kennedy-Blair Co., Ltd., into\na great mercantile firm.\nWe mean to keep pace and be a\ncredit to our city, and realize that\nin order to do so we must be consistent and treat our customers on the\nsquare.\nWe do not intend to get rich on\none customer, but by a small profit\non many thousands we expect to attain the same result.\nWe are specializing now on\nstoves, hardware of all kinds ; also\nMen's Winter Clothing.\nCall in and tee us.\nKennedy, Blair\n& Co., Ltd.\nFORT GBOKGE LAND DISTRICT\nDistrict of Cariboo\nTAKK notice that B. H. Livingstone and W. H. Newkirk, of South\nPort George, intend to apply for\npermission to prospect for coal and\npetroleum over the following describod\nlands:\u2014\nCommencing at a post planted at\nthe southeast corner of Lot 6644,\nthence south 80 chains; thence west\n80 chains; thence north 06 chains;\nthence eant 80 chains to point of\ncommencement.\nK. H. LIVINGSTONE and\nJuly 26, 1913. W. H. NEWKIRK\nThe Northern Lumber & Mercantile Company Limits\nW. F. COOKE, Pre*.\nRUSSELL PEDEN, Vke-Prei.\nG. E. Md,\n. Switlin\nManufacturers and Dealers in the Best JR\nand SPRDCE LIMBER in British Columbia\nYou can't build economically without getting\nour estimates from cellar to roof.\nOperators of the Famous Light\nDraught Steamer . \"Quesnel,\"\nOur Stock of General Merchandise is tlie\nlargest and best assorted in all Cariboo.\nThe fair and consistent treatment we give\nour customers is the same that has always\nruled and requires no mention.\nNorthern Lumber & Mercantile\nSecond Street\nSouth Fort\nGeorS. Company, Iimi\nCentral Avcdui\nFort Georgs\nPHONE It.\nP. (i. BOX \u2022'\"\nLight and Heavy Horses for Sale and Hire.\nSingle and Double Driving Horses.\nSaddle Horses. Good Buggies and Lurry.\nDraying, Freighting and Excavating Done.\nWHITE A WESTOBY - - Proprietors\nWE SHOULD WORRY!\nRegarding the brand of Cigars, Cigarettes\nor Tobaccos to smoke when\nTHE MISSION Confectionery Parlors\nNext to the Dreamland Theatre, carries a line of the\nabove carefully selected to satisfy the demands ol\nthe most exacting connoiseur. We have just received a complete line of Christmas Candles in\nbeautiful boxes. CALL AND SEE.\nr\nWe have had 243 years' experience in outfitting Hunters,\nTrappers and Sportsmen.\nGive Us a Trial.\nThe Hudson s Bay Com\nPHONE 20, SOUTH.\n^=\n\"iB ~5i*k~*v*<\u00a3S.}8S^$^^^*^'^*w^ \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0--.-..-.-..-. -,^-,*,-\n..w\\
\u00ab\u25a0\n6f \u25a0>\u25a0\ntf; tf,\nm'Ji\ntfi- tt,-\n'I. 'i.\n\u2022\/. 'i.\n(f,, \u25a0\/.\n<\u2022\/. v.\ntf. 'I.\nm t\/.\nti. a.\nif.\u00ab\n(ft tf,\nIf. \u00ab\nM tf,\ntf, V\nW v.\nW tf,\n\u25a0il,, tf,\ntf: tf.\ntl., 'I.\nm \u25a0\/\ntl.' il.\nth tf,\ntl, 'I.\nm tt,\n\u25a0i, tf,\ntil 7.\ntli tl.\ntli tl.\nIff tf.\ntf'tf.\ntA tl.\nthn,\ntf; tl;\ntfi tl;\ntl; ti.\ntAtfo\ntfrtf,-\n\u00abtf,\ntf.tl;\ntl; tl.\nm v.\ntf\/tf\n\u2022'I; ti.\ntl} t\/.\n%%.\ntf; th\nWW\n\u2022X- tf,\ntf; ti,\ntflti,\ntf.- m\ntt; tf,\nfnt.\ntfttl.\ntf; tl,\ntl; tf\ntl; ti.\ntf; \u2022*\/.\ntl; tf,\nfl: tf,\ntl: tl.\nif if\nt\u00bb if:\ntf: tf.\nW >'l.\ntf; if.\ntf; n.\ntf; tl,\ntl;tf.\ntf;tf.\n'I. tl.\ntl; tl.\ntt; H.\ntf. tf\ntl; if\n>f; n.\nil; if.\nif il.\ntf; tl.\ntf; tf:\ntf; tf.\ntf. tf\nWe are owners of choice business and residential lots in the\nGrand Trunk Pacific Townsite, and we have what we consider\n the best buys in town, \t\nYOU WISE INVESTOR, a lot purchased now in the Coming City will double and even treble in value by Spring,\nOur offices are headquarters for all information regarding\nPRINCE GEORGE. Call and inspect our listings.\nOpen every evening, Listings Wanted from Owners,\nWff?\nwtt.\n