"8fe17fa9-2c81-4cfa-b97e-1f3dbf5eebc7"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "2016-01-21"@en . "1911-08-11"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/prj/items/1.0311868/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " Pk\n/ i\n/\nj\nHew WelUmtM\nCoal\nis the best\nROGERS & BUCK\nSole Agents\nPeine* ^nptxt\nlegislative ^a\u00C2\u00BB^V\nMil I\nHighiciM^; \\n^ fluting\nin all Lines\nVOLUME II.\nPublished Twice a Week.\nPRINCE RUPERT, B. C. FRIDAY, AUGUST 11, 1911.\nPrice, Five Cents.\nNo. 16.\nG.T.P. NEW STEAMER\nPrince John is a Model for the Trade\nin Which She is to\nEngage.\nQueen Charlotte Settlers Will Be\nAble to Travel With \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nGreatest Comfort\nWRITS ISSUED\n(Special to The Journal) *\nOttawa, Aug. 11.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Writs au- *\nthorizing the election in two *\nhundred and twenty-one con- *\nstituencies in the Dominion *\nwere issued yesterday. *\nThe G. T. P. is showing that not\nalone with respect to land transportation are the facilities of the company to be the best procurable but\nit has given evidence that the same\nrule is to apply to the marine end\nof the services. The latest manifestation in this line is the advent of\nthe Prince John to this port. The\ntrade into which this latest vessel\nof the G. T. P. fleet is to enter is\na growing one and undoubtedly the\ntime will soon come when much\nlarger steamers will be required to\nfill the duties. The G. T. P., however, did not take the course so\noften pursued by companies of purchasing a cheap vessel that would\nmeet the immediate denrand. It purchased a vessel and had her rebuilt\nat heavy expense to make her adaptable to -the trade.\nIt is questionable whether any\nother trade that has developed as\nlittle as the Queen Charlotte one\nas yet has a vessel combining the\nsame comforts for passengers as has\nthe Prince John. The little steamer,\nwhich arrived here from the south\non Tuesday evening, had on board\nCaptain Nicholson, the superintendent of the G. T. P. steamship service, and Mrs. Nicholson. The superintendent came north to see the\nnew vessel put into active service.\nHe Is delighted with the latest addition to the fleet, and well he\nmight be.\nThe vessel Is a new one, having\nbeen built but a few months before\ntbe G. T. P. secured her. She was\nconstructed for trade as a freighter\nabout the coasts of the Old. Land and\nis built to withstand any sea.\nWhen acquired by the company\nshe was at once put in the shipyards and house work put in her\nto meet the requirements of the new\ntrade. Captain Nicholson himself\nsupervised the drawing up of the\nplans, which have had very careful\nconsideration. The result is that the\nlittle vessel would be difficult to\nimprove upon for the class of trade\nshe is to enter. Everything is convenient and not a foot of space has\nbeen lost. The house work is all of\na substantial character, being of\nsteel throughout. A charming little\nobservation room has been provided\nand excellent staterooms fitted up\nalong the general lines of the large\nPrinces. There is accommodation\nfor thirty-six people in the stateroom\nwhile if needed the dining saloon\ncan be made to accommodate eighteen more. This dining saloon is a\ncredit to the builders, being airy and\nexceedingly comfortable. The galley\nIs commodious and there is the fullest provision made in the way of\na smoking room. t\nFor steerage passengers' there has\nbeen fitted up quarters far superior\nto those generally provided for this\nclass of travellers. .\u00C2\u00BB\nThe vessel is exceedingly staunch,\nbeing built to weather any seas, and\nbeing fitted up to go anywhere. She\nis an economical vessel, consuming\nheaviest weather, and Is a remarkable sea boat. The placing of the\nengines aft gives her an appearance\nof staunchness unexcelled in many\nlarger vessels:'\nIn addition to a large and well\narranged steerage accommodation for\n150, she has first class accommodation; a very neat and comfortable\nsmoking room finished in fumed oak\nwith leather upholstery, and buffet\nin connection. This is accessible\nonly from first class quarters. The\ndining saloon, seating forty-four, is\ndone In mahogany with crimson upholstery and drapings, and is situated on the anchor deck. Attached\nto it is a large pantry and galley,\nconveniently laid out. The . chief\nsteward's offices and men's washrooms are located also on this deck.\nThe dining room Is reached by a\nmahogany stairway leading from the\nlounge room on the shade deck into\na well proportioned , and air vesti-\nbut, also mahogany panelled and\ndecorated. The principal stateroom\naccommodation is situated on the\nshelter deck, and consists of eighteen two berth staterooms of large\nsibe, well ventilated and all having\noutside windows. These rooms are\nfurnished with folding lavatories,\nspring berts and hair mattresses.\nForward of this is a very neat\nsemi-circular observation room, with\nlarge plate glass windows, done in\nwhite and gold and furnished with\nwicker chairs. This room is the\nmost attractive feature of the steamer. Above this Is the pilot house\nand officers' quarters.\nOn the after-part of the lower\ndeck there is ample promenading\nspace for steerage passengers, and\non the shade and upper decks there\nis ample shelter and lounge space for\nfirst class passengers.\nThe ship has a cargo capacity of\n450 tons, In addition to ber bunkers, and altogether will be a convenient and comfortable vessel, well\nadapated for the purpose for which\nshe is intended.\n o\t\nDROWNED IN FRASER\nFEELING DEVELOPS\nAGAINST RECIPROCITY\nOntario Farmers Show a Revulsion of the Terms of the\nPact Proposed to be Entered Into by the Government\u00E2\u0080\u0094Conservatives are Gaining\nas the Fight Continues.\n(Special to The Journal)\nToronto, Aug. 11.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Beyond nomination conventions in a few ridings\nthe political campaign in Ontario\nhas not yet begun in real earnest.\nThe fight will commence next Tuesday, when R. L. Borden, leader of\nthe Conservative party, opens the\nOntario campaign at Ion.\nThe Conservative party throughout the province is thoroughly organ\nized and the indications from all\nover the province augur well for the\nfuture.\nIn .many sections where at first\nreciprocity was hailed as beneficial\nto Canada, there has been a marked\nchange in sentiment and the confidence that was expressed by the Liberals that the farmers of the province will endorse the pact has received a decided setback.\nKILLED AT TUNNEL\nCave in of Rock at Kitselas Results in\nthe Death of One Workman.\nTwo\nOthers Were Injured in\nAccident at Head of Construction Work\nthe\nRETURNING OFFICER\n* (Special to The Journal) *\n* Ottawa, Aug. 11.\u00E2\u0080\u0094P. P. Har- *\n*' rlson of Cumberland has been *\n* appointed returning officer for *\n* Comox-Atlin electoral district *\n* for the forthcoming election. *\nonly about twelve tons of coal a day.\nUnder command of Captain Wear-\nmouth, the Prince John entered\nupon her service on Wednesday, proceeding to the Queen Charlottes. A\nmore detailed description of the vessel is as follows:\nThe steamer is 185 feet long, 30\nfeet beam, and 13 feet 3 inches\nmoulded depth, built of steel and\nclassed 100 Al at Lloyds. She has\nseven watertight bulkheads with\ndouble bottom, affording ample ballast and fresh water storage, large\nbunkers, two multitubular Scotch\nboilers, triple expansion engines,\ncapable of a speed of 12 knots under full doaded conditions. The vessel has been modelled to stand the\nFive Nen Working on Canadian Northern\nConstruction Lose\nLive;.\nAddition to List of Fatalities Connected With Work\nNear Hope\n(Special to The Journal)\nHope, Aug. 11.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Five men, names\nunknown, were drowned on Wednesday in the Fraser River at Saddle\nRock, the first flag station above\nYale. They were part of a gang\nattempting to place a cable across\nthe river.\nThe scow with three men was\nswept away but made the shore lower\ndown. The five men were In a\nsmall boat and were overcome by\nthe current.\nThis makes a total of nine\ndrowned sinf'e the beglning of preparations for railway construction\nfrom Hope northeastward on tlie line\nof the Canadian Northern Pacific.\n o\t\nA Rich Country\nAid. George Kerr has returned to\nPrince Rupert after a visit to Hazelton and district, where he looked\ninto conditions. He Is more than\npleased with the outlook in the interior. There Is an immense country with facilities in the way of agriculture and mining that It will take\nyears to fully develop. The northern\nInterior, in the opinion of Aid. Kerr,\nis second to no place in the Dominion.\nFires Do Damage\nRobert Jennings, road superintendent, has returned from a tour\nof inspection among the various road\ncamps up the Skeena. He reports\nthat good progress is being made.\nThe continued dry weather has made\nIt very difficult to keep the forest\nfires under control and in consequence there lias been considerable\nloss in tlie Lakelse, Kiliuaiigan and\nother valleys in tlie district.\nA cavein of rock at the G. T. P.\ntunnel now under construction near\nKitselas resulted in the death of one\nworkman. Two other men were injured in the accident. The rock at\nthis point is not very solid and has\ngiven the workmen quite an amount\nof trouble.\nThe details of the accident are not\nfully known. It was not due, however, to any explosion, but to the\nrock caving.\nCHANGES IN CABINET\nDr. Beland Has Been Taken in as Postmaster-General-Other Appointments Made.\nSuccessor to Sir Alan Aylesworth\nHas Not Yet Been Named by\nthe Government\nCLEARING RIGHT OK WAY\nMr. Shendy of Contracting Firm\nLeaving for Interior to Push\nForward Work\nM. Sheady & Co. have already commenced work in a small way on the\nclearing of the right-of-way for the\nG. T. P. beyond Aldermere. Mr.\nSheady is at present in the city and\nwill leave, In company with J. C.\nShepard, the superintendent of\nFoley, Welch & Steward on th*\ncoast, and V. W. Smith tomorrow for\nthe interior.\nMr. Sheady will then take steps\nto have the work pushed' forward\nwith all expedition. The contract\nentered into into is for twenty miles\nof the way, the cost being $60,000.\nReserved Judgment\nJudge Lampman has been hearing\nthe evidence in Guraski vs. McMordie for the past few days. The evidence is all in now and judgment\nhas been reserved. The action is\none for alleged breach of contract\npreferred by station men. Fred\nPeters, K. C, represented the prosecuting station men, while L. W. Patmore appeared for the defense.\n(Special to The Journal)\nOttawa, Aug. 11,\u00E2\u0080\u0094The government yesterday made an order appointing Dr. Beland of Beauce postmaster general; Hon. R. Lemieux\nminister of marine, and Hon. L. P.\nBrodeur a judge of the supreme\ncourt.\nA successor to Sir Alan Aylesworth\nas minister of justice will be named\nlater.\nBORDEN'S CANDIDACY *\n(Special to The Journal) *\nHalifax, Aug. 11.\u00E2\u0080\u0094At the *\nConservative convention the *\nnomination of R. L. Borden and *\nAdam B. Crosby was made *\nunanimous. No other names *\nwere submitted. *\nINSPECTED ROAD\nOfficials of the Railway Commission\nLooked Over the\nG. T. P. Line\nJames Ogilvie, assistant chief operating officer of the board of railway commissioners, and E. C. Lalonde, his associate in the work,\ninspected the Grand Trunk Pacific.\nThey arrived in the city by the Prince\nRupert and yesterday proceeded by\nspecial train, in company with W.\nC. C. Mehan, general superintendent,\nand G. A. McNicholl, superintendent,\nto the end of the track. They made\na full inspection of the line,\ngetting exact information for the\nguidance of the board.\nThe board of railway commissioners is to sit here on August 19, when\nany questions of a local nature coming within the scope of the board's\nwork will be taken up.\nNEGOTIATIONS PROGRESSING\nGovernment Is Considering the Question of Agreement with\nG. T. P. at Present\nHeld Picnic\nThe Ladies' Aid of the Methodist\nChurch held a picnic to Metlakatla\nyesterday. A delightful day was\nwas sp\u00C2\u00A3nt on the beach there.\nSELECT DELEGATES\nLiberals Name Those Who Will Represent Association at Convention.\nDuncan lloss Will lie the Choice of\nthe Local Liberal Party\nRepresentatives\nPleased With City\nE. P. Miller, secretary-treasurer of\nthe Dominion Trust Company, Vancouver, is in the district. He came\nnorth on a holiday trip, going as far\nas Skagway. On the way south, however, he was attracted to Prince Rupert and stopped off in order to take\na look over the place. He became\nmore or 'ess enamored of the city\nand has finally decided to visit the\ninterior of the province and see what\nthat part has to offer. He has gone\nas far as Kitselas but will return in\na day or two. Mr. Miller is very\nagreeably surprised to find the progress Prince Rupert is making. He\nis satisfied that there is a great future for it and is pleased to see the\nprogress already made.\nHarry Howson of Victoria, so well\nknown to the mining men of the\nnorth, returned to the city this week.\nHe has gone to Goose Bay and Alice\nArm in connection with some properties he represents there. He will\nprobably go up the Skeena on his\nreturn to the city.\nl^*+^^^**^**********\u00C2\u00BB*^**\u00C2\u00BB*^*+**+***\u00C2\u00BB-if**+\u00C2\u00BB*\u00C2\u00BB**#\u00C2\u00BB*\u00C2\u00BB***\nMeeting Tonight!\nA meeting of the Conservative Association will be held in Melntyre Hall this\nFriday Evening, Aug. 11\nat 8 p.m., to meet the delegates prior to their\ndeparture for the nominating convention.\n\u00C2\u00AB\nJ. A. KIRKPATRICK.\n*\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0K\n*\ni\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2K\n*\n-K\n*\n*\n\u00C2\u00A5\nI \u00C2\u00AB\n*\n*\n+\n+\n*\n*\n*\n*\n*\n+\n*\n+\n*\n*\n*\n*\ni\n*\n*\n*\n*\n+\n+\n*\n*\n*\n*\n*\nA message received yesterday\nfrom Mayor Manson by Aid. Kirkpatrick, the acting mayor, indicates\nthat negotiations are progressing\nsatisfactorily relative to the agreement with the G. i. P. The matter\nhas been before the executive council and an answer is expected from\nthe government on Monday as to\nth decision reacned on all the points\nThe message fr- .. the mayor\nreads as follows:\nJ. A. Kirkpatrick, Prince Rupert.\nNegotiations with government re\nagreement proceeding satisfactorily.\nFinal conference next Monday.\nWM. MANSON.\n o\t\nCONSERVATIVES MEET\nAt a meeting of the Liberal Association of the city held last evening\nthe delegates to the nominating convention of the party to be held in\nNanaimo on August 19 were selected. The twelve named were: Frank\nMobley, A. J. Morris, D. A. McKin-\nnon, S. P. .McMordie, J, J. Sloan,\nA. D. Pattullo, G. R. Naden, Frank\nKeeley, J. M. Lynch, Alex. Manson\nand Dr. Hall. Five alternates were\nelected as follows: Robert Ross, H.\nF. MscRae, H. Campbell, K. Mun-\nroe and W. P. Anderson.\nTbe choice of the local association\nfor a candidate is Duncan Ross, and\nthe delegates from here will press\nhis claims upon the convention next\nweek.\n o\t\nHad a Gun\nCharged with pointing a gun at\nthe mirror in one of the hotel bars,\nJ. McCuIl, was brought before J. H.\nMcMullIn, S. M., this morning. His\ncase was remanded until tomrrow.\n o\t\nBaseball Match\nThe Quill Drivers of the city defeated the Maple Leafs in a scheduled match of the local baseball\nleague last night. The score was\n30 to 28 In favor of the Quill Drivers, who attained their first victory\nof the season.\nAssociation Will Hold a Gathering\nTonight Before Delegates Leave\nfor South.\nThose Who Will Attend Convention\niii Nanalmo Will Leave\n.Monday .Morning\nAn important meeting of the Conservative Association of the city will\nbe held this evening In Melntyre\nHall at 8 o'clock. A few weeks ago\nthe association met and elected delegates to go to the convention whenever it met. Fourteen were elected,\nbut it was understood that before\nthe dat of the convention a second\nmeeting should be called In order to\ngive the members of the association\nFining Drunks\nIn the city police court this morning a drunk was given the usual\nfine. Several Indians have been\nbrought up during the last few days.\nMrs. Rada, on a charge of selling\nwithout a license, was fined $200\nand costs a few days ago.\n o\t\nMAY EXTEND LINES\nT. P. Reported lo lie Heading\nfor Pine River Pass\nFrom Edson\nFAVORS PRINCE RUPERT *\nSpeaking at a dinner given In *\nhis honor In London* Premier \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nMcBride, during bis recent visit, *\nsaid from his own knowledge *\nof Prince Rupert and the ail- *\njoining territory, anil with the \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\ndevelopment promised by the *\nGrand Trunk Pacific, he bad no *\nhesitation in saying that within *\nfive years those who wished to *\nseek a new home would find *\nnone better than at Prince Ru- \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\npert. \u00C2\u00AB\nan opportunity to meet the delegates\nand express their wishes as to the\ncandidate to be selected. This Is the\nobject of the meeting tonight.\nThe delegates attending the convention in Nanalmo will leave by the\nPrince George on Monday morning,\nreaching Nanaimo on Tuesday afternoon.\nWhile there is consederable speculation as to the probable candidate,\nnothing will be known definitely until the delegates have nn't In Nanalmo and considered the* whole question.\nThere is every indication that the\nGrand Trunk Pacific will head for\nthe South Pine Pass with their projected branch line north from Edson, construction work on which Is\nexpected to commence this summer,\nsays the Edmonton Capital. E. A.\nKnudson, a prospector and trapper\nwho has spent the last four years on\nthe shores of Rocky Mountain Lake,\n200 miles south of Fort St. John,\nB. C, stated that U, T. P. survey\nstakes extend right from the Pouce\nCoupe Prairie through the Soulh\nPine Pass. Through this section of\nthe country the levels of the right-\nof-way have been taken and the route\nhas been staked out carefully, all the\nstakes rearing the marks of tlie\n(Irani! Trunk Pacific.\nMr. i-vnudson says that this line\nwas staked In tbe summer of 1907.\nCanadian Pacific surveyors have also\nbeen through this pass. They ran a\ntrail line some time before the G.\n1*. I'. and the route they have chosen\nis not so clearly defined. Mr. Knudson stated thai tbe grade through\nthe pass should not lie a difficult\none, as the summit Is very low at\ntills point. The pass is qutle wide\nand there Is ample room for railway\nlines. In ibis ii differs from tlie\nYellowhead Pass, farther Bouth. Mr,\nKnudson lias visited 111*> pass several times with other prospectors and\ntrappers, lie' came from his post\nat Rocky Mountain Lake aboul a\nmonth ago.\nSince tlie opening of spring G.T.P,\nsurveyors have been running trail\nlines north of Kelson toward the\nAthabasca River and il is understood\nthat they have selected a suitable\nlocation with respect to grades and\nother nee'essary consideration. This\nIs presumably a line to serve the\nGrande Prairie country but the fact\nthat the copany has already made\ndefinite surveys through the Pouce\nCoupe country nnd on to the mountains is substantial ground for the\nbelief that the company is looking\nfor a northern route to the Pacific\nCoast.\nFactory Inspector Gordon eif van-\ncouver is in tin- city in connection\nwitii the duties ol bis office, He\nwill l.e'' fur the Interior after mak-\nIng Inspections here. PRINCE RUPERT JOURNAL\nFriday, August 11, 1911.\nj\u00C2\u00AB **\u00C2\u00AB \u00E2\u0080\u00A2;+ \u00C2\u00BBji *j* \u00C2\u00BB*- .*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 .j. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2*--lingbam's\nsadler intend to apply to the Chief j er, intend to apply to tne Chief Com-loini\"\"T \"VAT -\"\"*\"\nCommissioner of Lands for a license missioner of Lands for a license to \"g\" \u00C2\u00B0f Prince H\"r\nto prospect for coal and petroleum prospect for coal and petroleum on \u00C2\u00B0CCUDn rontra(-'tor. '\non and under 640 acres of land on and under 640 acres of land on Gra-\nGraham Island described as foi- ham island described as follows*\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nlows:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at post planted: Commencing at a post planted onthe\none mile east of the south corner of i west shore of West River, one mile\nL.L.4475; tlience north 80 chains; I easterly from the mouth of said riv-'\nthence east SO chains; thence south]er; thence south SO chains' thence\nplace of commencement\nAUSTIN* M. BRO.vN\nDated July 17, 1911.\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nQueen Charlotte\nTAKE NOTICE that thirty days\nfrom date, I, Austin il. Brown, of\n. . ,, , \u00E2\u0080\u009E,, , . .. i a. i^. t/uiutsce th\u00C2\u00B0nee 80 chains\n.\u00E2\u0080\u00A2hams; tbence west SO chains to the Xorth t\u00E2\u0080\u009Eence 30 cnaiDS West\nplace of commencement. :tIience so (.ljains Poutll. thence so\nii . i i , ,-,,,,, ' .chains East to point of comnienee-\nu.iitii .liny ie. i.ui. ment an(] contair,ing C40 acres more\nor Ipq*^\nSkeena Land District-District of | ChARLES j. GILLINGHAM.\nQueen Charlotte ~, , ., ,, fe . _\u00C2\u00B1\n I TAKE NOTICE that thirty days. Charles M. Huff, Agent.\nPrince Rupert, II. C, by occupation! from date, I, Henry Edenshaw, of Dated March 4, 1911, 4-18\nsadler intend to apply to the Chief | Masset, B. C, by occupation store- Skeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCommissioner of Lands for a license; keeper, intend to apply to the Chief, Cassiar\nto prospect for coal and petroleum Commissioner of Lands for a license! tak \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 NOTICE that Charles J\non and under 040 acres of land on: to prospect for coal and petroleum ' ejniingbam,' of Prince Rupert, B. c'\nGraham Island described as fol-|on and under 640 acres of land on\nlows:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at post planted\none mile north of the northeast corner of \u00E2\u0082\u00AC.L. 4477; thence west 80\nchains; thence south SO chains;\nthence east So chains; thence nortli\n80 chains, to place of commencement.\nAUSTIN il. BROWN.\nDated July 17, 1911.\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nQueen Charlotte\nTAKE NOTICE that thirty days\nfrom date, I, Austin M. Brown, of\nPrince Rupert. B. C, by occupation\nsadler, intend to apply to t! I Chief\nCommissioner of Lands for a license\nto prospect for coal and petroleum\non and under 640 acres of land on\nGraham Island described as foi\nlows\n__^^__\u00E2\u0096\u00A0ssssBnsssssanssiHi \u00E2\u0096\u00A0 ., e occupation contractor, intends to\nGraham Island described as follows: , t0 the Mitllstel. of Lands for\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at a post planted onL ,!cense t0 prospect for Coal and\ntie west shore of the West River, petroleum over 64 0 acres of land:-\nabout one mile easterly from the I fjomencing at a pt t planted 7 miles\nN. E. of the mouth of the White\nmouth of said river; thence east 80\nchains; tbence north 80 chains; |m d tn ]unction of the Naas,\ntlience west SO chains; tlience south j - - \u00E2\u0080\u0094 -\t\n80 chains, to place of commence\nment. M\nHENRY EDENSHAW.\nDated July .17, 1911.\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nQueen Charlote Islands.\nTAKE NOTICE that Wirt A. Stevens, of Chicago, 111., U. S. A., occupation civil engineer, intends to\n_^^___^_^__^__ apply for permission to purchase\nCommencing at post planted] the following described lands\nmarked Chas. J. Gillingham's S. E.\nCorner; thence 80 chains North;\nthence 80 chains West; tlience SO\nchains South; thence SO chains East\nto point of commencement and containing 640 acres more or less.\nCHARLES J. GILLINGHAM.\nCharles M. Huff, Agent.\nDated ilarch 5th, 1911, 4-18\nof\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District\nCassiar.\none mile east of the northeast corner I Commencing at a post planted on I GIlTltrtl\u00E2\u0084\u00A2 N\u00C2\u00A3T-\u00C2\u00A3S5n-h!t CharlJ;s \u00E2\u0080\u009EJ'\nof CL. 4474; thence east SO chains;|the shore, of Masset' Inlet'abouf one | oeiupflion' ItaSSr^iStlu to\nthence south SO chains; thence west\nSO chains; tbence north SO chains, to\nplace of commencement.\nAUSTIN il. DROWN\nDated July 17, 1911.\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nQueen Charlotte\nTAKE NOTICE that thirty days\nfrom date, I, Austin M. Brown, of\nPrince Rupert, B. C, by occupation\nsadler, intend lo apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands for a license\nto prospect for coal and petroleum\non and under 610 acres-of land on\nGraham Island described as follows'\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at post planted\nat the southeast corner of C.L. 4477;\nthence east SO chains; thence north\nSO chains; thence west SO chains;\nthence soutli 80 chains, to place of\ncommencement.\nAUSTIN il. BROWN*.\nDated July 17, 1911.\t\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nQueen Charlotte\nTAKE NOTICE that thirty days\nfrom date, I, Austin II. Brown, of\nPrince Rupert, B. C, by occupation\nsadler, intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands for a license\nto prospect for coal and petroleum\non and under 640 acres of land on\nGraham Island described as follows:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at post planted\none mile east of the south corner of\nC.L. 44(0; thence north 80 chains;\nthence west 80 chains; tlience south\n80 chains; thence east 80 chains, to\nplace of commencement.\nAUSTIN M. BROWN.\nDated July 17, 1911.\nmile northeast of the mouth of the j apply to the Minister of Lands for\nAin River; thence north 80 chains; a license to prospect for Coal and\nthence west 40 cliains more or less \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 Petroleum over 640 acres of land: \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nto the eastern boundary of T. L. J Commencing at a post planted 7V*\n35413; thence soutli along the j miles N. E. of the mouth of the\nboundary of T. L. 35413 and [White River and the junction of the\nT. L. 35414, a distance of 80 chains; -Naas and marked Chas. J. Gilling-\nthence east 40 chains, more or less, j nam's S. E. Corner; thence 80\nto point of commencement, contain-! chains North; thence 80 chains\ning 320 acres more or less. I West; thence 80 chains South;\nWIRT A. STEVENS. thence SO chains East to point of\nG. S. Mayer, Agent. , commencement and containing 640\nDated Feb. 24th, 1911.\"\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nQueen Charlotte\nTAKE NOTICE that thirty days\nfrom date, I, Austin M. Brown, of\nPrince Rupert, B. C., by occupation\nsadler, intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands for a license\nto prospect for coal and petroleum\non and under G40 acres of land on\nGraham Island described as follows:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at post planted\none mile east of the southeast corner of C.L. 4470; thence east 80\nchains; tlience north 80 chains;\nthence west 80 chains; thence south\n80 chains, to place of commencement.\nAUSTIN il. BROWN.\nDated July 17, 1911.\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nQueen Charlotte Islands.\nTAKE NOTICE that Alice Millard,\nof Masset, B. (J., occupation married\nwoman, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Commencing at a\npost planted about SO chains east\nand 120 chains north of the N. E.\ncorner of Lot 35; thence north 80\nchains; thence east SO chains; thence\nsouth SO chains; tlience west 80\nchains, containing 640 acres.\nALICE MILLARD.\nM. A. Merrill, Agent.\nDated Nov. 25, 1910.\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nQueen Charlotte\nTAKE NOTICE that thirty days\nfrom date, I, Austin il. Brown, of\nPrince Rupert, ti. C, by occupation\nsadler, intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands for a license\nto prospect for coal and petroleum\non and under 640 acres of land on\nGraham Island described as follows:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at post planted\none mile east of the northeast corner\nof C.L. 4469; thence west 80 chains;\nthence south 80 chains; Ihence east\n80 cliains; thence north. 80 chains,\nto place of commencement.\nAUSTIN il. BROWN.\nDated July 17, 1011.\nQueen Charlotte Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of Skeena\nTAKE NOTICE that S. Barclay\nMartin, Jr., of New Westminster,\noccupation engineer, Intends to apply for permission to purchase the\nfollowing described lands:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at a post planted at the\nnortheast corner of ungazetted lot\n1428, said lot being T.L. 39979;\nthence north and following the\nwesterly shore of Massett Inlet SO\nchains; thence west 20 chains;\nthence south 80 chains; thence east\n40 chains, more or less, to the point\nof commencement, and containing\n240 acres, more or less.\nS. BARCLAY MARTIN, Jr.\nDated July 21, 1911. 8-8\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nQueen Charlotte\nTAKE NOTICE that thirty days\nfrom date, I, Austin il. Brown, of\nPrince Rupert, B. C, by occupation\nsadler, Intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands for a license\nto prospect for coal and petroleum\non and under 640 acres of land on\nGraham Island described as follows:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at. post planted\none mile east of the northeast corner\nof C.L. 4469; thence east 80 chains;\nthence south SO cliains; tlience west\n80 chains; tlience north SO chains to\nplace of commencement.\nAUSTIN M. BROWN.\nDated July 17, 1911.\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nQueen Charlotte\nTAKE NOTICE that thirty days\nfrom date, I, Austin il. Brown, of\nPrince Rupert, B. C, By occupation\nsadler, intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands for a license\nto prospect for coal and petroleum\non and under 640 acres of land on\nGraham Island described as follows:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at post planted\nat the southeast corner ofC.L.4478;\nthence north 80 cliains; tnence east\n80 chains; e.eence south SO chains;\nthence west 80 chains, to place of\ncommencement.\nAUSTIN M. BROWN.\nDated July 17, 1911.\t\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCoast.\nTAKE NO'lICE that I, Roy,\nChrisman, of Port Esslngton, B. C .\noccupation prospector, intend to apply for permission to lease the following described land:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at a post planted about five\nmiles distant and in a southwesterly\ndirection from the point at the entrance to Captain Cove, Petrel\nChannel, and on the northeast side\nof McCauley Island; thenco west 20\nchains; tlience south 40 chains,\nthence east about 20 chains to shore!\nof Petrel Channel; Ihence northerly j v. fh ,\nalong shore line of Petrel Channel!;,0!1:.' Z%~Sz\nacres more or less. \t\nCHARLES J. GILLINGHAM.\nPharles il. Huff, Agent.\nDated March oth, 1911. 4-18\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nC1 i s q i *i p\nTAKE NOTICE that Charles J.\nGilllngham, of Prince Rupert, B. C,\noccupation contractor, intends to\napply to the Minister of Lands for\na license to prospect for Coal and\nPetroleum over 640 acres of land:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCommencing at a post planted 7's\nmiles N. E. of the mouth of the\nWhite River and the junction of the\nNaas, marked Chas. J. Gillingham's\nS. E. Corner; tbence SO nhains\n80 chains West;\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nQueen Charlotte\nTAKE NOTICE that thirty days\nfrom date, I, Austin M. Brown, of\nPrince Rupert, B. C, by occupation\nsadler, intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands for a license\nto prospect for coal and petroleum\non and under 640 acres of land on\nGraham Island described as follows:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at post planted\nat the southeast corner of C.L. 4467;\nthence north 80 cliains; thence east\n80 chains; tlience soutli 80 chains;\ntlience west SO chains, to place of\ncommencement.\nAUSTIN il. BROWN.\nDated July 17, 1911.\t\nto point of commencement and con-1 th,el?ce *\u00C2\u00B0 lch.ains ?\u00C2\u00B0uth,* theDCe 80\ntaining eighty acres more or less. chalns E,ast \u00C2\u00B0.\".I\"Dt\u00C2\u00B0 commence-\n'ment and containing 640 acres more\nDated April 11, 1911.\nROY CHRISMAN.\n4-25\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCoast\u00E2\u0080\u0094Range V.\nTAKE NOTICE that W. H. Ferguson, of Prince Rupert, B. C, occupation civil engineer, intends to apply for permission to purchase the\nfollowing described lands:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at a post planted about one\nmile southerly, following the sinuosities of tbe shore line from the\nsoutlfVest corner of Lot 104, Range\nV; thence 20 chains west; thence 20\nchains south; thence 20 chains west,\ntlience 20 chains south; thence 20\nchains west; thence about 40 chains\nsouth; thence along shore northerly\nto point of commencement.\nW. II. FERGUSON.\nG. Hansen, Agent.\nDated April 22nd, 1911. 4-25\nor less. \t\nCHARLES J. GILLINGHAM.\nCharles il. Huff, Agent.\nDated March 5th, 1911. 4-1S\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCassiar.\nTAKE NOTICE that Charles J.\nGillingham, of Prince Rupert, B. C,\noccupation contractor, intends to\napply to the Minister of Lands for\na license to prospect for Coal and\nPetroleum over 640 acres of land: \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCommencing at a post planted 6 '4\nmiles N. E. of the mouth of the\nWhite River and the junction of the\nNaas, and marked Chas. J. Gillingham's S. E. Corner; thence SO\nchains North; thence SO cnains\nWest; thence SO chains South;\nthence 80 ehains East to point of\ncommencement and containing 640\nacres more or less.\nCHARLES J. GILLINGHAM.\nCharles il, Huff, Agent.\nDated March 4th, 1911. 4-18\nSkeena\nof\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCoast\n I TAKE NOTICE that F. T. Saund-\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of j ers, of Vancouver, occupation master\nQueen Charlotte | mariner, intends to apply for per-\nTAKE NOTICE that thirty days mission to purchase the following\nfrom date, I, Austin if. Brown, of described lands:\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Commencing at a I Gillingham, of Prince Rupert, B. C,\nPrince Rupert, B. C, by occupation1 Dost planted about 6 miles north-1 occupation contractor, intends to\nLand District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District\nCassiar.\nTAKE NOTICE that Charles J\nsadler, intend to apply to the Chief! west of Love Inlet on the north\nCommissioner of Lands for a license j cast shore of Pitt Island; tlience\nto prospect for coal and petroleum | south 20 chains; thence west\non and under 640 acres of land on '\"\"' \" \"\" '\" \"'\nGraham Island described as follows:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at post planted\nat the southeast corner of C.L. 4465;\ntlience north SO chains; thence east\nSO chains; thence south SO chains;\ntlience west 80 chains, to place of\ncommencement. ,\nAUSTIN il. BROWN.\nDated July 16, 1911.\nm\nchains; tbence nortli to shore;\nthence following shore in a south-\napply to the .Minister of Lands for\na license to prospect for Coal and\nPetroleum over 640 acres of land:---\nCommencing at a post planted about\n8 miles N. E. of the mouth of White\neasterly direction to point of com-[River and the Junction of the Naas\nmencement , containing SO '\nmore or less. H\t\nFRANK TAUNTON SAUNDERS,\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Locator\nVV, Hamilton, Agent\nStaked 17th, Feb., 1911.\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nQueen Charlotte\nTAKE NOTICE that thirty days.\nfrom date, I, Henry Edenshaw, ofiser \t\nMasset, B, C, by occupation store-! tlon banker, intends to apply for\nkeeper, intend to apply to the Chief|permission to purchase the folowlng\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nQueen Charlotte Island.\nTAKE NOTICE that Robert Fra-\nOgllvle, of Vancouver, occupa-\nacres [ River, marked Charles J. Uilllng-\nbam's S. E. Corner; tbence 80\nchains North; thence 80 chains\nWest; thence SO chains Soutli;\nthence SO chains East to point of\ncommencement and containing 640\nacres more or less.\nCHARLES .1. GILLINGHAM\nCharles il. Huff, Agent.\nDated March 5th, 1911. 4-1S\nCommissioner of Lands for a license\nlo prospect for coal and petroleum\ndescribed lands:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at aj\npost planted about 2 miles west of\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District\nof Coast.\nTAKE NOTICE that Victor H.\nReynolds, of Hull, .Massachusetts, oc-\non and under i,,o acres of land on, the southwest corner of A. P 12- oupatlon chauffeur, intends to apply\nGraham Island described as follows: 087j thence east SO chains; thence f permission to purchase the fol-\nComnienclng at a post planted on the1 north 80 dial,i^ thence west 80 ., ,' iwaiM and:- Commenc-\nthence south 80 chains to\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nQueen Charlotte\nTAKE NOTICE that thirty days\nfrom date, I, Austin M. Brown, of\nPrince Rupert, B. C, by occupation\nsadler, Intend to apply to the Chief\nCommissioner of Lands for a license\nto prospect for coal and petroleum\non and under 640 acres of land on\nGraham Island described as follows:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at post planted\none mile east of the southeast corner\nof C.L. 4475; thence west 80 chains;\nthence north 80 chains; thence east\n80 chains; thence south 80 chains,\nto place of commencement.\nAUSTIN M. BROWN.\nDated July 17, 1911.\nbank of west River, about one mile '-bains;\neasterly from Hie mouth of said ru--: point of commencement, containing : '\u00E2\u0080\u009E , * \" ''\".\"' i\"**\"^\" \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\"\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \"\u00E2\u0096\u00A0=\" '\"V,\"\"\neasieri) nom un uiu oi s.iiu n\ ,'rin B | mark on the northerly side of the\nIng at a post planted at high water\ner; thence west 80 chains; tlience\nsouth 80 chains; tlience easl SO\nediains; thence north SC chains, to\nplace of commencement.\nHENRY EDENSHAW.\nDated July 17, 1911. \t\n64 0 acres. \t\nROBERT FRASER OGILVIE.\nArthur Robertson, Agent.\nDated Dec. 9, 1910.\n-District of\nSkeena Land District\nof Coast.\nTAKE NOTICE that James G\nCromble, of Prince Rupert, oceupa\ntion auditor, intends lo apply for\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nQueen Charlotte\nTAKE NOTICE that thirty days ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\nfrom date, I, Henry Edenshaw, ofj permission to purchase the \"following\nMasset, B, C, by occupation store- described lands:\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Commencing at\nkeeper intend to apply to the Chief I post planted at the northwest cor\nCommissioner of Lands for a license; ner, 55 chains east and 20 cliains\nto prospect for coal and petroleum on\nand under 640 acres of land on Graham Island described as follows: \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCommencing at a post planted on the\nsouth from northeast corner of Lot |\n1116 (Horry Survey), Coast Dist.\nrange 5; thence 20 chains east;\nthence 25 chains, more or less\nwest shore of West River, about one j south to Angus McLeod Pre-emp-\nmile easterly from the mouth of said tlon; tlience 20 chains wesl; tbence\nriver; thenco north 80 chains; tbence, 25 chains, more or less, north, to\nwest SO chains; thence south SO post of commencement, containing\nchains; tlience east 80 chains, to 60 acres, more or less,\nplace of commencement. | JAMES Q CROMBIE\nHENRY EDENSHAW*.\nDated July 17, 1911.\nentrance to a small unnamed cove on\nthe west coast of Pitt Island, about\none-quarter mile south of the entrance to Kltkatla summer village;\ntlience east forty chains: thence\nsouth twenty chains; thence west\nforty chains; thence north ten\nchains more or less to high water\nmark; thence following along high\nwater mark around the head of the\ncove back to the commencement, and\ncontaining sixty (60) acres more or\nVICTOR H. REYNOLDS.\nJ. H. Pillsbury, Agent.\nDated Feb. 18th, 1911.\nLINDSAY'S CARTAGE a STORAGE\nG. T. P. CARTAGE AGENTS\nOffice nt H. H. Rochester, Centre St.\n^^^^^^^^^^M LADYSMITH COAL\nFred Bohlen, Agent. I Is handled by ub. All orders receive\nDated June 14, 1911, 6-23 prompt attention. Phone No 68. PRINCE RUPERT JOURNAL\nTuesday, August 8, 1911.\nprince Bupert journal\nTelephone 138\nPublished twice a week on Tuesdays and Fridays from the office of\npublication, Third Avenue, near\nMcBride Street.\nSubscription rate to any point in\nCanada, $2.00 a year; to points outside of Canada, $3.00 a year.\nAdvertising rates furnished on\napplication.\n0. H. NELSON,\nEditor.\n-*jggej,r,.\nFriday, August 11, 1911.\nNOMINATION OF CANDIDA!\nNext week the Conservative party\nwill nominate a candidate to contest\ntin.- Comox-Atlin riding, if a strong\ncandidate is selected there is little\ndoubt as ie' tlie' results. The party\ncan win tin- seat.\nThe question of reciprocity is an\nImportanl one in a new country like\nthis\u00E2\u0080\u0094 just as Importanl as in any\npart of tlie province or of the Dominion. There is an immense new\nterritory to develop here. This city\nshould become a manufacturing and\ndistributing centre witli a producing\nterritory all around it furnishing the\nraw material and ihe means of living for tlie population that must\nlive here.\nOn the face of it protection to\nthese producers should be of decided\nbenefit. Anything that will prevent\nthe building up of prosperous farming settlements within reach of this\ncity will be a drawback to the place\nto that extent. The experience in\nthis province has been that it requires a lot of fostering and encouragement to induce agricultural\nsettlement. Other lines of enterprise, such as mining, hold out such\nstrong inducements that the farms\nare liable lo.be neglected owing to\nthe fact that the making of a farm\nin a wooded country is attained only\nafter years of hard work with small\nreturns when compared with the results often obtained by a prospector.\nThe retention of the home market\nfor the settlers upon the lands of\ntlie district Is therefore something\nto be sought if iliese occupiers of\nthe land are to remain satisfied with\ntheir lot.\nAS UNDERSTOOD IN GEHMAXY\nI News-Advertiser)\nIt Is more interesting that pleasant to note what is said in European\ncountries over tbe reciprocity treaty,\nand Sir Wilfrid Laurier's recent declaration of neutrality in British wars.\nA setrlking comment is found in tha\nFrankfort Zeitung, one of tlie leading journals of the German Empire,\nwhose leader on tlie Britisii Imperial\nConference we find translated in part\nIn the Toronto News. The Zeitung\nstates that the keynote of the Imperial Conference was given by Canada, and \"is a thoroughly anti-imperialist note.\"\nTlie German journal adds:\n\"What we have in mind is the\ndeclaration of the prime minister of\nCanada, a declaration so incredible\nthat when we first published it we\nwere inclined to doubt if our message had been correctly transmitted,\"\nSir Wilfrid Laurier's declaration is\nnext quoted and the Zeitung wants\nto know where ih\u00C2\u00AB different parts\nof the Empire to come in. Then\nit adds:\n\"It is characteristic thai all the\nchief Liberal papers In England\nmaintain a silence as to the grave\non Laurier's declaration\u00E2\u0080\u0094almost as\nif the word of command had been\npassed round to tell them to do so\nPossibly attempts may be made later\non to minimize the effect of tlie\ndeclaration but no one who will read\nit In its context can receive the impression that it was innocuous. Af-\nti'i- all there can be no doubt that\ntlie Empire would cease to be in\nexistence once the colonies really\ntook the line indicated by Laurier's\ndeclaration. The Empire would be\nno more an empire than a marriage\nis a'marriage which on ly counts in\ngood times and nol in bail limes. If\nthe conception of political unity is\nto have any meaning whatever it\nmust follow the idea so beautifully\nexpressed In the English wedding\nservice, 'for better, for worse, In\nsickness and In health.\n\"We outsiders call treat this question of the relations between England and her self-governing colonies\npurely as spectators. And as such\nwe are bound definitely to note the\nseriousness of the declaration, coming as it does from Canada, which\nin the last decade has with astonishing consistency and vigor extended\nits internal Independence to external\naffairs, and which has now let its\neconomic policy culminate In the\nreciprocity treaty with the United\nStates, which Is directly injurious to\nEngland.\"\nThere, is a note of exultation as\nwell as surprise in the comments of\nthe German journalist. Canadians\nmay protest against the conclusions\nof the Zeitung, but it is not easy\nto construe the premier's words into\nany other meaning. Whatever explanation Sir Wilfrid himself may\nmake, it. cannot be disputed that he\nhas given foreigners sufficient reason to believe that the British Empire can no longer depend upon Canada in time of need.\n| News of the Province j\n* i\n* * * * * * * * * * * *\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 * * * * * * * * * * * * * i\nLIBERAL CANDIDATES\nNEW* WESTMINSTER\u00E2\u0080\u0094A meeting of the Liberal Association was\nheld on Monday and local prospects\nwere discussed. Two names were\nmentioned as possible candidates for\ntlie Westminster riding and these\nmay be suggested to the convention.\nThe names were Alexander Henderson, late commissioner of the Yukon, and His Honor Judge .Mclnnes.\nNothing definite was decided, and\nafter the meeting was adjourned the\nexecutive of the club held a private\ndiscussion about the coming campaign.\nVICTORIA\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"There are so many\ncomplaints reaching the office of persons illegally starting land clearing\nfires during this dry weather that\nwe have decided to make an example\nof a few of these offenders,\" says\nFire Commissioner Gladwin. \"The\ndepartment recognized the wisdom\nand paramount necessity of refusing\nfurther permits for the present, on\naccount of the tinder-like condition\nof the forests, but several fires have\nof late been started by settlers ignoring the regulation of the department.\nWe know who these offenders are\nand will push prosecutions against\nthem. Warnings and argument as\nto the public danger do not seem-suf-\nficient with some.\" According to\nMr. Gladwin the fires along the\nnorthern mainland coast are now\nwell in hand, with the exception of\na fire still raging on Nelson Island.\nA special force of fighters has been\nsent there, and It is hoped will soon\nhave it subdued.\nARBITRATION TREATY\nText of Agreement Entered Into Between United States ami\n(heal Britain\nTlie arbitration treaty between\nGreat Britain and the United States,\nwhich lias passed the United States\nsenate, provides as follows:\nArticle 1\u00E2\u0080\u0094All differences hereafter arising between the high contracting parties, which it has not\nbeen possible to adjust by diplomacy,\nrelating to international matters In\nWhich the high contracting parties\nare concerned by virtue of a claim\nof right made by one against the\nother under treaty or otherwise, and\nwhich are adjustable in their nature\nby reason of being suceptible of decision by the application of the prin-\neiples of law or equity, shall be submitted to the permanent court of\narbitration established at Tbe Hague\nby the convention of October IS,\n1907, or to some other arbitral tri\nbunal as may decided in each case\nby special agreement, which special\nagreement shall provide for the organization of such tribunal if necessary, shall define the scope of the\npowers of the arbitrators, the question or questions at issue, and shall\nsettle the terms of reference and the\nprocedure thereunder. ,\n\"The spcial agreement in each\ncase shall be made on the part of\nthe United States by the president\nof the United States, by and with\nthe advice and consent of the senate thereof, his majesty's government reserving the right before concluding a special agreement in any\nmatter affecting the interests of. a\nself-governing Dominion of the British Empire to obtain the concurrence\ntherein of the government of said\ndominion.\nSuch agreement shall be binding\nwhen confirmed by the tw*i governments by an exchange of notes.\nArticle II\u00E2\u0080\u0094The high contracting\nparlies further agree to institute as\noccasion arises, and as hereinafter\nprovided, a joint high commission of\ninquiry, to which, upon the request\nof either party, shall be referred for\nimpartial and conscientious investigation any controversy between the\nparties within the scope of Article\nA, before such controversy has been\nsubmitted to arbitration, and also\nany other controversy hereafter\narising between them, even if they\nare not agreed that it falls within\nthe scope of Article 1; provided,\nhowever, that such reference may be\npostponed until the expiration of one\nafter the date of the formal request\ntherefor, in order to afford an opportunity for di'splomatic discussion and\nadjustment of the questions in controversy, if either party desires such\npostponement.\nWhenever a question or matter of\ndifference is referred to the joint\ncommittee of inquiry, as herein provided, each of the high contracting\nparties shall designate three of its\nnationals to act as members of the\ncommission of Inquiry for the purpose of such reference; or the commission may be otherwise constituted\nin any particular case by the terms\nof reference to be determined in each\ncase by an exchange of notes.\nArticle III\u00E2\u0080\u0094The'joint high commission of inquiry instituted in each\ncase as provided for in Article II,\nis authorized to examine into and\nreport upon the particular questions\nor matters referred to it, for the\npurpose of facilitating the solution\nof disputes by elucidating the facts,\nand to define the issues presented\nby such questions and also to include in its reports such recommend-\n! ations and conclusions as may be\nappropriate.\nIt is further agreed, however, that\nIn cases in which the parties disagree as to whether or not a difference is subject to arbitration under\nArticle 1 of this treaty, that question shall be submitted to the joint\nhigh commission of inquiry* and if\nall are but one of the members of\nthe commission agree and report that\nsuch difference is within the scope\nof Article 1, it shall be referred to\narbitration in accordance with theh\nprovisions of this treaty.\nArticle IV\u00E2\u0080\u0094The commission shall\nhave power to administer oaths to\nwitlinesses and take evidence on oath\nwhenever deemed necessary in any\nproceding, or inquiry, or matter\nwithin its jurisdiction under this\ntreaty; and the high contracting parties agree to adopt such legislation\nas may be appropriate and necessary\nto give the commission the powers\nabove mentioned, and lo provide for\nthe issue of subpoenas and for compelling the attendance of witnesses\nIn the proceedings before the commission.\nArticle V\u00E2\u0080\u0094The commission shall\nmeet whenever called upon to take\nan examination and report under the\nterms of this treaty, and the commission may fix such times and\nplaces for its meetings as may be\nnecessary at all times at special call\nor direction of the two governments.\nEach commissioner, upon the first\njoint meeting of the commission, after his appointment shall, before\nproceeding with the work of the com-\nfl, * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * **** -!\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\n\u00E2\u0099\u00A6 f\n*\n*\nRemember I\n*\nThat we I\nImport |\nOur Wines l\ndirect from Europe; and that\nno house in Prince Rupert can\nequal them for quality. No\nbetter can be bought anywhere\nin tbe Province. We make a\nspecialty of\nFamily Trade\nand guarantee satisfaction\n* stock of other\n*\nWe also carry a complete *\nLiquors\nTry a glass of\nCascade\nBeer\n* The best local beer on the *\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'\n* market. \u00C2\u00A3\nCLARKE BROS.\n* Christiansen & Brandt Bid. .*.\n* *\n* *\n* Telephone 39 Third Avenue *\n:\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2>\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB\nmission, subscribe a solemn declaration in outlining that he will faithfully and impartially perform the\nduties imposed upon him under this\ntreaty and such declaration shall be\nentered on the records of the proceedings of the commission.\nArticle VI\u00E2\u0080\u0094This treaty shall supersede the arbitration treaty concluded between the high contracting\nparties on April 4, 1908, but all\narguments, awards and proceedings\nunder that treaty shall continue in\nforce and effect, and this treaty\nshall not affect in any way the provisions of the treaty of June 11,\n1909, relating to the questions arising between the United States and\nthe Dominion of Canada.\nArticle VII\u00E2\u0080\u0094The present treaty\nshall be ratified by the president of\nthe United States of America, by and\nwith the consent and advice of the\nsenate thereof, and by his Britannic\nmajesty.\nThe ratification shall be exchanged\nat Washington as soon as possible,\nand the treaty shall take effect on\nthe date of the exchange of ratifications. It shall thereafter remain in\nforce continuously unless and until\nterminated by tw nty-fottr months'\nwritten notice given by either high\ncontracting party to the other.\nCrcosoting Ties\nThe C. P. R. has made a contract\nfor a term of years with the Dominion Tar and Chemical Co,, Ltd.,\nto treat about one million ties a\nyear. The plant is located at Trans-\nThe British Columbia Company\nLIMITED.\nAUTHORIZED CAPITAL $100,000.:: PAID UP CAPITAL $41,500\nDIRECTORS:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Reginald C. Brown, President; J. C. Maclure, Vice-\nPresident; H. E. Marks, Managing Director; Capt. E. Nash, William\nMcNair, R. A. Bevan, and F. C, Williams, Secretary. :-: :-:\nINTEREST 4 PER CENT. DEPOSITS\nThis Company acts as Executors, Administrators, Transferees and\nSecretaries to Public Companies. Commercial, Industrial and other\nbusiness propositions underwritten. Issues made on the\nLondon and New York Stock Exchanges.\nTIMBER, COAL, LANDS, and\nCOMPANY ORGANIZATION\nHead Office for Canada, 203, 208, 210, 215 Carter-Cotton Building,\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nThe Staneland Co. Ltd\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2TS THE-\nPaint Supply House\nof British Columbia\nALL GOODS ARE GUARANTEED\nWRITE FOR PRICES AND SAMPLES\nThe Staneland Co. Ltd\n836-840 Fort Street, VICTORIA, B.C.\nr\nReplenish\n\"i\nthe\nPantry\nHigh-Class....\nGrocery\nStock\nto choose from\nEVERYTHING CLEAN AXD FRESH\nGoods for the Table to Suit the Most\nFustidious Housewife\nS MERRYFIELD'S !\ni CASH GROCERY !\ncona, near Winnipeg. The preservative used is creosote, a distillation\nof coal tar or the heavy oils of tar.\nThe treatment Is to place the ties\nin cylinders, and, after closing the\ndoors, apply a vacuum, subsequently\nfilling the cylinders with creosote\nand subjecting the timber to an oil\npressure, maintaining the same for\nas long a time as the class of the\ntimber treated necessitates. The\ncharge is then withdrawn and the\noperation is complete.\n\u00E2\u0099\u00A6 \u00E2\u0099\u00A6 \u00E2\u0099\u00A6\nThe Thompson\n: Hardware Co.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094Second Avenue\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nj Paints. General Hardware,\nOils, Stoves and Ranges.\n2nd Avenue\nPrince Rupert,\nB.C.\nReal\nEstate\nINVESTMENTS\nReal\nEstate\nList Your\nProperties\nwith\nUncle Jerry\nJEREMIAH H. KUGLER\nHe Sells Buildings He Sells Contracts\nHe has Houses to Rent\nHe Buys Lots He Builds Homes\nHe Buys Leases He Loans Money\nHe Has Farms for Sale\nHe Sells Houses He Rents Stores\ne.essssssssssssWWBttHWBtiMB8W^BssssWWH^BHBWBWBBWBHM^WI^Wis^BBI^BBI\nJEREMIAH H. KUGLER\nSpecial Bargains in\nKITSELAS LANDS\nFRANCOIS LAKE LANDS\nLAKELSE LANDS,\nHAZELTON* DISTRICT LANDS\nBULKLEY VALLEY LANDS\nKISPIOX VALLEY LANDS\nPORCHER ISLAND LANDS\nK1TSUMKALUM LANDS\nSAND, GRAVEL AND MARBLE DEPOSITS Friday, August 11, 1911.\nPRINCE RUPERT JOURNAL\n*****************************************************\nj AMONG THE MINES !\nV *\nI*************,****************************************\nSTARTS SHIPPING\nRed Cliff Mine at Stewart is Connected\nby Rail With Salt\nWater.\nArrangements Made to Ship Ore to\nLadysinilh Smelter at\nGood Rates\nThe Red Cliff Mining Company is\ncelebrating today the connecting up\nof the mines with the railway from\nStewart. A party of shareholders\nwent north on the Prince Rupert this\nweek, including Erskine Smith, A.\nD. Tennant, who represents a large\namount of English capital, and several of the Old Country Investors.\nThey will mark the occasion in a\nfitting manner, and from now on\nshipments will be made from the\nproperty\nSpeaking of the prospects there,\nMr. Tennant pointed out that the\ncompany finds it possible to have\nthe ore shipped to Ladysmith and\nsmelted there, to whole cost, including mining, not exceeding $4-50 a\nton. This is possible owing to the\nquality of Ihe ore, which does not\nrequire the addition of any fluxes.\nWith the ore running into values\nto $20 a ton the returns to the company are thus excellent.\nAt the present stage of development the company will take out and\nship about 2,000 tdns a month to\nthe Ladysmith smelter.\nThe body of ore In sight warrants\nthe putting in of a smelter on the\nground, Mr, Tennant thinks, and\nthis may be done a little later. Under\nthe exceptionally good rates obtained, however, the company is prepared to ship to Ladysmith . for a\ntime at least.\nRARE MINERALS\nExcitement Reigns in the Kootenays\nOver Discovery of Platinum\nOre\nTO TAKE OUT COAL\nInterior Property Will be Fully Developed to Neet Demands of\nNorth.\nMeasures Located on the Line of the\nG. T. P. Will Re Opened Dp\nHy Owners\nAlexander Faulds, M. E., after examining the coal measures of the\nGrand Trunk Pacific Coal Company\nnear Hazelton, has gone south. Ills\nmission was one of deciding where\nthe work to develop the property\nproperly should be carried out. This\nlocation of the shaft, after the results of drilling, will be within one\nhundred feet of the Grand Trunk\nPacific main line, says the Omineca\nHerald. The site Is an ideal one\nfor an operating colliery because of\nthe facilities in the shape of water\npower, townsites and excellent agri-\nculturanl lands.\n.lames Wright, the manager, stated that Mr. Faulds had been engaged to thoroughly examine the\nproperty and to present his report,\nwhich would enable the company to\ndetermine the quickest and most\neconomical way to develop this new\ncoal field.\nThe company has ine seams varying in width from nineteen inches\nto si xfeet. The six foot seam, or\nNo. 2 tunnel, is 148 feet on the\nstrike, and a slope of 32 feet. No.\n1 tunnel has about 140 feet slope,\nwhile No. 3 tunnel is in 54 feet on\nthe strike. Considerable work has\nalso been done on one or two other\nseams for the purpose of locating\nfor drill holes, and it is intended to\nsend up a diamond drill this fall and\ndrill at least 2,000 feet. The coal\nis a semi-anthracite .and is excellent\nas steam or coking coal.\n o\t\nNOT IX PAYING QUANTITIES\nC. Oamscll, Dominion Government\nExpert, Makes Examination\nof Tulameen Diamonds\nNot for many years has there been\nso much excitement in the Kootenays\nover a milling discovery as that\nwhich has followed the announcement by A. Gordon French-that platinum and other almost priceless\nmetals of the same group had been\nfound in paying quantities at the\nGranite Poorman mine. For the\npast month a few Nelson men who\nhad heard of the discovery have been\nstaking all the available ground in\nthe vicinity of the dyke in which\nthe chief values were found and\nwhich extends for many miles in the\ndirection of Eagle and Foiiy-Nnine\ncreeks, and many scores of claims\nhave been recorded at the government offices.\nSince the news became public\nevery morning scores of prospectors\nhave left the city, returning at Intervals to record claims. The result Is that at present there is believed to be hardly a foot of tin-\nstaked ground in the territory supposed to be traversed by the dyke,\nwhich lias been proved at and near\nthe Granite Poorman to contain vast\nquantities of high priced metals.\nMany of the claims first staked\nhave been recorded in the names of\nJ. . P. Swedeberger, A. Gordon\nFrench, Thomas Gough, Mrs. Ida E.\nWilson, Dr. \V. X. Wilson, J. G.\nDevlin and E. E. Gullle, but dozens\nof others are ready to be recorded.\nThat the discovery was known and\nkepi a secret for some weeks is indicated by the fact that samples were\nsent for assay to Butte and Ottawa\nin order to make absolutely sure that\nno mistake had been made as to\nthe existence of the group of five\nmetals, platinum, Iridium, palladium,\nrhodium and osmium. The result\nwas thai answers came back giving\nreturns which, especially considering the low cost of mining; ore from\nthe dyke and cost of treating, make\nthe operation of the properties upon\nwhich the minerals exist amazingly\nprofitable.\nThe direction of the dyke has not\nyet been fully established, but it\nwas reported that It had been traced\nacross the Kootenay River below\nEagle Creek and that on the other\nhand it extends to the soutli of Nelson In the direction of the Venus\nmine. .Yesterday all assayers in the\ncity' were hard at work testing many\nhundreds of samples, In some of\nwhich the, metals of the platinum\ngroup were plainly visible to the\nnaked eye.\nYOU ARE SURE OP\nEngine Reliability\nIF YOU RUN A\nFairbanks - Morse Marine Engine\nOVER 125,000 IN USE THROUGHOUT THE WORLD\nTWO\nCYCLE\nFOUR\nCYCLE\nHEAVY\nDUTY\nMEDIUM\nDUTY\nRunabout\nType\nMOST COMPLETE LINE OP GASOLINE ENGINES IN\nTHE WORLD\nWrite for Catalog P10\nThe Canadian Fairbanks Co., Ltd.\n101-107 WATER STREET - - - VANCOUVER, B. C.\nLocal Agent\u00E2\u0080\u0094F. M. DAVIS - ... PRINCE RUPERT\nTHE CONTINENTAL TRUST COMPANY, LIMITED\nAuthorized Capital S500,000\nOfficers:\nWILLIAM T. KERGIN, M. D., Pres. DAVID H. HAYS, First Vice-Pres.\nM. J. HOBIN, 2nd Vice-Pres. & Mgr. JAY KUGLER, Secretary-Treasurer\nC. B. PETERSON, Ass't Manager\nExecutor and Administrator Receiver or Assignee\nFiscal Agents Trustees\nReal Estate and Insurance\nRegistrar and Transfer Agent 1'a,m Lamls a\"d Mines\nAgent for Cnre of Real Estate Escrow Agents\nTrustee Under Mortgages and Deeds of Trust Collections\nSAVINGS DEPARTMENT\n4 per cent on Deposits SAFE DEPOSIT VAULT AND BOXES\nWe will he pleased to answer any Inquiries regarding in vestments in\nPrince Rupert and Northern British Colombia.\nTHE CONTINENTAL TRUST COMPANY, LIMITED\nSECOND AVENUE PRINCE RUPERT, B. C.\nRev. R. W. Lee, Methodist missionary at Kispiox, was in the city\non his way south. He left for Vancouver this morning,\nCharles Camsell, Dominion govern-\nment niineralogical and geological\nsurveyor, arrived a few days ago in\nMerritt from Tulameen and Princeton. Mr, Camsell has become famous reecntly as the discoverer of\ndiamonds in the Tulameen, about\nwhich so much has been written in\nAmerican papers, and which has\ncaused widespread discussion in the\nOld World and throughout the Empire. In conversation, whi'e at Merritt, Mr. Camsell stated that he and\nhis party had been working in the\nTulameen for about three weeks, endeavoring to extract specimen diamonds from the rocks.\n\"In this I cannot say we were very\nsuccessful,\" said Mr. Camsell, \"inasmuch as the river was very high\nand we were unable to go down so\nfar as we did last year. We secured\na few fair samples, however, and I\nhave sent them on to Vancouver.\"\n\"Are they in payable quantities in\nthe Tulameen?\" he was asked.\n\"Well,\" he replied, \"I cannot say\nthat I think they are. There is undoubtedly a large and valuable deposit there, but we have found that\nthe chromite, In which the diamonds\noccur, being so hard, and not having disintegrated, or rotted and softened, as is the case of diamond pipes\nin the Klmberley fields, tends to\npowder up as soop as the pressure\nof the surrounding rock is removed.\nThe shock Invo'ved in breaking up\nthe rock around the chromite also\nshatters the diamonds; so that we\nfound that about all we were able\nto get was In the form of ine dust,\nand valueless. We did, however, manage to get a few well preserved samples, which we have sent away.\"\n\"Then,\" he wns asked, \"you think\nthat the work Involved In getting out\nthe diamonds would make It costly\nto operate on a paying basis?\"\n\"1 think so,\" he said.\nMr. Camsell will now go Into\nSteamboat to make an investigation\nfor the Dominion government. He\nhas sent his party into the mountains\nwith pack trains by way of Princeton. They would have gone In\nearlied, even last fall, had 'not the\nsnowfall In that section been too\nheavy for it to be possible to make\nany accurate survey of the mineral\ndeposits of the district.\n o\t\nBright Future\n\"Vancouver is destined to be to\nCanada what San Francisco is to the\nUnited States, and Prince Rupert\nwill be the Canadian Seattle.\" This\nIs the prophecy made by President\n.1. C. Si'Iitiriiian of Cornell University.\nI Where Togo Trained I\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2**\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2***\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2****\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\nTogo's nava.1 training was begun\nin England, where, as a young man,\nhe attended the naval > college in\nGreenwich. He also inherited his\ntaste for the sea, as he came of the\nSatsuma c'an, a tribe noted for its\ngreat sea warriors, says the New\nYork Evening Post. Indeed, prior\nto the time of the Chino-Japanese\nwar, the Japanese fleet was manner\n.almost wholly by the Satsuma clan,\njust as the army was drawn from\nthe Choshit clan. Nowadays, neither\nnavy nor army is entirely given over\nto these, the two most powerful of\nthe clans of Japan, but many men\nfronr' all over the empire are to be\nfound hi both services. When Togo\nentered the navy, however, its whole\npersonnel was Satsuma.\nReturning to Japan, he was employed in various capacities. In 1894,\nwhen war borke out between China\nand Japan, he was in command of\nthe Naniwa, a cruiser of 3,650 tons,\none of the vessels composing what\nwas then known as the first flying\nsquadron of the Japanese navy. During the war he greatly distinguished\nhimself, and earned the reputation\nof being a first class fighting man.\nIt was in connection with the episode of the sinking of the Wow-\nshing that his name first came into\nworld wide prominence. At the time\nsome adverse criticism of his action\non that occasion were heard, but\nthese died away on a fuller knowledge of the circumstances. The story\nreveals something of the character\nof the man, so it is worth telling.\nThe Kowshing, a transport vessel\nflying the Britisii flag, with a Britisii\ncaptain and crew, and carrying some\n1,100 Chinese soldiers for Asan, was\nmet by Togo in the Naniwa, who signalled to her, by firing two blank\ncartridges, to stop, which she did.\nThereafter a Japanese lieutenant\nwent on board, the Kowshing with\na peremptory order from Togo that\nthe transport must proceed no farther\ntoward her destination, but at once\naccompany ihe NaniVa to the main\nJapanese fleet. Captain Galsworthy\nof the Kowshing was willing to obey\nthese orders, but not so minded were\nthe officers of the Chinese force on\nthe vessel; they inunediatly raised\na great clamor, and threatened Galsworthy.\nSeeing what was occuring Togo\nsent a boat to bring off Captain Galsworthy and his crew, but meanwhile\nthe disturbance and confusion on the\nnowshing had increased and the Chinese provented them from leaving\nhi*. Some time thn passed, and at\nlength Togo signalled Galsworthy to\ntake one of his own boats and come\nover to Hi .Naniwa, but the British\ncaptain was not allowd by the Chinese to do so. For four hours Togo\nstood off and on, trying to save him\nand his ship, but, finding there was\nno chance of this, he at last ordered\nthe red flag, which announced that\nhe was about to fire, to be hoisted.\nA few moments later a well directed\nshot from the Naniwa struck the'\nengine room and penetrated the hull\nof the Kowshing, which soon afterwards filled and sank. As Galsworthy and his men leaped Into the\nsea, they were fired ou by the Chinese. Togo at once sent out boats,\nand rescued as many as he could.\nIn this way Togo began the Chino-\nJapanese war. His countrymen\nnever forgot the part he played In\nthis episode. Incidentally, he was\nsurprised to find that the English\ncaptain, Galsworthy, bad been an \"hi\nclassmate of his years before. In\nthe Greenwich Naval College.\nCANADA'S BEST MARKET\nL. Borden Condemns Reciprocity\nAgreement from Standpoint\nof Economics\nThe Financial News of London\npublishes an Interview which its special representative had a few days\nago at Ottawa with R. L. Borden,\nin the course of which the leader\nc-f the Opposition states:\n\"My views-upon the threatened\nreciprocity .agreement have been expressed many times in parliament\nand upon the public platform. That\nagreement completely reverses the\npolicy of the past forty years and\nstrongly tends to destroy the whole\nmeaning of our confederation and\nto disintegrate its fabric. Its avowed\nobject is to withdraw Canada from\nany closer trade connections with the\nEmpire. Even from the purely economic standpoint its results must in\nthe long run be of disadvantage to\nour people, whose best markets are\nin the Motherland and whose keenest competitors are the producers of\nthe United States.\"\nThe Journal (twice a week),\n$2.00 a year.\nonly\nrTe-RpM\nDouble Weekly Service\nS.S. PRINCE RUPERT & S.S. PRINCE GEORGE\nSail for Vancouver, Victoria and Seattle\nMondays and Fridays at 8 a.m.\nKen'STEWART Thursdays anel Sundays 8 a.m.\nSpecial reduced fee re Sunday's boal $9.50\nreturn, including meals anel berths.\nS.S.PRINCE ALBERT for Port Simpson, Naas River, Masset and\nNaden Harbor, Wednesdays, 1 P.M., and for Queen Charlotte\nIsland points, Saturdays, 1 P.M.\nRAILWAY SERVICE TO COPPER RIVER, mixed trains from\nPrince Rupert Wednesdays and Saturdays, 1 P.M.; returning Thursdays and Sundays, 5:20 P.M.\nTHE GRAND TRUNK RAILWAY SYSTEM, connecting with\ntrains from the Pacific Coast, operates a frequent and convenient\nservice of luxurious trains over its DOUBLE TRACK route between\nChicago, Toronto, Montreal, Quebec, Halifax, Portland, Boston,\nNew York ami Philadelphia. ,\nAtlantic Steamship bookings arranged via all lines\nFull information and tickets obtained from the office of\nA. E. McMASTER\nFreight and Pasenger Agent, G. T. P. Wharf.\n** ** ***************** ****\u00E2\u0080\u00A2'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\n! storaceI\n* Household Goods and Baggage \u00E2\u0080\u00A2:\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nX given careful attention. \u00E2\u0080\u009E>\nX Forwarding, Distributing and *\n* Shipping Agents *\u00C2\u00A3\nI TRANSFERERS J\n* Prince Rupert Warehousing .;.\n* and Forwarding Co. \u00C2\u00A3\n* First Ave., near McBride St. *\nDOUGLAS SUTHERLAND, *\nManager. %\nP. O. Box 007 Phone 262 \u00C2\u00A3\n> * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *!\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 **4 ** *\nTIDES AT PRINCE RUPERT, AUGUST, 1911\nExcursions!\nLet us tell you all about the cheap\nROUND TRIP EXCURSIONS\nto all Towns and Cities in Eastern\nCanada and United States\nVia\nThe Great Northern\nChoice of Return Route\nTickets to the Old Country by all\nLines. Take any Steamer from\nPrince Rupert.\nROGERS STEAMSHIP AGENCY\nPhone 110 Second Ave\nPrince Rupert, B.C.\nHIGH WATER\nLOW WATER\nDATE AND DAY\nTime! Ht. Time Ht Time; Ht Tiniej Ht\n3\n4\n6\n7\n8\n9\n10\n11\n12\n13\n14\n15\n16\n17\n18\n19\n20\n21\n22\n23\n24\n25\n26\n27\n28\n29\n30\n31\nTuesday ... .1 6:13 16.5 18:38 1S.0\nWednesday . . .1 7:26 16.2 19:38 17.4\nThursday . . . . 8:44 14.6 20:30 17.1\nFriday . .\nSaturday .\nSunday . .\ni.Monday .\nTuesday .\nI Wednesday\nThursday .\nFriday . .\nSaturday .\nSunday\n.10:04 14.6 21:33jl\n11:12 16.0 22:32 17.7\n|l2:00 16.0 23:21 18.3\n| ..,'12:89 16.8\n| 0:01[19.l;13:14 17.5\nI 0:39119.7|13:45!18.0\n| 1:15 20.2 14:18 18.61\nI 1:62 20.5 14:40 18.9\ni 2:2*9 20.6 16:08 19.2\nI 3:07|20.2|l5:88|19.4|\ne.ionday | 3:45119.7 16:11119.\nTuesday\nWednesday . . . .| 5\nThursday . . . .6\nFriday I I\nSaturday . . . .19\nSunday 110\nMonday |11\nTuesday . . . .\nWe&nesday . . . . 0\nThursday ... | 1\nFriday . . . - . . j 1\nSaturday . . . .2\niStinday 13\n'Monday I 4\nTuesday . . . .14\nWednesday\nThursday\n18.7 16:48)19.5\n13117.6 17:34 19.3,1\n14 16.3 18:82!18.9||\n46 15.6 19:46 18.8\n18-16.C 21:04 19.2\n35 16.6 22:18 20.0N\n4017.J 23:21 21.1\n...... 12:30 19.2\n16122.0 13:12 20.3\n06122.5 13:61 21.0\n5H22.5 14:29 21.2\n39121.9 U:06 21.2\n22 21.0 15:43 20.7\n0o|l-j.7 16:20 20.0\n49li8.2|16:68 19.2\n5:37116.617:38 18.2\n6:3515.2 18:26 17.3\n0:11\nl:04j\n2:27|\n3:40\n4:44\n5:34\n6:12'\n6:46\n/:18:\n7:49\nS:19\n8:49\n9:20'\n9:551\n10:34\n11:17\n0:14;\n1:28\ni:52\n4:06;\n5:08\n6:02\n6:50\n7:33;\n8:14\n8:52,\n9:28\n10:03\n10:40\n11:201\n0:24\n6.S 12:13\n; 7.5\n7.3113:08\nI 9.1\n7.414:06110.3\n7.015:2010.7\n6.3 16:2810.6\n5.4 17:22\n10.1\n4.618:04\n9.3\n3.8 18:41\n8.5\n3.3 19:16\n7.6\n2.9 19:.\"ed\n0.8\n2.8120:25\n6.1\n2.9 21:01\n5.6\n3.3121:40\n5.3\n4.1122:25\n6.2\n5.1 23:16\n6.6\n6.4;\t\n5.8 12:11\n7.7\n5.9 13:20\n8.9\n5.4 14:40\n9.3 '\n4.216:00\n8.8\n2.917:12\n7.6\n1.718:09\n6.3\n0.9 18:68\n5.1\n0.719:45\n4.2\n1.1 20:30\n3.7\n2.0 21:14\n.'}. e\n3.3'21:57\n4.1\n4.9 22:41\n4.9\n6.6 23:28\n5.9\nS.4!\t\n6.9 12:06\n9.9\nCANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY CO.\nB. C. Const S. S. Service\n#\nFamous\nPrincess\nLine\n^^\nThe Time used is Paciric Standard, for Ihe 120th Meridian west. It Is\ncounted 0 to 24 hours, from midnight to midnight.\nThe Height is In feet and tenths of a loot, above the Low Water datum\nadopted for the Chart. The Hafbor Datum, as established by the G. T. P.\nRailway, Is one foot lower.\nPrincess Beatrice\nWednesday, Aug 9, 9 a. m.\nSOUTHBOUND FOR\nVancouver, Victoria,\nAND\nSeattle\nJ. G. McNAB,\nGeneral Agent.\n*****************************************************\nGROUND\n* *\n* *\n* \u00E2\u0080\u00A2:\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nI Floor Space For Rent t\n* *\n* *\nj 1:1 the i\nI HARTBUILDING j\nCorner of Second Avenue and Sixth Street\nThe Best Business Corner in f\nPrince Rupert\nJermiah H. Kugler, Ltd. |\nFree Employment\nOffice\nFor all kinds of help. Cooks, waiters, dishwashers, hotel porters, all\nkinds of laborers or mechanics, call\nup 178 or call at the\nFREE EMPLOYMENT OFFICE\nGRAND HOTEL\nHeadquarters for Cooks and Waiters\nROGERS & BLACK\nWholesale Dealers In\nBUILDING MATERIAL, CEMENT,\nLIME, HAIR-FIBRE PLASTER\nCOKE, BLACKSMITH COAL,\nCOMMON BRICK, PRESSED BRICK\nSHINGLES AND LATH\nNEW WELLINGTON COAL\nAll orders promptly filled\u00E2\u0080\u0094see us\nfor prires.\nPHONE 110 PHONE 110\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0* * **** * * * * * * *.;\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 *********\u00E2\u0080\u00A2.\nc\n\\nF\"r Neat Job Printing\nnt'v thi' Jtturntii Man\nTel. 138\ny\nJ PRINCE RUPERT JOURNAL\nFriday, August 11, 1911.\nm\nI\nAUGUST : FURNITURE : SALE\nIf You have not visited our store it will PAY YOU TO DO SO NOW. Since lowering to street grade, we have our immense\nstock in shape for your inspection and convincing SALE PRICES in all grades of FURNISHINGS. Have you stopped to consider\nthe Savings of $ $ $ on the House Furnishing you require?\nFOR CASH 20 and 25 per cent. Discount pQR CASH\nMusic and Parlor Cabinets\nDINING TABLES, BUFFETS,\nCHINA CABINETS, CH1FF0N'-\nNIERS, LARGE EASY CHAIRS,\nLeather Covered; PARLOR TABLES\nand COUCHES\nIron Beds\nRegular Value of IRON BEDS,\n$5.00. Sale Price, any size ,,#8.50\nThis same reduction given to all\nIron Beds in pur large assortment.\n20 Different Designs BRASS EXTENSION RODS, at Cut in Two\nPrices.\nDRAPERIES\nTen Thousand Yards \u00E2\u0080\u0094 MADRAS,\nMUSLINS, CRETONNES, SATEENS,\nNETTINGS for your window treatment to be offered at this Daring\n35 % Discount.\nDressers and Stands\nDRESSERS and STANDS, Surfaced\nOak. Rregular Value, $18.50. Special Sale Price $14.50\n15 other different designs to receive this reduction.\nDRESSERS, So'id, Quarter-Cut\nOak, Golden Mahogany and Early,\nEnglish receive our Special 20% Re-\ndne tion.\nGO-CART SPECIAL\nRegular $13.50 and $12.50 Collapse-\nable GO-CART. Sale Price . . $8.50\nOFFICE DESKS\nA Full Line of OFFICE DESKS\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nRoll Tops, Flat Tops and Type Writing Desks.\nComplete House Furnisher\nTHIRD AVENUE\nGEO. D. TITE\nComplete House Furnisher\nTHIRD AVENUE\nLIGHT ON CIPHER\nBiblical Antiquities are Unearthed as a\nResult of Recent Finding in\nJerusalem.\nHiding Place of Treasures Is Referred to in the Discovery\n.Made by Syndicate\nFurther light has been shed on\nthe secret cipher that is supposed\nto have led the English syndicate,\nunder Captain Parker, to begin its\nexcavations underneath the MosQue\nof Omar at Jerusalem, a labor that\nresulted recently in the unearthing\nof valuable Biblical antiquities. The\ndetails given below are believed to\nbe authentic.\nDr, Walter II. Juvellus of llcls-\nlngfors, Finland, in the course of his\nBiblical studies, found traces of what\nhe believed to be a very complicated\ncipher which was In part used in\nthe Hebrew texts. He then turned\nhis attention to the Talmud and\nfound there, in the Book of Mischna,\nan Indication that, hidden in the\nBook of Ezekiel and in certain of\neMoses' Books were valuable sacred\nsecrets which could be declared to\nno one. Jn his continued research\nhe found In the Book of Ezeklel, in\ncipher, :i description of a secret hiding place in Jerusalem. In order to\ncheck this Infornu tlon, Dr. Juvellus\nthen turned bis atti tlon tee the\nlieeok of Moses, as a consequence of\nthe him in tbe Talmud that these\nbooks also contained valuable in-\nfeeriiialiien in the same cipher, and\nbearing mi the location of tin- hiding\nplace, in the Hook of Deuteronomy\nthe doctor found further descriptions\ne.:' Hie hiding place, and still further\nproof is alleged to have been found\nin i lie fragment known as the Book\noi Jesu ben Syrak.\nThe information conveyed in the\ncipher was:\n1. That there was a secret hiding\nplace in the rayon of Mount Orphel,\ncertainly containing the Tables of\nHie Law, the Temple Archives and\nihe Temple Treasures.\n2. That this biding place was con-\nnected with the blood canal used for\nthe carrying off of the blood of the\nsacrificed offerings In the Temple.\n3. That this hiding place was In\nconnection also with David's City.\nIt is not stated in the cipher that\nthe Blood Canal and David's City\nwere in direct communication,\nthough this is probable.\n4. That David's City was on Mt.\nOrphel.\n5. That the immediate entrance to\nthe treasure chamber was through a\ncleft deep down in the rock, which\nwas filled up at the time of the\nhiding of the treasures, and must\nconsequently first be cleared out by\nany explorers.\n6. That the Blood Canal stood in\nconnection with the Temple water\nsystem.\n7. That there were three approaches to the water system, and\ntlience to the Blood Canal. One of\nthese was through the Temple Itself,\nnow the Mosque of Omar, and another near to the Virgin's Well (discovered by Sir Charles Warren). The\nthird approach was at a considerable\ndistance and in these days unavailable.\nThat the Blood Canal was of considerable size may be gathered from\nthe fact that at the consecration of\nthe Temple twenty-two thousand\noxen and eighteen hundred sheep\nwere slaughtered as sacrifices by\nKing Solomon.\nSo much for the origin and contents of the cipher.\nThat the effort to discover the hiding place was worth making Dr. Javelins declared to be certain. Any exact description of the supposed con-\ntents e>f the secret chamber would\nbe Impossible, but it was understood\nthat the treasure alone to be found\nlliere would be worth several millions of pounds. Jesu ben Syralt's\nbook slates very dfintely that the\ncontents of the hiding place certainly\nInclude the Table of the Laws, hidden\nthere until the coining of Ihe Messiah. In addition, it is practically\ncertain, according to the cipher, that\nIhe secret place contains treasures of\nalmost incalculable worth, as well\nas manuscripts and archives of the\nvery highest scientific value. Included in Ihe cipher is a curse, \"sixty\nand sixty fold,\" on any unauthorized\npersons who may attempt to disclose\nthe secret chamber.\nIn August, 1909, the first excavations were begun in the greatest\nsecrecy and under various subterfuges as to the real object of the\nexpedition. The work has been continued since, but with certain necessary interruptions.\nDespatches received from Jersu-\nlem last May set forth that the excavators had found and carried away\ncertain treasures hidden from the\nRomans when they sacked Jerusalem\nin A.D. 70, including Solomon's\ncrown, sword and ring, and that with\nthis plunder they were on a yacht\nheaded for England.\nCaptain Parker said later in an\ninterview that all the antiquities discovered by the Britisii syndicate had\nbeen left in the hands of the Turkish government. Just what treasures\nthe explorers discovered has not yet\nbeen made known.\n\"I wonder if Mabel takes anything\nfor her lovely complexion.\"\n\"No. 1 believe she gives something for it.\"\nSkeena Land District \u00E2\u0080\u0094 District of\nQueen Charlotte Islands\nTAKE NOTICE that W. G. McMorris ol' the City of Vancouver in\nHie Province of Britisii Columbia,\noccupation, bro&er, intends to apply\nfor permission to purchase the following described lands:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at a post planted on an. island\nin Skidegate Inlet about 500 yards\neast from the mouth of Slate Chuck\nCreek, separated from the mainland\nof Graham Island at high tide;\nthence south three chains; thence\neast ten chains; thence north tliree\nchSlns; thence west ten chains to\npoint of commencement, containing\ntwo acres, more or less.\nVV, G. Mi'.MOIlRIS,\nHaled July 29, 191. Locater.\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCassis t*\nTAKE NOTICE tht.t Charles J.\nGillingham, of Prince Rupert, B. C,\noccupation contractor, intends to\napply to the Minister of Lands for a\nlicense to prospect for Coal and\nPetroleum over 640 acres of land:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCommencing at a post planted about\n8 miles N. E. of the mouth of the\nWhite River and the junction of the\nNaas, marked Chas. J. Gillingham's\nS. E. Corner; thence 80 chains\nNorth; thence 80 chains West;\nthence 80 chains South; thence SO\nchains East to point of commencement and containing 640 acres more\nor less.\nCHARLES J. GILLINGHAM.\nCharles M. Huff, Agent.\nDated March 6th, 1911. 4-18\nSkeena Land District.\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nQueen Charlotte Islands.\nTAKE NOTICE that Merton A.\nMerrill, of Masset, B. C\u00E2\u0080\u009E occupation\nprospector, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at a\npost planted at the S. W. corner of\nT. L. 40787; tlience north 80 chains;\nthence west SO chains; thence south\nSO chains, more or less, to the shore\nof Masset Inlet; thence easterly along\nthe shore back to the place of commencement, containing 640 acres,\nmore or less.\nMERTON A. MERRILL.\nDated Nov. 25, 1910.\nPrince Rupert Private\nAgency\nDetective\nN. McDonald, Manager\nAll kinds of legitimate detective work\nhandled for companies and Individuals. Business strictly confidential.\nP. O. Box 803 \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Phone 210\nTHE CANADIAN BANK\nOF COMMERCE\nSIR EDMUND WALKER, C.V.O., LL.D., D.C.L., President\nALEXANDER LAIRD. General Manager\nCAPITAL, - $10,000,000 REST, - $7,000,000\nDRAFTS ON FOREIGN COUNTRIES\n' Every branch of The Canadian Bank of Commerce is equipped to issue draft* on\nthe principal cities in the following' countries without delay :\nAfrica Crete\nArabia Cuba\nArgentine Republic Denmark\nAustralia Egypt\nAustria-Hungary Faroe Islandi\nBelgium Finland\nBrazil Formosa\nBulgaria France\nCeylon Fr'ch Cochin Chi\nChili Germany\nChina Great Britain\nit\n. {;\nina \u00C2\u00AB\nGreece\nHolland\nIceland\nIndia\nIreland\nItaly\n'apan\nava\nelalta\nManchuria\nMexico\nNew Zealand\nNorway\nPanama\nPersia\nPeru\nSiberia\nSoudan\nSouth Africa\nSpain\nStraits Settlement*\nPhilippine lalanda Sweden\nPortugal Switzerland\nK.teeeeeeinea Turkey\nRussia United Statu\nServia Uruguay\nSiam West Indies, etc.\nThe amount of these drafts is stated in the money of the country where they are payable j that is they are drawn in sterling-, francs, marks, lire, kronen, florins, yen,\ntacls, roubles, etc., as the case may be. This ensures that the payee abroad will\nreceive the actual amount intended. 233\nJ. M. CHRISTIE, Manager, Prince Itupert Branch\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nQueen Charlotte Islands.\nTAKE NOTICE that Allan Orr, of\nMassett, B. C, occupation carpenter,\nintends to apply for permission to\npurchase the following described\nlands:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at a post plant-\ned on the shore of Masset Inlet two\nmiles west of the S. W. coruer of T.\nL. 40787; thence north 80 chains;\nthence east 80 chains; thence south\n80 chains, more or less, to the shore\nof Masset Inlet; thence westerly\nalong the shore back to the place of\ncommencement, containing 640 acres,\nmore or less.\nALLAN ORR.\nM. A. Merrill, Agent.\nDated Nov. 25, 1910.\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCoast\u00E2\u0080\u0094Range V.\nTAKE NOTICE that Freadrick\nMadden, of Seattle, Wash., occupation laborer, intends to apply for\npermission to purchase the follpwlng\ndescribed land:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at a\npost planted about two hundred feet\neast of mile 77 on the south side of\nG. T. P. Right-of-way; thence west\n40 chains following the said Right-\nof-way; thence south to bank of\nSkeena River; thence east following\nthe sinuosities of said river until\ndue south of said post; thence north\nto point of commencement, containing 130 acres more or less.\nFREADRICK MADDEN.\nThos. L. Fay, Agent.\nDated April 27, 1911.\n5-16\nSkeent Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nQueen Charlotte Islands.\nTAKE NOTICE that Clara Orr, of\nMasset, B C., occupation spinster,\nIntends to apply for permission to\npurchase the following described\nlands;.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at a post planted about 40 chains south and 80\nchains east of the N. E. corner of\nLot 35; thence south 80 chains;\nthence west 80 chains; thence north\n80 chains; thence east 80 chains, containing 640 acres.\nCLARA ORR.'\nM. A. Merrill, Agent.\nDated Nov. 25, 1910.\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nQueen Charlotte Islands.\nTAKE NOTICE that Robert Cross,\nof Masset, B. C, occupation farmer,\nIntends to apply for permission to\npurchase the following described\nlands*\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at a post planted on the east shore of Tsu Skundale\nLake; thence east 80 chains; thence\nnorth 80 chains, to or near to the\nS. E. corner of Lot 35; thence west\n40 chains, more or less; thence\nsoutli 40 chains, more or less; thence\nwest 40 chains more or less, following the southern boundaries of Lot\n35; thence soutli to the shore; thence\nsoutherly along the shore back to the\nplace of commencement, containing\n500 acres, more or less.\nROBERT CROSS.\nM. A. Merrill, Agent.\nDated Nov. 28, 1910.\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nTAKE NOTICE that Charles J.\nGillingham, of Prince Rupert, B. C,\noccupation contractor, Intends to\napply to the Minister of Lands for\na license to prospect for Coal and\nPetroleum over 640 acres of land:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCommencing at a post planted about\n8 miles N. E. of the mouth of White\nRiver and the junction of the Naaa\nRiver, marked Chas. J. Gillingham's\nS. E. Corner; thence 80 ehains\nNorth; thence 80 chains West;\ntlience 80 chains South; thence 89\nchains East to point of commencement and containing 640 acres more\nor less.\nCHARLES J. GILLINGHAM.\nCharles M. Huff, Agent.\nDated March 6th, 1911. 4-18\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCassiar.\nTAKE NOTICE that Charles J.\nUillingham, of Prince Rupert, B. C,\noccupation contractor, Intends to\napply to the Minister of Lands for\na license to prospect for Coal and\nPetroleum over 640 acres of land: \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCommencing at a post planted about\n8 miles N. E. of tin mouth of White\nRiver and the junction of the Naas\nRiver, marked Chas. J. Gillingham's\nS. E. Corner; thence 80 chains\nNorth; thence 80 chains West;\ntlience 80 chains South; thence 80\nchains East io point of commencement and containing 640 acres mo: 3\nor less\nCHARLES J. GILLINGHAM.\nCharles M. Huff, Agent.\nDated March 6th, 1911. 4-18\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCassiar.\nTAKE NOTICE that Charles J.\nGilllngham, of Prince Rupert, B. C.,\noccupation contractor, Intends to\napply to the Minister of Lands for a\nlicenso to prospect for Coal and\nPetroleum over 640 acres of land: \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCommencing at a post planted about\n8 miles N. E. of the mouth of the\nWhite River aud the junction of the\nNaas, marked Chas. J. Gillingham's\nS. E. Corner; thence 80 chains\nNorth; thence 80 chains West;\nthence 80 chains South; thence SO\nchains East to point of commencement and containing 640 acres more\nor leBSi\nCHARLES J. GILLINGHAM.\nCharles M. Huff, Agent.\nDated March 6th, 1911. 4-18\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nQueen Charlotte Islands.\nTAKE NOTICE that Carl Nelson,\nof Chicago, 111., U. S. A., occupation\ndraughtsman, Intends to apply for\npermission to purchase the following\ndescribed lands:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at a\npost planted about 80 chains east\nand 120 chains north of N. E. corner of Lot 35; thence south 80\nchains; thence east 80 chains;\nthence north 80 chains; thence west\n80 chains, containing 640 acres.\nCARL NELSON.\nM. A. Merrill, Agent.\nDated, Nov. 26, 1910. 1\nFriday, August 11, 1911.\nPRINCE RUPERT JOURNAL\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2A**********************************\n* *\nI Premier McBride's Views |\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2***-*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2**\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*****\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nPremier McBride was given a very\nhearty reception on his arrival home\nfrom the coronation. The prime minister's party had been joined at Van\ncouver by Mrs. McBride, his mother,\nand hy Hon. Mr. Ross. At the Victoria dock the leader was met and\nwelcomed as he crossed the gangplank by lion. Dr. young, who has\nbeen acting head or the government\nduring the chieftain's absence; Hon.\nMr. Ellison, Leonard Tail, president\nof the local Conservative Association; Ernest McGaffey of the Vancouver Island Development League,\nMrs. Hasell I who, on behalf of the\nAlexandra Club, presented Mrs. lie-\nBride with a beautiful bouquet of\ntypical Victoria flowers) and a number of others.\nA Graceful Speech\nAt the Belleville street entrance\nto the docks the crowd had massed\nsolidly and Hon. Mr. McBride's appearance was the signal for round\nafter round of cheers given with a\nright good will. The premier was\nescorted to an open carriage and,\npreceded by a mounted police escort\nand the pipers' band, and driven to\nthe doors of llie Parliament Building, wliere an improvised platform\nhad been arranged, and from this\nMr. Tait voiced Victoria's welcome.\nThe premier responded in an address which was characteristically\ndirect and informal and In which he\nexpressed his appreciation, both for\nMrs. McBride and himself. He\nsketched deftly the outstanding features of the great ceremonial from\nwhich he had just returned, made\ndue acknowledgment of his recognition of the excellent work his colleagues In the cabinet have been\naccomplishing in his absence, referred to the splendid position\nwhich British Columbia at present\nholds In the heart of the Empire, and\nassured his fellow-Victorians that he\nhad come back to I hem with enhanced pride ill this splendid province and a stronger Briton and British Columbian than ever.\nGives His Views\n\"We had a most enjoyable and\nprofitable trip,\" said Mr. McBride,\n\"and thanks to the kindness and\ncourtesy of our official hosts, we\ndid not pass a dull moment from the\ntime we landed until the date of our\ndeparture. The coronation was a\nmost magnificent spectacle, which\naroused to the highest pitch everyone's patriotism and loyalty and\nmade one feel proud of being one of\nhis gracious majesty's subjects.\"\nRegarding the rumor whicfi has\nbeen current for the past few days\nthat he would enter into federal politics, Mr. McBride said: \"I cannot\nsay at this moment what I shall do,\nfor in the first place I have not been\nadvised officially that my services\nare desired as a member of the federal parliament, but I will say that\nif such an offer should be made\nto me i should consider it very seriously before announcing my decision.\n\"It is true that I had a long conference with R. L. Borden while in\nOttawa, and whi'e I am not at liberty to divulge the nature of the\nsubjects on that occasion, 1 will say,\nhowever, that I have promised the\nleader of our party to do as usual\nmy share in behalf of my party during the campaign and shall most\nlikely address meetings in Britisii\nColumbia and Alberta.\nWhat IS. C. Will Do\n\"There is no doubt about what\nBritish Columbia will do in the coming election. Seven for the Conservatives and a solid front will be\nthe answer of the coast province to\nSir Wilfrid Laurier's appeal to the\ncountry in September. The feeling\nis very strong, not only against reciprocity, but against the entire policy\nof the Laurier government. From\nMr. Borden down, the feeling of confidence In the ultimate result of the\nelection is the same. One and all\nare going into the fight, which, I\nbelieve, will be one of the most bitter In the political history of Canada, with unlimited optimism as to\nthe final result. As the result of\nMr. Borden's trip to the prairie provinces the Liberals may experience a\nfew startling surprises in that territory when all the votes are in. The\nLiberals' majority will find deep Inroads even in Quebec, Sir Wilfrid's\nparticular stronghold, and the Conservatives and Nationalists, each\nparty in its own way, is gaining a\ngreater foothold everywhere. The\nvery fact that the Laurier government dissolved so unceremoniously\nand in such apparent haste, might\nserve as an indication of the Liberal party's unrest, and prospects\nwere never brighter for a Conservative victory than now.\n\"Regarding the reciprocity question, I am, if anything, more strongly than ever opposed to it. While\nBritain's leading financiers on the\nsubject, and I cannot recall one single man in favor of it. Speeches\nmade recently hy members of the\nUnited States Congress, and even by\nPresident Taft, shed a most peculiar\nlight upon this proposed treaty and\nthe very tenor of them would life\nthe subject out of realm of finance\ninto a sphere of politics that must\nultimately affect most vitally Canada's economic and social welfare.\n\"Canada has not yet reached the\nzenith of her wonderful possibilities,\nand we cannot afford to sell our\nbirthright for a mess or pottage.\nThis country, which has reached a\nmost marvelous state of development\nand progress, has attained its magnificence through the energy,ingenuity and sagacity of its citizens and\nit cannot afford to barter Its future\nhappiness and tbe welfare of coming\ngenerations upon the dictates of\nvain-glorious politicians. Canada's\ncitizens will never permit their\nstaunch loyalty to the Mother Country to be dimmed by the shadow of\nan alliance which arouses the suspicion of all loyal subjects of the\nBritisii Empire.\nCanada's Expansion\n\"There are billions, not millions,\nof British capital ready to pour into\nBritish Columbia, for never before\nin her history has this province stood\nso well in the eyes of British capital\nas now, and this is particularly due\nto our railroad policy, which offers\na most desirable assurance to prospective investors of the solidity of\nour present and future. Canadian\nrailway lines have ordered so far\n345,000 tons of steel rails; most of\nthese will be in Western Canada,\nand our trade for the first two\nmonths of the current year totalled\n$112,170,119, an increase of $7,000,-\n000 over the same period last year.\nAll these figures cannot help but\nhave a most favorable impression.\n\"Our timber is millions and millions of acres in extent, and in quality it is the very best that can bo\nhad any very natrally this part of\nour natural resources is particularly\ntempting to investors. But I feel\nthat we must exercise, the greatest\ncaution in the manner in which we\ngo about trying to Interest capital\nin that direction. I feel that we all\nregard our province as a sacred trust\nfor Canada and the Empire, and we\nwant our brethren and friends in\nGreat Britain who do business with\nus to have a legitimate return for\nevery dollar, and the same applies\nto the lands, the fisheries, the mines\nand other industries of Britisii Columbia. But anxious as we may be\nto see that our foreign Investors\nshould have a profit, I believe that\n1 am speaking for all patriotic and\nloyal Britisii Columbians when I say\nthat we would perfer that they\nshould not pui a dollar into British\nColumbia unless they do it with their\neyes open and unless it is sound business.\"\n o \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nTREAT? DIM NOT PLEASE\nJapanese Newspapers Comment Adversely on Changes in the Alnglo-\nJnpaiiesc Alliance\nAccording to advices, the revision\nof the alliance between England and\nJapan has stirred the Japanese papers into an angry mood. The Hochi\ndeclares at the outset that the. warning which it has repeatedly sounded\nthat there were prospects of a change\nIn the Anglo-Japanese alliance has\nat last assumed a definite form, a\nchange which may cause great alteration in the Japanes programme of\nnational defence and which may put\nthe country In a decided hut notbrll-\nliant Isolation.\nIn the next place, the Tokio paper\npronounces the opinion that the new\ndevelopment of affairs is something\nvery far removed from the existing\ntreaty of alliance. Great Britain,\nsays the Hochl.'has nothing to fear\nabout the Russian Invasion of India.\nAnd yet naval competition with Germany has driven our allies to join\nhands with the American nation. The\narbitration treaty is aimed at Germany in Europe and Japan in Asia,\nas the signatories to the treaty profess that the identity of interest and\ncircumstances between both of them\nmake It a thing of necessity.\nAs regards the theory that Japan\nmust hold steadfast to the Anglo-\nJapanese alliance at all costs, the\nHochi thinks the alliance will be discarded when the arbitration treaty\nis brought into being, because the\nlatter's real Intention is to isolate\nJapan, politically speaking, Irom the\nrest of the world. When, It is continued, the Russo-Japanese convention was made it was regarded by\nsome as somewhat neutralising the\nbenefits England derived out of the\nB\nTHE JOURNAL\n$2.00 a Year\n| Job Printing |\nIf you want your printing\nhandled expeditiously by\nthoroughly trained and ex\nperienced printers have it\ndone at the Journal Office.\nTHE JOURNAL\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094$2.00 a Year\t\nment is, in the paper's eyes, exactly\ncoincident with this view.\nIn conclusion, the Hochi says that\nthe proposed arbitration treaty shows\nJapan that she is to drink the bitter cup to the dregs and that self-\nreliance is of the first importance.\nAnd to be self-reliant the nation\nmust have a large navy.\nThe Mainichi declares as follows:\nNow an arbitration treaty is on the\npoint of signature, the Times- proposes the revision of the Angli-.Iap-\nanese alliance. Although nothing\ndpfinite is yet obtainable, Japan has\na perfect right to refuse to act in\naccordance with the treaty of alliance, if the proposed arbitration neutralises England in case a war between Japan and America. If the\nprotection Japan derives from the\nalliance in case of war Is to be taken\naway, what remains?\nYosobaro Takekoshl, one of the\nleading Selyukal members, writing\nIn the Nippon, says that there must\nbe many Japanese whose anticipation\nof the consequences of the Anglo-\nAmerican treaty has hit the mark\nwhen they read the views expressed\nby the Times. After saying that\nJapan has never truly looked up\nto England for assistance In case of\nwar with America, Mr. Takekoshl\nsays the new treaty between Great\nBritain and America will prove an\nagent to weaken the Anglo-Japanese\nalliance, and should be food for contemplation for the Japanese people.\nAlthough, says he, America has\nfailed in the attempt at the neutralization of Manchurian railways, she\nachieved a signal success in floating\nthe loan and stipulating the arbitration treaty. Indeed, she has admirably accomplished the isolation of\nJapan.\nROYAL VISIT TO INDIA\nArrangements in Connection Witli\nDelhi Durbar anil Programme\nut. Itoiiilmy\nin England I talked with many of alliance. The subsequent develop\nThe Journal (twice a week), only\n$2.00 a year.\nIt Is officially announced that the\nking and queen will reside on board\nship during their stay in Bombay\nand that their programme will be:\nFormal reception in Bombay and a\ndrive through the city on December\n2; luncheon at Government House\non December 3; visit to Blephanta\nCaves on December 4; and school-\nchildren's function on December 6,\non the night of their majestices' departure for Delhi.\nIt has been defintely settled that\nthere will be no elephant procession\nat the Delhi Durbar.\nThe prospectus has been Issued of\na point-to-point race meeting leu- at'\nfleers of the civil and military ser\nvices, which Is to be held at Delhi\nduring the Coronation Durbar. The\nking and queen will present the cups\nfor the events, of wbi.b there are\nfive on the card. Neither betting\nnor totallsator will be allowed on\nthe course, nor will lotteries be permitted.\nIntending visitors to the Durbar\nmay naturally have some anxiety as\nto the means of locomotion in the\nlarge area covered by the various\ncamps. People who can afford the\nluxury of motor cars will not trouble themselves In the matter, bul\nthere will be hundreds of others to\nwhom the expense of vehicles will\nbe a esrious consideration. The railways under construction will, however, provide a ready means ol\nmovement from point to point. To\nthe north will be the \"army camps\"\nstation In the middle of the Infantry\ndivisions; while west of the review\nground will be another station In\nthe cavalry camp. In the area allotted to the provincial camps soutli\neel' Azadpnr a third station will be\nprovided. The central station of all\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094known as the \"Kingsway\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094 will\nbe on the Alipore road, and its position has been admirably chosen.\nThe lines linking tlie points mentioned will be on the broad gauge,\nwhile a ssytem of circular light railways will give other connections.\nVisitors will find all these lines a\ngreat convenience and the prices\ncharged for tickets will be kept low.\nThe highest rate of charges for visitors to the Durbar is $40 per day,\nwith a minimum of twenty days' contract. The applications are already\nsufficiently numerous to fully justify\nthe fixing of tlie rate by Ihe Durbar\ncommittee, and more will probably\nbe received. Visitors who pay their\n$40 per day, will get full value for\ntheir money, the arrangements made\nfor them being complete In every\nway. They will be In buildings and\nnot under canvas, and In matter of\npersonal comfort they will beaa well\nof as the English officials who are\nthe guests of the government.\nWATER NOTICE.\nNOTICE Is hereby given that an\napplication will be made under Part\nV. of the \"Water Act, la09,\" to obtain a licence In the Queen Charlotte Islands Division of Skeena District.\n(a) The name, address and occupation of the applicant\u00E2\u0080\u0094Merton A.\nMerrill, Masset, Q. C. I., B. C,\nProspector.\n(If for mining purposes) Free\nMiner's Certificate No\t\n(b) The name of the lake,\nstream, or source (If unnamed, the\ndescription Is)\u00E2\u0080\u0094I-In-tsua Lake, Tsu-\nSkundale Lake and Ain River.\n(c) The point of diversion\u00E2\u0080\u0094At T\nnear the outlet of Tsu-Skundale\nLake Into Ain River.\n(d) The quantity of water applied for (In cubic f<;et per second)\n\u00E2\u0080\u00941,000.\n(e) The character of the proposed works\u00E2\u0080\u0094Power Plant, Dam,\nFlumes, etc\nIf) The premises on which the\nwater Is to be used (describe same)'\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094At or near the mouth of the Ain\nRiver.\n(g) The purposes for which the\nwater Is to be used\u00E2\u0080\u0094Generating\npower.\n(h) If for irrigation, describe\nthe land intended to be irrigated,\ngiving acreage\t\n(I) If the water Is to be used for\npower or mining purposes, describe\ntha place wliere the water is to be\nreturned to some natural channel,\nand the difference in altitude between point of diversion and point\nof return\u00E2\u0080\u0094At or near the mouth of\nthe Ain River, about 100 feet below\npoint of diversion.\n(j) Area of Crown land intended to be occupied by the proposed\nworks\u00E2\u0080\u009410 acres more or less.\n(k) This notice was posted on\nthe 28th day of November, 1910,\nand application will be made to the\nCommissioner on the 1st day of\nJune, 1911.\n(1) Give the names and addresses of any riparian proprietors or\nlicensees who or whose lands are\nlikely lo be affected by the proposed works, either above or below\nthe outlet\u00E2\u0080\u0094Don't know of any.\n(Signature)\nMERTON A. MERRILL,\n(P. O. Address) Masset, B. C.\nNOTE.\u00E2\u0080\u0094One cubic loot per second is equivalent lo 35.71 miner's\ninches.\nJ. L. PARKER\nMIXING KXfilXEFH\nPrince Rupert, B. C.\nOpen for Consultation and Mine\nExamination\nTemporary Address: \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nPrince Rupert Inn\nFREDERICK PETERS, K. C.\nBarrister, Solicitor and Notary Public\nOffice in\nEXCHANGE BLOCK\nWM. S. HAl,L, L. D. S. D. D. S.\n:-: DENTIST :-: __.<*(*\u00E2\u0096\u00A0*-!\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0''>.'(\u00C2\u00BB*\u00C2\u00BB. '*i-,.\nCrown and Bridge Work a specialty.\nAll dental operations skillfully\ntreated. Gas and local anaesthetics\nadministered for the painless extraction of teeth. Consultation free.\nOffices, Helgerson 3k., Prince Rupert\nNICKERSON-ROERIG COMPANY\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094o\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCUSTOMS AND MERCHANDISE\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094o\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nBrokers, Forwarding Agents,\nStorage, etc.\nJ. W. POTTER\nARCHITECT AND STRUCTURAL\nENGINEER\nRe-inforced Concrete a Specialty\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094o\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nLaw-Butler Building - Prince Rupert\nHAYXOR UROS.\nFUNERAL DIRECTORS\nand\nPROFESSIONAL EMBALMERS\nMR. W. B. CLAVTOX\nDENTIST\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094o\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nOffice In the Westenhaver Block,\nOver Orme's Drug Store.\nPrince Rupert\n LADYSMITH\t\nCOAL\nROCHESTER & MONROE, Phone 115\nCorner Eighth and Fraser Street*\nClinton Rooms\nNewly remodelled and furnished.\nBoard and lodging. Home cooking\na specialty. Mrs. Anderson, Prop.\nRooms, $3 Per Week\nNew Knox Hotel\nARTAUD & BESNER\nProprietors\nThe New Knox Hotel Is run on tha\nEuropean plan. FlrBt-clas service.\nAll the latest modern Improvements\nTHE BAR keeps only the best\nbrands of liquors and cigars.\nTHE CAFE Is open from 6.30 a.m.\nto 8 p.m. Excellent cuisine; first-\nclass service.\nHum el, $1 a May \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Beds, 50c and np\nFirst Avenu<* Prince Rupert\nHamblin's Bakery\nJust Re-opened\nSale counter in MERRYFIELD'S\nSTORE, Third Ave. and Fifth St.\nFamily trade catered to. Will supply restaurants and steamers.\nCakes and Confectioner; of nil\nkinds\nTHE WESTHOLME LUMBER CO.\nLIMITED\nWe handle all kinds of\nBuilding Supplies\nFirst Avenue Telephone 180 PRINCE RUPERT JOURNAL\nFriday, August 11, Mil.\nHIGHER EDUCATION\nAnglican Synod Approves of Move for\nAffiliation With Provincial\nUniversity.\nReport ol the Bishops on the Subject Is Endoirsed by\nDiocese\nThe Anglican Synod, at its meeting here this week, heartily endorsed\nthe proposal of the bishops of the\nprovince with respect to higher education. This provided that the\nChurch should provide for a theological college in affiliation with the\nprovincial university, to be built by\nthe government.\nAnother course of action endorsed\nby the synod was with respect to\nthe formation of an ecclesiastical\nprovince. It was resolved that in\nthe event of an ecclesiastical province being formed in British Columbia, this synod recommends that in\nthe constitution of the proposed provincial synod, while provision should\nbe made for two houses, the bishops\nconstituting the upper house, and\nthe clergy and laity the lower house,\nboth houses should as a rule sit together, though each house should\nvote separately, the exception to the\nrule being when the upper house\nintimates its wish to sit separately.\nIn this connection it was resolved\nalso to recommend that in case the\necclesiastical province were formed\nthe title of arrhibshop should not\nbe assumed until at least five bishoprics had been formed.\n o\t\nNEW OLD XEWS\nInteresting Story of Klondike Dis-\ncovei*}* Received by Paper\nAfte rLong Delay\nThe newest bit of old news probably that ever reached a newspaper\noffice was received by a Seattle\nnewspaper office last week. The\n\"news\" in question was received in\na letter sent to the paper from the\nfirst settlement on the Yukon River,\nearly in the spring of 1897, and\nreported in detail the discovery of\nthe Klondike gold fields. \u00C2\u00BB\nThe correspondent himself was a\nprospector in the expedition that\nfirst saw gold in the Yukon and Its\ntributaries, and entrusted the news\nletter to a river boatman who was\nbound down the river to the pre*\neat city of Nome,\nThe boatman was to deliver the\nletters to Hie steamship Northwestern, due to land at Nome Camp late\nIn the fall. The boatman never\nreached Nome, but was taken ill 400\nmiles from the mouth of the Yukon and died. Before becoming too\nill he cached his gold pouch, letters\nand other personal effects, all sealed\nin a two quart fruit jar in the earth\nor floor of a trapper's log cabin in\nwhich he died.\nLast spring prospectors stumbled\non to his log cabin, and seeing the\ntop of a fruit can sticking up out\nof the ground, dug it up and found\nthe letters, gold and valuables. The\nnews letters, yellow from their underground sleep of years, were forwarded by registered mail to the\nSeattle paper and reached there last\nweek.\nThe letters, had they reached Seattle when due, would have given the\npaper a chance to \"scoop\" its rivals.\nThe letters will be preserved. The\ncontents will go into a special edition planned by the paper for a future date.\nSPORTS\nCAN'T CLAIM TITLE\nBilly Papke, weighing 165 pounds,\nin the \"pink\" of condition and sign-\nin ghimself \"champion middleweight\nof the world,\" is out with a challenge to all contenders. Nothing\ncould be more ridiculous, according\nto Ad Wolgast.\n\"In the first place Papke isn't and\nnever again will be a real middleweight,\" said tht champion. \"He has\nnot taken care of himself any too\nwell, and can't even make 160 now\nwithout hurting himself. He is getting a little too old to reduce too\nmuch, and It hurts an old man to\ntake off fat.\n\"Papke, it seems to me, is really\na fighter without a class In which\nto fight. He can t go into the light-\nheavyweight division because he\nhasn't the strength, and he can't\nfight middlewelghts, if they Insist\non his making the legitimate weight.\n\"There is at least one man who\ncan beat him if he gets down to\nthe legitimate 158, and that man is\nFrank Klaus. Klaus is the best middleweight in the ring today by all\nodds. He can easily make the\nweight; in fact, he is always a little\nbelow the limit. Then, too, he has\nthe speed, something which Papke\ncan't boast of now that he has taken\non weight.\n\"Klaus and Papke met once in a\nsix round affair in Pittsburg. The\nfight was of the no-decision order,\nbut fro mthose at the ringside I\nheard later that Klaus really had a\nshade on the 'Illinois Thunderbolt'\nin clverness.\n\"What right Papke had to the\ntitle any more than the rest of them,\nI can't see. He claims that because\nhe has defeated contenders in America, England and Australia he is entitled to the honor, but he is silent\nwhen the defeat he suffered at the\nhands of Johnny Thompson is thrown\ninto nis face.\nWRESTLING CHAMPIONS\nGeorge Hackenschmidt, the Russian wrestler, who is matched to\nmeet Champion Frank Gotch in Chicago on Labor Day, has made elaborate preparations to keep up his\ntraining. In a letter to his manager,\nJack Curley, Hackenschmidt outlined his plans. He will sail from\nSouthampton for the United States\nAugust 9, and will bring with him\nten cases of a special mineral water\nobtained in France. In the Hackenschmidt party will be Dr. F. B.\nRoller, chief trainer; Johann Koch,\nGerman athlete; Masseur Coleman,\nand a German chef who will prepare\nall the food. At New. York the wrestler will pick up Tom Jenkins, who\nwill accompany him to Cnicago.\nCORINTHIAN PLAYERS\nIn view of the visit to the Coast\nof the Corinthian footbali team, the\nfollowing \"thumb-nail\" sketches\nof the touring cracks will be of Interest:\nG. G. Newman\u00E2\u0080\u0094Charter House\nand Oxford. A reliable goalkeeper,\nwho has played some great games\nfor his university, and the old Carthusians. Is the latest recruit for\nthe Corinthians, and, like his predecessors has a safe pair of hands.\nW. Timmis\u00E2\u0080\u0094Honorary secretary\nof the club. A vigorous worker,\nboth as an official and a player.\nCharter House and Oxford. Never\nbeen known to have an off day.\nR. L. Braddell \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Charter House\nand Oxford. A powerful back and\nsplendid kick, who despizes weight\nand size; can move fast and tackle\nwell. Another P. M. Walters of\nmemorable fame. Holder of an amateur international cap against\nFrance. He is a double Blue, having also played in the last two varsity cricket matches.\nF. N. Tuff\u00E2\u0080\u0094Malvern and Oxford.\nA good all-round man who can play\neither back or forward. He Is a\ndouble Blue at Oxford, and so plays\ncricket for Kent county.\nI. E. Snell\u00E2\u0080\u0094Charter House and\nOxford. One of the best men on\nthe team; occupies with distinction\nany position in the field, being more\nconspicuous, however, at full or\nhalfback, wliere his great height and\nheading powers are available. Was\na blue at Oxford and obtained his\nInternational cap against France. Is\na barrister of the Inner temple.\nR. G. Thompson\u00E2\u0080\u0094Malvern and\nCambridge. A fullback of considerable promise who has not yet realized the limits of his powers. Is\nfast, a powerful kick and stubborn.\nP. Sargeant\u00E2\u0080\u0094Cambridge. An old\npublic school boy, who never knows\nwhen he is done. He is a great\ntackier and an indefatigable halfback. He is the mainstay of the\nSurrey county football team.\nR. M. Weeks\u00E2\u0080\u0094Charter House and\nCambridge. One of the younger generation who, from being a forward\nat Charter House, developed into a\nhalfback and obtained his Blue for\nhis consistent play in this position.\nJust the man for a long tour,\nM. Morgan-Owen \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Shrewsbury\nand Oxford. A name to conjure\nwith. He is a Welsh international\nof worldwide-reputation. A brilliant and determined centre half who\ndisp'ays splendid headwork, and a\npattern half back to watch in making openings for and feeding his forwards. He is now a shcoolmaster at\nRepton. The captain of the team.\nL. A. Vidal\u00E2\u0080\u0094Malvern and Oxford.\nHe is a very useful half and can\nalso play forward. He is a player\nof the vigorous type and can more\nthan hold his own in the hottest\nscrum. A demon for work, and so\nsay his scholars at Radley College.\nJ. B. BIckersteth \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Malvern and\nOxford. Captain of the Oxford team\nwhich secured such a well deserved\nvictory over Cambridge this year.\nHas been educated for the church,\ngetting experience in Canadian mission work near Edmonton. He is a\npretty half back player.\nB. O. Corbett\u00E2\u0080\u0094Thame county\nschool and Oxford. In an international and one of the veterans of\nthe team but still retains his form.\nHe is seen to the best advantage\nat outside left, where his great pace\nand cleverness are of grat assistance to his side.\" He is head schoolmaster.\nA. L. Corbett\u00E2\u0080\u0094Thame and Oxford.\nBrother of the more famous B. 0.,\nbut Is also an Oxford Blue and has\nbeen a very valuable member of the\nCorinthian team for some years. He\nis a master at Brighton College. He\nis a clever and fast forward.\nR. C. Maples\u00E2\u0080\u0094Sheffield and Oxford. A sound player In the forward line and very clever with the\nhall. Had a large share in the victory of Oxford over Cambridge in\nFebruary last.\nHoward Henry\u00E2\u0080\u0094Partner to R. C.\nMaples in the last varsity match, his\nclever work being much admired.\nLearned his football with the Manitoba Football Association, secured a\nRhodes scholarship, and has just\ncome from Oxford and starting life\nas a barrister In Winnipeg.\nS. H. Day \u00E2\u0080\u0094 Malvern and Cambridge. Is the greatest exponent of\nInside play In Great Britain today.\nHe possesses an unerring judgment\nand wonderful control of the ball.\nHe is an international, and also a\ndouble Blue. Is a popular member\nof the Kent county cricket team. Is\nnow a master at Westminster school.\nH. G. Bach\u00E2\u0080\u0094Cambridge. A fine\nall-round athlete, who, although recently down for his university, has\nplayed for the A. F. A. against Bohemia, Wales and France. One of\nthe surest goal getters in the team,\nbeing very clever at getting openings. Is a lawn tennis player of distinction and plays occasionally for\nWorcester cricket eleven.\nG. C. Vassall\u00E2\u0080\u0094Vice captain. Char-\nlei' House and Oxford. A hounsehold\nname. Now one of the old brigade\nwho distinguished himself at Oxford\nby obtaining a double Blue, and\njumping 23 feet against Yale and\nHarvord, which Is a record for the\nevent. He is an international, possessing weight and pace, and is a\nterror to all opposing goalkeepers.\nThe strength of his shooting is most\nremarkable.\nC. Wreford-Brown\u00E2\u0080\u0094President of\nthe Corinthian Club, is one of the\nmost wonderful players of modern\ntimes. What Wreford does not\nknow In football can never be learned. He is an ideal captain of the\nCorinthians for many years. He Is\na centre half back, and though a\nveteran, is always ready to don the\nwhite shirt.\n o\t\nP. Brown, who represents Radiger\n& Janion, wholesale liquor dealers\nof Victoria and Vancouver, spent a\nfew days in the city this week. He\nleft this morning for the south. Mr.\nBrown is a brother of Austin Brown\nof this city.\n[\u00C2\u00A3\nTENDERS WANTED\nTENDERS will be received by the\nundersigned up to Tuesday, August\n15, for Plumbing (sewer and water)\nin the old school building on Second\navenue. Plans and specifications\nmay be seen at the City Engineer's\noffice.\nW. D. VANCE, '\nAug. 11-15 Secretary School Board.\nTENDERS AVANTED\nTENDERS will be received by the\nundersigned up to Tuesday, August\n15, for the painting of a room in\nthe old school building on Second\navenue. Specifications may be seen\nat the City Engineer's office.\nW. D. VANCE,\nAug. 11-15 Secretary School Board.\nTO WATER TAKERS\nOn account of scarcity of water\nthe supply will be cut off between\nthe hours of 9 p. m. and 5 a. m.\nduring the dry weather.\nWM. MAHLON DAVIS,\ntf Supt. of Water Works.\n**************************\nl FOR RENT t\n* *\n* Store building on Second *\n% Avenue at Seventh Street. *\n* Low Rent. f\n| JEREMIAH H. KUGLER, LTD. |\n* *\n**************************\n**************************\n1 75 x 100 Feet I\n| ASK For Lease on Third *\n* UNCLE Avenue at Ninth J\n* JERRY Street *\n| JEREMIAH H. KUGLER, LTD. |\n**************************\nTo the Ladies of Prince Rupert\nDid you ever stop to think how much easier it would be for you,\nIf at the end of each month, you could pay all household bills\nby check? We solicit your account and have special facilities\nfor handling it. Private writing rooms are provided for the use\nof customers and individual attention is given each depositor.\nWe allow 4 % on Deposits and the use of checks.\nThe Continental Trust Company, Limited\n SECOND AVENUE\t\nIHItaiHIHlSlHlHlHlHlHlHlalHlHlBlHlHlHlBlBlH'SlHlHlHlS\nHOTEL .\nENAMELWARE\nHAVE JUST RECEIVED A SMALL SHIPMENT OF HOTEL\nENAMELWARE ESPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR USE IN\nHOTELS, RESTAURANTS AND CAMPS. WE GUARANTEE\nTHEM TO LAST' TWICE AS LONG AS ORDINARY ENAMEL\nWARE. /\nA CALL IS SOLICITED\nPrince Rupert Hardware & Supply\nCompany, Ltd.\nTHIRD AVENUE\nPHONE 120\naiSlHIHIHIBIBIHIBIHIHIHIHiBIHIHIHimlBIHIBIBIHlHlHIH\nFOR SALE\nLot 56, Blk. 34, Sec. 1, $5,000; 1-3 cash, bal. 6 and 12 months.\nLots 33 and 34, Blk 5, Sec. 1, $4,000; half cash.\nFOR RENT\nSTORES, OFFICES AND DWELLINGS\nFIRE INSURANCE in old English, Canadian and American\ncompanies, at tariff rates. Policies good as collateral at All Banks,\nand all written in our own office. PLATE GLASS, ACCIDENT\nand MARINE INSURANCE\nMM. Stephens & Co. Ld.\nREAL ESTATE\nPhone 222\nLOANS INSURANCE\nOffice: Third Avenue\nINVESTMENTS\nP. O. Box 275\nUe.*Suy S&Usf&ctory'Ringt\nGood, Sound Reasons for\nMONARCH Economy\nMonarch Ranges are built so that they can\nnever have \"air leaks\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094 \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nFor around every opening Into the body there\nIs a Malleable Iron frame to which the\nsteel is riveted.\nNo putty is needed in such joints. They are\nair tight when new and stay air tight.\nIf these other ranges were built In this way\nthey might be economical too.\nInvestigate this matter of rivet construction\nversus stove bolts and stove putty. It's\nimportant to every one using or buying\na range.\nSOLD AND GUARANTEED BY THE\nKaien Hardware Co.\nTelephone 3\nThird Avenue\nWe beg to announce to the public that we are going to\nremain at the same old stand cor. 6th St. and 2nd Ave.\nGRAND 15 DAY SALE\nThe Big\nFurniture\nStore\nWe are using the entire\nlliii't Block for 15 Days\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nA Grand 15 Day Sale.\nSole Agents for the\nOstermoor\nMattresses\nWe are using the entire\nHart Block for 15 Days\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nA Grand 15 Day Sale.\n* *\nu\nft\nti\n**\nx*\n* *\n* *\n**\nFURNITURE, STOVES, LINOLEUM, CARPETS, FLOOR COVER-\nINGS, REED AND RATTAN FURNITURE, BLINDS, CURTAINS, QUILTS,\nCOMFORTS, BLANKETS, SHEETS, PILLOWS, MATTRESSES, SPRINGS,\nIRON AND BRASS BEDS. BEST LINES OF UPHOLSTERED COUCHES,\nARM CHAIRS, PARLOR SUITES, ENAMELWARE, CROCKERY, GLASSWARE, LAMPS, TABLE CUTLERY, SCREENS, PICTURES, MIRRORS,\nWASHING MACHINES, BASKETS, FRUIT JARS, HAMMOCKS, SEWING\nMACHINES, BABY CARRIAGES.\nWE ARE CLOSING OUT THE\nSTOVE DEPARTMENT.\nIF YOU ARE INTERESTED\nCALL AND GET OUR PRICES\nF. W. HART\nCor 6th Street & 2nd Ave\nPhone 62 P.O. Box 230\n\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6 \u00E2\u0099\u00A6-\u00C2\u00BB-\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB + + + ** + + *. + ***** + ** + + + *\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 + + ***\u00E2\u0096\u00A0**\u00C2\u00BB+,"@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Prince Rupert (B.C.)"@en . "Prince_Rupert_Journal_1911-08-11"@en . "10.14288/1.0311868"@en . "English"@en . "54.312778"@en . "-130.325278"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Prince Rupert, B.C. : O. H. Nelson"@en . "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/"@en . "BC Historical Newspapers"@en . "Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives."@en . "Prince Rupert Journal"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .