"91b0c369-3265-4b20-8ea9-0c8159ddebd2"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "2016-01-21"@en . "1910-09-27"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/prj/items/1.0311915/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " New Wellington\nCoal\nis the hest\nROGERS & BUCK\nSole Agents\nftitprt Btmtnal\nHigh-Class\nJob Printing\nIn all Lines\nt:\nVOLUME 1\nPublished Twice a AVeek\nPRINCE RUPERT, B. C, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1910.\nPrice, Five Cents\nNO. 30.\nTHE GREAT TOURIST\nCENTRE OF NORTH\nG.T.P. is Devoting Attention to Making This a Spot Where\nTravellers Will Make Their Headquarters\nWhile Covering the Northern\nPart of the Province.\nThere is abundance of evidence\nthat the G. T. P. has In view a decided policy with respect to the development of this as a great tourist\ncentre. Next year will see this policy\nbeing well advanced according to the\nlatest indications and travel should\nbe diverted this way to a considerable\nextent.\nThe opportunities for building up\na great tourist centre here are unexcelled. The city Itself, exemplifying\nas it does the creation of a modern\nCity springing from a wilderness into\na populous centre in tbe course of a\nfew years, has an interest all its own\nTourists from all parts of the world\nwill he anxious to avail themselves of\nthe opportunity which is thus to be\npresented to them. But the city Itself\nIs not all there is to offer. In an age\nlike this when there is an increasing\ndemand for a retreat from the ordinary routine of business the trip along\nthe coast from Seattle, Victoria and\nVancouver to Prince Rupert offers an\nideal opportunity for the man of business to get away for a few weeks\nfrom the ordinary vocations and enjoy a sea voyage with all the terrors\neliminated which an ocean trip has\nfor those accustomed to living inland.\nWith headquarters at Prince Rupert, there are excellent opportunities to be afforded for enjoyable outings, and it is quite evident that the\nG. T. P. Is now preparing to thoroughly advertise the scenic beauties\nof the north.\nJ. C. Swan, the official photographer of the Grand Trunk company, nnd\none of the world's greatest photographers, has made a very valuable\ncollection of photos for the company.\nAfter his trip across the province\nwith the party of artists a stop-over\nwas made here during which time Mr.\nSwan made a valuable collection of\nviews of the city and the harbor. Mr.\nLett, the colonization agent of the\ncompany, also made a tour up the\nSkeena and took a number of additional views of the scenery along that\nroute to supplement the collection\nmade by Mr. Swan.\nOf the scenery aloijg the Skeena\nthe party were enraptured. Mr.\nSwan expects to return again next\nyear and take adidtional views. He\nwill try to make the trip in May\nwhen the best results from photography will be available. All of the\nparty are agreed that the Skeena\nriver section of the route, with its\nnever ending variety in the way of\nmountain and river Is unexcelled anywhere. This section of the route will\nsoon he open to the world by way .of\nthe first section of the railway. It\nwill be open to travellers next summer and from the opening of the\npassenger trade there should be a\nheavy traffic drawn from the vast\narmy of tourists who are always\nwaiting to invade a new territory.\nMr. Swan will, when be goes south,\nspend a few days in Vancouver, in\nVictoria, and in Seattle, taking views\nto be used in the publicity work of\nthe company.\nSome idea of the immense number\nof views taken by Mr. Swan can be\nrealized when the information is\ngiven that be is sending two trunks\nof negatives forward to Montreal to\nbe developed. Mr. Swan holds medals\nfrom all the great explsitions for his\nfinished work. He makes enlargements measuring eight feet in length\nand claims to lead in this line of\nwork.\nMr. Russell, the painter in oils, who\nwas a member of the party, says that\nit can only be a short time before the\nneeds of the trade will require one\ni Continued on Page Four)\nPRESS DESPATCHES\nJudge Mabee Will Hear Complaints on\nBehalf of Western\nCanada.\nIt Is Alleged That Discrimination is\nMade lo Offset Small Profits\nin East\n(Special to The Journal)\nWinnipeg, Sept. 27.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Enquiry into\nthe methods of the telegraph corporations In the matter of carrying press\ndespatches In Canada will doubtless\nbe the subject of a ruling from Judge\nMabee, chairman of the railway commission. The commission has been\nhearing complaints' from the Winnipeg Board of Trade and the Grain\nExchange, In which it Is alleged that\nthe companies are discriminating\nagainst the West to make up for\nsmall profits earned in the East.\nJudge Mabee postponed the case,\nIntimating that he would petition the\nMinister of Justice to appoint counsel\nto represent the people In the inquiry.\n o\t\nIS WBL)\nPLEASED\nHenry McOondless is Satisfied With\nHis Investments Here\nHenry McCandless, of McCandless\nBros., clothiers of Victoria, is spending a few days in the city. He will\nvisit Stewart before going south. Mr.\nMcCandless belongs to the vast army\nof Investors that realize that their\nmoney Is perfectly safe ln Prince Rupert. He owns property here and\nIs perfectly satisfied to hold on to It.\nHis visit here has more firmly established him ln his conviction that the\nInvestment ln an absolutely safe one.\nTo see the substantial work that Is\nbeing done here and to see wharves\nlike the government and other companies are putting In Is, he says, sufficient to warrant the conclusion that\nthere Is an Immense future promised.\nPHOTOS OF CHINESE\nThose Leaving for China Must Go Before\nthe Wonderful\nCamera.\nCheck is to be Kept on Orientals\nWho Return Free of\nHead Tax\n(Special to The Journal)\nVancouver, Sept. 27.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Hereafter\nChinese leaving on a visit to their\nhomeland and exempt from the head\ntax if they return within a year must\ngo before the camera for the purpose of identilication. The new. regulation is authorized by the Ottawa\nauthorities.\n o\t\nENTERS UPON MINISTRY\nMUST PAY IN CASH\nProperty Owners Using the Street For\nExcavations Will Be\nCharged.\nCouncil Endorses Majority Itecom-\nnieiidation of the Committee\nThe city council has endorsed the\nreport of the streets committee relative to dumping excavation material\non the streets, and fixed a rate of\n2 5 cents a yard as the sum to be collected. This will be required in cash\nand is made in two specific cases. One\nis the application of Mr. Barker, and\nthe other of Mr. Potter. The report\nstated that Aldermen Lynch and\nBarrow of the committee favored\nmaking the payment in cash, while\nAid. Hilditch, another member of the\ncommittee, was in favor of a bond\nbeing given.\nAid. Hilditch presented a minority\nreport on the subject setting forth\nthat he favored a bond being issued\npayable upon demand by the city,\nAid. Barrow said that Aid. Lynch\nand himself had come to the conclusion that a cash bond was the better method in view of the fact that\nthe city solicitor pointed out difficulties to be encountered in giving a\nbond. The charge of 25 cents a yard\nwould not be much.\nAid. Hilditch thought that a bond\nendorsed by a second party would\nbe a perfectly safe measure.\nAid. Mobley said he had changed\n***** * *\nVERDICT AGAINST CRIPPEN *\n(Special to The Journal)\nLondon, Sept. 27.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The coroner's jury has returned a\nverdict declaring that Belle\nElmore Crippen was murdered\nby her husband, Dr. Crippen.\nThe evidence presented convinced the jury as to the identity of the murdered woman.\nRev. Mr. McLeod Gives Fullest Satisfaction to Haptist Congregation\nRev. W. H. Mcl.eod, the new pos-\ntor for the First Baptist church here,\npreached morning and evening to\nvery pleased audiences. Mr. McLeod\nis a young man and possesses in large\nmeasure the vigor of youth which is\nso essential in the building up of a\nchurch In a new city like this. The\nBaptist congregation Is very well\npleased with their new pastor and\nentertain all hopes that he will do a\ngreat work here in the Christian Held.\nMr. McLeod is a very forcible\nspeaker, and has great powers of Illustration. He has quite elaborate\nplans on foot, aiming at the Increasing of interest ln the work of the\nchurch. Among these Is the starting\nof a young men's union which will\ntake the form of a Baracca class on\nSunday afternoons, along with the\nregular Sunday school classes, and\nwill be a means of social gatherings\nduring the week. Being deeply Interested in young men, Mr, McLeod intends to make all young men feel at\nhome In the church.\nhis mind somewhat in this matter.\nHe had done this because he had\nheard remarks from properly owners\nthat they would dump Ihe excavations on the street now so as to get\nrid of it cheaply as it was felt that\nlater on it would be stopped. He\nthought property owners should\ntherefore be charged.\nAid. Pattullo, in moving the adoption of the report, stated that the\nposition he took was that no permit\nshould be granted to dump on the\nstreet unless building was to follow\nimemdiately.\nAid. Barrow said all the members\nof the committee were agreed that\npermits should be granted only to\nthose who were to build and not to\nallow promiscuous clearing.\nTha report was adopted.\nFOR NAVAL COLLEGE\nCompetitive Examination For\nEntering Halifax Institution\nCadets\nTests Will lie Held at the Pacific\nCoast As Well As in\nthe East\nI Special to The Journal)\nOttawa, Sept. 27.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The first general competitive examination for\ncadets entering the naval college at\nHalifax will be held under the civil\nservice commission November 9 at\nVictoria, Vancouver, Nelson, anil also\nat eastern centres.\n o\t\nQUESTION OF HOURS\nDispute\nArises With Respect to the\nLabor on the\nStreets.\nContractor is Anxious to Expediate\nWork and Insists Upon Prolonging the Time of Men\nThe Fraser house on Eighth street\nand Fraser street, has been closed\ndown for repairs and a general overhauling. The rooms will be opened\nin a week or so under a new name\nand under the new management of\nMrs. Anderson. She expects to make\nit one of the highest classed rooming houses in the city.\nSTARTING SERVICE\n(Special to The Journal) \u00C2\u00BB\n\" Victoria, Sept. 27.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The train *\n* service on the Alberni branch *\n* of the E. & N, Is ready now *\n* as far as Cameron Lake. It *\n* will be inaugurated next week. *\n* The service will be Tuesdays, *\n* Thursdays and Saturdays at *\n* the start. *\nA difficulty has arisen in connection with a contract on the streets.\nS, P. McMordie, who is anxious to\npush work while the good weather\nprevails, has insisted that the work\nbe prosecuted at the rate of ten hours\na day. With the contract calling for\nan eight hour day as a minimum\nMr. McMordie was agreeable to pay\nfor the extra two hours put In, but\nnot agreeable to work stopping at\nthe conclusion of the eight hours.\nThe matter came up at the council\nlast evening and His Worship volunteered to use his good offices with\nthe contractor to try to effect a settlement of the difficulty, although it\nwas contended that Mr. McMordle's\ncontract did not preclude his doing\nas he was doing.\nHis Worship was unable to find\nthe contractor today so nothing has\nbeen done.\nAt the council meeting.last night\nthe subject was introduced by Aid.\nHilditch.\nAid. Hilditch wanted to know If\nthe mayor or city solicitor had done\nanything to adjust the difficulty between Mr. McMordie and the men employed by him. He would like to\nknow if the contract was drawn up\nin such a way that Mr. McMordie\ncould discharge men who did not\nwork overtime. If this was so, the\ncontract had not been drawn as It\nwas the intention to do by the council.\nHis Worship said his understanding was that the contract was intended to provide for an eight hour day\nat $3 a day as the minimum wage.\nThat was tbe spirit of the contract.\nHe was going to take the matter up\n(Continued on Page Four)\nTENDERS FOR POLES\nCouncil is Making Progress Towards\nElectric Lighting of\nSlreets.\nSeal Cove site Will be Available\nFor City Only on Short\nTerms\nThe subject of the temporary electric lighting system is still occupying\nthe attention of the mayor and council. Mr. Durant has returned from\nVancouver with the announcement\nthat a part of the plant is already in\nVancouver ready for shipment.\nAnnouncement was made at last\nnight's meeting of the city council\nby AJd. Mobley that there was little\nprospect of the city being able to obtain the Seal Cove site for electric\nplant purposes for longer than a\nmonth at a time and on condition\nthat they would vacate on short notice as the company had other uses\nto which it was to be put.\nAid. Pattullo also asked that the\ncommittee looking for a site should\nhe granted power to deposit a small\nsum as an option to hold any property that was thought suitable.\nThis permission was granted.\nAid. Mobley further explained that\nhe did not think there would be much\nrisk In placing a temporary plant at\nthe cove as it could be done very\ncheaply and the cost of moving would\nbe little more later on than at present. A small plant for temporary\npurposes could be put In there and\nafter It was started an additional\nplant could be installed on another\nsite to be selected. This would ensure an earlier start In lighting.\nAfter the second plant was started\nthe other could be removed.\nThere is thus every prospect for\na temporary plant being in running\nshape in & very short time.\nTenders were opened last night for\nsupplying electric light poles. Three\ntenders were received as follows:-\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nMcLean & Mclnnes, who offer poles\nat 7 cents per lineal foot.\nF. England, whose offer was 7'i\ncents a foot for 30 foot poles; 8%\ncents for 35 foot poles; 9'\u00C2\u00AB. cents for\n40 foot poles, and 10% cents for 45\nfoot poles.\nJ. Y. Rochester was prepared to\nsimply poles not less than 8 inches\nin diameter at the top at 9 y.. cents\nfor 35 foot poles, and 11% cents for\n45 foot ones.\nThe tenders were referred to the\nlight i.nd telephone committee.\n o\t\nManager Sweet, of the G. T. p,\nInn, has returned from a trip south\nIn connection with the opening of the\nbar in the Inn.\nUNIVERSITY SifE\nVancouver Has Been Selected as the\nBest Place for\nIt.\nReport of Commissioners is in Favor\nof the Mainland, Point Grey\nlie-in;; Named\n(Special to The Journal)\nVictoria, Sept. 27.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The report of\nthe University Commission appoinied\nby the provincial government, has\ndecided upon Vancouver as the best\nsite for the institution. The report\nof the commissioners is dated June 28\nIt was, however, nol received until\na week ago .Monday, and taken up at\nthe Wednesday sitting of the executive council. The report is us follows:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\"Victoria, June 28, 1910.\u00E2\u0080\u0094To His\nHonor, the Lleutenant-Governor-in-\nCouncil.\n\"Sir:\u00E2\u0080\u0094The University Site Commission begs to submit the following\nreport: In accordance with the provisions of the University Site Commission Act, 1910, your commissioners\nhave visited and made a careful examination of several cities and rural\ndistricts suggested as suitable university sites and have selected as the\nlocation for the university the vicinity of the city of Vancouver.\n\"We have the Honor to be, Sir,\nyour obedient servants, tsigned) \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nR. C. Weldon, chairman; G. Dauth,\nC. C. Jones, O. D. Skelton; Walter C.\nMurray, secretary.\nThe report Is accompanied by a\nfurther report in which Point Grey\nis recommended as probably the best\npoint. It is recommended that 250\nacres he used as a campass and 700\nacres as an experimental area for agriculture and forestry. Other sites\nare suggested should this not. be\navailable.\nThe report of the commissioners\nwas to be final.\nMURDERER IN WINOTPEG\nMan Shoots His Wife and Then Coin-\nmils Suicide\n(Special to The Journal)\nWinnipeg, Sept. 27.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Samuel Trite\nshot his wife fatally and then turned\nthe revolver on himself, dying instantly from the wound. The tragedy\nwas the result of a quarrel.\nto. H. Hargraves, of the Eastern\nTownships Bank, relumed last evening to Vancouver, after spending a\nfew days in the northern part of the\nprovince. Mr. Hargraves says his\ntrip was one of pleasure purely.\nRESERVED CREW\nShip Wrecked Party on Island Picked\nVp by Passing Steamer\n(Special to The Journal)\nMelbourne, Australia, Sept. 2 7.\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nThe mates boat containing thirteen\nof the crew of the ship Carnarvon\nBay, wrecked a week ago on King\nisland, landed on the island. Later\nthey were rescued by a passing\nsteamer and taken to Tasmania.\nTHE EXVV OF THE COAST *\nMayor Stork, after a visit to *\nWoodworth Lake last week *\nwhere the work in connection *\nwith the future water supply *\nfor the city is In progress, has *\nreturned delighted with the *\nprospects. He Is satisfied that *\nwhen the city has put In Its *\nnecessary pipe line and Is *\ndrawing water from that place *\nit will have a supply that will *\nmake It the envy of the other *\ncities of the coast. *\nVery satisfactory progress *\nIs being made by the engln- *\neer's department there and *\nHis Worship says It Is an- *\nnounced by those In charge *\nthat In about a year's time af- *\nter work starts the water will *\nbe delivered hero. A dam will *\nbe necessary to raise the *\nwater so as to carry it along *\nthe route intended. Th is dam\nwill approximate 20 feet In *\nheight. *\nThe lake, says Mayor Stork, *\nIs an Intensely deep one. Its *\nsource of supply is the moun- *\ntain sides surrounding the *\nplace so that the quality Is of *\nthe best. There Is abundance *\nof water and the city will be *\na favored place Indeed when *\nthis Is put In. \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nSECTION ONE READY\nFOR CONTRACTORS\nTenders Will Be Called Within a Few Days for the Different Parts of the Work Yet Remaining to\nbe Started in Business Portion\nof the City.\nThe city engineer has reported to\nthe city council that he has the plans\nready for the completion of work in\nSection one. He forwarded plans to\nthe council last evening. Te report\n:overs all that remains of sect inn one\nnot now under contract, and in a\nplan prepared by Col. Davis the dlf-\nferent sections arc set forth according to the contracts to be let.\nThe matter wns rferred to the\ntreets comimttee who will take up\nihe subject of the specifications and\nthe contracts and will report all as\ncurly a date as possible. There was\na disposition last night on the part\nof the council to rush the work along\nbut owing to trouble having arisen\nover the question of contracts and\nthe hours of labor, it was deemed\nbest to have the forms gone Into by\nthe committee In an effort to overcome any such difficulty In future.\nThe engineer's report stated thai\nthere will be about 50,000 cubic\nyards more filling than there would\nbe space for in the section. He recommended that the levels about the corner of Eighth street and Third av\nenue ami between McBride and First\nBtreeta on First, Second and Third\navenues be raised considerably so as\nin provide for additional filling, if\nthis were done and retaining walls\npul up the lilllng could be considerably Increased. Tha alteration of\nthe grades could l> \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 made anytime\nwithin the next month or six weeks\nwithout any disadvantage in connection willi the work as the contracts\nwere let with provision for altering\nthe grade from time to time.\nAid. Hildltch said he had found\nout how the engineer had arrived at\nhis estimate of the surplus rock. He\nestimated that the rock would expand at the rate of fifty per cent in\nremoving, while muskeg was given\nIts full contents. Aid. Hilditch\nthought these conditions would not\ncarry out. The muskeg would be\nlost In the rock and there would be\na large shrinkage. He was not opposed to the altering of the grades,\nbut If It were simply to get additional\ndumping ground he did not think\nthat was necessary.\nThe report was referred to the\nstreets committee. THE PRINCE RUPERT JOURNA^.\nThesifeF,. SeptemBjer 27\", I\u00C2\u00BB19\nJOHN HENDRY ON\nTARIFF QUESTION\nRetiring President of the Canadian Manufacturers Association Deals With Subject and With\nTransportation Matters\nin Speech.\nAt the gathering of the Canadian\nManufacturers' Association held in\nVancouver last week, John Hendry,\nof Vancouver, the retiring president\ndelivered a speech that contained\nfood for considerable thought. Mr.\nHendry is one of the best known men\nin British Columbia. His long connection with the lumber interests,\nfollowed by a meteoric advent into\ntbe transportation business and the\nfield of electric power and various\nother commercial propositions, has\nmade his name familiar not only in\nBritish Columbia but all over the\ncontinent. Entering the railway\nbusiness as the controller of the V.\nW. & Y. charter, he came into a\nbatt'e with some of the leading officials of American lines in touch\nwith J. J. Hill. Although he had\nhad no previous experience in this\nline of enterprise, he showed his\nability by winning out. The Stave\nLake power proposition at Vancouver owes its initiation to the business\nability of Mr. Hendry who found the\nmoney for it. Success has crowned\nthe efforts of Mr. Hendry, who is\nnow ranked as a multi-millionaire.\nSuccess has in no wise spoiled him\nfor he takes the same interest in\naffairs as ever and is respected\nwherever he is known.\nIn his speech before the Canadian \u00E2\u0080\u00A2'\nManufacturers, Mr. Hendry, among i \u00E2\u0096\u00A0:-\nother things, dealt with the subject\nof reciprocity with the United States\nand protection, and also with the subject of transportation facilities. His\nremarks on these points were as follows:\n\"In this expression of my views I\ndo not wish it to be assumed that 1\nam cf the opinion any serious harm\nhas alieady beci. dojie; my object has\nrath'- been to call atteminu to a tendency which seems to be leading us\nInto dangerous paths, more especially\nsince it has now brought us face to\nface w'th what is after all thj most\nimpoitant i.\"=sue confnnting is as\nbusinecg men today. I refer to the\ndesu'e of the United States fir a\ntreaty of reciprocity with us.\nTables Arc Turned\n\"The history ot our trade relations with the United States has of\nlate been so frequently and thoroughly reviewed by the press from one\nend of Canada to the other that there\nis no need for me to make anything\nmore than a passing reference to It\non this occasion. I desire, however,\nto emphasize the contrast between\nthe reciprocity situation as it pre-\nsents itself today, and as it presented itself forty years ago. At that\ntime it was Canada who came forward as the suppliant, anxious to secure a market in the United States\nfor her natural products. Today it\nis tbe United States that comes forward as the suppliant, anxious to\nsecure a market in Canada for her\nmanufactured products. When we\nwere the suitors to such extremities\n000,000; so that notwithstanding her\nless favorable geographical situation\nand her smaller consuming power,\nthe .Mother Country has taken 40 per\ncent more of our products than the\nUnited States. Are we now to turn\nour backs upon those who have befriended us and with whom, God willing, it is In our power to build up\nthe greatest and grandest empire\nthe world has ever known? I for\none sincerely hope not.\nProtect ion Necessary\n\"Next, I maintain that Canada today cannot afford reciprocity with\nthe United States unless it be confined to a limited number of natural\nproducts. Splendid as has been the\nprogress of our manufacturing industries under the policy of protection,\nthey are still dwarfed in comparison\nwith the gigantic establishments\noperating on the other side of the\nJohn Hendry of Vancouver,\nretiring President of the\n(.'.'iiiiiiliuii Manufacturers'\n,* V V V V V *\u00C2\u00BB\nAssociation ^^^^^^^\n!\u00C2\u00AB.j. .j. .j.\u00C2\u00BB;. \u00E2\u0096\u00BA;\u00C2\u00AB .j* .j, .j* <** >;* $ *^ *^ <<^ <3\u00C2\u00BB \u00C2\u00BB*\u00C2\u00AB ^ \u00E2\u0080\u00A2{\u00C2\u00AB \u00C2\u00BB^ ^ <^ ^\nFOLLOW THE TREND OF THE CITY'S\nPROGRESS BY SUBSCRIBING\nFOR THE PAPER\n\u00C2\u00BB*\u00C2\u00AB \u00C2\u00BB** \u00C2\u00BBI* *!* *** -J* *** *** *** *** *** *t* **\u00E2\u0096\u00A0* -J* *\u00E2\u0080\u00A2* *** *** *** *** *\u00C2\u00BB* \u00E2\u0096\u00A0** *** -i* -J\" ^ *$\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \"J* \u00E2\u0099\u00A6*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 \u00E2\u0099\u00A6** *J* \u00E2\u0080\u00A2$\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 *t* *!\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 *\u00E2\u0099\u00A6* *** *\u00C2\u00BB* *** *!.* *!* \u00E2\u0080\u00A2S* \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00A3* \u00C2\u00BB!\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 \"t* .j,^..j..;.^.*:..:*\u00C2\u00BB:*i,:..;\u00C2\u00ABi>i,:.\",t\u00C2\u00ABi->.;.''>\u00C2\u00BB:\u00C2\u00ABi-:\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00BB;.i->i';*i->*>i->ij*<..:.\u00C2\u00BB>\u00C2\u00BB>i,:\u00C2\u00AB\u00C2\u00BB><.\u00C2\u00BB:.c':. ij- *i- -t- -> \u00C2\u00BB> -> \"i* \u00E2\u0096\u00BA> -j- <- <* i-j* <\u00E2\u0099\u00A6 -> -j- <\u00C2\u00BB ^- *> *?\u00C2\u00BB ^-. \u00C2\u00BBj. <* ^\u00C2\u00BB <\u00E2\u0080\u00A2;\u00E2\u0080\u00A2< -j. .;* .-> Tuesday, ISefltember 3^ t9lQ\nPRINCE RUPERT JOURNAL\nSALMON RULES HIGH\nCanned .Product Shews Very Considerable\n. Advance in\n.Prices.\nStock*. Are Hard to Get At Increased\nRates\u00E2\u0080\u0094British Trade\nFirm\nAlthough canned salmon opened\nthis season.at.an advance on the\nhighest record opening prices, yet resales of futures have been made at\nan advance of 10c a dozen for Alaska\nreds and for pinks 7%c per dozen\nat Sau Francisco and 5c.per dozen\nPuget ..Sound. Even at these advances.it is hard to get any stock, for\nin nearjy every instance canners have\nto pro rate on their deliveries, and\nthis cutting down makes lirius, fortunate in getting salmon, .wary In\nselling .to others until they see bow\nmuch their regular trade wil take,\nsays tbe Commercial -News Pickled\nSalmon is higher for spot and will\nopen higher for 1910 pack. The last\nsale of Alaska red. in barrels was at\n$8 per barrel, and lie buyer eaj's that\nten days, ago be \u00C2\u00BBanted to till an\norder but could not find a seller. A\nreport 1b..current, that one parcel ot\nover 1,500 barrels- v/as badly stored\nand is no good or subject to condemnation,.!! offered for sale.\nThe pack of canned salmon an this\ncoast this.year will be around 3^.700,-\n000 eases, .but, as stated abov.e, all\nhas been sold and the trade is crying\nfor more. The total pack as given\nout official)}' of British Columbia\nsockeyes this year is 543,525 cafes,\nagainst 90,7,920 cases, in 1909, 5i}2,-\n698 cases in .1908, 547,459 cases in\n1907, and 62,6,160 cases in 1906. The\npack of Puget Sound sockeyes this\nyear aggregates 66,23.2 cases one-\npound tails, 8,6,384 cases 1-lb. flats,\nand 138,491 ceases halves, making .a\ntotal of 2 921,107 cases -of 48 pound}-\nto the case. Tl(* pack of Britisli Columbia and Puget Sound combined\naggregate 416,132 case>:, against.\n1,870,185 cases :h*st year.\nThe English markets are very\n1 strong and tending up, according to\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0 the London Grocer*' Gazette, August\n27th, which says:\nDuring the week tbe American\npackers have named their prices for\n. domestic use for .tit*- United States,\nand as these aru several -shillings\nhigher than are at present ruling on\nthe spot here, considerable buying of\nnew season'* British Columbia pack\nhas resulted, especially for 'i-pmind\nflats, at dearer rates. There is much\nmore, activity on the spot, and in the\nconfident expectation 'that prices for\nnew season's will be much higher,\nand in view of ihe short pack, business bus been done ir A'lueka at \u00C2\u00ABn\nadvance of 6d. The demand froti\nthe country continues exceptionally\ngood, and there is every indication |\nthat the'market will be a strong and\nadvancing one, especially for one-\npound flats. The Celtic has arrived\nat Liverpool with 1,000 case*.\ntrails'to'Hie varions'showings Of ore\nEnd opened up thedeidges in a number of plate's.\nThe assayer-'s report on samples\nsubmitted has just been received\nLAND Pl'RCHASE NOTICE\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCassiar.\nTAKE NOTICE that John Cherry,\n.tnf Victoria, B. C, occupation mat-\nand gives .values running up as high tr?ss maker, intends to apply for permission to purchase me following de-\nas $146 per ton, and there Is no\ndoubt but that the claims have everything in sight that has returned high\nvalues on Nine Mile and Four Mile.\nThe big.ledge appears to be twenty-five or more feet in width and\nwell mineralized. No boundary has\nyet been found. In several places ore\nhas been uncovered; in veins up to.\ntwo feet or more in width that has\nevery appearance of high-grade rock,\nbeing galena with some gray copper\nand an occasional lump the size of\n.a bean of the high grade silver mineral that hns given such astonishing\nscribed lands in the vicinity of Kitwancool or Chean Wein Valley:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nnorth-east corner and about 14 miles\ndistant in a north-westerly direction\nfrom the north end of Kltwancool\nLake, thence west 80 chains, thence\nsouth 80 chains, thence east 80\nchains, thence north 80 chains to\npoint of commencement, and containing 640 acres, more or less.\nJOHN CHERRY.\nJames W. Smith, Agent.\nDated June 3, 1910. Jy8\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCassiar.\nTAKE NOTICE that Brenton\n.Brown, of Vancouver, B.C., occupa-\nvalues on Four Mile. hill. Situated tion insurance agent, intends to ap-\nat au elevation of only a few hundred'ply for permission to purchase the\nfeet above, the level nf the Skeena, I following described lands in the vi-\n, , .... 'vlnitv of the Kitwancool or Chean\nsurface work can be continued until \u00E2\u0084\u00A2\l* ValIey:_Commenclng at a\nlate in the fall. The wagon roadjnost planted at the north-east cor-\nnorth of town reaehet.a point within Iner and about ten miles distant in\ntwo miles of the claims and the Rob--1''1 north-westerly direction from the\nnorth end of Kitwancool Lake,\nthence south 8 0 chains, thence east\nSO chains, thence north 80 chains,\nthence west 80 chains to point of\nbison lake irail almost touofces the\nproperty.\nFour claims on Nine Mile moun- ..\ntain, owned iby James .Latham S B ' commencement, and containing 640\nti cres, more or less.\nBRENTON BROWN.\nSUnger and Chas. Sanbt-rg have been\nbanded to Charles L. Hanson of Victoria. No price was announced. The\npnospects involved in. the deal are\nthe Dawson .Fraction, joining the\nSunrise group on the south, and the\nthree claims of the Silver Bell group,\njoining the salver Cup.,-group on the\nnorth and east. Mr. Hanson wili let\na contract for 'considerable work this\nfall and winter if satisfactory \u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ar-\nrairgi'ments can be made\nAnother strike of galena ore is reported this week and the samples\nbrought into town by Ole locators\nlook as fine as anything yet found in\nthat:3jne. Five.men are interested\nin the .group of claims thai have been\nstaked, A. H. Ritlsd&le, Gordon Mc-\nLePan, John Salt, Fred OFster and\nH. B. Thoen. Thnce ledges have been\ndiscovered with a width \n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2I RCHASE NOTICES\nLAND PURCHASE NOTICES\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCassiar.\nTAKE NOTICE that Sarah Ward,\nof Victoria, B. C, occupation married woman, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands in the vicinity of Kltwancool or Chean Weln Valley:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nS. E. corner and about 22 mllec distant in a north-westerly direction\nfrom the north end of Kitwancool from the north end of Kitwancool j from the north end of Kitwancool\nLake, thence north 80 chains, thence j Lake, thence north 40 chains, thence j Lake, thence north SO chains, thence\nwest 80 chains, thence south 80 east 40 chains, thence south 40 west SO chains, thence south 80\nchains, thence east 80 chains to the j chains, thence west 40 chains to'chains, thence east 80 chains to the\npo'nt of commencement, and containing 640 acres, more or .ess.\nSARAH WAR:).\nJames W. Smith, Agenl.\nDated June 6th, 1910 Jy8\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nTAKE NOTICE that George Mc-\nBain, of Vancouver, B. C, occupation\nmerchant, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands in the vicinity of Kitwancool or Chean Wein Valley\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of Skeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCassiar. \u00C2\u00BB Cassiar.\nTAKE NOTICE th\u00C2\u00A3U l'lt-'..-.i.ir TAKE NOTICE that Leihi Cherry,\nTutt, of Selkirk, Manitoba, occupa-j of Victoria, B. C, occupation mar-\ntion merchant, intends to apply for!ried woman, intends to apply for\npermission to purchase the following (permission to purchase the following\ndescribed lands In the vicinity of Kit- j described lands in the vicinity of Kitwancool or Chean Wein Valley:\u00E2\u0080\u0094j wancool or Chean Weln Valley: \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCommencing at a post planted at the 1 Commencing at a post planted at tne\nS. to. corner about 14% miles dis- S. E. corner and about 21 miles distant in a north-westerly direction-tant in a north-westerly direction\npoint of commencement, and contain- j point of commencement, and containing 160 acres, more or less. |ing 640 acres, more or less.\nFREDERICK TUTT. LEIIII CHERRY.\nJames W. Smith, Agent.\nDated June 3, 1910. JyS\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCassiar.\nTAKE NOTICE that Henry Van\nWyck, of Vancouver, U. C, occupation hotel keeper, intends to apply\nfor permission to purchase the following described lands in the vicin-\nJames W. Smith, Agent.\nDated June^th, 1910. Jy8\nity of Kitwancool or Chean Wein\nCommencing at a post planted at the ! Valley: \u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at a post\nS. W. corner and about 26*4 miles planted at the north-east corner and\ndistant in a north-westerly direction about 20 miles distant in a north-\nfrorn the north end of Kitwancool 1 westerly direction from the north end | from the north end of Kitwancool\nLake, tlience north SO chains, thence I of Kitwancool Lake, tlience soutii SO Lake, thence north SO chains, thence\nSkeena Land District -District of\nCassiar.\nTAKE .NOTICE that John Grieve,\nof Vancouver, B. C, occupation\nagent, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands in the vicinity of Kitwancool or Chean Wien Valley: \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nS. E. corner and about 20 miles distant in a north-westerly direction\neast 80 chains, thence south 80\nchains, thence west 80 chains to\npoint of commencement, and containing 640 acres, more or less.\nGEORGE McBAIN.\nJames W. Smith, Agent.\nDated June 8th, 1910. ,Iy8\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2Skeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nTAKE NOTICE that Catherine\nWelsh, of Vancouve., ti. O, occupation married woman, intends to apply for permission to purchase the\nfollowing described lands in the vl-\nvinity of Kitwancool or Chean Wein\nchains, tlience west 80 chains, thence\nnorth 80 chains, tlience east 80\nchains to point of commencement,\nand containing 640 acres, more or\nless. HENRY VAN WYCK.\nJames to. Smith, Agent.\nDated \"June 6th, 1910. JyS\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCassiar.\nTAKE NOTICE that Minnie Clarke\nof Vancouver, B. C, occupation married woman, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following\ndescribed lands in the vicinity of Kitwancool or Chean Wein Valley\nValley: \u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at a post 1 Commencing at a post planted at the\nplanted at the S. E. corner and about\n17 V2 miles distant in a north-westerly direction from the north end of\nKitwancool Lake, thence north 80\nchains, thence west SO chains, thence\nsouth 80 chains, tlience east 80\nchains to point of commencement,\nand containing 640 acres, more or\nless. CATHERINE WELSH.\nJames W. Smith, Agent.\nDated June 4, 1910. Jy8\nN. W. corner and about 28 % miles\ndistant and in a north-westerly direction from the north end of Kitwancool Lake, tlience south 40 chains\nthence east SO chains, thence north\n40 chains, tlience west 80 chains to\npoint of commencement and containing 320 acres, more or less.\nMINNIE CLARKE.\nJames W. Smith, Agent.\nDated June 8th, 1910. Jy8\nwest SO chains, thence soutii 80\nchains, tlience east 80 chains to\npoint of comemncement, and containing 640 acres, more or less.\nJOHN GRIEVE.\nJames W. Smith, Agent.\nDated June 6th, 1910. Jy8\nDEVELOPING CENTRE\nCoast Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094Distriat of\nSkeenn.\nTAKE NOTICE that Elijah\nRounds, of Victoria, II.C, occupation\nBtewart, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at a\npost planted one-half .mile north,,\nSke*na Laud District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nTAKE NOTICE that Echo Dudgeon, of Vancouver, B.l C, occupation\nassistant dentist, intends to apply for\npermission to purchase the following\ndescribed lands in the vicinity of the\nKitwancool or Chean Wein Valley:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nnorth-east corner and about 7 %\nmiles distant in a north-westerly direction from the north end of Kitwancool Lake, thence south 80\nchains, thence north 80 chains,\nthence east 80 chains to point of\ncommencement, and containing 640\nacres, more or less.\nECHO DUDGEON,\nJames W. Smith, Agent.\nDated May 31, 1910. JyS\nLetter Heads, Envelopes,\nStatements, Business Cards\nVisiting Cards, etc., etc.\nPrince Rupert Journal\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCassiiu.\nTAKE NOTICE mat Alfred E.\nParkington, of Vancouver, B. C, occupation broker, intends to apply for\npermission to purchase the following\ndescribed lands in the vicinity of\nKitwancool or Chean Wein Valley: \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nS. E. corner and about 15 V2 miles\ndistant in a north-westerly direction\nfrom the north end of Kitwancool\nLake, thence north 80 chains, thence\nwest 80 chains, tlience soutii 80\nchains, tlience east 80 chains to the\npoint of commencement, and containing 640 acres, more or less.\nALFRED E. PARKINGTON.\nJames W. Smith,\nDated June 3, 1910.\n ! Lairds N. E. corner of application to\n! purchase, and 300 feet east of Ana-\n;Mines Opening Up in the District That ham Lake tra'l- marked e. r.'s\nPromise to Give Valuable < ^T*' T^ f\u00E2\u0084\u00A2\u00E2\u0084\u00A2 \u00C2\u00A3\u00C2\u00B0 ^\nI east, ithence 40 chains north, thence\nj 40 chains west, thence 40 chains\nsouth to point of commencement,\nand containing 160 acres, more or\nless. ELIJAH ROUNDS.\nVincent M. Schibner, Agent.\nDated May 25, 1910. jn2i\nReturns.\nMines Opening up in the District\nThat Promise to Give Valuable\nReturns\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nTAKE NOTICE that- William\nand one-half mile east, of Nettie A. ISirapaon, of Lindsay, Ont, occupation hotel-keeper, intends to apply\nfor permission to purchase the following dfcscribed lands in the vicinity of the Kitwancool or Chean Weln\nValley:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at a post\nplanted at the south-east corner and\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCassiar.\nTAKE NOTICE that Edward t!as-\npell, of Cayley, Alberta, occupation\nmerchant, intends to apply for permission lo purchase the following do-\nscribed lands in the vicinity of the\nKitwancool or Cbean Wein Valley: \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nN. W. corner and distant about 15.%\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nTAKE NOTICE that Thomas Sills,\nof Vancouver, B. C, occupation machinist, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands in the vicinity of Kit-\nAgent.\nJy8\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nTAKE NOTICE that George Williams, of Winnipeg, .nan., occupation\nclerk, intends to apply for permission'\nto purchase the following described\nlands in the vicinity of Kitwancool\nor Chean Wein Valley:-\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at a post planted at the S. W.\ncorner and about 16% miles distant\nin a north-westerly direction from\nthe north end of Kitwancool Lake,\nthence north 40 chains, tlience\neast 40 chains, thence soutii 40\nchains, thence west 40 chains to the\npoint of commencement, and containing 100 acres, more or less.\nGEORGE WILLIAMS.\nJames to. Smith, Agent.\nDated June 4, 1910. Jy8\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCassiar.\nTAKE NOTICE that John Reid,-\nof Vancouver, B. C., occupation-\nbroker, intends to apply for permission to purchase the 'following described lands In Ihe vicinity of Kitwancool or Chean Weln Valleys-\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nS. to. corner and about 15% miles\ndistant in a north-westerly direction\nwancool or Chean Wein Valley:\u00E2\u0080\u0094 ..\nCommencing at. a post planted at the j ,,m ,he \"orlh Gn(i of Kitwancool\nN. W. corner and about 26% miles !ne' t,ienc(- norUl 4(l Chains, thence\nfrom the north end of Kitwancool \ from the north end of Kitwancool\nLake, thence south 80 chains, thenco j Lake, thence south SO chains, tlience\nmiles in a north-westerly direction : distant in a north-westerly direction I e,as^ 40 chains, thence south 40\n 'chains, thence west 40 chains to the\npoint of commencement, and containing 160 acres, more or less.\nJOHN REID.\nJames to. Smith, Agent.\nDated June 3, 1910. jyg\nOptimism with respect to the mining district with Hazelton as Its centre Is running high and a steady activity Is reported. The last copy of\nthe Omlneca Herald contains the\nnews that after returning from a\nvisit to the properties, R. P. Trimble of Portland, Ore., has bonded the\ntwo groups of claims located on\nRocher de Boule mountain by W. S.\nSargent and Colin Monroe for $66,-\n000; two deals being made on the\nclaims, one of the groups going for\n$40,000, and the other for $25,000.\nBusiness at home demands Mr, Trimble's attention and he left Friday\nmorning for Portland, accompanied\nby W. J. Gearln, a son of ex.U. S.\nSenator Gearln of Oregon. If he Is\nable to return in time this fall, work\nwill be started and kept up all winter. If he Is unable to do this operations will be delayed till next spring.\nOn the north side of the hill north\nof Hazelton, and not much more than\nfour miles and a half from town,\nthe claims recently located by Long,\nMcBaln and Latham are showing evidences of wealth that add materially\nto the prospects of the Hazelton district becoming a mining camp of the\nfirst rank. Although only staked\nwithin the last month, the locators\nhave with great energy cut good\nLAND PURCHASE NOTICES\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCassiar.\nTAKE NOTICE that William\nHume Grant, of Stewart, B.C., occupation engineer, intends to apply for\npermission to purchase the following\ndescribed lands:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at a\npost marked W.H.G.'s S.W. Cor., and\nplanted adjoining Alfred Manson's\ncorner post, thence 80 chains north,\nalong W. N. Harrison's west line,\nthense east 80 chains, thence south\n80 chains, thence west 80 chains, following Alfred Manson's noiih line to\npoint of commencement, and containing 640 acres, more or less.\nWILLIAM HUME GRANT.\nFrank R. Strolm, Agent.\nDated July 2, 1910. Jy22\nabout 7% miles distant in a north\nwesterly direction from the north\nend of Kitwancool Lake, thence\nnorth 80 chains, thence west 80\nchains, thence south 80 chains,\nthence east 80 chains to point of\ncommencement, and containing 640\nacres, more or lees.\nWILLIAM SIMPSON.\nJames to. Smith, Agent.\nDated May 31, 1910. Jy8\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCoast.\nTAKE NOTICE that The Canadian\nFish and Cold Storage Company, of\nVancouver, B. C, occupation mercantile and manufacturing, intends\nto apply for permission to purchase\nthe following described lands: \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nnorth-east corner of lot 34, Range 5,\nCoast District, thence south 20\nchains, thence east 40 chains, thence\nnorth 25 chains more or less to the\nshore line, thence following along\nthe shore line to the point of commencement and containing 90 acres,\nmore or less.\nThe Canadian Fish & Cold\nStorage Company Limited.\nJ. H. Plllsbury, Agent.\nDated July 14, 1910. Jyl9\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nfiODttf fly*\nTAKE NOTICE that George Tutt,\nof Vancouver, B. C, occupation den-\niet, Intends to apply for permission\no purchase the following described\nands in the vicinity of the Kltwancool or Chean Wein Valley:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at a post planted at the\nnorth-east corner and about 8%\nmiles distant In a north-westerly direction from the north end of Kltwancool Lake, thence south 40\nchains, tlience west 40 chains, thence\nnorth 40 chains, thence east 40\nchains to point of commencement,\nand containing 640 acres, more or\nless. GEORGE TUTT.\nJames to. Smith, Agent.\nDated June 1, 1910. Jy8\neast 80 chains, thence north 8 0\nchains, thence west 80 chains to\npoint of commencement, and containing 640 acres, more or less.\nEDWARD CASPELL.\nJames W. Smith, Agent.\nDated June 3, 1910. Jy8\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCassiar.\nTAKE NOTICE that Charles Gei-\nger, of Victoria, b. C, occupation\nclerk, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands ln tbe vicinity of Kitwancool or Chean Wein Valley:-\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nComemncing at a post planted at the\nS. E. corner and about 19 miles distant In a north-westerly direction\nfrom the north end of Kltwancool\nLake, thence north 80 chains,'thence\nwest 80 chalnB, thence soutii 80\nchains, thence east 80 chains to the\npoint of commencement, and containing 640 acres, more or less.\nCHARLES GIEGER.\nJames W. Smith, Agent.\nDated June 4th, 1910. Jy8 j\neast 80 chains, thence north SO\nchains, thence west 80 chains to the\npoint of commencement, and containing 640 acres, more or less.\nTHOMAS SILLS.\nJames to. Smith, Agent.\nDated June 8th, 1910. Jy8\nSkeena Land DUcrlct\u00E2\u0080\u0094District\"of\nCassiar.\nTAKE NOTICE that William Wallace, of Toronto, Ont., occupation\ninsurance agent, Intends to apply for\npermission to purchase the following\ndlscrlbed lands In the vi.!' iky of Kitwancool or Chean Wein Valley: \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nComencing at a post planted at the\nN. E. corner and about 26 M> miles\ndistant in a north-weBterly dlrocron\nfrom the north end of Kltwancool\nLake, thence soutii SO chains, thence\nwest 80 chains, thence north 80\nchains, thence east SO chains to the\npoint of commencement, containing\n640 acres, more or less.\nWILLIAM WALLACE.\nJames W. Smith, Agent.\nDated June 8th, 1910. Jy8\n-DlBtrlct of\n-District of\nSkeena Land District\nCassiar.\nTAKE NOTICE that Lome Thompson, of Vancouver, B. C, occupation\ndentist, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands in the vicinity of the\nKltwancool or Chean Wein Valley:\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nsouth-west corner and about 8%\nmiles distant in a north-westerly direction from the north end of Kitwancool Lake, thence north 80\nSkeena Land District-\nCassiar.\nTAKE NOTICE that Sarah Cox,\nof Monarch, Alberta, occupation mar-\nied woman, Intends to apply for permission to purchase the following\ndescribed lands ln the Kltwancool or\nChean Wien Valley:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing nt\na post planted at the N. W. corner\nand about 4 M. miles distant ln a\nnorth-weBterly direction from the\nnorth end of Kltwancool Lake, thence\nsouth 80 chains, thence east 80\nchains, thence north 80 chains,\ntlience west 80 chains to point of\ncommencement, and containing 640\nteres, more or less.\nSARAH COX.\nJames W. Smith, Agent\nDated May 3l8t. 1910.\nCoast Laud District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nSkeena.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, George A.\n'oole, of Prince Rupert, occupation\nirinter, intend to apply for permis-\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCassiar.\nSkeena Land Dlstriel District of\nCassiar.\nTAKE NOTICE that Grace Cess-\nford, of Victoria, 13. C, occupation\nmarried woman, intends to apply for\npermission to purchase the following\ndescribed lands in the vicinity of\nKitwancool or Chean Wein Valley:\t\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nN, E. corner and about 23 miles distant In a north-westerly direction\nfrom the north end of Kltwancool\nLake, thence soutii SO chains, thence\nwest 80 chains, thence north 80\nchains, thence east 80 chains to the\npoint of commencement, and containing 640 acres, more or less.\nGRACE CESSFORD.\nJnmeB to. Smith, Agent\nDated June Oth, 1910. Jy$\nSkeena Land District- District of\nCassiar.\nTAKE NOTICE that Henry Hemming, of Victoria, B. C, occupation\nTAKE NOTICE that Samuel JohnI^rmlsslon\"to purchaw th \"follow^\nMcDIarmid, of Monarch, Alberta, oc- !,,.Hi\u00C2\u00A3 \u00C2\u00A3, d ' n ' ^\ncupation farmer, intends lo apply for wancool or Chean Weln Valley-\u00E2\u0080\u0094\npermiBsion to purchase the follow- Commencing at a posl planted at the\nnig described lands in the Kitwan- x. \u00E2\u0080\u009E;. Boro0? aml eTbout 21 miles dK\ncool or Chean Wein Valley:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Com- tant, in a north-westerly direction\nmenclng at a post planted at the N. [rom tbe \u00E2\u0080\u009E,\u00E2\u0080\u009E.,\u00E2\u0080\u009E en\u00E2\u0080\u009E #-fc\u00C2\u00A3J2!e\u00C2\u00ABS\nmiles in a Lake, thence south so chains, thence\nnorth end ot KltwancooI^La^ ^L^C^^lT^JnTto Z\nthence south SO chains, thence west \u00C2\u00A3to of*co m ,C- neSt. and co\\u00C2\u00B0uZ\u00C2\u00B0\nS0 chains, thence noiih so chains, i\u00E2\u0080\u009Eg 640 ,-'\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0' i.i.nn\ntlience east SO chains to point of\nE. corner and about 4'i\nnorth-westerly direction\"\ncommencement, and containing 640\nacres, more or less.\nSAMUEL JOHN McDIARMID.\nJames to. Smith, Agent.\nDated May 31st, 1910. Jy8\nSkeena* Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"District of-\nCassiar.\nTAKE NOTICE that Annie Gowan,\nf Victoria, B. C, occupation married woman, intends to apply for permission to purchase Ihe following\nacres, more or less.\nHE.VItY HEMMING.\nJames to. Smith, Agent\nDated June 6th, 1910. Jyg\nscribed lands:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at a\npost planted on the north-east shore\nline of Smith Island, distant about\none mile south-east from Lot 38, and\nmarked \"G. A. P.'s North-west Cor-\n,ner Post,\" thence 20 chains south,\nchains, thence east 40 chains thence thence 80 chains east, thence north\nsouth 80 chains, thence west 40 j 10 shore line, thence following shore\nchains to point of commencement, j line to point, of commencement, con-\nand containing 320 acres, more or italnlng 160 acres, more or less\nless. LORNE THOMPSON. GEORGE ARTHUR POOLE.\nJames W. Smith, Agent. I Dated Satrrday, July 2, 1910.\nDated June I, 1910. Jy8 ' (First Insertion July 5.)\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCassiar.\nTAKE NOTICE that Nelson\nGowen, of Victoria, B. C, occupation mining engineer, intends to apply for permission to purchnse the\nfollowing described lands In the vl-\n'\".', '\u00C2\u00BB >:\"\"'- \" f\"\u00C2\u00BB\"\"i'''' 'I* described lands in the vlcfnityof KlS vV,nov:-Comm\"nrlnB\u00C2\u00B0r ***? 'nolS\nCamming a?^----^- I ^\"^ at ^ * E' COrn-r 'lnd a^\nConimencng at a post planted at the 19 miles distant In the north-west-\nN. W corner and about 23 miles dis-;erly direction from the north end of\nant In a north-westerly direction Kitwancool Lake thence south 80\nrom the north end of Kltwancool Chains, thence west 40 chains thence\nLake; thence south SO chains, thence, nortl, 40 chains, thence west 4 0\neast 80 chains, thence north 80 chains, thence north 40 etaatnY\nchains, thence west 80 chains to the thenco east 80 chains to point of\npoint of commencement, nnd con- Commencement, and containing 480\ntainlng 640 acres, more or less. 'acres, more or lew oma,mng 4S0\nTa^u-'V'm^' , NELSON GOWEN.\nJames to. Smith, Agent. james w. Smith, Agent\nJy8 Dated June 4th, 1910. Jy8\nDated June 7th, 1910. PRINCE RUPERT JOURNAL\nTuesday, September 27, 1910\nprince Bupert journal\nTelephone 138\nPublished twice a week on Tuesdays\nami Fridays from the office of publication, Third Avenue near McBride St.\nSubscription rate to any point in\nCanada. $2.00 a year; to points outside\nof Canada. $3.00 a year.\nAdvertising\"jrate furnished on application.\n(). H. NELaON,\nEditor.\nTuesday, September 2 7, 1910\nPRINCE RUPERT'S PROSPECTS\nCities in the south are beginning\nto realize what the position of\nPrime Rupert will be when the G.\nT. !'. is completed. They recognize\nthat there are immense potentialities\nlocked up ready to be opened\nin t lie great country stretching\nfrom a line midway between the C.\nP. R. line anil the G. T. P. and extending far north over a vast area,\nprovided with navigable rivers and\nlakes for hundreds of miles and embracing a territory through which\nbranch lines of railway to act as feeders to the main artery of traffic can\neasily be built.\nThe Saturday Sunset of Vancouver\nthus speaks of the situation: \"This\nquestion of opening the Eraser is one\nof vital importance to the coast cities.\nIf tiie scheme is feasible it cannot be\nundertaken too quickly, for unless\nsome such route is provided Edmonton will certainly monopolize the\ntrade of the North until the G. T. P.\nis linked with Prince Rupert. After\nthat it will be a case of competition\nbetween Edmonton and the G. T. P.\nterminus with Vancouver and Victoria securing only the crumbs. With\nthe Fraser river opened from Lytton\nto Fort George the coast cities would\nthen be in position to give commercial battle to Edmonton from the\nvery beginning. Without it we will\nhave to patiently wait for the slow\nbuilding of railways while Edmonton is in the meantime firmly establishing her trade.\"\nThe Victoria Colonist follows this\nup with the statement that it heartily\nendorses the Sunset's views of the\nsituation. The south is therefore\nrising to realize what the future\nprospects of Prince Rupert are.\n o\t\nRECOGNITION OF BOY SCOUTS\nCity Council Does Not Peel Inclined\nto Settle Differences\nAt the council meeting last evening the question of the Boys'\nScouts came up for a little discussion in an informal way. It was introduced by Aid. Mobley who stated\nthat he had been asked to bring this\nup as those interested wished to\nhave official recognition by the council.\nSome little discussion followed in\nwhich different members of tbe council expressed their willingness to do\nwhatever they could to aid in the\nwork, but they did not see how the\nCouncil could do anything beyong\ngiving a sort of moral support to the\nproposition.\nIt was explained that there was\nsome differences in the matter relative to the appointment of trustees.\nHis Worship explained that he had\nbeen approached In the matter but\nhad told those interested to get together and select the trustees and\nofficers desired. The council would\nthen, be supposed, be willing to give\na sort of moral support to the proposition. The first thing for those concerned to do was to agree among\nthemselves as to the officers.\nENJOYABLE DANCE\nThe Kaien Island Club on Friday\nevening established an enviable reputation as entertainers. The successful way in which the initial dance\ngiven in the rooms of the organization was carried out puts the club In\na rank that other social bodies will\nfind difficult lo keep pace With.\nThe function from first to last in\nill its arrangements reflected the\nhighest credtl upon the committees\nin charge and the whole club. The\nsociety of the city was well represented and all acknowledged that it\nwas never excelled in the history of\nsocial gatherings in the city.\nThe patronesses were Mrs. Stork,\nMrs. Manson and Mrs. McMullin.\nThe floor committee consisted of\nMessrs. F. II. Mobley, A. M. McLeod\nand C. II. Orme, while the members\nof the decoration committee were\nMessrs. to. M. Lailey, Ray Bowers, C\naV'ughan and John R. Beatty\nKaufmann's orchestra provided the\nmusic. The ballroom was very prettily decorated witli flags and electric\nlights, while the supper room also\nwas very neatly embellished.\nThe supper, which was served by\nthe Exchange Grill, was very tasty,\nand was enjoyed by all.\n' c\"t \u00E2\u0080\u00A2> *> \u00E2\u0080\u00A25' \u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0> \u00C2\u00BB> cjt *\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 *;. \u00C2\u00BB!\u00E2\u0099\u00A6 \u00C2\u00BB> * & i> \u00E2\u0096\u00BA> \u00E2\u0096\u00BA> \u00E2\u0099\u00A6 i*\u00C2\u00BB \u00C2\u00AB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2> \u00E2\u0096\u00BA> *!\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 * <2\u00C2\u00BB \u00E2\u0096\u00BA> \u00C2\u00BB>\nI MARINE NEWS j\nV\"'* *\u00C2\u00BB* *** *** *** *** \"\u00C2\u00BB* *\u00E2\u0080\u00A2* '*' '*' T *** *** '\u00C2\u00BB* *\u00C2\u00BB* **' *\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*/\u00E2\u0080\u00A2* *\u00C2\u00BB-' *2* *** *t* *\u00C2\u00BB* *\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 i\u00C2\u00AB*\nTo Arrive\nTuesday, Sept. 27.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Humboldt from\nSkagway.\nPrince Albert from Queen Charlotte City.\nWednesday, Sept. 28.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Prince Rupert\nfrom Vancouver.\nThursday, Sept. 29.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Prince Albert\nfrom Stewart.\nCity of Seattle from Skagway.\nFriday, Sept. 30.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Camosun from\nVancouver.\nCottage City from Seattle.\nSaturday, Oct. 1.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Princess Royal\nfrom Skagway.\nHumboldt from Seattle.\nPrince Albert from Masset.\nSunday, Oct. 2.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Camosun from\nStewart.\nPrince George from Vancouver.\n.Monday, Oct. 3.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Prince Albert from\nStewart.\nPrincess Beatrice from Vancouver.\nTo Depart\nTuesday, Sept. 27.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Humboldt for\nSeattle.\nWednesday, Sept. 28.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Prince Albert\nfor Stewart.\nThursday, Sept. 29.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Prince Albert\nfor Masset.\nCity of Seattle for Seattle.\nFriday, Sept.. 30\u00E2\u0080\u0094Camosun for Stewart.\nCottage City for Skagway.\nSaturday, Oct. 1.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Princess Royal for\nVancouver.\nHumboldt for Skagway.\nSunday, Oct. 2.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Camosun for Vancouver.\nPrince .Mbert for Stewart.\n.Monday, Oct. 3.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Prince George for\nVancouver.\nPrince Albert for Qteen Charlotte\nCity.\nPrincess Beatrice for Skagway.\nC. P. R. WINTER SCHEDULE\nThe new autumn and winter schedule of the C. P. R. coast line steamers\nengaged In the trade with northern\nports, has been announced by\nthe officials of the company. This\nnew list of sailings affects the\nsteamers Princess Royal and Princess\nBeatrice, tbe Amur and Tees. The\nschedule becoems effective on October 1.\nBy this new schedule, the Beatrice\nand Royal leave Vancouver as formerly, on Saturday nights at 11 p.m.\nand call at Swanson Bay, Prince Rupert, Port Simpson, Ketchikan, Juneau and Skagway on the northbound\ntrip, arriving at the latter port six\ndays after the departure from Vancouver. Lying one day at Skagway\nto discharge and take on cargo, the\nvessels will leave on Thursday nights\non the southbound trip and will arrive in Vancouver four days later.\nSouthbound vessels will not leave\nPrince Rupert earlier than 7 a.m. on\nany day of sailing.\nThe Amur will leave Vancouver on\nTuesday nights at 11 p.m. and will\nsail every other week. She will call\nat all northern ports of importance\nand will take on cargo at each place.\nBy special arrangements with the\nmaster or purser, calls will be made\nat Hickey's cannery, on Smith Inlet,\nwhen business warrants a stop. The\nTees, engaged in the trade out of\nVictoria, will leave that port on the\n7th and 14th of each month for Clayoquot and way ports, calling each\nway at all ports. The Tees will\nalso sail on the 20th of each month\nfor Holberg.\nWILL NOT CO.ME XORTH\nFrom Australia comes the news\nthat San Francisco will be the north\nPacific terminus of the new steamship line to be subsidized by New\nZealand to be inaugurated October\n22 with the steamers Aorangl and\nMatai, there being no Intention of\ncontinuing this line to Vancouver.\nIt Is proposed to arrange with the\npresent Canadian-Australian line for\na call at Auckland, The new line\nwill run from Wellington to San\nFrancisco via Ratatonga unci Papeete\nand does not propose to compote with\nthe present Spreckles lino from Tallin to San Francisco, although the\nconnecting line which tranships cargo\nnnd transfers passengers at Tahiti,\nwill be abandoned.\nThe chambers of commerce are\nprotesting against the establishment\nof the new line in favor of an improved Canadian-Australian service\nwitli New Zealand calls.\nCAMOSUN TO REPAIR\nOn her return to the south the\nCamosun will undergo repairs, missing one trip to the north. The vessel\nmet with a hlshap near the Naas\ndamaging her shaft. She did not\nreach here until early yesterday\nmorning.\nTHE GREAT TOURIST\nCENTRE OF NORTH\n(Continued from Page One)\nor two tourist hotels to be located\nbetween Prince Rupert and Hazelton.\nBut the line of the railway Is not\nthe only interesting feature for the\ntourist. There are dozens of side\ntrips about this district that will all\nhave attractions of their own and\nenable the visitors to the city to enjoy Several weeks of he most pleasing outings. There is Metlahkatla,\nt lie famed Indian city, with a vast\nstore of romance surrounding it and\nwhich will he a tourist attraction.\nThe harbor Itself wfth its vast\nstretches offer unexcelled opportunities for outings. The Queen Charlotte islands, with a beach near Mas-\nset that cannot fail in time to become world famous as a camping\nground, are within a few hours run\nof the city. The salmon fisheries\nwith their never failing interest to\nthe sightseer, are within a few minutes ride by train.\nAltogether there are opportunities\nfor building up a tourist trade that\nthe G. T. P. will not be slow to take\nadvantage of. It seems practically\ndecided that their big hotel which\nwill be run in conjunction with the\nchain of high class hostelrles across\nthe continent on their line of rail and\nin Victoria and Vancouver, shall be\nbuilt on the reserve overlooking the\nharbor from the top of the bluff between the G. T. P. wharf and the\nGovernment wharf. No more commanding position could be selected.\nHigh above the station and the\nwharves there will be a view from it\nof all that is transpiring on the\nwaters of the harbor. The surrounding area fronting on First avenue\ncan be transformed into a delightful\nhotel grounds that can never be shut\nIn, but will always occupy a preeminent position among the features\nof the city.\nQUESTION OF HOURS\n(Continued from Page One)\nwith Mr. McMordie. He did not want\nto see any technicalities in this.\nThere was nothing relative to overtime in the contract. His idea was\nthat it should be optional as to\nwhether the men worked overtime\nat the regular rate.\nAid. Barrow said that he felt that\nthe council was elected on the principle of an eight hour day without\nany overtime. The other side was\npledged to the same.\nAid. Hilditch said Mr. McMordie\nhad a body of men In his employ at\nthe start that was a credit to the city.\nThey were just the kind of men that\nwere wanted. Their place ,vas being\ntaken by a class that he had opposed\nall along.\nHis Worship said that he had gone\ntwice to see Mr. McMordie but had\nnot found him. He would trp to see\nhim tomorrow.\nAid. Hilditch thought that the\nmayor should in arriving at a basis'\ninsist upon the re-instatement of the\ndishcarged men.\nSTREET IMPROVEMENTS\nFinance Committee Has Matters Referred to It\nSeveral matters relating to street\nwork were referred to the finance\ncommittee by the council last night.\nThe residents of Sixth avenue, who\nasked a road to Summit avenue, desired the work done as asked for\nprovided it could be done on the\nprinciple of being repaid during a\nperiod covering twenty years.\nMr. Perks asked to be reimbursed\nfor removing rock from the street ln\nfront, of his place as it had saved the\nwork being done by the city.\nA roadway was asked for on Ninth\navenue, from McBride street to\nYoung street.\nMunicipal Notice\nLOCAL IMPROVEMENT NOTICE\nTAKE NOTICE thai the Council of\nIii\"- Municipal Cnrporition of Hie\nCity of Prince Rupert intends lo\nmalte the following lr.cal improvements:\nA 16-foot plank rordway from the\nintersection of McBride street and\nEighth avenue to thi intersection 'f\nEighth avenue and Hay's Cove Circle,\nand to assess the final cost thereof\nupon the property fronting or abutting thereon, or to be benefitted\nthereby, and that a statement and\ndiagram showing the lands proposed\nto be so especially assessed for the\nsaid improvements or work is now\nfiled ln the office of the City Clerk,\nand is open for Inspection during office hours.\nThe estimated cost of the work Is\n$6,731.\nDated at Prince Rupert this 27th\nday of September, 1910.\nERNEST A. WOODS,\nS27 City Clerk.\nVAST RESOURCES OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nHon. Richard McBride at Banquet of Canadian Manufacturers Tells Easterners of Possibilities of\nthe Province\u00E2\u0080\u0094Imperial Spirit\nBreathed.\nAt a banquet given in Vancouver\nlo tbe delegates of Ihe Canadian\n.Manufacturers' Association, Premier\nMcBride delivered an address which\nwas calculated to do much for the\nprovince. In no uncertain way Hon.\nMr. .McBride put the vast resources\nof British Columbia and the opportunities for business in the Pacific\nprovince prominently forward. In\npart the Premier said:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\"The distance between the Atlantic\nand Pacific coasts is steadily diminishing with the development of transportation and so also the distance\nwhich separates the Motherland from\nBritish Columbia. 1 think that only\nyesterday the Victoria press told of\nthe mall being delivered In Victoria\nfrom the old country in e, tltUc ~ .-er\nnine days. I can remember, and I\nam not a very old man, when it took\nthirty-nine days. The president referred in his address to Imperialism\nwhich is back of everything we do\nin British Columbia. We British Columbians are good Canadians but we\nare still more intense Britishers!\n(Aplause). I can say to Mr. Rowley\ntbat he never more truly expressed\nthe sentiments of the Dominion when\nhe spoke of the Imperial sentiment\nwhich is evident throughout the Dominion.\nDiverse Resources\n\"No province of the Dominion possesses in itself such a wealth and diversity of natural resources as British Columbia, and all in the initial\nstages of development. (1) Our fisheries account for over thirty per cent\nof the total catch of Canada; (2) our\nmines have produced since their inception $347,800,000, and 300,000\nsquare miles of mineralized ground\nare not yet prospected; (3) our timber brings in over $12,000,000 a year\nand (4) our agricultural and fruit\nlands, hardly scratched, over $8,000,-\n000.\n\"While our population is still\nsmall, our accomplishments are large.\nWe have created a trade totalling\nclose to $50,000,000 annually; established manufactures and industries\nyielding over eighty million dollars\na year\u00E2\u0080\u0094and, remember, we are still\nat the beginning of things.\n\"British Columbia, with its area of\n395,000 square miles, is the largest\nprovince in the Dominion, and could\ncontain within its borders Ontario,\nManitoba, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island, with\nsome 10,000 square miles to spare.\nHer coast line, from Juan de Fuca\nstraits to tbe head of Portland canal\nmeasures 7,000 miles, while an estimate of the extent of inland navigable waters totals 2,500 miles.\nFishing Industry\n\"The fisheries of our coast employ\nabout 12,000 men. British Columbia\nstands first In the production of salmon; nine-tenths of her annual output may be credited to that fish,\nwhile her catch of halibut is ten\ntimes more than that of the Atlantic.\nIn Nanaimo harbor 22,500 tons of\nherring (4 5,000,000 pounds) were\ncaught last year. Deep-sea fishing for\ncod and halibut, oyster culture, the\nmanufacture of fish oils and fertilizers, the canning of crabs, clams and\nother shell fish, the exportation of\nfresh fish in cold storage, and the\npreserving of sardines, anchovies and\nother small fry, are industries which\nmight well attract the attention of\ncapital. The European countries bordering the North Atlantic give employment to over a million fisher\nfolk. Experiments have established\nthe fact that half an hour's trawling\non the Atlantic coast of Canada will\nbring up more fish than can be captured in six hours In the North Sea\nHshing grounds, and, as it Is conceded by the best authorities on the\nsubject that British Columbia's fisheries are immensely more productive\nthan those of the Atlantic, it follows\nthat our fisheries would support a\nmillion people without taxing them to\nan appreciable extent.\nRiches in Timber\n\"The timber of Vancouver Island\nand the coast is remarkable for its\nsize and its unsurpassed quality as\nlumber. The Douglas fir grows to a\nheight of 300 feet\u00E2\u0080\u0094the average tree,\nmost prized by the lumberman, averaging 125 to 150 feet. Cedar, pine\nand hemlock also attain larger\ngrowth than in Eastern Canada. In\nthe interior the size of the trees Is\nsmaller, but they make excellent\nlumber suited to every purpose.\nRoughly, British Columbia's forest\nand woodland estate\" consists of 182,-\n000,000 acres, but figures are not\nnow available to show what quantity\nmight be classed as merchantable\ntimber. Various estimates have\nbeen made as to the available quantity of commercial timber, and these\ndiffer materially. The less optimistic\nof our timber experts, however, agree\nthat about one-fifth\u00E2\u0080\u0094or 36,000,000\nacres\u00E2\u0080\u0094of the whole may be so classed; whoch would yield, on the extremely modest basis of 10,000 feet\nto the acre, three hundred and sixty\nbillion feet annually for 100 years,\nor at the present rate of cutting for\nfour centuries.\n\"There are thousands of miles of\npulp and paper making woods which\nare still practically undisturbed.\nEnough has been done to convince\nthose interested that the manufacture of paper-plup and paper is destined to become one of our leading\nand most, profitable industries. The\nDURESCO\nThe King of Water Paints\nFIRST IN THE FIELDEEEEFOREMOST EVER SINCE\nTSOLE AGENTS IN WESTERN CANADA-\nThe Staneland Co. Ltd\n836-840 Fort Street, VICTORIA, B.C. '\nmm\nGRAND TRUNK PACIFIC STEAMSHIPS\nFor VANCOUVER, VICTORIA, SEATTLE.\nConnecting with Eastbound Trains\nPrince Rupert sails every Thursday, S.30 p.m.\nPrince George sails every Monday, S.30 p.m.\nFOR STEWART:\nBruno sails every Sunday at 5 p.m., returning Monday evening to\nconnect with Prince George, southbound.\nUruuo sails Wednesday, 5 p.m., returning Thursday evening, connecting with Prince Rupert southbound.\nFOR MASSET\u00E2\u0080\u0094Bruno sails 10 p.m. every Monday, returning Tuesday night, and for Skidegate and other Moresby Island Ports,\nBruno sails 10 p.m. Thursday, returning Saturday.\nTickets, reservations and Information from\nA. E. McMASTER\nFreight and Passenger Agent, G. T. P. Wharf.\npaper makers of the United States\nare clamoring for raw material, and,\nso far as British Columbia Is concerned, they can have it on one condition, and that is that they shall set\nup their plants within our borders\nand manufacture the raw product into paper. The province will supply\nthe wood and the waterpower to\ngrind it, but it must be exported in\nits perfected form.\nAgricultural Lands\n\"It is difficult to estimate with\nexactness the extent of our agricultural lands. Roughly speaking It is\nestimated forty-six million acres of\narable and pasture land are in what\n(Continued on Page Five)\nAtlantic Steamship\n Agency\t\nThrough tickets and excursion\nrates to\nEngland, France, Germany,\nami all\nScandinavian Ports.\nCall or write for rates to any\npart of the world. I am also\nagent for all American steamers\nto and from Prince Rupert;\nNorthern Pacific Railway; Alaska Pacific Express.\nJ. H. ROGERS\nGeneral Steamship and Railway\nAgent, Prince Rupert, B.C.\nUnion Steamship Co'y\nof B.C. Ltd.\nThe new Steel Passenger Steamer\n\"Camosun\"\nPRINCE RUPERT every Sunday at 9 a.m. for Vancouver,\narriving Monday afternoon.\nFor Stewart City on arrival from\nVancouver Friday night.\nNorthbound, leaves Vancouver\nWednesdays at 9 p.m.\nSteerage Fare $5.00\nThe \"Camosun\" is the only steamer\non the run having water-tight bulkheads and double bottom, thus ensuring safety of passengers in case of\ncollission or wreck.\nJ. H. ROGERS, Ticket Agent\nHAYNOR BROS.\nFUNERAL DIRECTORS\nand\nPROFESSIONAL EMBALMERS\nDR. to. B. CLAYTON\nDENTIST\n\u00E2\u0080\u00940\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nOffice ln the Westenhaver Block,\nOver Orme's Drug Store.\nPrince Rupert\nWM. S. HAl,L, L. D. S. D. D. S.\n:-: DENTIST :-:\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\nJ. H. PILLSBURY\nCIVIL ENGINEER\nSurveying, Designs, Estimates, etc.\nRoom 7, Exchange Block,\nCorner Third Ave and Sixth Street\nPrince Rupert\nG. W. NICKERSON & CO.\nCUSTOMS AND MERCHANDISE!\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094o\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nBrokers, Forwarding Agents,\nStorage, etc.\nJ. to. POTTER\nARCHITECT AND STRUCTURAL\nENGINEER\nRe-inforced Concrete a Specialty\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094o\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nLaw-Butler Building - Prince Rupert\nGRAHAM ISLAND \u00E2\u0080\u0094 \"The surest\nsign of the progress of a town or\ndistrict is its newspaper\u00E2\u0080\u0094live, active, hustling.\" \"The Masset Review,\" Masset, Q.C.I.\nThe Thompson\nHardware Co. :\n-Second Avenue\nPaints General Hardware,\nOils, Stoves and Ranges. Tuesday, September 21, 1910\nPRINCE RUPERT JOURNAL\n LADYSMITH\t\nCOAL\nH. B. ROCHESTER, - Centre Street\nIN THE COUNTY COURT OF ATLIN\nHOLDEN AT ATLIN\nIn the matter of the Estate of Thomas D. Kearns, deceased, Intestate\nAll parties having claims against\nthe above Estate are required to forward the same, with full particulars\nthereof, duly verified, to the undersigned, not later than the sixteenth\nday of February, 1911, after which\nsaid date the Estate of the said deceased will be distributed amongst\nthose entitled thereto.\nDated at Atlin, B.C., this nineteenth day of August, A.D. 1910.\nPATRICK FOLEY,\nAG-OS Administrator.\nPortland Canal Short Line Railway\nPursuant to Section 7 of the Navigable Waters Protection Act (R. S.\nCan. cap 115) notice is hereby given\nthat there has been deposited in the\noffice of the Minister of Public\nWorks at Ottawa and a duplicate in\nthe Office of the Registrar of Titles\nat Prince Rupert, plans and description of the site and side elevation of\na proposed railway wharf and trestle\napproach thereto to be constructed\nnear the mouth of Bear River at\nStewart, British Columbia, and that\none month after the first insertion of\nthis notice the Company will apply\nto the Governor-in-Council for the\napproval thereof.\nDated at Victoria, British Columbia, this ICth day of September,\n1910.\nGERARD RUEL,\nChief Solicitor.\nEBERTS & TAYLOR,\nS23 Agents at Victoria, B.C.\nLAND PURCHASE NOTICES\nOmineca Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCoast, Range Five.\nTAKE NOTICE that E. Lucas, of\nWest Carnie, Out., occupation banker,\nIntends to apply for permission to\npurchase the following described\nlands:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at a post planted at the southwest corner of lot\n2287, District of Coast, Range Five,\nand marked E.L.'s N.W. corner,\nthence east SO chains, thence south\n8\" chains, thence west 80 chains,\nthence north 80 chains to point of\ncommencement, containing 040 acres\nmore or less.\nE. LUCAS,\nSteven McNeill, Agent.\nDated Sept. 22, 1910. S27.\nThe Saving Habit\nis the foundation of Independence. Begin saving now by-\nopening an account with the Bank\nof British North America and\nmaking regular Weekly or\nMonthly deposits.\njfi.oo starts a Saving! Account\nand Interest is compounded at\nhighest current rates.\nThe Bank of\nBritish North America\n74 YEARS IN BUSINESS\nCapital and Reserve over\n$7,000,000.\nPrince Rupert Branch\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nE. STONHAM, Manager.\nVAST RESOURCES OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\n(Continued from Page Four)\nOmlneca Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCoast, Range Five.\nTAKE NOTICE that to. G. White-\nsides, of South Bend, Ont., occupation bank clerk, intends to apply for\npermission to purchase the following\ndescribed lands:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at a\npost planted at the southeast corner\nof lot 1729, District of Coast, Range\nFive, and marked G.G.W.'s N.E. corner, thence west 40 chains, thence\nsouth 80 chains, thence east 40\nchains, thence north 80 chains to\npoint of commencement, containing\n320 acres, more or less.\nto. G. WHITESIDES,\nSteven McNeill, Agent.\nDated Sept. 22, 1910. S27\nIN THE SUPREME COURT OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nIn Chambers before the Honourable\nMr. Justice Gregory.\nBetween:\nJohn Jacobs, Frank Johnson and\nCharles Carlson, carrying on business as contractors under the firm\nname or style of Hawkins & Co.,\nPlaintiffs.\nAnd\nC. Peterson, C. Larson, and C. Anderson, Defendants.\nUPON the application of the Plaintiffs and upon reading the affidavits\nof James Allan Aikman sworn herein on the 20th and 21st days of September instant, and filed, and the\nExhibits therein referred to, it is\nordered that service of the writ of\nsummons in this action upon the Defendants C. Peterson and C. Larson,\nbe effected by serving Lewis W. Patmore, Barrister-at-Iaw, with a copy\nof the writ of summons herein, and\na copy of this Order, at Prince Rupert, In the Province of British Columbia, and by publishing notice of\nthe said Writ of Summons and Order\nIn the Prince Rupert Journal, a\nsemi-weekly paper, pi 'dished in the\ntown of Prince Rupert, in the Province of British Columbia, for six\nIssues thereof, and thai the said Defendants, C. Peterson and C. Larson,\nbe required to appear to the Writ of\nSummons In this action within eight\ndays from the last publication in the\nsaid newspaper or from the service\nof the said Lewis to. Patmore, whichever shall last happen, and that the\nsame shall be good and sufficient service of the Writ of Summons herein;\nAnd, it is further ordered, that the\ncosts of, and incidental to this application be costs In Ihe cause.\n(Signed) F. It. GREGORY, J.\nNo man is as Important as his wife\nwould like to think he Is.\nD. D. Dewar and Mrs. Dewar, of\nVictoria, accompanied by T. A. Simpson, of Banff, Scotland, left, last\nnightf or the soulli, after spending a\nday in the city. Mr. Dewar for some\ntime has represented the famous distillers, James Simpson & Son, and\nhis trip with a member of the Arm\nwas for the purpose of looking over\nthe new city of Prince Rupert. Mr.\nDewar has made many friends on the\ncoast since taking up his home here.\nmay be called the Southern Belt. A\nlarge portion of this is covered with\ntimber too valuable to sacrifice even\nin the promotion of agriculture. This\ndoes not include the most southerly\ndistrict of British Columbia where\nthere are about three million acres\noccupied and immediately available\nfor cultivation.\n\"In the Central Belt, lying between\nthe 52nd and 56th parallels, the\ncountry to be served by tbe Grand\nTrunk Pacific railway, the arable\nand pasture land is estimated at\neleven million acres; while the\nNorthern Belt, between tbe 56th and\n60 th parallels, including the great\nplateaux of Cariboo, Cassiar and\nOmineca, may be credited with at\nleast an equal quantity of cultivata-\niwson, whose\nestimates have invariably been found\ncorrect, considered six million four\nhundred thousand acres of that country fitted to wheat growing, and as\nit is in the same latitude as Vermillion, Alberta, where the best wheat\nin the world is grown, we may accept his opinion without question.\nFruit Growing\n\"The progress made so far in agriculture has been principally confined\nto the Southern Belt. The advancement made, particularly In fruit\ngrowing, Is wonderful. Ten years\nago the total orchard area was 7,460\nacres. Today the fruit acreage has\nincreased to over 100,000 acres. The\nquality of our fruit is unsurpassed.\nYear after year it has taken the gold\nmedal at the Royal Horticultural Society's Exhibition in London, and the\nhighest awards at other exhibitions\nin England, Scotland, Ireland and\nWales. At the International Apple\nShows held In Spokane, British Columbia apples have been awarded\nnumerous prizes\u00E2\u0080\u0094in one instance\ntaking 13 prizes out of 14 entries\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nin competition with twenty-two\nStates. Fruits culture is mainly con-\nlined to the southern districts, but\napples, pears, plums, cherries and\nsmall fruits are grown as far north\nas Hazelton, on the Skeena River,\nand it is expected that experiment\nwill show that successful orchards\nmay be raised in many parts of the\nCentral Belt.\n\"A striking proof of the great Importance of the fruit industry is the\nenterprise of Vancouver in instituting\nthe first Canadian National Apple\nShow, which opens In Vancouver October 31st, which Maxwell Smith has\nworked so strenuously to secure for\nVancouver and at which there will\nbe exhibits from all parts of the continent.\nDairying Industry\n\"Dairying is another great Industry still In Its Initial stages. The\nnumber of creameries has doubled In\nlen years and the production of butter has increased 2,500 per cent, yet\nj we Imported $3,000,000 worth of\nI butter and cheese last year. There\nis no country under the sun better\nsuited to dairying and this branch of\nagriculture affords opportunity to\nthousands, and the same remark applies to poultry raising. We Import\nover $2,000,000 worth of poultry\nand eggs annually and the prices on\nthe local market place them in the\nclass of luxuries. It is interesting to\nnote that the value of poultry and\neggs annually produced in the United\nStates exceeds that of lumber, coal\nand Iron.\n\"We have easily ten times as much\nagricultural land as Japan with her\nfifty million producing over 22,000,-\nnoo bushels of wheat ln 1909,\ndouble that of Sweden. with over\n5,000,000 people over half of whom\nare engaged In agriculture and producing over 6,000,000 bushels of\nwheat in 19^8\u00E2\u0080\u0094and the greater part\nof Ev.-eden lies north of the sixtieth\nparallel\u00E2\u0080\u0094north of the northern\nboundary of British Columbia.\nMineral Wealth\n\"The mineral output of the province for 1909 was $14,443,025. The\ngross output of coal In long tons,\n2,400,000.\n\"The greatest coal field of British\nColumbia, or of Canada, is the Rocky\nMountain coal field, of which 80 per\ncent is In British Columbia, and 20\nper cent in Alberta. The present\nBritish Columbia (1909) gross output of coal for the whole province is\n2,400,600 tons, and at this rate of\nproduction East Kootenay coal fields\ncan keep up this supply for 15,000\nyears.\n\"Dr. Henry S. Poule, of Nova\nScotia, In the employ of the geological survey, says in his report, made\nin 1903, as to ceal still remaining In\nthe ground: 'The quantity of coal\nexceeding two feet in thickness within a vertical depth of 4,000 feet an\nestimate of 600,000,000 tons would\nseem conservative.' This does not\ninclude other promising fields in\nEast Kootenay, Northern British Co-\nlumoia and Peace river.\n\"The Rocky Mountain coal nelds,\nlying on either flank of the main\nrange of the Rocky Mountains, respectively in the provinces of British\nColumbia and Alberta, are undoubtedly the most extensive deposits in\nCanada, and, what is more important\nfrom a commercial point of view, are\nthe only large coal fields of first class\ncoal at present known on the Pacific\nslope between Alaska and Mexico.\nImmense Field\n\"While It has been a matter of\ncommon knowledge in British Columbia that these deposits were large\nit Is questionable if more than a few\npeople recognized their wonderful extent or the enormous influence which\nthey must have on the future of the\ncountry. What this influence must\nbe can best be demonstrated by the\nillustration of what the coal deposits\nof Pennsylvania have done for that\nstate\u00E2\u0080\u0094they have made it probably\nthe greatest manufacturing state of\nthe Union\u00E2\u0080\u0094and the condition of\nWestern Canada today is that of the\nEastern United States fifty years ago,\nexcept that we may look forward to\na more rapid development due to the\nmore general progress of the rest of\nthe continent, and the improved\ntransportation and other facilities\nnow available.\n\"It seems, therefore, that Eastern\nBritish Columbia Is destined to be,\nfrom the possession of its coal fields\nalone, the Pennsylvania of the Pacific\nslope, and that at no distant date.\n\"The estimate coal in the Rocky\nMountain coal fields is no less than\n44,130,000,000 tons, of which some\n36,000,000,000 or 81 per cent, of\nthe whole, is in British Columbia,\npractically all of it availab'e from\nthe valley of the Elk river.\nOther Minerals\n\"The tonnage of ore, exclusive of\ncoal, was 2,057,713 tons.\n\"The value of the output of the\nlode mines for the yoar was $13,-\n791,141, practically all of which Is\nsmelted in the province.\n\"The value of the output of our\nplacer mines is estimated at $477,-\n000.\n\"The output of the smelters of the\nprovince is approximately $13,800,-\n000, and it is worthy of note that\none of the smelters in the tonnage of\nore treated is among the first three\nlargest smelters In the world.\n\"It must be borne in mind that the\ncountry is not yet nearly prospected,\nand I might mention the recent discoveries on the Portland Canal\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nwhere there are already some 1,500\npeople at Stewart, and where Mackenzie & Mann are building a railway\nand propose to treat tbe ore there.\nSporting Centre\n\"No country peopled by white men\nsurpasses British Columbia in opportunity for the hunter and angler. Our\nvast solitudes are the home of a great\nvariety of wild animals and birds and\nour coast and inland waters teem\nwith fish. The grizzly and several\nother species of bears, elk, moose,\ncaribou and smaller deer nf many\nkinds, panthers, wolves, mountain\nsheep, goats, lynx, wild cat, foxes\nand many fur-bearing animals, are\nplentiful, and water fowl and game\nbirds are numerous and widely distributed. In the southern districts\nare pheasants, black game and capercailzie, Imported and climallzed,\nwhile partridge, grouse and prairie\nchicken as indigenous and are found\nin all parts of the province. The\ngame fishes Include salmon, steel-\nhead and several species of trout,\ncharr, sea bass and black bass. The\nfame of the province as a hunting\ng: iund has spread abroad and every\nyear sees an Increasing number of\nbig game hunters from Europe, who\nare invariably delighted with their\nsuccess In securing trophies. At the\nrecent sporting exhibition In Vienna\nthe display of British Columbia game\nin charge of Mr. Warburton Pike,\nwas one of the chief attractions, securing several first prizes.\n\"Some of the states of the union to\nthe soutii of us obtain large revenues\nfrom exploitation of their big game.\nThe state of Maine boasts of the revenue from her protected big game\nand you could put that state In the\nsmallest coanty of British Columbia!\n(Applause.)\nOpen Harbors\n\"One of British Columbia's greatest assets is her climate. Our harbors\nare open the year round and there is\nno ice to contend with in navigation.\nThe coast climate is exceedingly mild\nwhile as for our northern country,\nlet me say that the Russian province\nof Tobolsk, which lies north of ths\n4th parallel, supports a population\nof 1,500,01)0 and in the census year\nof 1900 produced over 21,000,000\nbushels of grain besides large quantities of dairy produce and live\nstock.\"\nA voice: \"What about Quebec?\"\nThe Premier: \"My friend, Quebec\nhas a good climate and so have we\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nonly more of it! (Laughter and\ncheers.)\n\"This province is peculiarly adapted to the comparatively cheap utilization of the power of falling water.\nIt is safe to say that on Vancouver\nIsland 500,000 horsepower may be\ncheaply developed.\n\"Within one hundred and fifty\nmiles of the city of Vancouver it is\nestimated that hydro-electric development may deliver five hundred thousand horsepower should that amount\nbe required. At Adams' river, above\nKamloops, is another magnificent\npower site. On the Kootenay river,\nnear Nelson, with Its own hydro-electric power plant at Bonnington Falls,\ninstalled at a cost of over $350,000,\nis, I believe, prepared to furnish\npower at a maximum of $30 per\nhorsepower fer annum for manufacturing purposes. The Pend d'Oreille\nriver, south of Nelson, is also capable of developing some fifty thousand\nhorsepower at moderate cost. On the\nwest flank of the Rockies are many\nsmaller power possibilities. On Willow river, within twenty miles of\nFort George, a company is even now\nundertaking the development up to\nsome twenty thousand horsepower as\nrequired. Near Prince Rupert the\nKatahda river may be made to furnish about ten thousand horsepower.\nAt the points already specified we\nhave nearly one million horsepower,\nconcerning which we have some definite information or partial development. The full extent of the province will enormously exceed this\nthough at present it is impossible to\nmake an accurate estimate.\nG. T. P. Road\n\"To secure population we must\nhave convenient and cheap transportation and this is being supplied\nas fast as possible. The Grand Trunk\nPacific will provide a great central\ntrunk line, with branches extending\nnorth and south, while the Canadian\nNorthern railway will serve a large\nextent of territory in the valleys of\nthe Upper Fraser and Thompson\nrivers and down through the fruitgrowing districts of Kamloops and\nNicola.\n\"The railway mileage today approximates 1,700 miles and there is\nunder construction over 400 miles of\nrailway, while the completion of the\nKettle Valley, C.N.R. and G.T.P.\nmain lines will add 1,300 miles to\nthe railways.\n\"In manufacturers the province\nproduces about $30,000,000 annually. The operation of the Tehuantepec\nrailway has already permitted some\nfifty manufacturing firms In Nova\nScotia and New Brunswick to do\nbusiness with British Columbia, and\nthe Panama canal will give still further relief, but the truj solution of\nthe problem is the establishment of\nfactories here from which the\nprairies can be suplied at half or less\nthan the present freight rates. We\nhave the raw materials and the power\nto run the machinery, why not utilize\nthem?\n\"Our merchant marine is steadily\nincreasing. The navigation returns\nfor 1909 show that 5,000 sea-going\nvessels sailed from British Columbia\nports In the year, while there were\n20,000 vessels engaged In the coasting trade, representing in all over\n9,000,000 tons of shipping.\nMust Manufacture Here\nThe assembly rose to Its feet in\nenthusiasm when the premier said:\n\"We hear talk of a ecrtain nation\nwanting to come into Canada for our\nraw materials. Her manufacturers\nmust have them. Well, they can come\nand get their raw materials If they\nwant to, but,\" raising his hand to\nlend emphasis to his remarks, \"on\none condition, and one only. And\nthat one condition is that they must\nbuild their mills here and manufac-\nCHAMPIONS OF THE WORLD *\nNew Westminster, Sept. 27.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094By a score of 11 to 1 on\nSaturday New Westminster lacrosse team established its\nclaim to retain the Minto cup,\nby defeating the Nationals of\nMontreal. The Westminster\nteam thus remains the champions of the world.\nCHURCH IS OPENED\nPort Essington Has New Building to\nTake Place of One\nBurned.\nOpening Services of Interesting Character Wore Held There on Sunday Evening\nture from their raw materials in this\nprovince of British Columbia!\" For\ntwo minutes enthusiasm reigned,\nsome of the members breaking Into\nsong.\n\"What does the future hold for\nus? It is a question that you must\npardon us in answering if we seem\ntoo optimistic. I feel satisfied, however, that we have already sufficient\nevidence in the past to say that we\ncan expect in the future to count the\npopulation of British Columbia, not\nby thousands as we do not, but by\nmillions. (Applause.) British Columbia needs no vain boasting to reassure herself!\" (Applause.)\n\"We out here,\" he concluded,\n\"say that while you come to British\nColumbia from Ontario and Quebec,\nwe western Canadians are just as\nproud of Toronto and Quebec, and\nwith as much reason, as yourselves\nare! (Aplause.) When we say this\nwe mean to Invite you to feel the\nsame toward British Columbia\u00E2\u0080\u0094to\nfeel that when we speak of our mines\nand timber and our agricultural and\nmarine resources, they are every\nwhit as much your inheritance as\nthey are ours. He would be recreant in his duty who returns to the\neast feeling other than that the west\nis as much his as ours. We are all\nloyal Canadians and with you easterners join in the strongest support\nin one king, one flag and one empire!\" (Loud and continued applause.)\n o\t\nG. Starrett, one of the directors of\nthe Canadian Fish and Cold Storage\nCompany, left for the south last night\nafter spending a few weeks here.\n(From Our Own Correspondent)\nPort Essington, Sept. 26\u00E2\u0080\u0094The first\nservice was held In the new Episcopal\nchurch here on Sunday evening. It\nwill be remembered that the English\nchurch was destroyed here some\nthree months ago, and work on the\nnew church has been going on for\nsome time now. The building has\nbeen completed and the first service\nwas held on Sunday evening.\nRev. F. Rushbrook has had a very\nstrenuous time building the new\nchurch, having done a great deal of\nthe work himself, but his labors have\nbeen rewarded, for he has certainly\ngot a very nice little house of worship for his small but faithful flock\nin Port Essington. Archdeacon Col-\nlison, of Kincolith, preached a very\neffective sermon last evening, and remarked that his first sermon ever\npreached in Port Essington was in a\nroom belonging to Mr. Robert Cunningham, over twenty-five years ago.\nHe was delighted to be able to address a congregation here once again.\nRev. R. VV. Gurd, of Claxton, B.C.,\nwas present at the opening ceremony, accompanied by his daughter,\nMiss Rita Gurd. There were quite a\nlarge number of people present.\nThe church was beautifully decorated with fresh cut flowers. The\nsinging was also excellent. Mrs.\nDoris Cameron sang a very fine solo\nIn a clear rich contralto.\n o \u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nPersonals\nLOTS FOR SALE\nIN\nEllison\nAND\nPrince\nHouses, Stores, Offices to Rent.\nMONEY TO LOAN\nC. D. NEWTON\nReal Estate Exchange Block Notary Public\nJudge Young has returned from\nAtlin.\n* t *\nHarvey Creech, of Copper City, Is\nin the city for a few days.\n* * *\nMiss Olga Instett has returned\nfrom a visit to Portland, Ore.\n* * *\nAid. Smith has gone to Camrose,\nAlberta, for a trip. He will inspect\na ranch he owns there.\n* * * t\nJohn G. Johnston, of Vancouver,\nwas in the city this week. He returned south last evening.\n* * *\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2J, Fred Ritchie left yesterday afternoon for Stewart. He will be absent from the city for several days.\n* * *\nF, II. Worlock, of Victoria, representing the Phoenix Brewery of that\ncity, has returned from Stewart.\n* * *\nJ. L. Parker of the Pacific Metals\ncompany, has returned from a trip to\nKetchikan and Goose Bay.\n* * *\nOn Sunday the Salvation Army\ncommenced services here under\nMajor Morris who introduced the new\nofficers for this fort.\n* * *\nAmong the arrivals on the Prince\nGeorge Sunday was C. H. Topp, formerly city engineer of Victoria. He\nresigned a few months ago to go Into\nprivate practice as a member of Ihe\nwell known firm of Gore & McGregor.\nMr. Topp left yesterday for the\nQueen Charlotte IslJnds on business\nfor the firm.\n* \u00C2\u00BB *\nMr. Long, the manager for Ihe\nBank of British North America, arrived this morning on the Cottage\n| City from Skagway. He formerly had\ncharge of the hank in Dawson. Mr.\nStonham, who lias had charge of the\nbank since Its opening here, will\nleave In a few clays to resume his In-\nspectora] duth\nill\nTIME TO ItlV\nKnzelton Nine Mile Mining Company\nOffering Shares ul Special Price\nThe new li tin of l'\ T. Bowness\nBrokerage Company is offering a\nspecial opportunity to investors to\nget in on the rich mining district\naboul Hazelton. The Hazelton Nine\nMile Mhiing Company, with what\npromises to be sonic of the very best\npropositions In a great camp, Is\nplacing a block of Bhares at special\nprices through this firm.\nThe property is controlled by men\nwho are on the ground and have\nknown the possibilities. With the\nopening up of the Interior these\nmini's will become very valuable. The\nshares are put on at the price advertised in .'mother column for a\nlimited time only, PRINCE RUPERT JOURNAL\nTuesday, September 27, 1910\nTHE HAGUE AWARD\nCOAL NOTICES\nFull Text of Decision Given in Fishing\nNatter Affecting Atlantic\nCoast.\nThe Question of What Constitutes a\nBay is Brought I'p Before\nthe Tribunal\nThe full text of The Hague tribunal award on the fisheries case as it\naffects the Newfoundland and Canadian Atlantic coast contains interesting Information, It is one of the\nmost Important matters ever submitted to an international court of\narbitration. These questions and\nanswers are:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nQuestion 1.\u00E2\u0080\u0094To what extent are\nthe following contentions or either of\nthem justified.\nIt is contended on the part of\nGreat Britain that the exercise of the\nliberty to take fish, referred to in\nthe treaty of 1818, which the inhabL.\ntants of the United States have forever in common with the subjects of\nhis Britannic Majesty, is subject to\ntbe consent of Newfoundland.in the\nform of municipal laws, ordinances\nor rules, as, for example, the regulation in respect of (1) the hours,\ndays or seasons when fish may be\ntaken on the treaty coasts. (2) The\nmethods, means and implements to\nbe used In the taking of fish or in\nthe carrying on of fishing operations\non such coasts. (3) Any other matters of similar character relating to\nfishing, such regulations being reasonable.\nIt is contended on the part of the\nUnited States that the exercise of\nsuch liberty is not subject to limitations or restraint by Great Britain,\nCanada or Newfoundland unless they\nare appropriate and necessary for\nthe protection and preservation of\nthe common rights in such fisheries,\nand unless ihey be reasonable in\nthemselves and fair as between local\nfishermen and fishermen coming from\nthe United States, and not so framed\nas to give an advantage to the former over the latter, and unless their\nappropriateness, necessity, reasonableness and fairness be determined\nby the United States and Great Britain by common accord, and the\nUnited States concurs in their enforcement.\nBritain Supreme on Const\nAnswer.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The right of Great Britain to make regulations without the\nconsent of the United States as to\nthe exercise of the liberty to take\nfish, referred to in article 1 of the\ntreaty of October 20, 1818, in the\nform of municipal laws, ordinances\nor rules of Great Britain, Canada,\nor Newfoundland is inherent in the\nsovereignty of Great Britain.\nThe exercise of that right by Great\nBritain is, however, limited by the\nsaid treaty in respect of the said liberties therein granted to the inhabitants of the United States In that\nsuch regulations must be made bona\nfide and must not be in violation ot\n(1) appropriate or necessary for the\nprotection and preservation of such\nfisheries, or (2) desirable or necesary\non grounds of public order and morals, without unnecessarily interfering with the fishery itself, and in both\ncases equitable and fair as between\nlocal and American fishermen, and\nnot so framed as to give unfairly an\nadvantage to the former over the latter class, are not inconsistent with\nthe obligation to execute the treaty\nIn good faith, and are, therefore,\nreasonable and not in violation of\ntho treaty.\nReasonable Regulations\nFor the decision of the question\nwhether a regulation is or Is not\nreasonable, as being or not being ln\naccordance with the dispositions of\nthe treaty and not in violation there\nof, Ihe treaty of 1818 contains no\nspecial provision. The settlement of\ndifferences in ibis respect thai might\narise thereafter was left to the or\nUnary means of diplomatic Intercourse. By reason, however, of the\nform in which question one is put,\nand by further reason of the admission of Great, Britain, by her counsel\nbefore this tribunal, thai it is not\nnow for either of *he parties to the\ntreaty to determine the reasonableness of any regulations made by\nGreat Britain, Canada or Newfoundland, the reasonableness of any such\nregulation, if contested, must be decided, not by either of ihe parties,\nbut by impartial authority ln accordance with the principles herein\nabove laid down, and ln the manner\nproposed In the recommendations\nmade by the tribunal.\nin virtue of article 4 of the agreement, the tribunal further decides\nthat article 4 of the agreement Is, as\nstated by counsel of the respective\nparties at. the argument, permanent\nin its effect, and not tremlnable by\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCoast.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, K. M. Mc-\nInnes, of Prince Rupert, occupation\nmariner, intend to apply for a\nlicense to prospect for coal and petroleum on the following described\nlands:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at a post planted on the south shore of Crow Bay,\nthence north 80 chains, thence west\n80 chains, thence south 80 chains,\nthence east 80 chains to post marked\nK.M.McI.'s S.E. corner.\nDated August 18th, 1910.\nSI 6 KENZIE McLEOD MclNNES.\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCoast.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, K. M. Mc-\nInnes, of Prince Rupert, occupation\nmariner, intent! to apply for a license to prospect for coal and petroleum over the following described\nlands:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at a post planted on the soutii shore of Crow Bay,\ntnence north 8 0 chains, thence east\n80 chains, thence south 80 chains,\nthence west 80 chains to post marked\nK.M.McI.'s S.W. corner.\nDated August 18th, 1910.\nS10 KBNZIB McLEOD MclNNES.\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCoast.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, K. M. Mc-\nInnes, of Prince Rupert, occupation\nmariner, intend to apply for a license to prospect for coal and petroleum over the following described\nlands:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at a post planted on the soutii short of Crow Bay,\nthence south 80 chains, tlience west\n0 chains, thence north 80 chains,\ntlience east 80 chains to post marked\nK.M.McI.'s N.E. corner.\nDated August 18th. 1910.\nS16 KENZIE McLEOD MclNNES.\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nTAKE NOTICE that I, K. M. Mc-\nInnes, of Prince Rupert, occupation\nmariner, intend to apply for a li-\nense to prospect for coal and petroleum over the following described\nlands:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at a post planted on the south shore of Crow Lake,\nthence south 80 chains, thence east\n0 chains, thence north SO chains,\nthence west 80 chains to post marked\nK.M.McI.'s N.W. corner.\nDated August. 18th, 1910.\nS16 KENZIE McLEOD MclNNES.\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCassiar.\nTAKE NOTICE that Reginald\nDavey, of Vancouver, B. C, occupation machinist, intends to apply for\npermission to purchase the following\ndescribed lands, in the vicinity of\nvitwancool or Chean Wein Valley:\u00E2\u0080\u0094-\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nnorth-west corner and about 6 \"4\nmiles distant in a north-westerly direction from the north end of Kitwancool Lake, tlience south 80\nchains, thence east 80 chains, thence\nnorth 40 chains, thence west 40\nchains, thence north 40 chains,\nchains, thence west 40 chains to a\npoint of commencement, and containing 480 acres (more or less).\nREGINALD DAVEY.\nJames W. Smith, Agent.\nDated May 30, 1910. Jy8\nNOTICE\nNOTICE is hereby given that application will be made to the Legislative Assembly of tbe Province of\nBritish Columbia at its next Session\nfor an Act to incorporate a company\nwith power to construct, equip,\nmaintain and operate a line or lines\nof railway of standard guage with\nany kind of motive power for the\nconveyance of passengers and freight,\nand with all the powers contained\nin the \"Model Railway Bill\": Commencing from a point at or near\nPort Simpson, or Work Channel, in\nthe Coast District, British Columbia,\nby the most feasible, desirable and\nI practicable route to a point on the\nEastern boundary of the Province of\nBritish Columbia, via the South-west\nside of Work Channel to the Skeena\nRiver; thence up the North side of\nthe Skeena River to a point near\nHazelton; thence to the junction of\nthe Bulkley River; thence up the\nright bank of this River eight (8)\nmiles to the Suskewa River; thence\nup this River by a low divide to the\nhead of Babine Lake; thence to the\nnorth end of Stuart Lake; thence\nnorth of McLeod Lake to the Mis-\nnichinca River; thence up the Mis-\nnichinca River by Summet Lake to\nPine River Pass; thence north-westerly to head of Pine River, and down\nihis River to Moberley Lake; and\nthence by the Peace River to the\nEastern boundary of the said Province of British Columbia; and with\npower to construct, operate and\nmaintain all necessary bridges, roads,\nways and ferries; and to build, acquire, own and maintain wharves and\ndocks in connection therewith; and\nto build, acquire, own, equip and\nmaintain steam and other vessels and\nboats, and to operate the same on\nany navigable waters; and with\npower to build, equip, operate and\nmaintain telegraph and telephone\nlines in connection with the said\nRailway and branches, and to transmit messages for commercial purposes, and fo charge tolls therefor;\nand to generate and to sell electricity\nfor the supply of light, heat and\npower; and with power to expropriate lands for the purposes of the\nCompany; and to acquire lands,\nmoney bonuses, privileges or other\naids from any Government, municipal corporation or other persons or\nbodies; and to levy and collect tolls\nfrom all persons using, and on all\nfreight passing over any of such\nroads, railways, ferries, wharves and\nvessels built by the Company; and\nwith power to connect with and make\ntraffic or other arrangements with\nrailway, steamboat, or other companies:\nDated at Victoria, B.C., this 11th\nday of August, 1910.\nBARNARD & ROBERTSON,\nA19. Solicitors for the Applicants.\nCOAL CLAIMS\nthe expiration of the general arbitration treaty of 1818 between Great\nBritain and the United States.\nForeign Crews on Vessels\nQuestion 2.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Have the' inhabitants\nof the United States a right to employ\nas members of the fishing crews of\ntheir vessels persons not inhabitants\nof Ihe United States?\nAnswer.\u00E2\u0080\u0094In view of the preceding\nconsiderations, this tribunal is of the\nopinion that the inhabitants of the\nUnited States, while exercising the\nliberties referred to in the said articles, have a right to employ as members of the fishing crews of their vessels persons not Inhabitants of the\nUnited States; but ln view of the preceding considerations, the tribunal\nto prevent any misunderstanding as\nto the effect of its award, expresses\nthe opinion that non-inhabitants employed as members of the fishing\ncrews on United States vessels derive\nno benefit of Immunity from the\ntreaty, and it Is so decided and\nawarded.\nReporting to Customs\nQuestion 3.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Can the exercise by\nthe Inhabitants of the United States\nof the liberties referred to be subjected without the consent of the United\nStates to the requirements of entry\nor report at customs houses or the\npayment of light or harbor or other\ndues, or to any other similar requirement or condition or exaction?\nAnswer.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The requirement that an\nAmerican fishing vessel should report\nif proper conveniences for so doing\nare at hand, it not unreasonable, for\nthe reasons stated in the foregoing\nopinion There should be no such\nrequirement, however, unless there\nbe reasonably convenient opportunity\nafforded to report, in person or by\ntelegraph, either at a customs house\nor to a customs official, but the exercise of the fishing liberty by the Inhabitants of the United States should\nnot be subjected to the purely commercial formalities of a report of entry and clearance at a customs house,\nnot to light, harbor or other duties\nnot imposed upon Newfoundland\nfishermen.\nImposing Restrictions\nQuestion 4.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Under the provision\nof the said article that the American\nfishermen shall be admitted to enter\nSkeena District\u00E2\u0080\u0094Queen Charlotte\nIslands.\nTo all to whom it may concern:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nNOTICE is hereby given that I, the\nundersigned, intend to apply for a\nicense to prospect for Coal and\nPetroleum upon the following lands\nsituate on Graham Island, one of the\nQueen Charlotte Group, in the Province of British Columbia, and more\nparticularly described as follows, viz:\nCommencing at a stake planted one\nand a quarter miles west of the\nnorth-east corner of Louis Inlet, and\nmarked \"P. C. Coates' S. E. Corner\nClaim No. 1,\" thence west 80 chains,\nthenee north 80 chains, thence east\n80 chains, thence south 80 chains to\nthe place of commencement.\nStaked June 14th, 1910.\nDated this 28th day of July, 1910.\nP. C. COATES,\nBy his Agent, Wm. Edward Laird.\nA9\nCOAL CLAIMS\nSkeena District\u00E2\u0080\u0094Queen Charlotte\nIslands.\nTo all to whom It may concern: \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nNOTICE is hereby given that I, the\nundersigned intend to apply for a\nIcense to prospect for Coal and\nPetroleum upon the following lands,\nsituated on Graham Island, one of\nthe Queen Charlotte group, in the\nProvince of British Columbia, and\nmore particularly described as follows, viz:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Comemncing at a stake\nplanked at the S. E. corner of P. C.\nCoates' Claim No. 1, and marked\n\"Wm. Penman's S. W. Corner, Claim\nNo. 1,\" thence east 80 chains, thence\nnorth 80 chains, thence west 80\nchains, thence south, 80 chains to the\ndace of commencement.\nStaked, June 14th, 1910.\nDated this 28th days of July, 1910.\nWM. PENMAN.\nBy his Agent, Wm. Edward Laird.\nA9\nLAND LEASE NOTICE\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCoast.\nTAKE NOTICE that The Canadian\nFish & Cold Storage Company Ltd.,\nof Vancouver, occupation Mercantile\nand Manufacturing, Intends to apply\nfor permission to lease the following described land:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at\na post planted at high water mark\non the westerly side of Prince Rupert Harbor and distant about 110\nchains from the north-east corner of\nLot 443, thence west 20 chains,\nthence south 20 chains, thence east\n5 chains, more or less to high water\nmark, thence following along the\nhigh water mark to the point of commencement and containing 20 acres\nmore or less.\nThe Canadian Fish and Cold\nStorage Company, Llmtted,\nJ. H. Plllsbury, Agent.\nDated June 20th, 1910. Jyl2\nLAND PURCHASE NOTICES\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nPim^iftr\nTAKE NOTICE that Phillip Williams, of Sydney, Nova Scotia, occupation accountant, intends to apply\nfor permission to purchase the following described lands in the vicinity of Kitwancool or Chean Wein\nley:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at a post planted\nat the S. E. corner and about 16%\nmiles distant In a north-westerly direction from the north end of Kitwancool Lake, thence north 80\nchains, thence west. 80 chains, thence\nsouth 80 chains, thence east 80\nchains to point of commer cement,\nand containing 640 acres, more or\nless. PHILLIP WILLIAMS.\nJames W. Smith, Agent.\nDated June 4, 1910. Jy8\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCassiar.\nTAKE NOTICE that Annie Grieve,\nof Victoria, B. O, occupation married woman, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following, described lands in the vicinity of Kitwancool or Chean Wein Valley: \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nN. W. corner, and about 17 % miles\ndistant in a north-westerly direction\nfrom the north end of Kitwancool\nLake, thence soutii 4 0 chains, thence\neast 40 chains, thence soutii 40\nbains, thence east 40 chains, thence\nnorth 80 chains, thence west 80\nchains to point of commencement,\nand containing 480 acres, more or\nless. ANNIE GRIEVE.\nJames W. Smith, Agent.\nDated June 4, 1910. Jy8\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCassiar.\nTAKE NOTICE that John Cox, of\nMonarch, Alberta, occupation farmer, intends to apply for permission to\npurchase the following described\nlands, situated in the vicinity of Kitwancool or Chean Wein Valley:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nComencing at a. post planted at the\nnorth-west corner and about five and\none-quarter miles distant in a northwesterly direction from the north end\nof Kitwancool Lake, thence 80\nchains south, thence 80 chains east,\nthence 80 chains nortb, thence 80\nchains west to point of commencement, and containing 640 acres,\nmore or less.\nJOHN COX.\nJames W. Smith, Agent.\nDated May 30, 1910. Jy5\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCassiar.\nTAKE NOTICE thai Mary Brown,\nof Vancouver, B.C., occupation married woman, Intends to apply for\npermission to purchase the following described lands lu the vicinity ol\nthe Kitwancool or Chean Wein Valley:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at a post planted\nat the North-east corner and about\nten miles distant in a north-westei ly\ndirection from tbe north end of the\nKitwancool lake, thence south 80\nchains, thence west 40 chains, thenco\nnorth 40 chains, thence west 40\nchains, thence north 40 chains\nthence east 80 chains to point ol\ncommencement, and containing 480\nacres, more or less.\nMARY BROWN.\nJames W. Smith, Agent.\nDated June 1, 1910. Jy8\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCassiar.\nTAKE NOTICE that James Alexander McDonald, of Monarch, Alberta, occupation farmer, intends to\napply for permission to purchase the\nfollowing described lands, situated in\nthe Kitwancool or Chein Wein Valley:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at a post planted\nat the N. E. corner about five and\none quarter miles distant in a northwesterly direction from the north\nend of Kitwancool Lake, thence south\n80 chains, thence west SO chains,\nthence north 80 chains, thence east\n80 chains to point of commencement,\nand containing 640 acres, more or\nJAMES ALEXANDER McDONALD\nJames W. Smith, Agent.\nDated May 30, 1910. Jy5\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nTAKE NOTICE that John Henderson, of Vancouver, B. C, occupation\nagent, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands in the vicinity of Kitwancool or Chean Wein Valley: \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nS. .W corner and about 25 miles distant in a north-westerly direction\nfrom the north end of Kitwancool\nLake, thence north 80 chains, thence\neast 40 chains, thence south 80\nchains, thence west 80 chains to\npoint of commencement and containing 320 acres, more or less.\nJOHN HENDERSON.\nJames W. Smith, Agent.\nDated June 7th, 1910. Jy8\nCoast Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nSkeena.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, Ernestine\nA. Roney, of Prince Rupert, occupation married woman, Intend to apply\nfor permission to purchase the following described lands:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at a post planted on tbe north\nbank of the Skeena River about half\na mile south of Geo. T. Church's preemption, thence west 10 chains,\nthence north 40 chains, tlience east\nto the Skeena River; thence southwest following the bank of the\nSkeena River to the place of beginning, and containing about 80\nacres.\nERNESTINE A. RONEY, Locator.\nto. A. Roney, Agent.\nDated July 7th, 1910. Jy22\nCoast Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nSkeena.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, J. Adolpb\nPerry, of Vancouver, B.C.. occupation\nbook-keeper, intend to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at a\npost planted, on the north bank of the\nSkeena River, about a mile west of\nLot 31, thence north 40 chains,\nthence east 80 chains to lot 31,\ntlience south 40 chains to bank of\nSkeena River, thence west about 80\nchains- following north bank of\nSkeena River to point of commencement, and containing about 320\nacreB.\nJ. ADOLPH PERRY, Locator.\nWm. A. Roney, Agent.\nDated July 16th, 1910. Jy22\n[certain bays or harbors for shelter,\nrepairs, wood or water and for no\nether purpose whatever, but that they\nshall be under such restrictions as\nj may be necessary to prevent their\n(Continued on Page Seven)\nCoast Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCSIf pan a\nTAKE NOTICE that I. Mary M.\nRoney, of Stillwater, Minnesota, U.\nS.A., occupation married woman, Intend to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands.\nCommencing at a post planted on the\nnorth bank of the Skeena River at\nthe south-east corner of Geo. T.\nChurch's pre-emption, tlience north\n40 chains, thence east 40 chains,\nthence south to the bank of the\nSkeena River, thence south-west following the Skeena River to the place\nof beginning and containing about\n120 acres.\nMARY M. ROENY, Locator.\nW. A. Roney, Agent.\nDated July 8th, 1910. Jy22\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nTAKE NOTICE that Violet Gelger,\nof Victoria, B. C, occupation married woman, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands ln the vicinity of Kltwancool or Chean Wein Valley:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nN. W. corner and about 23% miles\ndistant In a north-westerly direction\nfrom the north end of Kltwancool\nLake, thence south 80 chains, thence\neast 40 chains, thence north 40\nchains, thence east 40 chains, thence\nnorth 40 chains, thence west 80\nchains to point of commencement,\nand containing 480 acres, more or\nless. VIOLET GEIGER.\nJames W. Smith, Agent.\nDated June 7th, 19*0. Jy8\nLAND PURCHASE NOTICES\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCassiar.\nTAKE NOTICE that Pearl Caspell\nof Cayley, Alberta, occupation married woman, intends to apply for permission to purchase the folic wing described lands in the vicinity of Kitwancool or Chean Weln Valley: \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nN. E. corner and about 15% miles\ndistant in a north-westerly direction\nfrom the north end of Kltwancool\nLake, tlience south 80 chains, thence\nwest 40 chains, thence north 40\nchains, thence west 40 chains, thence\nnorth 4 0 chains, thence east 80\nchains to point of commencement,\nand containing 4S0 acres, more or\nless. PEARL CASl'ELL.\nJames W. Smith, Agent.\nDated June 3, 1910. jy8\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCassiar.\nTAKE NOTICE that Laura Gordon\nof Victoria, B. C, occupation married woman, intends to apply for permission to purchase tbe following\ndescribed lands in the vicinity of Kitwancool or Chean Wein Valley:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nN. E. corner and about 18 miles distant in a north-westerly direction\nfrom the north end of Kitwancool\nLake, thence south 40 chains, thence\nwest 40 chains, thence north 40\nchains, thence east 40 chains to the\npoint of commencement, and containing 160 acres, more or less.\nLAURA GORDON.\nJames W. Smith, Agent.\nDated June 4, 1910. jy8\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nTAKE NOTICE that Walter Marke\nof Toronto; Ont., occupation traveller, intends to apply for permission\nto purchase the following described\nlands in the vicinity of Kitwancool\nor Chean Wein Valley:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at a post planted at the N. E.\ncorner and about 27% miles distant in a north-westerly direction\nfrom the north end of Kitwancool\nLake, thence soutii 80 chains, thence\nwest 80 chains, thence north 80\nchains, thence east 80 chains to tho\npoint of commencement and containing 640 acres, more or less.\nWALTER MARKE.\nJames W. Smith, Agent\nDated June Sth, 1910. Jy8\nLAND PURCHASE NOTICES\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCassiar.\nTAKE NOTICE that Ethel Welsh,\nof Vancouver, B. C, occupation married woman, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following\ndescribed lands in the vicinity of Kitwancool or Chean Wein Valley:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nsouth-east corner and about 10 miles\ndistant in a north-westerly direction\nfrom the nortb end of Kitwancool\nLake, thence north SO chains, tlience\nwest 8 0 chains, tlience south 80\nchains! thence east 80 chains to\npoint of commencement and containing 640 acres, more or less.\nETHEL WELSH.\nJames to. Smith, Agent\nDated June 1st, 1910. Jy8\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCassiar.\nTAKE NOTICE that Henry Welsh,\nof Vancouver, B. O, occupation\nprinter, intends to apply foi permission to purchase the following described lands in the vicinity of Kitwancool or Chean Wein Valley: \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nS. E. corner and 11 miles distant\nln a north-westerly direction from\nthe north end of Kitwancool Lake,\nthence north 8 0 chains, thence west\n80 chains, thence south 80 chains,\nthence east 80 chains to point of\ncommencement, and containing 640\nacres, more or less.\nHENRY WELSH.\nJames W. Smith, Agent.\nDated June 2, 1910. Jy8\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nTAKE NOTICE that Frederick\nWelsh, of Vancouver, B. C, occupation clerk, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands in the vicinity of Kitwancool or Chean Wein Valley: \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nnorth-east corner about 11 miles distant in a north-westerly direction\nfrom the north end of Kitwancool'\nLake, thence south SO chains, thence\nwest 40 chains, thence north 80\nchains, thence east 40 chains to\npoint of commencement, and containing 320 acres, more or less.\nFREDERICK WELSH.\nJames W. Smith, Agent\nDated June 2, 1910. Jy8\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCassiai.\nTAKE NOTICE that James Welsh,\nof Vancouver, B. C, occupation machinist, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands in the vicinity of Kitwancool or Chean Wein Valley: \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nN. W. corner and about 12 miles distant in a north-westerly direction\nfrom the north end of Kltwancool\nLake, thence south 80 chains, thence\neast 20 chains, thence north 80\nchains, thence west 20 chains to the\npoint of commencement and containing 160 acres, more or less.\nJAMES WELSH.\nJames W. Smith, Agent.\nDated June 2, 1910. Jy8\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCassii\nTAKE NOTICE that Marguerette\nBurns, of Vancouver, B. C, occupation married woman, intends to apply for permission .o purchase the\nfollowing described lands ln the vicinity of Kltwancool or Chean Weln\nValley:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at a post\nplanted at the N. E. corner and distant about 12 miles in a northwesterly direction from -the north\nend of Kitwancool Lake; thence\nsouth SO chains, tlience west 20\nchains, thence north 80 chains,\nthence east 20 chains to point of\ncommencement, and containing 160\nacres, more or less.\nMARGUERETTE BURNS.\nJames- to. Smith, Agent.\nDated June 2, 1910. Jy8\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nTAKE NOTICE' that Richard\nHowie, of Vancouver, B. C, occupation dentist, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following\ndescribed lands in the vicinity of\nKitwancool or Chean Weln Valley:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nN. E. corner and about 24% miles\ndistant in a north-westerly direction\nfrom the north end of Kitwancool\nLake, thence south 80 chains, thence\nwest 80 chains, thence north 80\nchains, thence east 80 chains to the\npoint of commencement, and containing 640 acres, more or less.\nRICHARD HOWIE.\nJames W. Smith, Agent.\nDated June 7th, 1910. Jy8\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nTAKE NOTICE that Sandford\nBurton, of Vancouver, B. O, occupation mining engineer, Intends to\napply for permission to purchase the\nfollowing described lands in the vicinity of Kltwancool or Chean Wein\nValley:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at a post\nplanted at the N. E. corner and\nabout 23% miles distant ln a northwesterly direction from the north\nend of Kitwancool Lake, thence south\n80 chains, thence west 80 chains,\nthence north 80 chains, thence east\n80 chains to point of commencement\nand containing 640 acres, more or\nless. SANDFORD BURTON.\nJames W. Smith, Agent.\nDated June 7th, 1910. Jy8\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nPfl.\"\"4iflr\nTAKE NOTICE that Norman Cle-\nland, of Vancouver, B. C, occupation printer, Intends to apply for permission to purchase the following\ndescribed lands ln the vicinity of Kltwancool or Chean Weln Valley:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nComencing at a post planted at the\nS. E. corner and about 26% miles\ndistant in a north-westerly direction\nfrom the north end of Kltwancool\nLake, thence north 80 chains, thence\nwest 80 chains, thence south 80\nchains, thence east 80 chains to the\npoint of commencement, and containing 640 acres, more or less.\nNORMAN CLELAND.\nJames W. Smith, Agent.\nDated June 8th, 1910.\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCassiar.\nTAKE NOTICE that Charles F.\nBurns, of Moncton, New Brunswick,\noccupation auditor, intends to apply\nfor permission to purchase the fol-\nlowiug described lands in the vicinity of Kitwancool or Chean Wein\nValley:\u00E2\u0080\u0094Commencing at a post\nplanted at the south-west corner and\nabout 12 miles distant in a northwesterly direction from the north\nend of Kltwancool Lake; thence\nnorth 80 chains, thence eaBt 80\nchains, thence south 80 chains,\nthence west 80 chains to point of\ncommencement, and containing 640\nacres, more or less.\nCHARLES F. BURNS.\nJames W. Smith, Agent.\nDated June 2, 1910 Jy8\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nTAKE NOTICE that James Jar-\ndine, of Vancouver, B. C, occupation\nmerchant, Intends to apply for permission to purchase the following\ndescribed lands In the vicinity of Kltwancool or Chean Weln Valley: \u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nN. W. corner and about 13 miles distant in a north-westerly direction\nfrom tbe north end of Kitwancool\nLake, thence south SO chains, thence\neast 80 chains thence north SO\nchains, thence west 80 chains to\npoint of commencement, and containing 640 acres, more or less.\nJAMES JARDINE.\nJames W. Smith, Agent.\nDated June 2, 1910. Jy8\nSkeena Land District\u00E2\u0080\u0094District of\nCassiar.\nTAKE NOTICE that John McDIar-\nmid, of Lucknow, Ont, occupation\nfarmer, Intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands ln tho vicinity of the\nKltwancool or Chean Weln Valley:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCommencing at a post planted at the\nS. W. corner and about 13 miles distant ln a north-westerly direction\nfrom the north end of Kltwancool\nLake; thence north 80 chains, thence\neast 40 chains, thence south 80\nchains; thence west 40 chains to\npoint of commencement, and containing 320 acres.\nJOHN McDIARMID.\nJames W. Smith, Agent.\nDated June 2, 1910. Jy8 Tuesday, September 27, 1910\nTHE PRINCE RUPERT JOURNAL\nAPPRECIATED CITY\nRev. W. Stevenson of Victoria Writes of\nGreat Future of the\nPlace.\nPrince Rupert Strongly Impressed\nVisitor, Who Gives His Ideas\nAbout It\nRev. W. Stevenson, of Victoria, in\nhis latest article published in the\nColonist dealing with his trip along\nthe coast of British Columbia, gives\nattention to Prince Rupert. His ideas\nrespecting this place are logical and\nare such as could be expected from\none who takes such an Interest In\nhuman affairs as he does. He says:\nBefore seeing Prince Rupert I had\nheard much about it; its rain, its un-\nevenness, and Its soggy ground. It\nwas said that nothing was ever\nknown to grow there but moss; and\nthat its inhabitants were in constant\ndanger of sinking into tbe bottomless\nbog on which it is being built. And\nso I did not expect much. I did not.\nexpect to find a city in the making\nstanding on good rocky ground, and\nthe sun shining on it as it does at\nVictoria or Kamloops. I did not expect that one of the first invitations\nI should receive would be one to\ncome and taste some fine strawberries raised in the neighborhood. But\nthis was my experience.\nApproached by water, Prince Rupert has all the appearance of a\ntowsy-headed boy who receives your\nInspection with an air of defiance, as\nmuch as to say: \"You just wait a bit;\nI'm not cafing what people say just\nnow. I haven't got by best clothes\non yet. I'm here just, and I'm going\nto be a big fellow before some of\nthe wise people know where they\nare.\" This Impression was fully\nborne out by all tbat I saw and heard\nof Prince Rupert\nThere is the harbor, one of the\n'finest in the world, even if there is\nanywhere anything to approach It.\nThose who have whispered things\nagainst Prince Rupert must surely\nhave bade good-by to their senses.\nEighteen months ago it was nothing.\nIt was only then being cleared of timber to make room for a townsite.\nNow there is a considerable population, with three newspapers, fine\nhotels, banks, churches, schools, and\nseveral fine, big stores. But all this\nwould be sheer folly if nothing else\ncould be said about it.\nThe great asset of Prince Rupert,\nnext to its harbor facilities, is that\nIt is to be the terminus of the great\ntranscontinental railroad which is being fast hurried toward completion\nby the Grand Trunk Pacific. As soon\nas the line opens and traffic begins,\nPrince Rupert will spring to worldwide fame as the young giant city of\nthe northwest coast.\nPrince Rupert will not be able to\nhold back. It will no more be able\nto resist growing than a strong young\nathlete can on entering his teens.\nAny natural disadvantage which it\nhas at present are only tit talk for\nbabies and garrulous old people. It is\na wet climate to be sure; but who\never knew of a wet climate that was\nnot a perfectly healthy place to live\nin, other things being equal? There\nare no decent roads at present, and\none must not step off the sidewalk, In\ncase he should put his foot In a hole.\nBut who cares for that? There Is\nalways bedrock to build on, and before long Prince Rupert will have\nroads as strong and clean, and natural conditions as advantageous as\nany city can boast In Northern\nclimes.\nThis article is not written by a\nprofessional \"booster.\" I have no\nInterst in Prince Rupert more than\nIn Timbuctoo, but I could not help\nfeeling inspired by the vision of what\nPrince Rupert Is yet to be; and of\nwhat It will do for the millions of\npeople who are bound in time to\ncome this way, and find escape from\nthe crowded centres of European lifo\nand welcome to a new world of freedom and hope and natural advantage.\nI have no Interst in the real estate men. for whom Prince Rupert\nstands for so much, and who are\nthere for the sole purpose of marking\noff the newcomers who land In the\ncity. I would willingly send them out\nto work with their hands as other\nmen have to work, but the fact that\nthese men are there in such numbers\nis an indication of what is coming by\nway of trade and of the consequent\nrise ln land values. I have no sympathy with the gamble in land that\ngoes on In all these new places, but\nI predict that large fortunes will bo\nmade of town lots in Prince Rupert\nduring the next ten years or more.\nWhen I came back that way It was\nraining, but it was rain like a Scotch\nmist, only that the air was clear and\nmild.\nAs our ship steamed out of the\nharbor, a vision rose before my eyes\nof another giant city, teeming with\nlife and throbbing with energy; a\ngreat meeting place for the mighty\ncurrents of commerce between East\nand West that will surge this way;\na city rich in magnificent architectural creations, flowing with wealth,\nmade beautiful by. happy homes,\nschools, colleges, halls of learning,\nand homes of science and art; over\nthe water beautiful suburban residences, and on the waters stately\nsteamers filled with happ^ people as\nthey pass to and fro, seeking for\npleasure or for health on the shores\nof the many beautiful Islands by\nwhich these water ways are studded.\nAnd then I wished that I might live\nto see Prince Rupert as It will be\ntwenty, fifty, a hundred years hence.\n o\t\nNEW STYLES OF WARSHIPS\nStories of a startling revolution In\nthe construction of future warships\ncomes from Portsmouth.\nIt is said that the next Dreadnought to be built there will have\nmotor engines, and consequently the\nvessel will be without funnels, boilers, stokeholds, and the other prominent features In steam. This will\nmean a construction wholly different\nto the present type of fighting vessel,\nas startling ln Its change as when\nsteam first superseded sailing.\nAt present the internal combustion\nmarine engine has only been used on\nsubmarines and other smal craft.\nWhether it has yet been brought to\nsuch a pitch of perfection as to develop the 60,000 to 70,000 horsepower that would be required in the\nnext battleship is problematical.\nA solution of the difficulty would\nbring up to the dawn of a new era in\nnaval affairs, and place on the seas\nsmokeless squadrons of great speed,\nwith no funnels to hinder fore-and-\naft gun-fire, and an enormous saving\nin space, which would be devoted to\nincreasing fuel and ammunition, thus\nadding enormously to radius and effectiveness of action.\nIn other words, It would maku-the\nmight Orion, launched only a few\ndays ago, an obsolete vessel.\nIt is Interesting to recall that in\nMr. Max Pemberton's famous novel,\n\"The Iron Pirate,\" his wonderful ship\nwas driven by internal combustion,\nand failed at the critical moment owing to the difficulty of lubrication.\n o\t\nGERMAN RELATIONS\nHow the Late King Hoped for Closer\nRelations Between\nNations.\nHe Labored Always to Bring About\nPeaceful Settlements of\nTroubles\nLord Esher has contributed to the\nSeptember number of the \"Deutsche\nRevue\" a remarkable article on\n\"King Edward VII and Germany,\" an\nadvance proof of which has been obtained by the Berlin correspondent\nof the \"Daily Telegraph.\" Lord\nEsher deals mainly with King Edward's attitude toward Germany, and\ndeclares that he loved the German\npeople and had \"a real liking\" for\nthe Kaiser, which was the basis of\ntheir intercourse\nLord Esher describes as \"nothing\nbut pure imagination\" the notion\nthat King Edward directed the foreign policy of Great Britain, and\ncontinues:\n\"He always recognized that the determination of the policy of Great\nBritain was the affair of the minister\nfor the time being.\n\"The leaders of both political parties in the country found in him not\nonly a powerful ally, but also a positively unconquerable champion of\ntheir foreign policy. The foreign\npolicy of the ministry in office was\nIn his eyes\u00E2\u0080\u0094under constitutional\ngovernment, one should be able tq regard this as a matter of course\u00E2\u0080\u0094the\npolicy of the nation, and, therefore,\nalso the policy which the sovereign\nsanctioned.\n\"King Edward, for his part, never\ndoubted that he would surmount the\ninternal crisis which his ministers\nthreatened to bring about, in a peaceable manner, and without injury to\nhis prestige.\n\"He may have momonts of annoyance but he never lost courage, and\nhe was always conscious that he\nwould be able to win the majority\nof his people for himself, without regard to the form which a momentary\nmajority in the lower house might\ntake.\n\"In Internal affairs as ln foreign\npolicy, the fundamental trait in King\nE '.ward's character was courage.\n\"He was at one with the majority\nof his people In the wish to maintain\nthe sea power of Great Britain on the\nhighest step which It must occupy if\nit is to fulfil the purposes of national\ndefence and afford a guarantee for\nthe inviolability of British territory.\nHe had no ulterior thoughts, and\nnever had a hostile intention.\n\"Least of all would it have occurred to the king to look with feelings\nof jealousy, of irritation, or of uneasiness at the governing power of\nthe German empire.\n\"King Edward was far too reasonable, his knowledge of the world was\ntoo thorough, and his understanding\nof the conditions of commercial\nrivalry among the European states\ntoo e'ear for him not absolutely to\nappreciate the real meaning of the efforts of the German Emperor and\nthe German people to Increase German sea-power, and to peg out a\nbroader area for German colonial undertakings.\n\"He could not regard disarmament\nof limitation of armaments under existing corcumstances as anything else\nthan a fantastical dream, and he\ncould never understand how any intelligent human being could believe\nthat he had ever proposed either the\none or the other to the German Emperor.\"\nLord Esher concludes his article\nwith a plea for the inclusion of Germany in the bond of friendship that\nnd^v unites Great Britain and France,\nand though he does not expressly say\nso, he leads one rto believe that this\nconsummation would rave accorded\nwith the feelings and convictions of\nKing Edward. The mafc objects of\nsuch a combination, he suggests,\nwould be a guarantee of the status\nquo in Northern and Central Europe.\nTHE HAGUE AWARD\n(Continued From Page Six)\ntaking, drying or curing fish therein,\norin any other manner whatever\nabusing the privilege thereby reserved to them, is it permissible to impose restrictions conditional upon\nthe payment of light or harbor dues,\nor entering or reporting at customs\nhouses or any similar conditions?\nAnswer.\u00E2\u0080\u0094It is decided and awarded that such restrictions are not permissible unless American fishermen\nentering such bays for any oi me\nfour purposes aforesaid and remaining more than 48 hours therein\nshould be required, if thought necessary by Great Britain or the colonial\ngovernment, to report either In person or to a customs official, if reasonably convenient opportunity therefor\nis aoffrded, and it is so decided and\nawarded.\nWhat is a Bay?\nQuestion 5.\u00E2\u0080\u0094From where must be\nmeasured the three marine miles of\nany of the coasts, bays, creeks or harbors referred to in the said article?\nAnswer.\u00E2\u0080\u0094The tribunal decides and\nawards that in case of bays, the three\nmarine miles are to be measured\nfrom a straight line drawn across the\nbody of water at the place where it\nceases to have the configuration and\ncharacteristics of a bay. At all other\nplaces the three marine miles are to\nbe measured following the sinuosities\nof the coast.\nRules of Procedure\nNow this tribunal hereby recommends for the consideration and acceptance of the high contracting parties the following rules and methods of procedure for determining the\nlimits of the bays hereinbefore enumerated: (1) In every bay, not hereinafter speclflcially provided for, the\nlimits of exclusion shall be drawn\nthree miles seaward from a straight\nline across the bay ln the part nearest the entrance at the first point\nwhere the width does not exceed ten\nmiles. (2) In the following bays\nwhere the configuration of the coast\nand the local climatic conditions are\nsuch that foreign fishermen when\nwithin the geographic headlands\nmight reasonably and bona fide believe themselves on the high seas, tlie\nlimits of exclusion shall be drawn in\neach case between tho headlines hereinafter specified as being those at and\nwithin which such fishermen might\nbe reasonably expected to recognize\nthe bay under average conditions.\nFor the Bale des Chaleurs the line\nfrom the light at Birch Point on Mis-\ncou Island to Macquereau Point\nlight; for the Bay of Miramlchi, the\nline from the light at Point Escum-\nlnac to the light on the eastern point\nof Tabuslntac Gully; for Egmont Bay\nin Prince Edward Island, the line\nfrom the light at Cape Egmont to\nthe light at West Point, and off St.\nAnne Bay, In the province of Nova\nScotia, the line from the light at\nPoint Anconl to the nearest point on\nthe opposite shore of the mainland.\nFor Fortune Bay, In Newfoundland,\nthe line from Connalgre Head t0 the\nlight on the southeasterly end of\nThe Westholme\nLumber Company, Ld.\nWe carry the largest stock of\nBuilding Supplies in the North.\nQuotations given on short notice in all lines.\nRough and Dressed Lumber\nShingles and Lath\nMouldings and Cases\nDoors and Windows\nWe handle Plaster and Lime at reasonable prices\nGet our quotations for all classes of buildings.\n. FIRST AVENUE\nOFFICE AND\nWAREHOUSES\nI\nI\nI\nH\nI\n1\n1\n1\ni\nI\ni\nn\n1\n1\nla\n1\n1\n1\nI\nm\n0\nSHERWIN & WILLIAMS\nPAINTS\nCOVER THE EARTH.\nWE ARE SOLE AGENTS\nCARLOAD JUST ARRIVED\nReady Nixed Paints,\nPaints Ground in Oil,\nPaints Ground in Japan,\nVarnishes, Shellac, etc.\nWater Stains\nand\nDecotint\nIN ALL, COLORS\nPrince Rupert Hardware & Supply\nCompany, Ltd. thos. dunn, m&\n^^^mm^M^^Mu^^mmm^M^m^m^M\nm\ni\ni\nn\ni\ni\ni\ni\nn\n1\nI\n1\n1\nI\nII\nn\nI\n@\nI\n1\nII\n1\n0\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094THE\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nOliver\nTypewriter\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094FOR\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nSeventeen Cents a Day\nPlease read the headline over\nagain. Then its tremendous significance will dawn upon you.\nAn Oliver Typewriter\u00E2\u0080\u0094the standard visible writer\u00E2\u0080\u0094the most highly\nperfected typewriter on the market\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094yours for 17 cents a day!\nThe typewriter whose conquest of\ntho commercial world is a matter of\nbusiness history\u00E2\u0080\u0094yours for 17 cents\na day!\nThe typewriter that is equipped\nwith^scores of such conveniences as\n\"The Balance Shift\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"The Ruling\nDevice\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"The Double Release\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n\"The Locomotive Base\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"The Automatic Spacer\"-\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"The Automatic Tabulator\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"The Disappearing Indicator\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"The Adjustable Paper Fingers\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094\"The Scientific Condensed\nKeyboard\"\u00E2\u0080\u0094all\nYours For 17 Cents a Day\nDIIDI\nBrunet Island, thence to Fortune\nHead; for or near the following bays,\nthe limits of exclusion shall be three\nmarine miles seaward, from the following lines, namely, for or near\nBarrington Bay, in Nova Scotia, the\nline from the light on Stoddart Island to the light on the south point of\nCape Sable, thence to the light at\nBaccaro Point, at Chedabucto, and\nSt. Peter's Bay; the line from Cranberry Island light to Green Island\nlight, thence to Point Rouge for Mira\nBay; the line from the light on the\neast point of Scatarie Island to the\nnortheasterly point of Caue Morien;\nand at Placentia Bay in Newfoundland, the line between from Latine\nPoint on the eastern mainland to the\nmost southerly point of Red Island,\non St. Mary's Bay, in Nova Scotia,\nshall, for the purpose of delimitation, be taken as the coasts of such\nbays.\nHay of Fundy Excluded\nIt is understood that nothing in\nthese rules refers either to the Bay\nof Fundy, considered as a whole\napart from its bays and creeks, or as\nto the Innocent Passages through the\nGut of Canso, which were excluded\nby the agreement made by exchange\nof notes between Mr. Bacon and Mr.\nBryce, dated February 21, 1909, and\nMarch 4, 1909, or lo Conception Bay,\nwhihe was provided for by the decision of the Privy Council in the case\nof the Direct United States Cable\nCompany, versus the Anglo-American\nTelegraph company, in which decision the United States have acquiesced.\nOn the Whole Treaty Const\nQuestion (i.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Have the inhabitants\nof the United States the liberty to\ntake fish In tbe bays, harbors and\ncreeks on that part of the southern\ncoast of Newfoundland which extends\nfrom Cape Race to Rameau Islands,\nor on the western and northern\ncoasts of Newfoundland from Cape\nRace to Qulrpon Island, or on the\nMagdalen Islands?\nAnswer.\u00E2\u0080\u0094This tribunal Is of opinion that American inhabitants are en-\ntilled to fish in the bays, creeks and\nharbors of the treaty coasts of Newfoundland and the Magdalen Islands,\nnnd It Is so decided and awarded.\nTrading Privileges\nQuestion 7.\u00E2\u0080\u0094Are the Inhabitants\nof the United Stales, whoso vessels\nresort to the treaty coast, entitled to\nhave, for those vessels when duly\nauthorized by the I'nited States on\nlhat behalf, the commercial privileges on treaty coasl accorded by\nagreement or otherwise to United\nStates trading vessels generally?\nAnswer.\u00E2\u0080\u0094For these reasons this\ntribunal is of the opinion that the\ninhabitants of the United States are\nso entitled insofar as concerns this\ntreaty, there being nothing in its provisions to disentitle them, provided\nthe treaty liberty of Ashing and the\ncommercial privileges are not exercised concurrently, and It Is so decided and awarded.\nMany a man who pretends to believe things winds up by believing\nthem.\nNOTICE TO CONTRACTORS\nGraham Island School\nSEALED TENDERS, superscribed\n\"Tender for Graham Island School,\"\nwill be received by the Honourable\nthe Minister of Public Works up to\nand including Monday, the 1 Oth day\nof October, 1910, for the errction and\ncompletion of a small one-room\nschool building at Graham Island,\none of the Queen Charlotte Islands,\nSkeena Electoral District.\nPlans, specifications, contract and\nforms of tender may be seen on and\nafter the 12th day of September,\n1910, at the offices of John L. Barge,\nSecretary to the School Board, Queen\nCharlotte City; the Government\nAgent, Prince Rupert; tbe Mining\nRecorder, Jedway; and the Department of Public Works, Victoria.\nEach proposal must be accompanied by an accepted bank cheque\nor certificate of deposit on a chartered bank of Canada, made payable\nto the Honourable the Minister of\nPublic Works, for the sum of $125,\nwhich shall be forfeited if the party\ntendering decline to enter into con-\ntrac. when called upon to do so, or\nif he fail to complete the work contracted for. The cheques or cc rtl-\nficates of deposit of unsuccessful tenderers will be returned to them upon\nthe execution of Ihe contract.\nTenders will nol be considered unless made out on the forms supplied,\nsigned with the actual signature of\nthe tenderer and enclosed In the envelopes furnished.\nThe lowest or any tender not\nnecessarily accepted,\nF. C. GAMBLE,\nPublic Works Engineer.\nPublic Works Department,\nVictoria, B.C., September 7, 1910.\nWe announced this new sales plan\nrecently, just to feel the pulse of the\npeople. Simply a small cash payment\u00E2\u0080\u0094then 17 cents a day. That\nis the plan in a nutshell.\nThe result has been such a deluge of applications for machines\nthat we are simply astounded.\nThe demand comes from people of\nall classes, all ages, all occupations.\nThe majority of inquiries has\ncome from people of known financial\nstanding who were attracted by the\nnovelty of the proposition. An impressive demonstration of the Immense popularity of the Oliver Typewriter.\nA startling confirmation of our belief that the Era of Universal Typewriting Is at hand. \u00C2\u00AB\nA Quarter of a Million People are\nMaking Money With\n\u00C2\u00A9\t\nEXAMINATION FOR INSPECTOR\nOF STEAM BOILERS AND\nMACHINERY\nExaminations for tho position of\nInspector of Steam Boilers and Machinery, under the \"Steam Boilers\nInspection Act, 1901,\" will he held\n! at the Parliament Buildings, Victoria, commencing November 7th,\nj 1910. Application and instruction\nforms can he had on application to\n: the undersigned, to whom the former\nmust be returned correctly filled in.\nnot later than October 24th, 1910.\nSalary $130 per month, increasing at\nHie rate of $5 per month each year\n-to a maximum of $isn.\nJOHN PECK.\nChief Inspector of Machinery,\nNew Westminster, B.C.\ni te' En I %\nThe Standard Visible Writer\nThe Oliver Typewriter is a moneymaker, right from the word \"go!\" So\neasy to run that beginners soon get\nin the \"expert\" class. Earn as you\nlearn. Let the machine pay the 17\ncents a day\u00E2\u0080\u0094and all above that Is\nyours.\nWherever you are, there's work to\nbe done and money to be made by\nusing the Oliver. The business world\nis calling for Oliver operators. There\nare not enough to supply tha demand.\nTheir salaries are considerably above\nthose of many classes of workers.\n\"An Oliver Typewriter tn\nEvery Home!\"\nThat Is our battle cry today. We\nhave made the Oliver supreme ln\nusefulness and absolutely Indispensable in business. Now comes the\nconquest of the home.\nThe simplicity and strength of the\nOliver fit It for family use. It Is becoming an important factor In the\nhome training of young people. An\neducator as well as a money maker.\nOur new selling plan puts the\nOliver on the threshold of every\nhome in America. Will you close\nthe door of your home or office on\nthis remarkable Oliver opportunity?\nWrite for further detnils of our\neasy offer and a free ropy of the new\nOliver catalogue. Address:\nR. C. BEAN\nPrince Rupert Agent\nGeneral Offices: Oliver Typewriter\nBuilding, Chicago, 111.\nCANCELLATION OK RESERVE\nNOTICE is hereby given that the.\nreserve existing on Crown lands In\nthe vicinity of Babine Lake, and\nsituate in Cassiar District, notice of\nwhich bearing date June 30th, 1909,\nwas published in the British Columbia Gazette, dated July 2nd, 1908, Is\ncancelled.\nROBERT A. RENWICK*\nDeputy Commissioner of Lands.\nLands Department,\nVictoria, B. C, June Kith, 1910\n(First Insertion July 5.)\nmdmtm THE PRINCE RUPERT JOURNAL\nTuesday, September 27, 1910\nII\n;..j..X'***<'************-K\"J**<^ ti\"!'*i{\"t<**i'j'***-Ki!c.r-:\":i*.:\u00C2\u00AB:'ik.A\n\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0099\u00A6-\u00E2\u0099\u00A6 \u00E2\u0099\u00A6 \u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\"\u00C2\u00BB-\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00E2\u0099\u00A6 \u00E2\u0099\u00A6 .\u00E2\u0099\u00A6 a .\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\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0096\u00A0\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00E2\u0099\u00A6 \u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\u00C2\u00BB\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\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0099\u00A6 fcv\nThe Hazelton Nine-Mile Mining Co'y.\n^^^^ The Lead King =======\nMen who foresee the possibilities of the Nine-Mile country are buying NOW. The thinking public\ndoes not want investments which take such advertising as \"luck,\" and \"take a chance.\" The\npeople who are buying Hazelton Nine-Mile Mining Co. stock at 15c are those who have investigated.\nThis is no proposition for the sentimental. Would you rather wait and pay more ?\n50,000 Shares Only at 15c Per Share\n-FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL OR ADDRESS-\nThe F. T. BOWNESS BROKERAGE CO.\nPHONE 77\nOffice : Dawson Building, Third Avenue, Near Sixth Street\nPHONE 77\n*Y*\nIII\nIt\nf*\n-.-. .*\n.y 'tt,\nH\n*, ,*\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2:\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 *\n* #\n*. .*\n*' %\nI 'I\ni >%\nif't\nII\nII\nII\n'iA.r\u00C2\u00AB*!\nt.. , v (bAA ,*. ,\u00E2\u0080\u00A2\u00C2\u00BB ,\u00E2\u0099\u00A6\u00C2\u00AB A t,tt fy ,% ,*, A A \u00C2\u00BB*\u00C2\u00BB \u00C2\u00BB*\u00C2\u00AB i** A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A\n,-ritH*ri?i \ fi \u00C2\u00A3 I* **\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 ti J*-\"?1- \u00E2\u0080\u00A2** \u00C2\u00A3 \u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 .** \u00C2\u00AB*' \u00C2\u00BB*< & \u00E2\u0080\u00A2*\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 X i*. .*'\nINQUEST WAS HELD\nCoroner's Jury Find That Richer Fired\nShot on Thursday\nNight.\nThe\nAccused Will Come Up\nPreliminary Hearing on\nFriday\nFor\nThe Inquest into the circumstances\nsurrounding the death of Joseph\nBeaudoin last Thursday night was\nconcluded last evening before the\ncoroner, J. H. McMullin. The jury\nconsisted of J. R. Beatty, J. D. Allen,\nAlex. McRae, John H. Johnston, J. H.\nThompson and John Vaughan. The\njury after bearing the evidence\nbrought in a verdict that the murdered man came to his death by a\nshot In the breast fired by AlpBonse\nRicher.\nThe preliminary hearing of the\ncharge against Richer will be gone\non with on Friday before tbe police\nmagistrate.\nAt the inquest last night Thomas\nKeon was the first witness called.\nHe stated that he had seen Ri.'her\nhelping Beaudoin, who was very\ndrunk, home on Wednesday night.\nThe next morning Richer came and\nasked witness for a clothes brush ti\nbrush the mud from Beaudoin's\nclothing, and he also told witness\nthat he was going to town to get a\nbottle to cheer Beaudoin up. Richer\nhimself was perfectly sober.\nDr. Tremayne stated that he had\nbeen called for about 8.30 Thursday evening and was told that some\none was shot. He, along with the\npolice and Richer, hurried to the\nscene of the shooting in a launch. Upon arriving at the shack he found\nBeaudoin lying on the bed groaning.\nHe examined him slightly and ordered him to be taken to the hospital.\nUpon closer examination It was found\nthat the bullet had gone through the\nleft side, thence to the right side,\nculling the tenth rib, going under\nihe liver and through the diaphragm\nInto the right lung and finally lldg-\nIng Itself in the slomach.\nThere was considerable hemorrhage In the chest. The doelor slated\nthat this, along wiib the shock, was\nthe rause of death.\nJoe Sinclair testified that he had\nknown eBaudoln for several years.\nHe s:iw him last week On Friday\nhe identifier] Ihe body of the deceased\nns thai of Jos. Beaudoin.\nDavid Slanstrotn, employed by\nFoley, Welsh and Stewart as a hook-\nkeeper, staled that there was $277.70\non Hie hooks to the credit of Beaudoin.\nSergt. Regan, who accompanied\nDr. Tremayne to the scene of the\nshooting, gave evidence very similar\nto that of Dr. Tremayne. He also\nslated that while at the hospital\nRicher started to talk In French to\nBeaudoin. Regan told him to talk\nIn English, because anything he\nshould say would be used In evidence\nngainst him. Richer started to cry\nand said that he had done It unintentionally. Beaudoin looked up at\nRicher, murmured something, and\nsaid that he should not have done it.\nRicher told Regan that the two of\nthem had been drinking for three or\nfour days and that on Wednesday\nnight Beaudoin had robbed Richer\nof $14. Thursday night they had\nquarrelled over it, and at Richer was\nsitting on the bed with the gun in his\nhand it went off. Regan could not\nfind the $14 that Richer claimed\nBeaudoin had stolen. The next morning Richer appeared at the police\nstation with the $14 which he\nthought Beaudoin had stolen but had\nnot.\nUpon examining the gun In court\nlast evening it was found that a\nseparate action was required to cock\nthe gun after it was loaded, otherwise the gun would not go off.\nSergt. Regan stated that he had\nfound two empty whiSky bottles and\none partly full in the shack occupied\nby the men.\nAfter the evidence bad been put\nin the jury retired, shortly afterwards bringing in the verdict before\nstated.\nThe deceased man has a brother in\nWest Superior, Wisconsin, and also\nan uncle, a logger in Vancouver.\n o\t\nFIRE EQUIPMENT\nRecommendations Pass Council Authorizing Work to be Done\nTbe fire and water committee of\nthe city council made a report last\nevening recommending a number of\nitems asked for by the Are chief. The\nlatter stated that the two hose reels\nhad arrived and the houses should\nbe erected for them. These, he recommended should be built so that they\ncould be moved. They should be 10\nfeet by 14 feet and 8 feet high and\ncould be built at a cost of $50 each.\nOne should be built at the corner of\nSecond avenue and Seventh street,\nand the other at Third avenue and\nFifth street. He also recommended\nthe purchase of cable to be used in\npulling down buildings in case of\nnecessity in fighting Are. This should\nhave a hook on one end and a ring\non the other.\nOn the motion to adopt the report\nof the fire committee, Aid. Hilditch\nwished to know If anything was being done to Increase the water main.\nIt seemed useless to provide for additional connections unless the main\nwas Increased.\nAH. Mobley explained that these\nhose centres were Intended only to\nfacilitate using the hose they had.\nNo additional hose would be needed.\nHis Worship explained that the\nsix Inch pipe which was to have been\nplaced to continue to the street line,\nhad to be used to provide for an\nincreased supply from the pumps to\nthe reservoir.\nAid. Mclntyre suggested that as\nthe pipe was needed for this use ad\nditlonal pipe might, have been order\ned. It should all be done subject to\nthe city engineer's approval as he\nwas well aware of the necessities.\nThe report was adopted.\nTOOK HIS OWN LIFE\nMystery Solved Surrounding Disappearance of George Reid Who Murdered His Wife.\nOPENING LAKELSE\nMan Apparently Committed Suicide\nA cry Shortly Alter Taking\nLife of Woman\nGeorge Reid, the murderer of his\nwife at Clayburn, the police, believe,\nwas evidently insane when he put a\nend to the life of his young wife a\nfew weeks ago for his body was found\nfloating in the Fraser river with the\nthroat cut from ear to ear last Tuesday morning by Joseph Louis, an Indian, near Pump House No. 2, Mats-\nqui Prairie. The red man was in a\ncanoe at the time and after making\nfast to the body hurried to Mission\nwhere Constable Wilkfe of Vancouver, was then stopping with Constable Gammon. As soon as the provincial constable set eye upon the body,\nhe said: \"That is the man.\" So well\nhad the officer studied the photograph of the murderer that he knew\nevery line. Not only did the clothes\nworn by the dead man tally with the\ndescription of those worn by Reid\nwhen he disappeared, but the whole\nget up was the same. However, to\nmake assurance doubly sure, the constable telephoned to the B. C. Electric Railway office at Vancouver, asking Mr. Porter to view the remains.\nMr. Porter, who is an employee of\nthe B. C. Electric Railway company,\nand who with Mr. Rutledge was\nboarding with the Reids at the time\nof the murder without the slightest\nhestitation identified the body as that\nof .Reid.\nFrom what has been learned from\nwitnesses and from scraps of circumstantial evidence, Reid wrote a foui\nletter to the young men who boarded\nwith him and his wife. This letter\nhas never been made public. Then he\nkilled his young help-mate and fled\nto the C. P. R. bridge at Mission, not\nfar from his home at Clayburn, which\nit will be remembered lies just across\nthe river from Mission. There, It Is\nsurmised, he drew a sharp razor from\nhis hip pocket and slashed his throat\nwith frenzied fury, so that he severed\nthe jugular vein and cut deeply the\nthroat in a long wound extending\nfrom ear to ear. Then he either fell\nInto the rushing river below, or tumbled over through shock and loss\nof blood.\nCompany Incorporated to Carry on Operations in That\nDistrict.\nCompanies Incorporated in the Province\u00E2\u0080\u0094Appointments Made by\nGovernment\nD. C. Yates, employed on the erection of the new Bank of Montreal\nbuilding on Third avenue, fell from\nthe wall a few days ago and was\nbadly injured. He was removed to\nthe Hospital and is making satisfactory progress.\n o\t\nA. to. Ross, of Vancouver, representing the underwriters, after spending several days in the city, went\nsoutii last night. Mr. Seeley will remain a few days to complete the\nwork.\nThe latest copy of tbe Provincial\nGazette contains notice of the Incorporation of the Lakelse Valley Development company with a capita]\nstock of $200,000, divided into 4,000\nshares.\nThe company is incorporated with\nquite large powers, being authorized\nto carry on all kinds of real estate\nbusiness with power to loan money\nand do general financial, mercantile\nand manufacturing business.\nThe personel of the company Is\nnot made kuown through the notice\nbut It is believed that a syndicate of\nVancouver men is behind the proposition. The company, judging from\ncertain powers given it, intends to\ncarry on a general colonization\nscheme clearing tbe land and subdividing it for the intending settlers.\nTho following other companies\nhave been incorporated:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nArtley-Elford Boat Co. of Nelson,\nwith a capital of $50,000.\nCanadian Mining Operators, Ltd.,\nwith a capital of $250,000.\nCentral B. C. Lands, Ltd., capitalized at $200,000.\nEmpress Electrical Works, Ltd.,\nwith a capitalization of $700 to take\nover business of A. G. Teague.\nHose Investment Co., with a capital of $250,000.\nIndependent Liquor Company with\na capital of $25,000.\nThe Salmon Arm Fruit & Land\ncompany, with a capital of $250,000.\nSomer Park, Ltd., capitalized at\n$250,000, to deal in petroleum and\nother mining and industrial concerns.\nVernon Curling Rink Company,\ncapitalized at $10,000.\nThe Issue contains notice of the appointment of the following notaries\npublic: H. W. C. Boak, L.L.B., Vancouver, and Alfred Carmichael, Alberni.\n o\t\nThe earth wrapped ln the soft mystery of a summer twilight Is as sweet\nas a bride In her veil.\nLINDSAY'S WAGE & STORAGE\nG. T. P. CARTAGE AGENTS\nOffice at H. IJ. Rochester, Centre St.\n\u00E2\u0080\u0094o\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nLADYSMITH COAL\nIs handled by us. All orders receive\nprompt attention. Phone No 68.\nThe Roland Rooms\nSplendid Accommodations\nNewly Furnished\nHot baths; right down town; good\ntable board all round\nRATES, FIFTY CENTS AND UP\nSome Rock\nBottom\nPrices\nSee Us For Investment\nRupert City Realty & Information Bureau, Ltd.\nPRINCE RUPERT,\nB.C.\nIX THE SUPREME COURT OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nBetween:\nJohn Jacobs, Frank Johnson, and\nCharles Carlson, carrying on business as Contractors under the firm\nname or style of Hawkins & Co.,\nPlaintiffs.\nAnd\nC. Peterson, C. Larson, and C. Anderson, Defendants.\nTo C. Peterson, and C. Larson, of\nPrince Rupert, in the Province of\nBritisli Columbia:\n\QV are hereby required to take\nnotice that a Writ of Summons was\nissued In the Supreme Court of British Columbia, Victoria Registry,\nagainst you, C. Peterson, and C. Larson, and C. Anderson, at the suit of\nJohn Jacobs, Frank Johnson, and\nCharles Carlson, carrying on business\nas Contractors under the firm name\nor sty'e of Hawkins & Co., on the\n29th day of November, 1909, claiming to have it declared that the Defendants on or about the 15th day\nof January, 1909, withdrew from the\npartnership business then being carried on by the Plaintiffs and ceased\nfrom said date to have any interest\ntherein, having abandoned the same\nand that they thereby forfeited all\nright in or to any of the monies\nearned by such business under and\nby virtue of a contract entered into\nwith D. A. Rankin In or about the\nmonth of August, 1908, and completed on the 13th day of November,\n1909, to do certain work upon a portion of the Grand Trunk Pacific Railroad near Prince Rupert in the Province of British Columbia, and for an\naccount and for a receiver, and that\nyou are thereby required to cause an\nappearance to be entered for you at\nthe Victoria Registry of the Supreme\nCourt aforesaid and that In default of\nyour so doing the Plaintiffs may proceed therein and judgment may be\ngiven in your absence.\nAnd you are further required to\ntake notice that by an order of the\nHonourable Mr. Justice Gregory\nmade ln the said cause on the 22nd\nday of September, 1910, service of\nthe said Writ of Summons upon you\nC. Peterson and C. Larson was ordered to be effected by serving Lewis\nW. Patmore, Barrister-at-Law, with\na copy of the Writ of Summons herein and a copy of the order now being\nrecited and by publishing notice of\nthe said Writ of Summons and order\nin the Prince Rupert Journal for six\nissues thereof. And that you be required to appear to the said Writ of\nSummons within eight days from the\nlast publication in the said newspaper\nor from the service on the said Lewis\nto. Patmore whichever should last\nhappen and that the same should be\ngood and sufficient service upon you\nof the Writ of Summons in the said\naction.\nDated this 23rd day of September,\n1910.\nYours, etc.,\nJ. A. AIRMAN,\nSolicitor for the Plaintiffs, whose address for service Is at the office of\nthe said J. A. Aikman, Imperial\nBank Chambers, corner of Yates\nand Government streets, Victoria,\nBritish Columbia. S27\nFred Stork\nGeneral Hardware\n...Complete Line of...\nVALVES\nPipe and Pipe Fittings\nCANCELLATION OF RESERVE\nNOTICE Is hereby given that the\nreserve existing on Crown lands ln\nthe vicinity of Babine Lake, situate\nin Range 5, Coast District, notice of\nwhich was published in the British\nColumbia Gazette, dated December\n17, 1908, Is cancelled in so far as\nsaid reserve relates to lots numbered 1519, 1518, 1517, 1516, 1515,\n1510, 1507, 1506, 1506A, 1503 1501,\n1502, 1512, 1511, 1505, 1504, 1613,\n1514, 1509, 1508, 1530, 1527, 1528,\n1529, 1531, 1632, 1533, 1534, 1535,\n1537, 1539, 1536, 1538, 15.40, 1541,\n1544, 1543, 1545, 1546, 1542, 1547,\n1548, 1549, 1550, 1520, 1521, 1522,\n1523, 1524, 1525, 1526, and 1551.\nROBERT A. RENWICK,\nDeputy Commissioner of Lands.\nLands Department,\nVictoria, B. C, June 16th, 1910.\n(First insertion July 5.)\nHear\nthe\nTruth\nThere's nothing about a set of\nharness that requires such careful\nattention, in both leather and workmanship, as traces and collars, there's\nwhere the strain lies, there's where\nwe excel, though we are just as\nwatchful as to every other detail of\na complete set of harness, be it for\nheavy or light work.\nB. C. Saddlery Company\nLimited\nMANUFACTURERS OF SADDLERY\nJobbers of Leather, Harness, Saddles, Whips, Trunks and Valises,\nPads, Blankets, Rugs; Harness Soaps\nand Dressings.\nB66 YATES STREET\nVICTORIA, B.C."@en . "Newspapers"@en . "Prince Rupert (B.C.)"@en . "Prince_Rupert_Journal_1910-09-27"@en . "10.14288/1.0311915"@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 .