THE DAILY NEWS The Daily News The Leading Newspaper and the Largest Circulation in Northern B. C. Published by the Prince Rupert Publishing Company, Limited DAILY AND WEEKLY SUBSCRIPTION RATES—To Canada, United States and Mexico—Datxy, 60c per month, or $5.00 per year, inadvance. WEEKLY, $2.00 per year. All Other Countries—Daily, $8.00 per year; Weekly, $2.50 per year, strictly in advance | TRANSIENT DISPLAY ADVERTISING—50 cents per inch. Contract rates on application. HEAD OFFICE Daily News Building, Third Ave., Prince Rupert, B. C. Telephone 98. BRANCH OFFICES AND AGENCIES New York—National Newspaper Bureau, 219 East 23rd St., New York City. SEATTLE—Puget Sound News Co. LonpeNn, ENGLAND—The Clougher Syndicate, Grand Trunk Building, Trafalgar Square. Susscripers will greatly oblige by promptly calling up Phone 08 in case of non-delivery or inattention on the purt of the news carriers ugg DaILy EDITION. THURSDAY, SEPT. 28 THE LOVE OF THE FIGHT Last night two half naked men stood inside a roped ring in a local athletic club for several, rounds and pounded each other in the many damaging ways that skilled boxers know. In their own way they enjoyed it. It was the love of the fight. Around the ring some hundreds of Prince Rupert men gathered, and applauded first one man then the other as each scored a point or landed a blow on his opponent. They paid two and three dollars apiece for the privilege of witnessing the match. It was the love of the fight. The preachers may talk till doomsday about ‘‘degrading spec- tacles’”’ and ‘brutal exhibitions.’’ They cannot eradicate the love of the fight that lies very close to the surface of our common humanity. One of our most gleeful memories centres around a ministerial friend who interposed to stop a street fight, but getting hurt in the peaceful mission, suddenly forgot his sacred calling and turned in to clean up the crowd. A story about a very popular priest now in Prince Rupert—it may not be true, but it sounds like the truth—tells of a rough house at an election meeting in the old Kootenay days. As the excitement grew he leaned over to a friend and whispered, “‘As a priest I can’t very well hit arybody, but I wish someone would hit me.” It has been pointed out by high-browed teachers of psychology again and again, that the phraseology of politics, of business, ney of evangelical religion itself is the language of the battlefield or the prize ring. All life is a fight. “I've had no education. I’ve been a cow puncher since I was nin years old, but I’ve seen a lot of life, and I measure a man by the amouni of punishment he can take without giving in. A man can’t win at any game that can't fight,’’ was the way another man sized up his phil- osophy of life a few nights ago, as he exchanged confidences during a long night ride in the teeth of a storm. Sometimes women realise that the masculine love of a fight has a meaning in the race-development. Helen Macdonald, a clever British lady writer, some time ago told in M. A. P. of flouting the con- ventions and attending a boxing match in London. Her description is very novel: “The fight began. They punched each other in the ribs, little punches, and the referee danced after them all the time to see that they punched fair. Just when I was getting interested, they suddenly stopped and retired to opposite corners and sat down on chairs. ; “Presently blood came, and as I sat watching it, harassed between feeling very well and feeling that I ought not to do so, I began to understand how little I was realizing that these mer were actually suffering physical pain. Nevertheless, it did not worry me a bit. The only thing I found and annoying and un- pleasant during the match was an ugly trick one man had of jumping in with his mouth open. He looked as though he might bite. “The man with the open mouth won. It was splendid to see the gameness of the loser. He went right through with it to the bitter end. His courage I could appreciate, even if my ig- norance of boxing caused me to miss all the science of the blows. “In the ‘high-and-far-off times,’ before we all became so civilized, courage and brute strength in her man made just the difference between life and death to a women. “They still count. Primitive instincts 2re hard to kill. I glanced at the poor physique of some of the sightseers as we left the place when the fight was over, ard I thought of the men I had just seen in the ring. I think I understard why the most of them would rather their women didn’t attend prize fights.”’ The men who gathered last night to witness and to take pari in the contest of blows were obeyirg an impulse thet antedates history, and that is still a dominant factor in the real work of life. To learn to give blows—above all to learn to take them; to hit straight and learn to take without bitterness or fear the blows thet come is to learn the strong man’s philosophy of life. The Canadian General Electric Co.. Limi c Co., Limited HEAD OFFICE: “ORONTO FACTORIES: PETERBOROUGH, ONT ’ MANUFACTURERS OF EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL The Canad a Foundry Co., Limited Toronto, Ont. AIR COMPRESSORS DREDGES MOTOR DRIVEN TRIPLEX BOILERS GAS AND GASOLINE EN- BUCYRUS STEAM SHOV- GINES ORNAMENTAL IRON BOILER FEED PUMPS PILE DRIVERS USHE COCHRANE FEED WATER STRUCTUI 7 MATHER & PLATT TUR- HEA STRUCTURAL STEEL CONCRETE ; MIXERS BINE PUMPS UNDERWRITER STEAM PRINCE RUPERT BRANCH ®om 4 Mcintyre Block | GRAHAM KEARNEY, AGENT ———— RELEKRKEKEPRRERE Ree RRR The Graham Island Oil Fields, Limited CAPITAL STOCK $1,000,000 We are offering for sale a very , limited amount of shares of stock at 25c¢ per share; par value $1.00. These shares are going quickly and will soon be off the market THE MACK REALTY & INSURANCE COMPANY GAs PRODUCERS LOCOMOTIVES Phone 245 * 4 ‘ i ok ~@~ By Clive Phillips Wolley (AUTHOR OF GOLD, GOLD IN CARIBOO, ETC.) el ee id t CHAPTER XV. “Well, I'm blanked! Protheroe! You infernal drunken fool, come back. Come back, I say. You'll drown, sure,” But Protheroe took no notice of Jim's frantic cry. In that roar of. wa- ters which was already about his waist, and seemed to be Se his ears, he could hear nothing m the shore which he had left, and if he had dore so, he bad sense enough t4; know that it would have been moie dangerous to try to turn back than to’ on. im saw that himself, as the words left his lips, but it is the fashion of. human beings in dire straits to cry for the imposeible. And Jim was in a worse strait than the doctor, In the swirl at his feet there were two small objects, somewhat darker than the heaving darkness around them. They might well have been pieces of drift wood, being hustled down stream, but to Jim they would be in that dreary future in front of him, the horse he stole and the mat he murdered. And the unsteady lights of the Soda Creek lanterns were dancing along the river’s course coming down stream to- wards him, nearer and nearer, until he could hear the voices of those who carried them in spite of the noise of the waters. With a curse he swung himself into the saddle, and wrenching the roan’s head round viciously, he galloped up stream for fifty yards, over a chaos of slippery boulders. Then he turned his horse's head to- wards the river, and drove his spurs home, but though the colt’s spirit was broken by bitter hard work, his in- stinct recoiled from this new peril, and he rose fighting and pawing the air on the very edge of the flood. It was in vain. The man’s blood was up and the ice-coated boulders gave the beast no footing. With a crash the two went into the river, the horse on its side, whilst the man, thrown clear of his mount, disappeared some feet down stream of him. Twice the beast was turned over in the flood, and for a few moments the water swept over the man, but before either had been drifted to the level of Protheroe, Jim had regained his horse’s head, and twisting the fingers of one hand in the beast’s long mane, swam steadily on the down stream | side of it. Once he had his head above water, the colt swam superbly, driving against the current with all the energy | of young life battling against death, | so that before they had half crossed | from shore to shore, Combe and his horse were level with Protheroe, and making some sort of a breakwater for | him. But it was not enough. The doctor was still in the saddle, and Combe could see the pinto’s head sinking lower and lower. If the doctor stayed | where he was, the horse embarrassed | by his weight, must drown, and in spite of his efforts Combe could not | make his voice heard in that swirl of | waters. On the bank, the noise was as_ the indistinct roar of a mob, but in mid-stream each voice became distinct, individual and hostile. He heard the waves rouring at him, | he could feel the undercurrents pulling OD eee ch tt et , to his death, rather than fight longer against the inevitable, but the sight of the other man stil] struggling, and ob- viously spent, roused him to one more effort. It was useless to shout to the horse, but with his free hand he managed to strike it in the face, and drag ite head almost under with the other, until in despair the beast turned up stream again. But it was too late. Jim knew it, tor hz could hear the ice teeth | enashing almost at his heels, and he| only struck out still from a stubborn determination to fight to the lust inch. His reward exceeded his hopes. Since he plunged into the Fraser it had seemed to Combe that he and his horse by immense efforts had just managed to remain stationary upon & Plane of sliding water which carried them towards the ice pack, but now for the first time the long lean head which had bored down upon him, push- ing him always nearer and nearer to eternity, began to forge ahead. There was no doubt of it. They had reached the eddy under the shore; the big boulders loomed up, grew clearer, and the roan struck bot- tom. At the first touch Combe’s knees seemed to give under him. All his Strength had gone, and having gone through the devths he seemed likely enough to drowsy in the shallows. It was only by an immense effort of will that he braced himse!f sufficiently to stagger out of the eddy. He could have fallen where he landed, but a cry from the doctor found one last re- srv of strnrth Ift in his companionuu serve of strength left in his companion, and calling upon that “last ounce,” Jim blundered down the bank and into the water, falling against a great tooth of rock, which broke the force of the river at the bend. By what seemed a miracle, the pinto had just made good its footing on the very last point between it and the swirl which led to the ice jamb, but the doctor was too spent to profit by his horse’s good luck, and though Jim grabbed him as he was swept by, he could do no more. For what seemed to him five of the | longest minutes he had ever known, the water crushed him against that rock tooth, whilst his arm was recked with the pain of keeping his fingers | crooked in that Landle of wet clothing, | which swayed with the current, which he had not strength to drag back. He could hold on to it, he would go with it rather than le* go, but he could }not find the strength needed to draw | it to his own place of safety. Jim felt his body slipping away from the rock which sheltered him. Gently, insistently, like az angler who puts all the strain he dare upon a lightly-hook- }ed fish, the waters drew him from his hold, and then there came one of those strange chuckling sounds which water makes amongst the boulders. In his light-headed condition it was to Combe the laugh of a devil who wins, and it touched some spring in his nature, of which for the moment he had lost control, the strength came | back to his muscles, and with a last | desperate effort he drew Protheroe to him; dragged him somehow to the but | separately at him, he knew what they river’s brim, and dropped him there, wanted, and the fury, and the number | where the waters lapped over the first of them daunted him, | boulders of the dry land. His only chance was to cling to bis; For a long pause there was silence, horse; his only hope of saving Proth-| but for the ravings of the river, eroe seemed to be to let go, and if| baulked of its prey, and the little wind, saddle. | sage brush along the cliff's edge. But at the last moment Protheroe Utterly spent, the two men lay seemed to realize what was required where they had fallen, as did the pinto. of him, and slid out of the saddle, hold- | Only the roan stood upright, and even ing on to his horse’s mane, and swim-| his strong knees were bent, his head possible, drag the doctor out of his| which wined like a wolf amongst the | ming as Jim swam. By this time both horses had drifted below the level! of the ferry, which was | now crowding with men, gesticulating and apparently shouting to the two in| the water, and some of the more sober among the lantern bearers having got | the ferry out towards mid-stream, were | endeavoring to let a rope down to-| wards the doctor. But it was hopeless fishing. The line was not long enough, and (he cast- | ing of’it inaccurate. Neither Jim nor! the doctor attempted to avail them- selves of it. | Side by side, stunned by the noise | around them, they battled with the/| Fraser, whilst though the farther bank | seemed to come no nearer, the red. lights of Soda Creek grew more dim} and distant, and the figures on the) ferry more indistinct. | Luckily for the swimmers there was even less ice in the river than there | had been in the morning when Combe | the upper country through which flow the tributaries that supply the Fraser | with its first run of ice, but there mont enough of it to add to their difficulties. Suddenly the light of Suda Creek | went out altogether, and the dancing | lanterns on the ferry disappeared, and | at the same time a new sound struck | upon their ears, a dull, grinding noise, | which grew louder and more distinct | with every second that passed. They had drifted past a bend in the river, and at the next, to which they | were being hurried, the ice was pack- | ing. If they got into that pack before | reaching the further shore, it would be the end of them. The horses, spent already, must go under in the churning | and grinding ice. Straining his eyes to the utmost, | Combe thought that he could just dis- tinguish the line of the farther bank. | ‘It was nearer than the ice pack which he could hear in the dark below him, but was it near enough? They were | being carried down stream many yards | | for every foot which they made in the | | direction of the shore. It was just one | of those positions in which death is made doubly hard by the temptation | to 6 ele against it. Death itself is robably not so very dreadful. Nature | {8 full of bogies to coerce her wilful children, and the last bogie of all, used | mainly to make us play out our innings | to the end, is possibly the most gentle fraud amonget them, but that struggle | in the dark against the irresistible wa- | tere, with life and safety so near at hand, was bitter to bear, and at the very climax of it Jim's horse gave in and turne¢ its head down stream, In a moment they were racing to- their death. After all that long fight against the stream, almost within gm hung, and his whole body was shaken with shivering fits. Combe was the first to recover. Dragging himeelf to his feet, he went over to the doctor's horse. “You've got to get up, old fellow,” he said, “or you'll die on our hands, and we can’t spare you yet,” but the poor beast lay with head stretched along the ground and took no notice of him. it had made up its mind to die. “Can you help, Doc?” Jim asked, but the doctor shook his head, and lay still, nor was it until nearly an hour later that Combe contrived to get his companion and the two horses up to the top of the cliffs, upon which he | built a roaring fire, not only for the | sake of comfort, but as a sign to any whom it might concern that they had survived the river crossing. “And now, Doc, I guess you might as well get along towards the ferry. There'll maybe be someone there still, unless they've all given us up for dead. crossed it. The frost had not held in| You wili have had about enough for/attendant at the one while, I expect.” “What! Give up the run when I've jumped the big brook? Not much, Jim.” “Then you mean coming on?” “Il started to get there, and I'm going to get there with both feet, my son, a6 you would say in your picturesque fashion.” Jim pulled at his pipe in silence for some time, then in a shamefaced way he said: “I owe you an apology, Doctor.” “For abduction? Yes, I believe that there is some trivial penalty attached to that form of amusement.” “No; not a blanked bit for that. You'd have done the same only I didn’t know it. It's just for not knowing you; I'm sorry. | ought to have known you were @ man.” “I was drunk. Anything is good enough for a drunk.” “There ain't another man in Cart bou would have risked his life as you did, drunk or sober.” The doctor laughed. “You did for one, and that is life anyway. Do you think that the loss of it wouid be such a terrible calamity? Think of it! No more whiskey-—bad whiskey at that; no more graceful badinage with the coy Kate Canyon; no more delicate jests with that fat- headed bar keeper; no morg memory perhaps. If I believed that last, Jim, by heaven, I would not forgive you for pulling me out. But let's stop talkin, and get & move on, or those fools w be over to look for us.” “We shall have to walk, at firet at any rate.” “It can't be helped. I suppose that we can get some feed for the horses at Braithwaite's.” “Yeu, if we start now we should be there by sun up,” and hghting their pines, the two their horses away wards the west. CHAPTER XVI. After Jim Combe'’s departure @ strange quiet fell upon the life of the ranch. There were no. galloping horses about the corral; thers was no noisy cowbow chaff about the barns. The cne thing necessary was that Frank Anstruther should be kept quiet. Any movement caused him excruciat- ing pain, and was likely to disarrange the imperfect bandages in which his body was swathed, and though he took his punishment with set lips, never complaining of the pain, he was a bad |patient, restless under restraint, and excitable to th st degree. It was only long as Kitty was in the room that they could keep him still, As long as she was in his sight he would He hour after hour without stirring, only the eyes in his white face alive, and those so followed every turn of the girl's pretty head, that they frightened her. She began to feel that those burning eyes could see through her into her heart, and for that she was by no means ready yet. There was a picture in it upon which she was trying to pass judgment, a pic- ture of a furious storm in which trees were crashing and roofs iifting and solid substances were being whirled about by some invisible agency, and in the middle of it all a great red roan reared and raged. “Them’s baby tricks,” she quoted under her breath, and a proud smile spread over her face as she thought of the man who drove the great red devil into the heart of the storm to do her bidding. “! wish that I could have seen Jim start.” The voice came from the bed, and Kitty flushed guiltily as she turned to- wards the speaker. He did then read her very thoughts. “Why do you say that?” “It must have been such a grand match between Jim and the stallion. I don't think Jim has his equal as & horseman.” “That is what they say about here, but 1 don't suppose that he would be any good in your country.” “Why my country and not yours?” and then with a generous impulse, | “Jim would be good anywhere. The better the class the more he would | shine in it. Sitting a fence isn't as | hurd as sitting a buck jumper. Seem- | ing is not worth anything compared to | doing,” and he pushed irritably at the | bedclothes which encompassed him “Suffering is harder than either,” said a quiet voice at his eithow, “Kitty, make Mr. Anstruther take this, and don’t let him worry about Jim. Jim ts | Guite able to take care of himself.” (TO BE CONTINUED) os er ed ITEMS OF.. SPORT ape ! { George Hackenschmidt has post- ed $5000 at Chicago for # private return meich with Frank Gotch. x M OK offer we act epted, te the | Heck's rried | Gotch provision that the metch be held This wes not Ss ce and with |withir two months. laccepted by Hackenschmidt, say- ing that his injured knee would {not permit his return to the ring lin that time. x uM Detroit, Mich., Sept. The trotter of the grand circuit cara- |} 9 5. van which occupies the centre of | at the present the light time is the homely chestnut gelding R. T. C., a graduate from breaking on farm the spot sod a neastern to | position of the most talked about trotter on the big ring. He wor $10,000 within the space of one week, one at Kala- the Grand } two stakes }mazoo and one at Rapids track, in addition to a purse ‘coal and ; on Graham Ielend deseribed as follows: | West Coast of Graham laland | race at Indianapolis. x mR OM | Calgary, Sept. 20.—‘‘We don't} |want bathing suits, do we girls,” | chirped the leader of a bevy of | pretty chorus damsels from Cel-| jgary. They were up the lsulphur basin at Banff, and the baths was per- duty of al iforming the handing out the bathing suits. “Oh, pshaw, no. There's body but us here,”’ was the un- animous verdict. “I never did like being hampered by e. bethirg suit,’’ explained the leader. ‘‘It makes me feel so heavy.’’ So they all disrobed and plurged in, and sported around displeyirg that would have turned of the famous seulptors' yreen They being watched customary no- forms some models with didn’t by the attendant either, envy. object to EMPLOY CEMENT TESTER Latest Addition to the City Engineering Staff Arrived Yesterday. Yesterday the members of city engineering department extended a welcome to their cement tester whose services will be much ap- The of tester found preciated. employment hes been the a cement necessary since dispute in ty. | West Coast of Graham council recently over cement quali- | em COAL NOTICE Skeena Land Distriet— District of c Take notice that thirty da shor dete toe Prince Rupert, B. C., by occupation bookkeeper, intend to apply to the Chief Cem- missioner Seoasie for a licenee to prospect ‘or on and under 640 acres lang on bee tee ee ene ee follows: - Sommene! at © post Jn two miles nort of C. BE. B. Coal Lease No 18, marked 8. “. corner C. E, B. Coal Lease No. 19, thence north 80 chains, thence east 80 chaina, thence south #0 chains, thence west 86 chains to place of com- Daved Sept 11,1911, C, E. BAINTER Locator | ar pt. 11, ° . E. oR, Pub. Sept. 23. = Skeena Land District —Distriet of Gueen C Take notice that thirty se fro date, roe Bainter of Prince Rupert, B. C. by occupation bookkeeper, intend to apply to the Chief Com- missioner of Lands for # licence to prospect for coal and m on and under 640) aeres of land | Commencing at a post planted two miles h of C. E. B. Goal Lease No. 14, marked sw. corner C. E. B. Coal Lease No. 20, thence north 80 chains, thence west 80 chains, thence south 80 chains, east 80 chains to place of com- Dated Sept, 11,1911, C. B, BAL rat il, ° >. BE. BAINTER, Loew Pub. Sept, 23. <4 Skeena Land Distriet-—Distriet of Queen Charlot ‘Take notice that thirty days cet cates 1c. E Bainte: of Prince Rupert, i C,, by occupation bookkee;or, intend to apply to the Chief Com- minsioner of Lands for # licence to prospect coal and petroleum on and under io acres land on nee Island described as follows: Commen: at & post planted two miles north of C. EB. B. Coal Lease No. 16, marked 8"E. corner C. E. B. Coal Lease No. 21, thence north 80 chains, thence west KO chains, thence south 80 chaina, thence east 80 chains to place of com- meneement. Dated Sept. 11,1911. ©. E. BAINTER, Locator for of Skeena Land District —Distriet ‘Take notice that thirty days from date, 1. C. EB. Bainter of Prince Rupert, Bb. C., by occupation bookkeeper, intend to apply to the Chief Com- — any Lasts ter 6 Usense to coal an of Queen Charlotte | at & post planted two miles north . onl Lease No. 16, marked N. E. corner C. BE. B. Coal Lease No. 22, thence south 80 chains, thence west 50 chains, thence north 80 chains, thenee east 80 chains to place of com- mencement. Dated Sept. 12,1911. C. E. BAINTER, Loecato Skeena Land District—D. Coast Range 6 Take notice that I, John Rutherford Beatty of Prince Regent, secupation engineer, intend to apply for to purchase the loliowing a lande: Commenei at a planted on the east shore df the Exch River, and being about two miles northerly from the mouth of the said Exchumsik River, and which post is about fort chains north from a stake planted on the Exebumalk River and known as “BS”; thence north 40 chains, thence east #0 chains, thence south 80 chains, thence west forty chains, thence north 40 chaing, thence west 40 chains to the place of commencement, containing 480 acres more or leas. Dated September 12, 1911. Pub. Sept. 23, JOHN RUTHERFORD BEATTY Queen Chariot Cc. Take notice that thirty days from date, 1, E Bainter of Prince Rupert, ze C., by jon bookkeeper, intend to apply to the Chief Com- missioner of Lands for a licence to prospect for ecal and petroleum on acd under 640 acres of land on Graham Island described as follows: Skeena Land Distriet—Distriet of te Commencing at @ post planted five miles east of Coal Lease No. 4467, marked C. BE. B. Coal Lease No, 1, N. E. corner, thence west 80 chains, | thence south 80 chains, thence east 80 chains, | thence north 80 chains to place of commencement. Dated Sept. 11, 1911 C. BE. BAINTER, Locator Pub. Sept 23. — a , a P e . a a Bagerge, Storage and ory Ca 0-9 — ; Theatre Block Puone bt tte eas, + W. J. MeCUTCHEnN Carries complete stock of Dr 5 attention paid to filling oo Special Drescription * Second Are, Tht egg PHONE $01 PONY EXPRESS SYSTEMATIC mrp ANT " RY ot ce Rigs or Motor Car day Gee Agents, Puy Seventh Ave. and } POL OLS ithe, Bor tal Gasoline Lay ond cont For Hire by Hour or D BOATS BUILT AND REPAIneD H. Johnston Cow Creek P.O. Box 187 rH PP AL AS k 4 +14 FRED. STORK General Hardware o-~< ‘ 4 , Builders Valves & Pipes Graniteware Hay ' 1 Stoves * ‘ SECOND - AVENUE! o-oo — ¢-¢—4-4 +14 —_—_—_—_—_ S.S. INLANDER i) -+» FOR... HAZELTON Take the fast light-draught ste er Inlander for Hazelt _— H. B. Rochester - Agent For Sa | Level lot near Sea! e at le. cash and $25'a mont! Skeena Land District—D istrict of Queen Charlotte | Two level lots near corner Take ‘ots cai thirty days from date, 1, C. E | Bainter of Prince isupert, B. C., by occupation bookkeeper, intend to apply to the Cie Com- missioner of Lands for « licence to prospect for coal and petroleum or and under dao acres of land on Graham Island described as follows Commencing at a post planted five miles east | of Coal Lease No, 4467, marked C. E. B. N. W./ corner No. 2, thence south 60 chaina, thence east 50 chains, thence north 80 chains, thence west 80 chains to place of commencement Dated Sept. 11,1911. C. E. BAINTER, Locator Pub, Sept. 28. Skeena Land Distriet—Distriet of Queen Charlotte | Isiands Take notice that Austin M. Brown of Prince Kupert, B. C. occupation f. ds to apply to the Chief Commissioner of Lafds and Works for @ licence to prospect for coal, oil and im on and under the followi described | nds on the West Coast of Graham Talend: j Commencing at a post ted three miles east | of the northeast corner C. L. Ne. 4478 thence 60 chains south, thence 60 chains east, thence 80 | ehains north, thence 80 chains west to point of commencement. AUSTIN M. BROWN, Locator Date of Location Sit July, 1911. } Pub. Aug. 17. keena Land Distriet—District of Queen Charlotte | Islands Tuke notice that Austin M. Brown of Prince | Rupert, occupation saddier, intends to apply to the Chief Commissioner of Lands and Works | for a licence to for coal, oil and petroleum | on and under the following described lands on the | Commencing at a pars paras three miles east | of the northeast corner C. L. No, 4474 thence | 80 chains south, thence 80 chains west, thence 80 | chains north, thence 80 chains east to point of commencement. Located August lst, 1911, Pub. Aug. 17. Skeena Land District-——-District of Queen Chariotve Islands Take notice that Austin M. Brown of Prince Rupert, occupation saddier, intends to ly to the Chief Commissioner of Lands and Works | for a licence So proseset for coal, oll and petroleum | on and under following described lands on the | West Coast of Grabam Island: | Commencing at a post planted three miles enst | of the northeast corner of C. L. No. 4471, thence 80 chains cast, thence 80 chains south, thence 50 chains west, thence 80 chains north to point of | commencement. | AUSTIN M. BROWN, Locator | Located August lst, 1911. Pub. Aug. 19. Skeens Land Distriet—District of Queen Charlotte | Islands Take notice that Austin M. Brown of Prince | | Rupert, oecupation saddier, intends to apply to | ora the Chief Commissioner of Lands and Wor! licence to prospect ior coal, oi! and roleum op and under the follownig described lands on the, Iniand: | lanted three miles east | Corrmencing at @ post Cc. L. No, 4470 thence of the southeast corner | north 80 chains, thence east 60 chains, thence south 80 chains, thence west 80 chains to point of | commencement. | AUSTIN M. BROWN, Locator | Located A lat, 1911, | Pub. Aug. 19. Skeens Land District—Diastries of Queen Charictts | Islands | Take notice that Austin M. Brown of Prince | Ruy eecupation saddier, intends to apply to | the Chief Commissioner of Lands and Works for & licence to prospect for coal, oil and um on and under the following described lands on the Wort Const of Graham agent; i ars | Jommen at @ post plan hree m| | of the pF eorner of C, L. No. 4476 thence | 80 chains west, thence 80 chains north, 80 chains | east, thence 80 chains south to point of com- mencement. AUSTIN M. BROWN, Locator Located Av let, 1911. Pub. Aug. 19. Skeena Land District-—District of Queen Charlott | Islands Jn Take notice that Austin M, Brown of Prince occupation saddier, intends to apply | f seeaunes tes aout at on Sctodeen | ‘or a licence to lor , ol] an um on and under the following described tands on the | Weat Coast of Graham Island: Cor at @ post planted three miles east of the southeast corner of C, L. No, 4470 thence west 80 chains, thence north 80 chains, thenoe east 80 chains, thence uth 80 chains to point of com. AUSTIN M. BROWN, Locator Located August 1st, 1911, Skeena Land Distriet——District of Queen Charlott Islands Take notice that Austin M. Brown of Prince Rupert, saddier, intends to apply to the Chief Pomynienoner of ante ne orks for # aenes to pros) or ie a on a es the” fliowing described fea on the West Coast of Graham c, Commencing at # post planted two miles east of the northeast corner of C. L. No, 4478 thence 80 chains east, thence 80 chains south, thence 50 chains west, thence 80 chains north to point of mencement, oe AUSTIN M. BROWN Lecator Date of Location 81st July 1911. Pub. Aug. 17. Skeena Land Distrlet—Diewiet of Queen Charlott Take notice that Austin M. Brown of Prince Rupert, oceupation saddier, intends to wpply te the chief Commisnonar of Lands and Weeks dor a licence to pros lor co petrolewn on and Catal the tohentins deseribed lands on the West Coast of Graham Island: segaging Oh a yee panied thee mallee eo © the corner . she sa cerues of L. No. “ane thenee 80 east, thence south thence 50 thence 80 north to point of " AUSTIN M, BROWN, Locato it Kee dow, 1911, Conr Avenue and pair. Easy cash ar | Two double Lane « Avenue and Dor pair. Easy cast Lot 19, Block 26, Sectior Ea Fire, Life and Accident Insurance JOHN DYBHAW Pattullo | plan New Knox Hotel |BESNER & BESNE! — Locator | The New Knox Hot First-class ser mprovements. FIRST AVENUE, PR — = Windsor Hotd t I FIRST AVENUE Newly Furnished and Steam Heated Rooms AND DINING A FIRST CLASS BAI ROOM IN ( RATES 50 Ct BATHS FRE! po. oa $ Bigger an Bet W. H. Wright, Prop ee ae eee prnn raw The Big Furniture Store HART ! h Main entra: entrance a 6th At er than Ever F, W. HART ben h of d ci y bee r paid to ¢ w t ( 6 NOTICE OF | | SSOLUTION nersilp Take notice one eretolore cx! ¥ Handasyde & UM di cluc H | fart pame his all o be the ccounts ios who H , , col prue ill pay al he aforesaid Dated at Ps his day 25th Cc, H Riper B. Cu \_ [), 191! » Jr. wpasyD! t HAN} Whites Portland Cemetl.-