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 TRANSIENT DISPLAY ADVERTISING—50 cents per inch. Contract rates on application. SUBSCRIPTION RATES—To Canada, United States and Mexico—Datty, 50c per month, or $5.00 per year. in advance. WEEKLY, $2.00 per year. All Other Countries—Daily, $8.00 per year; Weekly, $2.50 per year, strictly in advance. HEAD OFFICE Daily News Building, Third A.ve., 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. ben ENGLAND—The Clougher Syndicate, Grand Trunk Building, Trafalgar are. Supscripers will greatly oblige by promptly calling up Phone 98 in case of non-delivery or inattention on the part of the news carriers. WEDHEAPAT, Nov. 15. DAILY EDITION. DEAR COLLIER'S, PLEASE EXPLAIN. In a recent issue of Canadian Collier's Weekly, under the caption of, “Armand Lavergne’s Splendid Defiance,” the editor, H. F. Gadsby, pruv- ably the cleverest paragrapher in Canada, has the following to say: “The latest word is that Armand Lavergne will oppose. Armand Lavergne is like the Irishman who had just landed in New York. ‘What are you?’ he was asked, ‘Democrat or ’.epublican?’ ‘What's the gov- ernment?’ Pat inquired. ‘Republican.’ ‘Well,then. I'm agin it.’ What- ever government is in power, Armand Lavergne is ‘agin’ it. He is the! direct antithesis of the gentleman who said: ‘Whatsoever king may rule still I'll be the vicar of Bray, sir." Armand Lavergne is ‘agin’ | any or all Canadian governments because he has a reputation to keep | up as an amateur Prince Rupert. He is the chevalier of desperate | causes -because there is better fighting and greater appearance of | romance on the off side. As a speaker he can make better speeches, as a writer he can write snappier articles, when he has something to criticize, and since governments are continually doing things it follows | that governments are continually providing food for criticism. Besides, | it is easier to knock than to boost any day. Armand Lavergne has | chosen the better part which shall not be taken from him. We cannot but admire his courage in standing splendidly outside in the wet when so many others are scurrying for the sunshine. Armand Lavergne defies any government to please him.” All this about-Armand Lavergne is very understandable. But what does the reference to Prince Rupert mean? It cannot be the original | Prince Rupert that H. F. G. had in mind, for that ancient swashbuckler, | believed in always being with the government. For his allegiance to the) Royalist eause, the nephew of Charles the First and his ‘‘band of seventeen roving gentlemen adventurers” who formed the Hudson’s Bay Company received the biggest monoply in the annals of Canadian graft. Prince Rupert did not believe in being “agin the government.” It must be that the fame of our aldermanic white hope has spread abroad, or that the free for all scrap in the Council Chamber every Monday | night is winning the kind of fame it is calculated to bring. PMB MeeSeES A TN THE EMPRESS THEATRE | Return engagement of the ‘Sherman-Cleveland Opera mpany TO-NIGHT A MUSICAL PLAY IN THREE | TERESI Disp nus Cae OMS ane ype») ye Dee $y ee = mi.) )) IN (t meng aa) pS ACTS pgm.) (cae eaCs “Lonesome T own” SAME CAST AND CHORUS ELABORATE SCENIC AND ELECTRICAL PRODUCTION pen SST) (R wir Prices 50c., 75c and $1. MOE MEGS ESSE pp aaweea RS Se ES PROBS) CAPITAL STOCK $1,000,000 We are offering for sale a very limited amount of shares of stock at 25¢ per share; par value $1.00. These shares are going quickly and will soon be off the market : : THE MACK REALTY & INSURANCE COMPANY ; SELLING AGENTS : BOVACERECECEERCEESE86454644644444444444400444R40404 PUUCUVC CCTV CTV CVT CCC CC CCCCCCr POP POND DOL ISP LISELI DISD GD DG PUVeTTT PPPS DI DDSI IG A Aaebab dada tetas te POO PDIP IAI IS When in Vancouver You Should Stay at the CARLTON HOTEL Finest Cafe in B.C, European Plan. Rates $1.00 to $2.50 per day. Hot and Cold Water in each room. CORNER CORDOVA AND CAMBIE STREETS Vancouver, B.C. Aun brtutes tatatnte abn Da Baba dab Baba baba ba ba Ba br bn bn bn tp 0 tp tp tp tn ¥ wv vv SUVS view’ vw PUTS Aadinln dutta te te | Inspecting-officer of the South-Coast | lights. |long before Pyne was able to verify | ment, | rock, j}news to all hands, but refrained, be- | cause he fcared ultimate failure. Be- il H Pillar =|! Light Soon after seven o'clock the watch reported that two vessels were ap- proaching from the Bay. One was the Falcon, and the sailors soon made out that the other was the Trinity tender from Plymouth. When they were both nearing the buoy, Brand was aroused. It was evident that the brief rest had cleared his brain and restored his self-confidence. Instantly he took up the thread of events, and his first words showed how pleased he was that someone of authority in the light- house service should be in active com- munication with him. Through his glasses he distinguish- led Stanhope on board the Trinity | steamer, standing by the side of the Other officials were there but near Stanhope was a tall elderly man, unknown, and certainly a stran ger in Penzance. The Falcon was now chartered by press-men, so the civilian on the offi- cial boat was evidently a person of consequence. Indeed, Brand imagined the impression, that the newcomer was Mr. Cyrus J. Traill, whom he had failed to notice in the poor light of | the previous evening. He knew quite well that the exper- fenced chief of the lighthouse service would appreciate fully the disabilities under which he labored, with eighty- one mouths to feed from a stock al- |ready far below the three months’ maximum. The first telegraphed question be- trayed the prevalent anxiety. “Hope all is well?” What was he to say? Was it not teave her to the gui’ sery packed bedroom. As the day pass a iteration of all that & new feature in the crowded community agreeably apparent from each other, sine groups. An incons: tled on the women the knowledge sprea all starve to death e hea this cold dungeon. y degra | ‘oathe it, to upbraid Ashes with spoken curses estrained ‘rears. The eanctuar} day was | }ecoming the tom> e next. No onger was there ¢ to look lat land or sea from | ndows |Everywhere was set! wn a pail of blank, -horrible s e and susp clon. Even Constance yielded to the com mon terror once wh« men of the wateh escorted the b« of a tray: joad of provisions to the occupants of the coal-cellar. “Enid,” she whispered the light in their eyes? What is it? Does hunger look that way? “It must be so, yet it is almost unbe- lievable. real starvation.” “One would think so. But it is 80 hard to realize things beforehand, And they have nothing to do. They are brooding all the time. We are slaves of our imagination. Many a sick per \son is allowed to eat far less than these men have been given, and the deprivation is not felt at all.” “What will become of us, Con- Btance, if we are detained here for) many days?” “Dear one, do not ask me. We must. not think of such things.” “But dad is thinking of them. I watched his face when I took him a scrap of food just now, and—” “Hush, dear, Let us pray—and hope.” There was a clatter of feet down the fron stairs. The men of the watch were hustling to unbar the fron door. A solidly built, circular raft had been lowered from the Trinity tender. An assistant-keeper, wearing a cork jacket, with a rope about his waist, was clinging to a stumpy mast in the centre. Two stout guide-ropes were manipulated from the deck of the ves- sel, and the flat, unweildy mass of timber was slowly drifting nearer the lighthouse with the tide. The door of the column opened to- earisome before, yns of the self dis- small om set means, best to speak boldly and let the men know the truth, not alone as to their) present desperate plight but revealing | the measures he had devised for the | protection of the light? He could not make up his mind to launch out into} a full explanation that instant. So he signalled: “Everyone alive, but many cases of grave collapse.” Stanhope was again the signaler— evidently he had arranged—matters with the Admiral at Portsmouth—#so Brand expected the prompt reply: “How are Constance and Enid?” “Quite well and cheerful.” The tall man-near Stanhope bent closer. “Are Mrs. right?” Brand assumed that the lady was in no worse condition than others. stance, telling him the state of the sick during a hasty visit, had not men- tioned her name. So he eent the needed assurance, and went on fcriornly: “Suppose no effort can be made to open communication?” To his great surprise the answer came: “We are constructing a raft. When the tide falls this afternoon we will try what can be done.” Ah, how glad he was that he had not ubeyed his earlier impulse, and horrified the anxious rescuers by a prophecy of lingering death for many, with the prelude, perchance, of mur Vansittart and Pyne all Con-| | derous excesses committed by men on the verge of madness. If that story had to be told he would not flinch, but it was a grateful thing that the hour of its telling might at least be defer- red. A long message followed, a string of loving words from relatives ashore to those known to be imprisoned on the rock. During the merely perfunctory reading off of the signals his active mind was canvassing the probabilities | of success or failure for the venture |} of the was high-water about three o'clock, and, in his judg: with the wind in its present) quarter, about northwest by west, the afternoon. It | cross seas whieh would sweep the reef} and engulf the lighthouse at half-tidg would render it wildly impossible for | any raft ever built by man’s hands to) live in the immediate vicinity of the the issue lay with others | now. He know that they would do all that brave men would dare. He was tempted to make known the inspiring However, neath his feet was a human volcano, Stirred too deeply, it might become active and dangerous. So the apathetic multitude in his charge, hungrily awaiting a” scanty morsel of food which only provoked what it failed to gratify, must rest content with the long statement writ ten out by the purser and read by him at the door of each room. Pyne took to Mrs, Vansittart the news of his uncle's presence on the steamer. “If you would like to see him,” he said, “| have no doubt Mr. Brand will let you stand on the gallery for a little while,” a She declined, excusing herself on the ground of weakness. “In this high wind,” she sald, “it will be very cold out there, and any further exposure would make me very il.” “That's true enough,” he agreed, though he wondered why she raised no question concerning the message she wished him to convey to Mr, Traill. Had she forgotten the urgency o! her words over night? He had car- ried her instructions quite faithfully to Brand and the latter smiled at the fantasy. “Time enough to think of such things when we are assured of the lady's departure,” he said, and they Jeft it at that. Thinking to interest her, Pyne told her of the crowd on the Falcon. “Mostly reporters, Brand thinks,” he said. “What a story they will build up in the New York papers, It will be more fun than a box of monkeys to get hold of this week's news and read all the flapdoodle they are printing.” But Mrs, Vansittart was not to bo roused from her melancholy, She treaded tie least physical suffering. Privation was a new thing in her life. To-day she was inert, timid, a woman who cower: < away from the door and was obviousiy a@mxious that he should _the opposite | steamer was a good one. }to play with. | gruff Atlantic wards the east, so the wind, with its pelting sheets of spray, was almost in quarter, and the stout granite shaft itself afforded some de gree of protection for the entrance. The scheme signaled from the None but a lunatic would endeavor to approach the rock itself, but there was a chance that the raft might be made to drift near enough to the door to permit a grapnel to be thrown across the rope held by the gallant volunteer on the raft. It was his duty to attach the two ropes and thus render it possible for a stronger line to be drawn from the vessel to the pillar. There was no other way. The lighthouse did not possess a rope of sufficient length to | be drawn back by the raft without the | intervention of some human agency. This was precisely the puny, half- despairing dodge that the reef loved Cat-like, it permitted } the queer flat-bottomed craft to ap proach almost within hail. Then it shot forth a claw of furious surf, the heavy) ®aft was picked up as if it were a floating feather, turned clean over, and flung many fathoms out to sea, whilst both of its guiding cables were snapped with contemptuous ease. The assistant-keeper, kept afloat by his jacket, was hauled, half drowned, back through the choking froth, whilst the wave which overwhelmed the raft curled up a spiteful tongue and almost succeeded in dragging out several of the men stationed in the doorway With a clang the fron shutter was rushed into its place, and when the sailor was rescued the Trinity boat steamed away to try and secure the raft. So joyous hope gave way once more to dark foreboding, and the only com- tort was the faint one to be extracted from the parting signal: “Will try again next tide.” CHAPTER XIIL BEFORE THE DAWN Discipline slackened its bonds that night. For one thing Mr. Emmett fell ill. Although inured to hardship in the elemental strife, being of the stocky mariner race which holds tha in no dread, he had never before been called on to eat sodden bread, to drink condensed steam flavored with varnish, and to chew sustenance from the rind of raw bacon. These drawbacks, added to the lack of exercise and the constant wearing of clothes not yet dry, placed him on the sick list. Again, there were ominous whis pers of unfair division in the matter of food. It was not within the realm of accomplishment that the pursur Constance, Enid, and others who helped to apportion the eatables could treat all alike. Some fared bette than others in quality if not in quan tity. and talked of favoritism. A crisis was reached when th second officer mustered the night watch. When one sheep leads the others will follow. A stout German from Chicago asked bluntly: “Vere's de goot of blayin' at mound- in' gart? Dere is but von ting to gart, und dat is der kidchen,” Community of interest caused many to huddle closer to him. Here was one who dared to say what they all) thought. Their feet shufffled in BUD: | port. The officer, faithful to his trust, | was tempted to fell the man, but he thought the circumstances warranted | more gentle methods. “Why are you dissatisfied?” he) sternly demanded. “What do you sus- pect? Are you fool enough to ima gine that you are being cheated by people who are dividing their last crust with you?” “How do you know dat? Dose girls —dey are chokin' mit Mr. Pyne all der day. Dey can'd do dat und be hungry, like us.” “You unmitigated ass!" said the dis- gusted officer. “There is food here for three people. They have fed elghty-one of us for two days and will irew apart) did you see | They are far removed from | The unfortunate ones growled | of the | Keep us going several more days. | Can't you figure it out? Isn't, it a miracle? Here! Who's for guard | and who not? Let us quit fooling” And the doubters were silenced for the hour. The hymn-singer endervored to raise a chorus. He was noi greeted with jenthusiasm, out a few valiant spirits | came to his assistance. feebly A couple cs wer rendered—and {ise ence. “hy “whet” observed Pyne calmly | when he entered the service-room to | find Brand trimming the spare lamp. | “Not to-night,” said Brand. | “Why not? Hell may break loose } at any moment downstairs.” | “What has occurrcd? I heard some } thing of a dispute when the watch } mustered at eight o'clock. |} “Things are worse now men found a gallon of spirit in the “Good Heavens! of it?” | “He and his mates the tin. Fight are helpless!y drunk— ithe others quarrelsome. The next thing will be a combined rush for the store-room.” “But why did not the second officer tell me?” “He thought you had _ troubles enough. If he could depend on the remainder of the crowd he would rope the sinners. Says he knows a slave knot that will make ‘em tired.” Brand's eyes glistened. “The fools,” he said, “and just as the weather is mending, too.” “You don't mean that?” “Listen.” He glanced up at the glass dome. Heavy drops were pattering on It; they looked like spray, but Pyne shouted gleefully: “Is it rain?” “Yes. 1 was just going to summon the watch to help in filling every ves- sel Dy spreading canvas sheets we can gather a large supply if it rains hard. Moreover, it will beat the sea down. Man alive, this may mean sal- vation, Tie those weaklings and sum- mon ever sober man to help.” hymns One of the methylated work-sbop.” | Did he drink any have emptied Ss LAND LEASE NOTICE oe ea. District of Coast Range Take notice that H. M. Cliff of Dundalk, ir: tema 40 chains, thence west 80 chains more or lew \ a of ery re lease, thence follow: a south 40 chains more to one line, following said «bh line easterly 80 chains more or less to poir ; Containing 320 acre, more Dated August $1, 1911. H. M. CLIFF Pub. Sept. 30, William McNair, Age Bells Coola Land Distriet—Distriet of Coast Range | Take notice that H. M. Cliff of Dundalk, Ir land, occupation a intends to apy for permission to the following desernbed Commencing at post planted at the N. F corner of Lot 33, chebes north 20 chains, thence west 40 chains, thence south 20 chains more or lems to shore line, thence following the shore line | east 40 chains more or less to point of commence ; containing 80 Cares, more or le=. Dated August 31, 1911. MM. CLIFF Pub. Sept. 30. William MeNair, Agent Bella Coola Land Degree —-Distsin of Coast Rang Take notice that H. M. Cliff of Dundalk, Ire es intends to apply the following describeu post planted at the N. W ieee north 40 chains, thence h 40 chains more or following shore line westerly 40 chains more or less to point of com- + Containing 80 acres, more or lew Dated August 24, 1911. H, M. CLIFF Pub. Sept. 30. William MeNair, Agent Duis Coste Laud Disteles-Distriet of Const Range Take notice that H. M. Cliff of Dundalk, Ire intends to apply = to the following described oars eee eee, eB. Ww of Lot 252, therce south 40 chains more to northern ae of lease No. 1 applied H. M. Cli, thence following said boundary thence north 40 chains, thence to point of commencement; cor e of less. 1. H. M. CLIFF William MeNair, Agent Coola Land Dee ee of Coast Range Take notice that H. M. Clif’ of Dundalk, Ire- land, occupation geatieman, intends to apply for permission to lease the following described With a whoop, Pyne vanished. He met Constance on the stairs, coming to see her father before she stretched | her weary limbs on the hard floor of} the kitchen She never khew exactly what took) place. It might have been politeness, | but it felt uncommonly like a squeeze, and Pyne’s face was extraordinarily) close to hers as he cried: “It's raining No more canvas) whiskey. Get a hustle on with every, empty vessel.” He need not have been in such a whirl, however When the shower came it did not last very long, and there were many difficulties in the way of garnering the thrice blessed water. In the first place, the lighthouse was expressly | designed to shoot off all auch exter! nal supplies; in the second, the total quantity obtained did not amount to more than half a gallon. But it did a great deal of good tal other ways. It brightened many faces, it caused the drunkards to ba | securely trussed like plucked fowls and dumped along the walls of the! entrance passage, and it gave Brand some degree of hope that the rescue Operations of the next day might be) more successful. » When the rain cleared off, the moon} flickered in a cloudy sky. This was a further omen of better fortune. Perhaps the jingling rhyme of Admir| al Fitzroy’s barometer was about to be justified: “Long foretold, Long last; Short notice Soon past.” And the hurricane had slight warning of its advent. “I feel it in my bones that we shal) all be as frisky as lambs to-morrow," said Pyne, ter the scurry caused by passed. “We must not be too There is a chance, now. that, but the sea is treacherous.” “This reef licks creation. Harbor, in Maine, where a mighty big sea can kick up in a very few hours, i have seen it go down again like ma gic under a change of wind.” “That is quite reasonable. Any or dinary commotion has room to spread itself in the tide-way. Here the tide is broken up into ocean rivers, streams with boundaries as definite as the Thames. The main body sweeps up into the bottleneck of the Channel. Another tributary comes round the north of the Scilly Isles and runs into actly at this point. given but sanguine, The result often is that whilst little pleasure boats can) safely run out into the Bay from Pen zance there is a race over the rock that would break up a stranded battle ship.” |. “Say, do you like thia kind of life?) “I have given my best years to it.” Pyne was smoking a pipe, one which Brand lent him. The tobacco was 8 capital substitute for food, especial! | as he had established a private unden standing with Elsie and Mamie that they were to waylay him when possi ble and nibble a piece of biscuit he! carried in his pocket. | This arrangement was to be kept a. | strict secret from all especially from Miss Constance and Miss Enid, whils} the little ones themselves did noi know that the shedragons whom) Pyne feared so greatly gave them sur | reptitious doses from the last tin oj| condensed milk, retained for their ex | clusive benefit. || “Do you mind me saying that yoy are a good bit of an enigma?” he hazarded, between puffs. “It may be so, but | like the ser vice,” | “Just so. | was never so happy as) | when I took a trip as fourth enginee1| |} on a tramp in the Gulf of Florida. But | that didn't signify being tied to a long | nosed oiler for the remainder of my days.” “Are you a marine engineer?” in quired Brand, with some show of in terest. “IT hold a certificate, just for fun! 1 had a mechanical twist in me and! gave it play, But I am an idler by pro| fession.” The lighthouse-keeper laughed, 80! naturally that the younger man was) gratified. Polite disbelief may be « compliment. (TO BE CONTINUED) Subscribe For The Daily News = containing 50 when he joined Brand af. | the rain had At Bar| the tidal stream again ex: Commencing at a post planted at the S. E corner of Lot 251, thence south 40 chains more or lems to northern boundary of Lease No. 1 — for by H. M. Clif, thence east 20 chains | mg said boundary, thence north 40 eh | thence west pian chains to point of commenceme: H. M. CLIFF William MeNair, Agent Dated a at 1g1L. | Pub. Sept. 30. COAL NOTICE | Skeena Land District— District of Queen Charlotte Isiands Take notice that Austin M. Brown of Prin thence 50 « containing J Vated Sept. is Pub, Sept. 2 Skeena Land Dake « | Rupert, occupation saddier, intends to apply tc ! | the Chiel Commissioner of Lands and Works lor a licence to prospect for coal, oil and petroleum « and under the following described lands on the West Coast of Graham Ieland Commencing at a post planted three miles east = the northeast corner of ©. L. No. 4472 thence 380 chains west, thence 80 chains north, thence o chains east, thence 80 chains south to point of commencement. AUSTIN M. BROWN, ted A lst, 1911. Pub. Aug. 19. Skeena Land District — District of Queen Charlotte islands Take notice that Austin M. Brown of Prince Rupert, occupation sadder, intends to apply w the Chief Commiasioner of Lands and Works for « iicence to prospect for coal, oil and petroleum on and under the followng described lands on the West Coast of Graham Island Commencing at a post planted three miles east of the southeast corner of C. L. No. 4470 thence north 80 chains, thence east SO chains, thence | south 80 chains, thence west 50 chains to point of commencement. wae M. BROWN, Locator | Located August Lst, 1911 Pub. Aug. 19. Skeena Land District — District of Queen Charictt« ! N Uipirict Kang E E chains Take notice that thity days from date, 1, ( | Bainter of Prince Rupert, B. C., by occupation bookkeeper, intend to apply to the Cniel Cou inisioner of Lands fur a licence to prospect for | coal and petroleum on and unier 640 acres of land on Craham island described as follows: Commencing at a post planted two niles north TiaLa northwest .oinet Coa! Lease 4466 aiarked | C. E. B. Cont Lease No. 29, toenes south 80 ebains, | thence west 80 chains, thence north 80 chains thence east of chains ty point of commencement | ¢ »ntaining 640 acres more or leas. | Dated are 12. 1911. Cc. E. BAINTER Pub. Oct, 7. LAND PURCHASE NOTICE I won't deny) Skeena Land Distriet—District of Cassiar Take notice that Charles William Ham of Vancouver, B. C., oceupation inspector, intends to {o segy, o. for Seer to purchase the followir 1 Tecate at a post planted at the con fluence of Blackwater river with the Naas river about two miles south from the sixth Dominio Telegraph cabin. Post marked C. W. H. 5 W. Corner, thence 80 chains north, thence 80 chains east, thence 80 chains south, thence 8) chains west to point of commencement, containing 640 acres more or CHARLES WILLIAM HAM Dated feotgusber 23, 191 Pub. Nov. 2 Skeena Land District District of C assiar couver, C., occupation carpenter, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands: Commenci at a t planted at the fluence of Blackwater river with Naas river, « two miles south of the sixth Dominion Te leg , cabin. Post marked T. A. W.S. E. Corner, ther 8C chains north, thence 80 chains west, thenc |chains south, thence 80 chains east to point of commencement, ConIOk 640 acres more or less THOMAS ARTHUR WHITE Ln Dated feot. #8, 1911. Pub. Nov, | Skeena Land District—District of Cassiar Take notice that Angus James McKenzie .of | Vancouver, B. C., cecupation bookkeeper, intednns to p somly, Sr pe for permission to purchase the following ene ney ata it planted at the con Svante of Blackwater river with Naas river, about wo miles south from the sixth pomrsion | Telegraph | oe Post marked A. Corner, thence 80 chains south, thence 80 chains east hence 80 chains north, thence 80 chains west Lecator | Take po N. DvD. for permiss | lands Comme boundary « east cor Skeena Lar iake no Winnipeg o apy described la Comme corner 4( E. eur chains sou 510 acre Vated de; Pub. Sep Skeena La i dane Eng., 0 lands Take notice that Thomas Arthur White of Van to point of commencement, containing 640 acres | Pella Coola more or ANGUS JAMES McKENZIE | Dated Beg pept, 83, 1911. Skeena Land District—District of Cassiar Take wee that Herbert McLennan of Van gouver, , occupation real estate agent, intends to to apply y for bermission to purchase the following | ther ere ‘at a post planted at the con fluence of Blackwater river with the Naas river |about two miles south of the sixth Dominion | Telegraph cabin. Post marked H, M. N. E. Take t land | tor per |} lar ts ,§ ymme Nec (ot fndia following of I . of Bella ‘ 80 et a Dated Au Corner, tenes § 80 chains south, thence 50 chains | pub, Se pt. west, thence 80 chains north, thence 80 chains vast to pa of commencement, containing 640 | D ted Sept 23, $3, 1912 a Pub. Nov. 2. Skeena Land District—Distriet of Coast Range 5 Take notice test I, Thomas MeClymont of Prince B. C., occupation real estate | broker, in ered ae Seely lan or P perauanon to purchase Comme! ing at @ psot planted at the S. W. corner of pre-emption record 412, thence erst 50 chains, coenee men f 40 chains, thence west 50 chains pore thence following shore of lake . : TB are es to Bolt ih com- | meneummont ; containing 820 acres, mo eran. Dated pt 5. 1911, THOMAS McC CLYMONT Pub. Sept. Erenest Cole, Agent | Skeena Land District—District of Coast Range 5 Take notice ee Benjamin Russel Rice of Prince Rupert, B. oceupation waiter, intends to deer a for “pertimin to purchase the following rn a post planted 65 chains south heast corner of Lot 8060. Post art B, ms R 8. E. Corner, thence 70 chains West, thence 65 chains nerth, thence 70 chains . thence 65 chains south to point of com- mencement, containing 455 acres more or leas. es JAMIN RUSSEL RICE | Dated Deteber 8 911, Pub, Nov, 2 | HERBERT McLENNAN | a" al ake bro a Ont apply. for per | deseribed la Commet of the Zya west corner the wester more or les point more or less Located Aug Dated Aus Pub, Aug. 26 Commer south from 160 feet C north, then south, thence ¢ ment, cont | Dated July Pub. Ave Skeena Land bi tg vk es hat a % =i GEE bose a6 ES 5 = ab 4;