{ f Phd fe Hy | ae 1 i, Me ie a he ie Bh i #, an ; oe ia a Bi vit 1H Bil 4 | 1 Hf ie iC Cae wi ide a iia if Bae G ‘hab ‘e 1 aha Pai olny i) el | t 2 THE DAILY NEWS og aR cnlotia ani i , ns niin erent 3 ” —— LAND PURCHAS| Non The Daily News =I DAILY NEWS Seon PHENIX THEATRE OUR SOD A | ake notion that hoe 7p tt2t ot Coun Formerly The Prince Rupert Optimist aa aa Rupert. B.C., occupation married woman, (tite Published by the Prince Rupert. Publishing Company, Limited DAILY AN) WEEKLY SUBSCRIPTION RATES— Daly, 50¢ per month, or $5.00 per year, in advance. WEEKLY, $2.(0 per year. OUTSIDE CANADA—Daily, $8.00 per year; Weekly, $2.50 per year, strictly in advance. TRANSIENT DISPLAY ADVERTISING—50 cents per inch. on application, Contract rates 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. SUATTLE—Puget Sound News Co. ree ENGLAND—The Clougher Syndicate, Grand Trunk Building, Trafalgar quare, ‘‘The newspaper, with the law, should assume the accused innocent until proven guilty; should be the friend, not the enemy of the general public; the defender, not the invader of private life and the assailant of personal character. It should be, as it were, a keeper of the public conscience.’’—Henry Watterson. cegure DAILY EDITION. WEDNESDAY, May 10 A LESSON IN TOLERANCE FROM ENGLAND Usually we think of old countries as toiling along the path of progress, burdened under precedents, and groaning under the weight of ancient growths. Young countries we think of as free from the tyranny of the past. The doctrine that the child is father to the man is held to be good among them. Great Britain which of late years seems to have discovered the secret of the renewal of youth, upsets that doctrine. She is becoming more radical than her children. An English financier last week was explaining that the inroads of the Lloyd-George budget on the weaith of the British aristocracy was driving a lot of it to British Columbia for safety. Anomaly of anomalies. Before the British House of Commons is now a bill—the Shops Bill—which because of its domestic character may get little notice abroad, but which is an object lesson in tolerance to the lawmakers in the Dominions over the seas. Some of us who know of the tyranny of the Lord’s Day Alliance and its special legislation, might well doff our hats to the men who have drafted the Shops Bill and piloted it through to a Grand Committee of the British House. In our own Dominion many a shopkeeper has been and is being convicted of a criminal offence for selling a loaf of bread on a Sunday, (Under New Management) ABRARBAB TO-NIGHT Complete Change of Programme Latest Pictures - Best Music GET THE HABIT EVERYBODY COME Children 10c Adults 15c BESNER & BESNER, [PRoprIerors The New Knox Hotel is run on the European plan. First-class service. All the Latest Modern Improvements. EDS 50c UP i | FIRST AVENUE, PRINCE RUPERT EEE CTRICAL FIXTURES ELECTRIC WIRING IN BOTH PRIVATE AND BUSINESS HOUSES Work performed by experts only. A first class job is guaranteed in every instance. A 'arge stock of Chandeliers and Fittings carried. H. W. Blakely - Electrican Third Ave. - - Near Sixth usually to some hapless family whose suppertable the previous night had been raided by friends, with the result that the next day the hosts had either to go hungry or break the law and get an extra loaf One poor fellow who took a photograph of his house on the Sabbath was convicted at Toronto. Refreshment dealers are fined for seliing | ice cream, unless it is part of a full course dinner—as if an icecream | appetite on Sunday is sin, and an ice-cream-and-meat-and-potatoes | appetite is lawful. Even the purchase of a magazine to read on a} Sunday is a criminal offence for which the Lord’s Day Alliance hires) detectives to work on Sundays to collect evidence and establish cases. | To buy a postage stamp is a crime. About the only thing one can} safely buy in our sister provinces is a Sunday cigar, it having been decided by an appeal court ii Ontario that tobacco being mentioned in the pharmacopaeia it follows that a cigar is a drug. But to keep | the transaction free from the taint of crime, the customer must buy | his Florfina or his Panatella from a druggist, and not from a cigar dealer. | | } | | In the Shops Bill, the British House proposes to throw over the| Act of Charles II. under which small traders have been persecuted | in some parts of the country, and make it lawful to sell or purchase | on Sundays, newspapers, magazines, periodicals, medicine, milk, refreshments, and similar necessities and luxuries. The Bill bases its | legislative proposals on the broad fact that certain customs have| arisen in the country that involve great economic and industrial interests, and are necessary to the social happiness and education of | large masses of the people. In reply to a large deputation of ministers who waited upon him | to urge the prohibition of Sunday papers, the Home Secretary, Mr. | Churchill was very frank. do such a thing,”’ he said. “IT would sooner leave Parliament than | By removing intolerant interference with the necessities and | pleasures of peaceable citizens, who prefer to spend their Sundays | as they like, and not as some other folks with different ideas would | like, the British Government will best achieve its end, which is to! limit as far as possible all Sunday trading that is notmecessary to the| happiness and welfare of the people of Great Britain. NOTES DUE When Mr, D’Arcy Tate left Prince Rupert with the assessment agreement in his pocket he promised the city that a reply would be forthcoming by April 15th. Nearly a month has passed since that date but no reply has been received. maintain for breaking promises. Companies have a reputation to Last year the private owners of lots in Prince Rupert had to pay | taxes on $4,700,822.50. This year they will have to pay taxes on $7,820,830. That is a liberal margin for improvements, It is an increase of a fraction over 66 per cent on last year’s assessed values. The news that the Dominion Government will carry out improve- ments at Naden Harbor, further improvements to the Government wharf at Stewart, and build a $75,000 fisheries cruiser for the Pacific coast is good news. Money invested by the Government on this coast is as sure of good returns as is the money of the private investor. But there is one thing the Dominion Government might have done for Prince Rupert, it might have voted $50,000 to build us a wharf. We need it, sure enough. If the Dominion Government were to build us a good substantial steel and concrete wharf, it would probabiy last us until the other Government wharf is ready—the one that was started two years ago, and of which the first pile is not yet driven, The first number of a new magazine, “The Pioneer Magazine” published in Seattle, comes to hand. It is cramful of excellent stories of Alaska, the North, and British Columbia and announces its policy to be ‘‘to tell its readers the inside facts relating to the industries of the West and its opportunities.’ It looks as if it is going to be a force in bringing the attractions of the northern Pacific coast to the notice of the world. Coast to Coast OCEAN TO. OCEAN Tickets To All Points ROGERS’ Steamship and Railway Agency Second Ave. Phone 116 ‘Windsor Hotel FIRST AVENUE AT EIGHTH STREET Newly Furnished and Steam Heated Rooms A FIRST CLASS BAR AND DINING ROOM IN CONNECTION RATES 50 CENTS AND UP BATHS FREE TO GUESTS ROBT. ASHLAND P.0. BOX 37 ae THE [IROQUOIS POOL English and American Billiards Twelve Tables SECOND AVE. WORKINGMAN’S HOME Rooms 50c BEST IN TOWN FOR THE MONEY | J. GOODMAN, Proprietor Lot 13, BL 11, Sec. 5 only one left at We have sold the ? adiatning lotsa with- in the last week, to local buyers We are agents for the old reliable Phoenix, Liverpool and Lendon and Globe and British America Fire Insur- ance Companies. ‘G.R. NADEI. COMPANY Limited, Prince Rupert, B.. Read The Daily New 50 much of life revolves around the “cost of things” that the store lads have an increasing interset. 4 MAY | ..Grand Hotel.. sun, and became invisible at a few $1000 <= j of European scenery. Trials have The Paper You are Reading To- night Goes tc Tokio FAR-REACHING POWER Sent East and Westward the Daily News is Now on the Verge of Linkiiig Hands Right Round the World. On the coming trade with Japan and the Orient generally Prince Rupert bases high hopes of great prosperity, and not without reason, as all the world knows. Already a most significant sign of the certain dawn of this great Oriental trade for Rupert is found in the interest taken in our city by the Japanese themselves and by Eu- ropean men of business in Japan. | A number of Janapese scribers in the city and at Port Essington read the Daily News, and forward it to their land. The paper is thus becoming known in the cities of Japan which are looking already towards Prince Rupert, and from Tokio the other day, came in a subscription from sub- home- to which the Daily News is now being regularly forwarded. For some time the Daily News, in its old form as The Optimist, has been reaching al! the principal European countries. Now it looks as if the friendly newspaper which you open every day had only a little to go in its reach East and West, to join hands with itself |right round the ithe daily doings that tell of the world, | ever increasing vitality of Prince | Rupert are sent in their attractive | Daily News |tinent and over ocean into the dress through con- older business centres to awaken and keep on the grow the world’s | interest in our City. ALTER | EARL GREYS New Color of Uniform Super- sedes Khaki GERMANY ’'S NEW SHADE Slate Blue with a Little Green in It is Llikey to be the New| Military ‘‘Invisible Hue” Successful Experiment With It. the fashion service Germany has set for a new army uniform. Khaki has had its innings. It was adopted by the British army and spread to practically all ‘the armies of the world. it was dis- the khaki color was very suitable as a service the plains of Africa and India, it was Then covered that although dress for soldiers in dusty hardly efficient against the green grey- Eu- summer backgrounds and white winter coloring of a |ropean terrain. | A German officer wandering on |the Indian frontier had his tention drawn the peculiar slate-colored body cloths affected jby Yaghistan Afridis. He {told that the this |was so generally worn was that |it disappeared rapidly on a rock- bound hillside, even in a_ blazing at- to was reason color feet distant in the night, and that Spring Beds, clean White Sheets 25¢ it was used by the Afridis as an | Prince Rupert for investment, To all artificial protection in their blood feuds by day and thieving ex- peditions by night. He returned to Berlin with a report that set the army clothing experts think- ing. As a result of exhaustive tests the German general staff hit upon a blue-green-grey mixture that the summer green and the blue-grey winter shadows |given entire satisfaction, so much \so that bodies of hussars when wearing the nr uniform mistaken for parties of led horses, France has now decided to adopt ‘a similar color, and the Ministry of War has selected a light grey- jgreen for the kit that is to super- | sede the blue great coat and the ow were red trousers thai French soldiers | have worn in victory and defeat fur half a century, Twe battalions taking part in this year’s French manoeuvres will be supplied with uniforms made from the new ma- | terial. Thus| 3200 Buys 160 acres of Fruit $ and Vegetaiie land at Kit- selas. Half mile from Railway. Fine cabin included, 187 Buys 75 1-8 acres of Fruit $ land at Kitselas, Half mile from the Railway. $70 all rented, ‘“‘ASK UNCLE JERRY’”’ | $250 Buys store and House on the | $500 Partner wanted in Fruit bus- iness on Third Ave. Buys Rooming House on 3rd Ave, Nine furnished rooms, A snap. main street at Kitselas, Buys Furniture and Lease for two years of Ter Room | | | House, Toilet and bath, i $80 Cash—First payment on $4,- | 200 Rooming House, 25 x 100, | }2story and basement. Balance pay able $100 monthly. | $725 | section 1. Buys Furniture and 3 1-2 year | lease of Rooming House in Rent $45 per month. } | a prominent English banking house | “ASK UNCLE JERRY”’ Sash buys story Room- $190 i ease - Piteted, 47 x 70. Accommodates 30 pecple. $5 ridge Landing Per Acre. 155 1-4 acres, with buildings included at Brecken- (mile 85.) $1 8 Per Acre. 422 acres in the famous Lakelse Valley. Per Acre. Just a nice little $5 0 farm of 80 acres. farm buildings included 1-4 mile from railway. “ASK UNCLE JERRY” $17,500 $7,500, balance in one and two years. $250 of payment can be arranged. $6000 Buys Double Apartment House in section 6. Terms can be arranged. $5500 wi, cold water, and Time payments arranged. $5180 bath, al! modern conveniences. five $300 Reserve. “ASK UNCLE JERRY” $2700 iences including bath. $3000 lences, $2625 $5 “ASK UNCLE JERRY” $100 ond Avenue $1000 $35 Offices for Rentin the Banking District ‘“‘ASK UNCLE JERRY”’ HERE is an increasing demand for dwelling houses and apartments, Anyone having houses and apartments for rent to be vacant at any time in the near future should list them with us at once as we have many demands by mail | from parties who desire to secure quart- |ers by the time they arrive here. House and in acre price. Buys live, going hotel. Five years lease. Cash Buys 5 room House in section 6. Easy terms Nine basement, Room House hot and modern couveniences, Buys Buys elegant eight room Bungalow; four fire-places suys room House on 3uys 4 room House in sec- tion 5. Modern conven- Buys 7. room House in sec- Modern tion 5, conven- Suys two story House, 7 rooms, in section one Per month will rent a 50-foot store on Second Avenue, Per month. We are offering OF, x 47. Buys fine Storehouse Third Avenue. Per month rents Store and Living Room on Fulton St. AM daily asked my opinion as to the permanent values of real estate in such enquiries I honestly state that any Prince Rupert properties, at present |valuations, are a good investment, | but I advise my clients who are desir- |ous of taking advantage of ‘‘snaps’’ to invest only where offerings are made at | much below present market quotations, who have ready cash for invest- | ments good properiies at from 20 to 40 | per cent, below the market by careful watching of fluctuations and chances by our staff, If you have cash for in- | vestment and are looking for real bar- | gains call in and talk it over, I can show you how to make quick profits, Ww" are able to pick up for our clients } Jeremiah H. Kugler | | | | for rent a fine Store on Sec- on | to apply for permission to purc) | described lends: | Oammencing at a post plant and 120 chains south from the lot 1783, Coast District, Rang: ‘ er of chains, thence eart 40 cha a 6 chains, thence west ww chain FOUNTAIN. | 22 FOR ‘11 Date Mar, 26, 1911 Pub. Apr. 4, 1911 Skeena Land Distriet--Distric: Take notice that Mary Hel) ver, H. C., occupation spinster for iasion to purchase the ( lands: | Commencing at 4 post ; east corner of Lot 39580, th: . ; » north to Lot 1723, thence #0 aaa Pure Ice Cream with all the | $582, thence about 80 chains ot ast “Fixins’’ thence 40 chains east, inence a A Lot 682, thence 20 chains east : north, thence 20 chains « Pape mencement; containing 280 acr om SS TT Post marked M. B. B., 5.6. Dated Feb.i4, 1911, MARY ub. March 4 c H ORMI ; Skeena Land Mistrict — Dist ° x Wale ' Islane > fake notice that Geo. H. La The Pioneer Druggist B. C., occupation barber, int: rm 82 ermiaiion to purchase the t ands " Cemmencing at t miles west and one mile sou of Stanly Creek, Naden Ha } chaina, thence west 40 cb | chains, thence east 40 chair Jated Mareh 17, 1911 INLANDER: Pubs Abel Ss PHONE : ; ; i ,. < cetiseerneaiamanmmenitel S.S. a pot Skeena Land District D Take notice that l, JH. Mca | Rupert, occupation miner te coe FOR see yermniesion to purchase the | lands Commencing at a post plant | corner of lot 2249, thence east j south 6 chains, thence west north 6 chains to point of taining 2 acres more o. leas Date Feb. 15, 1911 J. H. MeAUGHPRY Pub, Feb. 25. 1911 Andrew } HAZELTON Saturday, May 1 Take the fast light-draught steam- { Yietr » ider for Hazelton Skeena Land District—1 adh cerca . Take notice that I Boicom M Rupert, B.C., oecupation labore ply for permission to purchas« Agent ot barat» sencing at a4 post plant« half miles in an easterly dire m Naas River where the Lava | and one mile in a norther said Lava Lake trail thence west & chains, the thence east chains to p containing 640 acres Date Feb, 3, 1911 Pub, Mar. 10. | H. B. Rochester thence BOLA J WANTED eee ERE eer ees Skeena Lend District D Take notice that |, Willia A local representative is wanted . aver, B.C one patio . . or permisnsion to purchase th for a territory tributary to Prince ed lands ’ a Commencing at « post pla Rupert to sell the hardy non-irri- fee tive ‘aoa ob gated nursery stock grown by the nndies B oa northe " . south & chains, thence ea Oregon Nursery Company, Oren- north 80 chaina, thence west & co, Oregon. Liberal terms. Party Caen. OP Wil AM must come well recomsnended. Dated tat Feb. 1911 Charl Pub. Feb. 25 Skeena Land District — Distr Take notice that Frank Ont., oceupatior for permission to purchase the lands Commencing at mile weet and two Stanley Creek where Harbor, Graham Island thence 50 chains enat, the thence 80 chains west t peer ees ADDRESS reer er eres booKhkeep« Oregon Nursery Company Oregon & poet miles Orenco - and contaning 640 acres © - Dated Mareh 17, 1911 PPAR ALA Pub Apel F Oo R S A L E Skeena Land District ~ D . » tall Take notice that f, Pete Two Box Ball Alleys, 42 feet long; Wall B.C., oecupation taamete case and counter, chairs, card tables, ete $200 takes the outfit for quick sale. Apply H. E. ROSS, Empress Hotel Pool Room Third Avenve - Prince Rupert PLAS IOI » purchase the f Commencing ata post piante R.'s S.W. corner and immediat marked J.M.'« N.E. corner ner; thence north 8 chalns, t thence south 80 chains, thence point of commencement more or les 7 ‘o ‘= LAND PURCHASE NOTICE Dated Ist Feb. 1911 Cha Pub. Feb. 2% : , keena Land District — District ) on ¢ Skeena Land District i of Queen Charlotte Wate eaten shes’ Cherian Take notice that George W. Arnott of Prince | ®upert, B. C., spenpeues § Rupert, occupation real estate broker, ®PP!Y for permimion to pu » < intends .s acta described lands for permission to purchase the following described lands Commencing at a post pla Commencing at post planted about seven corner of surveyed lo miles and one-halfjmile wes one mile south Fiet, thenee from the mouth of Stanly Creek, Naden Harbor, | utherly limit thence west 80 chains, thence south 80 chains, thence east 80 chains, thence north 50 chains Dated March 17, 1911 GHO. W. ARNOTT Foner Pub. April 22. Nuina Demers, Agent | limit of a timber limr 40 chains more or less to 4« southerly of the easterl Skeena Land District——District of Coast Range 5 3984, thence in a nort! Take notice thai Angus Beaton of Prince Rupert, | projection of the said B. C., occupation miner, intends to apply for per mission to purchase the following described lands Commencing at a post planted at the south east corner of, Lot 3937, thence 40 chains west, thence 40 chains south, thence about 60 chains east to Lakelwe Lake, thence meandering said lake shore in an northerly direction to point of com- | menecement; containing 170 acres, more or less, Post marked A. B., N. EB. Corner Dated Feb. 14, 1911. ANGUS BEATON Pub. March 4 limit 60 chains more or lew ment, containing 240 acres r Dated March &, 1911 ( Pub. Mareh 25. HA Coast Range 5 Lar Take notice that I, sumkalum, occupation farmer for permission to purchase thé lands: Commencing at @ post plant« corner of Lot 3983, thence ea south 40 chains, thence we north 40 chains to place o! co Dated March 18, 1911 Pub April 16. Skeena Land District District of Const Take notice that 1, John Miller, of Vancouver, B.C., occupation butcher, intends to apply for permission to purchase the following described lands : Commercing at 2 post planted about 1 chain from tidewater. at the head of Luscombe Bay, and | marked J.M.'s N.E. corner, thence west 80 chains, thence south 80 chains, thence east 80 chains, thence north 8) chains, to point of commence- ment, containing 640 acres tnore or less, JOHN MILLER, Charles B. Stark, Agent Skeena Land District —-Distric Take notice that Alexander ver, B. C., oceupation carpent« for permission to purchase th lands Commencing at a post plant from the south west corner marked A. B., N. W. Corr south, thence 80 chains east, t north, thence 80 chains west mencement; containing 200 acrw Dated Feb, 14, 1911. ALE XAN Pub. March 4. er Dated Ist Feb., 1911 Pub. Feb, 25 Queen Charlette Islands Land District Skeena Take nutice that I, Joan MeLeod of Vancouver, occupation broker, intend to apply for permission to prospect for coal and petroleum on the following described lands: Commencing at a post planted at the mouth of the Tl-el River and marked J. MeL. 8S. BE. Corner, No 1, thence north 80 chains, thence west 80 chains, thence south 80 chains, thence east 80 chains to point of commencement’ containing 640 acres, more or less JOHN MeLEOD Dated Feb. 21, 1911. Pub. Feb. 23 Clarance MeDowell, Agent District of Skeena Land District D Take notice that I Arthur Ja eouver, ocoupation broker, tnt ermission to purchase the f lands: Commencing at a post plant: half miles in an easterly direct on Naas River where the Lave menees near the trail, thence ca thence south 80 chains, thence | thence north 80 chains to point containing 640 acre more or l« Vk Date Feb, 8, 1911 ARTHUR J : Agee Pub, Mar, 10 Joseph | Queen Charlotte Islands Land Distriet-~—Distriet of Skeena Take notice that I, John McLeod of Vancouver, occupation broker, intend to apply for permission to prospect for coal and petroleum on the following described lands: Commencing ata post planted about two miles south and two miles west of the mouth of the Tlel River and marked J. Me.L. N. E. Corner, No. 47, thence south 80 chains, thence west 80 chains, thence north 80 chaning thence east 80) chains to point of commencement; containing 640 acres, more or leis. , | N.E. corner and P.R.'8 5.B, cor Dated Feb 22, 1911. "OHN MecLEOD | 80 chains, thence north 80 cha Pub, Feb, 24 Clarence MeDowell, Agent | chains, thence south 80 chains \ | mencement, containing 640 acre Skeena Land District-~ District of Queen Charlott | ALEXANDEK Islands | Dated lat Feb,, 1911 Charles Hi Take notice that J. H. Murphy of Vaneouyer, | Pub. Feb, 25 3. os, ooeupee commercial traveller, intends | to apply for perWision to purchase the followin doseribed ands:, *| Commencing at a post planted about seven miles west and one mile vouth from the mouth Skeena Land District Dis: Take notice that I, Alexa Vancouver, B.C., occupation | apply for permiasiop to purcha described lands; Cemmencing a post planted a 8.E. corner, and adjoining pos! Skeena Land District-—-Distr Take notice that Fred W. bo! kaium, ceeupation farmer, inter | permission to purehase the follow of Stanly Creek, Naden Harbor, thence north 80 | lands: ab chains, thence west 40 chains, thence south 80) Commencing at a post plante theo chains, thence east 40¢ ins. east corner of A. McLeod's pre« ence # Dated Mareh 17, 1911, J. H. MURPHY | 20 chains south, thence 10 chain» ' oa Numa Demers, Agent | chains north, thence 10 chains ¥ | oS foutelning aC Rit ; Jated April 10, 1911, FRIBDRIC! Skeena Land Distriet—Dixtrict of Coast Range 6 | Pub April 22. Frod H Take notice that George Levick of Prince Rupes | B. C,, occupation clerk, intends to ep y for | Pub. April 22. Skeena Land District—Distriet of ‘ perpiedon to purehase the iollowing dostribed | ‘Take notice that I, Lionel Kings " e ands: | ver, B. C,, oeeupation miner, i"\' ori Commencing at a post planted on shore of | for permission to purchase the foll Lakelse Lake about 60 chains north east from outlet | larulas of said Inke (Lakelse River), thence 20 chains | north, thenee about 60 chains east to Lakelse ke, thence meandering said lake shore in a weat- erly direction to point of commencement; taining 80 acres, more or | ens. 8. W. Corner, Dated Feb. 14, 111, Pub. Mareb 4, Commencing at. post planted © | wost corner of Lot 992, Kange », ‘ | thence west 40 chains, thence fon- | thence east 40 chains, thence nor! Post matked G. L. yoint of commencement. ve dated March 24, 1911. LIONE! GEORGE LEVICK | Pub, April 22. loti Skeen: Visti ) et of Queen Migs Skeena Land District-District of Cogest ‘Takeo hom t ara ott oO. Crew o en Take notice that Mre. L. ©. Putnam of St | Rupert, B. C., oecupation agent, inten’ ie onve Paul, Minnesota, occupation married woman | for permission to purchase the fouowink tntetie to apply for permission t purchase the cna : following described lands: Commencing at a post planted ut uth Commencing ats post planted at the southwest | mies weat and half a mile south of nade corner of Lot No. 1783 marked Mra, L.C, Putnam's | Stanley Creek where it emptic ait northeast corner, thence west 40 chains, thence | Harbor, Graham Island, thence ¢a*' halt south 80 chains thence east 40 chains, thence | thence north 40 chains, thence wes! | Vg north 80 chains to post cf commencement, eon | thence south 40 chains to peint of co! taining $20 acres more or less. | or jess ae Dated March 20 1911, MNS. L. ©, PUTNAM | Dated Murch tt tte HUBERT Oks Pub, April 15, Geo, R. Putnam Agen | Pub. Apeil 7. ‘Numa Demers