1 ptomber 28, 1928 Friday Sept. Sataraay, 1 lUWffiiaaifltiaJS l). par(incnlal Service is provld cd by the people for the people. FOR INFORMATION KISGAKDING British f va 0,61 I " V:'. V -I-n" - : v v olumbia Jfines apply to larhnpnf.ftf Wnm .Qnoay 28, 29 & Oct 1 ' LADIES' DEPARTMENT r-'iik and Wool liloomcre, l'cach uiu lieum. Sale $1.00 wuhlgowns, Rood iuality, reg. $1.45. Sale $1.00 Mik and Wool Vests, very good quality. .Sale 31.00 Silk and Wool Hose, all colors, reg. $1.35. Sale $1.00 lliiick anj Drown Cashmere I lose, reg. $1.25 each. Sale, 2 for $1.00 :. uo.cn Ladies' Crepe I loured rest, nicely (rimmed, all colors, reg. $1.13. Sale $1.00 YAM) GOODS DEPARTMENT Hunt ends, White Cctton, very good quality, ranging from 25c to 40c ii ;ard regular. To clear, 6 yaris for $1.00 jl inls Pillow Tubing, hort ends, ranging from Jit a yard and up, Id to 1G" wide. To clear at 2' yard $i.00 White or Striped Flannelette. Safe, 6 yar.'s for...... $1.00 ;.(; or Striped Flannelette, 36" wide. Sale, 1 yard fw $1.00' iJliJi-' ird ! lannclette, 36" wide. Sale, 3 yards for $1.00 . d tjuality Kilrhen Towelling. Sale, 6 yards for $1.00 I. ir.cn Towelling. Sale, 4 yards lor .. ... $1.00 ".!:" Vrvy Cotton, good quality. Sale. 6 yarJs for $1.00 S'irrt end Sheeting, 70, 80 and SO" wide, good quality, reg. 7S to $1.00. To clear, 2 yards for '. $1.00 (ton Crepe, White, Pink, Kmc, Hlue and Fawn, ref.' 28c yard. Sale, 7 yarJs for .'. 1.00. yards Cretonne, reg. 35c per yard. Sale, 4 yards fer $1.00 Quilting I'rlnt. re. 75c per yard. Saks, 2 yards for $1.00 HOYS' AND MEN'S DEPARTMENT !5 vs Flannelette Nightshirts, reg. $1.45. Sale $1.00 it' y Meece-iined Shirts and Drawers, up to size 28, 2 far . $1.01) I'e urnns "95" Shirts and Drawers, reg. $1.S0 each. Sal $1.00 Vcn's Cashmere Sox, all color, reg. 75c. Sale, 2 far $1.(KJ .Ut.'n Heavy Working Sox, reg. 15c. Sale, 3 for , $1.00 WOOL DEPARTMENT Slttland Vhm. Sale, 8 hall for ' ...."'... $1.00 Double Knitting Wool, all colors. Sate, 3 skeins far $1.00 Sv--nterdown. Sale, 6 halls for 8l0 Scotch Fingering, in Mark, Drown, WMt aa Grey, esf .$1.00 . bxtra mmcmJ 2 Iwxes Crayotw, 7 Pencil, 7 Scribblers, 1 Rubber, lPcaefl Hof 2 Drawing Docks. All for $1.00 '.iris' DIoomerH, good weight. Sale, 2 for ' t... $1.01) t.irV Vests, reg. 65c Sale 2 for $1.00 lirlH Nightgowns, age G to Is. Sale .. $t.()0 tiirls' Heavy Winterwelght Vesta, upto 8c regular. Hale, 2 for $1.00 t.irlw' Cotton and Wool Combination, long sleeves, reg. $108. To clear at $!.(& SHOE DEPARTMENT I.', i'airs Indies' and ('.Iris' Felt Slippers, ranging from $1.30 to $240 regular. To clear at $1.00 Ven'x l!ubbcr DMts, knee length, quality guaranteed, to clear at $1.78 lu.vV ftuhker Hoots, knee length, sites l to 3, ' To clear at $9.30 i ( uliiH Rubber Dsots, knee length, 11. 12. IS. To clear at $li85 We have numerous ether bargains la the star waJca sfaxsj W itt i rmit us to puhlish. It will be worth year wUH to coat la and e ta lor yourselves. Jabour Bros. Ltd. IMume 615. 3rd Avenue and 7th Street Victoria, j DlfiCU 1927 UciKirl now available. Spc-cial Bulletins, Annual Hcports, e'tti., furnished free of chnrKc. TJIE DAILY NEWS PAGE FIVB News of the Mines AROUND PRINCE RUPERT (iranby Hclinqulshes Outsider Hufus-Argenta Ore Assaying High-Duthie Strike is Confirmed The Grunby Co. has relinquished its bond on the Outsider Mine on Portland Canal, south of Stewart, and is now taking out all equipment and-machinery. Since 1023 the Outsider has been held by the Granby Co. by a bond under royalty payments on ore tonnage mined. Last year 1:1,095 tons of ore was mined and In 192G, 114,729 tons. The ore was mined for the silica it contained which was required at the Anyox smelter for fluxing purposes. Now, however, silica is not required at the smelter and copper values were not sufficient to make mining profitable so the company decided to abandon operations at the Out- sider. Part of the machinery now being taken out will be used at the Bonanso mine and the balance absorbed by the Anyox plant. The Outsider is the oldest shipping mine on the north coast of .Silverado groups. TM worx ha been proceeding since . ing and, JeuUs to $l.;50,u00. The Independence property at Stewart will be thoroughly cov-jered by oiamond drilling, the I nevenue fining 10. uw. an nounces. Heavy ore concentration lis expected ai the operators proceed, especially In the -aone eov- tawessam Cred by No. 3 and Net 4 wins. No. 6 diamond drill hcM. la now being driven and will b pitt Wwn to a depth of TOO feet,, era. cutting seven hundred feet of a mineralised mne that has been traced over a mile and a half. Confirmation han bee received of fh nee it strike at tee Duthle mine at Smlthe-H. The atrifce was at depth, ti e tunnel at the lowest working brjakliic in 10 a strong vein earryi ig a foot of clean, high tgrad alive;- lend. At this, depth the ojfcHftrrence gives omr seVen hundred- feet of backs and means that EMjthle i definitely fftabllsh-! d as a big producer on 'til lower i lavtla. Tho Marmr ConMlidaljkd property rs nov being exalatned by engineers ef the Coaaalldsted fining & Srulting Co. Negotiations ari said to be proetjjdJng for the purchase of the y. property which, i one of the target ' In the Portland Canal district. TKAUI.VO Afi V "Mow old' it ybuiljltr, ! il nny '.' - '' . ".sh' ji m' it'il 1 ost you a I'tiarter to fiiu! out." BUYING MINE i ! AT SMITHERS British Columbia and was oper-' - ated by the Brown Alaska Co. in,EnK,s.h M ninK Engineer Tell of 1906 when several thousand tons of ore were shipped to the Hedley smelter, Alaska. Reports from New York and Toronto that Premier Gold had cut its quarterly dividend from Mix to five cents appear to hac been in error. H. A. uuess, vice-president of the company, has announced that the regular six per cent quar terly dividend, amounting to $300,-000, will be paid as usoal on Oc tober 4. This will be the second dividend of six cents, previous ones having been at the rate of eight cents. The reduction of two cents followed the announce nient that expenditures be made for tne exploration of ifte Prosperity, t'ouer iuuo and Deal and of Attitude of Eng. U ij in udditioc, an aerial ti . mway is I jt st lish Capital The Edmonton Bulletin carried the following article under a two column display head a few days ago. Development work on a prospect two and a half miles from Smithers near the B. C. Alberta border, is to be carried out almost immediately with the object of having the claims taken over by English capital for working, according to Hubert Reade, mining '.ngineer of London, England, who is a guest at the Macdonald. The claim, Mr. Keade stated, war a mafrnlflAnt nrnriArt hasr. were to . " .-"" i-y ing silver, lead and gold, and financiers in England were in- in it. Much Negotiaion wh-it company or syndi- oeing erec ed to tounuct ne inrce cat,. would take over the nroDertv. ..rooties wilii a cout. nirating he did not say, other than that mill near cu.u! level, ine fortn- ft would be a strong concern. He .oming disbursement will increase had been negotiating about it for .ne grand t - al of Premier divi- aome months. ! Asked as tq the British attitude toward Canadian mining invest- The diamond drilling campaign monts, Mr. Reade stated that the , aa I . , AT cuft.s i ial hv I tit I a i r 1 1 i.i lTi'ourriAint nf tVio PttfvlUliivin n speculative properties out here," he continued. "They must be approached differently from the way you approach your own cap-talists. They do not like to put money into development work and think you should have a property producing before they take it up. When you people over here think thafthe1 Englishman must Invest here, you lose sight of the fact that he has the whole world as a market for his in vestment and can pick and choose. 'The real trouble however, is the antagonistic attitude of cer tain newspapers and the fact that the investor has not the money to put into a project and leave for three or four years without a return on it. In this day of high taxation, he cannot i do it. Big People Coming. "The big people in England will come in eventually. Of that there is no doubt but they are chary. The Grand Trunk sticks as do the actions of high pressure salesmen who worked different propositions on behalf of American interests. Too much stuff of no value has been foisted on the Englishman." Mr. Reade expressed the opin ion that a lot of good would be done if a new law was passed in this country prohibiting the list-; ing of mining stocks on exchange until such time as the mine was producing. IN A BARBER SHOP THIRTY YEARS AGO HALIFAX. NJS., Sept. How tlmea bar changed la Instanced by the following lteto. taken from tne files of the Ac (Mac Recorder of thirty yean go: "A tmuortil eatabllnhment on Bar- rlngtan Street Uils forenoon received a visit from a young lady teacher, at- trading tne educational conference here; the wanted to have her hair cut. and the bosa of the establishment would irdegat self. the task to nobody but him- " " The regular droppers-ln thought they .lutieaia oi tne nuiu wirgeuuM me Canadian was auiereni ana bad struck the wrong place when they mine at acerart nas obtained re- that there would have to be aniatw the pretty young woman sitting nulls that aue tne 'well-known ! adjustment of these before they I "Pint in the operating ehair. with nrniwnv nm nt ha iwiti..i nr.i. '-miM umrlr in humnnii I the gonial proprietor all blushes and hT PrV,n ' "ei """iiman -till throws X. section of the property assays re-, up the Grant Trunk fiasco when -nothing-unusual-with-me" eiprw-veaied values of iOti ounces of sil- anyone asks him to invest in sion." ' ver jiiiii Id per ceut ieau 10 tne ion, ' 'this being said to rejsresent a fair j """" valuation of the group. Assays of ! itut us-Af genu hign grade gave .,23 ounces of silver and 17 per i cfiii lead to tne ;oa. Work win be 1 ,'Uciieu torward energetically on ' .. ,.oi ty, Aii. DUMiiti beiiig de- it 1 mined U make toe mine one ol jw major p;uper.icii ot xMo.tliern uit.isn Coiumoia. Tne ownera -ie convince.! that Lite property is jusi. us valuable as any northern property no. excepting 'tae Premier or Geo: te Copper. Development operauous, now in full swing, will bo continued! througa-oul the winter. las OOniniOil5835 J)lll jfTntfra'ttf ($ AMM"1 InlmlH lWiim A . TOM. MtiJt In Canada y imrfo thfamout Dominion BltUhll Linoleum FOR RED'S Transfer Fifteen years' experience in FURNITURE AND PIANO MOVING We sell 8 kinds of Coal Any kind of Wood in any quantity CEMENT SAND GRAVEL Our price, weights and measures are right. So Is our Service Phone us and Save Money and Time DAY & NIGHT SERVICE Day Phone: 201. Night Phone: Red 317. Ling the Tailor Phone C19 Clothes Cleaning Price List like this is worth keeping in mind! Ladies' or Gentlemen's Suits steam pressed 7. Overcoats 7.", J Trousers JV fckirts 3.-50 Boys Suits 50c? SUITS, Dry Cleaned and steam pressed .... $-.00 Overcoats .2.00 Trousers 7." Skirts 7.Tf Coys' Suits $1.00 Also Ladies' Fancy work at reasonable rates- We call for and deliver to all parts of the city. 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