THE DAILY NEWS : NOT AS OTHER M s70t. -- OAL NOTICE The Daily News a CT aes prayer antniettonieneenetienetienen enon eneteenenenenenstionenenetenster set The Leading Newspaper and the Largest Circulation in Nort!ern B. C. Rev. Canon Welch is Thankful SEERETEES RESETS ST EESEES SORESRED EDD SEER ER EES EET HERE Yet ine at te Published by the Prince Rupert Publishing Company, Limited | Canada is Free from Core PS G5 FR | missense DAILY AND WEEKLY pe Oe Ba | ind on TRANSIENT DISPLAY ADVERTISING—50 cents per inch. Contract rates | London, Oét. Mee Rev. cadon } ye Cosi L . on application. phatase in, : ae Oo eh om ’ iiveettar ; Mes ; pa Ss . en, | Welch, D.C.L., L.L.D., vicar of} i a sek Dated e SUBSCRIPTION RATES—To Canada, United States and Mexico—Dalxy, 50« Wakefield, formerly rector of St.| Se & ——— Pub per month, or $5.00 per year, in advance. WEEKLY, $2.00 per year. All er os isi Other Countries—Daily, $8.00 per year; Weekly, $2.50 per year, strictly James Cathedral, Toronto, and se : in advance. provost of Trit ity College, spei k- 4 yet - HEAD OFFICE jing for the Western Canadian se Jef oan Daily News Building, Third Ave., Prince Rupert, B, C. Telephone 98. fund in Lo oom Oe Se ee ie Po 7 ONS ve! ree Oe much more likely that we shall Oo Yet rth STA aah eo cay . ao oe lannex the Amertans, than thi Yet DAILY EDITION. aaa TUESDAY, OCT. 17) they shall ever annex Canade.| ¥% rea or y nt F z * Ti SSS The freedom, justice and absen % (@) . | Pub ep. 2 ate LE BRAS D'OR IN LABRADOR lof corruption which obtains north | gs re a for the 40h pasellel ie lreedy| THE ONL) NEWS READERS HAVE ANOTHER TREAT. STORE FOR THEM egy : Now that an expedition has returned from Labrador, as announced | drawing thousands northward from a in yesterday’s News, with a small steamer load of rich ores, there; the United States.” se bove a is a possibility that Canada’s Atlantic seaboard may see development | . ls 4 similar to that which has started on her Pacific seaboard. et A NEW PAPER MILL se ‘ é Though with a less sheltered coast than has Northern British | italy se e a Columbia and with a less equable climate, Labrador is not the barren| New Westminster is Rejoicing E 6 we inhospitable country that it is popularly imagined to be. Its most] at Another Big Industry i a southerly point touches the same latitude as North Vancouver Island; | nd yes . 2 its northernmost latitude touches the Yukon boundary. Into its} New Westminster, Oct. 16. Je} bookkeeper, inter via creeks shoals of fish swarm. Indian tribes live on its coasts, and in| Construction work on the rew ae | coal and tle the north bands of Eskimo. It has timber wealth, especially pulp| peper ‘mill on Brurette River is| Yes a Comme : timber, and a recent traveller grew most enthusiastic over its berries,|about completed, and the equip- . ; % iG 4 declaring that Labrador was the greatest berry country in the world. |ment will shortly be installed. —_—_— The News has received so many letters ————— : vat Ghatne ch va of appreciation from its readers for its as | Dated Sept. 11, 1911 y But gold is the great lure. Now that an announcement has been! The location of the new peper- made of gold in Labrador, many an expedition will be fitted out in}making plart is ideal for the search of the yellow metal. business, as the pulp bolts can be Pub. Sept. 23 ae enterprise and judgment in securing the serial rights of Captain Clive Wol- ley’s great story, ‘‘The Tenderfoot’s ——| Wooing,” that it has gone still further. Fo Skeena Land District Take notice that t Bainter of Prince R & The surprising thing to the philologist is that the gold hunter ae brought in with the greastest not sought Labrador before. Its name, the Anglicised form of La} facility, and the firished paper Bras d'Or (the Arm of Gold), tells its own story of the days when|shipped out on a spur from the Canada was the field of action for the gay adventurers of France. The| G. N. R. title Arm of Gold was not bestowed upon that distant country for} The building itself is a com- nothing. modious vie, modelled somewhat English history indeed tells of how in the days of Queen Elizabeth,}after the plan of the paper mills when Sir Walter Raleigh was Lord of the Seas, three small ships set}on Lake Michigan. The frame sail from England for Northern Labrador and there spent a summer] work is made of sawn timbers ard and a winter. Returning with a cargo of gold ore to England, the] the sides are constructed of gal- expedition eventually found that this ore would yield three ounces} vanized iron. Half a dozer greé | of gold to the ton. This was not considered a sufficiently good return ]iron banded vais necessary io by the London merchants who outfitted the expedition, so the little}the proceess of mekirg pape | vessels did not make a second voyage. Three ounces of gold to a|have already been installed The} ton would probably be viewed differently today. The Treadwell mines} machinery and manufacturing at Alaska are paying very comfortable profits on ore that yields|equipmert are being purchased i: three dollars, not three ounces of gold to the ton. the East ard in the Urited States. | According to Mr. E. Colpitts Robinson, F. G. S., who visited a8 Fe corner C. E. B. ¢ 80 chains, thence ea . ath chains, thence weet . ail mencement. Dated Sept. 11, 1911 Pub, Sept. 23. Skeena Land D The News has secured the serial rights for Louis Tracy’s Great New Story “The Pillar Skeena Land Distr “ r @ notice th ake ice tha Bainter of Prince Amn bookkeeper, ir | missioner of Lar coal and petrok Labrador in 1909, confessedly in search for the precious metal, the| land formation belongs to the Laurentian period, the northeast coast SILVERSIDES BROS. | land on Graham | | Commencing > Oo jek a iek r ccs iat of C. E. B. Coa :t ee lsc ha ; . x, FO} 3 z sof set anal O ana oO Seg ie +O} sek being composed of Laurentian gneiss, with intrusive granite and oe pa $ ° : . ; ‘ ney 8 SIGN PAINTERS } .. quartz veins. Resting of this are some of the lower Silurian beds. i The sands carried down by the rivers are al! that is known of the || bse Sra Sie ee r ie Sao : : ‘ : ‘ ad Sept. 11,1 “ geological character of the interior, and these show that the-interior | 336 it: al ‘ . . . . | '? contains rocks of gneiss with micaceous quartz. | aper angers 336 ei ss is All that it needs is someone to move the Japan current from \| 336 siteee ee . x ees ‘ ‘ ‘ . ae et os Ernest a Northern British Columbia over to Labrador, to make it a fine country | ——~———— , | 334 bookkeeper, intend - a T 7 . a . to prospect in. INTERIOR DECORATORS e ad Sa we ere P.O, BOX 120 PHONE 156 GREEN 2 ri ae 4 PASSING COMMENT Second Avenue, near McBride 334 4 chains, ther mencement. Dated Sept 12, 1911 ‘TER, Loco To be shot in the arm by a fellow hunter befell a man on Vashon | Island last week. That was bad enough. But to have the explanation ... Whites Portland Cement.. s i sek 4 : sek z : made that he mistook him for a grouse is adding insult to injury. } : oO Yes a is FO} ie a s a ek : eh set Oo Oo fo} O ie si (e) and will start the story Next Week. Skeena Land Dist Take notice Bainter of I bookkeeper, missioner of coal and pe land G ons m G. C. EMMERSON | This is a new danger that the hunting season has brought. AGENT | ——— Phone 125 Naden Biock Second Ave | The Chinese are going ahead rapidly. Not content with the news of a republic being started in China, two American born Chinese now attending Columbia University announce their intention to run nt r ‘ a for the Presidency of the United States when they are old enough. | e eine This has got some of the United States editors going. And some people | In sor ote bie : a Louis Tracy is the greatest writer of fascinating adven- think the Chinese are devoid of humor. cy th Sees x REO NG FIRST AVENUE AT EIGHTH STREET ture stories in England.—His plots are vigorous. —His Newly Furnished and fle 1 ] 5 £ characters are lifelike. There is not a dull paragraph. Pe rr | Talking of Chinese humor, a lady at Vancouver—we will call | her Mrs. John Brown because that isn’t her name—engeged a young | || A FIRST CLASS BAR AND DINING Steam Heated Rooms Chinese servant. The Chink was modern, and States-trained. His stories are models of good English LOO Snes Haas : 7 : ROOM IN CONNECTION What is your name?’’ demanded Mrs. Brown on the first day. | rea “‘My name is Hai Tai Lee C ” it itd: ice asa RATES 50 CENTS AND UP ly name is Hai Tai Lee Chung” (or something like that) said | Tatuh HIRED LoCEers the Chinaman, in very good accent. “Very well. I'll call you Wong,” said Mrs. Brown. |W H. Wright, Prop P.O. BOX ] | “What's your name, Mrs?’’ asked the new-servant. | “Oh, my name is Mrs. John Brown,’ explained the lady. What The Pillar of Light Is The ‘‘Pillar of Light” is a sea story of love and adventure. As you may guess the ‘Pillar of Light” is a lighthouse. The story concerns the romance of Stephen Brand the lighthouse keeper and man of mystery. It is a story of heroic deeds in many lands. It will ————]_ hold you to the very last word and d- KK = light you all the time. In the end you will see the greater meaning of the title ‘‘The Pillar of Light. “Velly well, I'll call you old aunt Sally,’’ returned the Chinama: without the outward suspicion of a smile. «FOR RENT... ————— —— 5-room House on 8th Ave., section 5. Partly furnished, $22 a month Skeena Land D Take t it AT THE EMPRESS THEATRE i...FOR SALE... f Sc ee === SE H Hl, Lots 8 and 9, block 34, sec, 8, $600. i | ill Commencing at of ¢ 3, corner A, T. B. ¢ 80 chains, then » 80 chains, thence mencement stor | A. T ‘ Dated Sept. 12, 19 Pub, Sept. 23 grlotte hill | Easy cash and terms Lot 19, block 26, sec. 5, Easy terms. Hil 2, blo til - } Lot 22, block 24, sec, 5, $800. | Lot 17, block 49, sec. 7, $350. $50 cash Mm | Dey llth De Uva Fire, Life, Accident and Liability Insurance and $25 per month. JOHN DYBHAVN Skeena Land D | Take notice | Broderick of I’r 7 | | bank manager missioner of Ls eS — —_—— =—— SPRCPRSPR OPE 0 FRO PEC PRs BRO SROSROPROFROPROPRSPROFROPEOFESS RePsBosaesue, Sean ae ee eee ee eee See eee Se CeO eee ee esse eeseuecsceceeneeceone ete eee eee J ouaouacudshaohdsbashsousousobdshdshaebdshuoudcussusebrendshestesussheser ter seesteserses estes } land on Graham Graniteware Tinware Commencing at 4 ? |'Piahin_ nort 4 Cc, E.B thence west 5V thence east df it 5 . containing 640 aer p, BAL TE Dated Sept. 12. 19)! | Pub, Oct. 7. il Pattullo Block, fand on Gah a +) of CE. | a t College Chums ii g acer lll Pn we (peeeteteees peteerereteeaes 10 cast 80 chains, t —AComedy-drama in Three Acts | Ye a eopimenceine Age | tW. J i 1 . J. McCUTCHEON ¢ & tel siya : Dad Sep, | —WILL BE PRODUCED WITH SPECIAL SCENERY BY— | if eMac ne ee a 7 o This story is exclusive in British Columbia to the Daily News and | ee eae BP ta i Fi rae to filling Peewee - its readers, See that you get the story from the start by having wie fie it The WIL! AMS STOCK Co |g: Thoniee Died PED PR ene your name entered on the Daily News books as a subscriber. mitasloner ot La - ii ° /RPPOCOREPROSECSSSSENEREOT | fee Sh etm il ee i ney = ——| aot oad La 1 © 4-6-6 © 6-6 & © @-« THE DAILY NEWS t oe hal ‘ DOORS OPEN AT 7.30 CURTAIN AT 8.15 SHARP q O —— DELI | e920 cea Ne ll SN eS ETE Daa es lo FRED. STORK t ret ’ VERED | Dated Sent 12, 191 — ? ~General Hardware | Yes Re | eorTye | et aD fae | SMTi orice Prices: 50c, 75c, $1.00 Builders’ Hardware | Yer Dc a Month ~ $5 (00 a Year é ee Valves & Pipes Oxford Stoves ¢ G anieplonsy of Tt | 3 | Shy SESRESEDREDREDGEDUCD:EDUCDEESEEDREDUEDNEDEEDCsieneeaeeacencens casas eeraeensenaruarasrenenteaze RESERVED SEATS ON SALE IN THE THEATRE OFFICE SECOND - AVENUE — © -2-@-4-6-6- 0, —se— @-—¢ @-¢ ove ‘e} ie