THE OMINECA HERALD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1928 MINERAL ACT NOTICE : “D,X.’? Mineral Claim, situate in the Omineca Mining Division of R.5, Coast District, - ca ‘ Where Incated:—On Lorne Creek {about three miles above tne junction : of the North and South Forks) on the south fork, Omineca Mining District, British Columbia. \ : TAKE NOTICE that I, Charles Phil- | lips, Free Miner’s Certificate, No. 66,- 7a5C, intend, sixty days from the date ’ hereof, to apply to the Mining Recorder » for a Certificate of Improvements, for the purpose of cbtaining a Crown Grant - of the above claim, And further take notice that action, * under Section 85, must be commenced / before the issuance of such Certificate _ of Improvements. ; Dated thie 12th day of October, A.D. m 1923. 1826 Delinquent Co- Owner To Geo, W. Kerr: : s =©Take notice that whereas we, Stephen 4 MeNeill and A. Carmichael, have done ) Notice to or caused to be done, and paid for same, the assessment work on the m Trail, Trail, Fraction, Independence and = Dardenells Mineral Claims, situated at m Fourteen Mile Post on the Copper River trail, in Omineca Mining Division, for the years 1921 and 1922, and have @ recorded the same, unless you pdy your w share of the above work, together with ®. the cost of the advertising, we shall, at m the expiration of ninety days from the m@ date herenf, apply to the Mining Re- m corder at Smithers, B.C., to have your a’interesta in the above mentioned claims ™ vested in us, pursuant to the provisions m@ of the Mineral Act. For further in- m formation apply to Stephen McNeill, im Copper River, B.C, : A. Carmichael . Stephen MeNeill i, Dated at Copper River, B,C., my this 10th day of September, 1928, 1128 NOTICE RIN THE MATTER of an application * forthe issue of a Duplicate Certi- ficate of Title for Lot two hundred and seventeen (217), Group one (1), Cassiar District, — . m6 Satisfactory proof of the loss.of the Certificate of Title covering the above land having been furnished, it is my Intention to issue, after the expiration one month from the first publication jereof, a fresh Certificates of Title :overing the above land, in the name of John Clarke King Sealey, which, Certi- ate of Title. was issued on the 13th etober, 1911, and is numbered 8521, Land Registry Office, Prince Rupert, C., 9th November, 1923, H. F. MacLEOD, Registrar of Titles, 24 | The Hazelton Hospital Certificate of Improvements B uffalo Herds Grow Beyond Accommodation CHARLES PHILLIPS aha fe nearly ali Canadians the oews that the buffalo, which we have been accustomed to regard as nearly extinct, have recently co increased "ag to necessitate the slaughter of a herd of 2,000 at the Canadian Buf- falo Park, Wainwright, Alberta, will come as a very pleasant sur- _ prise. The mere existence of this surplus definitely announces that, though we will never see a large wild herd again, we yet may hope to see the prairies repopulated with mumbers of buffalo, and that this magnificent animal, Monarch o! tha Plains, will be always with us, Tha buffalo were in their glory when the construction of the firs? American transcontinental railroad was begun in 1866. Herds of fifty theusand head were then common up the western plains of this con- tinent 4s far south as Utah and as far north as Hudson's Bay, and as many aa 100,000 robes were mar- keted annually. So easily were these obtained that whiskey-traders could purchase a robe for one cup of liquor. In 1874 the North-West Mounted Police, on trek for the Rockies, saw several immense herds, notably tear the Sweet Grass Hills, when the force marched all day through a herd of -60,000 which|Ca blackened the horizon. This roman- tic scene, so vividly contrasting the wilderness and its denizens with the oncoming representatives of civiliza- tion, is surely a fit subject for ar- tists and poets, The work of destruction, once & Few of the Sopertinous Huffals by 1880 only vast quantities of buf falo bones and skulls remained te show that the great herds had ever been. The mighty half-breed huntes had fallen to collecting these akuils and bones for the sugar-refineries and bone dust factories of the United States. [It is worthy of note that the first eastbound freight run by the Canadian Pacific Railway was loaded with such reHes. _ The present encouraging state ot affairs-is-due to the foresight of the nadian Government, which, in 1907, purchased a amal] herd of buf. falo in Montana and brought it over the border to form the nucleus of the 00 head now at Wainwright. To 9 Wise purchase we owe the faci that the falo has not become merely a heraldic beast as axtinct launched, proceeded so rapidly that as the unicorn or the dodo The Late Mrs. (Rev.) + J. Snowden Brayfield + The Hazelton Hospita} - issues fe tickets for any period at $1.50 per a. month in advance, This rate in- Mm cludes office consultations and ™ medicines, as well as all costs fa while in the hospital. Tickets are = obtainable in Hazelton from the - @ drug store; from T. J. Thorp, | Telkwa, or by mail from the medi- cal superintendent at the Hospital. It distreases you and your frienda ' —it is dangerous. A few dropa of me Shiloh, the 60-year old remedy, brings immediate relief. Shiloh tops that irritating tickling inthe hroat, loosens the phlegm and eels the tissues. Get Shiloh, at our druggists, 30c, 60c and $i.20. ‘Horse, Bugey and pr Sale Outter, cheap. Ap- Rev... V. Sensum; ‘Hazelton,-or. Om: to Christ’s little ones, the child- ren in the Sunday school, her memory will be cherished ‘in the age to come, She was gifted .|as the end drew near. jlessly. The Church of England, In seeking to pay tribute to the life and sacrifice of the late Mrs. J. Brayfield one feels that words are all too inadequate with which to do justice to a life which was lived in the service of human- ity. The words from ‘King John’”’ are more than appropriate, “At last the night was gathering About the burning crest of the ‘old, feeble and day wearied sun,” so it would seem in the past few weeks her ‘night’ came on all too quickly and on Tuesday, Nov. 6, 1928,.she mercifully and quietly passed into the life of rest and eternal peace, As far as the actual vears of her life are recorded, one might say the spirit “Diu Multumaque Vixi’’ (I have lived long and fully) must have been her thought The real love of her life has been given to her husband, the Rev. J: Snowdon Brayfield, for whose interests she toiled: eease- of which she belonged, received Herald, New Hazelton, 2021 Set at ae with a capacity for organization, and to the St. Stephen’s W.A. she was the dynamic and leader. It is impossible to think of Mrs. Brayfield in the past tense, for love is God and God is eternal, She must always live in the hearts of ‘those who loved her, and alwaya we shall feel the presence abiding in a country which was her home for so many years. ceased leaves to mourn her loss her husband, the Rev. J. 8. Bray- field; her daughter, Mrs. Phipps, of Vancouver; Cuthbert, the youngest son, now living at Vir- (den, Manitoba. Her nearest and dearest friends can truly say of her who will be so much missed: ‘*Pather in Thy gracious keeping Leave we now Thy servant sleeping, ’' Wm. C. MAWHINNEY, Telkwa, B.C, ~The ferry at Kitwanga is com: pleted and ready for launching. This should be quite a boon to ‘Besides many friends, the de- many settlers across the river, The Largest Mail Order Medicine - _ House in Northern British KO + ‘: Prince Rupert. tothe _ Columbia | - “Ask for our yellow price sheet, ear = Sent gladly upon request. oe a pa te rc ra 0 of which she belonged, received ||. W.-JS. McCutcheon | munificently a wealth of devotion. |f ne tich Col service and sacrifice. 0 '"Betduse “bf'the' juy “she ‘gave! \ - British Columbia. | Telkwa Hotel Serves. the traveller to and through the Bulkley Valley MAKE THAT YOUK HEADQUARTERS { = j - James Kotow proprietor TRLEWA + - BO | i Omineca Hotel f Rolfe & Dawson Managers { = f ‘ Best attention to tourists and to commercial men. . Dining room in connection Rates reasonable. Patronage is solicited } Hazelton B,C. Hotel. Prince Ropert: & + on | THe LEADING HOTEL } In NortTuern B. C. Prince Rupert, B.C. | European Plan. , Rates $1.50 per day up. { The Bulkley. Hotel E. E Orchard. Owner European or American Plan The headquarters for the Bulkley Valley. Tourists and Commercial men find this a grand hotel to atop at. All trains met. Autos, livery or rigs saddle horses provided Ri Smithers. B.C. Sh rn rr ed ad re a nd Pe lt Importers and Dealers in | Wallpapers We carry the Burlaps largest and ‘ MOSst Vari Faints stock'in Northern Varnishes British Ghss |. Columbia Brushes, Etc, Write us for information when renovating or building your home . ' Make Your Home Attractive! - BEAVER Boakp DisTrisutors A.W. EDGE CO. P.O. Box 459. Prince Rupert, BC. | — pe Rene asa ke Pra