PRINCE GEORGE CITIZEN Tharsd DANCING Miss Inga Andersen, who has jus returned from studying under the Barbes School of the Dance, at Van couver.;will open classes for instruc tion in dancing. She will employ the Russian and Italian systente which have produced the world's greatest dancers. Miss Andersen will be pleased to interview parents _ and prospective pupila at her studio on Saturday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. Further particulars on application to the INGA ANDERSEN SCHOOL OF DANCE Seventh Avenue. Appointments may be arranged by telephone, No. 68. STOCK WANTED FOR WINTERING E. Vandenburg is desirous of securing twenty-five head of stock for wintering on his farm at Pauncha Lake. All stock will be fed on timothy hay and given the best attention. Stock will be received on November 15th at Prince George, and returned to the same point on April 1st. F,or further particulars apply to John Henderson, Prince George. ol,2p Bishop Adams Pays Prince George First Visit Next Sunday First Bishop of the Diocese of Cariboo has had a Fairly Eventful Life. Rowed in the College .Boat, Played Rugby and Was Handy with His Fists. Right Rev. W. R. Adams, Lord Bishop of Cariboo, will conduct the services in St. Michael's church ' on Sunday. Within the space of a' NOTICE OF INTENTION TO APPLY TO LEASE LAND. In Fort George Land Recording District of Cariboo and Situate on Bobtail Lake, Locally Known Little Bobtail. TAKE notice that Pioneer Fur Farms of B.C., Limited, of Vancouver, B.C.. fur farmers, intends to apply for a lease of the following described lands: Commencing: at a post planted 300 yards up Little Bobtail Creek from its mouth, thence 160 chains north, thence 80 chains east, thence 40 chains i§outh. thence 40 chains west, thence 102 chaints south, thence 40 chains west, and containing 700 acres, more or less. Pioneers Fur Faring of B.C., Limited E. E. Madden, Agent. September 6th, 1925. olr9tp Prince George Hotel BARBER SHOP This Parlor specializes in Ladies' and Children's Hair-Bobbing. Shampooing, Waving, Singeing and Scalp Treatment. The manner in which work is performed is the best advertisement of the Parlor. J. O'BRIEN. Proprietor. MILK PRICES ADVANCE In pursuance of an agreement on the part of the local milk producers the Centralia Dairy has to announce that the winter price for milk will go into effect on Thursday, October 1st. when the retail price will be 20 cents per quart. The Centralia Dairy takes this opportunity of thanking its numerous customers for patronage extended, and of assuring them a continuance of first-class service. THE CENTRALIA DAIRY. MILK PRICES ADVANCE In pursuance of an agreement on the part of the local milk producers, the Woodfield Dairy has to announce that the winter price for milk will go into effect on Thursday. October 1st, when the retail price will become 20 cents per quart. The Woodfield Dairy also takes this opportunity to thank its numerous customer*, for the patronage extended and to assure them a continuance of first-class service. J. A. JAMES, Woodfield Dairy. City Dairy Commencing the price of October 1st, Milk will be 20 CENTS PER QUART. ol,2p M. PENNY,_ Proprietor. couple of months the bishop has experienced a wonderful transitition. Two months ago he was diocesan inspector of schools in the Diocese of Southwark, one T>f the most crowded and poorest of all the dioceses of the city of London. At the present time he enjoys the distinction of having been made the first bishop of the Diocese of Cariboo, the spiritual head of the Anglican church in a territory sixty thousand square miles in extent. It is a big undertaking for a middle-aged man to attempt, but those who were instruumental in securing his elevation believe he is the man for the job, and that he will add strength to the House of Bishops in Canada. Bishop Adams is not an utter stranger to Canada and the manner of living of its people, in that he spent some six years on the prairies. He came to Canada in 1908 and held various charges in the Diocese of Qu'Apelle, remaining in the dominion until 1914, when he returned to Englad on account of the health of his wife. To a considerable extent Bi3hop Adams may be described as a self-made man of about 50 years. From the time he was barely aut of his tens he has fought his own way. his father dying when he was a lad, and his mother being unable to afford fees at expensive schools, he progressed under his own steam, winning scholorships at school and at Durham University. TheK». by dint of coaching backward felkw students, he paid his own way, fin They promptly appealed the case to the supreme court in Moscow. The verdict there was appallins to all concerned, ruthless as justice of the Hyerborean gods. The Leningrad decision was quashed. "Inasmuch as the bond (and therefore the winnings) belongs to the tenants' association as a definite legal entity and not as a group of individuals, therefore tlia winnings should not be divided among said individuals to be utilized as each may desire but retained as the property of said entity to be used only for the purposes for which that entity was constituted," said the court. In other words, not one ent could go to any, pocket. All that is allowed is the rebuilding of Lu^ky House, fair and lovely, with open plumbing, central heat and electric cookers. This Earl Will Not lake His Seat in House of Lords Heart of Eighth Earl of Portsmouth Continues in His Estate in Wyoming. av> October PUBLIC MEETING T. G. McBRIDE, M P INDEPENDENT CANDIDATE * ' Will Address a Public Meeting in the CAPITOL TK TUESDAY, OCTOBER 13 at 8 o'clock Play Safe and Vote for a Business Man «:"muniiHv™nmraimfliiiiniifflMrainnM^ Good Tea at a Low Price •ROSEDALE'* IS AN INDIAN (BLEND OF GOOD STRENGTH AND FINE^FLAVOR. PER POUND 65c Greed of Winners Costs Them Shares in Lottery Prize Took Their Quarrel to the Courts and Found They Cannot Divide the Prize. Group of Tenants See Vision^, Great Wealth Fading From Their Sight. of The upset of the Soviet revolution has produced no more lamentable Comedy than the story of ^Leningrad's "Lucky House," a fiumble workers' tenement in one of the poorest sections of the city. According to Soviet law, twenty-eight inmates of the tenement formed a tenants' association to administer the building through a committee which acts virtually as landlord, apportions rental, collects the taxes, and so forth. About eighteen months ago,, during a drive for the first state internal lottery loan, the committee of Lucky House decided it would be patriotic to invest the small surplus then in hand in a 100-rouble bond. After a discussion at a meeting of the ocupants a bond was bought and at the first drawing, some weeks later, it won the grand prize of 100,000 gold roubles. Lucky House immediately became the centre of interest of not only Leningrad but the nati6n. The press throughout the country pub^ lished interviews with the new "mil_ lionaries, for to the average Russian a fortune of $2000 is wealth be. yond the dreams of avarico. The authorities were anxious to popularize a new loan, so peasants in the remotest villages listened, breathless, to their account of the meagre lives of these lucky ones and their plans for the golden future. Letters reached them by tens of thousands, begging, congratulating and envying, and each inmate discovered a horde of new relatives eager to share the golden windfall. The whole Lucky Horse lived in a feverish dream of rapture. It was a fairy tale in real life. Then came the sad awakening. It began when the committee of Lucky House decided, instead of dividing the winnings evenly among the 28 tenants, to apportion shares according to the percentage of rent each tenant paid. What bitter quarrelr followed, what heartburnings and hatreds! The poorer tenants declined to submit to such unprole-tarian injustice and their shrillest spokesman, a widow named Ryabo-va, pleaded their ease herself before the Leningrad people's court. She won. The court decreed a straight division, irrespective of sent percentage. The verdict was popular and Mme; Ryabova return- 'sioner, Victoria" Be" Forty Yjears 'Residence dn Canada and United States Lost Interest in Home l>nn $48,704,604 The mining laws of this Province are more liberal ami the fefas lower than any othtr province in the Domini™, or any Colony in the British Empire. ; • Mineral locations are granted to discoverers for nominal fees. Absolute titles are obtainable by developing sucn properties, security of whick is guaranteed by crown gran -• Full information, together with mining reports anu naps, may be obtained gratis by addressing N.B.—Practically all British Columbia Mineral ties upon wheh development work has been done scribed in some one of the Annual Reports of the of Min»a. Those considering mining investments s refer to such Reports. They ar« available without chM •n application to the Department of Mines. Victoria, i>¦/-'. Reports of the Geological Survey of Canada, Pacific J*u«a-ing, Vancouver, are recommended as valuable sources information. The Honorable the Minister of Mines VICTORIA. BRITISH COLUMBIA