' flRE 'Th^es * CO. ���"JIw WESTMINSTER. ASSURANCE WHITE, SHILES & CO. NEW WESTMINSTER 'JO CENTS. HUB KOMBER 82. NEW WESTMINSTER, li. C. WEDNESDAY MORNING, APRIL 13, HE OPTIMISTIC MORE MONEY EOR ERASER RIVER MILLS COLONIAL HOTEL SOLO I EXPECT TO FIND 5,000,000 TO VANCOUVER BWE INHABITANTS IN NEW YORK MB f Committees'English Capital Will Assist Chief; in Expansion of Big Local Lumber Industry. H Reports. Jill be Marshall J. M. Insley Disposes of Business for About $10,000 to C. Schwahn, Who Takes Possession Tomorrow. Census Enumerators Actively Engaged in Canvassing Gotham���Big Showing Is Confidently Expected. RACE AND RELIGION DISCUSSED IN SENATE RAILWAY DEAL 3M IS RESUMED ODMf : Da!' r prepai US" Idte season MKommlttees committee is swiftly \ Having but recently completed the """���tlons i"1' llie blB cele" larSeBl timber deal on record in Brit- rilaUt tlie second meet- ish Columbia, tlie purchase of 75,000 'was held ami some acres of magnificent standing timber presented re- from Comox to Campbell river, the many details which Fraser River Mills, Limited, it is un- ���Pf rran&ed till u day or derstood, is now about to transfer r1 'e he feU but things are its entire assets to a new company. r llv licked Into shape. i From what can be learned here the EvLi brought to bear on' deal is in "effect a reorganization of Ujui-,, Mis ^^ (u l;ike the company, some new directors join- ^"H proue alon again this ing the old. lt is further stated that r'1,1 baiter having resigned, a large amount ol English capital is "'"' '��� i.,,,��� to serve on being brought Into the new organization with the object of expanding the present enormous business, today classed as one of the largest lumber Lr'wlil continue to Elland do all to fcmmittt v, and celebration along iis power For a consideration in the neigh-1 borhood of $10,000, .1. M. Insley yesterday disposed of the Colonial hotel, I business and stock in trade, to Charles ! Schwahn, a Vancouver man who ran the Fountain hotel on Cordova street about four years ago. The purchaser will lake possession tomorrow, and will probablj make a numbei of alterations and Improvements to the bouse. Mr. Insley has not yet decided on his I'm ure sphere of activities. The sale does not Include the site, which is owned hy Mrs. Macnamara, ulstlon, was 4,030,00( now of Vancouver, but formerly of this city. The Colonial hotel is the oldest II-' censed hostelry in this city, having first been granted .i permit to sell , ��� n it being mad point of French Canadians Commission to Delve For Facts of Great Waterways. -Ready to Start Work. Request for Representation on Bench Discussed. New York, Apiil 12.���The prediction is made tonight by many that when the 1,740 census enumerators, who be- gan their canvass of the city on Vn- i day have completed their task, they will have counted the noses of at least 6,000 000 poisons. The census of 1900 gave this city a population of 3,437,292, but for several years New York has had a hazy idea thai it has left the 4,000,000 mark far behind, and one estimate made on January 1. based on the voting pop- 1. Edmonton, April 12.���Tlie railroad, commission opens at ten o'clock tomorrow morning in the legislative hall, parliament buildings. \V. lt. Clarke, of the Great Waterways dishing, ex-miQ- ��� willies PROPOSAL TO HOLD AN IMPERIAL CENSUS spirituous liquors in 1850, whe Almost every movement today is from an Imperial stand- Next year is the year of the Ottawa, April 12.���The senate did today what it seldom does, it gravely . discussed race and religion, lnciden-1 tally Senator Cloran was dressed down by Sir MacKenzie Howell, who defended Toronto from a chaige oi bigotry which lie alleged hud been levelled against that city. The ex- J witnesses premier declared that members of the i commission Roman Catholic religion were elected usual work. to positions every year hy Protestant Clark and dishing will anive in 'ioionto. | tlie city tills evening from the south- The topic arose in this way. Semi- j During the recess Walsh, senior tor MacDonald, of British Columbia, counsel for the commission, lias been drew attention to a report of tlie do-! busily engaged in going through the lhe recent convention of files of the telegraph companies. ��� I ���.ir.uiiip nut telegrams received arid president railway, and W. II. ^^ r of public works, will be the first examined, after which the will settle down lo its- mgs of which I picking have bearing on the llioiis to call on Manage.^ -o ^ gingle ���ompan>. 1ms tin ft"J-:?3te was ��, in the province jcorner argest area of mer- , streets j the motion oi wi��< ",-jr;- "{ ' The chlof shareholders in the pres- federed tbat an WP���ftatgurf eJ^any are President A. D. Mc-1 been lemudiModel.'.iy.the expenbes ^J*0���^ Davidson, Mr. hnber in the world. _ j Mr. Insley, who will severMs corn ( -_, rf. ^ -populatlon tt-ction with the place tomorrow, .��� ....,,, Sent of this city for the: impossibility ��� far exceeded what was expected. -that anything like an accuiate esti has ' m French-Canadians of Ontario that Senator Beleourt headed a depu-' sent which may lation to wait upon tlie premier ask-! case. ~ *"" " "������" loi'ii I Counsel for the various parties ln-~ in the city with the Bennett, for the es tonight. TO HYMNS IN PARIC ,���Ten thousand* River park on> noon In July��� Sunday school be carried out- on this Sunday session of the* .w held and that .~ be taken to this- other suitable place vacancies park or to -some lt May Queen. This appropria- Rj^ ^ fls made every year.^ rf the ; Mackenzie & uited that millionaires. To the Iwan MacQowan, Edward Chicago meat packer, and Mann, all of whom are past forty-two years. PLAN FOR BIG CANAL SANCTIONED IN COMMONS PAID MONEY BACK iccurate estl-1 cancies, it would have is almost an i legitimate request to have vacancies pain. ����� ��, ^^^^^ I filed by lepresentatives of the French- to sing choruses in the open air Canadians and Catholics. But sup-1 Tuller and Meredith of New YoiK, posing other denominations asked for experts in Sunday school music, will similar privileges, would it not be a be in the city in connection with the --*��� j����nmin��.! nrovlnclal convention of Sunday Mutual Easing committee, estimated uiai . iuww.,.., oiilJ require ahetit $r>uu for his I To the coming of the Canadian 'lie com- Northern with Port Mann as Its town- the site on the south bank of the river, le amounting to about I'.mo. Tills almost opposite the mills, and rail- iint as was spent way expansion in British ColUuiu.o , lBe ,JU tllI_ ^uu -...,i>,,���. \ in I)art the de-1 poration of a company to build a canal Litigation Against Peoples Life insurance League Is Dropped irtment aud the rest of the bes made rough estimates, Ottawa, April 12.���The commons railway committee this morning re- elved the report of the subcommlt- __ x- v intll 12���A former Syracuse, N. Y., Apia/-��� ;f\ |J(_ lrt surance Vs7ociaUon~~an$ League^ die each denomina- provincial mo3t deplorable case, eacn oenuuu ~ ; .,������ .)Q,���anrtinir reuresentation in tne workers, and It ls proposed' officer cuse, w. I-, ray.- --��� , . ., Tn of the Peoples Mutual Life in- Columbia tee on the Comnee bill for tbe incor- ��u the same amoum as v.u�� ..����� . --* ��� , attributed . , ITW- .,.,_, ���lonment of the company's operations , from m Watson promised to provide |utow��J��" R, ' oodora bettei proceselon than ( upon a gigantic year and all the other chairmen kied to be equally opUmisUo about! ���_-.,��_rien lr depanmonts. I SATISFIED |te meeting did not last long and inata\5 taken up with discussing Dorninica Has lltets ol ielail. I No Fault to Find With Tariff Agreement. 12���The West In- Lake Superior to Lake Winni peg. A majority of the subcommittee found that tlie project was feasible tind that there was no reason why the company should be prohibited from constructing the canal if all public interests were propertly safeguarded. The bill will be considered to- | morrow. cussing the payment of .150,000 to the society and the settlement of all liti- ~�� tine "The trustees of the tion demanding representation hi u�� - be a8kPd t0 attend. senate and on the bench. After a nun-, tn.�� " tion and others, will be- toed years of peace and harmony | ���| ���^gat a banquet on Thursday ,, estlons of race and religion shou d mJJ8" Manitoba hall. The ban- beSowed to die out, and should ��^nlng �� w ami&y scbooB St be brought before public bo die. g*jSSi* asslstant_sup_erintend: 5t be Diougm u*;.u. ^ r vatinn slin- -i-n�� .. Sir Richard Cartwright, who brought superlntenaenn,, .m.-,..,���.. , society with one exception paid back the lall< t0 a close> said that as the ents- secretaries and some other offline money they received for Its trans- n��t|�� had b(-'en raised in the form eers Kev. J A. Bowman, provinclai fer Lieutenant Governor White, wbo of a question he would be glad to president, will preside, and an address received $"0 000 as a debt due'frora supply the answer. Such a delegation will be given by W. H. Irwin, the ': '���--> Mnnnn nnrt|had called upon the prime minister provincial secretary. ������������' ...iti, rtoleeatlons i XTevtar wnWbuVd' $30,000, and ^.w!���, of the First National WITHOUT A COUNTRY. will sue the Farmers Bank of Tor- |ICE ELLISON OFFERS SITE FOR B. C. UNIVERSITY 'Ictorla, April 12.���In connection h the bid which will be made by enterprising cltlzenB of the Okan- In for the establishment of the pndal university In that district, : Price Ellison, provincial minister Ms and representative of the con- London. Apri. ._ dies Royal commission report states that the recent tariff agreement between Canada and the l'nited States will remove all fears of Jamaica, Trinidad, Grenada and Dominica that the latter would retaliate if a preferential trade arrangement were made with Canada. JURY RENDERS PECULIAR VERDICT IN MURDER CASE S^u���aiUSSSinpE CONDEMNS REMOVAL ee site of one hundred acres, in I Ul L, uun�� OF MMEVILLE COLLEGE B "V suitable, should the universe selection committee 'regard ' i favor lhe proposals for the loca- _______% ln the Interior! P6 Offered site may be selected Director of Quebec Institute ijrtothe southeast or Immediately ping the city limits of Vernon on north. No conditions whatever itiached to the volunteered gift, "iRli Hon. Mr. Kllison anticipates 'other Interested landowners may | 'to the donation. If another loca Montpelier, Vt, April 12.���"Not y reason of insanity," was the the Dementrlus Mikales, also known as jaim-a .���..^..ell, was charged with the murder of Mrs. C. G. Mascott, wife of his employer, at Bane on July 26, 1300 ^^^^ There was no apparent guilty h verdict of the jury ir Mikales murder case today as James Mitche directors of the Fai~ .^^^^^^^ onto to recover on a certificate of deposit for $150,000." NOVEL PLAN OF THIEVES. Pumped Fumes Through Keyhole to Lull Guard While They Robbed Safe. Brussels, April 12.���A robbery ot the most Ingenious kind has just been perpetrated at a jeweller's shop ln the Hue Beuve, which Is much frequent- ed both by day and night. Thieves 9, by shooting. I entered an empty house next door, motive for the'climbed along the roof, brooke through I thp akvlight of the jeweller's premises I and as was usual with delegations of the importance and weight of this had been promised thnt their repre- ~~~~~ sentations should receive considera-1 New York, April 12.���Joseph Uber- tlon. Sir Richard said that for forty- aU, connected with a law firm at No, seven years he had had experience 3J Broadway, seems to be In a lair with tlie affairs of Canada and he way to rival Edward Everett Hales- , could testify that there were no peo- famoiftj "Man Without a Country." pie who gave more consideration to More than that, the only placj lathe feelings of other races than did which U bei all seems to have any right, the French of Quebec. This closed to reside is on some body of water the incident. dividing the United States from Can-- {ada. His predicament Is the result. ! of having taken a half-hour trip Into. Canada last October. C berall arrived here from Austiia. ��� rwnher 30. 1906. The ' "���*-*- MONEYED RUSSIANS ARE 1 on October 30, Austro- Dis- of Part He Played missed Because in Recent Embroglio. crime. The prisoner was sentenced to the and went downstairs, state asylum for the insane at Water- They evidently knew that the jew bury, eller's brother, the only person in the house, slept in a room on the second COMING TO THIS COUNTRY S*^^S___?_\ PORT ARTHUR RECEIVES ,���.. _*.������,. vuiofless MESSAGE| soporific fumes through t ��� - - .,��� Tl,e jeweller's bro- :*,. ~ay with a bad he J ache and found the room still full in I r-,,. . . . ... . . ITS FIRST WIRELESS M first _ ^^^^^ eived at r was takeji today by the Port Arthur, April 12.���The wireless message ever rei I Port Arthur ^^^m Montreal, Apr n 12.���By the terms of Home and �����i from fie'steamer Aii- oa, asking to have BCOWB rea^ t unload some heavy macWnerj wmci floor. Working silently, they pumpeo ..tt>n fumes through the keyhole ot ed door. The jeweller's bro- )ke next day with a bad head- 1 found the room still full of fumes. On going down to the shop he Fifteen Hundred Will Migrate to Bet- Land This Autumn���Germans ter to Send Scouts to Canada the locked, door. , ther awoke next day with a bad headache and found the room still full of fumes. On going down to the shop he found that jewels valued at $30,000 had been stolen. So far there is no London, April 12.���A ml ��� *- ti,��� ��i,ipVpS of 1,500 Moldavian, Walhu rii,����i:in Deasants with met . lie tiiu m^w ., zen, he having been ln prison lu Austria. Under the law he could not be deported on this ground alter he had been here three years. I But after he had been here two ! years eleven months and twenty days I he went to Niagara Falls, crossed Into (Canada and came back. Therefore his last arrival In the country was withltt A mixed party the three-year limit, and the Immigration authorities at Falls island order- He appealed to ichlan and clue to the thieves. Russian peasant Bersabia in the aulumn for Canada It Is expected that many more wl.l follow from the same province. There ls also a movement on loot among numerous agricultural colonists under tlie southern government for the despatch of *********-- ��� and sturJ year means leaves ed him deported Washington and the decision was confirmed. Then he took the case to the Federal courts, where Judge Hand Is. puzzling over It now. Under the law an Immigrant, If deported, must be sent back to the coun-. em govornnieiu m. �� - lllch he came. bo, u v*nn- a pioneer party of 7*0M Ju ��<���� h muBt be sent to v emigrants to Canada next *M �� ttepor^ ^ ^^^ lm,ulgra- un . .. .t,-i,.t :lR those of the |fm N'ew i:n,i;,���d"u.lt^ad'co,m %*���<** SS'hli charge P'a Projected auxiliary branch of dismissed from ! Brand Trunk rallw Ptlrough ithode Isla r outlet at Providence and It is will not he [���������<-<>'. ><>ao������������������������ 4 ary branch or mp�� '�� . , ���1C cou,.fto will no. ��� Way, a direct ��l^��*Ht St John. It ie doubt- nd with a Bsa-.eBtaWlshed at w _egume 1(s lul ' '"; does Archbishop BrUOh- Iwork, bu II U,,lmsM;t,.0���olitan of the Montreal. April i- ' 1)(, I Hnmnired. The type cam. _ _._, . .. n,n u rueholdeis oi in report to tho shut iinlon Coal compans^Pre ^ & wn._ .sident Plum- ffSf& floor and s-eTeral form plod. Ready ior Big Business. h'lti.h,,, vprll 12.���Marconi's Sr'tani manager states that pa lew day8 the company will ' m a position to accept mes- wges for direct transmission 10 Canada. esl' <>f WfflS wm��apCpolht its di- Montreal distiltt, ^'" "il mer this afternoon tirgeu n��, ,. ... The wreckers were frightened away ger of amalgamation of the Dominion before finishing the job. Two sledge Steel companies hut "Know, has caused quite ��� ��*����� 4fnMSd\ffthgehcX?S- orally oxpei>teA tfat �� t0 wln thorlties '"i'l HttU cba their case before ttf ��J��o Coal and Uominion S^-.. would prove a wdse thing, but the question was one for Individual share holders themselves to settle. Too ^'VTo^ack^Johnson, Chicago, Ai.rll l..-J<"'K ������������ **-*�����������������������������������, concerned. J Si, case be[ore ^ ��ac. ��� f01. Chlongo> W����^^SZ- *> of ^TKvd^te?co*mmanlcaUnS the who began ��^'trX feflrlee found hammers and a crowbar were u The paper wlll be issued today on a 10x1 press. The Dally Record has a number of bitter enemies In the town. A. R. O'Brien, the editor, is on the steamer Cottage City, which will arrive In Seattle Thursday. jnltoba to Be Wei ^er-Dempster Une Fails to Get Export Rate on Goods for B. C. charging for the all-rail haul 111 has handed down an In- wntenl witli ^ds,to~tIie railway com ttl'lJ" ..,���<,n(niv tlu April 12.���The railway (���J,,>ntr ., Jn'��i^lc Hrm de.!��lo"n~toUln7''^th ex- company . . <!.j K Tl'e Elder-Dempater lino mlsst��n ror_on m I,,!!!'1,1:. wlll('h mns between Mon Not ith this, the" Elder-Dempster u" <"'��. .. nlllway corn- compelling the allwny company to charge only ex Instead of domestic rates S>C M ,olln and Mexican ports port rates ins Montreal C'"" ' agreement with the on goods sh PP�� , d {or KSffi?. }}��"���y ����**. and ?^��^iwSKft which wojrtd give St. Brlt- the gyuma��iuui ^��� day and contented himself with an auto ride into the country. Democratic Candidate Wins. New Britlan, Conn., April 12.���-At the annual city election here today i James M. Holl(oran, democrat, was elected mayor over Orson V. Curtis, republican, by a majority of 022. The rest of the republican ticket, tlie majority of the nominees being up for reelection, were elected by a large majority. The city is nominally republican by a majority of about 1,600. First of Oil Burning Fleet. ''th the". ", waa able- 1" conjunction j"��' ������"���"j.e|d" thel hasted lines, to carry goods from mission upneia^ , Anril ii-Distinguish- Bath, Maine. Api 11 - boat de. ed as the first of tht l���v A with stroyer fleet to be e^'PPclu9lveiy, burners for burnins on * ^ the Paulding ^''S works. No noon by the Bah lr n {or Manitoba to dc ?���������� Represented. Winnipeg, April 12.���The Manitoba Provincial Sunday School association I will be represented by thirty-one dele- gates from all parts of the province j at the sixth World's Sunday School I convention, which will be held at Washington, D. C, May 19 to 24. Charles Tupper Married. Edmonton, April 12.���At All Saints church at noon today Charles Tupper, eldest son of Sir Charles Hibbert Tupper, of Vancouver, and Miss Mary M. Dickey, daughter of the late Hon. A. R Dickey, of Amherst, N. S., were married, the ceremony being performed by Archdeacon Gray. Invitation to Roosevelt Issue Oversubscribed. London, April 12.���The Western Land company's issue of (1,600,000 five per cents was greatly oversubscribed today. Farmer Fatally injured. Winnipeg, April 12.���Alexander Phillips, a farmer of Roland, Man., was fatally Injured to.'.ay by being thrown from his rig. Bishop Dart Sinking. Up to un early hour this morning the condition of Bishop Dart was practically unchanged. He ls conscious bdt seems to be gradually growing weaker. tion laws are as strict as those United States, and he undoubtedly would be turne.l back. Ills best chance would seem to be^ a houseboat on the Niagara river or a_ camp on the suspension bridge. ��������������������������������������������������������� The Right Kind. ��� London. April 12,-Two women owning 110,000 called at thfl Canadian Pacific Railway office yesterday, desiring to take up a quarter-section of land In southern Alberta. ��� ��� ��������������������������������� �� + ��>������������ + Pulp Wood Exports From Quebec Mast Be in Manufactured State Quebec, April 12.���If the people of the United States want pulp wood from the crown lands of the province of Quebec they must take it out of the province either iu the shape of pulp or paper. Premier Gouln this announced ln the legisla- de- Wlndsor hall, Montreal. The announcement had been layed, however, because threatB at a- tariff war between Canada and the- United States had arisen. Hla go*-- eminent had no desire to embarras-. , the federal government and so it hadT "ast lc��nt. .^nada to British Columbia the class oi ������ properly ln,s for about twenty-flve per was asked m tl'un the railways were freight. Point leu a3*����ssra!��w*-'p��*1 Southampton. April 12.���Mayor Morel, of Southampton, has sent an Invitation to Colonel Roosevelt to attend a public luncheon to be given ln his honor on June 10, the date upcu ' ment io which he expects to sail for home. I nounced afternoon announceu m ....v, ._= the leaerm ��������=.���...... s that It was the policy of the I delayed making Its po'.lcy ofllclaliy ernment, and that It would be put I known, though this delay had not bee�� a effect almost Immediately. "" ~" �����������-nm��nt_ In taking this step they were following the example set by the province ot Ontario, which had found the ��-���-< uo ..rtrtPd that It lure u,�� .> ��� government, and that It would bs put known, uiuuBu tu.��, ���_._��� _ Into effect almost Immediately. requested by the Ottawa government- ��v.������ woro fol. premier Gouln also announced that it was the Intention of the government to increase the stumpage dues, wblefc* have not been raised for ten years, by ��� ... mm. a .nt and also to ta- He added that ^jrru&T��^l5i^jsj^^Vjt S,�� ,bo���. ��r. ���;,oS... ^<;r.vc""e SSSS6-*V ��sup Jr-sswr��� purposes. ,_J ��� Jin*-** ��� ^ f' ' ���'���'" i i , * * ' ': i; l ��� 111] i . it r Kn* * * to j ''- ��� ���* ji ;"? ra ���-��� ��� ii-.!'; j. kit; j ; ij.Sf ;l" i :# "'';,v &M "In r- ������ '������ V; | '���:m ' a* i ���':��� twi 'i "lfi .ii yi !i 1? ;;N s i ,1: ii '��� ait ���*" ��� ",\ imhu r ' ��� Mk'-y*: ' !'Ti.3! I- Mink* ill; f. j ir.:. Hi MS1* . ^\ i'l ,:'.-'^';r I'"' iv 13.1, > J '* PAGE TWO. IHE DAILY NEWS. WEDNESDAY, Af>RlL ��� Classifieydyertisements WANTED. WANTED���ROOM WITH OR W1T11- out board by young gentleman. Write box C. C, Daily News. WANTED���TENDERS FOR SLASH- ins about eight, acies on Tenth avenue an.l Armsiroiii; .street. Particulars, apply S. Fader, city, or Walker Uros., Edmonds. WANTED -- EXPERIENCED MAN for real estate work. References. Good proposition. P. L. Secord & Co., 460 Columbia St. Sapperton. WANTED���FIRST CLASS TA1LOK- ess. Apply A. S. Neilson. Sixth street. Enter by Cunningham hall. WANTED���WOMAN���AGE IS TO 30 ���to help with general housework. Two children. Good home tmd wages. Apply Pi entice, 1S37 Napier street, Vancouver. WANTED TO RENT ��� BY YOtJNG couple, with best references, small, well furnished modern house or apartment. A. D. V., this_office. _ WANTED^��� FURNISHED HOUSE for four to six months; small family���no child; en. F. J. Hart & Co., Ltd. LOCATING SCRIP. Land Seekers Start Out to Stake 3,500 Acres. Edmonton, April 12.���For the purpose of locating something like 3,500 acres of South African scrip, a party of a dozen land seekers, under direction of E. H. Reid, Iand guide, will leave tho city ""ruirow morning, for Athabasca Landing. i inn is on.' oi the first locating parties to leave the city this spring, and is probably the first one to locate South African scrip, it is the intention of the party to locate the most of their land in the vicinity of the Landing. They are lured by the prospects of the early completion of the Canadian Northern railway to that point, and by the attractive reports of the quality of the land in that district given them by Mr. Reid. Mr. Reid himself has located 320 acres of South African scrip six miles southeast of Athabasca Landing, and finds it a most desirable location. He strifes that the land in his vicinity is excellent for farming purposes, with plenty of water, and enough timber for all purposes. He hopes to locate several parties in that section ims spring. INew Advertisements WILSON, COOK & CO. Office: Northern Crown Bank Bldg. Ground Floor. Phone 646. Open Evenings for Your Benefit. SURREY SNAP���Good till 2 p. m. today. The southwest K of section 25, township 2. Price $101 per acre. Good terms. BRENING & CO. General Brokers. EXCLUSIVE SALES ONLY. Merchants Bank Building, Rooms 5 and 6. Corner Columbia and Begbie Streets. Phone 686 BECAME A "MAN" TO ESCAPE TWO SUITORS About 4 acres with waterfront in block 1 Burnaby; car line going tlu SURREY���25 acres in bection 2/j whole length; $6,000, Township 2, facing on Hjorth road; i $425 per acre; terms. WANTED���TO KENT BY MARRIED couple, one or two furnished rooms close to business section. Address Permanent, News Ollice. WANTED���ACREAGE IN BURNAIIY suitable for subdivision. Reply to Bona Fide." News Office. WANTED���SIX TO EIGHT ROOMED cottage; fully modern; close in; good location. Write P. O. Box 176, City. WANTED ��� A GOOD HUSTLER knowing real estate business. Apply Room 4 and 5, Merchants Bank building. WANTED���TO RENT ONE OR TWO pleasant furnished rooms or small furnisheS house by married couple. Address A. B., this office. Solman's Little Scheme. Lou Solman's proposal to donate a championship cup for competition among clubs of the world looks like a frameup to shelve the Minto cup. Just as long as the latter trophy was held in the East there was never any talk of another cup, but since the New Westminsters brought the vice-regal silverware West, the Eastern folks have done more or less talking about another trophy. Mr. Solman can take it for granted right now that the West, ern clubs will continue to regard the Minto cup as being emblematic of the world's championship, and they will conunue to play for it and on other.��� News Advertiser. SURREY���35 acres N\ 2 of E'/�� of Section 35 Township 2; $225 per acre. SURREY���Southwest .i of Section 27 Township 2; price $90 per acre. $55 per acre buys 160 acres of good land on Great Northern railroad, the southeast U of section 30. township 10, Langley. Known as the Mrockie place; 40 acres cleared; house, barn, fruit trees, etc. A going concern. SURREY���N.W. 1/4 of sec. 24, township 2; good soil and near Yale road; $78 per acre, $4,480 cash; 6, 12. 18 and 24 months . SURREY���$400 per acre buys 120 acres on Hjorth road. SURREY ��� $650 an acre buys 4 12 acres on tram line known as lots 7 and 8 in section 30, range 2 west l SURREY���A fine subdivision or ranch; 40 acres; the S.E. .4 Sec. 33, range 2, W.; price $350 per acre; good terms. Lot 9, block 3 of "L" district lot 29 in Burnaby; $350. 2 Acres cleared land in Burnaby on Hastings road; flve minutes from city car, ten minutes from new tram. 40 Acres in section 6 in ward 1 facing coast Meredian road in Surrey; $250 per acre. SURREY���18 acres; 4 acres cleared; facing on Townline road; lots 2 and 3 of N. E. 1-4 section 31, township 2; price $350 per acre. R. T. PRINCE AUDITOR AND ACCOUNTANT. Books Opened on Approved Systems. SURREY���3,000 feet of waterfrontage containing 100 acres; price $21 per front foot. STABLE MANURE HAULED AWAY regularly, the whole year round. Arrange with B. C. Nurseries, P. O., City. FOR SALE. FOR SALE���CHEAP FOR CASH. A 200-egg Petaluma incubator in good condition. Apply H. I., this office. FOR SALE ��� WHITE LEGHORN eggs; single comb; good strain; flve cents each. Samuel Wilkinson, Sixth street, East Burnaby. FOR SALE���TWENTY CORDS OF wood. Apply S. J. News Office. FOR QUICK SALE���34-FOOT PAN- eled counter, with 3 foot solid fir top ,tit $2 per foot, Apply to Herbert P. Vidal, Custom Broker, Market Square, City. FOR SALE���FOUR ROOMED COT- tage; lot 50x132 cleared, fenced; one block east of Twelfth Street car. Price $1,400, terms. Apply, Owner, 1024 Tenth Avenue. Agent for the HALL SAFE COMPANY CIncinnatti, Ohio. P. O. Box 795. Phone L 578. Office: Room 9. Westminster Trust Block. VICTOR A. JOHNDRO ARCHITECT Room 6, Guichon Building. Phone 681 ROOMS TO RENT. FOR RENT���ON TENTH STREET, facing Moody square, 6 rooms <YV. C). Immediate entry. Apply Smith, 1007 Sixth avenue. FARM TO RENT ��� TO RENT OR lease by the month or year, small Jarm at Sunbury, good house and ibarn; easy terms. Apply K., this ���office. HOPE & BARKER ARCHITECTS 625 Columbia Street New Westminster, B. C. A. CAMPBELL HOPE, C. A. C. And at 336 Hastings St., W. Vancouver, B. C. Phone 3650 FOR RENT. TO LET���ONE NICELY FURNISHED bedroom. 703 Agnes street. TO LET���SIX-ROOMED COTTAGE. Vacant May 1. Rent $23. Apply 1221 Hartco j. treet, evenings, between 6 and 7. FOR RENT���HOUSE AND FOUR Lots in Burnaby, near car line. 1 _(Five rooms and bathroom, pantry, '-etc. Rents $12 per month. May lease for six monthe if tenant , suits. Apply to P. Peebles, 620 Columbia Street. FOR RENT���HOUSE AND 4 LOTS in Burnaby, near car line, i rooms and bath room, pantry, etc. Rents for $12 per month. May lease for -3 months if tennent suits. TO LET���COMFORTABLE ROOM for aie or two ladles, close to car. (115 Hamilton street, city. FOR EXCHANGE���FIVE ROOMED 'House and lot In Vancouver, value -$2f)0fl, for house and lot in New Westminster. Apply, Box P. R. I .News Office. FOR FIRST CLASS JOB PRINTING GO TO THE ARROW PRESS 739 FRONT ST., WINDSOR BLOCK "roprletress. Mrs. M. Domlny. REWARD Fifty ($50.00) dollars will be paid for Information that wlll secure the conviction of the preson or persons -who damaged shade trees on Blackford street, or of any person damaging boulevards ln the city. By order, W. A. DUNCAN, City Clerk. City Hall, March 29, 1910. Guichon Hotel Newest and Most Up-to-Date Hotel in the City. SURREY���20 acres, the south half of northeast Quarter of section 33, range 2 west; $425 per acre, Quarter cash. SURREY���$160 per acre buys 40 acres of good land, the west half of the northeast quarter of section 16, township 2; good terms. 60 Acres in section 36 in Surrey; about 20 acres cleared; $275 per acre. BRENING & CO. General Brokers. EXCLUSIVE SALES ONLY. Rooms 5 and 6. Merchants Bank Building, Corner Columbia and Begbie Streets. Phone 686. A. G. MARSHALL, South Westminster Phone F507 SNAPS IN WATERFRONTS. 150 acres of good land under crop, with 30 chains of waterfront. Price only $500 per acre, on terms. St. Louis, April 12.���Two mm desperately in love with her, though she cared for neither, led Miss Lillian Lowengren to don man's garb. For two years she worked as cook in a restaurant and lived in a rooming i house, where her closest associates did not know she was a woman. She drank whiskey, swore and did other "manly" things so well that she allayed all suspicion. At tlie City hos- 1 pi tal, where she is under treatment 1 for Injuries received when she rolled : out of bed and out of a third story window at her rooming house, she told ; a strange story. "More than two years ago," shi. said, "I was a working girl and two men made love to me. I didn't care for j either, but they persisted In giving i their attention. I was not used to the ways of this country, and I quickly saw that a woman has no chance here. j She is always petting attention she j does not want lf she works for a ! living." DEPLORE SALE OF MK PICll Dr. Bode Severely Cnticl for Allowing Brita3 Buy Art Treasures, Berlin, April 12.���Dr. Bod detractors���and then , their name is legion, are afresh for allowing a Wo. lection of Chin,-., , nZ^n-\ captured by the British mus J collection was got tc��� man lady, Frau VVi 1 exhibition last ��� s G��J ire n,ai,yj :-:"-"'!ilill��| ether by ,1 TO PROTECT ELEPHANTS. 14 acres excellent land with house and buildings, with 21 chains waterfrontage. Railway through property. Price $8000, quarter cash. 160 acres nearby all cultivated, exc 1- lent land, waterfrontags North Arm, near city. ; Paris. April 12.���Moved by the ' threatened extermination of the elephant a number of prominent French- linen have formed a society called "The I Elephant's Friends," which, from Its ' offices at Montmartre, will endeavor Ito check the slaughter of the ele- j phants of Africa and other parts. Among those belonging to the so- 'eiety are several members of the institute, M. Bourdarle, the well known I explorer and General Famln, of the I French colonial forces. "The elephant species." says M. j Tournier, the general secretary, "is on ithe road to disappearance. The Roose- ' veils, great nnd small, take pleasure I in exterminating them; they slaughter on the average 40,000 of these beasts every year; and in all the fastnesses of Africa there are not more than 325.000,000 elephants. The society will plead for the preservation of the elephant, not for sentimental reasons, but for practical ones. and ,.J J<;"' al the ii Royal Academy of .\ns. " Prior to the exhibition tv administration of the PriisrimTT Museum of which Dr. iiode (��� head, expressed the opinion! paintings were not genuine t����� ly Japanese copies, and dijwj to Frau Wegener, wh��� |lad 0jJJ sell the pictures to them xrt| have been bought by '!, BriM eum under conditio) consW more favorable than llu Bode rejected. Local ,��� 1 Bode regime cite tl pininn off ous art dealers as to the colled and point out that it makes the oil lar judgment of the Berlin art] thorities utterly ridiculous "Then paid for the 200 Chinese plctj I remarks Herr Fritz Stahl, <.,��� 0|| Iiode's most implacable enemies! I much lower than that of the [J Leonardo bust." SURREY ��� $175 per acre buys 20 acres facing on Roebuck road; known as Lots 10 and 11, Sec. 34, Range 2 west. Easy terms. 40 acres, with waterfront. Sunbury. Good terms. One acre waterfront, qnarter mile from Lulu Island bridge. BURNABY���$100 cash and $15 per month buys a flne large lot on Third avenue, Burnaby, near city car line. BURNABY���Two quarter acre lots near Second street; an Ideal location; price $300 each; easy terms. BURNABY���2 large lots near city car line; price $250 each; one-fourth cash, balance $10 per month. COQUITLAM���Two and three-quarter acres on Pitt river road, including house, barn; running spring on property; on surveyed car line running to mills; price $1,750; easy terms. LANGLEY���On Surrey line, 80 acres, the west 1-2 of S. E. 1-4 of section 34, township 8; price $80 per acre; easy terms. MATSQUI ��� A snap joining Aldergrove townsite; 23 acres; the N.W. 23 acres fronting on Yale road. A flne subdivision. Price $115 peij j acre; easy terms. | 40 feet waterfront, three minutes from bridge. $50 per foot. Apply for terms. A. G. MARSHALL, Estate Office. South Westminster Phone F507 KELLINGTON BROTHERS. Corner Columbia and Begbie Streets. Phone 680. 6 Lots in West End for $2,100. MILLER & JEWHURST. Opposite City Hall. Room 7 Thompson Blk. Phone 669 '"~~v~"~w~mjRmEY] 106 Acres, facing on Townline road, S 1-4 miles from waterfront. Price $100 per acre. 80 Acres in S. E. 1-4 Sec. 34, Tp. 8. Price $M per acre. The east 80 acres of S. W. 1-4 Sec. 32, Tp. 8. Price $75 per acre. Scott Road���We have a number of 5 and 10 acre blocks; close in and right on car line from $200 per acre up. 8 Lots on Sixth stret car line; $250 each; easy terms. Kennedy Subdivision acreage at $225 per acre; near the tram line. 4 Acres close to Kennedy Station on new car line. Price $1,350; $550 cash, balance fi, 12 and 18 months. This is splendid property, and ls increasing in value rapidly. Call and see us about this If you want to make money. FOR A GREATER BERLIN. Prizes Offered for Flins for a Bial German Capital. Berlin, April 12- Plans for a'GrJ er Berlin" have just been winked 1 as the result of a prize coop��tM between leading architects, build] and town planners. Prizes of {;,: each have been awarded for schem .which peer three generations Into] i future and contemplate the Berlin tl wlll be In the year 2,nun, which ll] ed as the period when the capltal-1 teem with a population of lo.n'ifl.OOl I Meantime it ls estimated that ml and traffic will have tripled by 191 .and that the population wlll then | '4.300,000, or roughly double the prd ent total. In 1950 the total wlll real 0,450,000, and ln 1975 It will agsrcsaf ' 8,250,000. "In a population of ROOf 000," say the professors who capturJ ithe second prize, "we divine a (_ , peril for Berlin, a pnil for filch 1 I must be prepare,!." It Is proji��j( ! avert this danger by a far-lift li plan to regulate the construction! street buildings and parks so call fully that overcrowding will be pra| tlcally impossible Surrey ��� 10 acres in section 34; house, barn, and several acres cleared; price $375. CITY���6 room modern house on large lot on Fourth avenue and facing city car line. A beautiful home. Price $3,500; easy terms. Some very good lots in Sapperton; near tram line and school; below market value. Suburban 1 and 2. KELLINGTON BROTHERS. Corn-r Columbia and Begbie Streets. Phone 680, 160 Acres in Section Price $400 per acre anee 6, 12 18 and 24 24, Range 1 ; 1-4 cash, months. W. ial- North 40 acres in S. N. It. 1 West. Price 1-4 cash, balance 6, months. W. 14 Sec. 6, $2<)0 per acre; 12, 18 and 24 41-2 Acres on Yale road; under cultivation and fenced. Price $1,050; $300 cash, balance C, 12, 18 and 24 months. Whitney to Lay Corner stone. Kingston, April 12.���The corner-Mi of the new Chemistry building course of erection al Queen's win slty ls to be laid on ConvocationM April 27. Sir James Whitney,Premi of Ontario, has acceded to tlioteijuel of the board of governors, an! will r present on the occasion to lay til stone. The Ontario legislature wi give a sufficient yearly ���-���rant for Hi years to erect this building, which��'_ cost about $100,000. Cafe Adjoins. First Class Service. Columbia 8t. New Westminster. Phone 18. J. W. PAY LANMCAPE tAROENHR. Tweatr years experleaee at lawns, boulevards, eeddlag. grading and pruning or all kinds. HaUefactlon guaranteed. Orders solicited. Apply KELLINGTON BROS. Begbie Street. We will buy two city lots close to car line���must be market prlcea and easy terms. WILSON, COOK A CO. Office: Northern Crown Bank Bldg. Ground Floor. Phone 141. Open Evenings for Yeur Benefit. A. C. MARSHALL South Westminster Phone F507 Acreage and half acres; near tram. Easy terms. South Westminster. Five and two acre blocks and cutoffs. Easy terms. 35 City Lota. Scott Koad station. $150, third cash, balance 6, 12, and 18 months. 15 Acre farm; well stocked anl ln good cultivation; with furniture and equipment. Easy terms. 120 Acres; $200 per acre; close in. Good terms. 15 Acres; all under crop; 6 cows, horsee and equipment; $5000; $200o cash, remainder on terms. 132 Feet on Colambla street, New Westminster; excellent view; double corner, with residence. Twe excellent lots; North Vancouver; double corner; $100 cash, balance to salt. 40 ft. Waterfront ; three minutes from tho bridge; $50 per foot. APPLY��� A. G. MARSHALL, Real Estate Office. Phone F. 50? South Westminster. TENDERS Tenders solicited for repairing and removing it. Patrick's ball. Plans and specifications can ke aeen at Bt. Louis college, A. L. Lares? and Small and Bucklln's office. Tenders to be extended to April 16, 1910. FATHER O'BOYLE. Bank of Montreal MT IfiUUUD 1115. CAPITAL /.f 14,400,000.00 REttERVE 11,600,000.00 ���nucha* throughout Canada and Newfoundland, and ln London, Eng. land, New York, Chicago and Spokane, U. B. A., and Mexico City. A general- banking business transacted. Letters of Credit issued, available wltb correspondents ln all parts of tbe world. Savings Bank Department���Deports received in sums of $1 and upwaid, and interest allowed at S per cent, per annum (present rate). Totn.' Assets over $168,000.OW.OO. NEW WESTMINSTER BRANCH, O. D. BRYMNER. Manager. EGGS! Green Cut Bone to Make Your Chickens Lay. Central Meat Market *\ - BOWELL & ODDY Orner Eight* Bt nn�� Fifth ATenfte J PHONE 17a Here's Another Chance���yesterday's is sold. Large Lot on 1st Street between Third and Fourth Avenues, facing Queens Park. Price $2,000, one-third Cash, balance 6 and 12 months. Builder's or Speculator's Bargain $2000 cash will handle these 6 lots with modern 8 room house in that beautiful residential district bounded by Pine st., 4th ave. and 3rd st. Price $10,000. . . NATIONAL FINANCE CO. LIMITED N. H. McQUARRlE, Local Manager Real Estate, Loans and Insurance Phone 515 Curtis Block 657 Columbia St. nesdav, APRIL 13, 1910. THE DAILY NEWS. PAGE THREE. ,crosse Goods jaseball Goods HIGH MEAT PRICES NOT All DUE TO TRUST Increase of Population and Decrease of Supplies Part- Tackle . rp | ly Responsible. Y'S guy Early while |ck is Complete ia Street���C65 l^r ffestff-inster, B. C. ^ -t';: ; ;'^ ,33EBH8BIBsS 1. SPECK'S j SPECIALS! ��� in, and Second Hand Purnl- % tjre Bought nnd Sold Lents for Baynes' Carriages L Capital Milk Separators Ibcond-Hand B.cycles from $.0 to $25.00 GENERAL REPAIRING Front Street Phone 275 ������������*���***���* ������������������#������ I Ineral Waters Aerated Waters Manufactured by HENLEY NEW WESTMINSTER, B. C. LVne U. Office. Eighth St The meat trust Ins not everything to do with the scarcity of meats in the United States and the steady Increase in price that Is driving housewives with limited household allowances t<> distraction. 'I be number of food animals In the United states has decreased 5,000.000 sine,, moi, and the number <if consumers hns Incre l 12,000,000 in the same time, Bays the Washington correspondent of the Ottawa Globe. This is the result of an analysis by the Bun au of Statistics of the Department of Commerce and Labor, ol I lie census i stlmates of population and the Departmi nl of Agriculture s estimates oi food animals in the years L901 and 1910. The term "fond animals" Include In this Intsance all cattle, sheep and swine in the Unlti i States as estimated bj the Departmi nl of Agriculture, and the term "consumers" Includes all of the population as estlmati d by the census. 'l'he Depart ment of Agriculture's figures pul the total number of cuttle I in the United Stati s on Januai y l, 1901, at 62 1-:: million; sine;.. 59 3-4 million, and swine 57 million, a total ' of 17!i million. For January 1, 1910, the estimate is, cattle, 69 million,' sheep. 57 1-1 million, and swine -17 3-4 million, a total of 171 million, a de-| crease of five million In the aggregate of the three groups of food animals. The census estimates the population of the l'nited States on June 1, 1901, at 77,647,000, and un June 1, 1910, at 88,!)12.hi)(l. an increase of a little more than 12,000,000 in tlie population while the number of food animals was declining about 5.01)0,dun. In the meantime the total value of e food animals In the country has A Scene From "The Red Mill," at the Opera House Next Friday Night, Ap ril 15. NOVA SCOTIA EDUCATION. Cost $1,229,834 Last Year, Premier Murray Reports. Halifax, N.S., April 12.���According to a report in the House of Assembly, IMPORT NEW INDUSTRY. Silk and Lace Workers from Nottingham Got to America. London, April 12,���A new Industry is to be inrtoduccd into the United &<__&_;������ -va-is^LagS^'-ga^ ;.*.+~a-JLm.^rm\-~. .---��u__rS*m*v brought down today by Premier States from Nottinghamshire. A num. THE MKAt.S AT THE .ytton Hotel \m prepared hy expert white w��totattie cleanest and most | niter tttcben In the city. ���MEM TICKET $4.50 Nn wh0 wires your house places T��riini> (.|p(.tn So p|ace ���I once. 'iny tit your your orders t increased despite the 1 eduction in number, the Department of Agriculture estimating the aggregate farm value of the 179,000,000 cattle, sheep and %swlne in 1910 at $943,000,000. and the aggregate farm value of the 174,- 000.000 at $2,368,000,000. T'..��� give's au Increase In the aggregate value of 22 l-er cent., while the number was declining a little less than 3 per cent, the Increase in tlie average farm value per animal of the entire number of food animals being 2a 1-2 per cent. Cattle More Numerous. The one class of food animals which shows an actual increase ln the period In Question Is cattle, of which the number In 1901 was 62.333.870, and in 11)10, 69,080,000, an Increase of about 11 per eent, while the population was increasing about 16 per cent. The farm value of cattle In 1901 ls put at $1,411,737,08(1, and ln 1910 at.$1,697,- 761.1100, an Increase of 20 1-2 per cent in value, while the number was increasing about 11 per cent. The average farm value per head of all cattle Is given In 1901 at $22.65, and In 1910 at $24.7,8, an Increase of but S 1-2 per cent ln value per head on the farm. In the markets,however, beef pi ices showed a much larger advance, the New York wholesale price of "family beef," as shown in reports to the Bureau of Statistics. Department of Commerce and Labor, being $12.50 per barrel in the first week of January, 1901, and' $16 per barrel ln the first week of January, 1910, an Increase ol <s8 per cent. Prices of grains show advances also. The quoted price of corn in the New York market in the first week of January, 1910, was, according to the Bureau of Statistics figures, -15 3-4 cents per bushel, aud in tlie first week of January, 1910, 71 1-2 cents per bushel, an advance of 56 per cent; oats In Janu ary. 1901, 2S 1-3 cents per bushel, and in January, 1910, 49 1-2 cents, an advance of 75 per cent; of wheat, in the first week of January, 1901, Sl cents per bushel, and in January. 1910. $1.30 per bushel, an advance of 60 1-2 per cent. .Murray, public education in Nova Scotia last year cost $1,299,834. The Technical college cost $116,000, exclusive of equipment. The milage of highway In this province, according to the report of the road commissioner, is 1.800 miles, and cost to the province for upkeep was $217,500. TO RAISE SUBMARINE. interesting Apparatus Invented and Is Used in Cherbourg. Paris, April 12.���At the present moment there ls being tested at Cherbourg an invention for raising sunken submarines. The experiments were made with tlie submarine Narval, which was purposely sunk. By means of the invention, which ls kept an absolute secret, divers'went down and succeeded In closing the gap and fixing the tube through which compressed air Is forced Into the vessel, driving out tlie water. When sufficiently lightened the Narval refloated herself. In view of tho success of the experiment the Inspecting officers have decided to recommend the minister of marine to adopt the invention. ber of young hand-fiame knitters are on their way across the Atlantic to work in America at very high wages. They will take their own machines and will make high class silk and lace ties, motor scarves, shawls and veilings���goods for which America has hitherto been dependent on iin- poits from England and France. The imported workers who come from various villages in Nottinghamshire, wlll be paid $25 a week, rising in a month to thirty. I TO BOOM NIAGARA FALLS. Council to Co-operate With Board of Trade in Promoting Publicity. Niagara Falls, Ont., April 12.���The city council tonight decided to meet with the board of trade Friday night to devise ways and means for the appointment of an industrial commissioner to advance the city's Interests. The matter will finally be left in the hands of the ratepayers. IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE ���IN��� THE DAILY NEW oney rR.E.ND ALWAYS I* GOOD |H VOU (ln��� Itet, | ,!;';*" your money for It wi',, V Bank ��t Toronto 111 be safe it. and ready and n while you leave when you need It, will be WlTheTime l��,!tfor.yo'ilhroepBrcent- ��� Small or large sums ��e deposited at any time. 80 BRANCHES 0ntarl��. Quebec West. and the I Ca"itau Rest ��� .$4,000,000 ... 4,750,000 of Toronto Estminster, BRANCH 1 Bracey, Mgr. B. C. VICTOR HERBERT. Victor 1 lei belt's latest composition s "Tho Red MM," which will be icai.l at the Opera House on Friday. Mr. I lei belt was bin n iti Dublin, Ireland, February l, I860, and, as tha grandson of the distinguished poet. dramatist, musician and novel- Lover, he comes by Ids nd artistic talents naturally, child he was talt! ii to Qer- became a student of music, prominent position wus at FOR SALE BY OWNER cash down buys the best business prop Begbie street; C Columbia, main street. Balance very easy. $2000 erty on Begbie street; close to A SNAP painter, 1st. Salllli musical b [.When ti 1 many am lllls first first 'cellist of the court orchestra, Stuttgart, al the age of twenty seven. i His exceptional ability was not long pent up iu the provincial German capital however, and he was soon winning laurels in this country. Alter a number of years devoted to composition during which he established his reputation as the foremost light opera composer ln America, lie was engaged 'to conduct the Pittsburg orchestra. Later his selection to conduct two sets of philharmonic concerts in New ! York during the past two seasons was Ion eloquent tribute to the weulth of his reading. Mr Herbert's.comic opera composl-. tlons comprise an extensive list of pop- I ular successes, among them The Prima Donna," In which WW Scheft !has starred for two seasons; The j Tattooed Man," Frank Daniel^ offer- ing; "The Singing Girl." ;���e ForK��M Teler," "The Idol's Eye/' 'The Wl* ���rd of 08, Hie Nile," "Cyrano de He ge ao" "The Serenade," "Babes In. iToyland." "I.lttle Nemo," and "It hap- I pened In Nordland." Mr Herbert Is the $2000 cash down buys 160 acres "of land, rich black soil, sub-divided into 20 acre blocks facing Stave Lake Road, price only $16 per acre The timber itself is worth more. The Stave Lake Power Company is going to have car service there in the very near future. APPLY C S. News Office A block of 10 lots in Sapperton. Price $225 per lot. One third cash, balance 6 and 12 months. A block of 18 full sized lots in Burnaby, beautiful view. $450 each. Terms to suit the purchaser. Sold singly or en block We have Buyers for Houses in all parts of the city. Owners apply to The British Canadian Securities Company, limited. T. R. PEARSON, Manager. Office: The Dominion Trust ^��������������������������4����< ������������������������������ >aaa*a<>aaa*aaa*4caaaaaa.a4>_ ! FRIDAY, APRIL 15th. Martin & Emery Co.'s Complete Production of the World's Greatest Operatic Sensation ������������������������������������ ��������������������������������������������������������������������������� OMM^m* I s_fstSS& FITTINGS 1 SHOW CASES chief agitator tectlon of composers against the phon- oRr"ph and talking machine companies whichappropriate music: wi^t Pajr- in* for It It was he who flrst canea ptonSnU records "canned music." ARTISTIC MANTELS���STAIR RAILINGS-ALL KINDS OF WOOD. WORKING���DESIGNS AND E8TI- V MATES SUPPLIED ^: NEW WESTMINSTER WOODWORKING COMPANY J J. BROOKES, Proprietor v WORKS-Corner Eleventh end Carline. PHONE 473 Music by Victor Herbert Book by Henry Blossom Presented With Every Detail as Characterized Its Unparalleled Engagements of One Whole Year Knickerbocker Theatre, New York; Four months Grand Opera House, Chicago; Three Months Colonial Theatre, Boston. With a Select Company of uMWaWaW 60- SIXTY PEOPLE- Including 60;- BERT O. SWOR as CON KIDDER FRANKER WOODS at KID-CONNOR �� The Famous Dutch Kiddies A Beauty Chorus of Forty-40 Special Augmented Orchestra | VICTOR HERBERT'S SONG HITS��� The Streets of New York, Every Day Is Ladles' Day With Me, Because You're You, Whistle It, Go While the Goin's Good, Mignonette, �� A Widow Hat Ways, Good-a-Bye, John, The Isle of Our Dreams, , . You Never Can Tell About a Woman, I Want You to Marry Me. < �� 8eat Sale Opens Monday, 11th. I I >. PAGE FOUR. THE DAILY NEWS. ; * , -t ��� ��� ,1 U '��� ' , tl- > ; iv ������ !$ Mi! . "fl %( ', a, <\ ii: ��� I nn w i ��� ti I ���!������ ,, 1 ;1 lfi 'i 'ji ; ' J *' iiS ���; ' Si ,. '. - tail ' ��� > **i ���t k ll v ��� j * i..;-i ' i* ..��� i ' gill'. . ������- fi!'.'��� ��� ' a; *,: 'i i��iv,'fc| '��� ill: t' life. '���'�����': Vi.s.'.'H. < ,. .4 fl ii ������ '������ $1 Wi .1 1,1 Fo ���HI II-If !����� '.! ���tou* I llli' SillV!'" I'i ���* te i m i i Ti >i i'V, ��� t-wWAtlw, 'Mmi The Daily News .Published by The Dally .News Publlsn- Ins Company, Limited, at their offices, Corner of McKenzie und Victoria Streets. <C A. Paige Managing Director COW BEATS WORLDS RECORD. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13, 1910. AIDING INDUSTRIAL MENT. DEVELOP- Extensive and important developments in the way of new industrial undertakings are coining about in ..every direction around the city of New Westminster. Such activity in this; ounce ot fo0il given her, as well as respect as is now being experienced every ounce of milk and butter she Gave 80 Pounds of Milk Daily���Pro duced 29.27 Pounds of Butter. Utlca, April 12.���About twenty-two miles south of this city, near Solsvllle, a cow has just distinguished herself by smashing the world's record in the amount of milk and butter production in a seven-day test. Farmer Eugene Lamunlon had a cow which was producing milk and butler in such quantities that he had to milk the animal i four times a day, so he took advan- ] tagc of a privilege granted by the State Department of Agriculture and called upon the department for a test of the cow, the State to pay one-half of the cost of the test and the owner the otber half. A representative of the State Department and another dairy expert from the Cornell Agricultural college came to the farm, and for thirty days they fed the animal, weighing every WEDNESDAY, ApR| I LEES LIMITED ffHgwj-N'WWW iHB'-wiiB^'.wpa^^.TWr.rr^r'gt MUSES' has not before been known, and the ���creation of a busy manufacturing area produced. The result was that tho years 11 months and 23 days old cow has smashed the world's record, An and about the ltoyal City is prac- nQt on,y fof the production of C0W8 -tically assured in the by no means j at that age, but of the best that a distant future. Each day brings its | cow of any age has produced. batch of enquiries and of business men on a trip to this district to spy out the land and discover a suitable Lockhart de Kol No. 101,514 is thc highly poetic name of this extremely practical cow, and for seven days she gave over eighty pounds' of milk each site for a factory. Not all these turn day and produced 29.27 pounds of but up trumps, of course, but a goodly percentage find that the reputation spread abroad in regard to the favorable situation and circumstances of Mew Westminster, as a location for manufacturing purposes, is thorough- 4y sustained, and desire to establish operations here. It has happened, however, on more vfrhan one occasion lately that an industrial tlrm desirous of placing their .factory in or about this city has Sound difficulty in securing a ���which possesses good deep frontage. Tiiis difficulty is due to the j ter. The highest record for this age of cow was liT.OH pounds of butter in seven days. Farmer Lamunion was offered $. ,500 today for the cow, but he promptly refused it. DOUKHOBOR COMMUNISM. From "The Letters of Betty I31uo," by Jean lilewett, in April "Canada Monthly" (formerly Canada West). Communistic life is a thing that grows on you. Down in yonder bouse with tbe blue smoke curling from site I the chimney, the baking for the vll- water|lage is done. In another is done the washing, in another the spinning, ln another the weaving of rugs and fact that practically all such sites, [cloth. The bake woman is not proud, for some distance up and down and j though her apron is a good half yard on either side of the Fraser, have wlder than that worn by her sisters. There is no emulation, no faultfind- 2000 Yards of New Carpets Go in Stock Today been already snapped up, and the Xew that do happen to be still on the ���market are being held at very high figures. There is, however, a very flne area of land, with the best of deep water aud all the requisite facilities for the accommodation of large ocean going vessels, on Annacls Island. From lhe shipping point of view this place lias also the advantage that vessels remain in the main channel of the river and have not to go through the (bridge to load or discharge their car- sees. Annacis Island has found favor with several Industrial prospectors of late, but has not proved accepable to ���them for the unfortunate reason that It has no connection with the main- Jand. We happen to know of one case in which the head of a large manufacturing concern in the States is ing, each goes on with the task given lnt her hands without let or hlnder- ence. It is a matter of training, I suppose. Now with us lf one woman undertook the baking we would all be clamoring for her to use our recipes; if one made our dresses we would choose the pattern or know why; and we would all be busy helping the spinner, weaver, etc., we'd never get our own share done. Imagine one woman taking care of all the babies! Not a word about "my nurse said" this or that���the Doukhobor woman has no nurse; not a word about the doctor's opinion on the merits of hot or cold milk���the Doukhobor women have no doctors. She has just her own common sense and training which tell her the other woman knows as much as she does, She lets it go at that. Beautiful Axminsters. >Viltons and Brussels Art Squares and Mats . . Tke CHOICEST PATTERNS In All Canada 400 NEW RUGS, WE INVITE YOUR INSPECTION. Our Great Cut-Price Sale on Fine Furniture Continues until Saturday. "We Furnish Your Home Complete" LEES LIMITED Phone 73 Successors to Lee's Furntiure Emporium. 716-718 Columbia st. New Westminster prepared to expend a quarter of a mil lion dollars upon buildings and plant '0f*MJ-s on this island if he could secure com munication with this city. And it is | one mile east of Palmyra pretty certain that there would be j twelve miles west of here, was today other firms ready to establish works in this position if the necessary con- BODY OF WOMAN FOUND DOUBLED UP IN TRUNK ��� ' m Hannibal, Mo., April 12.���The body Gertrude Maxwell, a wealthy widow who lived alone on .her farm, which is nection were provided. There are over eight hundred acres on Annacis island available for development and found in a trunk at her home. She has been missing since last Wednesday. A club was found in the room, but the body bore no marks \of v)'oi- lence. Mrs. Maxwell, who was about sixty years old, was fully dressed. Her if this were connected up with the kness were bent so that her chin mainland a large and very important j rested on them. On Wednesday last industrial settlement would soon be she te'ephoned a physician that she in evidence there. Such a town would be of the greatest advantage to the commercirl interests of New Westminster, and it seems to us that in consideration of ���such a circumstance the city might Thaw Has a Chance. Pittsburg, April 12.���Unless exceptions are filed by his creditors, Harry K. Thaw will soon be discharged in as well provide the desired means of I bankruptcy.| Referee Blair today filed hit final report, recommending that a discharge be granted. was ill and he prescribed for her over the telephone. communication. This could best be effected by the erection of a bridge ���over Annacis slough, thus connecting Annacis with Lulu Island. The latter has already bridge connection with this <aty and will shortly have a car line running to its extremity. A bridge across the slough would probably not cost more than thirty thousand dollars anj the investment of this sum would be In every way warranted by the return in the way of trade that would come to the city. With the liulu Island line continued over the suggested bridge and across Annacis Island, the latter would virtually become an integral part of the Royal ���City. There is no doubt that if the industrial development of New Westminster is to go ahead something in ���the way of what we have suggested will have'to be done. It would seem xhat now is the time to take advantage of what is certainly a golden /opportunity. ���PROMISING OIL DISCOVERY NEAR THOMPSON SIDING Ashcroft, April 12.���Messrs. Chata- way and Leitch who lately doscovere.l petroleum deposits near Thompson ���Siding, brought a large quantity of oil .shale to town, portions of which they are forwarding to the Dominion and Provincial Assay departments In the presence this morning of several citizens the finders, of what is we believe the first of Its kind discovered in British Columbia, ignited this oil shale which clearly showed the presence of oil, both by the easy manner in which It flamed and by the fumes. This find may lead to an entirely new industry in tlie famous Tliouip- :u302 Valley. SentjOa Approval To Responsiblb People * Laughlin FOUNTAIN PEN and RED GEM &/>e IhK Pencil Your Choice of Thm Two Popular Articles Po��l paid to any address for on Bi Insi-ii. , Mail Bo Kxiba. "' llutlratlani aie txaol kit* Every pen guaranteed full 14 Kt. belief Odld���cut uu right hand may be hud in e.tlier our standard black opaque pattern, or Nou-hreakaltle Triinspat- ent, ds desired, either in plain or engrave, finish, as prelerred. Yon may try iMl pen a araaLt, liyoudouoiflud t i.x r��j.,.,���������u��i, a teller attiilo ihni, y���u cm, to- 1 cur* tor *n*MS iiMBi, fun ,),,,,, S MIOI la . ,y oUier limko. If )i��tB entirely ����t.,(,���.<-,.., y hi every in-f IptCt return It ftii'l we will ,, i���l [ jui, <1 IJI���r ,1. Crr oa lift Ii our fame,n ���nd ! rn|>���l��r Ki.i. Oni Ink I'aiieii, cuuii.lcla leak ,,r<���,f Ifludiph, may | hs rarrled la any pnlUon fi, poeMt 01 ihnpnlni t'B���, ivrll,., el 'any H'kIo at flrat tolloh, Mill" iium (i|,rlnir) food, Milium I point, pollihid ruloanlud tniher caee, teira cntto flnhli. lletall I | everywhere fur KM, Ayentl I wanted Wrllo for toritll, Wnlo now "leu )uu forget." Add,, I11 Laughlin Mfg. Co.*! Ma esllo Bldg., Detroit iilnb Manufacturing Sites WATERFRONTAGE AND TRACKAGE We have a number of these, but we want our list extended so that we can suit all comers. We are specializing in these We have choice residential sites at Edmonds, 66x166 feet. Price '^50; 1-1 cash, balance 6, 12 and 18 months. Five cent car fare and water s; stem, etc. Nothing better in the country. PATTERSON COMPANY 657 Columbia St., and at Edmonds. Phone F 208. Th* wonderful progress of Canada ia Qhutrated by the (act Out tha tnaj* Cocoa ia tha world ia made thara. COWAN'S PE.RFE.CTION COCOA Ii tbe purait and the best and la fait becoming the bavaraga for old and young. THE COWAN CO.. Ltd.. TORONTO r A Rare Investment I Two 5 Room Houses close in, near to car line, on one full sized lot, $3000 for the two, 1-3 cash, balance 6, 12 and 18 months. These houses could rent for $15 each per month. .V. H. H. LENNIE 650 Columbia Street. Phone 596 58 See the Latest in Ladies Waists ���* i j ****a\**~^a The daintiest and most attractive showing of Ladies' WafflJ awaits your inspection. You'll be astonished at the exclusively... this collection, and delighted with the lovely creations thai bavelUjU come to hand. Smart tailored waists in a pleasing collection ol white and striped effects. Lingerie Waists, embroidered a\d tuck. styles in charming variety, and elaborate Net and Silk Waists, exclusive styles that will especially appeal to stylish dirssers. Prica to suit long or short pocketbooks. Call and inspect them, More Curtain Muslins, etc Just new In today. "Prettier than ever," will he the verdict wheal you see these late arrivals. Cream Madras in a wide range of i signs in self color and three-tone patterns. Fancy Casement CM cream with stripe and also with colored designs, Colored Cable! Nets and Venetian Scrim in a large assortment of colorings. ���From! 25c to \\M Art Muslins, 1 Oc. a yard Exceedingly pretty designs ln this inexpensive Muslin. Good col orings. well printed, and excellent value at the price Also extii wide, Flowered Art Muslin, in Green, Green and Blue and Green and Pink combination; 38 inches w.'de. Per yard ,5e* Colored Table Cloths $ 1.25 per yard! Turkey Ited with various right designs; reversible Tho washing qualities of these cloths is well known to all. Good large 8lze, fl* Turkey Hed Damask, with light colored or green d> sign, spot"' dice pattern; 58 inches wide. Per yard ftl ������������ ADainty, Quickly Served "Breakfast' Perhaps your appetite Is a little sluggish In the morning? The" Ereakfast at the "ROYAL CAFE"���Everything is so clean and dainty. and the food so delicious and appetising that you're certain to en. y it. Prices are moderate, too. THE ROYAL CAFE Seabold & Jones, Props. Dominion Trust ������������������������������������������������������������������>����������������������������������������������������������� Block. ���������������������������������������������������������������������* CLOCKS WESTMINSTER CHIME, MUSICAL, MARBLE, POLISHED W00i GILT, SILVER, CHINA, ALARM, CABINET, CUCKOO AND "' CLOCKS I Chamberlin's ,*$��** Official C. P. R. Time Inspector. �����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������** ���������������������I ������������������������������������������������������������������������^������^���������������������������������������***** JUST ARRIVED Ryall's FACE CREAM PRICE 25 Cents \ Ryall's Drug Store 4) ��������������������������� EYES TESTED FREE BY OPTICIAN ,aaaa4>aa**>*aa4>aa ���������������������������������*��� 4**n APRIL 13, 1910 THE DA1LV NEWS. PAGE nVB. ��� GardenjPreshnessorSA^yl fit CHAMPIONS fli at GIVEN CUP WESTMINSTER MEN WIN TWO BILLIARD GAMES Offers Trophy! Coldicutt and Watt Defeat intermediate lacrosse Opponents. Andeberg K��'officers and Schedule; { and Grant Beaten. Canadian Northern Townsite ���Right in amongst It.' meeting of tbe New intermediate Laotf>ssve held last evening In ade room In the City ���s,#ster <"nf'tru- .��� kwarf0 ���1IL.,i in the election of Bwlng up of a schedule r��thsr business. 'io announced tbat he J* '" cud foil competition ** fteams In the city league rlte was unpremeditated and Pre6�� [donatio" conditions for I In good billiards in Vancouver hist night the New Westminster men won I two out of tbe live games, Coldicutt I beating Gordon for the second time in the series and Watt scoring Ids lirst ' win by defeating Brown by 21 points. | Grant called off his game with Robinson when it was about half finished. He made a close shot, which he thought scored. The referee was not ' watching the play attentively but Fresh and fragrant from the gardens of the finest tea* producing country in the world. Ask your grocer for a package to-day you'll like it ���- Black, Mixed and Natural Green, 40c, 50c, 60c and 70c per lb* ������* Lot 14 in Section 20���Five acres o'i Hl-Jorth Road; $3,000; 1-2 cash, balance 6 and 12 months. 80 Acres in Section 21���$450 an acre. TERMS. : called it a miss. The majority of the understood that it spectator thought that the shot had ,��� lertv of the win-. scored, but the marker held to his Prop - ��� - -''decision and Grant refused to go on score when this fiTad pr"P��effl J gift, I"*'1 ln l^.Ss'vt-ar. a"d will not >nb the championship every ^proposal was well received l^fing officer for the year a <TS .'��� . C Galbraith. ferd executive committee, H. W'Nel on, C. D. Peele, Roy I'cnOsta, Swanson, W. gangster; f 'c o the Pacific Coast Ama- pSi -sedation, J. L Keary, D'n6 Peele was appointed a com- I"' t n.u. to have the names of te^PuM, -he detent mugs present In their possession ,P E Munn. Nels Nelson and CD. I Me were appointed as a committee K constitution, as the present Sot following the rules of the ninrs is not satisfactory. Kas decided to hold all the gaxoes Veen's park, as there was diffl- lHy m getting good gates at Sap Tt'on and the West Knd. Thf following schedule was drawn i without undue argument: Schedule. Sapperton vs. Reglnas-May 12. Reginas vs. West End-May 19. rwest End vs. Sapperton���June Z. Reginas vs. Sapperton���June B. West Knd vs. Reginas���June 16. Sapperton vs. West End-June 23. Sapperton vs. Regina���July J. Regina vs. West End���July 14. West End vs. Sapperton���July -l. Reginas vs. Sapperton���July 28. West End vs. Regina��� August 4. Sapperton vs. West End-August 11 with tbe game. The happened stood 140 to 10'J in favor of the Vancouver man, The game between Coldicutt and Gordon was the closest that has been Played yet, the New Westminster expert winning by only two points. Gordon was ahead right up to the finish and the Vancouver men were offering odds of three to one on their player. There were few takers as the local men were not well supported. This brings the two men even on the score, both having won two games. ( Lee was sick and not able to play, j Andeberg thus being forced to play two games. llis regular opponent. Parks, won by 22 points and Adio came out 50 in the lead. Watt succeeded ln winning from Brown by 21 points In a good game. | The Vancouver men have not yet won the Chamberlin trophy, as they , bave to win eighteen games and Up HERO RECOGNIZED. James Gallagher, of St. Catherines, Receives Medal. St. Catherines, April 12.���James Gallagher was tonight rewarded for a' brave deed, whereby on February 21 last he saved a young girl, .Margaret Thorn, from drowning in the hydraulic raceway. Mr. Gallagher, who Is seventy years of age, was walking along the bank of the raceway when , be heard the girl's cries. Heedless of i consequences, he plunged Into the icy waters and affected a rescue. The I matter was taken up by T. 10. Dudley, I local agent of the Royal Humane so- > ciety, with the result that following an | investigation a medal was granted. This was presented at the regular : meeting of the city council tonight, | when a large number of citizens were in attendance. The presentation was | made by Mayor McBride, who compli- Imented Mr. Gallagher upon his brave 1 deed, pointing out the value of the medal, which ls granted by the society having Karl Grey and other prominent men among its members, lie expressed his pleasure in presenting the medal, which be hoped the recipient would long live to wear and enjoy. Mr. Gallagher made a brief reply . ALGMW LACR0S3E CLUB ELECTS SEASON'S OFFICERS Tlie officers of the Calgary Lacrosse Mot the coming season have been SteAulollows: I Patrons. Mayor Jamieson, R. B. ; iBenneu.W.U. Cushing. Hon. president���M. S. McCarthy, in. p Hon. vie. president���J. A. Walker. Hon. second vice-president���W. M. avidson. President���Dr Hicks. Vice-preslilent���Joe Moir. Second vice-president���J. Harris. Manager and captain���Allan Mc- lonnell. Executive���lun Sewell, C. Waugb. ',1.0'Oara, Joe Moir, F. Gravelle. Joe Moir will be chairman of tho isecutive. nave lo win bi^uvov*. r to the present have won only seven teen. If they win one game of the next series played here next Tuesday tbey will become possessors of tbe trophy. Coldicutt has announced that he wlll play any member of tbe National Sports club team here for any amount from $100 to $500. In the games last night Robinson made the high break, making 52 right ut the start of his game with Grant. The following is the score in detail: New Westminster���Coldicutt, 200; Watt, 200; Andeberg .ITS; Andeberg, 150; Grant, 109; total, 837. Vancouver���Gordon. 198; Brown, 179; Parks, 200; Adle, 200; Robinson. 140; total, 917. English Racing. Newmarket, England, April 12,���The Pltzwilliam slakes of 16 sovereigns each, with 200 sovereigns added for two-year-olds, distance four furlongs, was won today by H. P. Whitney's Late FrivoUB filly. Lawrence Water- I bury's Alster Cross was second and Stanton third. Ten horses ran. of thanks for the medal, but his attl tude appeared to be that of a man ' who considered he had done nothing ' out of the ordinary. The mayor then 'pinned the medal on Mr. Gallagher's breast amid the applause of all present. IRVING STATUE NEARLY READY. on AERO CLUB WOULD REGULATE AIR TRAFFIC Paris, April 12,���The Areo Club of France has placed before the Minister i of I'ubllc Works a series of sugges- Memorial or Famous Actor to be View in June. At last London is promised its long waited Irving memorial, though it appears that it has not been the particular fault of anybody that It has been so long delayed. Thomas Brock, the sculptor, has been so busy on the Queen Victoria memorial that lt was impossible for him to get on with his Irving statue. However, Tl is now definitely stated that at the end of June or beginning of July next the j memorial will be unveiled by Sir John : Hare. i The statue is to have a very fine I site, back of tbe National gallery, and, . very appropriately, opposite the Gar- j rick theatre. There the vast public ���who loved Irving will have the satisfaction of seeing���to quote his son, Laurence Irving���"his features set up in the street, amid the noise and tho COUNTY COURT CASES. At the regular sitting or the county court yesterday Judge Howay disposed of a .eat many cases. Most Of them were set for trial at a later date and some were thrown oat, only one or two being settled. The following is the list: Corbould & Grant vs. E, Hepworth; $225.25; trial fixed for Monday, April 18, at 11 a. m. Vanstone Heating and Plumbing company vs. Kwong Man Tai. (340,91; case dropped from list and action dismissed. Kinney vs. Carlton; $109.55; next court. J. C. Allen vs. E. B. Deane; $1,432.- 62; stands till April 18 at 11 a. m. Hill-Tout Lumber Co. vs. Pittl- plece and Crawford; $75; struck out. Hattie Hobbs, vs. George A. Campbell; $71; Judgment for plaintiffs by consent with costs. Catterwood and Watson vs. Sylvester; $200; trial fixed for Friday, April 22. at U a. m. C. West vs. H. West; $15; settled. Small &. Bucklin cs. W. Laughlin; $15; settled. Erlckson, Gustaphson vs. Olsen and Vancouver Power Co.; $861; trial [ fixed for Thursday, April 21, at 11 a. m. I F. Kearsley vs. DeVoy &. Owens; '$285.50; trial fixed for Tuesday, April 19, at 11 a. m. Ellis vs. Pitt River Lumber Co.; $87.12; trial fixed Tor Wednesday, April 20, at 11 a. m. C. W. Saunders vs. J. H. Thompson; $75; trial on Thursday, April 28, at 11 a. m. J. Manhire vs. W. J. Kerr day to be fixed. Trapp vs. Nelson; trial for April 29 at 11 a. m. Broder vs. R. P. Rithefc & Co, trial fixed for May 2 at 11 a. m. 10-Acre block on Main Road���$475 an acre. t 12 Two-acre blocks in Section 30, Block 5, N. R. 2 West. B. C. E. Ry. runs through and close to these blocks. WHITE, SHILES & CO. THE SURREY SPECIALISTS. Phone 85.-628 and 746 Columbia St. 4*aaaaaaaaaa\***+++aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa***aaaaai $800; What's the Use What's the use of having a nice garden, and the hens scratching it all up? What's the use of having hens if you don't keep them home. Try us for wire netting and fencing. T. J. Trapp & Co., Ltd. Eight roomed house, barn and three acres of good pasture land to rent on new Yale road; about fifty yards from bridge approach. $25 per month. Apply to W. J. Kerr. ** - /".vtn'the subject of tho memorial Sges- ] ., t m00ted there was some dif- , &wK>7^^ b^een actors YESTERDAY'S BASEBALL. At Danville, Va���Danville, 11? Greensboro, l. At Richmond���Richmond-Rochester llEastprn league); rain. South Atlantic League. Lynchburg���Toronto (Eastern ���Lynchburg (State At Ileasu rain. At league); Augusta-Augusta, 6; Columbia, Jacksonville, 4; Sav- At Savannah pnnah, 0. At Macon- I Called end -Columbus, 1; Macon 1. of ninth inning; rain.) Lacrosse Players' Union. I Toronto, April 12.���A lacrosse play- tts' union is said to be the newest Wne In lacrosse circles. Some of the Payors In Toronto who do not think >��ey are getting all that Is coming to tic. One of these Is for __ privacy of enclosed spaces, like court yards and gardens, by making it a punishable offence for pilots to cross such property at a height of less than fifty yards, or to halt above them at less than 500 yards, while towns in j general are to be avoided. i The scheme does not show how such regulations shall be enforced; it leaves it to the Perfect of Police to I find a way to Identify and overtake offenders against the laws of the air. For their own protection, airships are to be provided with some kind of horn with which they will signal to each other before passing; and the Aero club asks that owners of all buildings over forty yards In height shall furnish powerful lamps to make their roofs clearly visible at a distance, and they want the name of every railway station painted In let- tors a foot long on its roof. and actresses as to the form it should take. Miss Ellen Terry was one of the most notable dissenters from the statue proposition although she subsequently came into line with the general desire. Miss Terry suggested instead the institution of a museum, library, or picture gallery, on the lines of the Shakespeare Memorial at Stratford-on-Avon, an ambitious scheme which obtained the warm BUpport of, among others, the Bishop of London, Mr. Balfour, John Burns, Mme. Sarah Bernhardt, Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema and Holman Hunt. Mr. Brock's statue is in bronze, but Its character is being kept a secret for the present. The Timberland Lumber Company, Ltd. ^^^^^^^^ MANUFACTURERS OF Fir, Cedar and Spruce Lumber,Rough, Dressed and Kiln Dried, Dimension Timber and Shingles, Cedar Poles and Piling in any quan tity. Ask Us for Prices Office, Room 8, Thompson Blk A. J. CRAIG, Man. Director New Westminster, B. C. p. O. Box 953 AND UPRIVER LANDINGS THE NEW STERNWHEELER For CHILLIWACK I them. Bald to be contemplating I Btting together in an attempt to ���i��e salaries, Just what minimum W would name, or whether tbey Would Whistle blows 'Milt work when the C< o'clock are questions that have 1,01 Vet been decided. \AiiA*m*r's Horse Wins. Wldemersn wWemer'8 S? atUBngbeln les'Bains, today. , _ ,��� ntv iand Suburban. Betting on City ana beltlng on London, April \- ... Minoru, the City and Suburban 1 ��� V 6 toi; Ueanhwif t, 8 to i. 100 to 8! Sunbiight, 100 to lueff, 11 fo ���! $38,000 Will Buy Section 13 Block 5 Range 1 W. in Surrey. About 157 Acres. Exclusive Sale BRENING & CQ* h* New \Ve��tn,Snstcr M������'��� ������ hanl. Ronk BldK. INCW chants Bank Bids MONTREAL INGOING CRAZY. Epidemic of insanity Sweeps the East- cp ern Metropolis. I Amil 12.���Since last i examination, was Bent to , the daughter of Timotny > on Christmas ���J��^*XcUwd celles and was ��� r"'lS,ieI. and St^intiSiUsoftbesame^ asyium. . EARTHRQ^^TsPOKANE ,, ,., \ nevere shock Spokane.April w. ��� fle,8nwgrapb wa8 registered by ���� t fi.35 af,Q0rgthe"Eelasted! n.ne-six- ��V" .;.'of a ml Ute and the resulting rSons wei e registered over a pe- rlod of four '"ln,1,;sg paBt and west. ^sT^rthrtrearthquake occurred 2SW^*^^ Graduates Elect Officers j it,, irr n dilates ot ine, The ^lvft%ah lected the fol- dty on Monday nigh f button: lowing officers Of h< irf Mo. Honorary I'residcnt i on Co_ Rrl.'e. prime mlnisteioru Wnrd,aW lumbia; Ifflde" 'D fTios ' president, Taylor. M.A.. I I !�����.. _f Co. ReVl Tidnclpal Slpp.ellet(irytrp.i8UI.eri lumblan college. �� Professor W. P. Hfln8'0Ld,;.eH D Robson. Rev. It Will Pay Vou S.S. PAYSTREAK Leaves Brackman-Ker Milling Company's Wharf, New Westminster With Passengers and Freight as Follows: REGULAR SAILINGS Leave New Westminster Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday at 8 a. m. Leave Chilliwack Wednesday, Friday atad Sunday at 7 a. m. FIRST CLASS PASSENGER ACCOMODATIONS ROYAL CITY NAVIGATION CO., Limited wcvai va/fstMINSTER NEW WESTMINSTER i The Very Best Flour Made Every Sack Guaranteed $1.85 Per Sack 3 lbs Creamery Butter $1.00 3 lbs People's Blend Ceylon Tea $1.00 WWORKMEN can sue you without cost to themselves, and they have EL VERYTHING to gain and small chance to lose by so doing. PERSONS other than employees accidentally Injured about the premises Invariably sue for damages. REGARDLESS of their own responsibility for the accident, or the existence of negligence on the part of others. ON the slightest pretext employees may sue you, even for accidents caused by the negligence of a fellow-workman, and THE suit may be brought against you long after the occurrence of the accident by which he was Injured, EMPLOYERS, and business men can ill afford to assume the risk of this ever-increasing and uncertain liability. CREDIT of otherwise responsible manufacturers and business firms Is sometimes seriously impaired by such damage suits. TT O go to law means lass of time, money, endless annoyance and B worry. YOUR profits may be seriously curtailed as a result of accident unless you are Insured. ONLY Insurance against such risks will enable you to fix aud reduce your expenses to a minim um. NDER the protection of a Liability Policy ln the Railway Passengers' Assurance Company you will save money and time and be relieved from all such annoyances - " " 'U ������* PHONE 193 and 443 Sapperton Phone 373 u ALFRED W. McLEOD \ Phone 62. "Th. In.uranc. M.n" 657 Columbia PAGE SIX. THE DAILY NEWS. WEDNESDAY APRIL 13. ; .:' i f t Hi J1' It lit-^ i, ��� 'ii , ��� i ' r* J ii'i ��� ��� - j; S;-"'l i I V.' H is. ��� 'tl,' I I 'I * :'' ��� fi *.��� ?;���,'��� s ^�� " ���!! tal! ' i . .Sri'i i liW .ft! ' ��� J Vlfl J V , '-tH- ��� ��� J:4. ' ; ��� '! l:; . ilffl l ..:�����'������ ��� ^ IS ��� ���' "��� Vl'N i KI U ���' AS.,. "I*.'/,-1 lilfiflti'iMi TO? 1 11.111?. �� $ ���� t,'a '���rn ' '��� $" - L-1.TI tl^jH !!i:vf/t''-L;|'" .!) '���?��� J.'Sl'." Uo nesc TENDERS FOR SUPPLIES. SEALED TENDERS addressed to the undersigned, at New Westminster, li. C, and endorsed on the envelope "Tender for Supplies" will be received up to noon of Monday, 11th day of April, 1SU0, for supplying Ship Chandlery, Hardware, Groceries, Meats and Coal, required for the use of the Department of Public Works at New Westminster, 13. C, until March 81, 1911. Tho supplies furnished must lie of tho best quality of their several kinds and must be delivered at the Government wharf, New Westminster, or where specified in the form of Tender. The Department reserves tho right to accept the whole or part of any Tender. Forms of Tender may be obtained at the office of the Resident Engineer, Department of Public Works, New Westminster, 13. C. Tlie lowest or any Tender will not necessarily be accepted. G. A. KEEFER, Resident Engineer. Department of Public Works, New ���Westminster, B. C, 24th March, 1910. Newspapers Inserting this advertisement without authority will not be paid for it. LAND ACTS. CITY OF NELSON LOSES A REMARKABLE PRISONER Honorary Prisoner at Lockup Had Freedom of City���Saved Corporation Money Past Winter. PLEASED AT PROGRESS OF OKANAGAN HERDS New Westmister Land District. District of New Westminster. Take notice that Alexander McLennan, 01 Vancouver, iinus.i (^oiuu.uia, occupation contractor, intends 10 ap- 1*0' lur permission 10 purciiase u,e loiiowing described lands: bouiiiieiicing ai a post planted at the soutlieusL point ot uie lbiaud situate about, four (4) chains trom 'limber mmi. Au. 381^3, tneuce lioiineny and westerly and southerly and c>usl- eiiy around tno snore at low Hue lo place of commencement, containing lour acres, more or less. ALiiXA^UEK McLENNAN. J. F. 13AGGS, Agent. March 17, 1910. NEW WESTMINSTER CITY ASSESSMENT. Court of Revision. Notice is hereby given that the Assessment Roll for the year 19lu has been returned to me, and remains iu my office where it may be inspected by any person having an interest tnerein, until the sitting of the Court ot Revision. The first sitting of the Court of Revision on the said Assessment Roll will be heid at the City Hail in the said City on Monday, the lSth day of April next, at 11 o'clock, ln the lore- noon. Any person Intending to appeal against the assessment must do so in writing to be filed Vrith the City Clerk at least seven days before the first sitting of the court. W. A. DUNCAN, City Cierk. c.''v --tot;. March IR. 19m NEW WESTMINSTER LAND DISTRICT. District of New Westminster. TAKE NOTICE that the Pitt River Lumber company, Limited, a body corporate having its head office at the City of New Westminster, intends to apply for permission to lease the following described lands: ��� Commencing at a post planted on the westerly shore of Pitt river at its intersection with the northerly side of the Canadian Pacific Railway company's right-of-way, thence following the westerly shore of Pitt river in a northeastly direction, seven thousand eight hundred (7,800) feet more or less to a witness post planted on said shore to locate the most northerly corner of the Pitt River Lumber company, Limited, booming site; thence at right angles to said shore a distance of about three hundred and fifty feet (350) to the said northerly corner of booming site, snld point being two hundred (2d0i feet from low water mark of said shove; thence southwesterly and two hundred (200) feet from said low water mark seven thousand eight hundred and thirty (7830) feet, more or less, to the southwesterly corner of said booming site; thence north- westerly to point of commencement, and containing Bixty (60) acres, more or less. TIIE I'ITT RIVER LUMBER COMPANY, LIMITED. T. W, GRAY, Agrnt. Dated a( the City of New Westminister, 11. C, 1 Ms 28th day of February. . D, 1810. Nelson, 13. C, April 11.���Charlie Foster, who has been the 'prisoner-at- large' of the city lock-up for the past winter, unostentatiously left on a recent morning, upon his summer rambles. Charlie paid no long, lingering farewells. The door was on the latch, and he had been informed that his welcome was about to definitely expire. Ono morning a stillness reigned in the lock-up when the police came round, but everything was in its place. The wood-box stocked, the cots made, i and the place as neat and clean ;ts the proverbial new pin. Charlie had gone. ll was on the evening of December 113 that Foster appealed to "Bob" Reid, tho night constable to run him ln. He claimed that he had searched long and diligently for work, without success, and that he was broke. If he went to a hotel, he would be arrested when they found he had no money and if it was all the same to "Hoi)." he would Just as soon go in at once. Three nights running Foster made this play, and on the last occasion Constable Reid told him that the key would be turned on him. Foster pleaded, and asked that he be sent over as a vagrant. As a last resort he could steal something, and be sent lo jail, but he did not want to offend if he could avoid it. The upshot was that the next morning Foster was brought before his worship, Mayor Selous, who was sitting as magistrate, and after the whole story had been detailed, he became a sort of honorary prisoner. For more than three months he was an unofficial guest of the city, and on balancing accounts at the end of the winter, if was found that he had saved the city money. When other prisoners were in the cells. Foster naturally occupied the position of "trusty," and like everything else he did, this duty was efficiently discharged. One one occasion there were five prisoners, and Foster was ln his element. He made them keep clean, and he fed them well, saving the city money on the meals, which otherwise would have been ordered from the hotels. All the winter Charlie cut the wood for the two fires in the lock-up kept the place scrubbed clean and everything shipshape, and cooked the meals that were required. When there were no other prisoners, Charlie had the freedom of the city, and he employed his liberty with discretion. So far as the police knew, he did not take a drink ol liquor alt winter. On the contrary he employed his abundant leisure In improving ills mind, spending much time in tlie reading room of the library. Charlie was a professional hobo, according to the police, but had more intelligence and application than usually goes with that class. On ono occasion, it is related, an individual was seeking the police in a hurry and, among other places, carried his quest to the door of the lockup. A voice answered the knock. "I want Chief Young." bawled the visitor through the wooden door. "He isn't here," answered the voice through the door. "Oh, is that you, Constable Ellis?" "No, he isn't here." "Hullo. Constable Reid���." "He isn't here, either." "Well, who the dickens then?" "I'm the prisoner," was haughty reply. Victoria, April 12.���R. W. Hodson, provincial live stock commissioner, who has but recently returned from a tour of the British Columbia mainland and interior districts in eonnec- 'tion with the dairy farm competition in which all dairymen of British Columbia are so deeply Inter) stod, spea'<s i with particular appreciation of the J very rapid strides that have been made in the Okanagan in the development of the dairying industry along tlie most modern and progressive lines. Th dairymen of that district are not only greatly improving tho quality of their stock and seeing to it that their stabling, accommodation generally, food, water, etc., are all that can be desired, but they aro establishing the latest facilities in planl, aereating all milk offered for sale, dispensing the same in sanitary bottles, and generally proving themselves entirely up to date���very far in advance, says Mr. Ilodson. of the dairymen of the Yiotoiiu district. The latter are only just beginning to learn the advantage of modern dairy methods, and Mr. Raper will shortly make a big bid for the besl business of Victorians by the opening of a planl which meets the full re- quiren ents of dairy sen nee. He has a herd of upwards of one hundred blooded cattle, and is at present putting in a plant thai is far superior to anything else of the kind on Vancouver island. OKDLK-HUU REGARDING IMMIGRANTS Regulation Is Framed to Prevent the: Dumping of People Liable to Become Public Charge. TALLYRAND EPIGRAMS. French Countess Gives Some Worthy of Her Illustrious Namesake. Paris, April 12.���The Countess Vera de Tallyrand, a well known social leader in tlie highest circles in Paris, has prepared a surprise for her wide circle of friends by having printed for private circulation a little book of aphorisms on life and love, entitled "Thoughts and Remembrances." in this work the Countess Vera reveals herself as a keen student of mankind and the possessor of a delightful wit tempered by broad and kindly philosophy, and by that touch of cynicism which points an epigram. Here is some useful advice to men couched in epigrams on women: "To pleace women one must adhere to only one." "Women never come of age; reason Irritates them, sentiment guides them. "Woman is like the dew. If it is a tear of dawn, a fall of pure alabaster, lt ls a pearl; if it fall to earth it is mud." 1 "When woman loves she pardons even crime; when she ceases to love she does not forgive even virtue." 1 Of her own sex tho Countess remarks: 1 "The coquette takes her desire to please for her need to love." , "The first tiling that women know is that they are beautiful; the last thing they perceive is that they arc old." I "A woman is like an army; she Is j Irretrievably lost lf she has- no re- ;s(;rve-" -4iM*.M FIRST TRADER ARRIVES ON NORTHERN MIGRATION are you, Charlie's The local agency of the Oliver Typewriter company is at 746, Columbia Street. Three doors from the B.C.E.R. car station. ���* I Edmonton. April 12.���One of the first'fur traders to reach the city tiiis ' spring from outside points, to make arrangements for his annual trip to his northern posts, is L. S. Straus, of Chicago and St. Paul, who came in from the south last night, and Is a guest at the Alberta. Mr. Straus has several posts in the northern part of the province, the chief of them being at Fort Resolution, from where he brings out a considerable quantity of fur every year for shipment to his headquarters at St. Paul. Mr. Straus said that he did not expect to go north until early in .May, as the northern rivers would not be In good condition for navigation for a month yet. Hc stated that he expected the fur catch would be larger than last year. This was the concensus of reports which had come down from the north. The last issue of the Canada Gazette I contains details of the recent order in [ Icouncil in regard to immigration passed by the Dominion government These Iprevent the dumping of people who are liable to become a public charge or who are In any way undesirable as citizens, The order is as follows; 1. If an immigrant, male or female, other than a member of a family pro-, vlded for under the next following regulation intending to enter Canada. arrives at the border or at any place I of landing in Canada between the I first day of March and the 30th day of October, both (lays Inclusive, he or ; ii Bhall, as a condition of permission to enter Canada, have i.i his or her possession at the time Of arrival, money belonging absolutely to such Immigrant to the amount of at least $25 In addition to a ticket or Buch sum of money as will purchase a tic Ivei or transport tor such immigrant to his or her destination in Canada. 2. If an immigrant so Intending to enter Canada is tho head of a family jand is accompanied by his or her family or any member or members thereof, tiie foregoing regulations shall not apply to such family or the members (thereof, but the said immigrant head of a family shall have, ln his or her possession, in addition to the said sum of money and means of transport hereinbefore required, a further sum of I money, belonging absolutely to such immigrant, equivalent to $25 for each I member of the said family of the ago ' of eighteen years or upwards, and I $12.50 for each of five years or up- 1 wards and under the age of eighteen ' years, and in addition tickets or a sum equivalent to the cost of transport for all the said members of the ! family to their place of destination 1 in Canada. 3. Every such immigrant arriving j at the border or at any place of landing in Canada between the first day of 1 November and the last day of February, both inclusive, shall be subject to the foregoing regulations, with the substitution of $50 for $25, and $25 for j $12.50, whenever lhe said sums of ! .25 and $12.50 are mentioned in the said regulations. I 4. It shall he the duty of the Immigration agents at the various places or ports of arrival or landing In Canada to see that the foregoing regulations are compiled with. Provided, however, that the immigration agent may, notwithstanding anything hereinbefore contained, except any Immigrant from the operation of the fore- 1 going regulations if it is shown to his satisfaction that: ��� (a) The immigrant, If a male, is going to assured employment at farm work, and has the means of reaching 1 the place of such employment, or ' I (b) That the immigrant, whether I male or female, is of one of the fol- 1 lowing descriptions, and is going to , reside witli a relative of one of the j following descriptions, who is able and willing to support such immigrant I and hns the means of reaching the place of residence of suCli relative: (1) Wife going to husband. (2) Child going to parent. (3) Brother or sister going to brother. (4) Minor going to married or independent sister. (5) Parent going to son or daughter. F. K. BENNETTS, Asst, Clerk of Privy Council. South Westminster property ls handled by Hale Bros, and Kennedy, Ltd. Call in and see them, and they will put before you some good things. W. RICH Teaming and Expressing. DEALER IN WOOD 730 FOURTH ST. PHONE R527 THE STEAMER TRANSFER Will leave the Brackman- Ker Wharf for Ladner, Westham Island and way points at 2 o'clock, returning on the following morning. "Robin Hood Flour is Different." it compares with If, Madam, we could take you right into our Model Bakery at the Mill, where all our tests are made, you would see exactly what we mean when we say, " You would see how favorably other flours in respect to color. Its superior quality would be plainly visibile to you. You would quicker realize why you are to add more water than usual when using it. The bigger loaf made by it would lie before you. Seeing it, you would note its closer texture���no waste. Tasting it, you would admire its finer flavor. In short, you would surely decide that you ought to start using Robin Hood Flour right away. But, Madam, if you cannot come to our Bakery, we can help you to have better Baking Results of your own. Use Robin Hood Flour yourself, and prove that what we claim for it is true. We supply the flour-quality. We give the guarantee. It is up to you to get the benefit. Have you asked your grocer about our Money-back-guarantee yet ? Saskatchewan Flour Mills Co. Limited, r.Iocce Jaw, Sask. * SURRE PROPE Is the Cream of Investments 17 large lots situated in the choicest part of Surrey, South Westminster-The ideal suburban homesite. Price $150 per lot. Must lie sold en block; adjoining property is selling at $250 per lot. The Above is a Money Maker SCOTT ROAD " The Gateway of lhe Delta " 160 acres in section 25. 155 acres in section 18, 165 acres in section 18. 120 acres in section 12. All the above are on the Scott Road and the prices range from $110 to $150 per acre. See us for full particulars. List Wilh Us. We Are Sure Sellers. E. J. FADER Northern Crown Bank Building. Phone 295 L 1 Ph ������* (od< |gn, sc IdNe N IjAi PR CO Esti Eastertrook Milling Company, Eburne, B. C. FLOUR ! FLOUR ! IMPERIAL $7 per bbl. HUNGARIAN JEWEL..��6.75 per Bbl. TERMINAL .5.25 per Bbl. HINDOO FLOUR $4.50 per Bbl- McOuarrie & Co FL0UR AND feed merchants FRONT 8TREET. New Westminster. Telephone S33. B.C. Mills Timber and Trading to. ^~\viif Manufacturers and Dealers in All Kinds of LUMEBR, LATH, SHINGLES, SASH, DOORS, INTERIOR FINISH TURNED WORK, FISH BOXES. LARGE STOCK PLAIN AND FANCY GLASS. Telephone 12 Royal City Planing Mills Branch New Westminster Bex 13? CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY CO. White Star-Dominion Canadian Service _ (5) ^e-i Atlantic Express Leaves Daily at 3:25 ���Ddklng direct connections for all , points in Eastern Canada and United States. Revelstoke local and connection for Seattle and all points south leaves daily at 8:35; Agassiz local at 5:35 p. m. For further particulars apply to ED. GOULET, C. P. R. Agent. or C. B. FOSTER, A.O.P.A. Vancouver S.S S.S. NEW STEAMERS Montreal to Liverpool LAURENTIC��� Triple screw, 14,900 tons. MEGANTIC��� Twin screw, 14,900 tons. largest and most modern. commodation equal to .iny cross' ing the Atlantic. For Rates and Tickets Apply t0 E. G O U L E T, C. P. R. Passenger Station NEW WESTMINSTER The Ac- g. CANADIAN PACIFIC B.C. CoastSS. Sailings R'flJHH^ mp*':' up ______WkW_ "l��H.| Wt_W_Waa_W*WKBa\V. Princess Charlotte leaves Vancouver at 10 a. in. daily except Wednesday for Victoria. Princess Royal daily at 1:30 p. m. SS. Joan leaves Vancouver at 2 p. m. daily except Sunday for Nanaimo. SS. Queen City leaves Vancouver Mondays at 5 p .m. for Union and Comox. SS. Princess May leaves Vancouver at 11 p. m. April 24, and every ten days thereafter. i SS. Beaver leaves New Westminster at 8 a. m. Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays for Chilliwack; returning leaves Chilliwack at 7 a. m. Tuesdays,. Thursdays and Saturdays. Westminster Transfer Co. Wfflce THone in. Barn Fhone 1�� Columbia 8treeT B*gg*ge delivered promptly t0 any part of tha city. Light and Heavy Hauling OFFICE���TRAM DEPOT. plione 667 Estimates Given. J. NEWSOME & SONS PAINTERS, PAPER-HANGERS AN DECORATORS. 214 Sixth avenue, between S'^ond enue and Third streets. ^ NEW WESTMINSTER fa. esdav, APBIL 13, 1910. THE DAILY NEWS. >*���������������������< e Have Client Waiting to invest in New Westminster Properties. List your property with us. PAGE SEVEN. CANADIAN NAVY OFFERS CAREER . r )j-��~J?&r___mmi*MWF^siWa*^ the VILLE REALTY CO. 21 09 Granville St. phone; R4949 Vancouver, B.C. lodel Sign Works YEE KEE & CO. SCENE AND ORNAMENTAL PAINTING. Id News Block, Sixth Street New Westminster. Theo. P. Young. Prop. JACKSON PRINTING COMPANY CORRECT STYLISH PRINTING Estimates Given on Any Kind of Job Printing Thomson Blk. Phone 388 TAILORS Suits Cleaned and Pressed. Windsor Hotel Block P. 0. Box S44 COAL New Wellington JOSEPH MAYERS Phone 105. P. 0. Box 345. Office, Front St., Foot of Sixth. "YOU NEEDN'T COME AROUND" to our office every time you need a ton of coal���any of our drivers will bo glad to take your order. Then, too, a postal will bring about the same result���good coal In your cellar at short notice. Also, our phone is in good order, and their numbers are 15 and 16. Coal procured here is crackajack coal, however secured. TAKE NOTICE that an application jasbeen made to register the Corpor- atlon o the Township or District of rt_.I���y,1?8t^e,ownerin "���-���simple, un- :!���������. i ���'���'���'" '""l| ' i the Reeve l;1';;.^ of the Corporation of the i^nH-ip or Distrlcl ol Surrey to the Corporate, of the Township* Die- !."��� ��1 Surrey, bearing dates m' the 218 day ���f October, A.D., 1905 and - ,fet da-v (l1 December, ,\.li., l.ol of "ll ami singular that certain parcel or tract oi land and premises situate ylng and being in the District or New Westminster, in the Province of British Columbia, more particularly known and described as: Lol l in subdivision 24 of hlock l of Bectlon :io, block & north, range 2 west; lots 8 to 17, Inclusive, of subdivision ::; of section 16, block B, north range 2 west; lots 15 to 21, inclusive, block 11 of southeast quarter Bectlon l, township 9; lots 5,1',, and 7, in subdivision 23 of section Ul, block ;,. north range 2, west; lots 22 and 23, in subdivision 23 of section Hi, block 5, north range 2, west; lots l, 2, 3, i, 5, 6, 7, 8, 11, 12, block -1 or bu 387A, group 2; lots 2 to (1 .inclusive, blo.k 11 or southeast, quarter section ���!. township 9; bu. 5, block li of loi. 387A, group 2; lot ::s, i,io,k ^ of lo; 387A, group 2; lots 21, 22, block :; ol' southeast quarter .onion 4, township 9; lots is, mi, block 2 of southeast quarter section 4, township 9; lot 22, block IG of southeast quarter section 4. township 9, map 519; lot 2!i, block IG of southeast quarter section 4 township 9. You and those claiming through or under you and all persons claiming any interest in the said land by virtue of any unregistered Instrument, and all persons claiming any interest in the said land by descent, whose title is not registered under tlie provisions of the "Land Registry Act," are required to contest tho claim of tbe tax purchaser within forty-five days from the day of tbe first publication of this notice upon you, and In default of a caveat or certificate of Us pendens being filed within such period, or in default of redemption before registration, you and each of you will be forever estopped and debarred from setting up any claim to or in respect of the said land, and I shall register The Corporation of the Township or District of Surrey as owner thereof ln fee. And I hereby order that publication of this notice for thirty days in a daily newspaper published In New Westminster will be good and sufficient service thereof. Dated at the Land Registry Ofiice, New Westminster, Province of British Columbia, this 29th day of March, A, D., 1910. C. S. KEITH, District Registrar. To David Miller, William A. McCal- lam, Angus Mclnnes, T. G. Stark, William Davis, Henry Fraser, Henry Kells, Harold Ponsford, Allen Spiers, George Stone, Robert Lyness, Margaret G. Cooper, John Roberts, Richard Hosking, Hugh T. Crossley, John B. Hunter. type ot vessels which would be of the greatest assistance to thc empire ln case of hostilities, It stands to reason that Canada has the nucleus of a navy of which any country would be proud. As lo the destroyers, those; for tbe | Canadian navy are larger than any ! similar typo In the navies of tho Argentine Republic, Austria-Hungary, lOUng- Men Wishing tO Serve Chili, China, Denmark, Greece, Italy, Japan, Netherlands, Portugal, Norway Netherlands. the Empire Will be Wei-'sw<<ti-n mui-ruruey corned on Fleet. LAND REGISTRY ACT. GILLEY BROS., Ltd. | ��* *Wfc 'COPYRIGHT! A DELICIOUS CUP OF COFFEE whese aroma is fragrant and appetlz- j ing, a chop or steak with fried pota- : toes, or a dainty broiled chicken, saok as w�� prepare, to tempt your appetite these cold mornings, ls what , you need. We can tempt the palate ot aa anohorite. KENNY'S | 73i COLUMBIA STREET, OPP. TRAM OFFICE. Beef, Mutton, Veal, ^ork and Poultry QUALITY THE BEST. Fresh Oysters are on sale twice weekly ���*��� Burns & Co **.- C. Treves, Manager. pHONE 101. 645 COLUMBIA 8TRE���T. TAKE NOTICE that an application has heen made to register George Troughten as the owner in Fee Sim- p.e, under a Tax Sale Deed from Edwin M. Carncross, collector of the Municipality of Surrey, to George Troughten. bearing date the 7th day of September, A. D. 1908, of all and singular that certain parcel or tract of land and premises situate, lying and being in the District of New Westminster, in the Province of British Columbia, more particularly known and described as:��� Lot 7, Biock 1, being a portion of Section 20, Block 6, North Range, 2 West. Lots 3 and 4, part of a portion of fractional section 21, Btock i North Range 2 West. You and those claiming through under you and all persons claiming any interest in the said land by virtue of in unregistered instrument, and all persons claiming any interact in the saU "Land Registry Act," are required to contest the ciaim of the tax purchaser within forty-five days from the date of the service of this notice upon yn , and in default of a caveat or t*ti f - cate of lis pendens being filed v.ithm such period, or in default of redemption before registration, you and each of you will be forever estopped nnd debarred from setting up any claim to or In respect of the said land, and I shall register George Troughten ns owner thereof In fee. And I hereby order that publication of this notice for thirty days in a daily newspaper published in New Westminster will be good and sufficient service thereof. Dated at the Land Registry Office, New Westminster, Province of British Columbia, this 9th day of March, A' a m��- C. 9. KEITH. District Itegistrar. To:~Michael Robert Barry. John D-liie'ns Alr.ypnHer G. Mncfftr'anp There is a great deal of misapprehension as to the size of the vessels which it is proposed sliall form the nucleus of a Canadian navy. Conservatives have made it appear that the entiri scheme is upon such a trivial plan thai im tui uie ls presented for the youth of Canada to enter upon the naval profession, Doubt has been presented la two forms. First that the proposed navy was of the "tin pot" variety, so Insignificant lh.il no career was pre- tented to young Canadians to join lt, because ii offered no attractions. Second Because tlie navy contemplated did nol meet with the approbation of the British admiralty. These two suggestions are without any foundation in fact, lt may be said first, thai the vessels are of greal size, tonnage and strength; and secondly, that they are the very type selected by the British admiralty. To make the subject more intelligible the proposed vessels are as fol-1 lows: Nlobe, armoured cruiser, 11,000 tons displacement; 435 feet long, 0y feet beam; 26 feet draught; 10,500 Indicated horse power; speed 20 knots; cost originally $2,741,415; coal capacity, 1,000 tons; complement, 000 men; IG 6-in, guns, 14 12-pounders, 5 2- pounders, 2 machine guns, 2 torpedo (tubes. I This vessel is to be purchased from I the British government, and will be 'first stationed on the Atlantic side, ���and be used as a training ship. It is i part of the scheme to train Canadians for a naval career, pending the I construction of the permanent ves- Isels of tbe fleet. This will meet the I aspirations of a great many young | men who have already signified their j intention of entering the navy. Rainbow, armoured cruiser. This Ms a vessel of 3,600 tons purchased from the British government to do ; service on the Pacific as a training ! ship, in the same way as the Niobe 'will on the Atlantic. Four Bristols, armoured crulser9, each 4,S00 tons displacement; 430 feet [long; 47 feet beam, IB 1-4 feet draught, i 22,000 Indicated horse power; speed, i 125 knots; complement each 20 officers I and 371 men. I These are the latest type of fast | President cruisers being constructed by tlie Vipp-PrpdHpnt British admiralty. So recent are they \ �� tt a u j that the latest particulars with to- JaS. ti. ASnaOWll I gard t; them have not been given out, J T) Q Q^XneYOR [The particulars of construtclon audi ' 'armament will not be divulged. Six destroyers of the latest improved river class. The very latest type adopted by the British admiralty. They j will be about 225 feet long, 23 1-2 feet beam, 9 feet G inches draught; twin 'screw; GOO tons displacement; 7,500 I indicated horse power, over 25 knots | I speed. Total complement, 30 officers,' France, Germany and the L'nited States have some destroyers larger than those of Canada, but the Canadian ones are vastly superior to many of those belonging to either of the countries mentioned In tonnage, indicated horsepower and speed. Career for Young Men. The few particulars given here, which may bo found by reference to official sources, indicate that Canada will have a navy of tho most up-to- , date character. It Is true there will i be no Dreadnought yet, but all the other vessels are the best modern science has evolved. Much has been said about Australia and New Zealand giving Dread- , noughts to the British navy. It Should be remembered that while I Australia provides a unit. Great Brit- ain contributes .1,250,000 a year towards tho expense of It. As to New Zealand, It was arranged that tho Dreadnought provided by her should bo stationed on the China station, and only the smaller vessels of the unit be maintained in New Zealand waters. Australia the Same. There ls another point about, which much misunderstanding exists. Criticism has been directed against the Canadian government because the Canadian fleet does not pass automatically under British control in case of war. It appears that Australia has a similar provision ln the law to that of Canada. To set tho matter at rest, ; Admiral Klngsmlll cabled the Australian government as follows; Parliament Must Consent. "Please inform me by telegraph, as soon as possible, whether, in the I event of war, vessels of Australia's navy pass automatically, without, any action, under control of admiralty." I To the above cable the following reply was received by Admiral Kings- mill: "With reference to your telegram, transfer control to the admiralty is not to be automatic, but subject to> approval of Commonwealth government on declaration of war." The objections urged in this regard to the control of Canadian parliament have no force. Young Men Will Join Navy. it is confidently anticipated that many applications will be made by young Canadians ambitious to make a career In the Canadian navy. To tbem it. may bo said, that not only Is the ambition laudable, but in the Canadian navy they will have the same opportunity as would be available ia any first class navy In the woi hi. it is true that Canada at C:ls time cannot offer positions upon Dreadnoughts, but ibis is ro1 a serious drawback. Cruisers form the largest part of every navy; tiiey are more mobile, and on board of them the recruit sees more service than he would upon a mere fighting machine. The Canadian navy otters an honorable career to young men who seek the profession of the sea. The vessels of the Canadian navy are tlie very best and latest of their type, and experience upon one of them will count ln any navy in the world. j It ls a crime to discourage anibl- | tions young men from joining the navy upon the ground that the boats I are small and Insignificant. This la I not thc case. The Canadian cruisers are the equal of any afloat of their ! type, and superior to most cruisers of any other recognized fleet In the world today. This can readily be seen by reference to any naval annual. CREAM FROM CANADA. To Make Butter for United States Cities. New York, April 12.���Dealers on the wholesale butter market here predicted today that as a result of the reduction in the tariff on cream front eleven cents to five cets a gallon, there will shortly be large quant (ties of cheaper butter offered to consumers In New York, Chicago and other cities within reasonable distance of the Canadian border. A chain of creameries, It Is said, ls to be built along the Canadian frontier, which will make butter from Canadian cream, and will be able to market the product at a reduction of 25 per cent from the current price. Northern Crown Bank HEAD OFFICE, WINNIPEG ^js_A Capital, Authorized, ��� - �� $6,000,000 Capital, Paid Up, $2,200,000 DIRECTORS - Sir D.H. McMillan, K.C.M.G. Capt. Wm. Robinson H. T. Champion Frederick Nation W. C. Leistikow Hon. R. P. Roblin A General Banking Business Transacted R. Campbell J. P. Roberts General Manager - Supt. of B. C. Branches E. HAWKSHAW, Manager New Westminster Branch ADVERTISE IN THE NEWS NOTICE. District of New Westmister. TAKE NOTICE that thirty days after date date I. William B. Wright of Clayburn, B. C, Intend to apply to the Assistant Commissioner ofI LaM�� for a license to prospect for eoal an-l petro.eum on the following described '""commencing at a post markedI Wm. E. Wrights southwest corner set at the southeast corner of BUJ1���* ^ No 205, Group 2, New ^estml"ter District, thence east one ttUt,��gg north one mile, thence west tnre fourths ot a mile, ^e ��outt thgj fourth of a mile to the point of com- m6nCementWiLLIAM E. WRIGHT. New Westminster, B. C, March 8, 1910. 548 men. Substantial Fighting Force. The navy will thus consist of: twelve vessels, 210 officers and 2,500 men. As to the armament it cannot be mentioned now with any certain-| ty, as details of this description are , not given publicity, but the fleet wlll be a formidable fighting unit, and of the greatest service to the empire ln case of emergency. As coast and commerce protectors tbey are the very game class of vessels used for a similar purpose by Great Britain and are recommended to Canada as tbe most useful trp�� for the purposes required. Approximately this navy will cost $11,500,000 to build and about $3,000,- 000 a year to maintain. The entire scheme was based upon the specific recommendations of the British admiralty. The object sought 1 was to relieve the British fleet of the task of defending commercial routes In time of war. The cruisers, lt was pointed out, would by reason of their great speed, be enabled to know the whereabouts of aa enemy and give timely warning to the heavier battleships. At the same time their own armament will be of such strength that they can take care of themselves in an emergency. These are the vessels described by Conservatives as a "tin pot" navy. For the purpose of comparison lt may be mentioned that the Nlobe is 3,000 tons larger than the two largest of the United States cruisers, and 8,000 tons larger than most of the others. The Bristols will be exceeded ln size by only three United States cruisers���(two being those referred to above, which are themselves 3,000 tons smaller than the Nlobe). The Bristols will bo larger by several thousand tons, than thirty cruisers of the United States' navy, and be only exceeded ln size by three United States cruisers. lf the Canadian navy ls "tin pot" what of tho United States navy? Compared With Other Navies. Another point of comparison is that the Canadian cruisers are larger than any cruiser in the navies of the Argentine Republic, Brazil, Chili, Chi- J na, Denmark, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Sweden, Turkey. Canada's cruisers are larger than 32 out of 37 French cruisers. Canada's cruisers are larger than 45 out of 51 German cruisers. Canada's cruisers are larger than 22 cruisers of the Italian fleet. Canada's cruisers are larger than 27 out of 30 Japanese cruisers. Canada's cruisers are larger than 9 out of 10 Spanish cruisers. i It Is evident that the Canadian navy bears comparison well with the cruisers of any other marine power I in the world. Cruisers are a very Im- ! potant part of a navy and, ns Canada followed the suggestion from the British admiralty with regard to the Symmes & Crandell Beg to announce that they have opened a REAL ESTATE business in the NEW DEAN BLOCK , .^.s. M (3 doors from Bank of Montreal, Columbia St.) We already have quite a number of desirable properties. Come and see our list. It ls growing every day and we will be pleased to add any which you may have. CHEAP HOUSES Six Money making buys for home or Investment - - ���1,500 to $8,000. Easy Terms.. Inquire at once. Also a 500 foot bargain In Waterfront at $26. LI8T YOUR PROPERTY WITH US FOR QUICK SALE8. VANCOUVER FINANCIAL CORPORATION LTD. I J. A. MOTHERWELL, Local Manager. Room 4, Merchants Band Bldg. Corner Columbia and Begbie Sts. I Is This a Snap or Not ? 20 Acres of Splendid High Land within a few minutes of Sapperton car. Fine view of the Fraser River and city of New Westminster. Price is $250 per acre with One-third Cash, balance 6, 12, 18, 24 months ���r H. H. LENNIE ;; Phone 596 650 Columbia Street i b ���':- i I. d . ii *.\��. !*( ���Kit ���;�� 1.1 ,��� *, * i 1J sill? I i tl;.- *��� -, ' a * ' '' P *\$V\r 8 nlW ���i ���> :i, ���-���]( AlNfc���feK Ki: y. I -_ <**' | ��� M'vjR' i It: IWw';*'"'% 1 '��� ' - PAGE EIGHT. \ THE DAILY NEWS. WEDNESDAY. APR,L - "i iw (AHOT URON A COLD H/iNDLE I City News I I "Asbestos Iron" J WHY NOT USE THE REST. ��� NO MORE BURNT HANDS. * Anderson & Lusby COLUMBIA STREET. ������������������������������������������������������������������������������ ��� ��� ��� ��� i a a a ��� ��� ��� ��� : ��� M WE DREAD-NOUGHT IN COM- j PETITION. X n~*9m t Our Naval Policy Is to have nothing but first class workmen and satisfy our customers with first class Plumbing and Heating. ��� ��� ��� .��� HARDMAN'S HARDMAN BLOCK. Phone 281 The Westminster Modern Business School This institution is particularly desirous of securing as students the young men and young women who seek the BEST In commercial education and to those who become students here, and work as hard for their own interests as the instructors of this school will, the outcome is bound to be satisfactory. A. L. BOUCK, 610 Columbia St. Principal. We Give Careful Attention to accounts of corporations, firms and Individuals, and shall be pleased to meet or correspond with those who contemplate making changes or open Ing new accounts. If you haven't a Savings Account NOW Is the best time to start one The Royal Bank of Canada (Incorporated 1S69) Capital Paid-Up $5,000,000 Reserve 5,700,000 Total Assets 70,000,000 New Westminster, B. C. Branch, F. RHU^B Manager. CANADIAN PACIFIC AT LA NTIC $j��|jp H IPS Do not book your passage without seeing us first. Our system of handling tickets from the Old Country will save you money. For dates and rates applv ED. GOULET, C.P.R. Agent. ENGLISH WATCHMAKER Gold Watcaes for Ladies from $12./; up. Silver Watches, gents' open face $6.00. Silver Watches, gents' open case $7.50 up. Agent for Waltham and Jilgin Watches. Watch repairing a specialty. F. CRAKE Two Doors from Geo, Adams' Grocery MII'S DRUG STORE Removed to DEAN BLOCK Four doors east of Bank of Montreal, where the same careful attention will be paid to all prescriptions and orders as heretofore. Mrs. James Leamy, of 39 Columbia street, will not receive on Thursday. The popularity of the midday lunch at the Royal Cafe grows every day. It is served from twelve to two, with quick service. ** A cigar factory, under the direction of A. Snowder, of Vancouver, has commenced business in the Colonial hotel block. For spring plants or cut flowers, ] phone Davies' Groenhouse, R208. ** A further consignment of the world's best typewriters has just an ived. Call and see them at 746 Columbia street, three doors from the B. C. E. Ry car station. ** The Ladies of the .Maccabees will meel In ihe i. o. o. F. hall at three o'clock this afternoon. The initiation of a number of candidates Will be followed by a social. To Furnish an Office, sre W. E. Fales. ��* Call al the Bohemian Cafe today and have lunch there. It is being run as a lirst class dining room. ** Camp 191, Sons of Scotland, will pay a fraternal visit to Royal Scots camp, Vancouver, on Thursday, April 22, leaving on a special car at 7:25 p. in. and returning about midnight. Great selection of seeds and potted plants at Tidy's. ** The Bohemian Cafe starts business today in the Depot Hotel. ** C. R. Saver, the travelling secretary of tbe Y. M. C. A. in Canada, left for Vancouver yesterday efelling on his way to Calgary. It is our business to <make gloves, vests, waists and other garments perfect by our special dry cleaning process. If you desire to be well dressed for any function, patronize our cleaning department. Royal City Cleaners and Dyers. Phone R 298. *�� The funeral of Henry James Roland Thrift, who died on Sunday, will take place today at two p. in., from the mortuary chapel of Murchie & Sons to the I. O. O. F. cemetery. The late Mr. Thrift was thirty-nine years old and is survived by a wfi'e and five small children, the eldest of which is nine and tne youngest three. He is a son of H. T. Thrift, of Hazelmere. For Ladies' Desks, go to W. E. Fales. *�� Scows for hire. Apply Joseph Crane, Queensborough Ship Yards, Lulu Island. ** The monthly meeting of the Philan- thies was held yesterday afternoon at the residence of Miss Carrie Robson, St. George street. It was decided to hold a social in the league room of, Queen's avenue Methodist church later in the month. The executive committee was instructed to secure badge pins for the forty-seven members of the society. A payment of $25 procures a lot in South Westminster from Hale Bros. & Kennedy, Ltd. These lots are In great demand. ** See the new arrivals at Fales, Agnes street. ** Judge Howay yesterday refused to hear an application made for bail for S. H. Ford, who is at present held at the jail on a charge of wounding with intent to do bodily harm. The reason given by his honor was that Ford had written him a personal letter asking for bail. Judge Howay set the date for tbe hearing on Saturday, April 16, when Judge Murphy will be here from Vancouver. Through his counsel, W. J. Whiteside, Ford elected to be tried at the regular May assizes. Local grown plants and flowers, fresh every day at the Co-Operative store, Sixth street. Miss Doris Leslie Clute, the youngest daughter of J. S. Clute, of this city, and Hubert Bruce McBaln, of Vancouver, were married yesterday afternoon at Holy Trinity church, the Rev. Canon d'Easum officiating. The bridesmaids were Miss Brown and Miss Gertrude Brown, cousins of the bride. Mr. McBain was attended by John Belyea and John Ersldne, of Vancouver, whilst Mr. and Mr. Wood acted as ushers. Mr. and Mrs. McBaln will spend their honeymoon In Portland. The finest assorstment of Morris chairs ever seen in tills city at Fales. ** The Women's Auxiliary of the Royal Columbian hospital is making arrangements with the amateur company which recently produced "Pinafore" in Vancouver for the appear* ancs of ihis aggregation at the local opera house, probably about the end of this uiouili. Timber limit for sale, containing ten to twelve million feet of fir and cedar. This is a good logging proposition and convenient to water. In order to close up an estate must be sold at once. For particulars and price, apply to Owner, 1001 Sixth avenue, New Westminster. ** m jeesie Mclaughlin coming. Talenter Scottish Songstress Will Appear Here on Wednesday, May 25. Arrangements have just been com- Ipleted by Rev. A. E. Vert, acting on j behalf of Camp 191, Sons of Scotland, for the appearance here on Wednesday, May 25, of Miss Jessie MeLaugh- lan, a Scottish singer of world wide fame. .Miss McLaughlan will be on the coast, appearing in Vancouver and Victoria, about that time, and it was owing to this circumstance that the local Sons of Scotland were enabled to make arrangements for her visit to New Westminster on terms which will permit of reasonable prices being charged for admittance. Miss McLaughlan appeared before a Westminster audience about four years ago, when she created as favorable an impression as is her invariable rule in enlightened communities. FUNERAL NOTICE. Rose of Columbia Lodge No. 115, Sons of England Benefit Society: The members are requested to meet in tlie lodge room, K. of P. hall, on Wednesday, April 13, at 1:45 p. m., for the purpose of attending the funeral of our late brother, H. J. R. Thrift, which takes place from the Murchie undertaking parlors. Sojourning brethren are cordially invited to attend. H. DISNEY, Secretary. "GET THE HABIT" Coal Scuttles SPECIAL TODAY 45c Each Thc Fair 646 Columbia Street. Wc buy for cash and seil for the same. STORAGE HERBERT P. VIDAL Market Square PHONE 475. For a Few Days Only SPECIAL SNAPS IN Lulu Island Acreage and Waterfrontage | Also some Choice Puys in Surrey. F. J. HART & Co. U LIMITED. Cotton Shantung Poplin Suitings Perfect imitations of real silk���so splendidly have the weavers and dyers done their work that no doubt is possible regarding the success of their endeavors to perfect their production of cotton suiting; shades of Wisteria, Reseda, Myrtle, Brown, Rose Pink, Nile, Pawn, Natural, Cream. Navy, etc., are here ln many fabrics, Cotton Shantungs, Cotton Pongees, Coi (led Poplins, Bedford Cords, Lineiio, Indian Head in weights particularly appropriate for spring and summer Tailored Waists and Suits. Per yard, 20 to 75c 15,000 Yards of Prints and Ginghams 15c per Yard; 7 Yards for $i.qo No store _ the Bhowa a more complete stock o Wash Fabrics l��� the immen,e range of Plain and Fancy G|ng hams, English Prints, White Crossbar and Striped Muslim Colored Muslins. Ducks, |>���',' cales, etc., arc the color's ir, ally shown from season to % son as well as hundreds jB new tones _ new ,|, ,., M l which fashion has Bel We carry only the best quail. ties and we have . , that the colors aro fast. Visit the Wash c|ooda Section or write foi samples Per yard, 15c; 7 yards for $1.00 Moirette and Heatherbloom Underskirts $2 to $3 each Either Moirette or Heatherbloom is a material reliable in every way. These materials bave been made purposely for Underskirts. Skirts are made with full flounce on which are two narrow frills; also with wide dust ruffle underneath. Shown In Black, Brown, Green, Navy and Black and" White Check. Each, $2.00 to $3.00 Scotch Plaid Moirette Underskirts ft*fr��j Pine quality Moirette ln very pretty Tartan designs. Skirts are made full with deep flounce ruffles', all lengths. Each $2.25 Children's Wash Dresses 50c to ��1.00 Each Our showing of Children's Wash Dresses is worthy of the consideration of any mother who finds it difficult or impossible to make her girl's clothing. Prices are very little higher than the cost of material alone and all sizes are here. In these Wash Dresses the materials used are English Prims. Ginghams, Chambrays and Percales, trimmed with pipings. The work upon these dresses Is well done; no raw seams; built in proper proportions for Canadian girls; and colors are fast. Sizes suitable for girls 1 to 8 years of age. Each 50c to f1M Infants' White Frocks "50c to ��1-75 Each Mull Lawn and Soft Cambric, made up In attractive styles for the wee folks. These Frocks are daintily trimmed with lace and sheer embroidery. Many styles from which to choose your baby's frock at prices ranging from 50c to $!���" Many New Attractive Features Find Favor in the Millinery Section jj' \ I Every day s;"s some of Millinery Novelties. I) a new selection of fine London. Fancy bandeaux ideas. New straw plaits a including wheats and gras placed in stock. These terials are being rapidly creations. Visit the Millinery De Hat while the selection 1 thing new In the showing uring the past few days straw shapes direct from depicting latest New York nd fancy flower sprays, ses has been received and varied and handsome ma- moulded Into up-to-date partment and secure your s at Its best. W. S. COLLISTER & CO. THE STORE FOR WOMEN'S WEAR. ,^^*.->w^yw^4^-tw����4��cT!|y*fj^i- ll_i-.se ��>'���
- Library Home /
- Search Collections /
- Open Collections /
- Browse Collections /
- BC Historical Newspapers /
- The Daily News
Open Collections
BC Historical Newspapers

Featured Collection
BC Historical Newspapers
The Daily News Apr 13, 1910
jpg
Page Metadata
Item Metadata
Title | The Daily News |
Alternate Title | [New Westminster Daily News] |
Publisher | New Westminster, B.C. : The Daily News Publishing Company, Limited |
Date Issued | 1910-04-13 |
Geographic Location | New Westminster (B.C.) |
Genre |
Newspapers |
Type |
Text |
File Format | application/pdf |
Language | English |
Notes | Titled The Daily News from 1906-03-06 to 1912-04-24; Westminster Daily News from 1912-04-25 to 1912-12-04; and The New Westminster News from 1912-12-05 to 1914-09-04. Published by The Daily News Publishing Company, Limited from 1903-03-06 to 1912-04-24; and The National Printing and Publishing Co., Ltd. from 1912-04-25 to 1914-09-04. |
Identifier | The_Daily_News_1910-04-13 |
Series | BC Historical Newspapers |
Source | Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives. |
Date Available | 2015-12-18 |
Provider | Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library |
Rights | Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Digitization Centre: http://digitize.library.ubc.ca/ |
DOI | 10.14288/1.0317420 |
Latitude | 49.206667 |
Longitude | -122.910556 |
Aggregated Source Repository | CONTENTdm |
Download
- Media
- nwdn-1.0317420.pdf
- Metadata
- JSON: nwdn-1.0317420.json
- JSON-LD: nwdn-1.0317420-ld.json
- RDF/XML (Pretty): nwdn-1.0317420-rdf.xml
- RDF/JSON: nwdn-1.0317420-rdf.json
- Turtle: nwdn-1.0317420-turtle.txt
- N-Triples: nwdn-1.0317420-rdf-ntriples.txt
- Original Record: nwdn-1.0317420-source.json
- Full Text
- nwdn-1.0317420-fulltext.txt
- Citation
- nwdn-1.0317420.ris
Full Text
Cite
Citation Scheme:
Usage Statistics
Share
Embed
Customize your widget with the following options, then copy and paste the code below into the HTML
of your page to embed this item in your website.
<div id="ubcOpenCollectionsWidgetDisplay">
<script id="ubcOpenCollectionsWidget"
src="{[{embed.src}]}"
data-item="{[{embed.item}]}"
data-collection="{[{embed.collection}]}"
data-metadata="{[{embed.showMetadata}]}"
data-width="{[{embed.width}]}"
async >
</script>
</div>

http://iiif.library.ubc.ca/presentation/cdm.nwdn.1-0317420/manifest