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This serves as a link between CONTENTdm and Archivematica."}],"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"label":"Aggregated Source Repository","value":"CONTENTdm","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:dataProvider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who contributes data indirectly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"AlternateTitle":[{"label":"Alternate Title ","value":"[New Westminster Daily News]","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/alternative","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:alternative"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/alternative","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An alternative name for the resource.; Note - the distinction between titles and alternative titles is resource-specific."}],"DateAvailable":[{"label":"Date Available","value":"2016-06-14","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DateIssued":[{"label":"Date Issued","value":"1914-05-28","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"label":"Digital Resource Original Record","value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nwdn\/items\/1.0316060\/source.json","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:aggregatedCHO"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The identifier of the source object, e.g. the Mona Lisa itself. This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   V 2 0\nv\n...\nH   -\nVolume v.-Number 71.\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C., THURSDAY MORNING, May 28, 1914.\nPrice Five Cents,\nSIGN PROTOCOL    {MS CONFISCATED    jMHWAUK.. GETS   HEAVY RAINS\nWITHIN A WCCKJ     By R[BEl lfADfR!   CANADIAN fNTRYJ     HINDER WORK\nMexican Problems Rapidly\nBeing Disposed of by the\nMediators.\nPrincipal  Issues in  Dispute Are Practically  Settled\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdInternal  Affairs\nStill  to  Be Considered.\nGeneral Carranza Takes Possession of\nProperty  Owned  by  Foreigners\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdValued at Several Million\nEagle Pass, Tex., May 27.   Acting\n|on  what  they  snid  were orders from:\nI General Carransa, constitutionalist of-:\n; flcisis conflsoated today    five   coal i\n' mines near Sablnas, Mexico. The\nmines are owned by Krench and American capitalists and are ihe large**!\nin Mexico. At constitutionalists head-\nquarters at Pledras Negras it was\nsaid tlie mines would be opened us j\npublic properties\nPERPETUAL RIGHTS\nTOD-ADMAN'S ISLAND\nThrough   Freight   Will   BeIConstitutionalists Unable to\nRouted to New West- Establish Lines of Com-\n^^^^   minster. I   t        munication.\nContract   Will   Be   Let   to   Complete\nConnection With B. C. E. R. into\nThlr. Cify.\nNiagara Falls, Ont,  May 27.- Dis-\nposition oi tbe .Mexican problem by     ,..,\nmediation   bad   so   far   pre;.res.led   at   M   ,llt,   Jjjfoondlda\nthe end of today's conference* that ii jcandido and  Lampacltes.   The\nwas predicted that a proctocol would |panles operated under Mexican\nbe signed  within  a  week.\nTrie  main  issues  are  understood  to\ninn- been satisfactorily worked out\nin principle and ii now only remains\ntu ,,' determined whether e-i rtain is-\nsui ii of comparatively minor importance shall be Included in tbe scope\nni lhe negotiations, Issues of this nature Wi re understood to have been\ntne subject of a conference held today in Toronto between the mediators and the American delegates before attending the garden party giv-\ni n *d lhe Duke and Duchess uf Connaught und the mediation colony. En\nroute tonight from Toronto back to\nNiagara falls the mediators communicated the views of the Americans to\nthe Mexican delegates in Informal discussions aboard the special car.\nThe  points yi t  to  be  taken  up it\nis  understood  relate chiefly  to\nmil  problems aud  it Is known\nlhe  disposition  of  thi\nii  is  decided  to seek\nNo  Record of Such an Order Can Be\nFound   in   the  Government  Archives  at   Ottawa.\nARMS LANDED\nEOR HUERTA\nStrong Anti-American  Feeling Causes\nApprehen.ion Among Oil Men\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nThreats Ma-.e.\nSeattle. ,\\iay 27.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdContinuing its po-\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^     liey of teaching into ail the large ship-\ni-Jlnes ordered seised re known I ping centres of the    North    Pacific\nAitiiajita,   M< nor, ; coast, the  Milwaukee is about to  let I\nthe contract for constructing a three |\nmile connecting track at Sumas whicli I\nwill  link the big line with  the  B. C.\nElectric  railway  at  Huntingdon,  B.C.\nand   enable  the  through     billing    of\nTorrential  rains\nOttawa, May 21. -Tlie bearing of\nthe famous Dead Man's island case\ntook place in tlie exchequer court today. The original lease was for a\n26-year period. It was claimed that\nin the following year a second order-\ntn-couiicll was passed making tlie\nlease perpetual. Tlie city of Vancouver, which desires the land for park\npurpose--,  prevailed  upon  the  depart-\nGerman   Steamer   Bavaria\nSucceeds in Unloading\nCargo.\ncom\n  charters, but virtually all the stock Is\nheld by foreigners, with French In-\ntereats predominating. Sabinas is half\nway hit ween l'i'dras Negras and\nMonclova.\nThe properties are valued at several millions of dollars,\nThe confiscation order also Included 16,000 tons of coal nnd 26,000 tons\nof coke whicli It is said will be Bold\nand the proceeds used for tiie constitutionalist army.\nWOMAN CANDIDATE\nFOR SCHOOL TRUSTEE\nTampico,  May 21.\nhave  prevented  the  constitutionalistsIment of justice to endeavor to break\nfrom  restoring satisfactory  coniinunl-1 the lease.    Thut the claim to perpet-\ncttlon eithp\nlines\nbv railroad or telegraph I ual  rlB<>ts made by Thomas Ludgate\n,,.,,, and  company  of  Vancouver,  lumber-\nexoapl    eiver    a limited    area. , . ,     1\n' men,   would  appear  to  be dangerous\nTrains are running In Ihe direction oflwaB made c-f,a,. wnen Mr. Bottdeorau,\nMonterey as  tat   as Montemoros,  but|clerk   of tne   privv   council,  and   Mr.\nUnder  Mexican   Laws Captain   Liable\nto a Fine\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdVessel Held at Vera\nCruz by American Navy.\nfreight from all  points in  the origin-1 j_eerj washed out\njust  beyond this town a  bridge    has]\nin\nInter-\nto be ;\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffddlators,  If i\nagreement\nThree   Nominations  Filed  at  Burnaby\nYesterday\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdElection   Will   Be\nNext   Saturday.\nHeld\nAll hope ni an election by acclamation taking place in the special election of Durnabj school trustees to\nfill the vacancies caused by the resignations of Trustees Herd and\nChurchland, disappeared yesterday at\nnoon when three nominations were\nfiled For the first time in the his-\nI tory of Burnaby a woman candidate i\nappears In the field, Mrs. Eunice Anna Doling, of Edmonds, Ileitis one pf\nthe   three     nominal'id.      The    others I\nwen- T. W. Mayne and Prank RusMll\nrn' ('Mitral Park,\nThe election will take place on Saturday, May 80 the usual polling booths I\nbi Ing open iu the various sections of I\nthe  municipality,    a  very  light  vote\nla   expected.   North   Burnaby   not   be- |\ning represented on the voting blanks\nwhile not many are expected to vote\nIn   the   Kast   Burnaby   and   Burnaby ;\nlake districts.\nupon   them  at all,  to treat  them   only\nin the form of recommendations for\ntin1 guidance of tbe new provisional\ngovernment, which it is hoped will\nbe \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd stabllsbed In Mexico.\nInternal  Problems.\nTbe atUtude ol the Mexican representatives is thai these Internal problems, while no means unimportant to\nMexico Itself, should noi be entered\nInto by tliis tribunal, Inasmuch as tlie\niii.i usslon <>i one would lead to an-\noth- r. Thus almost Interminable delay would result before a common understanding could be reached.\nin ilus connection the Mexican delegates brought up as an Illustration,\nthe governorships of Mexican states\nand the problem of the relation of\nthe stnt.' governments to the provisional ii-deriii government, when it;\nshall have heen established. They\npointed out that no attempt to formu-\nIn!' a plan dealing With provisional I\ncontrol of state governments, or In\nany way defining their relations with\ntbe federal organisation would involve\ntin- mediators to the point Of tedllim\nin the solution of local problems peculiar to each stale\nThe Mexican envoys held that these\nproblems can be best worked out by |\ntheir own people after the temporary\ncentra]  government  has been  established. ^^^^^^^^^^^^\nAs   to   what   disposal   precisi ly   hail i\nheiii   made   of   ihe   question   of   the\nelimination of General Huerta, other Fertunate Holders of Stock\nthan the Intimation that his dignity\nwill be upheld, the mediators riinain-\ned retlcient today. Emphasis was\nlaid upon the fact that, although the\nCarranza element had not been represented at the conference, the plans\nformulated by the mediators comprehend the expectation of bringing Carranza in accord and to tbe support of\ntlie scheme for a provisional government. Particularly by one of the\nmediators, the confident hope was expressed that as soon ns Carranza and\niiis followers became acquainted\nilie   proposals   thev   would   agree\nally loaded car into New Westminster\n'and  Vancouver.\nPlans for effecting this  connection\ni have    been     under  consideration  for\n'more than six months and  yesterday\nll.    it.    Barling,    vice-president, announced that they had culminated in\nthe drawing up of contracts.\nPassenger Traffic Not Considered.\nWhile   the   passenger  angle  of the\ntraffic   has   not   been   considered   the\ntact that freight cars can be loaded\nIon barges at Seattle, towed to Belling-\ni ham and from there sent by rail over\n| the Bellingham and Northern to Su-\n, mas and thence over tlie electric line\nj to New Westminster signals the enter-\n' in\", wedge for another great transoon-\n| tinental line   Into   iiritish Columbia,\nTariffs covering the  new  routing are\nnow in preparation.\nFor the  present  the  company\nnot  extend   its  through     hilling\nTroops sent into the interior on\nthree trains under command ol Qeneral Pablo Gonzales are marching from\nMontemorelos toward Monterey, but\nQeneral Qonzalea and his staff are\nwaiting tor ih* bridge to be repaired,\nwhen they will go forward with the\ntrains. If the constitutionalists mean\nto bring in war supplies through this\nport no evidence of this intention has\nbeep forthcoming.\nTlie work of relieving the customs\nhotiEe, is proceeding rapidly. No further forced loans has been imposed.\ni There are only 2u Americans at the\nI oil propet ties along the I'anuco river\nabove Tampico, ol whom almost all\nare employees of the Texas Oil company.\nAnti-American  Feelinq,\nj    There is considerable apprehension\nwill j among the oil men owing to the anti-\nand | American      sentiment    fomented    by\ntransshipment  Into  Vancouver owing | Huerta    sympathizers    who  are    en-\nto the short curves in the tracks of\nI the 11. C, 1*7 R, line in that city. Sev-\ni eral of the outer suburban points will\ni lie reached  where freight shipped by\nJarvls, secretary of the militia council, both swore that they had bunted tbe files of their reipecltve departments In vain without finding any\nsecond order-in-council giving perpetual rights to Mr. Ludgate, This was\nall the evidence put in by the plaintiffs, the arguments then being proceeded with.   Judgment was reserved.\nHEAT IS INTENSE\nIN EASTERN STATES\nThermometers   Reqister   1CO   Degrees\nin Many Cities\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCooler Weather\nIs Promised.\nami\nwill\nwill\nand\ntlie\nRUSH EOR SHARES\nCONTINUES AT CATGARY\nthe new  route can  be  unloaded\ni hauled  into the citv.    This  shift\nbe hut temporary as the company\nendeavor   to   teach   the   business\nJobbing centre  with  its cars.\nBuilding  Connecting  Tracks.\nPreliminary   work  of  building\n\"Y ' track where it will join the British Columbia Electric lir,.', a shcrt\nI distance west of Huntingdon, has al-\n| ready been begun.\nThe Iiritish Columbia F,l\ufffd\ufffdetric rail-\n; way in 1910 built a standard gauge.\n170-pound    electrified    railway    track\nfrom New Westminster to chilliwack.\na distance of about sixty-four miles.\ni For   the    handling   of    freight   traffic\ntwenty-five electric  locomotives   and\n14511 box cars are now In nee anil daily\nfreight   trains  are  operated  between\ni New   Westmlnsti r    .and     Chilliwack.\n| Milwaukee freight cars will be taken\nto tlie International boundary line bv\nits own locomotives, and then- turned\nevir tn the electric line to lie hauled\ninto   New    Westminster   under   join-\n| traffic arrangements which have been\nj agreed upon.\ndi.-avoiing to inflame the constitutionalists b\\ absurd stories of alleged j\nAmerican atrocities. This sentiment j\nis a factor in the general reluctance I\nof the managers of the oil companies\nto resume operations up the river.\nSevera! foreign companies are reported to have decided not to employ anymore Americans and gradually to dispense with the services of those still\nin their employ on account of the danger of Mexican hostilities.\nReports from Panuco today indicate\nthir, the anti-American sentiment is\nIncreasing and open threats have been\nmade by prominent Mexicans to drive\nout the Americans and destroy their\nproperty. The few Americans in that\nregion realize they are in a dangerous\nposition, but are determined to defend themselves if necessary. I'anuco\nIs now occuoled by a small detachment of constitutionalists from Tamplco, who have taken no part In the\nanti-American demonstration and it\nI is believed can be relied upon to check\nany violent demonstration.\nWashington, May 27. -A wave of intense mid-summer heat, accompanied\nby enervating humidity, setting over\nthe Atlantic states and the Ohio and\nmiddle Mississippi valleys, brought jI j^e\ntemperatures today near to record-\nbreaking points. Richmond. Va., with\na temperature of 9G degrees was the\nonly place where the mercury established a new record.\nIn Washington the enclosed thermometers at the elevated weather bureau registered lio degrees, while those\non the streets marked 100. the official figure within erne degree of the\nwarmest  May day  since  1S70.\nln many cities throughout the east\nthe temperatures reached a point only\none degree lower than that in Washington. New Vork, Boston and Philadelphia all sweltered  with\nWashington, May 27. Ammunition\nconsigned to the Huerta government\nin Mexico which had been kept in\nthe bold of the German ship Vpiranga\nsince the American occupation of\nVera Cruz, was reported to have been\nlanded today at Puerto, .Mexico.\nConsul Canada at Vera Cruz cabled\nthis information to the state department and it also was repotted from\nother sources to the war department\nthat arms consigned to Huerta had\nbeen landed at Puerto Mexico from\nthe German steamer Bavaria. Both\nsteamers belong to the Hamburg-\nAmerican line.\nNo Effort to Prevent.\nNo effort to prevent the delivery\nof the ammunition consignments was\nmade by officials of the United\nStates, I'uerto, Mexico, being an open\nport and the United States having\nagreed to the suspension of hostilities\nduring the mediation of tlie Mexicau\nimbroglio at Niagara Falls.\nlt was made plain at tbe state department that the only possible  way\nfor the United States to have prevented the    shipment   of   arms    through\n1'uerto,  Mexico, would have been    to\nseize the custom 'house as was done\nat Vera Cruz when the Yplranga was\nabout to land her cargo at that port.\nThis would have been an open violation of the suspension    of hostilities\nand  would have disrupted  mediation.\nThe reported delivery of these ear-\ngoes aroused considerable speculation\nln view of the fact that arms on \"board\nI the    Hamburg-American    ship    Kron\nPrinzessln     Cecilie     consigned      to\nHuerta   through   Puerto   Mexico   several weeks ago were turned back    on\norders   of  officials  of  the   steamship\ncompany at Havana.\nLIABLE TO A FINE.\nSell   in   Anticipation   of\nUnited Oil Co.\nRefuse to\nStrike\nin\nAID TO C. N. R.\nGETS fIRST READING\nREMAINS EOHND\nOE ANDRE'S BALLON\n-- -^- ~-^^^^^^^^^^^_ *he official,\nfeniperamres.  show-In*  94  decrees.   In \/\nthe   west,   St.   Louis,   Evansville   and\nTerre Haute had temperatures of 92\ndecrees.\nSlightly cooler weather was promised in the east in the remainder of\nthe week, by the bureau experts tonight, but the indications are that no\nreal relief will come until Friday when\na disturbance sweeping down from the\nnorthwest may bring genera! thunder\nshowers.\ntheir military  operations.\nwilh\nlo\nBIG OIL INTEREST\nSHOWN IN I\nstatement\nDevonish.\nUnited  (Iii\nMr. Skinner, Who Owns Stock  in\nQingman Wells, Beseiged With\nQuestions.\nthe\nCalgary,  May  27. -The\npublished   today   by   O.   C\nmanaging director of tlie\ncompany, that on Saturday the bailer\nin the company's well, whicli is situated   about   three   miles   west   of   the\nDingman well, brought to the surface\nsand Which was heavily saturated with\noil. caused quite a flutter on the market.   There was a rush to buy shares\nat   $1S,   but   few   were   forthcoming,\nnractlcally ;.ll tin- shareholders being\ncontent to await developments  which\nare expected now at any moment.\nthe general belief here is that the\nUnited Oils company will be the next\nto strike oil. The well is down 1570\nfeet iiiul the presence of the oil bear\nIns -and and the heavy flow of wet\ngas cnianatlii\" from the well has led\nMi\" public to form the opinion Unit a\nflow of oil may be encountered in tills\nwell al any moment now. And when\nthe second How of oil is struck things\nwill happen here. Outside capital has\npoured In liberally so far, but the sec-\n  onil strike will establish the existence\n,,.,        , . of a huge oil field and lhanv more mil-\nLondon    May  27.   When   his  pres-  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd      \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd, ,|(>  fortncomlng\neuee in the city became known yester.  fm. d6velooment\nday afternoon. Mr. Skinner oue ot the R ffM h.Rn(,a on tne maHa,t |odav\npresent beneficiaries ol the present U)at t|)p men behJnd Ulfi gvnd-cate\nCalgary oil boom, was literally be- whlch. is helng formed, and whiob will\nsieged with questions as to the pros- conlro] mm acre8 of laml ha\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd (rom\npects Of the oil field. Mr. Skinner, Srioklln0) and also thllt Jas Sweenev,\nwho is one of the promoters ol the 0le wp\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd known (-aUfornian millionaire\nDingman wells, has trtic to say: and 0l| man js |Iltcrpi,ted,\n\"1 cannot say that the boom rook r\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,m.,lf,*1:im Craig, the noted British\n1110 by surprise. 1 have long been con- geo-0g-sti (,-tated todav that it was bis\nvhceri that oil was there and made 0I)-nl0|1 tnnt the well of the British-\nspHdal arrangements regarding my An),,rta company, which is down 1200\nwhen I sailed lor England, We |ppt B-imil(1 rllt into the oil bearing\nnot   only   mineral   rights   ofJNnds at a deptn of from vo()0 to\nNotice   of   Amendment   to\ndule  of   Freight   Rates\nTwo Months.\nFill   Sche-\nWithin\nFirst Trace of the lll-Fated Arctic Expedition  Discovered in a Forest\nof  Eastern  Siberia.\nWOMEN'S CHRISTIAN\nTEMPERANCE UNION\nat vai^-\nUic body\nhut both mineral |\ni   01\ntin\nproxy\n;i 'ssess]\t\nliieusands of acres.\nand   surface   rights   of   thousands   of\nfurther   acres.     I   don't   heHeve\n11\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdc sent boom is a mere flash in the\npan,    I think the oil is permanent, but\nso 'far It is of tlie pumping out, rather\nthan the gusher variety.\n.noo\nfee\nMany rf tho capitalists here are\n1 complaining about the high prices be-\n) in\" asked for leases.\nSEVERE   EARTHQUAKE.\nWEATHER  REPORT.\nLower   Mainland   and\nWestminster:    Light   to\ncrate  winds;\nstationary  or\nlure.\nNew\nmod-\ngenerully    fair;\nhigher tempera-\nShock Felt at Colon But No Damage\nResulted.\nColon. May 27.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA severe earthquake shock lasting more than thirty\n.seconds occurred tonight, it was\nmuch stronger than any of the seismic, disturbances felt in tlie canal\nzone last Octuber.\nNo damage was done locally so far\nas reported. The officials at (ititun\ndescribe the shock as very strong, but\nhad no knowledge up lo a lite hour\nof any damage to tin- canal.\nStockholm,   May   27.-What   is   believed to be  the remains of the balloon  in  which  Prof. Salamon  A.  Andre ascended from Lane's island, near\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^    opitzbergen,  July  11.  18'J7. in an at-\nOttawa,  May  27.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAfter  practically   tempt to reach the North  Pole, have\nl\\vo  weeks of  discussion,  the C.N.R.   been founu in a forest in Eastern Si-\naid   resolutions   were   given   a   first   beria, according to a telegram receiv-\nreading this afternoon and stand for   ed  at the  Swedish foreign  office  to-\ncond   reading    tomorrow.    Then   day   from   Yakutz.     Investigation   of\nthe   bill   will   be   introduced   and   on   the   reported   discovery   has  been  or-\nthe second reading stage it  is expec-   dered by the government,\nted  tin re   will  be  :i   number of ilivi-       The Arctic explorer was accompan-\nsions. led by two scientists, and after lav-\nTonight   Hon.  Frnk Oliver gave no-   ing Lane's island no reports wera re\ntice of an amendment calling on tlie   ceived from tbe party'.\nC.N.R.   to  file  within   two   months  a       Although traces of Andre's balloon\nSchedule of  freight   rates  giving offi-   have frequently been reported\ncial treatment to the west and north,   ions places and  while even\nIn giving tills notice he said tlie west   of the famous Swedish  Arctic oxplor-\nwas   disappointed   over     the     rectnt   er   was  said   to   have   discovered   on\nJudgment   of the  railway  board and   the  const  of  Labrador,  nothing  bus\nthis would  he an opportune time for   ever   been   definitely   established   as\nthe   government   to   bring  about    an   to  what actually happened to the ex-\nequalisation of rates. pedltlon or what  became of the bal-\nConsideration of lion. W.T. White's loon,\ntariff resolutions was then taken up. Andre and two companions, Messrs.\nThey were given a second reading, strindberg and Praenkel, started\nput through committee and stand for from Lane's island in the hope of be-\ntbird reading. During the discussion |ng curried by trade winds to the\nthe members claimed the price of North Pole. The explorer believed\nnails bad gone up 25 cents a keg be- that the steady current of air would\ncause of the duty on wire rods. take him into the polar regions in a\nFor  the  payment  of  Fenian  boun-   week,  carry   him  over  the   pole  and I\nties   which   was   considered   in   com-   land  him   safely   in   North   America. I\nmittee a long discussion at the even-   Kive   buoys   from   the   balloon   have\ning  session  particularly   on  the  part   been picked up.\nof tlie Nova Scotia members. The im- Many searching expeditions have\npresslon prevails thut prorogation will returned unsuccessful, in January,\ntake place before the end of next 1Q10, dispatches from I'rince Albert\nweek, probably a week from Friday. Sask., said that lSishop Pascal an-\nThe re-distribution committee is said nounced be had received letter from\nto have reached an agreement on all a missionary telling of the supposed\npoints except the proposals to wipe finding of Andre's balloon by Eski-\nOUt llussell county. Ont.. and Rich- nios near Reindeer Lake, iu the Arc\nmend county. Nova Scotia, if an un- I tic Circle, D00 miles north of Prince\ntinimous report  cannot be agreed up-   Albert.\non the bill, the matter is likely to go j     It has thrice been reported that An-\nover until next  session  but Uie hope | dt-e's body  has  been  found, but none\nstill prevails that an agreement  will   of these statements are\nbe reached. \t\nMrs\nWhite is Elected President For\nthe   Ensuing   Year\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDele-nates\nFor Victoria Convention.\nThe annual meeting of tlie Women's\nChristian Temperance Union was\nheld yesterday iu St. Stephen's\nchurch. The following office bearers\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ere e! cted for the ensuing year:\n.'resident, Mrs. VV. White; vice-presi-i has carried arm\nJem, d.rs, Traves; corresponding sec-1\nn tary, Mrs .Cross; recording secretary. Mrs. Barnard; treasurer. Mrs.\nrelet- Young.\nThe delegates appointed to the annual convention to be held at Victoria\nfrom June 16 to lh were Mrs. Cross.\nMr... Barnard, Mrs. Mi-Adam, Mrs.\nForrester, Mrs. Evans.* Mis. Wilson\nand  Mrs. Timllek.\nThe treasurer's report showed a\ncredit balance on baud of $lu4.\nThe other reports of the officers\nI and superintendents were left ever\nuntil the next meeting to he In id on\nJune 9, and the appointments of superintendents for the forthcoming year\nwas held over until after the convention.\nCaptain of Bavaria Violated  Law    in\nTwo Respects.\nVera     Cruz,     Mexico.     May     27.   -\nThe captain of the Bavaria  is  liable\nto B  fine under    the    Mexican    laws,\nwhich  are  being administered  by the\ncollector of the port. Captain  Herman\nO.   Stlckney.     The shipment  or arms.\neonsl.srned   ror   Vera  Cruz,   but   landed\nat  Puerto,  Mexico,  forms  a  violation\nof  tiie laws, and tin- absence    ot    a\n.second  violation.\nBrigadier Genera! Funston said the\nquestion of fines was entirely in Captain Stickney's hands, but the collec-\ntoi said today that he had no actually\nlevied as yet.\nTbe Bavaria is held here only because clearance will be refused until\nihe matter 01 fines is adjusted. The\ncustoms officials assert that so far as\nthey know the arms shipment on the\nVpiranga of tlie --ame line which precipitated the seizure of Vera Cruz by\nthe American forces wr.s still aboari\nwhen that vessel left there for Puerto.\nMexico, two days ago. They assume\nthat there is no possibility that the\n250 machino guns, 15,000.000 rounds\nof ammunition and other war material aboard the Vpiranga would be\nlanded, as the liner is under charter\nof the German government at the\npresent time, and was ordered\nI'uerto. Mexico, by the German\nister to pick up German refugee\nRumors have been current\nI some of the war material!\nI Huerta had contracted ia Germany\nhad been filtering through by way of\nPuerto, Mexico. Virtually every German liner touchint at the gulf ports\n^^^^^^^^^ ir ammunition shipped under that contract, The Bavaria\nincident is tiie first one where positive information of the landing of\nthese supplies has been received, although there have been intimations\nhere Unit tiie army or navy has knowledge of other landings or attempted\nlandings,\nOutside of armv circles the Ameri-\ncana here are Inclined to belief the\nHuerta, officials desire the Bavaria\nwar supplies for strengthening their\nnorthern lines against the constitutionalists. General Funston admitted\nthat he had no information as to\nwhat became of the shipment.\n10\nmin-\nthat\nwhich\nHUERTA WILLING\nTO RESIGN REINS\nFIRES UNDER CONTROL\nFew\nNeed\nVera Cruz. May 27.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdReports reaching here today through private channels says President Huerta has committed himself to turn over the government to a commission composed\nmembers of the various factions in\nSmouldering     Spots\nWatchina.\nWith the aid of the recent welcome\nrains   the fires all over the  country 1 of ^^^^^^_^^^_^^^^^^^^^\nunder   control.     Mr.  the republic.    He is also said to have\nsubstantiated.\n  ! Reduced Rates\nWarm at Moose Jaw. Montreal!   May  27.    The\nMoose  Jaw,   May  27.    Intense  heat   made  a  cut  of  $2   in   Its\nand strong southwesterly winds visit-1 immigration  rates agreed\ned   Moose    Jaw    today.    The official j month ago  hv  the\nthermometer recorded a maximum of\n87 in the shade.    This is the highest\ntilts   year,   beating   Monday's,   record\nby   three   degrees.\n.te:i-v.\nC.l'.It. has\nwestbound\nto about a\n        [lips in the\nNorth Atlantic pool, $81.50, and announces the rate us $29.50, This mav\npossibly lead to a rate war between\nthe continental  lines and  the C.P.R.\nhave been got ^^^^^^^^^^^^\nBeckett, crown timber agent, cannot\nas yet give any estimate of the dam.\nage done as the conflagrations em-i\nbrace an area roughly computed at:\n:', miles suuare. There were three\ndifferent fires of serious import on\nthe south side of the Fraser The\nMcNair company of Port Moody is\nsaid to have lost from 8000 to 10.000\ncords of shingle bolts, the Pacific Mill\ncompany some 1500 or 2000 cords at\nWhonnock, and smaller miils from\n. ltm to 1000 cords.\nWhile there is no Immediate danger\nof a  further outbreak  the  fire still\nsmoulders in snags and it w ill  be ne-\nI cessary either to blow them up or cut\nthem  down  before  the  wardens will\n1 feel safe.\nagreed to relinquish power to any\nsuccessor which such a commission\nmight select. The report further sa?s\nthat Huerta's determination has already been \"communicated to the\nMexican delegates and probably di-\nrestly to the Washington government.\nHero Sinks Launch.\nTrying to cross the bows of ihe\nI City owned tug Hero opposite Gilley\n' Bros, wharf. 11 gasoline launch owned\nj by the Yang Tai company was cut to\nthe water line yesterday morning the\nI wreckage afterwards floating ou a\n's.iudbar near Lulu Island. The two\n.Chiu.mien who were operating th\"\nI launch were assisted on boaTl the\n1 Hero. PAGE TWO\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS.\nTHURSDAY, MAY 28. 1914.\nWMm$fc$\ufffd\ufffd%\n^5^*^#\n \"      s^'ai   *\"    i-\"- '*y^\"i\nThe government road at the in ad of\nAn Independent morning paper devoted to the Interests of New Westminster and] Hoyja  lake is  now  being Improved.\nthe'Fniaer Valley.    Published every morning except Sunday by the National Printing .     \ufffd\ufffd     \ufffd\ufffd   '\nend Publishing Company, Limited, ot 63 McKenzie street. New Westminster, British j     A       ^  wedding was solemnized at i\nColumbia. ROBB St'THKULAND. Managing Director. { ,.]lox   pre8Dyterflin'   church   ut   Trail,\nAll communlcaUons should be addressed to 'lhe New Westminster News, nnd not L n ^ll(j.lv evening when C. A. lloyn-\nto liidivldual members of the Btaff. Cheques, drafts, and money orders should be made L\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 1(|('.l*1 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,.,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.,,,, ,- for p Hums &\npayable to Tbe National Printing and Publishing Company, Limited. : r(j'   v ,JS   ulljlrd   tl)      .]\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.,     Kathleen\nPERFECT CORE FOR THE KIDNEYS\nSuffered For 10 Months With Terrible Kidney Trouble\nUntil He Learned Of GIN PILLS\nTELEPHONES\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBusiness Office and Manager, U99 ; Editorial Rooms (all departments), I'M.\n<SUHSCRIPTION RATES\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBy carrier, $1 per year, $1 for three months, 40c per\nmonth. Hv mall, t3 per year, St. per month.\nAdvertising rates on application.\nTHURSDAY MORNING. MAY 28. 1914.\nMorris,  a  former  resident of Nelson, j\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    \ufffd\ufffd    *\nAlexander Conway, aged 65 years,\nwaa found dead in his room  in  Vancouver.    Conway, it was reported to ]\nlhe police, had been drinking heavily '\nfor  several   days.     He   was  a   native\nof  Scotland  but  bad  been  a  resident ,\nof Canada for the past twenty years.'\nDAIRY INSPECTOR WANTED.\nTho city has been reminded of its duty by the pro-l\/J\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. t.HSrK^\nvincial live stock commissioner, who has written that it;week ago, died as the result of ani\nis up to New Westminster to appoint a dairy inspector and, operation,  mm. go\ufffd\ufffdjrtoMgto, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nthe health committee of the council has the matter under *p-or- wiiiiam died after a lingering;\nconsideration. ,UneM tma \ufffd\ufffd?\"' .\nIf the preservation of human life, particularly among -   A detachment o.   Moom   mining\nthe children of the population, is of any consequence, jJ^^Kg'M \ufffd\ufffd$.&[\ndairv inspector is an absolute necessity to every city, and w, ,k m their private ear. They were\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nthe sooner he gets busy here, the better. . Se^nw^d^eite8. and\"wu.a\"o:\nDuring one period last year, when an epidemic had through to Rossiand, where they win\nbroken out among the babies of this town, seventy-one iptnd a week. ^  ^  (\ncases out of seventy-three reported were traced directly to    -n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd, province wm be represented at\n;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdrmvn  mUL-    M-hir-'h   ic  a   nr-ottv  irnnil  2ir0Timent  in   itself   Halifax next September at the annual\nimpuie milk, wmen is a pretty gooa aiguim.ii.*, iii iwseu  oonveaUon of tlll. Canadian Forestry\n\"I raftered misery even when under\ntreatment trom lhe best doctors for ten\nmonths, ami nothing seemed to do me\nany good or relieve my painful condition.\nMv trouble was Inflammation of tlie\nKidneys and Bladder. I finally determined to i-o to the Victoria Hospital,\nHalifax,   for   treatment.      Two   days,\nhowever, beforemy intending departure,\na in.-ij\ufffd\ufffdhlx\ufffd\ufffdr called aud happening to have\naCilN PILL in bis pocket insist on my\ntaking it. I did so, nnd six hours after\ntaking it, the results and benefits I\nileriveel were simply nothing short\nof miraculous. Instead eif noiiiu to the\nhospital, 1 seat for a box of GIN PILLS,\nwith the result that I am a cured man.\nI recommend GIN PILLS to everyone\nsuffering from Kidney and Bladder\nTroubles\". LEWIS MACPHERSON.\nlt makes no difference what you have\nbeen using\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdif you have any trouble\nwith the Kidneys or Bladder\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdif the\nUrine is hot anil scalding -or if your\nBack aches or you have Rheumatism\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ntake GIN PILLS and cure yourself.\nRemember, every box of Gin Pills is\nsold with a guarantee of satisfaction or\nmoney back. 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50 at\nall druggists. Sample free if you write\nNational Drug and Chemical Co., of\nCanada, Limited, Toronto. 211\nBUSINESS  DIRECTORY\nAUDITOR   AND   ACCOUNTANT\nII. J. A. HL'RNETT, AUDITOR AND>\nAccountant Telephone R147. Rooat\n:.  Hun Block.\nP. if  Smith. \\\\\\ .1. Qroves.\nAUDITORS AND ACCOUNTANT*\nWeill   undertaken   In    city    and  outside\npoint*.    8II-13   Westminster Trust Bldg.\nI'lii.m- SI4.    P. O.  Box .'.07.\nFRATERNAL.\nL.O.O.M., NO 854\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMEETS ON FIRST\nand third Tuesday in oach month at t\np.m. In tin Labor Temple. A. .1. Christmas. Dictator: David Boyle, Pasl Dti\ntutor; W, J. I'l'nviB. Secretary, -1 1\nx. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd stmlnster Trust Building.\nELECTRICITY TO I\nCURT ALT ILLS\nnod   to,yFWeH-v-__v   rfJvwhlctlTz r\nSuch Is Editcn'o Prediction\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGreat Inventor   Says   Humanity   Must\nKnow  More About  Itseli.\niowa Lumber &\nTimber Co., Ltd.\nNKW    WESTMINSTER   LODGE    Nn    '.\n11.    I'.   II.    IO.   ol    I'.   C\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    lie-els   first   llllii\nthird Friday nt s i-.m.. Labor Temple.\nSeventh and Royal avenue. A. Well*-\nOrar, Exalted Ruler; I'. II. Smith. Hen\ni' 1. ii.'.\nfor a real, live dairy inspector for New Westminster.\nassociation, this being the first meeting of the association so far east. A\ncontribution of $-00 has been forwarded by the province towards tho\nexpenses of the convention.\nThe weather man did a good stroke of business when\nhe turned on the taps and drowned out the forest fires.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Harold  Robertson  and  Curly Jones\nThat's an ominous ouietness which seems to have collided m a buscbaii game at Pen-\nsettled over Ulster since the passing of the home rule bill.\nIn Indiana eggs are so plentiful they are being sold\nthe bushel.  It looks as though heaven had been located\nin the hoosier state.\nby\nticlon and the resultMvas nearly fatal in one case. Jones sustained a\nfracture of the collarbone, while Robertson was knocked out and was only brought bac!< to consciousness by\nmeans of artificial respiration.\nReports from Guaymas say the fighting there all has\ni at long range, sometr-\nthe U. S. state department.\nNine tons of steel, two carloads of\nemont and two carloads of stone for\nthe   construction   of    the     Dominion\n, - i-i       n i ir fl \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd government  building in  Port Alberni\nbeen at long range, something like Bryan s handling ot, m.rived lagt weeki   A Bh-pm8nt \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdt\n! 27,(1,000 bricks is also on the way to\nI the city for the same purpose. The\nI stone  work  on   the  building  will  be\nWell, Port Coquitlam has made up its mind to borrow: commenced early next week,\nsome money.  Here's hoping it's as easy to get the coin as;   r>ersoriB interested in the Tulameen\nit is tO decide to go after it. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd creek district and who for years have\n  held placer leases in hopes that some\n, day a company strong enough would\nIf the militant suffragettes carry out their threat to undertake to thoroughly prove  the\nground,  were  advised    on    Saturday\nthat the B, C.  Platinum, Ltd., a corn-\ndamage Glasgow's water supply there'll be a fine excuse\nfor jags in that town for a while.\nOrange, \\. J., May 27.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe future !\nuses   of   electricity   that   will   benefit\nhumanity   most   will   he   through   its I\nmedical application.\nA new source of electrical supply [\nwill be direct from coal without need ]\nfor steam boilers.\nThese are predictions of Thos. A.\nEdison, whose inventive genius is\nresponsible for the widespread application Of electricity.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'Electricity has been the principal\nfactor in the enormous progress of\nCivilization in the lust 33 years,\" Edi-\nson said. \"But greater and more wonderful uses of it are held by the future.\n\"lt  must  be  possible  to  generate\nelectricity direct from coal,\" he said.\n\"When that is accomplished  we  will I YelloW\nrecord a new epoch.    It may come tomorrow.    We are working on it now.\"\n\"Considerable is being done to reveal the medical functions of electricity,\" he continued, \"but its possibilities in this direction are practically\nunknown,\n\"This research work must be done I\nsecretly, ns the thousands of quacks |\nnow applying electricity to humans for\nI. i> 1 >. I--. AMITY LODQH Nu. .7\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTHE.\nri-.iiil.il* meeting ni' Amity Lodge, No,\n*.'\". I. \ufffd\ufffdi. ii. I-'.. I\ufffd\ufffd held every Mondov\nnight nt s ..'clock In Odd Fellows' Rail,\ncorner Carnarvon and Eighth BtrefHs.\n\\ lilting brethren cordlallv ie. Ited.\nir. w. Sangster, N.Q.: .1. U Waiaou,\nV.t;.;  w. C.  Coatham,  P.O..  recording\nSecretary!    J.    W.    McDonald,    flli.inrl.il\ni-' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd rotary,\nFUNERAL  DIRECTORS.\nW. K. PALER & CD., 811-61. AiiNl-:*\nstreet, opposite Carnegie lllirurv. Moat\nup-to-date  funeral  parlors  in  the citv.\nSi lallsts in shipping.    Lady assistant\nhi attendance. Always open. Day phone-\n170,   iilnln   phone  si.\nWe  can  now  supply   Oak\nFlooring   and   Casing   and\nBase.   We also have some\nCedar    (Cvpress)\nwhich is just the thing for\nmaking cabinets, dress boxes\netc.\nPhone 904.\nHi'WKI.I,   (SUCCESSOR    TO    I'eN\nter \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'.-  Hanna,  Ltd.)\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFuneral  directors\nnnd i inli.iliiuTs.    Parlors In.\", Columbia\nstreet,  New   Westminster,    Ph  99:t\nBOARD  OF TRADE.\nBOARD OF TRADE NEW V7ESTMIN-\niter Board of Trade meets In Ihe board\nroom, City Hull, as follow*: Third Friday nr each month. Annual meetings\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ni Un- third Friday nl February, c Fl\nStuart  Wade,  secretary.\nPROFESSIONAL.\nCORBOULD,  GRANT & Menu.I..  BAR-\nrislers, Solicitors, etc. -tn Lorni   street\nNew  Westminster,    >'.. ]\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:. Corbould   K.\n(-    J-   R.   Hiiint.     A. B.   MoColl. '\nADAM SMITH JOHNSTON, BARRIS-\nter-at-law, Solicitor, i tc, solicitor tor\ntin- Bank \"f Vancouver. Office*; Merchants' Bank Building, New Westmln-\nsti i'. B. i* Ti lephone No, 1070. Cable\naddress \"Johnston.\" Code Wmt.-iu\nunion.\nW, F. HANSFORD. BARRISTER Solicitor, ne.. Colllster Block, corner <\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"-\nlumbla und McKensle Htreels, Now\nWoatmlnster, li. C. I'. O. Box .8. Tele-\nphonu   344.\nIf nothing happens to spoil the fruit crop of the Koot-,   a bin.*..- ,iur,;it;: - mu;. .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. i..,: <\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;\nv and Boundary it is to be a rec<\nso it's not all mining in the interior.\nenay and Boundary it is to be a record breaker this year, {fJj^S Z ^ufdaTnLfi cans\npany backed by English capital would lull sorts of ills seize on every advance\nstar: operations in June'. | announcement  from  scientists  to ad-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   \ufffd\ufffd   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ' vertise their claims.\nMust Know More.\n\"Till we know more about our bodies  it   will  be  difficult  to  tell   what\nd  the  most  destructive  fire    in    thi  loan be done With electricity as a med-\nhistory of Atliu.    lt practically wiped i leal aid.\nTOM\nout  the  busine\nbesides a largi\nMore than two hundred protests against Burnaby assessments have been filed to come up before the court of .i'^'w!* ,!',1't'i,r;,'l;r,T'\nrevision next week and it is expected that a pleasant time\nwill be had.\ni section of the town\nnumber of residences,\nsaved   and\nEifty-six logs, averaging forty feet\ni in   length    and  other    small    timber\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd i \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd I were cut by tho old timers of .Nelson\nSan Salvador wants to help Mexico lick the United *h\ufffd\ufffd m*de a'rip t0 Vle .r.anch of '\np,   , T\ufffd\ufffd  c        ci   i       j        \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -l Ml      ii       i     .   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   ,1    ' w-  r,\"sk nt  Kokanee for the purpose\nStates.   If San Salvador is wise she will attend stnctlv \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdf obtaining the logs tor their shack\nto her own knitting and let the greasers untangle their,which is to, be \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdr?Sl!d \ufffd\ufffd\" ,th,\ufffd\ufffd r*crea-\n, ,     , ..,        ,   ,     ... . * tion  grounds as old timers   heudquitr\nknotted skein without butting in. ters during chahko Mika week.\nIf Teddy Roosevelt doesn'r pan out to be a good vet-\nproperty,  are  belived to  have  been I\nerinarv surgeon his pet, the bull moose, is likelv to come to I u'c \"u\"*;e \"f tnf destruction by fire,\n.;      , \ufffd\ufffd     j     ittl      i * \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_ i of  the  fishing  lodge at    Shawnlgan'\nan untimely end.   The absence of its patron seems to have\nmade the bull moose heart grow weaker.\n\"I   enco  asked   Du   Bols   Ilrymond, ,\npsychologist,   what   makes   my   finger\nmove,    lt isn't heat, light, electricity,\nmagnetism.    What Is    it?    Iteymond '\nhad studied it 30 years but lie could j\nnot answer me.\"\nEdison now  sleeps about  five and |\na  half hours a night.    For years he!\nonly slept four.    Mrs. Edison, he explained,  doesn't  permit  him  to  work I\nall night any more.\nHis   daily   diet   does   not   exceed   a |\n! pound and a half of food,    lie smokes j\n\\ cigars and  chews  tobacco,   hut  bans\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    *    * j cigarettes.\nTramps,  f.areless of other  people's]     \"e  is sixty-seven  and  says  he    is!\nFACTOR\nWHITESIDE, EDMONDS & WHITE-\nelde- Barristers and Solicitors, vVent-\nmlnater 're-fist ink . Columbia Btreet,\nNew Westminster, It. C, Cable oddr \ufffd\ufffda\n\"Whiteside,\" Western Union, I- 'i\nDrawer 200. Telephone 6B, W .1.\nWhiteside, K. C.; II. l\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Edmonds, U.\nWhlteilde.\nJ.   SI'H.U'KI.I.     CLUTE,\nBARRItSTEK-\nat-lnw, Mollcltor,  etc.,\n'iiiini   Columbia\nand  McKi nzii- streets,\nNew Westmln-\nsti r,  ll, r.    i>, 0.  llu\\\n710.\n117.    Telepl\t\n.\/.   P    HAMPTON   liiil.t\n.    BARRI8TER,\nSolicitor    nnd    Notary\nOffices,   II.nl\nBlock, *:^  Lorne street,\nNew  Westm ii-\nster. It. C.\nMCQUARRIE, MARTIN & CASSADY,\nBarristers and Solicitors. 006 to 612\nWestminster Trust Block. O. i: M -\ntin. W. it. McQuarrie and Ocorgo I,.\ni lassady.\nenjoying rewards of right living and I\nmoderate eating.\nRead3  118  Periodicals,\nlake owned  by  W.  H.  Munsie,  presi-!   He- reads regularly 118 scientific and\ndent of the Shawnlgan Luke Lumber   trade periodicals, and five daily news-\nCompsny.    The fire occurred early on i\nWill DRILL fOR Oil\n'   AROUND REVOSM\nSunday  morning and completely  demolished  the  two-roomed  lodge,\ufffd\ufffdand\nits contents.\nto\nnn oil area extends from t'.-ilgary to\nVanpouver,       The     lighter     oils     lie\nthought would   be   found   at.  Calgary\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdind tho largest deposit of the heavier\noil  somewhere in  the Columbia  val-1 Canadian Pacific railway,\nley, probably In the nelghbornood of\nArrowhead,    His prediction in regard\nto the Calgary field has already been\nconfirmed.\nMembers of the local syndicate are\nall confident th:tt tho probability of\nfinding oil is extremely strong and\nare prepared to trick opinion wltb\ncash.      Many   other   Revelstoke   citi\n  j-\/.ens   have   -isi*iii  to   be  allowed   to\nj shate  in  il*-.   enterprise and a com-\ni 'stok'i,   ISC.,   May   77.    Revel-  pany wil be formed to take over the\nRtol        today much excited over the I oil  rlghta and  operate.   As the  ear-\ni-.r\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'. -, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd th<? creation ol an oil well\n1 7 eity.\nEastern\nDrill\nSyndicate   Acquire\nfor OM  In  Aren ol\n.S*.;u*:re   Miles.\nRight\nTen\nD. McNlCOl, vice.president of the\nWith his\nwife, daughter and son, is visiting\nPenticton, the guest of his sun. who is\nfruit, ranching there, Mr, McNlcol is\nmuch impressed with the Okanagan\nuid considers that great benefits v.il1\nsecure to that section ns the result\nof the building of the Kettle Valley\nrailway.\npapers and keeps in intimate touch\nwith every form of human activity, including baseball, golf and the stage.\n\"1 read four lines at once.'' he said.\n\"They should tejch that kind of reading in the public schools.\"\nDANGERS OF CELLULOID\nInteresting Tests Before a Committee\nof the British  House of\nCommons.\nTi n sqi        miles of oil bearing land :\nwen   : \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd il eti ti lay  by   It.   Smith  and\nVV. i'i . -, on '\\-ilf of a Revelstoke\nhj i.'i'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd iii, i \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd of T. Kilpatrlck i\n.'   M   Mi li     i\\\"   H.  Butherland,\n. O.  S,   Met arti r,  VV    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    Anslie. 0.  R, '\nLnwi  nee.   Dr.   .1    li.   Hamilton.   It\nSmith nnd VV   Poupi re ,\nThe   land   coi m   Bhuare I\nriilis nt the mi nth ot the t olfflBblfl ;\nriver m Arrowhead and fi ir miles]\nacross the Arrow lake al Oalenii liay.\nIt is the Intention of tbe Bymi \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd tte !\nto install drilling machinerj ai \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd..,. I\nearliest possible moment.\nThere   ;,re\nthe  district\nposit and reports from experts are\nthat there is ;i strnng poeslb lity thai\noil will Im discovered at no greai\n\/depth. Three years ago a company\nn was former] to proSnect for oil in the\nname neighborhood but although most\nfavorable reports were obtained financial complications prevented the urcj\neet from being carried to completion.\nHer portion of the drilling will he i-i\n..iiiul tbe cost of s'nklng a v.eii will\nbe comparatively small.\n'DEi-F AND DUMB\" HOBO\nHAS CCOD FLOW OF SPEECH\nExtensive preparation!* are bi ing\nmade for the Western Canada Irrigation convention, which will be held\nin Penticton in August Amonc the\nspeakers from a distance who will he\npresent and deliver addresses\nProfessor Prank Adams of tin-\nverslty of California, J, T, Hlnkle of\nthe state nf Oregon Irrigation depart\nment, Don II. Bark of Idaho, and\nmany other nun prominent In Irriga-\nAnnouncement that the directors of\n;,ic Granby company has declared the\nregular quarterly dividend of $1.60\na share on the Issued capitalization\nof 148.648 shares, amounting to s^iiii4.-\ni 477', caused an advance of BOc n share\ntion affairs or western America\nSpokane,  May 27.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"Jack\"  Walsch,' *   *    \"\nwho pretended to be deaf and dumb\nwhile lugging in the neighborhood of\nLidgerwood,' through a letter, broke\nInto ti-ry speech iu police court yesterday when witnesses told of his visits   to   their   doorsteps   in   search   ol\nalms. His ire was nrouRid because the | on   the   Spokane   stock   exchange   en\nofficer who arrested  him  had  ridden : Tuesday,     The   disbursment   will   ln-\nhack and forth along Bridgeport ave- made June 15 to the shareholders on\nH'7''.''   Indication, thai   ,1UH OI1  3  motorcycie caving him record  May 29\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -'before arresting him. ! dose and  will  bring the grand  total\n\"YYhv didn't he come and arrest me ! of payments up to $5,215,990.\nwhen  I  came out of the house?\"  he \ufffd\ufffd    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   *\nsnapped \"Why didn't he come nnd i An inspection trin is being made\narrest me then is what 1 want him to ! through the Okanagan district by VV,\ntell   me.\" I Young, controller of the water works\n11  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  that'    ';i8 business.''  said the. j branch  of the lands department,    lie\ncourt.   \"Have y..ii anything t:i say in ] is consulting with owners of the dis-\nyour own defense?\" tt'ict who want to have an Irrigation I fire, then the fire becomes practical\n\"Nl- Mat's :i.i i  .,vant to say.\" re-  district formed under Hie act of last hy  uncontrollable,\"   Professor    Lewes\nVVergas  in  large  and  inr-reasint  piled  the  prison.r.  and be  was  led  aession,    Mr.  Young will  make esti-  remarked\nquantities   bubbles  through  the  son    ,,,rk t0 rep08e \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  ^ *asJith I mates for them of tho cost of brln\nWith the aid ol a fancy hair comb,\ncosting about sixpence. Professor\nVivian B. Lewes gave a demonstration\nbefore a commltte of the British\nHouse of Commons of the dangers of\ncelluloid. When lie took hla seat in\nthe witness chair to support the bill\npromoted bj the corporation of the\nare I city of London, to obtain powers to\n' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd r'-gulnti the manufacture and Btorage\nof celluloid articles, the profesor proceeded to explain the properties of\ncelluloid. Applying the burning end\nof a cigarette to a piece of tbe comb,\nhe dlrecti I the atti ntion of the committee lo the fumes whicli were given\noff fumes which contained, he said,;\na large percentage if the excessively\npoisonous ami highly Inflammable'\ncarbon monoxide, and camphor fumes,!\nHe then shewed what happened when\nthe temperature was increased BO ii\"\nto produce combustion. A lighted\nmatch was brought into contact with\na piece of the comb, and Immediately\nwhen the books will , a fierce flame was produced. These\nllustratlons showed that there was a\ndual method of combustion In the case\nof celluloid. Relow a certain temper-\nI ature a \"fuming off\" resulting in the\nproduction   of   poisonous  giises;   at  a\nhigher temperature, flaming rombtis-\nj tion.    \"When  you  reach the point at\nwhich   you   have   the   gases   catching\nIn view of the industrial development in\nGreater Vancouver, actual and in prospect, and\nto the fact that in the\npast many manufacturing plants have been\nlost to the community\nowing to the exorbitant\nprices demanded for\nland, your careful attention is invited to the\nfollowing:\nThe Coquitlam Terminal Company have for\nsale to bona fide business concerns, manufacturing sites, all clear\nand level, with trackage\nand ample waterfront-\nage at from twelve hundred and fifty dollars\nper acre, also home sites\nfor employees at extremely low rates, with\nexcellent school facilities, city water, electric\nlight, etc. Address enquiries to\nOil h.'.s b'^cti enllected In bottles and\n* burn.! freely,    In one place an invert-\n<\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd(.'   funnel   -herd   over   th\nI ,i \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd has been light\"] at th\" n\",ili end\nnnd burned Eteadlly. Oil In small\nqtiantltles has been noticed on the\nwater of  the  Arrow   Lake.\nr.-'t'i\"' -nr Viv-hey. president of the\nL'urvers'tv cf Pennsylvania nnd one I\nof tho foremost oil experts, reported\nthat il*\"-r- were sfrone Ind'e- t'-ns nf\nin \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd II bcarln? are-a pnd thai the oV\nwould   1> >   nrobablv   discverrd   al   a.\"\nf'eolll of .\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd!]\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- 1,01*1 fe-t.    II\" e--mined '\nthe \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd      on  t!\"- surface *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd il declared t\nthat It \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\" - not n vegetable but min-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd '-\"il gag ntiti that it extended over a\nI \" area,\nothe- rxp, rt; have reported emiallv\nfavorably. An ene-fnoer employed bv\n,'\"' Pitt Hi-i-- Company, who has\n\ufffd\ufffd- --I \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd n Hpeclal \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd t-niv of oil henrint\niormatlon, gavo it as hi., opinion that\nvant to siiy.    re-\nnnd   he   was   led\ndays  in jail  with\nhis question unan ;wi n .\\\nHis scheme, aa told  :,.   witnesses,\nescaping | was to present a letter tening of his\nHe emphasised strongly that the\naffliction, brought on by tul\nand  ask  fir a  mite toward  t\nchas \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd of a  tent and  blankets\ncculd go to the mountains and\ncrate.\nIng water to the point where tbey ;,langor of celluloid\nwant I i use it, in the Mission Hill set- of Its weight, to its\ntlement, either by way of a canal con-   ot- celluloid in the form of a film, h\nw.is  ln\nsurface.\nire\nthe ratio\na pound\nnur-\nn he\n' cup.\nAf;\nNESTY CRANTFD\nMEXICAN  TROQ3\nTampico, May 27.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdQeneral Caba\nlerro Issued a decree today granting\nnmnestv to   all    federals    retreating\nfrom Tampico, amnesty to be limited\nto two weeks. It Is understood that\nthis action was taken so thai the dispersed federals might know they were\nnot being pushed and to prevent the\ndestruction of property by the fugitive  soldiers.\nrculosis | \"ectlon across tlie valley from the I paid would be about -0U feet of film.\nGrey canal or by a pumping system [{ i^at were suspended In a repairing\ndirect from Okanagan lake. : room it would present not far short\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    * of G.OOO Bquare inches or exposed sur-\nVice-president Alfred Shaw, of the : face.' On the other hand, a pound of\nVancouver board or trade, has left for celluloid In the form knife handles\na *rip to England and Scotland. After; \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,..-. uid expose a surface of less than 100\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdu'Midlns *o his own business affair*-1square inches: and bo tbe film was\n,n England, Mr, Shaw will, on behalf something like 60 times more danger-\n\"f thn\" board of trado, visit the office cn- than the knife handles, in a\nof the :., enfgeneral for British Col-1solid a-tich- there was ver} little\nuuiliin in London, with a view of hav- , danger, but when there was :i mass of\nIng placed there a greater volume of; finely divided cellulose the danger\noflclal government data relating to j was multiplied to a tremendous ex-\nthe natural resources of Hrltish Col-\numbia bo ns to head off the exploitation of companies n,nt might through\nmisrepresentation a.,,, subsequent fall-\nures, harm the good ,,;ime of tna pro.\nTERMINAL\nCO, LTD.\nGranville Street,\nVancouver. B.C\ntent.\nHig  catches   of   trout  are   reported\nj by   local  fishermen   during   the   pant\n| week    A parly of four caught IHS fish\nat Atunroe ink'- on Sunday last\nMADE IN\nB.C\nMiNUFAClUBf'l', \ufffd\ufffdSS0flm!0N\nOf  BRIIKH 10IU1HIA    .\nSfTSOV&lS   OF   <'!).\\l.   MINING   RICUU-\nI.A'I'li INS\nCOAL MINING rbchts of lbe I lull e\nin .Miiiiinii.i. s.isli.iien,-wiiii and Alberta.,\ntho Yukon Territory, tha Northwest Territories niul in n portion <n tho Province\nof British Columbia, may U- leased for i\nterm \"t twenty-one ypure nt nn annual\nrental uf tt nn acre. Nol more than 2,jU0\nacres v. ill be li asi .1 i iu uppltcant.\nApplication  for n  hns tn.t  be m i li\nby the iippllcunt In person lo the Agent\nin- Hub-Asi-nt ni' the district In which tho\nri'^iits  nppljed   for  are  situated.\nIn \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdui'veyed territory tin- land mus' bu\ndescribed!  by  sections,  or letfal   Bub-dlvi-\nsinus of sections .mil  In  unsurveyed  I\nrltory the tract applied for simll be staked\nout  by iii,- applicant himself.\nEach application must be acoompni I\nby n I', i of .<\"i which will be rerun I\" i II\nthe rlKhts applied for are not available,\nIn:t not otherwise. A royalty simii i,.-\nliiiiil on the merchantable output of the\nmine ;it the rate of OVe cents i r t'-;\nTho persen operating tii\" mine shsll\nfurnish the Agi-nt with swum returns\naccounting for iho full nuantlty nr in--, -\ncttantnblfl coal mined und p 13 tho roj \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nulty thereon. Ii the coal mining rig '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nare nol being \"t\" rafed such returns sh 11I1I\nIn* furnished nt  li nsl  once n year.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd|'h\" lease \\iin Include tho coal mining\nrights only, but the lessee will be permitted i\" purchase whatever available\nMill.ie \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd right m.iy l\" considered u,-i \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n.-;iev for Hi, working of the mine nt llio\ni.i 1 - - of (10 nu acre.\nl-'or rnii Information application should\nli\" iniiile 111 ihe Secretary of the  ficpart-\nnn-iit  ni'  the  Interior,  mt nv.i.  nr to   m '\nAi. ni  hi   Bub-Agenl of  fiomlnlnn   Lai  I*.\n\\\\7  W. CORV,\n1 le] nly Mlnlsti 1 ul' i!,.- Inturlot\nN'H ttniuithnrlzed inililicntlon er this\nadvei iIni-iimiii will nut In- paid for,\nNew Wellington\nCOAL\nJOSEPH MAYERS\nOffice,  554  Front  Street,\nFoot of Sixth Street.\nP. O. Box 345. Phone 105.\nWestminster\nTransfer Co.\nOffice Phone 185.       Barn Phone 137.\nBegble Street.\nBaggage Delivered Promptly to\nAny Tart of the City.\nLight and Heavy Hauling\nCITV OF NEW WESTMINSTER, B C.\nVICTORIAN  ORDEK  OF  NURSES.\nMISS E. D0WNHAM\nResidence:  Room 118 McLeod Ulocfe\nPhone 489 L.\nMATERNITY. SURGICAL AND\nr.'.LDtCAL CASES ATTENDED.\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd11\nw.i THURSDAY. MAY 23. 1914.\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd__\ufffd\ufffd_.\ni-A-ii.  ini.tc\nJudge Howay Relates Early\nHistory of This City\n* \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'nth-ring unique in the history\nol New Westminster was held by the\nNative Sons on  Tuesday evening.\n- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'- Johnston, grand fae-tor, pre-\nlOI I und tbe gpaciOUS hall of the Odd\n! \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd iwS was well filled with men\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. Ing from the oldest timers to the\nI \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'. initiated native sons who are\nne;iiited at the age ol  IS years.\nMr. Johnston said, as thief factor of\nthis post, lie extended to them a very\n! welcome. Never in the history\ne. New Westminster had sue-h an\neven! taken place, lie could not ex-\npri \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd iii words the pleasure it gave\nthe Native sons that tbey wen- In\nthe position to entertain tlie pioneers\n1; I: <'., and more particularly tlie city\n\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd New Westminster.\ni \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd was very sorry that they could\nnot \"M,.,ni their courtesy that night\ntu the native daughters and lady pin-\nneeri of the city. The next thin-;.\nhi ,M vet, lu- hoped, would be an even-\ning with those ladies. (Cheers.)    He]\nwould now  Introduce    Judge    Howay,\ntheir  grand  historian.\nJudge  Howay.\nJudge Howay, received with cheers,\nsaid he bad selected us the t' enie of\nh \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   address the eaily days of New\nWestminster down to the time that sir;\n.liitnes Douglas retired  from office in;\n1S14.    He realized that in dealing with '\na matter of this kind and speaking of\nit ;n the presence uf those who lived i\nnnd bad  their being in  the  midst of\nit. i'. iiiiiiht be looked un as an Impertinence  from   otie  whose  information\nv ni entirely derived from books, However he bad undertaken It and would:\n'ii   v hilt he could.\nit was in the spring of 1868 that\nl        < >::.-:< tiee   ef   gold   in   tlie   fraser\nvalley set in motion the great north-,\nera exodus from California.    It was\ni'.   I   :i in w yellow star had atis'-n on!\nth.  horizon tor the people of California to worship,    lt entile at a singular'\nioment when the placer miners uf!\nCalifornia were looking for gold\nground, They were told that every\nOld :-!::;> or packet that could float was\n' tiled Into service to curry tills great\n< rot -i to tie- northern land There\n;:'-t much Information about it\ntin n. of its geographical position\nvery little was known, of its physical\nand political condition absolutely\ni.'.Hiin,*\nEarly   Days.\nAt that time Vancouver Island was\nn crown colony with the then .Mr.\nJames Douglas as governor and also\nhead of tlie Hudson liny company,\nwith Victoria in existence and Nanaimo, the rest waa unorganized terri-\ntory, It was called in a vague way\nNe-,,, t aledonia and tlu- only evidence\nol the white man iu lhe land were\nHudson Bay forts. So far as the gold\nrush of is.'iS was concerned these forts\nw-re at Langley, Hope and Kamloops,\nfor Vale at thill time had none \"Ht nf\nbv'ues although V opened again.\nWhen tlie crown colony of B. C.\ncame into existence Governor Douglas\nthought it necessary tn have .1 caol\ntn!, though In- exhibited considerable\nspring. (Laugh ter.) Inaccessibility\nwas another objection \"and depression\nand disease were enemies trom want\nof exercise in tiie open air.    (Laugh\nvacillation in the choice of a site for\nthat capital. Parliamentary despatches\nshow that Hope wag first chosen asi\nthe centre of the gold mining Industry. In the latter part of 1S5.S he gut\na new idea and then it was on the site;\nwhere St. Mungro's cannery is. There\nwere speculators, real estate men. in\ntie- country even then, however, and\nthey selected Derby, old Langley. They\nproceeded to lay down sites. Douglas\nChecked that idea and gave it tlie\nquietus, but next proceeded to take\nadvantage of what they had done. A\nsurveyor ran over the land and proceeded to lay out tlie site in Derby.\nThree, thousand blocks in the towhslte\nuf Derby were offered for sale and\n1K7 were sold, bringing in 113,000.\nAmong the bidders at that sale were\nsome familiar names, J. Webster, J.\nA. Homer aud W. .1. Armstrong.\nJudge  Howay   paid  a  high  compliment  to  Sir  Edward   Bulwer  Lytton.'\nafterwards Lord l.yttr.n. as a practical]\nstatesman, as well as a brilliant ora-;\ntor and renowned novelist,    lie said\nthere was one thing he had determined\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd' n  ami  that was to send  out to the\ncountry a detachment    of    soldiers,\nThis was in  response to    Qovernor 1\nDouglas' request\nRoyal  Engineer.. I\nThe  Koyal   KiiRlneers   were  picked I\nupon and Colonel Moody was selected\nto tiike charge of the detachment,   It\nwas no ordinary detachmnt but 150!\nvolunteers,    The colonel  had colonial\nexperience in the early forties as governor of the  Falkland  Islands. There\nwere  some  who  said,  a   pioneer had\ntold him, that one of the reasons fur !\nseme  of  their  short  streets\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMerri-\nvale, Blackwood and Mackenzie\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwas 1\nbecause Colonel  Moody's experiences\nIn the windy Patklands led him to be-1\nlleve that h they butted against Bome\nblock there would be less draught of\nai..   (Laughter.)\nThe colonel was eMef commissioner ;\ncf lands and works aud held the com-j\nnthislon 01' lieutenant-governor. One\nuf his duties was iu advise the g^ver-\nnor as t<> bis capital. He condemned\nDerby and selected New Westminster,\nA.- a result ol this two thingns hap-\npened, a little ill will developed between the governor and Colonel Moody\nand between th\" mainland and the island. Here tlie judge illustrated the\namusing controversy over tho first\nsuggested narai. of New Westminster,\nwhethei it. should in' Queensborough\nor Queenborough, Quoting early descriptions of the reyjl city from hooks\nby .Major Downing and others. Judge\nHoway  gave an idea of tin- gigantic\ntask  the  sappers  had   before  them  lit\ntheir coming i;i 1868. o*u writer,\n: a.1 officer of the engineers, told that\nit   took  him  two luitrs  to  do a  mile\nand a half through the bush, hut opln-\n| ed that Queenborough as a strategical\npoint from its geographical  position\nwas 11 very good site indeed. The writ-\n'-,   also  related  thai  he  stumbled  cn\nii  lame hear, much to their mutual\n, discomposure.\na less flattering description given\nWas that New Westminster was Object-(Streets Judge Howay stated the gov-1 shjw in some way that we do appre-1 proposal of this kind, a monument to\ntlonable  because it  was too elevated, [eminent did  not keep its promise  tolciate what they did for us as Native\ntoo heavily timbered, situated on on I devote   the   money   brought   in   from J Sons.\"    (Cheers.)\nextensive swamp to iay nothing of tne! the sale to that purpose. Consequent- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     Judge Howay then Eat down amidst\nnoise ...  acres of frogs during   the]!}  there waa disaffection among theIcheers.    The add.ess, wittily    inter-\n,r.  iple n\".d   When  Mr.   Franklin came   iperseO  With quotations from various\nround wltb more of these lots for sale! authors had been listened to with rapt\nthey  kicked up such  a furore that it  attention, only  interrupted  by cheers' evidence   of   depression.     Everything\nwas  Impossible  for  him  to    proceed. '. lor the premier and  Sam  Archer, an  looks  prosperous    and     progressive.\"\nter.)    Its enemies also called  it  theIThe attorney general for the time in-   old engineer, when they arrived. (Cheers.)\nphantom city. [timated  tiiat  they  were  liable to anl    XV. H. Keary moved, and Judge Bole\nIn 1S5X the survey of New West-j action for interfering wltb a govern- seconded, a hearty vote of thanks\nminster was undertaken by the Royal ment auction and they threatened to Judge Howay for his address, which\nEngineers and civilians. One of the ; him with tlie action of the river if he : was acknowledged briefly by that geu-\ncivilians still  remained in tiie person I did   not  clear  out.     (Laughter.)    Mi.   tletnan.\nOf Mr. Moberley and be was not SUrelDewdney was sent and the lots were Tne chairman announced that the\nthat their friend, Mr, Carter, was not [sold In 1SIJ0. The grading of the I secretary had prepared a roll book for\noonenoted with that survey. Streets still  rankled  In  the  minds of. the  signature  of every  pioneer  pres-\nFlrst   Sale. the people and they called for the for-1 ent,  with  the date and   place of his! \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n' mation Ot the town. The governor saw ! birth  and  the date of his arrivel in j     Eagl  j .-nne,   the   oldest  and   most\nno   reason   way   this   should   not   be , British Columbia. J       . .     ,\"       ,  ,,      \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,,.,   K\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nAll  thev  wanted,  he    said.      This was filled in at the subsequent! successful  play   of  the   age,   will   be\nwas to tajc themselves and raise money! tanquen;. Ith** offering of the Players' company\nto grade their streets. s;r airh^rt M.Rrirf. |ionlght.    it is needless to go into the\nCitv Incorporated.\nIn   June.   ]S>59.   the   first   sale   took I\nplace by 'Mr. Franklin.   A long, lanky I\nScotsman, Macphee,    interrupted    at!1\"   -\nthe start, by asking who was going to I\ngrade   the   streets.     The     auctioneer\nconsulted  the governor  and   returned\nthe Itoyal Engineers, in the good old\ncity of  New   Westminster.\nI do nay I feel the privilege of being invited here very much to my old\nLome tome, (cheers) to see so many\nwell  known faces.    I cannot see any\nEAST  LYNNE  AT THE\nOPERA  HOUSE TONIGHT\nwith the answer that the purchase\nprice would be dedicated to grading\nthe streets. The money derived from\nthe sale amounted to 190,000, one lot\nbringing $1,900, lot 11, block 5. Anyone who had purchased in Derby and\npaid up was credited with that\namoun:\nThe pioneers set to work to build\nthe city. xV. J, Armstrong who was\nsti'l with them, had the honor of\nbuilding   the   first   house   on   March\nSo on July lfi. 1880,\nSir Richard McBride . <)f   ^   , aB    everyo,)e\nSir iiici.ard Mcllride. pressed to say i kl)0WB  what Mi.   grea,   p,ay  is   and\nNew Westmin- s few words before the adjournment, Itt -'io^na^emeat'orthe Pis-yew' com-\nster waa incorporated us the first city | ruse and said:   lhe address which we|M\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ho\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd cngr\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdri \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdn \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd tn malm\nIn II. C.   They were prior to Victoria,\nwhicli was incorporated in 1881,\nOne of the  clauses  in  the  charter\ngave   the   council   power   to   cut   the\nhave listened to a few  moments ago\nreplete ai   is  was  with  so  much  per\ntajnlng to the city ol New Westmin-1\nstei, has given me so much food for\nAPPROPRIATED  $2000\nFOR ULSTER PROTESTANTS\nKegina,   May   27.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdExpressing   total\nBecause for once at any rate in j approval of the course    pursued    by\nf  the   mer-1 the good old city of New Westminster | the  Protestants in  Ulster, the Grand\nChants   advertising.       Among     them | we must class ourselves as chechakoes; Black    Chapter   of     British     North\ntrees down on any man's lot if he did j thought and reflection that even if 1\nnot do It himself, at the other fellow's were set down at this time to deliver\nexpense, The result was piles and! an address I would feel considerable\ncross piles of big timber which gave I embarrassment, enhanced by the cir-\nmalicloua people the opportunity to I cumstance that those ol us who came\ndub the city S'limpville, Stuinptown j -,ere in the 70's aie a little bit nervous\nLl. 1K5H.    He had lived  here 55 yearn  and other opprobious names. when we are sensible of the presence\nconstantly, except whicli his business      Judge Hosvay quoted from the first I of those who came here in the 50'b or\ni-iii'Mi him aw:i\\. Issue of the  iiritish  Columbia,  Peb-IOO'i\nThe first hotel in the town was built: runry, 1881, the names\nby Colonel J. T. Scott, the children's\nfriend. One or two generations of\nNew Westminster had loving remem\ntirauces of Colonel Scott and his .May\nda.-\nPioneer Conditions.\nThose living amongst the luxuries\nOf the present city could hardly realize the conditions of the pioneers. lie\nbad been told that the present town-\nsite was one of the finest timber limits in the province of B. C, covered\nwith gigantic fir and cedar.\nThe first minister in tlie town was\nI pany have spared no expense to make\nit a complete success.\nEast Lynne will run until Saturday, giving way to Ilex Beech's great\nstory   of  the   northland,  \"The   Spoil-\nthe Kev. Hr. White, father of one of!\nthoil  citizens, a native son. He came i\nhere in March, 1859, and preached his j\nfirst   sermon   on   April   3  on   Lytton\nsquare.     The   congregation   consisted!\nf one woman, two childn n and fifty ;\nor sixty men.    One of the ladies was ;\nMrs. James Kennedy, nnd one of the\nmen, W. .i. Armstrong, were still with\nthem\nThe next parson to come to the city\nwas the Kev. John Sheepshanks, afterwards Bishop of Norwich, England.\nHe published a diary before he died a\nyear or two ago. In that book he\ngives iiis first impression of Westminster, lie arrived in September,\n1859, He held his first services in\nthe treasury, calling his congregation\nwith the aid ni a Chinese gong. Later\nTrinity church waa built in Septem-\nbi r, I860, the first church in the city.\nThe rectory was \ufffd\ufffd':< n built, fixS feet.\nThe bishop held there were six necessaries of life, shelter, blankets, fire\nand fuel, water and something to eat.\n(Laughter.) The chime of bells presented by Baroness Tiurdett Coutts.\njtul   demolished  in  the  fire  of  lhiis.\nwere W, J. Armstrong, general merchant; J. T. Scott, coal deal and wharfinger; Henry Holbrook. commission\nagent;  Iir, Crane, B. Cormack Jones,\n'general dealer;  J. A. Homer, real es-1 deeply,  with all my old time friends\ntate and lumberman, and others.        jand brother native sons, that it is our\nHe also read the names out of the  privilege to be enabled to meet here\nfirst  directory  published  in  1863.       i tonight  with  the old    pioneers    and\nBoth  readings   were   received   with   founders of  New    Westminster    and\n: great  interest, as  well  as  stories  of j hear discussed in their presence mat-\nthe New  Westminster  mint,  and  the , ters of history of which they, perhaps.\nRoyal   Engineers'   dramatic   society's  alone   can   give   living   testimony   to-\nI performance of \"Box and Cox.\" day.    I  was much struck with Judge\nConcluding, Judge Howay said there | Ho way's closing observation, the erec-\nand it is traditional In this city that I America in session here today passed\nthe less a chechako has to say the ] a vote of $2000 which will be for-\nbetter. (Laughter.) Despite this em-1 warded to the Canadian Unionist\nharrassment,  as a  native  son I  feel | league in Belfast.   The vote of money\nwill be accompanied by a resolution\nexpressing the confidence of the\nCanadian Oraneemen in the policy ot\nthe residents of Protestant Ulster.\nThe  sum of $2000  was ordered  to\nbe sent at once.\nwas cue thing he desired to say before\nsitting down.\nThey were a strangely constituted\npeople, If they had anything nasty\nto say about a man they said it when\nbe was alive, and anything laudatory\nthe) saiei when he was dead, and\nlaid n wreath  upon his grave,\n\"We have had the Koyal Engineers\nin this city for many years,'' said the\nJudge. \"We own that they were here\nfor the whole of the province, but this\niI ,- here tbey landed and lived. This\nis the city that they named and surveyed,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdlt   and\ntion of some memorial In the city ot\nNew Westminster that would stand\nout in years to come as some evidence\nOf the appreciation of the native sons\nof the country to the wonderful efforts\nthat were put forth in the early days\nby the Koyal Engineers. I may state\nto you that Colonel Wolfenden, not\nlong before he passed away, spoke of\ncoming over to New Westminster to\nmeet his old colleagues and come\ndown to Sapperton, where they could\nmake out pretty nearly the exact spot\nwhere the Koyal Engineers com-\nThey did what they could for i nienced to work. For my part 1 al-\nmade   their   homes   here.     It   ways felt while we were constructing\nPRIVATE OFFICE\ndoeB appeal to me as a good object tor I memorials  \ufffd\ufffdf  some  sort or another:\ndees  appeal   to  nn-  as  a  good  objeir- ; all over the province, schools, public\nthe  Native  Sghs to  put before  them; buildings,   as   some   evidence   of   the\nBelvca  and   make  a   strenuous   effort!work ol some one. by a curious com-!\nwhile some cf these tried friends are bination of events we have done noth-l\nwith us to establish Borne sort of mon-  Ing in honor of the pioneers, the Koyal\nument towards perpetrating the mem-1 Engineers.    I de,n't think there could\nory of the detachment of Koyal Engl-lbe a better opportunity for the Native\nneers and its work ln the country, es-:Sons of New Westminster than to con-!\npecially in this vicinity.    If the mon- jctntrate on  some   action  that  would\nI ument is  undertaken  by  the  Native lead presently to Buch a movement. In 1\nSuns   I   have   very   little   doubt   that I a few  months you  would  get a con-\nformed the subject of an anecdote re- even with the present financial strin-1siderable sum oi money for the erec-\nlatlng to :i dispute between Victoria j gency not only individuals but public tion of such a monmument as would be\nand Westminster ns to their posses- bodies would aid the movement. It a credit to the city as well as to the\nj.;,,; commend the suggestion to vou before  Native Sons.   Public bodies as well aa\nReferirng to the    grading of    the all these people paSB away. We should I private individuals would recognize a\niBEs!\nCramming down Ill-chosen\nfood, and rushing back to\nwork, leads straight to dyspepsia, with all it means In\nmisery.\nProper habits of eating,\nwilh a Na-Dru-Co Dyspepsia Tablet after each\nmeal, restore good digestion, health and happiness.\nA box ot Na-Dru-Co Dyspepsia Tablets costs but\n50c. at your Druggist's.\nNational Drug snd Chemical Co. of Canada. Limited.\nUS\nDuring our  Big,  Clean-Sweep Sale we give a   high-grade broom with every purchase of $5.00 or over.\nNOTE   THE   SWEEPING   REDUCTIONS\nFURNITURE    CARPETS\nLINOLEUM\nCARPETS.\nTapestry  Rugs,\n2V4x3 yards:   regular  $6.75. CC Ajg\nClean Sweep  Sale         fWibV\n3x3 yards; regular $111.50. *\ufffd\ufffdQ  9ti\nClean Sweep Sale         90.CO\nItxSVi yards; regular $12,00. *\ufffd\ufffdQ TfC\nClean Swec p Sale         99. I 9\n:ix4 yards;  regular $16.00. \ufffd\ufffd>-| -I   \"]K\nClean Sweep Sale    91  lilv\n3%x4 yards;  regular $17,511. (10 *7C\nClean Sweep Sale    9 m \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd I W\nScotch Wool Rugs.\n3x8% yards; regular $15.00. C1(| 7C\n3x4 yards; regular $17.50. CIO  OC\nSale  <)lbibW\nBrussels Rugs.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1V,x3 yards; regular $13.50, *Q ^j\"\nSale      99.19\n3x3 yards; regular $20.00. 4_1Q Kfl\n3x3% yards; tegular $22.50. (IA TR\n3x4 yards)   regular  $25.00. (IC 7K\nBritish Velvet Rugs.\nEight only;  7,x4 yards;  regular $26.00. (17  Kfl\nIron Beds.\nWhite Knamel Iros Beds; regular $3.90. \ufffd\ufffd4   Qf|\nSpecial  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* I .99\n3-0 Green Knamel Iron Bed; one only;  regular $10.50.       $5*5 f\ufffd\ufffd#%\nSale   9P.0U\nFull size Iron lied; regular $6.50. it 4  t\\fm\nSale, each   9**a9'9\nSALE PRICES STRICTLY CASH\nBELOW ARE A FEW PRICES.   SEE WHAT\nYOU SAVE.\nDressers.\nI'i. Dresser; Iiritish riate Mirror; regular $11.00. sJQ \"yC\n.Sale   I'riee          $OiO\nOolden Oak Dresser;   3 large drawers;  with  British fl\ufffd\ufffdtt QK\nbevel plate mirror; reg. $11.50.   Sale Price       fOiVV\nAsh Dresser; 3 drawers; plate mirror; reg. $15.50. CIO OI%\nSale Price   91 mma\\\\.9\n* .Mahogany Dresser; large plate mirror; reg. $24.50. C1Q Oft\nSale Price  9\\ 0ib3\nMahogany Dresser, same as above only larger;  reg.      tlOTT  CA\n$36.75.    Sale Price       9m. i iWU\nBlrdseye .Maple Dresser;  with large plate mirror: reg    COC ftfl\n183.00.   Sale ''rice  9C.0.UU\nBest British Wilson  Rugs.\n4.6x7.6   feet;   regular  $12.50.\nSale  \t\nti.Ssf feet; regular $22.50.\nSalo  \t\n!\ufffd\ufffdx9 feet; regular $30.00.\nSale  \t\n9xl0.fi feet;  regular $33.60.\nSale  \t\n9x12 feet;  regular $45.00.\nSale  \t\nTapestry Hearth Hugs;  regular $1,60,\nSale   \t\nVelvet Hearth Hugs;  regular $2.75.\nSale\t\nWtlton Hearth Bugs; regular $\".75.\nSale  \t\ndoe. Cocoa Door Mats.\nSulo  \t\nKxtra Heavy  Printed   Linoleum;   regular  50c.\nStile I'riee. net- square yard   \t\nScotch Inlaid Linoleum;  regular $1.00.\nSale Price, per square yard  \t\nSr-Meh Inlaid Linoleum;  regular $1.26.\nSale Trice, per square yard      \t\n55c\n$1.25\n$2.25\n$3.25\n$9.75\n$16.75\n$22.50\n$26.75\n$33.50\n$1.15\n$2.15\n$2.95\n50c\n40c\n75c\n95c\nNottingham  Lace Curtains at Sale Prices.\nitegular 75c a pair.\nSale Price, per pair \t\nResult*.;* $2.00 a pair.\nSale 1 rice, per pair \t\n1 egu'.'ir $3.25 a pair.\nt ale i'riee, per pair\t\nItegular $5.00 a pair.\nSale Price, per pair\t\nfumed Oak  Mirror;   liritisli  Plate  Minor;   tegular CIO CO\n$17.50.   Sale ^lO.OU\nSolid Quarter Cut tiolden Oak Dresser;  with l\ufffd\ufffdr|-e mirror In centre\nand twoniirrois at side;  a beauty;  regular J>>\" 0l\ufffd\ufffd. (AO  CO\n(lolden Oak Dresser:  large British  plate mirror*,  reg.      #4 4   |ffl.\n$20.0(1.    Sale   ** I -*t.*IU\n(lolden Oak Dresser; low base; princess style; extra     (4Q 7C\nlarge mirror; regular $26.50.   Sale  #1 9. I 9\nChiffoniers.\nKir Chiffonier:   5 drawers:  plate mirror:   reg. $15.        $__\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd(\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_   TC\nSale    )l I.I O\nWhite Knamel Chiffonier;  regular $17.85.\nSale   \t\nWhite Knamel Chiftonier:  regular $13.50.\nSale  \t\nMahogany Chiffonier;  regular $31.50.\nSale  \t\nBlrdseye Maple Chiffonier: regular $33.00.\nSale   \t\n$13.95\n$11.25\n$25.00\n$25.00\nSALE PRICES STRICTLY CASH\nDENNY & ROSS\nr\nCorner of Sixth and Carnarvon\nTHE   OLD   RELIABLE\nPhone 588 PAGE FOUR\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWA\nTHURSDAY. MAY 28, 1914.\nPURE\nJAMS\nMade of Kresb Fruit and finest\nrefined sugar and containing no\npreservative. Such are Buchanan's .lams and at prices here\nquoted are as economical us\nhome-made jams:\nBuchanan's  Strawberry Jam.\n4 lb. tin    65c\nBuchanan's Gooseberry Jam,\n4 lb. tin    65c\nBuchanan's  Raspberry  Jam,\n4 lb. tin   65c\nBuchanan's     Damson     Janv\n4 lb. tin    65c\nEmpress   Pure   Fruit  Jams,\n4   lb.   tins    75c\n'Wagstaff'.s   Pure  Strawberry\nJam, 5 lb. tin    85c\nNoel's   Afternoon   Tea   Bluek\nCurrant Jam. 4 lb. tin. 75c\nClimax  Compound  Jam in  5\nlb.   tin     55c\nA   large  assortment  of   Pure\nJams   iiiul   Jellies   in   1   lb.\nglass   jars    25c\nModel Grocery\nMATHESON * JACOfeSON.\n808 Sixth St. Phona 1001-2.\nEast   Burnaby   Branch,   Second\nSt. and Fifteenth Ave.\nEdmonds Branch, Gray Blk.\nPhone Hilt..\nLocal News\nthe patients are removed from the old\nbuilding which will take place on\nSaturday or Monday next.\nSewer  Wcrk  Starts.\nPreparatory work was begun on the\nSappi rton   Bewer   way.  at   (llenbrook\nby tin   penitentiary men.\nMortgages\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAlfred W\nMcLeod.\n13221)\nNew   Planking   Laid.\nTrackmen  of  the  (treat  Northern\nrailway  have  been improving tlie approach to the eity market by the lay-\nin.;; i I new planking.\nBriquettes, Briquettes, cheaper than\ncoal. Barry Davis & Co., Phones\nSSO and 411 L. (3323)\nWood.   Wood.   Wood.\nOood factory wood (dry) at Superior\nSash & Door Factory.    Phone 503.'\n(3324)\nFour Bridges Destroyed\nIteeve   Marmont and Chief Constable\nPare visited the North Pitt river road\nI yesterday  and  found  that  th\"  recent\nI fire had destroyed four of the Coquitlam bridges.\nGRADUATING EXERCISES\nUELDAI B.C. HOSPITAL\nRatepayers' Meeting.\nTiie regular meeting of the Ward\nOne Ratepayers' association. Burnaby\nwill be belli in Johnston's ball- Highland Park, on Friday evening at S\no'clock.\nChimney Fire.\nThe fire department was e-.illed out\nto a small chimney fire on Hospital\nstreet yesterday noon, stations Nos. 1\nand 4 answering the call. A chemical was used in extinguishing the\nblaze.\nEight  Nurses  Receive  Diplomas    For\nEfficiency\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSeveral     Excellent\nAdres'-cc Given the Class\nYou   may  like  tea and\nthey  may  not  like  you.\nPremier bottle beer, it is\nand agreeable substitute.\nor ask your dealer.\ncoffee, but\nIf not, try'\nn healthful\nPhone 1.75\n(3322)\nInsure in the Royal, the world's\nlargest lire company. Agent. Alfred\nW.  McLeod. the Insurance  Man.\n(33211\nSelecting Assize Jury.\nSheriff T. J. A nn strong and J. J.\nCambridge, registrar of tlie supreme\ncourt, were engaged yesterday seleet-\ning the jury for the annual assizes\nell June 22.\nLightship Removed.\nTlie sandheads lightship has been\nremoved from its location at the river\nmouth for its annual overhauling.\nWhile the Ship is off duty a gas whistling buoy showing a red. oscullating\nli-.'!!!. wiil take ils plaee.   ,\nBoring for Oil.\nBoring operations for oil have he-en\nstarted at Hattic Prairie. It is reported that the indications are favorable and that lhe work will be energetically pushed forward.\nKat at the Royal cafe, Deminlo.i\nTrust building. Good cooking; good\nservice. (3320)\nThere is a period in the life\nof every man when he thinks\nabout the future welfare of those\ndependent upon him. Sometimes\nthis does not come until sickness overtakes him. '.Then he\nmakes a wilb--put it may be\nmade under wrong influence.\nHad the will been made during good health, tho most deserving persons\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdaccording to the\ndeceased's wish\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdrwould have\nshared in the distribution of the\nestate.\nDo you not realize that it is\nyour sacred duty to no longer\ndolay making your will?\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*The advice 'of tire Dominion\nTrust company in this matter\nmay be of value to you. All such\ndiscussions are treated in strict\nconfidence.    ' -\t\nWill Remove Booms.\nFollowing a complain! made by up-\nriver fishermen that log booms were\nI interfering with fishing along the\n! drifts the owners of the booms have\n'been requested by the Dominion fish-\n! i ry officials to remove them. The\nj booms were moored neat* Barnston ls-\ni land.\nThe bright silvery appearance of\nthe \"SALADA\" package is (lu\" t0 'be\nwonderful aluminium wrapping the\ncompany are now employing to pack\niet their well known ten. So close is\nits texture that it will preserve the\nfreshness of the  leaves even  better\nI than lead.\nAfter Road Material.\nThe provincial government has sent.\ntwo scows up to Nlcomen Island to\nconvey materia] from the Nlcomen\nquarry for the Island roads which are\nunder construction. The Dewdney\ntrunk road on the island is completed\nexeoept one portion which has yet\nto be gravelled.\nPitt River Bridge\nThe time for receiving tenders for\nthe new I'itt river bridge expired on\nTuesday last and the contract will be\nawarded in a few days. The bridge\nwill be steel on concrete piers and\nextend a length of about 1500 feet.\nThe rost is estimated at approximately $750,000, and tbe work ia expected\nto extend over a year.\nFred  Davis will sell by  public auction  (absolutely without  reserve)  the\ni household   furniture   and   effects     of\ni Mrs. Cunningham at 703 Agnes street\n! on  Thursday,    May   28.  at   1.30  p.m\ni sharp.    S::le   will   include  in   part   ot\n| very handsome Axminster and other\ni carpets,   linoleums,   easy   chairs   and\nj rockers,   morris  chairs,   dining   room\nj set of diners, solid oak extension  ta\nI ble and  sideboard,  beds,  springs and\nmattresses,  dressers  and   commodes,\nmalleable range, kite-hen utensils, etc\nGoods on  view morning of sale.\n(34101\nWomen's Educational Club.\nThe Women's Educational Club will\nmeet at the home of Mrs. J.  Bryson, I\n702   Sixth   avenue,    this     afternoon. I\nwill\nI\nMiss Evans of Columbian collegi\ndeliver  an  address  011  \"Modern\ntnntists.\" and will consider the work\nof  Maurice  Maeterlinck.     Musical  selections will be    rendered    by    Miss\n*   Th\nI cannery\n' probably\nWestmin\nWill Let Contra.t Todiy\ncontract for the new St. Mungo\nstorage\nand cold storage plant will\nbe let today. Several New\niter  and     Vancouver    firms\nWat soti.\nIng until\nThis\nnext\nwill be the\nSeptember.\n.have bill on the work, and according\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd)ra* | to James  Anderson,    owner    of  the\ni plant, a Terminal City firm will se-\n| cure tlie job unless the local men pare\ndown   their  prices.     It   Is   understood\nA pretty ceremony tool: place in the\nnew Koyal Columbian hospital yesterday when eight nurses, members\nof the second training class of the\nhospital, received their diplomas. Owing to the recent inclement weather,\nthe orlgina] intention to hold the exercises on the lawn was cancelled,\nthe main ward on the ground floor of\nthe new building being used for tbe\noccasion.\nMiss A. ,f. Hill, who has been a\nmember of tlie board of directors for\nllie past sixteen years, presented the\ndiplomas to  the  nurses.\nTlie eight nurses who received di-\nploinas were:\nMiss Constance Wiltshire, Miss\nPrances Whitaker, Miss Harriet (Jal-\nbiiiiih, Miss Elisabeth Percival, Miss\nMary Green, Miss Kdith Green, Miss\nBitty Morrison and Miss Annie Bow-\nyer.\nOne of tlie graduates. Miss .Morrison, is just recovering from a serious\nillness but was able to attend the\nceremony seated in an invalid's chair.\nPresident George Small occupied\nthe chair and iu his opening remarks\ndwelt upon the Importance of the\nHoming event, the opening of the new\nbuilding\nAddresses were made by Rev. E. O.\nThompson, Mayor Gray and Dr. G. E.\nDrew, the latter in a very able address' giving a resume of the work\nof tin- nurses in training and how-\nsuch a system came to be perfected.\nDr. Drew eulogized the work of Miss\nScott, lady superintendent for the\npast several years, who retires from\nthe institution at the end of the present month.\nFi Uowlng tlie exercises which was\nattended by many from this city and\ndistrict, the nurses of the Institution\nserved refreshments to the guests.\nRusbton's orchestra was in attendance.\n| question which it will probably take\nI the courts to decide. The vessel was\nI chartered lor the trip to this coast.\nI and now that the trip ia completed\nI the charier is fulfilled and Singh no\nlonger responsible, having paid his |\n1 good money tor the outward trip.\nShould  the  Hindus ordered  return-\nled, as is certain to be the case, who j\nI is to pay for their return to the potts I\n! from which they shipped? Singh  will I\nj undoubtedly  claim   that  be  Chartered \\\nthe ship only for the outward trip und I\nia not  responsible.    The captain  of\nthe   Komagata   Maru   will   naturally\nproteit   at  taking  them   back   ut   his\nown expense,  and  the owner.-:  of Ihe\nvessel   will  likewise  claim   tha*   they\nare   not   responsible  for the  expense\nof their voyage back.\nIn  the meantime Gurdit  Singh  has\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd made a nice little profit on the tran-\ni suction, and  the 375  Hindus, ut least\nthose who have not been  to this province  before,  will  have a  round trip\nnt the expense of their fare one way.\nVANQUISHED PLAYED\nEOR THEIR CAPTORS\nrecn from the country north of Bs til-\nlo As soon as possible after tbey\narrive they are sent again to sweep\nup the remnants of tin- Huerta I in\nThey are being m-iiI ever the uid\nMexican Central railroad Una, which\nit was said, is hi gOOOd condition, und\nwhich offered the best -\"111 qdid\nmeans cf transporting troops to the\ncountry through which the constitutionalists must pass on their w\ufffd\ufffd* t 1\ntlie  Mexican  capital.\nMore Fighting in Sight.\nThe troops are being sent towards\nZacatecas, where a torce uf fed rals\nis opposing tlie niiu commanded hy\nOeneral Panfllo Natera. Rumors haw-\narrived here that the federals evacus-\nled Zacatecas but troops continue to\nbe   sent   where   tbey   wuilld   b I   avail*\nable to move against tlie Zacatecas\nstate capital. A foreign resident, vim\nrecently returned her,- from  Zacate\ncas City declared there were : \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd >iei\nfederal troops in that town.\nSaltillo probably will retain only a\nforce sufficient to garrison it. A;\nSun Luis Potosi, it is said that the\nforce now besieging the town under\nGeneral Carrera Torres is suffii 1 nt\nto handle the situation and take the\ncity.\nMEXICANS  RECEIVE\nMORE   AMMUNITION\nMexican   Federal   Band   Rendered    a\nQuickstep for Successful  Rebel\nSoldiers.\nTorreon. May 27. The military\nband of the vanquished played for\ntlie victors or the battle of Paredon.\nwhen u part of the Zaragoza brigade\nreturned to camp hen* last nigh;\nfrom the campaign against Saltillo.\nAt the heels of the constitutionalist\nsoldiers several hundred federal sol\ndiers and the federals band captured\nIn the attack on the federal troops\ntrains nt Zeruche. They will be given the choice of joining the constitutionalist army or of being set free.\nAs they have no means of finding\ntheir comrades far to the south, und\nno way of getting food and clothes,\nthey probably will poln the revolutionary army.\nTroops continued to pour into Tor-\nMexico city. May 27.   lt waa report\nled tonight un high authority that a\nI large   shipment   nf   ammunition      had\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd jimt been received making two shipments in less than two week,; delivered i\" ihe federals. The government\nis now well supplied witii ammunition\nI to carry on its campaign against the\nconstitutionalists,\nThe Brazilian minister is endeavoring to have Washington permit the\nrelease of merchandize at Vera Cruz.\n'. consigned to firms here, without the\npayment nf duty to American authorl-\n! ties The plan is to have the merchandise si ni to the capital by  way\n! of Puerto Mexico, where the duties\nwill be  paid to the  Mexican govern-\ni ment.\nAlderman McNeil,\nturned from Victoria\nbe spent a couple of\ntate business.\nPort Moody, 11-\nyesterday where\ndays on real es-\nEugene, Ore,, May 27.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdResolutions\nof sympathy, passed  unanimously  bj\nthe student body of the University of\n[Oregon, were tonight wired tn the fam-\nlily  of the   Rt.   Rev.  Charles  Scad.; ng,\nEpiscopal Bishop Of Oregon, who died\nI in Portland this morning.\nlast  meet- i\nR. C. Hospital Opening.\nThe citizens of New Westminster\nand district are invited to attend the\nformal opening of the new Royal Columbian hospital which will be open\nto the general public on Friday afternoon between the hours of 3 and 8.\nThe Woman's Auxiliary of the hospital has made arrangements to serve\ntea which will be entirely free of\ncharge. This will be the last opportunity of the citizens to inspect the\ninstitution from lop to bottom before\nthat efforts are being made to induce\nMr. Anderson to give the local firms\na preference if the difference in the\nbids  i.s not   beyond  all   reason.\nDominion Trust\nCotr.paiiy.\nTht' Perpetual Trustee.\nPer Cent on\nDeposits\nNew Westminster\nBranch.\nelfi   Columbia   Street.\n8. KEITH,  Ma\"t.er.\nNEW WESTMINSTER\nCo-Operative Association\nPHCNE 453.\nHood    River    Strawberries,\npe:   box    15c\nFine Ripe Bananas, dozen..30c\nSweet Oranges, 2 dozen ...35.\nLemons,  per dozen    25;\nilacon, Swift's Premium, sliced, pe:  lb 35c\nWilson's  Special   Bacon,  per\nlh 35c\nPure  Food  Peas    10c\nFresh Mackerel, 2 lbs 25c\nNEW   WESTMINSTER\nCo-Operative \/taction\n33  Cight.'-i  St.\nPhone 458.\n\"The   Flower   Queen.''\nThe    floral   cantata,   \"The   Flower\nQueen.''    being    prepared    by    sixty\nyoung people under the able direction\nof  Mrs.  Cave-Browne-Cave,    will    be\n. given in St. Patrick's hall nn Thurs-\ni day ami Friday, May 2S ami 29.   Tin\n> proceeds    are    to   be   in   uid   of   the\ni Young    Women's   Christian    Associa-\nj tion,      This  cantata   is . a   charming\nmusical   nnd   spectacular   production\nand  has  been given  in  a  number of\ntbe large cities of England with great\nsuccess.    Admission: Adults 50 cents;\nchildren 2ric   Tickets may he obtained from  the members of the chorus\nand a: the Y.w.c.A, 13415)\nRecovered His Boat.\nLockie Ilrown who had his gasoline\nbout stolen several nights ago. yesterday succeeded in recovering his craft.\nIt was found below the bridge al\nSouth Vancouver by some boys. Mr.\nit\"' .. :i returned yesterday afternoon\nwith his property. When found the\ngasoline engine had been removed\nand 1111 attempt lind evidently been\nmade to sink the boat as the bows\nwere staved in. The peculiar part of\nth ' nffalr Is that while the engine\nhad bi en removed tho shaft and the\nnropeller still remained In the bout.\nThere ;s no clue to the thievi a,\nMiss (\"race Henderson, daughter of\nMr. Alexander Henderson, K.C., of\nVancouver, spent the week-end with\nher aunts, the Misses Henderson, on\nFirst street.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    *    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nMr. nnd Mrs. Jos. Lorimer, Fa.-:'\nBurnaby, announce the engagement of\ntheir daughter, Mary, to Mr. William\nSutherland of this city, the. marriage\n111 take place tlie third  week in June,\n...\nw. .1. Manson. M.P.P, for Dewdney\nreturned from Victoria yesterday and\non his way home to Mission, visited\nthe offices uf R. F. Bon bo n, ro:ul superintendent for Dewdney, in the provincial government,\n.   *   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nMr. and Mrs, Charles Ft. Cheney, uf\nNew Westminster. II. ('.. are among\nthe Canadian arrivals registered at\ntlie Washington Annex. They have\nbeen visiting friends in London, Kng.,\nfor several months and are now- on\ntheir way home after havin-_ spent\nseveral weeks In California.- Scattli\nPost-Intelligencer.\nHOSPITAL   DANCE.\nAMERICAN LADIES'  TAILORS\nInvite  the ladles of this city to   Inspect   their   spring  stock  of  tho\nlatest  fabrics  and  styles.    Special price for two weeks only $35 ani\n$40.    We guarantee perfect fit.\nCorner Clarkson and Mackenzie Sts.\nHO FOR WHITE ROCK!\nand the salt sea breeze, Monday, May 26.   Special Q, N. R. train leaves\nNow Westminster 8:80 a.m.;  leaves White Ruck 7:U0 p.m..\nROUND TRIP FARE, $1.00.\nWHITE, SHILES & COMPANY\nGeneral  Insurance Agents.\n313-315 Westminster Trust Building and 746 Columbia St.    Phone 85L.\n\"C!\nover  Leaf\" Brand\nICE CREAM\nManufactured  by  the\nCompany is absoluti ly\nSweet Cream is used,\nih\" 1 lover I' af. and  is\nCn\n::l     Dairy\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd and <ml\nsmacks ol\njust  as sweet\npui\nI:\nFor  That Holiday\nPicnic\nWest India  Limn Juice, bottl\nHtavt is  I.hiie J\\ftee au-.l  l.ii.i,\nOordial, per bollie\t\nMonserrat Ume Juice, per\n.25c\nla.ce\n.  35:\nbottle 43c\nTHE BEAVfR INMBAN\nTRANSfER CO.\n! Try  it   and  be couvlnci d\nManufacturers of Pure Crystal Ice.\nI Phone     1150    and     Encourage     Local I\nManufacture.\nThe Crystal Dairy Co.\nLIMITED\n555 Sixth St.\nPleasant Event Held in New Building\nin Honor of Nurses.\nOne of the nicest little dances of\nthe season was that given at the Royal Columbian hospital last night in\nhonor of the graduating class which\nreceived   diplomas   yesterday.\nMiss Jessie  T.  Scott,  lady  superintendent, assisted  by Secretary Withers,  n reived   the  guests  in   the  new\nI building, a  ward  of which  hud  been\nset apart for dancing,    Rushton's orchestra    never   played    be.tte'i    music,\nthe  strains  of  waltzes nnd   marches\nbeing  heard  until  an  early  hour till\nmorning.    Dainty  refreshments  were\nI served  by  the  nun; b  in  the dining\nj hall, every little di tail being of such\na  taste as to api 1 al  to every guesl\npresent, numbering over one hundred\nWHO STANDS fXPENSE\nOf RETURNING HINDUS\nBOILERS   Riveted Steel Pipes\n       BURN OIL     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nTANKS\nVULCAN  IRON WORKS, LTD.\nP    O    BOX   44?\nTELEPHONE   I?*\nYOU ARE OFFERED\nA complete line of Manicure olioda to\nselect from. Sets complete if yon\nwish, or separate Files, (.'lips, lluf-\nfers, Scissors (nail and cuticle),\nChamois Skins, Creams, Powders, and\neverything needed to keep the hands\nin noiid condition.\nStep in for vour supply\nAT RYALL'S.\n701 Columbia Street    (Druggist and Optician) Phone 57\n(V\n-lentrted   Gurdit   c'\nCountrymen   for\nChartering\nngh   Charred   His\nthe  Trip  After\nthe   Ship.\nhave\n7-11\nstarted\nSixth Street.\nan\nRose's  Ume  .iii'.:i'  and  Cord.,:'.\nLime  .line' .   Crape  JulCo   etc.\nDalton's Lemonade.  Big Wheel  Lemonade  Powders, etc.\nROse'a  picnic  size bottle  of\nJuice,, pur bi ulr-\t\nFOR   YOUR   SALADS,   w\ufffd\ufffd   have   the\nchoicest green stuff, kepi fresh and\nclean   under  running   water,  green I\nonions,   radish,  lettuce,  cucurabets,\netc.\nSweet  Pickles In tin *. just the thine\nfor the  picnic  baskot, per tin   15c\nand   25:\nFRESH   STRAWBERRIES  DAILY\nI\nSATISFACTION   IS  OUR   AIM.\nDean's Grocery\nauto  freight  service 1\nNew   West-\nA  reliable ;\nservice  guaranteed.    Charges  reason- j\n^-hle.    Give  us a trial.\nvon  hetween   Vancouver   and\nu,meter and   way  points.\nWhen Hungry Look for a White Place\nTHE STRAND CAFE\nPhone  1254.\nWhite Cooks\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNuf  Said.\n?\nlurr Block\nPhone 186.\n\"JIumHi   Street.\nRead - The - News\nAre You Going Camping?\nIf bo yi u will probably need a tent. Then come to us and we can\nsnpply you with anything in tha* line.\nWhether yen are going camping or pot you should have one of\nenr f-ynoui- Palmer Hammocks* iaay are different. Many oolors to\nchoose from.    Prices ranging from iz.50 to $12.50.\nT. J. TRAPP & CO.\nNew  Westminster.        Phone 69\nVancouver, May 27.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA new interpretation has heen placed upon the\narrival of the shipload of Hindus whn\nare now In port aboard the Komagata\nMain,  but  an- not allowed  to land.\nIt viis rumored that the boat was\nnot chartered by Gurdit Sin^li as has\nbi (11 claimed all aloug, und that he\n: was bringing :,77, fellow countrymen\novi r at his own expense. While It is\nadmitted that he really chartered the\n.0iip, lie did not give free passage to\nthe passengers who are desirous of\nlanding In British Columbia. On the\n,;i utrary, ho charged each cue of them\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd11 .lated price for the trip, realizing\nmore than enough to pay for the charter nf the vessel.\nIn add,lion he brought over a rar-\ngo of conl for which he received the\nfull tariff. This latter represents a\nclean pro It on the voyage In addition\nin ulnt he cleared on the passenger\niii: over and above the'price of the\ncharter,\nit has in cn el..inn d all along In\nBome i|uiii'tcr.i thai Singh knew perfectly well thai he would not be able\nto land his countrymen on their arrival   iii   Vancouver,   bul   that   they\nwould   be  ordered     returned     whence\nthey came by  the  provincial and the\nDominion frovernmonts.\nThis will bring out an  Interesting\nMoney back if the recipe\ndoes not taste better\nthe \"ROYAL STANDARD\nway.\" Try ROYAL STANDARD side by side with\nyour pet brand, just as we\ntest it in our laboratory side\nby side with other flours\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nwe will let sharpened appetites decide which is the\nbetter way.\nYour grocer is flour-wise\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdask him.\njej^^ THURSDAY. MAY 28. 1914.\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS.\nFACE rivi\nli'\nLACROSSE\nGOLF\nBOXING\nS PORT\nBASEBALL\nCRICKET\n| BASEBALL |\nNORTHWESTERN  LEAGUE.\nStanding of the Clubs.\nWon    Lost\nVancouver  7S\nSeattle   ..._________\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd...\nBAM. IGfiiGtfl\nwas  scratched   a   few     weeks-\nbay\nlie\nWect  Ends and  Sapperton\nInn  Food for Fans at\nPark.\nWill  f-'urr,-\nQueen3\nrarch \t\nago.\nDurbar II., today's winner, is a\ncell by Rabelais out of Armenia,\nwas bred in franco.\nAfter Durbar's  moderate display at I\nI. .:,. ...iiiiui. May 17. when be finished out of the money in the race for\ncolts valued . ' 120.000, Mr. Duryea decided not tj send him to compete in!\nthe Derby.   On the elimination of the \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\"wonder horse,''  The Totrarch.   how-j\nSpokane\nTacoma\nPortland\nVictoria   .\n19\n17\n11\n13\n18\n19\n7'4\n.4\n3D\na. former star slabsman with the Athletics, by tbe Brooklyn Federals, indi-\ncatea tbe risk the organized clubs are\ntaking  urban  they  release a  player to\nthe minors,    Ilout-k refused to go to\n_BI Baltimore in tin- international league\n| and hooked up with the outlaws for a\nthree year term. That makes the second Mackman to jump. Danny .Murphy refusing to report at Baltimore\nI eail;' iu the season.\nPct\n.68.\n.1127\n.a*;u\n.441\n.414\n,268\nYesterday's Games.\nVictoti. 2, Tacoma 1.\nSpokane 3,  Vancouver  7'.\nSeatth -Portland  postponed;\nI'olo i.s sure some highbrow sport\nwhen $-1)0 is charged for boxes admit-\n'tins; six persons to the coming series\nj between Kngland and the States. A\n, pile of money was cleaned up last BUm-\n| mer In the games against the Hurl-\n; Ingham  team.\nAMERICAN LEAGUE.\nLacrosse  fans should be treated fo|ever,   the   American   turfman\nStanding of the Clubs.\nWon    Lost\nWashington   -l\nPhiladelphia   17\na real picnic at Queens park this eve-l\nUlng when Sapperton and West Binds\ni-lasii in the initial game of tlie sea- i\nsun. These two teams have played |\npreviously, Sapperton taking the game I\nbut on account of several protests!\nagainst players tbe executive decided\nto declare the game void.\nThe trouble created no little friction!\nai   tie-   time  and   while  the   officials\nbave been Instructed to keep a firm\nI ait'l   on   the   play   tills   evening,   all i\nkinds m  fun Of a strenuous character |\nis  liable  to  lie  pulled  off  before  the\nfourth quarter la ended.   Sapperton,\nafter losing the championship In 1913,\nis anxious to make amends and with\nn first dais  team  wearing the blue,!\ntbe champions are likely lo be extend-1\ni d to the Tiill limit\nUnlesB   Bast   Burnaby  drafts  morel\nplayers the race will be between Sap-\nperton and  West Ends and tonight's\ngame will have _ direct bearing as to!\npossesison of the Ki rr cup.   The game\nwill start at 6:30 sharp.\nSapperton will line up as follows:]\nW, Coutts, It. Chambers, K. Coulson.l\nW, Ki.lii:,. .1 Chambers, W. MltchelLl\nE Camoron, A. Pollls, J. McDonald,\n\\V7 Sclater, H. 8clater, J. Sclater; |\nspare, D. fluff; referee, Chris. Cam-j\neron\nhis  deci\nthe colt\nion  and\na chance\naltered ( Detroit      ill\ndetermined to give 1st l.ouis   18\n' Hoston     IB\nNew Vork  It\nChicago   Di\nCleveland    H\nJUNIOR LACROSSE\nJchn   Robson   in   tead   to   Repeat\nJcc   Lally   Medals\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLeague\nStanding::.\nfoi\n12\n17\n1\".\n17\n17\n16\n20\nI\nPet\n.666\n.686\n.688\n.4X4\n.408 j\n.400\n444\nEpsom Downs looked like Vera\nCruz in possession of the American\nmarines yesterday when the famous\nold Derby was run off. The London\nbobbies assisted tba county force in\ndrawing a cordon around the course\nto prevent another of those fanatic\nsuffragettes from throwing herself in\nfront of the horses. Even at that one\nc! th\" cops must have enjoyed one\n.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdal shock when a woman fired a blank\ncartridge at him.\nAwing\nBOXING BARRED\na slight mix-up in the public schools lacrosse league the following games Will be played on Saturday:\nl'\\ W. Howaj VS. John Robson at Sapperton p-.ik. 9:30 a.in.; Lord Kelvn\nvs. Richard Mcllride at Queens park\n10:30 a.m. In June succeeding Saturday -.'aiiie.-. will he played strictly to\nSchedule, the season ending the week\npn vic,ns to the Bummei  vacation.\nThe  league   standing   for  the  Joe\nLally medals is as follows:\nWon\nI John  Robson        5\nI Herbert Spencer     4\nSt,  l.ouis       3\nj lxird Kelvin       1\nRichard McBride     0\nK. W, Howay     o\nYesterday's Games.\nWashington  7,   Detroit  0.\nBoston \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*>. Cleveland 4.\nSt.   l.ouis   1,   Philadelphia   1:   game\ncalled in sixth on account rain.\nChicago-New   Vork postponed;   rain.\nSeveral of the Salmon Bellies are\nseriously considering training methods\nemployed by Jimmy Duffy, the Hamilton boy, who recently won the Boston Marathon. Duffy claims he trained on cigarettes and beer, mentioning\nthese as the principal articles Of diet\nNATIONAL LEAGUE.\nStanding  cf the  Clubs.\nPittsburg  ...\nNew Vork .\nCincinnati . .\nIlrooklyn . . .\nSt. Louis . .\nChicago\nPhiladelphia\nHoston   \t\nWon\nLost\n.  21\n9\n.   IS\n11\n.   21\n15\n.   14'\n16\nThi   V.   VV.  C.   A.  und   V.   M.  C.  A\nhave obtained a lease of tbe tennis\nBOUtlS     at     the  old   See   house.     Th-\n\"i   W, ''. A   will have the use of tie\nPct!conns on Tuesdays, Thursdays an\nis\nl\")\n12\n!*\n21\n17\n,700\n.826\n.683\n.4 SO\n.47.1\n.41*;\n4i:i\n.3111\nj courts\nSatuidi\nvs.\nCHEAP RENTS\nBradley Block, 5th Ave. and 12th St.\n3-roomed suites  $16.00\n4-roomed Suites \ufffd\ufffd18.00\n2 modern houses, full sized basement, 1214 and 1216\nHamilton St.   Rent $15.00\nFurnished Modern Cottage, Blackwood Street.\nFurnished Modern House, 6th Ave. and 1st St.\nNew fully modern house for rent, 7th Ave and 2nd St\n5-roomed Cottage on 7th St., modern, $11 per month.\nMarjoribank Building Suites to rent at $25.00\n6-room Cottage with basement and garage, modern,\nCor. 8th St. and 8th Ave. per month $25.00\nWESTMINSTER TRUST\n\ufffd\ufffd\"'     V\/\ufffd\ufffd'.^yj LIMITED\n\\ -HEAD OFFICE- NEW WESTMINSTER.B.C.\n\\;;; U.J%KES.'MAN:DIR.,       J.A.Rennie.SECY-TRES\nLost\n0\n1\nSport Comment\nYesterday's  Games.\nPhiladelphia '!. Cincinnati 8.\nNew  Vork 3, Chicago  1.\nBoston 7. St. l.ouis 4.\nBrooklyn-Pittsburg Kami* postponed;\nrain.\nFEDERAL LEAGUE.\nSt. l.ouis 3, Baltimore 4.\nAll other Federal games postponed\nrain.\nTiie ll. c. E, ll. baseball team le arranging u sp\ufffd\ufffd< ial trip to Sumas on\nSunday afternoon where tbe fast\nWa.hinpi-oii tlate team will be taken\nen. A rpeclal ear will leave li.e Col-\nitmbii i-tnet depot ai 12 o'ciook making .i -lou-i'too run to the boundary\nline T\ufffd\ufffd\ufffde ttain will leave Immediately\nafter the ?ume, i special tare of one\nilollar uivtring the trip,\nthe   local   regiment   under   the   com-: LITTLE\niiiiinil of Lieut.-Col. J. D. Taylor. Ml'.\nhas  taken  tlie    lead    in    numerical\nstrength, even defeating the Vernon     ott\nn giment, the 102th. ' the\nTlie 104th paraded as follows: Staff, | who i\nENCOURAGEMENT\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    FOfl  THE   HINDUS\n8t. Andrew's and Knox Presbyterian\nchurch teams :'.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd cash in a church\nbaseball  ieujui   game nt  Moody  Park\nI this evening at 6.SC. Considerable In-\nterest is being shown by the followers\nlot the new organisation and a good attendance is expected when the two\n| nine.-;   meet.\nIS; a company, <\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd11; 11 Co., Capt. 1J\nCo., capt. Cackey,\nCarleton, 41!; G Co.\nII.\napt.   Cunningham,\nH. Smith. 31;  D,\n40;   E  Co.,  Capt.!\n. Capt. P. H. Cun-J\nwa. May, 27.-Or. Sundar Singh.\nihiiiu  leader  from   Vancouver,\nhere endeavoring to secure the\nCo.. Capt.  Corbjuld,\nstretcher  section,  8;\nProsecutinq Attorney Gives Orders to\nPrevent   Match   Between   Chet\nNeff and  Bill-^ Williams.\nSeattle, May 27, John K. Murphy,\nprosecuting attorney of Kings county,\nlate today Instructed Sheriff Edward\nCudlhee to prevent the staging of a\ntell round boxing bout between Chet\nNeff and Hilly Williams, scheduled to\ntake place Friday night. In a hail ju.-t\nnutsiile   the   city   limits.     Four   round\nexhibitions only have been permitted\nin the city fer several months and it\nwas planned to open ten round exhibitions euiside the police Jurisdiction\nbut the prosecuting attorney ruled\nthat such bouts were illegal, The\nstaging of short bouts within the city\n\ufffd\ufffdiis a  matter for police supervision,\nMr. Murphy Bald, He will not interfere with the tour round exhibitions\ngiven under tbe auspices of athletic\niissuei.it.ions.\nSPORT CHATTER\n(By the Potter.i\nTlie difference o! opinion will still\nexist between Andrew Carnegie and\nWillie Ritchie, even following the terrific licking tlio California!! lightweight received at the hands of\nCharl ly White on Tuesday night at\nMilwaukee.\nThe   Laird   oi   Skibo   declares   em- i\nphatically that It is little short of criminal   lo:   a  man  to  die  rich.    Kitchie.\nholds  that any champ  who dies poor many statements credited to bun that\nI the fans accept all these yarns with a\nREGIMENT RETURNS\nFROM VERNON TODAY\nnlngham, 31\nH   drums, ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\ntotal, 266,\nDuring the entire period in camp\nthe New Westminster regiment has\nbeen the recipient of considerable\npraise both from the officers of the\nbrigade and the hundreds of spectators who have been daily in attendance.\nadmission  of bis .countrymen,   interviewed a number of minister today.\nIt is said there is no likelihood for\nthe restrictive oriler-in-council beim*;\nrelaxed as requested by Ur. Singh or\neven that a committee of inquiry will\nbe appointed.\nWalter Johnson states he will pitch\nj for the team that offers him the most\n| money in 1916,    Walter has denied so\nSTRIKING MINERS\nASK FOR SUPPORT\nOif\nAMERICAN ENTRY WINS\nDur\nof;\nca's   Durbar   II.   Carries\nEvent  of  the\nBig\nRacing\nYear.\nis a chump.\nRitchie missed his calling -Alien he\ndid not enter the business  world.  No\nfinancial depressions would have ever\ndaunted   Willie,    The  golden   ducats\nwould  have continued  to fall  into his.\ncoffer whether the C. S. was at wai\nwith Mexico or the corn crop of Iowa,\nhad   failed.     The   victory   of   White, '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nwho by  tlie way is English  horn, will\nundoubtedly pave tbe way for another I\nbattle   either     between     Welsh     and !\nKitchie    or White    and the    present\nchampion,\nAccording  to the  press dispatches!\nthe Californian had a mighty hard time ;\nof  it  staving  off  the  attack  of  the\n| Chicago boy and but for the fact that\nno decisions are allowed in Wisconsin,!\n| the   referee   would   have   undoubtedly ,\nawarded the verdict t.i the newcomer!\n! iii  the  fistic  world.\n\"Kendall states under affidavit that\nhe has nol received any money for\nplaying lacrosse In Alberta, but that\nhis travelling expenses were uaid from.\n|Kelowna to High River, and his ex-\nwhile  there about!\ngrain of salt, but it is highly probable\nthat Clark Griffith will have to bid for\nthe star hurler's services next season\ni! a Federal attack is to be staved.\nCriffith claimed Johnson was worth\n$100,000 but it is dollars to doughnuts\nthat nothing like this sum will change\nhands should a deal be pulled of!.\nicers and Men of the 104th Receive\nHigh   Praise   While  at   Annual\nEncampment.\nThe signing of Pitcher Byron Houck\nMembers of the 104th regiment who\nhave been in cuinp at Vernon during\nthe past five days will arrive in tin-\ncity some time this morning, having\nentrained at the Okanagan city late\nlast nieht.\nj    For  the  first  time  in   many  yean-.\nSeattle, May ll\". - Issuance oi a n:.-\ntton wide call fur financial and moral\nsupport foi the striking Colorado coal\nminers, endorsement of Congressman\n.1. W. Bryan's bill culling for federal\nownership of the Colorado coal mines\nanil the selection of Denver for the\nnexl i.,1 eting place were the principal\nacts ot the convention of the Rocky\nMountain Association of the United\nMine Workers of America, which ad-\njir.'.-'i.' I today. The delegates voted\nunanimously in favor of carrying on\nthe Colorado strike to a finish.\nOPERA HOUSE\nThe Players'Co.\nThursday, Friday, Saturday\n\"EASTIYNNE\"\nNext\n\"THE SPOILERS\"\nPRICES: 15c, 25c,\nPhone 961.\n35c.\npen-\nto\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdere\npaid\nEpsom, Ens., May 77 Durbar II.,\nbelonging to II. B, Duryea, the only\nAmerican entry, won the Derby here\ntoday,    n. Cholmondeley's Hapsburg\nwas   si caul,   and   ll.   .I.   King's   Peter\nThe Hermit, was third, Then- were\nthirty starters..\nDurbar II, won by three lengths. A\nlength and a hall separated second\nand third. The last American race-\nhorse owner to win the Knglish Derby\nwits Richard Crocker, who carried oft\nlite classic with Orby In 1907.\nThe Derby stakes was established\nin 1780, but races had, taken place\non the same course na early an 1(140.\nThe Btakes is valued at $32,600 and\nis for entire coits and fillies of three\nyears eld. The course is nbout one\nmile and a half In length.\nI'm- this year's race there were originally 77.', entries, The great favorite   for   this  year's   race.  The  Tel\nROYAI\n\" THEATRE\"\nFeaturina\n\"Our Mutual Girl\"\nPar* 2.\na month     He played against the Chinooks during that time and no protest\ni\\-.as made. No othei evidence being\navailable we have not suspended\nhim ''\nThe above is an excerpt from the\nwire tot-warded by President 11. P,\nArchibald of the Vancouver branch of\ntbe British Columbia Amateur Athletic union and demonstrates the lax-\nIIty of the union officials on this side\nof the continent  on some cases while\nJin   others,   players  are   suspended   for\ni trivial offences. Kendall of course is a\nVancouver lacrosse player. A whitewashing in Iiis case was a foregone\nConclusion Just us soon iis the Calgary chinooks protested him.\nit mighl be stated thai the hist has\nnot  bein heard Of the case, 'The New\nWestminster branch, which has made\noven worse breakt in the past, is i>c-\nI ginning to awaken trom its long sleep\nland according to President Jim Keary\n[of the local union, steps will be taken\nto secure if possible the real inside\nfacta of the case    To the ordinary\nsportsman, a man who is paid his travelling expanses and provided with his\nboard  and  room  In  an  hotel  for one\nmon tii  during   which   he   is   playing\namateur lacrosse, la nothing less than\n!\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd, professional,\n\/\nFine  Kevitone\nA   FILM   JOHNNIE.\nThanhouser\nKATHL.r_l_i\\l.   THE    IRICH\nROSE.\nAn   Historical   Romance   in\nTwo Parts.\nFlvinq   A   Film\nA CHILD OF THE  DESERT\nFeaturino  Sidney  Ayres  and\nVivian   Rich\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDrama.\nTHE   BRASS   EUTTONS\nComedy.\nAdmission:   5c.  and   10c.\nThe pricket pessimists of the city\nreceived a rude jolt on Monday when\ni lie Royals citm> across with a clean-\ncut victory over the llurrards, one of\nthe crack elevents of Vancouver. K. C,\nH. Cave signalized his return with the\nclub by compiling a well-earned 80,\nwhile Peel followed With \":!. Monday's victory if 1174 to 141 raisns the\nhopes of the local knights of the willow* and more successes me to be expected from now on.\nII\ntwo\nBig\nSr.\naga\nMo:\nthe\nanility\nin t\nfroi\nlooks t.i be a straight tight be\nin Toronto and Nationals for tho\nPour    championship.     Doughy\nng featured for tba Blue Shirts\nInst the Quebec aggregation on\niday,   6000   spectators   witnessing\ngame even though numerous other\n'actions were featured the same\nTecumsehs and Quebec are back\nraining nnd will probably be heard\nn   within the  next   few   weeks.\nYou Paid $20 to $22.50 for a Suit\nS DIFFERENT NOW\nFor You Can Get It Here During This Great Sale\ns\nFOR ONLY\n8wimming, Hikes. Mountain Climbing,\nPaper Chases.\nMay  15 to  Oct.  1, $2.00.\nRoval Avenue. Phone  1000\nFunston Denier Report.\nVera Crus, May 77. -Qeneral Funs-\nt< n denied ton'.ghl t >\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd report that\nemissaries trom Huerta had approached him with a view to ascertaining If\nhe would receive the provisional president and give him protection. General Funaton also said that he bad no\nknowledge of the landing of any war\nsupplies from the ateamer Vpiranga.\n$12.00\nMake It Your Business Today to Get Yours\nred & Mcdonald\n707 Columbia Street\nNew Westminster \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>\nmnm\nPAGE  SIX\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS.\nTHUr.eOAY.  MAY 28,  1914.\nWORKS HIS WAY\nTO SEE CHILDREN\nAGENCIES.\nCLASSIFIED   ADS   WILL   BE   HE-\ncelvt-d for The News at tbe following places: F. T. Hill's drug store,\n*;:8 Columbia street; A. Sprice,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdQueensborough, Lulu Island; Mrs.\n__. Larden, Highland Park; Mrs. V.\nLewis. Alta Vista.\n*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*><\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd<\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd RATES. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nClassified\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOne cent per word per\nday; 4c per word per week; 15c per\nmonth; 5000 words, to be used as required within one year from date ol\ncontract,, *25.00.\nHOW AN AMERICAN\nVIEWS CANADIANS1\n.SAI.K BY OWNER\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd50 ft. clear-\nlot near car line, Edmonds. Ap\nHox No. 8429 News office.\nS Man  of Sixty Years Stokes on  Atlantic Liner to Earn  His Passage\nto Canada.\nTOR\nBALE Early Cabbage and |\nScotch Tale Plants; 2~>c for 5n. Mr.1\nMcNair Cray. Graham off Sixth St., I\nneai car line. (3428) '\nMontreal, May 27.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWatching and\npraying as ihe time tor every postal\ndelivery draws near, an elderly Englishman is sitting and waiting for\nnews of his children In Ontario, in ;i\ni well known Church of England bome\nuear St. Catherine stueot.    lie arrived\n \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd lin  Montreal four days ago and has\nFOR BAUD\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1.00 DOWN, $1.00 PER j ll0t fl CPIJl \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd h|a pocket, or the slightest  idea of what be\nFOR SALE    TWO CIKCL'LAli SAWS\nand saw table complete.    Apply at?\nThe News office.\nVOU    SALE    SELL     YOUR     PROP\neriy tlmnigii an ad. In this column.\nweek. Canada's Pride Malleable\nRanges; every one guaranteed. Market square. (3316)\nLADIES   WANTED\nthe  only  store   in\nbabies'   clothes   to\nSixth street.   Ladtf\nto   notice     that\ntown     making\noi,!, r   is  a:   61\ns' and children's\nunderwear\ndressmaking\n(3408)      apply next house.\nFRASER VALLEY JUNK CO*329\ni-ront St. Phone 213, cash paid tor\nall kinds of juuk. bottles, sacks bar-\nIron, old rags, old rubber\n(\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd',719) :\nrels, cast\nboots and Bhoi B.\nWANTED\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFurniture,\nMeCloy   &   Co..   the\ntc,    W.\nexpert\nTO RENT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFURNISHED HOUSE-\nkeeping rooms, $10 per month, at\n224 Seventh street. (33131\nFOR RENT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIF YOU HAVE ROOMS\nto rent try an ad. ln this column.\ntioneers, will conducl a successful I\nauction  for you or buy outright  if ;\nsale not dc-'ired.    C\"\nprompt settlements, over  20\nwide exp< rience.    v\\\nSixth streel.\nbusiness,\nvears i\nor call 32 I\n(3423) |\nWANTED \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  HOUSEHOLD    KUKN1- |\nture. or stocks in trade, in large or\nsmall quantities, highest price paid.\nOr Fred Davis will sell your goods j\nby  public  auction   with   guaranteed I\nresults, or no commission  charged,\nsee the expert em furniture before j\nvou give your goods away.   Address\nFred   Davis.   548   Columbia   street.\nNew Westminster. (33171\nLOST AND   FOUND.\nLOST- May 3, safety pin brooch with\ncircle cf' turquoise and pearls, on\nFraser valley line or on Btreets. Return io News otfici. (3425)\nwaa tt do next.\nHe  comes from  a  quiet  little  English country town,  where  he  was    a\ntradesman   in  a   small   way.  but   bis\ntine.'   sons   and   two   daughters   are\nworking  in  Canada,  and  lie  became\ndesperately anxious to see them.    He\nMODERN HOUSE FOR    RENT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd115  began to fear he might die before be\nper month.    Or will sell.    Will take   could,   for  he  is  sixty  years  old.\ngood  agreement  or    mortgage    as!     u,,  managed   to   work  his   way   to\nLiverpool telling none of bis neigh-\n(3413) ! horn lor fear they would prevent him.\nlie was in a lever of Impatience i-i\ncross the ocean. He did not even\nwrite to his children, He hud no\nmoney, but he is Strong, so he went\ndown lo thi' docks und managed to\nget taken on a westbound ship ns a\nstoker.\nHe  had  never  done  rough  manual\nlabor   before,   so  before  he   was  two\ndays at  sea his hands were in a terrible condition.    The heat of the fire--\nexhausted  him  but  he  stuck  gamely\nI to   his  post,   assuring   everyone   that\nlie  was  never tired.     His  gentleness\ni and   eagerness  to    give     satisfaction\n! made  him  a  favorite  with   the  other\n! men and ho got  many a kindly hel**-\n\\ tin; hand.\nHi,-   Idea   was  that   oner'   the  boat\n' landed him he would \"be in Canada)\"\ni with   everywhere   within   hailing   distance nnd he was in despair when 1\"\nwas told ihat his children were il l,:ii\ntrain journey away.\nHe belongs to the Church of 6ng-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd i;>*icl so eotm kindly Rtontrealer ad-\nvi-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd d him to lie Rev. A. H. McOreer,\nasslstanl priesl of Ohrisl Church Cathedral. This gentleman has taken\ncare of him temporarily, and wrote\nin once io his children asking them\nto send iheir father's far,- and he will\nBee him rnfoly en his ww.\nM. !-\naue-lTO RENT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBeautifully furnished five\nroomed bungalow, garden growing,\nchickens, Fourteenth avenue nnd\nTwelfth rirnet car lino half block.\nMrs. E. S. Bevington, Edmonds.\nB.C. (3424)\nCOLLECTIONS.\nHAD DEBTS COLLECTED EVERY-\nv.bere. No collection, no charge.\nAmerican-Vancouver Mercantile Ar\n. enev. 3*16 Hastings street west. Vancouver. (33141\nWhen Requiring\nHelp\nFOUND\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHeavy draught horse, bay.\nstar on forehead, aboul 1600 pounds,\nOwner can have Bame for expenses.\nIf not claimed hy June 3 will be\nmid. 511% Eighth Btreet, New\nWestminster. (3411)\neither male or female, do not  forget\nthat the Municipal Labor Bureau is in\na position  to supply you.\nPHONE 852.\nCTRAICHTJACKET  FOR   RIVER\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nCGRPOHATION OF BURNABY.\nAUCTION SALES.\nFURNITURE, STOKE STOCKS AND\nfarm sales conducted. Furniture\nbought for cash. 1'. D. Urown. 17\nHegbie street. New Westminster.\n(33177)\nHi,\nThe s'; nutnrv i'i Ing nf thi Ho ird of\nI.i.- ii,.:. Commissioners will he held al the\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd; n \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd nl Hail, .-ii v.*. il ii'sdny, the 10th\ni v ... ,lum . 1914, ..; 1\" <>'i loch in\n[, renooi .\nARTHUR (3.  MOORE,\n..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdli   . Clei\ni:.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd>..-...' -.  i: '' . Ma:   - li i, 191 I.\nAPPLICATION   FOR  TRANSFER\nLAND   REGISTRY   ACT.\nTAKE   NOTICE  that   ra   the  meeting of the hoard e.f license commissioners of the City  of New Westmiu-\nIte south half of the southeast quar-; ster on June lu. we Intend to apply\nter of .section 22, township 10, in the | for a   transfer of  tho  liquor  license\nli strict  of  New   Westminster,\nWhereas proof of the loss of Cer-\n[icate  of  Title   number   16324F,  1s-\ni .   !  iti   the  name  of  Andrew   John-\n;   *.. haa been filed iu  this office.\nNotice Is hereby given that 1 shail\nat the ' M'iralion of pne month from\nthe date oi the first publication Iiere-\nof, in a daily newspaper published in\nthe City of New Westminster, issue\na duplicate of the said certificate, unless iii ih.- meantime valid objection\nbe made to mc in writing.\nJ. C, GWYNN,\nDistrict Registrar of Titles.\nLand Registry Oifice, New Westminster.   B.C.,   May   13,   1011.       (37.7S)\nnow held by Ricbman and Dennett in\nrespect to the premises known ns the\nCosmopolitan Hotel situate upon Lot\n12. corner of Columbia\ntreets,    City    of   New\nrom Richman and Ben-\n1. Citv Block\nund   iiiul,ie   :-\nWest mi n.' ter, i\nnet!, lo\nJOHN FRASER\nOEORGE PRBBMAN\nMay\n1914.\nLAND   REGISTRY  ACT.\nlie  Southeast Quarter of Section  23.\nTownship  10,  In  the    District    of\nNew Westminster.\nWhereas proof of  ihe  loss of Cer-\ntiflcate of Title Number 2946F, issued\nin the name of Joel Stevens, has been\nfiled in this office.\nNotice is hereby given that I shall,\na; the expiration of oue mouth from\nthe date of the first publication hereof, in a daily newspaper published in\nthe City of New Westminster, issue\na duplicate of tlie said Certificate, un-\ness in the meantime valid objection\n.  made to me In writing\n.1. C, GWYNif,\nDistrict Registrar of Titles.\n.. *'. Registry office,\nNew Westminster. B.C.,  April  27,\ny.ni. (3301)\n^Mu-Cave-Browne-Cavels\nL.R.A.M.. A.R.C.M.\n4EM3ERS OF THE INCORPORATED\nSOCIETY OF  MUSICIANS.\nLeBsons in Pianoforte, Violin, Sing\ning, Voice Production, Theory (iD\noiass or privately). Harmony, Counter\npoint. Musical Form and History.\nPupils prepared   for   the   examinations of the Associated Hoard of   the\nRoyal Academy of Music and  Royal\nCollege of Music.   Also   Professional\ni Diplomas, Teacher or  Performer.\nFor  terms,  etc..  apply  51   Dufferlu\n; Street.   Phone 411 R.\nTIDE   TABLE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFRASER   RIVER.\nFor the Week Ending Sunday, May 31\nWestminster.\nTime.\nSand li.mts.\nHigh.\n4 40\n28.20\n.' 2C\nmu.\ni\nCOLUMBIA    STREET,\nNEW   WESTMINSTER\nGymnasium Clas-. Thursday al 7 30\nSwimming (lasses. Tuesdays and Fridays. :; to 4. at Y. M C. A. Young\nLadies' Club, Kriday at  8  p.m.\nBoarding and room rates reasonable\nMeals served to ladies and gentlemen\nKor  particulars call  phone 1324.\n21\nLow.\n0:3 '\nI '- 53\ni on\nit .'.i\n1 50\n16:05\nHigh\n'1 [me\n-\nIS  lv\n777'.  16\n21    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. 50\n10\nl i\n;* 50\n17  20\n5:05\nIS:05\n' 20\nIJ   15\n:\t\n1 26\n7\"  13\n:. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd o\n71:71\n5 4S\n7:. 03\n6 7 1\n22 tl'\n-  22\n23 16\nlit\n11 I\n12.4\n11 ::\n1: ti\n11.2\n12;\n11 0\n12.7\n10.7\n12 0\nI\"::\n12 7,\n9.4\n12 I\nI.OW.\nTime. Ht\n11.31     0.9\n0 02\n12:04\nn: 50\n12  In\n1: 17,\n13:20\n2:48\n14.03\n10.2\n0.7\n10.4\n0.6\n10.4\n0.6\n10 ::\n1.0\n9.7\n1.8\n8.8\n2.8\nTrealTicnt ReconTnen_ed by British\nE.-tqincer for the Mississippi.\nSir William Willcocks, the British\nengineer who designed C\"1 great. Assouan dam to control the '.caters of\nthe Nib- for Egyptian irrigation, appear d recently before the committee\n! on rivers and harbors at Washington.\nAt a time when tlie chief interest\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwis not absorbed by the news about\nMexico, the expert evidi nee of bo eminent an authoritj in relation to Mil*\nsisslppi flood prevention would have\nexcited nation-wide interest, important rerults maj not follow his en-\n11a I ned opinion that tho Mississippi\ntray be controlled by a system of\ndikes and that their construction pre-\nBents no engineering difficulties, Bays\nthe Philadelphia Press.\nFlood prevention has become one of\nthe most. Important problems confronting the United States government.\nThe disastrous Mlssisslpi floods of\n5!H2 caused material damage, estimated at not loss than fl00i000,000. .Many\nlives were lost, and n deplorable condition of destitution followed the subsidence of the waeers. because homes\nlind heen washed away and farms de-\nod. ('attic perished, and farming\nmients had disappeared In the\nmighty current. Apart from this unprecedented overflow the ordinary loss\nfrom floods Jn the I'nited States is\nestimated  al   $50,00 1,000  a  year.\nDnited States army engineers are\nengaged in carrying out plans to initiate the Mississippi and Missouri\nfloods. These, however, are designed\nto ameliorate the disasters and not\nti prevent them. Sir William Will-;\ncocks told the committee that it\nwould be easy to put the Mississippi\ninto a [-traitjacket. The remedy is to]\nbuild bigger dams than have hitherto\nbeen attempted. He went back for an\nexample thousands of years, and\npointed out that the Babylonians\nnever built a dike less than 100 feet\nwide. Instead of the enormous width\nof the Mississir-i's proving an obstacle\nSir William declared the bigger the\nriver the easier the task was to master it. '*On a river like the Mississippi,\" lie said, \"where the rise is only\na toot c day. it should he easier to\ncontrol thin on a river where the\nflood Just walks up the sides.\"\n7arthquakc Shocks.\nCatania, Sicily. May 27. Earth\nshocks which have been felt daily\ns nee the disastrous earthquake of\nMay 8 became more accentuated today, Rumors were circulated that a\nnumber of persons bad lost their\nlives in the outlying districts bur official reports made no mention of\nany casualitles.\nMunicipal School District of Burnaby\nPublic Notice Bs Hereby Given\nTo the Electors of the Municipality aforesaid .at , po! -. bec cn, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd__, seary al the Election now pending for the\nsame, so far as Is hereunder set forth, and nal have . \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd , r-0-,. aml ,,_\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,h.;, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. VscriK dnIy noml.\nnated as Candidates al the said Election ami foi     iom only-\nSurname\not'.ie,1   Namei\n Eunice   Annie\n Thomas   William\n Franklin John ..\nWhethi        ; i\nCouncil ir,    or\nTrustee\nRchi \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n.   . Schoi i u\n.., School   i   . -,.,\nto  tak''   ;\nAT\n'\nl: .\nri ceived are\nRank,   Profession\nOccupation\nnudi\nVI i Kay\nMi!-..,\ngovt; >  .\nMUNICIPAL   HALL ;incnds\ntAP.NET HALL.   Barne'\nDoling\nMayne\nRussell\noi   which  all   persons  are  hereby  required   to take  i\nTHE   POLL   WILL   CE   TAKEN\nHAMILTON   RD    SCHOOL,   Burquitlam\nMR    TOPPING'S  STORE,   13th  Ave.   East   Burnaby\nKINGSWAY WEST SCHOOL, McKay\nEurnab) ;  .\nSCHOU STP    iT SCHOOL, Broadview.\n3PERLING AVENUE SCHOOL, Lakemere\nON   SATURDAY.   MAY\nAn-_ will  be opened at 9 a.m. and close at 7\nEvery Elector mav vote for Two School Trustees nnd n i\nHome-maker,\nContractoi\nAccountant,\nordinals\n-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. 1   h\ufffd\ufffdi-l..  carnc-\nM-TwiSf bAKE ST0RE* Eurna\"'' >-ak\nSOCia?DJ.T HALL' Bo**''^'-y and Pan\nNEL8Q\ufffd\ufffdC_-UB   R\ufffd\ufffdOM. CaoitOl   H:ll\nRIvVpw\ufffd\ufffdVENUE   SCHOOL,  Alta  Vista\nRUERWrXy  KAST   SCHOOL,  South   Eurn\nndora,  North\nGivi\n%     i'.l'-lll'i     11m,       - ,   .       ,,_.,       , ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    . ,\nn undei my hand iii Kdmonds. this 27th da*, ol May,\nIn   t!\np.m.\nI   I ;\nUV.ll c,\naby.\nmy ul  the  Polling  Stations,\nIOOUE,  Returning, (illicit*.\nSays They Are Sore at Duke of Con-\nnaught and Will be Revenged on\nDuke  cf Teck.\nIt   la an old saying that yon have\nto  ;:o  abroad  to gel   the  news  from\nhome.    A  modern  instance  to  Oana-\nlans   who   happen   to   read   the   New\nYork Times or the  Public  Lodger of I \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nPhiladelphia will be found In the ex- U\nhaustive  article   recently   which   pro-11\ndiets that failure awaits the Duke of\nTeck   as   governor  general    or    this\ncountry    This sad prophecy is based\ntt|ioti  the failure of tbe Duke of Connaught to endear himself to the Canadian pi ople.    Canadians bad  I bought\nthat the Duke was to have been considered  as  one  of the  most   popular\ngovernor generals in their history, li\nappears however, from  Ihe author Of\nthe utricle   in  question   that  he   has\nfailed  dismally,  and  that   be  Ih  glad\nindeed   to   be   relieved   if  Ills  office\nand return to England.   That the failure has been due to any fault on his\nown pffrt in not asserted.    On the con- i\ntrary,   it   is  said   that   bis   wretched 1\ncondition is due to the members of\nhis  entourage,  who  have  shown  no!\ntacl or discrimination in the manner i\nIn which they have treated the demo-!\ncratlc citizens ot this country.\nTitles  Abhorred   Here.\nWe are told that the members of\nthe suite who have alienated the j\nDuke and Duchess from the affections '\nof Canadians have nol done so deliberately. Their errors have hern\nof tlie head rather than of the heart.\nTheir sole object has been to shield\niheir royal master from the uncouth\nadvances of the Canadian people.\nThey have endeavored to repress end\ndiscourage anything In the nature of\nundue familiarity, and to surround\nthe governor general with an impene-\ntr ble wall of etiquette.   The article\nI    ' Cl ''lis:\n\"Nov.- this is all very well in Eng-\nii- d where there is generally a ten-\niliu'v 10 mob royalty, In an admiring\nrather than In an unfriendly fashion,\nBut  conditions are < ntlrely different\n, in Canada, when the people are Intensely democratic: :n much bo that\nas also in Australia and in New 2ea-\nland, they disdain titles to such an\nextent that the acceptance by any\npublic man of a  knighthood or of a\n1 barcn< icy Is usually  held to mar bis\npolitical   prospects,\"\nTeaching Canadians Manners.\nThis disdain of titles which is go\nintense in Canada would probably impress itself more stronglj upon American observers who have no opportunity of ( ver receiving a title than\nupon the native born. Bui even in\nthis country it ought to be said thai\nthe disdain is bj no means univer- .\nsni, some very respectable persons\notherwise having consented to accept\nthese distinctions. This disdain, how-\nover, has been augmented by the con\nduet of the courtiers that have sur\nrounded the Duke of Connaught They\nhave impressed upon the natives the\nfact that to be seated in the presi nee\n1 I the Duke or the Duchess is a crime\njus; short of high treason, that to\nbroach a subject In conversation that\nhas nol been formally Introduced Is\na solecism, and that to Bpeak befor 1\nhaving been spoken to Ib worse than\na nuslance. It appears that the natural   tendency  of  Canadians  iii   the\npresence   of  the   governor   general   is\nto  squat  down  comfortably,  to  converse in a loud and familiar tone, and\nto talk upon unpleasant subjects, flav- '\nIng been discouraged In these demon-\ntrations of democracy    the    country\nsulks and is prepared tn take n.s re- i\nvenge upon the Duke of Teck\nThe Secret Well  Kept.\nThe disgust of Lhe Canadian public\nis equalled only by the loyalty of the\ncorrespondents of tho  English news- |\npapers,  who. we are told,  have hitli- j\nerto   refrained   from   appraising   the I\nfolks at home of ttie true position of\naffairs.\nThey  have lied    patriotically  and\nhave  represented  the regime of    the\nConnanghts as a most successful one. |\nMoreover,  their  well'  meant    dooep-\ntions might bave been continued indefinitely   had   it   not   been   fnr   the\nstalwart patriotism of Mr. fiftnmerson, j\nwho in the house of commons voiced |\nhis objections to the appointment of j\nthe Duke of Teck.    Mr. Etamersnn Ib j\namong   those   who   scorn   titles,   and '\nyearn toward democracy to such nn\ne-t-nt  that  he Is never satisfied until his acquaintances call him \"Hank''\nWhen Mr. Emracrson made bis memorable  pretest  it  wa\ufffd\ufffd Impossible  for\nthe Canadian correspondents to keep\nthe  British  public  any longer In  the\ndark,   and   they   were  obliged   to   report  that  the C\ufffd\ufffdna*an  puMic. hated\nthe idea of any members of the royal\nfamily  being appointed  lo this country In the capacity of governor general.\nAn Unfortunate Impression\nThia is how it leaked out. nnd the\npopular dissatisfaction is said to have\nbeen made more intense by the slow\nly disseminated intelligence fiat the\nTockB are not wealthy, and that they\npurpose staving a lar;e part of the\ngovernor general's salary with the\nobject of potting utorin windows up-\nn their Knglish home and \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\"\ufffd\ufffd\nmodern plumbing.   It is admitted   hat\nthe C\/mnaughts are -'ichl a,ul tlmt\ntbey have spent their money gener-\nn.ialv Seme apee.ulatlnns are Indulged n by the author of the article in\nquestion as to whether the new governor general and his wife will be 80\nSent upon their dignities as the\nC^nnaughts havo been represented to\nbe by their courtiers, and it would\nappear as though another American\nEvolution were pending should they\ndo so If this article were .11 one of\nhe Hearst newspapers it would ex-\nHte only amusement, but since It ap-\nn arsi 1 two of the most responslb e\nZT\\mt edited of American Jo irnals\nft must be taken more seriously It\nit must i\ufffd\ufffdt American readers\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd too bad ^i^nd,he Leader\nwh0 ,00k to J J\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffddftbacciirau. survey\ny-fiSBTrt foreign countries\nshould be BQ misled.\t\n.iittoectl   answering   the   do-\nTw0   suflP\ufffd\ufffdc s Nortnern hold-\nBCrlptirwi\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -Swred in by the Per-\nnr. mpii   wore h-11 .  . 1\n\"fepouoo Thuwday n\ufffd\ufffdgbt.     .\nThe Bank of Vancouver\nHEAD   OFFICE:   VANCOUVER,   B.C.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdranchea Throughout the Province of British Columbia.\nSavings Department et all Branches l>epoe!ts uf Oue Dolls.\" aud\nupwards received aud Interest at tb\ufffd\ufffd bluest current rite paid or\ncredited half yearly.\nA QENERAL BANKING BUSINESS TRANSACTED.\nDrafts and Travellers' Cheques sold, payable lu all parts of tbe\nworld.\nCHA8. O. PEN NOCK, Qeneral Manager.\nNew   Weatmlnsttr   Branch: a. W. BLACK, Manager,\nLet Us Figure Your Lumber Bills\nNo order too large or none too small to get out best grades :ir\ufffd\ufffdd\nprompt delivery. We deliver where you want it, in any quantity, large\nor small.\nTelephone or call our Hetail Department and get our prices.\n\"THE FRASER RIVER MILLS\n(CANADIAN WESTERN LUMBER CO., LTD.)\nLocal Sales Department, Phone 890.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nB. H. BUCKUN, N. Bi.AKDBl.BB,       W. r. II. BUCKUN.\n1-1 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.  a\ufffd\ufffd,i ei*ki. tigt. Vice-Presides.. Beo. i>>4  Iras.-.\nSMALL-BUCKLIN LUMBER CO., Ltd.\nMANUFACTURERS OF\nFir, Cedar  and  Spruce\nPhone* No. 7 and *n\ntrmm.  i\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi i' nil i\nCANADIAN\n'P^L^mWl <X X     .    PACI Fl C\nB. C. Coast SS. Service\nFor Victoria and Vancouver.\n10:1 '  a.m Daily\n_:im   p.m Daily\n11:46   p.m Daily\nFor Seattle\n10:00   ii.m '.DalTy\n11 .i\">   ii.in Daily\n11 A't p.m Saturday\nFc-  Nanaimo\n10 a.m, and 6:30 p.m Daily\nNanai-no. Union Bay, Comox\ns .im. Thursday und Saturday\nVancouver.   Union   Bay.   Powell\n1117, p.m Every Saturd ly\nPrince  Rupert, Granby  Bay and\nSkccua River Points.\n11:0 ip.n   Wednesdays\nFor Gulf Island Points.\n7 00 ii in  Tuesdays for Victoria.\ncalling at   points  in  Quit Isl.\nTo Alaska   . .    Every   Saturdas\nEXCISIONS\nCheap fares for all return\nkets in Eastern points, on sale\n'... ginning June 1st.   Gi od to i*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nturn up to Oct. 31c t.\nFor particulars apply to\nE. GOULET,  Local  Agent, or ta\nH, W. Crodic, G.P.A., Vancouver\nmn-aavi\nTIME   CARD \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPassenger   Service\nINTERURBAN  LINES\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdB. C.   ELECTRIC   RAILWAY\nTrains   Leave   New  Westminster Term,nal, Columbia and Eighth Sts,\nFraser Valley Line\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdKor Chilliwack at 9:30 and 11:18 a.m\nand 2 and 6 p.m.. Local I'm- Jardine at 7 a in.. ' xcept Fridays\nwhen local leaves at B a.m. for\nMt. Lehman.\nFor Vancouver, via Burnaby\nLake\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAt 5:30 a m., and hourly\nuntil 11:30 p.m. Specials on\nweek diiyii at S a.m. nnd .', p.m.\nKlisl cur on Sundays at 8:30\na.m.\nFor Vancouver, via North Arm\nof Fraser\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdConnects vfitii Steveston service at Eliunte; 7 a.m.\nand hourly until 11 p.m First\noar on  Sundays  at.  !  a.m.\nFor Vancouver, via Central\nPark\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdS and 6:45 a.m., every 1\"\nFREQUENT  FREIGHT AND EXPRESS SERVICE TO CHILLI-\nVACK  AND VANCOUVER\nliRHISH COLUMBIA ELECTRIC RAILWAY COMPANY\nNew Westminster Salesrooms, B.C. Electric Btock, Columbia A. Eighth.\nminutes to 9 a.m.: every '-11 minutes to -1 p.m.; every i'i minutes\nto S:30 p.m.; erery 30 minutes\nto 1! p.m., with I ist car at mid-\n!:>;ii:. ;\"..;:in day afternoon service every 15 minutes to ll p.m.,\nwith lasl car at midnight, Ou\nSunday at h, 7, 7:.''.n and S a.m..\nund 20 minutp service to K:40\np.m., weei day service thereafter.\nFraser Mills-Queensboro\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFor\nFraser Miiu at r,:2n, t',:2o ami\n7:45 a.m. and every hour to\n11:45 p.m. Leave Fraser Mills\nnt G, 7, &:26 a.m. and every lionr\nuntil iniilnlRht. lust car lo Columbia St. only.\nG. T. P. STEAMSHIPS\ntifPKOVBD srRlXC. BCHBDULE\nBJCfectlVe April ist. l\ufffd\ufffdM.\nS.S. \"Prince Rupert,\" S.S.\n\"Prince Gecrge,\" S.S. \"Prince\nAlbert.\" S.S. \"Prince John.\"\nEvery Monday at 12 Midnight\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nTn Prince ltiil\ufffd\ufffd*rt ami Cirnnt.y\nHdV\nEvery Tuesday, 12 midnight\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nTn Victoria anfl Brattle.\nEvery Thursday, 12 midnight\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nTo I'rince Rupert nnrl Stewart.\nEvery Friday, 12 midnight\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nTn Queen CwirtoMa Island pnlnts.\nEvery Saturday. 12 midnight\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nTo Victoria and Seattle.\nS S Prince Ituprrt aud B.S. PrUlOS\nHear a* make olns- connection to\nnnd from points etUll of Prince\nRunert on fJr;iniJ Trunk Pacific\nUnllway.\t\nIf You  Are Undecided\nWhere to Go on Your,\nSummer Vacation\nLet us siiRKost U five days' cruise\nthrough the inside channels of\nthe North Pacific Coast on the\nS.S. \"Prince Rupert\" or \"Prince\n(leorRP.\" Palatial oil-burning\nships; all outside rooms, with\nhot and cold water in each, Mas-\nniflrent, restful scenery. \"You\nwill feel better when you return.\"\nWe represent all Trans-Atlantic Steamship lines.\nThrough tickets via any line to Chicago\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGrand\nTrunk beyond\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLet us submit an itinerary for your\nconsideration.\nC. E. Jenney, G.A.P.D. H. G. Smith, C.P. A T.A.\n527  Granville St..  Vancouver. Phone  Sev. 81S4\nTO FARMERS AND GARDENERS\nXVe have received a consignment of HYDRATED LIME FERTILIZER  which is highly recommended.\nLime is almost aa important for the successful urowih of plants\nas sunshine and water.\nPER TON, $12.50\nSpecial Rates in Carload Lots.\nGILLEY BROS., LIMITED\nPhones 18 and 11. 102 Columbia Street W\nADVERTISE IN THE DAILY NEWS THURSDAY, MAV 22, 1914.\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS.\nPAGE SEVEN\nWE  DO   OUR\nPART\nBiggest Drug Store In B.C. Any\nDrug  win lean) - or Retail.\nCURTIS REXALL\nDRUG STORE\nNew Westminster.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdriivrj\nJOHN B. GRAY\nThe Jeweller\nPull Together; Buy at Home;\nFor Providence Keeps Them\nWho Keep Themselves\nTHE FAIR\n.FOR.\nCrockery and\nStationery\nIf it's  Shoes,  try  the\nOld Country Bo t Store\nWe lire Stocked up in the best\nCanadian and o:d i ountry Foot-\nui.-.i,. In ail kindii of summer\n;hci.-; our stock la complete.\nCanvas Shoes from 55c. up;\nBathing Bhoea ZOc. to 30c for\nWW :en. Our prices ;:re the lowest possible i-s our term.-'\nARE CASH.\nJ. STEWART, Proprietor.\nliuy   your   Ti ania   Racquets   a:id\nBaseball (loud.; lrom\nM. J. Knight &Cc. Ltd.\n65  Sixth  Street.\nWe want your trade.    Your dollar is worth a dollar at\nMacDonald's Grocery\n633 Sixth Street.\nNew   Westminster,   B.C.\nWhen   you   huy,   buy   the   best\naud  get  it at   MacDonalds.\nPhone   1075L.\nMcBRIDE'S RETAIL\nLIQUOR STORE\nEighth  St.\nChoicest Wilms and Liquors on\nthe market always in stock.\nPRICES  RIGHT.\nZT. i       The community which tints not organize for the gen-;\nnLjIlrlmSitli UlLAnflll\\Y'era^ S00^ \ufffd\ufffd*f **ts citizens i.s in a precarious state, as organ-\n_. ization accomplishes everything when it is perfect.   It\n:CECl!FA!HISGllARANIfED;unit0S the community *one of lhe stronsest of y11 tieH r^, ZtiZ\n  the desire to improve every citizen's condition. choicest Goods.\nWhen it is perfect, co-operation accomplishes every-,\nthing.   It satisfies desires, simplifies needs, foresees the\nwishes of the interested parties and becomes a constant;\nsource of benefit.\nCo-operation tends to wear smooth those prejudices\nwhich maintain animosity between business interests in:\none centre.\nIt softens and polishes the manners of men. '\nLive merchants' associations, live individual merchants, with originating minds, can do much towards secur-l \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ning and holding the patronage of the people among whom\nthe\nP.O. Box M Dally News BIO-j.\ni. T. BURNETT'S PRINT SHOP\nJOB   PRINTING\nof all  kinds.\nd Columbia Btreeta.   Prices right.   Satisfaction guarantee*\nLowest Prices. 89 McKensle St\nWESTMINSTER\nFURNITURE STORE\nRUSSELL\nB. & K. ROLLtD OATS\nnone just as good, nor none het-\ntrr.    Inslpt on getting.\n6. & K. CEREALS\nPURITY AND B. & K. FLOUR.\nMake More Bread and Better\nBread.\nHAY,  GRAIN   AND   POULTRY\nFEEDS.\nTHE\nBrackman-Ker\nMil ing Co., Ltd.\nSPECIALS:\nRed ('roes Fork and Beans, in Tomato Sauce;  large, full\nweight 2 iu. tins; each \t\n('anada Pint Pork -ind Beans;\n1  Ib. tins. 4 fo.-   \t\nBockoye Salmon, 1-2 lb. tins.\nFour for\t\nMeFarian and Lang's Fancy Biscuits. l_ lb. packages;\n3 for \t\nKoyal  Standard  Rilled  Outs;\n7 Hi. sacks; each\t\nAnnandale Supply Co.\n10c\n25c\n25c\n25c\n30c\ndo business.\nBUYERS HAVE A DUTY.\nOn the other hand, the buyers in the community must\nTry a \"Society\nBrand\" Suit\nThis Summer\nVan Loo Cigar\n'''\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdlilo-ed   for   Young   Men\nWlia Stay  Ycnnp\nand   Men\nFor STRAW and PANAMA HATS\nSEE PHILLIPS.\nThis is the season  when we have to change our headgear to a\nmore comfortable and lighter weight, such as Straw aud Panamas. We\nhave them both.\nThe Botha Shape in senate and fine straw  $1.50 to $5.00\nOthers  50c to $2.50\nPanamas  $6.00 to $15.00\nM. J. PHILLIPS\n671 COLUMBIA ST.\nColumbia Piano House\nR. M. ROSS, JR., Manager\nSewing Machines.\nBetter machines for less money.\nBOY FROM\nPacific\nMeat\nMarket\nMcMenemy & Anderson.\nSome have meat too tough to eat,\nWhile some have meat that's tender\nWe sell meat you'll rind a treat,\nIf you let US be tho sender.\nRAIN \/ROWERS'\nB.C.AGENCY. LTD.\nNEW WESTMINSTER.B.C.\nM:i nn fact ii re   und   wil   Paisley   Whole\nWheat  Meal,  iiriton  Breakfast  Meal\nand   Grain   Growers'     Private     Stock\ndo their share towards helping to make everybody prosperous and the most telling manner in which they can;       ^1Q . --\nshow their loyalty is by spending their money at home.          $lo and More\nThe cow must be fed if she is to continue riving milk. A. S. Mills  &  Co.\nYou cannot draw more out of a cask than has been put!       Columbia street at sixth\ninto that cask. | \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_.   -j \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ______\nIf the buyers of a community persist in spending\naway from home the money they receive in salaries and\nwages, the time surely will come when there will be no\nsalaries and wages for them.\nThis i.s the philosophy of the situation in a nutshell.\nDEVELOP A HOME MARKET.       \t\nThe first step in the right direction is the creation\nand development of a home market.   You can create that I\nmarket here by starting to spend all your money in New\nWestminster; you can develop it by continuing to do so.\nAlso give the subject a little thought. You're living\nhere, making your money here and everything that helps\nyour city is bound to help you in the long run.\nTELL YOUR FRIENDS ABOUT IT.\t\nj Talk this buy-at-home business to your friends, get in-\n; terested in it and you'll be surprised how popular you can\nimake it in your own neighborhood.\nThe work for the improvement of the city should be\n| made a community job and every resident should engage\nclear  Havana,  Cuban  made.    Sole\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdirency for New Westminster.\nVF.STMINSTER CIGAR &\nTOBACCO COMPANY\nPHARO   CIGAR   STORE.\n603 Columbia St.\nA full line of STANDARDS from\n$35.00 to $80:00.   Easy Terms.\nPianos.\nBell, Helntzman and Co., Chick-\nBring Bros., Wormworth and\nothers. We save you money.\nOrgans from $25 up. Pianos\ntuned.    Pianos to rent.\nRoyal CitylADIK'and ^KOSkm\nWineCo.   SUITS\nLIMITED\nHigh Class Wines, Spirits,  lieers. Etc.\nFrom $25 to $45, made to order.\nJ. N. AITCHIuON\n; Merchant  Tailor.    Weatmlnatar ^rumt\nFlour. All from Marquis wheat grown i in it W'ith equal Zest.\nPhone  '9\"\n735 Columbia Street. I\niu  Alberta.     It   is  good  and  it  saves\nyou money.\nEL GLOSTOVO\nHOT POINT WEEK SPECIAL\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAt half price. May 11 to 16 only, $3.25.\nBROWN & SON, 620 Columbia Street.\nHEE CHUNG JACKSON PRINTING CO.\nQuality Printers\nPhone 388\nMERCHANT   TAILOR.\nSpring  Suitings  just  arrived.\nSee       ______________________\nthem. Perfect fit and workmanship _,^^^^^\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^~\nguaranteed. Prices from $18.00 up. , Market Square\n70|  Front Strict.\nWear Our Good Furnishings\nNothing puts u man mi such good terms with himself as good\nfittinir. good feeling underwear, forks, shirts, collars and neckties,\nWe've got them for you. Vou get tluni from us. don't take anything\nthat Is handed out to you, but come to the store that \"has got the\ngoods\" when you want furnishings.    Of course our prices are right.\nreid & Mcdonald\nNEW   WESTMINSTER'S   STORE   FOR   MEN'S   WEAR.\n707 Columbia Street.\nLocal development and the building up of local business will be hindered just a'^ long as the thoughtless citizens line up at the counters away from home and spend\nthere the dollars they have earned in their own town.\nLET THE DOLLARS SHOUT FOR YOU.\nIn these modern times money not only talks, but it\nshouts.   Every dollar you spend away from home keeps i\non shouting, but it doesn't even whisper a sinarle good!\njword for New Westminster.   It finds its way into the\nbank clearings of another community and, instead of being a good worker and advertiser for the citv where it\nJ was earned, it becomes, not only a dead loss, but the ac-\n! tive ally of a powerful rival.\nMake up your mind to buy at home, get your neigh-;\nbors to follow your example; in other words, BE A GOOD\nj CITIZEN.\nPhone Your Order to 1299.\njine and  see our new  store Corner\nColumbia and Blackle Sts.\nWhale Oil  Soap, Quassia Chips\nBlack Leaf Extract at\nRYALL'S Drug Store\nPhone 57 Hart Block.\nSmart  shapes   in   Panama,   Peanut,\nJava and l.inen to $1.5U to $10.00.\nOUTING HATS\nMRS.   AGRET,   59   SIXTH   STREET.\nPACIFIC CANADIAN\nPRINTING COMPANY\nCarnarvon Street.\nCommercial,  Catalogue  and   Poster\nPrinting.\nBuy Your Sheer from\nSINCLAIR, The Shoe Man\nHe Sells Nothing but the BEST.\nThe best of fresh and home cured meats\nP. Burns & Co. Ltd.\nPalace Market, Columbia St. Phone 1200\nEdmonds Market, Edmonds. Phone 1203\nSapperton Market, Sapperton. Phone 1204\nGOOD MEATS. GOOD SERVICE.\nWill You\nLine Up\n?\nRICHARDSON & HUMPHRIES\nInclusive Dealers in Men's\nHigh-Class Clo-\n^VtAff*-*)\nnuosfD acmes\nthing and Furnishings.\nNow ready in Spring and Summer Styles    There has never been\na line of men's clothing that has pleased bo ninny men and given so\nmuch   satisfaction   and   wear  as   these   same   FIT-RITE   CLOTHES.\nBetter come in today and look them over,\n709 COLUMBIA STREET. WESTMINSTER TRUST BLOCK.\nRead Your Home Paper First\n<&Ut\nr ^Br?_S^_TfiS__lL'L!\nSHOP IN NEW WESTMINSTER\nThe Morning Paper of New Westminster and\nThe Fraser Valley.\nUp-to-the-minute in every Department.\nLimited.\nAND SHOP AT McALLISTERS.\nC. A. WelshpAMES &\nMcCLUGHAN\nLIMITED.\nTHE  PEOPLE'S GROCER.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPhones:\nCity  Store       193  and  443\nSapperton Branch      37-1\nWest End Branch     650\nTHREE  BIG  STORES  OF  PLENTY.\nPhone your Order to 1299\nHardware, Plumbing and Heating.\nNew Westminster, Oeneral Office and\nStore, Corner Front and Sixth St.\nWe Pack, Ship and Prepay Freight on all Purchases.\n| WE CAN PROVE\nto you or any other sane person that this store can and does sell Furniture and Home Furnishings for as little money as any other storo\nin British Columbia. OUR PRICES, hacked by a reputation for square\ndealing, have stood the tests Of two years' unfair competition\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBankrupt Stock Sales nnd Bargain Sales under all sorts of names.\nYOl'H MONEY will go further and return sooner to your OWN\nPOCKET when you keep it in your HOME CITY.\nOUR STOCK is new and up to date, marked to give you the hundred cents ci honest vulue for every dollar of your good money you\nhand us. ,\nWE WILL TREAT YOU  RIGHT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWE WANT YOUR BUSINESS.\nDENNY & ROSS\nTHE OLD RELIABLE.\nCorner Sixth and Carnarvon Sts.\nPhone 588 PAGE EIGHT\nTHE NEW WESTMINSTER NEWS.\nTHURSDAY. MAY 28. 1914.\n\\\n\\\nMUSI APOLOGIZE\nOR LEAVE UNION\nInsult  to   Delegate   Stoney  Cause   of\nHeated Debate\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdVancouver Tailors at Outs With Local.\nThat the New Westminster Trades\nand l.ahor council has become weary\n<-f Brocra.tlnat.pii In the matter of the\nVancouver Tailors', union and their re\nman! lo apologi\/.e fur the derogatory\n-remarks that one of their deputation\nmade on the floor of the local council\non Oil. 6, 1 :* 1 :t. with regard to Dele\ngate It A Stoney, the local organizer\nfor the American Federation of l-abor,\nwas evidenced at lhe regular meeting\nUf*t evening when' the president was\nInstructed to inform the Vancouver\nTailors' union taut unless an apology\nwjs forthcoming before the next meeting of the council the delegates of the\nTailors' union would lie barred from\nthe floor ol the council. This amendment was passed uftei a motiun hail\nbeen maiie that a delegation be sent\nIn Vancouver to present the matter\nbefore the Tailors' uiiiou and then\ndemand an apology to the council and\nto the organise) upon penalty vif expulsion of the tailors'.,delegates from\nthe council,,\nAt the last melting of tho council\nn long letter was, read from Delegate\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdStoney defending his position with regard to the attack*- made upon him by\nHit; tailors, and then one of the tailors' delegates again reiterated the\nCharges against Mr. Stoney, but not\none of the lailois brought forward one\niota of evidence io support the charge\nlhe-, had made, which , when sifted\ndown amounted to the fact that Mr.\nStoney had acted within his province\nas an organizer in trying to form a\nlocal union of the tailors, and taking\nthem out Of the jurisdiction of the\nVancouvi I   union.\nLast evening it was made clear that\nthe Typographical union had wailed\nfor eight months for an apology to its\nmember and it was tired of tne game\nand there was no reason but to suppose that any other member could b\ufffd\ufffd\ninsulted with impunity. There was\nconsiderable heated debate, most of it J\nin favor of tlie amendment as the local\nlaboriten favored the attitude of the\nTypos and could not see why the tail\nora did not apologize.\nIteports of unions showed that most\nof the building trades were slack, but\nthat some of the other lines of industry were slightly improving. The municipal committee waa instructed to\nwait upon tho city onilttoil and see\nthat lhe new manhole covers were\nmade here and that private employment agencies be taxed so high lhat\nthey would be put out of business and\nmen would not have to pay for a job.\nbut would lie hired through the mu-\nniclpal employment bureau.\nResolutions adopted by the Fraser\nRiver Fishermen's Protective association wi re received and were endorsed\nand Uu council pledged to support the\nfii bi rmen In any way they could.\nPffiSOM ESTATE Of\nwro srathcona\nTefal    Value   As   Filed  in Probate  is\n4 651,000 Pounds\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDuty is $837,-\nS38  Pounds.\nl\/ondon, May l'7.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIt is learned to-\nday that the following figures have\n)'>-<n rendered for the probate of lhe\nesiatea of the late Lord Strathcona*\nValue of personal estate in the United Kingdom 118,500 pounds; pcrson-\nal estate abroad valued at 4,232,6000\npounds, The total value of the per-\n.-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdonal estate is 4,651,000 pounds. The\nduty paid on this amount is X'JT.tCR\npounds, such duty being payable at\nthe rate of fifteen per cent.\nThe late lord's holdings consisted\not:\n'Ireat Northern Hallway, United\nSlates, $8*660,000.\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd itliern Pacific railway, $3,380,000\nCanadian  Pacific railway, $4,112,000\n* \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:.    of Montreal $ti4r,,0('0.\n1 aur<; tide company, $46\ufffd\ufffd,(i(io.\n' '     -   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   Steel .Corporation,  $400,-\n1 ad come under tho pro-\nv,-)iotl : Mt i.loyd-George's budget,\njust introduced ihe duty payabh\nwould ; \" been over $1,170,000\npounds, instead o! ouly 8B>,838 pounds\nis payabh\n. T!l\" CU at GroBven.ir\nSquare are  valued  al  ...ooj pounds\nThe picture! ....    vortli U.ooo pounds\n***s lordship r.      .,, .,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd, Hud.\nson Hay compa mounts i,    is 000\npounds; Anglo Pi , .,,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,., pounds\nnnd Baring Bros, 11    . v .,,;..\nProperty in Wisconsin.\nMadison, Wis.. Ma; _7 The . tate\nof Baron Strathcona ni Canada wil\nnay nearly $100,000 Inheritance tax to\nthe state of Wisconsin. The Wisconsin holdings which will be laxed are\nthe stocks of the Nun inn. Pacific\nrailway  approximating $3,380,000\nAcquitted   of   Concealment.\nPortland, Ore.. May 27- W. W Robinson and B. X. Openheiuu r. members of the bankrupt firm of W. \\v\nRobinson and company, olothlers,\nwere acquitted in the federal court\ntoday of a charge of having conceal j\niii $18,000 of the firm's asset\ufffd\ufffd. Robinson was arrested several months\nago on board a north bound train in\nWashington, and said ho was en route\nto Canada. Op< nhelmer was arrested\nlater. n\nCable  Rates to Australia.\nMontreal, May  27.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIt has been ar-1\nranged between tin: Canadian Pacific i\ncompany's telegrapn and the British\nPacific cable board to inaugurate the'\nweek-end and  letter service between\nCanada  and   Australia  including   the\nFiji islands, commencing on May 28. j\nThe   rate   between   < anada   nnd   Australia will be three dollars for twenty \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nwords  or   less,   and  each   additional t\nword o*. er i wi nty to be 15 cents.\nMeet Your Friends at McAllisters.\nNow is the time for the new\n'UTILITY HOUSE DRESSES\"\nAll the new Summer styles and colors\njust in, priced from $1.75 to $3.00.\nRead Abdut the Electric Iron\nSpecial for Friday and Saturday\nSummer has practically arrived and your kitchen\nwill become almost unbearable ii you have your\ntire burning all day long. Don't go through the\nhot weathei dieading the thought Of ironing day.\nBuy an Electric Iron for ease anil comfort. On\n.May 29th and 30th, next Friday and Satin day, for\nthose two days you will be able to purchase- a\nhighly reliable Electric Iron, guaranteed   4**% QC\nfu.  ten years, for   9mma99\nOrder now  and  we will reserve one for you at  this\nprice.\nBoys' and Men s Furnishings\nBoyr.'   Knee   Pants.\nHey:' [(nicker Pants, In fancy tweeds, nnd worsted\nCloths;   well   made   and   good   bard   wearing   pants;\nPriced at from .' OOC TO $ I .4-0\nBoyr.' Overalls.\nBoyc'  Blue   Denim  Overalls;     two  pockets,  lull   bibs\nand good Buspenders; all sizes Cft*. 7Cf*\n18 to 32,    I'riee at   SJUWj    I %Jw\nMen'. Bib Overalls. S1.00.\nMen's Bib Overalls,  made of stout  denim,  In  plain\nblack  and  blue;   also  blue and   white  striped;   [our\npockets;   full   bibs;   good   suspenders,   with   elastic\nsit  in;   union  made;   all  sizes. ft 4   AA\nPrice   9 l\ufffd\ufffdUU\nOverall Pants, made oi plain biaek stout denim;\ndouble stitched seams; five pockets; buttons riveted on.    All sizes. C A   t\\f\\\nPrice    9I.UU\n* Overall Jackets are made to match overalls at sane-\nprice,\nMEN'S   SUMMER   UNDERWEAR.\nMen's     Balbriggan     Underwear;      men's     Shins\nand  drawers;   all  sizes. ^Kf*\nSpecial at, per garment   &ww\nI'lne Merino Underwear; light summer weight;\n\"Penangle'' make; natural color: sizes 7,4 to 44,\nSpecial at 65c per garment, 4*4   Otl\nper suit    9 I \ufffd\ufffdCw\nMen's Fine Nainsook Combinations; sleeveless and\nknee length;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd closed crotch;  sizes fi\ufffd\ufffd4   ftA\n:;l to 44.   Special  9 ' .UU\nThe New Westminster\nAND FRASER VALLEY\nMeet Your Friends at McAllisters.\nDepartment   Store\nSee the new\n\"MORNING GIORY\" WASH DRESSES\nWonderful values from $1.25 to $5.71.\nTELEPHONE NO. 73.\nAlways   the Best Values  in Our\nLadies' Ready-to-Wear Dept.\nA New Arrival of Navy and Gray Serge Suits.    Very Special  Values\nat $16.50.\nA Lady's Suit of fine all wool serge; in plain tailored effect. The\ncoat is made In square or cutaway front, with breast pockets, and\nskirt is made with side pleats and high waist band. The coat is\nbeautifully liii\"il with Skinner's satin. If priced at $110.(in they\nwould  be considered '-lend value. (I ft   Cfl\nOur Special Price ia  9 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Q\ufffd\ufffd5IU\nA Splendid Line ol Black an. White Check Suits at $20.00.\nA guild Black nun White Check Suit is just what is wanted for this\nseason's wear. Why not get one now. at a money-saving price;\nconies in a splendid all wool material, with coat in new stvle cutaway model, and lined with Skinner's satin; tlie skirt is plain tailored,\nwith high waist band.   See this very special suit COn AA\nvalm       Price   ^CU.UU\nWe Also Carry a Gwcll Stock of the Now Famous \"Balmaccan\" Coats\nfo,- Women.\nThis is a co.it which la in gnat demand In all the leading cities of\nthe world. Tin \"Balmaccan*' Coal la as \"classy\" a coat for a woman\naa u \"Burberry\" le foi a nun. They are a very useful coat, made\nin Hinar'. light-weight tweed:: and homespuns; cut in distinct mannish atylea, with wide liaglaiid shoulder and sleeve effects,\nand full In tbe skin. An ideal coat for traveling or motoring. There\nis a pretty assortment to choose from: in sizes to_fit all, and prices\nplace them within the reach of everyone,\nSpecially   priced   al   \t\nHave You Seen the \"Utility\" House Dress?    We Carry a Full  Range\nof Stylec and Prices.\nWith the \"Utility\" garmeni you can dresa instantly, without mussing\nthe hair, and be dressed prettily and comfortably. The \"I'tility\" slips\non. and off like a coat, aud tbe wearer finds delight In such features\nas characterizes the \"Utility\" garments. They are made as a house\ndress, kimon:-. or negligee See our Interesting showing of styles and\nprices, ranging\nfrom    \t\nWe are Sole Agents for the \"Utility\" Garments. Be Sure to Look\nfor the Label. Then You Will Be Purchasing a\nGenuine \"Utlity\" Garment.\nWe Are Also the Scle Agents for the \"Morning Glory\" Wash Drccscs.\nTheee are stylish Wash Dressoa now being vastly worn by the American lady of good taste. Why? Because they are a dress that is\niiKuli quite, differi nt uud In better materials and designs. Our showing includes many clever styles, and the prici a arc the lowest possible,\nThe miking of the \"Morning Glory'' garments la ol the same high\nstandard as done by the home dressmaker; excellent qualities in every\nciass materials used. The values we offer arc very unusual\nindei d. Priced\nfrom   \t\n$15 to $20\n$1.25 to $3.95\nWash Goods Dept. Specials\nCotton Ratine,   This cornea In a good heavyweight,\nsuitable for suits and one piece dresses; good\nwashing and wearing; mines in pale blue, peacock\nblue, old lose and white; 77 inches wide. 4E|-\ufffd\ufffd\nI'er yard      \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfww\nFancv Crapes, just the very thing lor summer\nwear. We have a choice selection in this line, it\ncomes in a white ground with a dainty OE|%\nfloral  effect.    Per  yard      *'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nJapanese Crepe. This is a crepe which can be used\ntor dent's Blouse Shins or ladies' house or outing\ndieaaea; has a nice, stylish appearance. Comes In\na stripe effect;  30  inches  wide, 4 j?_\nPer yard    I 5JU\nBlankets and Comforters\nWe can supply your every need  In  blankets at\nver;  moderate prices\nGrey   Blankets, either  union  or  pure  wool;   sizes\nfrom 60x70 to 04xM at, per pair. $2.50, ,, 4\ufffd\ufffdtm j?#\ufffd\ufffd\n$2.75,  53.50,   $4.50  nnd *O.UU\nHudson   Bay   Point   Blankets;   colors   red,   brown,\nlawn, gray or white; weight .\", lbs fl\ufffd\ufffd4   t\\t\\\nto h lbs. at, per Ib *l \ufffd\ufffdUU\nWhite   Woo'   Blankets;   stsa  00x80;   blue  or  pink\nborders  at.  pei 'flIA AX\\\nSize   i;\"ixS4 :   gonii   heavy   weight;   white   blankets.\n$4.95\nPure  Scotch   Wool  Bkeldon  Blankets;   size  68x88,\nBach Blanket whipped singly. Clfl flfl\nat\nper pi\n$1J5to$5_95\nPrice, per pair  \t\nSateen or Silkallne Covered Comforters; size 66x72;\nwell filled with pure white cotton filling and well\nquilted.    Price, per CQ s%fl\nDome Comforters; size 60x72, in pink, bine, green\nor   red   covering,     Price.\neach   \t\n$5.50\nRemarkable China and Glassware Values in\nthe Basement (or 5c, 10c, 15c and 25c\n25c Cream Pitchers fi r, i ach   5c\n$1.00 Dozen cisss Tumblers  each  5c\n$1.25 Dozen colonial (liars i'ruit Nappies, each  5c\nlin   Plates,  each    .'    5c\nli \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd China Mugs, each   5c\n10c Salts and  Peppers, each   5c\n$1.75 dozen Class Fruit Dishes, each   10c\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdiiir  Class Cream Jugs, each   10c\n16c Class Measuring Cups, each 10c\n15c China Olive I);, lies, each   10.\n16c and 20c Plates, each  ',0c\nI'm Cups and Saucers, each    10c\n25c Earthenware Teapots, each   15c\n25c Chin;-  Ash Trays, each   15c\n30c  Milk .lugs, each    15c\n30c  China  Salad   Howls,  each 15c\n25c Fruit  Plates, each    15c\n;;.\";.  Dinner oi   Soup  Plates,  each    15c\n85c Class liutiei   Dishes, each    15c\n250  Vtnegrfr   Bottles,  each    15::\n7,\"ic   Flowei   Vases,   each    15c\nHammocks, strongly  made, with    stretchers   and    pillow    attached,\n5K?.' 2.50, $3.50, $4.50\n34-inch Canvas Trunk.-, with heavy slats and brassed holts and clamps\nand coverec\" trays.\nSpecial   \t\nHardwood Refrigerators, lined with galvanized iron, thoroughly insulated;  all  interior  parts\nremovabh  \t\nWire Meat Safes, varnished In natural wood.\nThree sizes,  each, $2.25, $2.75 and.\nA Consignment of Ladies' Sunshades\nAll conceivable shapes, styles and coloring effects are included in\nthis hrjiid new stock. Exactly the same shapes and styles that are\nnow very much in great demand in all the European fashion centres\nwe have in our new stock. The covers come in cottons, linens, silks\nand satins, in plain, stripes, florals and white needlework, mounted\non good steel frames, firmly attached to plain, or fancy wood handles\nIn long and medium lengths. Kvery sunshade has been carefully\npriced at its lowest, so as to find a ready purchaser, as we do not\nintend to carry any of our present stock over for another season.\nLook this lot over.    We can oblige you       tf 4   [\\t\\ CO  QC\nRanging   from   each    \ufffd\ufffdP I .UU TO 99.99\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd MAIN  FLOOP\nAttractive Values in Table Linens\nGreat Genuine Reductions in Our Furniture Department for Today\n$6.50\n$10.50, $12.50, $15\n$3.25\n3c!:d Oak Diners at Earcjain\nPricec.\nSolid     (Ial*      Diners,   set   of   *- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;\nfumed or goldi n finish; leather\nspring seats, Regular $56.00\nSpecial     $45.03\n$32.50 Sot  of Chairs $25.30.\nAll  solid  quarter    oak    chairs.\nwith    genuine     bathe,     seats,\nfumed  or  golden.  Sale.   .$25.00\n$42.50  Se*:  cf  Chairs $31.00.\nSet of oix quarter oak chairs. In\ngolden      finish,     leathei      seats.\nSale    Price     $31.03\n$24.00 Set cf Diners $18.50.\nSolid   oak  chairs,   In   fumed   or\ngolden   finish;   this   is   the   best\nChair ever offered I'or the mone*\nSale   Price     $18.50\nKitchen Treasures, top and\nbase   complete;   regulai'   $14.00,\nSpecial      $9.00\nBox couch, regular $6.50; .-[\ufffd\ufffd'\ncial    $3.25\n.-;'-: of Kitchen Diners, six In\neach; English finish; regular\n$14.00;    special     $9.85\nSanitary  Couch   Special.\nGuaranteed Conch, with high\nback, complete with mattress\nfor double bed Regular $77':\ni pecial        $1C75\nHining Chairs,    leather    seats;\nregular  $3.60;   sale  price  $1.95\n-.. mm\nDining Chairs, solid s'-a!: reg.\n$2.26,    Sale  price      $1.15\nExtension Table, round top. pedestal base. golden finish,\nsolid oak; regular Jln.O'i. Sab-\nprice     $12.50\nBuffet, Eolld oak; fumed, earlj\nEnglish or golden  finish;   regu\nlar   $25.50,     Sale   price       $17.00\nMorris chairs, loose cushions;\nsolid oak frame, fumed finish;\nregular  $14.00,   Sale   price  $8.75\nIron Beds, \ufffd\ufffd bite 1 uatneled with\nbrass caps; all sizes in stock;\nregular   $8.60.   Sale   price   $1.25\nTh \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd above !\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd<! complete with\n.-pr'ug and mattress; any size.\nRi gular   $9.60,   Sale   price   $6.25\nDreSSCl', golden oak; three\ndrawer:*, bevel plate mirror;\nRegular $9.50;  aale price $6.25\nDressers, Plncess style; three\ndraw rs; large bevel plate mlr\nror.      Regular     $18.50       Sale\nprice     $11.00\nBedroom 01 Parlor Tables, golden   finish;   regulai   $2.50;   Bale\nprice $1.50\nFloral\n35c\nrcerlzed\n59c\nweave;\n59c\n54-incll  Pleached  Damask, a durable weave for ordinary use.\ndesign.    Regulai  50c value.\nThursday,  per yard   \t\n68-lncb fully bleached Table Damask 01 superloi weave; mercerized\nfinish, in very attractive Coral designs;  regular 75c value.\nThursday,  per yard   \t\n60-inch strong wearing unbleached Table Damask; extra heavy weave\nmakes a splendid wearing kitchen cloth. Regular value 75c,\nThursday pei yard \t\n70-Inch all Linen Bleached Table Damask with satin finish; very\nsuperloi weave in choice floral di signs; will weai '':it*s. This is excellent value at the regular price of ?1.7j yard. ^<   flfl\nThursday, yard    9 * \ufffd\ufffdUU\nSize 46x76, pure Irish Linen Lunch Cloth, In fleur de lis design. Thi.-\nis a very superior cloth at the price.    Regular value 95c. 7E#*\ufffd\ufffd\nThursday. each        I VV\nHemmed bleached Union Table cloth, size GQx80. Rich designs; will\nwear well.    Regular $1.50.\n1 iiursd3j. each   \t\nReady Hemmed Table Napkins of good quality; size 19x19. Floral\neffects; a handy napkin for hotel and cafe use.    Regular\nvalue $1.35 dozen.   Thursday, per dozen\t\nA Special in Plain Sheeting, 25c. Yard Thursday.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'' _to hand,  20  pieces Of heavy   weave  bleached  Cotton  Sheeting:\n;' ''\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd '\" Inches wide and the regular price is 36c vard.\nrhursdsi special, yard \t\nTlH $1-00 Pair Turkish Towels for 85c. Pair.\n.-'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   an    splendid   Towels,   good   wearers   and   quick  dryeis.     They\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdn,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdrii Tr,''\"!s '\ufffd\ufffd colored or white. OE*_\nrhurBday special, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;in. OOC\nThw'sheete8^***' *C,Ual $2'75 Val*JC'-' Thursday Special! $1-95 Pair\nn. nil:. Iw'.iiKtitt .'iV-.i*N,r\"' r,linar.v value; mad'- from fine cotton and\nThursda \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  special, pa|r        \"   '\nDress Goods Specials\nfor Today\nCheck Dress Goods of extra\nvalue in black and white, navy\nand white, brown and na-..\\.\nbrown and black or gray and\nwhite; splendid wearing material and good, useful shades\n42   Inchs-   Wide.  49c  Values  at\n25c.   per   Yard.\nSplendid\ndresses, -\nwi ar, etc.\nnine     for     Holiday\nPt!. children's school\n$1.25\nx!9.     Floral\n$1.15\nbee ting:\n25c\n$1.95\nBathing Suit Lustres\non Sale Today\nThis lot consists ol good, last\nshades of black, navy, brown,\ngreen, cardinal, cream, pink,\noky, gray, maize, etc.; 36 inches\nl\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd width and a splendid quality.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdUsually selling Up to 45c Today\nyour choice, per 25C\nvard,  at   \t\nWe Pack\nShip and\nPrepay  the\nFreight on\nAll Purchases.\nHHOP IN NEW WESTMINSTER\n^ Limited.\nand shop aT McAllisters.\nWe Pack\nShip and\nPrepay the\nFreight on\nAll Purchases.\nToday's Values Are Good on Our\nMain Floor. All the Ladies' New\nNovelty Neckwear at Special Prices\nWe Carry a Very Big Stock,    All Are Correct Styles, and Our Prices\nAre the  Lowest Possible,\nA Dainty New Style Collar at 95c.\nA very pretty Collar ol  fine lace,  with frilled effect;   some  trimmed\nwith  satir, and  large buttons;   others in  Brussels  net,  with  double\nsatin nick bands.    In colors white and cream. QC*\ufffd\ufffd\nSpecially priced at   www\nLace Net Yokes, at 65c to $1.25.\nA fine lace net, with dainty net ruffle and front piece; finished with\nglass or satin buttons.    Specially CEm Cl   OE\npriced at     DOC to 9 I 'CO\nLADIES' GLOVES ARE ATTRACTIVELY PRICED.\nLadies' Super Silk Gloves. Special at $1.25.\nComes in  a good, strong quality  wearing silk,  Is  made  with double\nfinger tips and  In  elbow  length,  and  finished  with  three  dome  fas-\nteneis at  wrist.    A regular $1.7.*i value. \ufffd\ufffd4   OE\nSpecial at, per pair   9 * .4.0\nLadies' Fine Quality Lisle Gloves. Special at 65c Per Pair.\nThis is a Clove that  will give entire satisfaction  to the  wearer;   in\nshort  lengths;   colors  black  and  white, and  fastens  with   two dome\nclasps.    Special at CE#\ufffd\ufffd\nper   pair       DOC\nLadies'   Fine   Kid   Gloves.   Special  at  95c   Pair.\nThese arc tiie well known \"Perrln\" make of good French skins;  very\npliable and perfect in fit;  in colors black, tan, brown and white, and\nIn all sizes. Regularly sold at $1.25. QEs*.\nSpecial  for     www\nA  Silk  Boot  Hose, Special at 50c Pair.\nThis is a perfect seamless Hose with big'n spliced heels and toes, with\ngood lisle legs, made full fashioned and with good garter tops; colors\nblack, tan, pink, sky, cream and white, und In all sizes.    A splendid\nwearing silk.    Regular 75c values. Special at, SAm\nper pair     wUC\nLadies' New Veilings.\nComes in  floral and plain mesh, and in the new beauty spot effect;\ncolors  black,  white,  navy,   Alice  blue,  purple,  brown  and  black and\nwhite spots,    Reduced in prices.\nfrom   \t\nLadies'   Hair   Barrettet.\nA nice new- stock;  in shell, amber, and semi-amber,    and    in    both\nbarred and plain Btyles.    Prices from\neach   \t\nFancy Wash Collars, Special at 50c.\nConies  in  fine crepe,  in  low effect, and with dainty  net   frills,  in  a\nplain  white and  in  floral designs.    A  real  pretty anil EA*\ufffd\ufffd>\neffective collar.    X'ery special at, each    WwC\nChiffon and Crepe Neck Ruffles, Special al $1.00. $1.50 aud $1.75.\nAll the new shades in stock, and finished with satin bow nnd dome\nfastener,    Specially priced\n35c to $1.00\niber,    and    iii    both\n25c to 50c\n$1.00, $1.50, $1.75\nat   \t\nLADIES' AND CHILDREN'S HOSIERY SECTION OFFERS REAL\nGOOD VALUES.\nChildren's Fine Ribbed Hose. Special at 25c Pair.\nWe carry the celebrated \"Little Dais.\" ami \"Little Darling\" makes;\nalso the \"Buster Brown's Sisters\" stockings for children's wear In all\nsizes ranging from 4 to 8%, and in all general colors. These are' 1\ngood   make,  with  S  gooil   reputation   for  wear \ufffd\ufffd>\nsI'*'ci\ufffd\ufffd'    \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'   fcOC","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"New Westminster (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"The_New_Westminster_News_1914-05-28","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0316060","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.206667","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-122.910556","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"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.<br><br>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.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"New Westminster, B.C. : The Daily News Publishing Company, Limited","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"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\/","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"Series":[{"label":"Series","value":"BC Historical Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","classmap":"oc:PublicationDescription","property":"dcterms:isPartOf"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1914-05-28 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1914-05-28 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The New Westminster News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}