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Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" i<\nVOLUME ' .<iBER 65.\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C., THUttSDAV MOHNING, MAY 9, 1012.\nPRfCE FIVE CENTB. ~\n=\nMAYOR ENDORSES\nNEW MOVEMENT\nNational Reserve and United\nServ'ce Club Spoken of\nEnthusiastically\nNames Can Be Registered with Clerk\nat City Hall\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdShould Be 1000\nStroifg.\n\"I cannot tell you how deeply I feel\nMAY DAY FESTIVAL\nREADY TOR FRIDAY\nMr. J. J. Johnston Will Act as M. C.\nin Unavoidable Abaence of Mr.\nJ. J. Cambridge.\nA meeting of the May Day committee was held last night when lt was\nleported that everything was as last\nweek befoie the postponement. A\nquestion was raised as to the possibility of getting the children of the\nsurrounding districts here for the\nfestival and lt was suggested that the\nsecretary telephone the school authorities today, requesting that they\nhe allowed to attend.   It was also re\nin this matter, but It Is a source   of ] ported that last Friday morning the\nintense gratification to myself, and,\nI am sure, to the city as a whole, that\nthere are sufficient men of energy\nand, I might say, patriotism, who have\nmade their homes here, to institute\nmovements such as the formation of\nthe National Reserve and the United\nService club ln Westminster.\"\nWitli these words his worship the\nmayor yesterday greeted the committee representative of the different\naims of the services composing the\nNational Reserve which was started\nunder such auspicious conditions on\nTuesday evening.\n'The members of the National Reserve are deceiving of the * highest\ncommendation. They have remem-\nbcied their old allegiance\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdnot that\nthey were ever likely to' forget it,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nbut this movement brings together\nnumbers of men sharing that same-\nallegiance. The National Reserve\nmovement, which, as you slate, ls in-\ndted simplicity itself, is still of the\nvWy greatest import to the country\nlooked at dom many points of view,\nnot least fiom tha; of the defensive\nI c-.n assjre you that I shall onl.v be\ntoo ;lease.l to taVe change of tlie roll\nof names, ani I trust that within a\nrhoit time i: will contain tiie names\nand iiiidresses of eiery past soidicr,\nsailor or member of the auxiliary\nfores now living wIPliln the bounds\nof Westminster ancl  the district.\"\nThe mayor stated that all men\nolif.-i:i\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd were Inrttci to come to the\ncity bail and theie lsave thalr namer\nwith the city eler :, Mr. W. A. Duncan,\nv.ho an old s-iHIer himrelf. h\ufffd\ufffds contented to register the men. He will\niilso take at ens to acquaint tha mllKla\ndepartment with what New Westminster has done towards tho formation\nof a National Reserve fnr Canada,\nThose Eligible for th? National Rescue arc sailors, marines, soldiers\nmilitiamen, yeomanry, volunteers or\nlenitotials, who have coinileted their\nterm3 of service. They will register\ntheir names at the cltv hall, but by so\ndolir; do not render themselves liable\nfor service of any description. It is\na movement fimply to keep a record\nof these men. wbo, trained to arms\nand all that that means, might on\noi 'osion of dire national peril be at>-\njeiled to for aid. Without a record\nof them being kett the Individual\nmembers are lost sight of.\nLis worship assured the delegation\nthat the movement would grow, ft\nwas a great honor to the city to be\nthe flrsl to begin It in Canada, and he\nhoped that the men wAuld eome forward so that It mleht poon be said\nthat the cltv and district possessed\nat least a thousand men in the National Reserve.\npeople of Millside telephoned In to\nask If the festival was to be held and\nwere notified that It had been postponed. This was proof of the wide\nInteiest taken ln the affair.\nMr. J. J. Cambridge reported that\non account of the assizes being held\nIn the city at this ti ne he wouid be\nunable to act as master of ceremonies.\nIt was moved by Chief Watson that\nthe past master of ceremonies, Mr. J.\nJ. Johnston, take the office, and it was\nso agreed as lie had had experience.\nAt the suggestion of Mr. D. E. MacKenzie, Mr. W. A. Gilley was persuaded to accompany him. It was\nlhe opinion of Mr. MacKenzie that\nsomeone ought to become used to the\nposition for the beneflt of future festivals.\nThe publicity committee reported\nin tbe person of Mr. P. W. Lu;e on\nthe awarding of the prices for decora-\nlions, the results of which havo already been published. It was also announced that the first prize, the Dally\nNews cup, was nov on exhibition at\nP. Burns. A orb* will be awarded to\ntiie best decorated a itomobile ln the\nparade, tiio Judging to be left in the\nhand! of the publicity committee.\nIt is likely that the next celebration\nwill he held on May 1, because of the\nexperiences of the past few years. No\nuction was ta'en In the matter last\nnirhf. that heir:' left until next year,\nbut It was rointcd out Ihat very often\nM.iy 1 w;is a (ina day; while Mr. Mackenzie, clerk of the market, stated\nthat theie were -moro rainy Fridays\nthan any ether day. as his experiences\nv.ith the market showed. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nCARRY OFF POSF\nFO PORT ALBERNI\nPROVINCE DONE\nWITH ELEVATORS\nRoblin    Government   Gives\nOrders to Shut Up Commission\nCtate-owned  Elevators  Only  Handled\n40 Per Cent, of Crop\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLosing\nProposition.\nWinnipeg, May 8.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe Roblln government haa had enough of government ownership o.'ele,ators. D. W.\nMcCuaig, chairman of the Manitoba\ngovernment elevator commiESion, stat\ned I his morning that he had receiver'\norders to close up the business of the\ncommission by the close of the present crop year. August 31. He said hc\nhad been with tie commission since\nIt started and found that lt did not\nretci'e sufficient support from the\npeo. ie, and this was presumably the\nreason for the commission go!n~ oat\nof business.\n\" Mr. McCuaig slated that from September 1 to January 31 last year, the\nj-overnment elevates had only handled 40 per cent, of the grain, according to the statement of the railways.\nTl'e elevator business has been losing\nat both endi\\\nBURNABY FACING\nWAFER SCARGFY\nTroubles   cf   Municipa'    Supply\nMany\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdRush  New  Main to\nCompletion.\nAre\nCAN MAYORS 6E\nPAID SALARIES ?\nNelson Raises Awkward Question for\nChief Officers of Cities Under\nTwenty Thousand.\nNew    Town    Scapegra:es    Raid    Old\nTown\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCanadian Highway Post\nReturned with Apolcgics.\nWcid comes from Nel.on that ac-\nOOr.Mn; to the amended version of\nthe Municipal Clauses act no ma-or\nof any city with a smaller population\nthan 20.(1(10 can receive any remuneration for his services. Accordingly the\ndespatch says that Nelson's mayor\nwho has received $1200 a year ever\nsince the city's Incorporation In 1897\nla now without a salary.\nIf this report were trie, lt would,\nof course, apt ly to Weatmlnster, and\nMayor Lee would have to be content\nwith tho bare honor of his position\nas head of the city. The general understanding, however, of the amended act was that cities of less than 20,-\n000 population had no power to increase the salaries of their mayors\nbevond what they were at the time\nof tho passing ot the amendments. It\nmay be that when the peonlo of Nelson come to loo'c closer Into the matter they will come to the same conclusion, but on the otber hand It Is\npossible that the wise men of Nelson\nave rli'ht. If bo, there will be weeping and pnashln?- of t?eth among the\nmajors of ail the cities of B'I'lsh\nColumbia with the exception Of thoso\nof Victoria nnd Vancouver.\nAustralians Go Under.\nLondon. Mny' 8.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNotts secured a\nsurprisingly easv victory today over\nthe visiting Aiistr-'ilnn crloket team\nby six wlclteta. This waa the flrst\ngame plnyed between on English\ncounty eleven and the visitors from\n1he Antipodes, the latter only having\narrived a few days previous to the\nopening day of the match.\nAlberni. May 8.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe rivalry between Old Alberni and Port Alberni\neame to a head when some wild\ns; irits of the latter town carried off\nthe Canadian Highway post in tha\ndark of night from its site at the foot\nof Johnson road in Old Alberni. and\nplanted it In the main business thoroughfare of their own city.\nBoth towns had been eager ln their\nattempts to secure the post for themselves, ebut the road conditions made\nIt Imperative that the planting ceremonies take place at old Alberni. Consequently there was some heart-burning among the enthusiastic supporters of the new town, but they bore\ntheir disappointment with a good\ngrace, attended the ceremonies ln\nforce and made themselves good fel-\n.lows, everywhere.\nThis last escapade was the act of a\nfew irresponsible members of the new\ntnwn, it is supposed, and while It lias\ncaused much laughter, little lH-feelinr;\nhas been created. On waking up on\nthe morning after, Mayor Waterhousc\nhastily summoned tbe council and\nordeied that the post be returned\nwith suitable apologies. This was accordingly done and here the Incident\nends.\nVERDICT NOT QUILTY.\nJury Acquits McKenzie After Three\nHours Discussion.\nAfter being out for three hours the\nJury brought in a verdict of not guilty\nln the case of Alexander McKenzie\ncharged wdth robbery with violence.\niMr. W. F. Hansford appeared for the\nprisoner.\nAfter Knight had been cross-examined by the defence, and Sergeant\nStanton had given evidence, the accused took the stand and told that\nhe had not been loafing about the\ntown, but at two periods during the\nBdaends, May s.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe municipal\ncouncil of Burnaby has awakened tc\nthe v-iet thac cnless- promct me2i.\".irt::\nme la'en in the near future, thr\nresidents will have a watt: famine\nstaring them In the face.\nDuring the past few months bti* one\nof fVe three most populated districts.\n;h; t 'it Edmonds, can be said to have\nhad a plentiful supply of water, the\ni^i'tnts of Central Park heing eom-\npeljed to | ack their water for some\n''stance while East Burnaby peopl,\nhave been enjoying the small surplus\nleft over from the Edmonds station\nOn Tuesday morning the pump at the\nlater i lace went wrong and before lt\ncould bs used, after the repairs ha^\nbeen made, the motor owned by the\nB. C. E. R. which pumps the water\ninto tbe larpe storage tan'c. burned\nout, thus cutting off the supply from\nthe Edmonds and also the East Burnaby districts. Added to this, the\nWell at Patterson station wh!-- the\n-municipal authorities had banked or\nto supply the Central Park area unti'\nthe new system was In wording order,\nhas been found to contain a large\namount of silt, and until this is drawn\nout. the pumps will be unable to run\nTaken as a whole, very li:tle complaint Is made at present conditions\nthe residents realizing the fact that\nthe council is doing Its utmost tc\nalleviate the want in anv way '~os-\nslble. Instead of trying to complete\nthe whole system befoie turning on\nthe full supply from the Soymour\ncreek basin, the waterworks engineers\nare rushing the work of laying an\neighteen inch malu across the municipality, from the North Burnaby district ta Edmonds. A delay has. occurred cn account of the council being compelled to C*ln the right '.(\nrvn thio.igh certain prorerty with the\n[ires, but this having been granted,\nonlv a mile and a half of pipe remains to be laid before the water can\nbe sent from the North Burnaby rese-\nvoir.\nThe roads through which the main\nwill be laid have been cleared In advance by the day labor gangs, and It\nremains fo',' the contractors to complete the installation of the trunk\nmain. Tbis Is expected to take six\nweeks to do, nnd until then, the residents are asked to bear with the council in the piesent conditions now prevailing.\nNO OFFICER MAY\nSMOKE TOBACCO\nSuch a Resolution at Methodist Conference at Mine-\napolis\nWill    prosecute    Mission    Work    in\nRoman and Greek Catholic Countries\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFavor Union.\nMinneapolis, Minn., May S. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nCommendation of Indian Commissioner Robert G. Valentine for his\norder that in government schools all\ninsignia of any religious order be removed and that those wearing a distinctive church garb lay such aside\nwhile engaged in government duties,\nwas given In a resolution adopted by\nthe general conference of the Methodist Episcopal church today.\nThe tesolutlon urges that \"as the'\npresident, at the solicitation of a certain ecclesiastic, directed that the o'.'-\nder of the commissioner be suspended\npending a future hearing, which hearing was held on Aprll 8, tho same now\nbe enforced.\" Secretary of the Interior Fisher put the order Into Immediate effect Instead of withholding\nhis decision untll August 1, as he had\nannounced.\nThe conference also took action as\nfollows; lt adopted a resolution preventing election to any office of tbe\ngeneral conference of any man who\njses tobacco In any form;\nAdopted the Rice resolution declaring that the Methodist Episcopal\nchurch would prosecute mission work\n'it the so-called Roman and Greek\nCatholic countries despite the action\nof the ecumenical missionary conference at Edinburgh, a woi ld-widc meeting of different denominations which\nwent on r?cord as opposed ta Protestant misclon wer:* in such countries;\nWent on record as favoring the\nun'on of the Methodist Epis:opa!\nohtyCh and Methodist Episcopal\nchurch south.\nThe Episcopacy committee ia Eaid\nto,ho deadlocked on the number Qf\nhis'iops to he superannuated at this\nsession of the conference. On the\nnumber whicb will retire to a great\nextent depends the number of new\nbishops to be chosen.\nPROGRESS CLUB\nEXECUTIVE BUSY\nWork of Perfecting Organization   Ad-\nvancea\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWork to Be Centralized\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFive Hundred Members.\nTbe work of organizing the Progress\nclub, or Westminster Progressive association as It Is technically known,\nwas advanced several steps at the\nflrst meeting of the executive held\nlast night. The secretary and president wore appointed, a committee to\ndraw up a constitution and several\nlesoiutlons were passed with regard\nto certain items lo be Incorporated\ntherein. One of these was to alve\npower to committees to add to tnelr\nnumbers.\nThe executive also recommended\nthat the entrance fee be fixed at $10\npayable In four quarterly payments\nof $2.50 each. Two new committees\nwill be appointed, namely, an agricultural and an Industrial committee,\nwhich wdll be expected to take u0\nthese lmpor:ant blanches of work\nvery acti\\ely.\nArrangements were made to centralize the work as much as possible\nso that intercommunication between\nthe di.Teient committees and the different members of each committee\nmay be facilitated.\nE\\eryone present seemed embued\nwith a determination to keep busy ln\nthe interests of the city. Membership cards will be printed at once\nand it ls hoped to secure flve hundred\nmembers almost Immediately. Over a\nhundred, names are aheady assured\nand if every one of these will secure\nfour more a fine beginning will be\nmade. Various publicity schemes were\ndiscussed, the most ambitious of\nwhich were left over for later consideration as the question of funis\nat once became important. Some of\nthe work will, however, go ahead at\nonce.\nFinally the committee adjourned till\nue.rt Tuesda'% when it will consider\nthe constitution iii detail ani prepare a rsport for thc general meet-\nin?.\nMN AMMNFS\nfor mmm\nOPEN MEETINGS\nTOTHEPUBUC\nLOCAL METHODISES\nCLOSE CONFERENCE\nLaymen   Appointed   Delegates\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdQues-\ntion of .Conference Evangelist\nPostponed.\nOPERA  HOUSE  PICTURE8.\nS-.rah Bemh-irdt and Madame f.ejane\nWlll Be Depicted.\nManager Harry Tidy, of the opepi\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ house, yesterday made arrangements\njear he had been working out at Co- hvlth Curtis and Prieatlv, owners   of\nquitlam Dam, and about Christmas he1 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd .-    -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd...TTT. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdj\nhad worked ut Westminster Junction.\nHe was out of work from abbut the\nmiddle of January and stayed most of\nthe time with a friend over In South\nWestminster. On the Friday when the\nrobbery happened he was with a\nfriend named Malcolm McLeod and\ntook a cow to the market to sell for\nhim, Then he went tt? to see a man\nnamed Grant. Abput C ^'clock he\nwent up to the market again. Later\nhe fell ln with a friend named Mc-\nKlnnon, who ask* d tf he could sleep\nwith hlm that night. About !> o'clock\nthe accusod said ,be went to bed and\nIn the morning he found McKinnon\nIn the hed with him. He also denied\nbeing up on Sixth avenue on Friday\nor even at any other time, or that he\nhad ever had a revolver.\nthe films of Sarah Bernhardt' and\nMme. Rejane, to show these pictures\nln his house next Wednesday and\nThursday evenings. Sarah Bernhardt\nand Mme. Rejane are two bf tbe\nmost famous actresses In the world\nCounsel for the defenoe, Messrs. Hen-\nplaying \"Camille\" before tins picture\nmachine. This drama, \"Camille,'' was\nthe play In which 8arah Bernhardt\nfirst made her great reputation, and\nin which she has playe.' over 2000\ntimes. The ricttires are in flrst class\ncondition and will be shown ln the\nVancouver opera house two nights before they come he:e. The new picture\nmachine has been installed in tbe\norera house and ererytbltv; Is, ln\nfirst class Working order. Thp regular run of pictures wlll not be shown\nthere till nfter the flrat of next month.\nThe semi-annual meeting of the\nWestminster district of the Methodist\nchurch closed its sessions yesterday\nafternoon, having held, In the opinion\nof the many delegates, one of the\nmost successful conferences ln the\nhistory of the district. Mr. J. Ashton,\nof Sapperton, brought up the question\nof the advisability of appointing a\nconference evangelist. After much\ndiscussion, It was moved by Rev.\nOkell and seconded by Mr. J. C. Loree\nthat the matter be left over for the\ntime being, although it was considered an Important project for the members to embark on.\nFelicitous remarks were made .regarding the work of the Rev. Brbwn,\nof ths Queens Avenue church, and\n.Tiucli regret wss expressed at thc\nthought of liis *tea\\ ing for a larger\nfleld ln thc near future.\nThe following-laymen were appointed delegates to tbe annual conference\nof the Methodist churches of the province which will commence on Wednesday next at Victoria: Messrs. J. VJ.\nAshton, G. Copeland, Joseph Booth-\nroyd, G. Blair, D. 8. Curtis, E. A.\nEiwin, W. T. Reid, J. C. Loree, J.\nRumble, H. Wilson, R. H. Keary. B\nCasselman. J. H. Frost and S. Bole.\nThe alternates were Messrs.- G. Cunningham, G. T. Chapman and Campbell Glass.\nThe financial conference will be\nheld In the Queens Avenue church\nsometime ln August, subject to the\ncall of the chairman.\nThe proceedings began on Tuesday\nafternoon. Rev. T. H. Wright being\nelected secretary- There were pres\nent Revs. Dr. Jamea.H. White, C. W.\nBrown. A. B. Hetherington. F. 8.\nOkell, E. D. Biaden. J. H. Wilgbt. A.\nE. Roberts. T. G. Barlow, F. L. Carpenter, W. A. til (Toid aud T. H.\nWrlaht\nMessrs. F. L. Carpenter and M.\nPike were examined. They were\nboth probationers. Mr. Carpenter has\nbeea previously ordained and was\nrecommended to be received in full\nconnection with the church. Mr. Pike\nwill attend Columbia college next\nyear, end was continued on probation.\nDuring the past year the church haa\nsuffered a loss by the death of Rev.\nT. D. Pearson, or this city, and Rev.\nT. W. Hdll. of Sardis.\nDurinif the evening the policy to\nbe pursued In regard to the educational .work ot Columbia college was con-,\nsldered. The establishment of the B.\nC. university at Point Grey will render some changes necessary.   -\nCommittee  Working  Quietly\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIntend:\nts Make Exhibition Best on\nRecord. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nQuietly and unobtrusively plans are\nbeing fashioned for the various departments of the exhibition which will\ntake place in the fall, and there seems\nto be no doubt that this event will\nrank as tbe best ever yet held in the\nRoyal City.\nThere was a meeting on Tuesday of\nthe committee which haa in hand tke\nspecial features of attraction to be\nprovided for the delectation of the\nvisitors. This committee, composed\nof Messrs. A. E. Sherriff, T. J. Armstrong, W. A. Gilley, D. E. MacKenzie\nand Alderman Kellington, considered\nand discussed a very large number of\nproposals of various natures. A selection of those attractions which were\nconsidered to be tbe most suitable\nwas made, and this will now be presented to the whole committee for Its\napproval both as regards the selection\nand the appropriation to cover the\ncost.\nThe idea Is to get as much attraction as possible for the entertainment\nof the public without going to too\nlarge an expense.\nWILL SUE NEW8Y.\nFleming After Star Lacrosee Man for\nBreach of Contract.\nToronto, May 7.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNewsy Lalonde is\nto be sued for breach of contract by\nthe Toronto Lacrosee club. The statement was made this morning by an\nofficer of the Torontos, and lf necessary the Scarboro Beach management\nwill send a sherl.T to bring Lalonde\nback from the coast to face the\ncharge of taklir; money under false\npretences. The Torontos base their\ncharges on the faot that Lalonde had\nalready signed up with Vancouver\nwhen he came east, and the fact that\nhe accepted $2500 of their coin as ad\nvance money la stated to be sufficient\ngrounds to bring the Cornwall home\nstar to the courts. Lalonde has property In Cornwall, and lf tbe charge\nagainst him ia sustained his latest\ndeal Is liable to be a very costly\nmanoeuvre.\nT. and L. Council Believe in\nPrinciple of Public Discussion\nWork for Westminster First-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDisow\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nAgent for Alleged Trades Publication.\nOne of the most important matters\ndebated at the regular meeting of\nthe Trades and Labor council beld.\nlast evening, was that of suspending,\na section of the constitution which\nheretofore had kept fhe meeting.\nclosed to the public. Delegate-.\nCameron fathered tbe movement\nand stated that this was necessary if\nthe members or the organization were\nto bave the support of the citizens of\nthe city. They, the Trades and Labor,\ncouncil, had been lighting for the\nschool board meeting being Open tt\ufffd\ufffd-\ntlie public, so that all might know\nwhat was going on In that body, ami\nhe thought It perfectly right that the\npublic should have a chance to learn.\nthe work done at their meetings.\nDelegats Stoney, in seconding the\nmotion, said: \"We wish the public or\nWestminster to see we run things differently than the school board meetings. We have alw.ays ailowed the\npress a fiee hand In' reporting the\nmeetings and It ' Is rto their credit\nthat the people of (Mils city get ao\naccuiate aecocuit of \"tvhat business Is-\ntransacted. We never hear of any of\nour members making a kick at being;\nmisrepresented.\"\nDe.egate Grant ln support of the\nmotion, said: \"The people ol this city\nhave been able to findafct during the\npast year that this council is working:\nIn the interests of the city at large.\nThey have no grudge against anybody\nwho is working in thOWame direction.\nThe motion was cimiec by a large\nmajority.\nThe municipal committee was requested to biing d|> before the city\ncouncil the question of tbe advisability of sending tftWr -plumbing inspector to the annual convention of\nplumhlng and Banitary inspectors to\nbe beld In St. Louis in June of this-\njear.\ni Delegate Grant was Instructed tor\nprepare data to be given the municipal committee in tbe matter oC\nmunicipal coal yards.\nDelegate Stoney brought up a matter which several of the city tradesmen had meatione.l to him that ot   a\nStranger in the city who was working\nIn the Interest of a trades publication,,\nstatins he was a certified member of\na union \"and that his credentials had'\nbeen endorsed by the local   dounclL\nThe folio ling motion   was   carried:\n\"That this body disclaim all connection with a seir-styled agent who   is   '\nsoliciting advertising ror a Trades and\nLabor Review and lurther, tbe executive had  never been approached by\nthe man and know nothing'whatever-\nabout him.\"\nDelegate Stoney In his remarks:\nstated that all members should work\nfor the city first. G\ufffd\ufffdve Westminster\ntrade to Westminster people.\ndelegate     Cameron   . reported     unhealthy state of affairs in the Labor \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nTemple company.   But lffOO shares remained unsold and tbe union men of\nthe city had but a short time to take\nadvantage of the oflfer to purchase the?\nremainder at par value.   It has been\nplanned by the officers of the company to construct a smaller hall In the-\nbuilding which could be used by   the\nsmaller unions, the larger one being\nrented at times for the purposes of\npublic meetings.\nThe municipal committee reported\nin connection with the Seventh\navenue school tbat the mayor had\ntold them that the city council was\npowerless in the matter.\nScanlon Returns from Harrison.\nThe sternwheeler Helen M. Scanloir\ncame down river yesterday from Harrison, where she has been   tied   up\nduiing the paat winter.   The wafer in\nthe river which haa heen lower than\nror a number or yeara,   now   shows\nsigns oi reaching Its normal height,\nthus allowing the steamship traffic te-\nnavigate without any difficulty.   The\nScanlon   Is owned   by   the   Brooks,.\nScanlon Lumber company and lg tied'\nup at the market wharf.\nGREAT BUILDING ACTIVITY\nIN CITY AND DISTRICT\nBuilding in tbe city and district Is\ngrowing apace in Its volume, and Is\nto a very great extent responsible\nfor the activltv now to be seen in\nrealty. Yesterday's building permits\nalone account for a further three\nhouses to he added to the growlna\nlist. Mrs. Hughes will build an eight\nroomed two stoev house on Roval\navehue coating $2401); Mr. W. ,T. Mal-\ncolm a glmihr residence on Seventh\nawnue Id co3t $2200. and Mr. A. K.\nForfenden will erect a flve rcomed\nbungalow on Regina- street .costing\n$2500.\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* * * *\n*,\nUNITED 6ERVICE CLUB\nCOMMITTEE ACTIVE\nThe committee in charge of \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nthe organizing of the United\nService club ia not letting the\ngrass crow under Us feet. *.A\nmeeting at which all the members were present was held\nlast night in the offices of\nMessrs. Walker Bros. & Wtlfcle,\nand preliminary steps- were\ntaken towards drawing up entrance and membership fees\nand so forth, a sub-commlttes\nbeing an pointed to inquire Into\nthe matter of suitable quart'is\nfor the new club.\nForma will he   printed   and\ncirculated both for entrance to\ntbe club and for the use . of\nthose eligible tor the National'\nReserve.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\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 PAGE TWO\nWESTMINSTER DAILY NEWS\nTHURSDAY, MAY 9, 191Z\n| Classified Advertising\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\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd RATES. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nOne cent per word for day.\nFour cents per word per\nweek.\nNo advertisement accepted\nfor less than 25c.\nBirth, death and marriage\nnotices 50c per insertion.\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\nWANTED\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMISCELLANEOUS.\nWANTED\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWOMAN WANTS WORK\nby day.   Apply Box 72, News office.\nWANTED\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBY LADY ROOM AND\nboard ln private family not far from\ncenter of city.   Apply P. O. Box 8(U.\nWANTED\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdS OR 10 CARPENTERS,\n$4.25 for eight hours. Call at 716\n.Fifth street.\nWANTED\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCARPENTERS AT ONCE,\nunion scale. Call at Hub Cigar\nStore.\nWANTED\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdROOMERS AND BOARD-\ners.    36 Hastings stieet.\nWANTED TO BUY\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdONE OR TWO\nlots in Buena Vista. State price on\nterms and for cash. Reply Box 71.\nthis office.\nWANTED\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA TEAMSTER AT ONCE.\nFted Davis, furniture store, Front\nstreet.\nWANTED\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTWO GENTLEMEN FOR\nboard and room; also table hoarders without room. 814 Third avenue.\nWANTED\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDRESSMAKING BY THE\nday.   309 Keary street.\nWANTED\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAN OFFICE BOY IMME-\ndiately. Apply Diamond and Corbould, room 1, Lavery block.\nYOUNG MAN (GOOD EDUCATION)\nrequires work in city; any kind.\nBox 73 News.\n\"WANTED \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd A ROOM WITH THE\nprivilege of practising on the piano\none hour evenings, by plain work-\ningman. Please state terms. Address  Box 77,  Daily  News office.\nWANTED - A WAITRESS. APPL\\\nBohemian cafe, opposite C. P. R-\ndepot.\nTO RENT.\nFOR RENT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOFFICES ON SIXTH\nstreet, opposite Dominion Trust\nblock.   Apply H. P. Vidal & Co.\nF.OR RENT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA SUITE OF FURN1SH-\ned rooms at Queens Court, Second\nSireet and Park Row. Apply S.\nFader.\nTO LET\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTHREE NICE LIGHT\nhousekeeping rooms. $12 monthly.\nAdults only.   225 Eleventh street.\nTO RENT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFURNISHED HOUSE-\nkeeping rooms at 224 Seventh\nStreeL\nFOR RENT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLARGE FRONT ROOM\nsuitable for two gentlemen or light\nhousekeeping. Apply 213 Seventh\nstreeL\nBOARD    AND\ngentlemen:\nPhone 1129.\nROOM\nevery\nFOR    TWO\nconvenience.\nLOST.\nLOST \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd CHEQUE IN FAVOR OF\nFrank Typper. Finder please return\nto News office.\nLOST\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPLAIN GOLD RING, NEAR\ni-Sixlh avenue, last December. Finder\npi.ase return lo this office. Reward.\nLOST \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd A POMERANIAN PUPPY\nabout two months old, white. Reward offered to anyone bringing\nsame to 316 Third street.\nFOUND.\nFOUND \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd- A BLACK AND WHITE\nPointer dog. Owner can have same\nby paying expenses and applying to\nGeore-e Grad;r, poundkeeper, Edmonds.\nKOYAL ORDER OF MOOSE NO. 854\nmeets ln Eagle's Hall, Columbia\nstreet, second and fourth Wednes\ndays, at eight o'clock, Visiting\nP. A. P. S. welcome. F. C. Cook,\nDictator; J. J. Randolph, Vice-Dictator:  H. L. Christie, Secretary.\nFOR 8ALE\nFOR SALE \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFIVE GALLONS OF\nJersey milk daily. Write E. Gladwin, Langley Prairie.\nVOR SALE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCHEAP, IN GOOD OR-\nder, a four burner gas plate, with\noven complete. Apply 210 Agnes\nstreet, city.\nFOR SALE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSTEEL MALLEABLE\nranges on easy terms; $1.00 down,\n$1.00 per week. Canada Range Co.,\nMarket Square.\nParties   intending   building   in   Alta\n\"Vista   or   Burnaby   and   vicinity,   get\n*ny   estimates,;   plans   and   specifications furnished.    T.  M. Moorhouse,\nAlta Vista P. O.\nTEACHERS   WANTED.\n'Wanted. Teachers for all grades in\n1'ublie schools, including Principals.\nApplicants are requested to write stating qualifications and salary required\niind must be prepared to undergo on\nexamination b.v the School Medical\nOfficer if required, Applications toi\nreach ihe Secretary's office by noon\nof Thursday, Mav 2i!rd.\nL. AVORY WHITE,\nSecretary,  Board  of School Trustees.\nNew Westminster, B. C.\nThe People's Trust Co., Ltd.\n451 Columbia Street. Phone 669\nIN BURNABY\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHouse and lot, corner\nSecond avenue and Sixth street'\nfour rooms, city water, electric\nlight; chicken house, runs, etc.\nPrice $1800; $450 cash, balance $15\nper month.\nGOOD CITY BUY\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOne lot between\nThird an 1 Fourth avenues, close to\nEighth street; size (16x100. Price\n$1200; one-third cash, balance 6 and\n12 months.\nCORNER LOT AND HOUSE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSituat\ned on Thirteenth sireet aud Sixth\navenue; size 132x132; all cieared.\nPrice $9500; one-thirj cash, balance 6, 12 and 18 months.\nON SECOND STREET\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdOne let between Seventh and Eighth avenues.\nPrice $600: one-third cash, balance\nll and 12 months. There is a lot\nof building going on in 'fbis neighborhood.\nON A GROWING STREET\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHouse\nand two lots on Durham street,\n120xl48'4 feel; all cleared. House\nhas six rooms, bath, toilet, furnace,\nfull sized basement; chicken hou^e\nand runs, etc. Price $5500; one-\nquarter cash, balance 6, 12 and IS\nmonths.   No. 71.\nNOTICE.\nAll persons having accounts against\nthe 1912 Ball Committee of Pon No.\n4, of the Native Sons of B. C, are requested to present them to me on or\nbefore May Hth, 1912.\nA. E. McCOLL, Treasurer.\nP. O. Box 02, New Westminster.\nCORPORATION   OF  BURNABY.\nEngineering Department.\nNotice to Contractors.\nSealed tenders endorsed \"Cracked\nRock\" will be received by the undersigned not later than 12 noon on Saturday, May llth, for the supply of\n2000 yards of cracked rock.\nParticulars and specifications may\nbe had at the Engineers' Office, Edmonds, B. C.\nTenders will not be considered un\nless made out on forms supplied. The\nCouncil will not be bound to accept\nthe lowest or any tender.\nW. GRIFFITHS,\nComptroller.\nEdmonds, May 1, 1912.\nCITY OF NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C.\nLocal  Improvement Notice.\nThe People's Trust Co., Ltd.\n451 Columbia Street. Phone 669.\nSCHOOL   DESKS.\nTenders wanted for supplying\nschool desks (single) in carload lot*\na sample desk must be left at the\nSecr:tary's office.\nAlso   tenders   for   teacher3'   sanl-\nI tary desks, sample or cut to be left\nat Secretary's office.\nTenders lo be at the office by noon\nof Wednesday, Mav 15th.\nL. AVORY WHITE,\nSecretary   Poard  of School Trustees.\nNew Westminster, B. C, May 2,\n1912.\nThe Municipal Council of the City\nof New Westminster having by resolution determined and specified that\nit is desirkble to carry out the following works, that is to say: To\nseed, cover with mould and plant\nshade trees on the boulevard on Thir.l\nStreet from Royal Avenue to Sixth\nAvenue,\nAnd that said works be carried out\nin accordance with the provisions of\nthe \"Local Improvement General Bylaw, 1912.\"\nAnd the City Engineer and the City\nAssessor having; reported to the\nCouncil in accordance with the provisions of the suid by-law upon the\nsaid works giving statements showing tbe amounts estimated to be\nchargeable agninst the various portions of real property to be benefited\nby the said works and other particu\nlars and the said reports of the said\nCity Engineer and City Assessor having been adopted b.v the Council.\nNotice is hereby given that the said\nreports are open for ins; ection at the\noffice of the City Assessor. City Hall\nColumbia Street, New Westminster\nB.C.. and\" that unless a petition\nagainst the proposed works above\nmentioned signed by a majority of\nthe owners of the land cr real pro\nperty to be assessed as charged in\nrespect of such works representing at\nleast one half in value thereof is presented to the Council within fifteen\ndays from the date of the first publication of this notice the Council will\nproceed with tlie proposed improvements under such terms and condi\ntions as to tlie payment of the cost\nof such improvements as the Council may by by-law In that behalf\nregulate and determine anl also to\nmake the said assessment.\nDated this Eighth day of May. 1912\nW. A. DUNCAN, City Clerk.\nDate of first publication May 9, 1912.\nSHORT   OF   SUPPLIES.\nMount   Blackburn    Expedition   Meets\nWith   Great    Difficulties.\nCordova, -Alaska, May 8.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThree\nmen of the Dora Keen's Mount Blackburn exre Ution returned to Kenne-\ncctt yesterday to obtain a new supply of alcohol and provisions, ths\nparty's stores having become exhausted.   The alcohol is used for cooking.\nThe main party is in camp. In tents\nat an altitude of 12.0CO feet on the\nmountain, and when the three men\nleft, the climbers had been waiting\nten days for the abatement of a\nfrightful storm. The men with their\nfresh supplies-will depart for the main\ncainn tomorrow. They fear that tbe\nexpedition will bo unsuccessful owing\nto the mild winter and the early opening of spring. Already man.- avalanches have dashed '.'own thn moun\ntainside, making the ascent slow and\nperilous, All of the party are well.\nThere is a feeling of disappointment\nbut all the members of the expedition share Miss Keen's determinaiion\nto reach the summit if tbe feat ls\npossible. Miss Keen, who is a member of a distinguished Philadelphia\nfamily, sailed from Seattle April 10,\nto undertake the conquest of the\ngreat Copper River peak, which is 16,-\n140 feet high.\nLIVE   CORPSES   RIDE   IN\nHEARSE    FOR\nA   BET\nSeattle, May 8.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAs a result of a\nwager, Joseph Guerrerl, manager of\nthe Pe:ry Hotel, Attorney George Dibble anl S. L. Spencer, chief steward\nat the New Washington, yesterday\nrode as passengers In a Collins Bros\nhearse from the Totem pole to tlie\nPerry Hotel, 4he route being along\nSecond avenue to Union street, east\non I'nion street to Seventh avenue,\nMadison  street and the Perry.\nThe party met at dinner Saturday\nnight, and when they got together\nagain yesterday, at the Seattle, Attorney Dibble proposed that they ride\nin a heaise, and the man who refused\nto do bo must pay for the dinner.\nNone woull take a dare and they\nclambered in, all lying prone.\nWillie passing Second avenue and\nUnion street, one of the passengers\ndrew hack the black curtains, and\ntwo young women, waiting at the\ncrossln-;, screamed at the top of their\nvoices.\nIN\nTHE     SUPREME     COURT\nBRITISH COLUMBIA.\nOF\nIN THE MATTER\nTitles Act,\"\nof   the \"Quie'In?\n-and-\nC0RP03ATI0N      OF      BURNABY.\nEnginecrinj  Department.\nKotic- to Clea'lng ContrActors.\nTenders   endorsed   \"Clearing\"    will\nbe receive:! by the   undersigned nol\nlater than 5 p. in. Monday. May 13th.,\nfor clearing and grubbing tbe Easter\nly  33   feet    of  Houndary   Koad.  from\nHarm i   Road to the Qreal   Northern\nright-of-way,       approximately       108\n-chain.-;\nSpecifications and particulars maj\nbe nad al Engineer's Office, Edmonds\n.is. C.\nTinders will nol be oonslderad \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nlees made out on the forms supplied.\nThe council  will  nol  be   hound to\nAccept the lowest or anj tender.\nW. GRIFFITHS,\nComptroller.\nEdmonds, May 3, 1912,\nINVESTORS' INVESTMENT CO.\nPhone 295 Office, Curtis Elock\nOWNER will consider\nHighest Cash Offer for\nthe following property\nin bulk:\n*uSd visions 89 and 90,   Lot\n3, Suburban Block 14.\nAct Quickly.    Address :\nSOX 190, DAILV NEWS OFFICE\nHOUSE AND LOT for $3000, five\nrooms modern e>:cept furnace;\ntp,ird cash; (i, 12 and 18 months for\nbalanoe.   No. 34,\nALL MODERN BUMGALOW, $3650.\nOn Dublin *treet; well located;\nthird  (ash;   6,  12  months.    No.   18,\nTWELVE.ROOMED   HOUSE,, $15,750.\nAn   acre   of orchard,   on Twelfth\nmn el,   terms.    No. 2H.\nCHOICF   BUILDING   LOT.  cer; f  ft.\nPatrick's and Second street. $-,0110;\nsize 132x120.   no. 'll.\nSAPPERTON HOME SITES \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Five\nlots ,\",:txll6, lane ut rear; $fi(ill each,\none-third cash; terms. No. 4(1.\nSEVENTH AVENUE \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Lot between\nSecond and Fourth streets on south\nfide; $1500, third caBh; terms.\nNo. 32.\nON EIGHTH AVENUE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLarge build-\nIns lot, lane at rear, $('.15; terms.\nNo. (i.\nFire, Accident, Employees' Liability,\nAuto.   Plate  Glaus  Insurance.\nINVESTORS'  INVESTMENT CO.\nPhone 295 Office, Curtis Block\nIN THR MATTER of Lots 1, 2 and\n3, in the Subdivision of bts 16 ani\n17 and pait of 18, of Lot lfi. Sulm -\nban Biock io, City of New Westminster, Map number 1,021.\nN'OTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that\nJessie Turnbull, of the City of New\nWestminste-. in the Province of Hritish Columbia, lias made appi cation\nto tha Honorable Mr. Justice Mm phy\nfcr a Declaration or Title to ihe\nabove mentioned p.operty under tht\n\"Quietins Titles AC,\" and upon the\nsaid application did producs evidence\nwhereby she appears to be the owner\ntherof in fee simile, free from al\nencumbrances, SAVE AND EXCEPT\na certain Agreement of Sale ti Mary\nW. Horle, deposited in the Land\nRegistry Offlce at the City of New\nWestminster, B. C, and numbered\n23008C, and thereupon the said\nJudge did by Order dit\ufffd\ufffdd the 27th\nday of April, 1912, order that all per.\nj sons having or pretending to have\nany title to or interest in the said\nlands, or any part thereof, is required\non   or   before   the  31st   day   of   May\n[now next ensuing, at 10:30 o'clock In\nthe forenoon, (at or after wliich time\nthe said Judge will sign the Dicl ration of Title herein), to file a Stats-\nment of his or her claim, anJ se:ve\nnotice thereof on the Petitioner, or\non Messis. Whiteside & Edmonds,\nher Solictors, at their ofllce in 'le\nCity of N'ew Wei-tminster, B.C., an I\nIn default thereof such claim will\nbe barred, and the title of the sud\nJessie Tinnbull become the true and\ncorrect title to tho said hinds, md\na Declaration cf Title will l-su \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd lint\nGermans and Exposition.\nSan Francisco, May 8,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGerman and\nGerman-American members of the\nWays and Means Committee of the\nl!)l.r> Universal Exposition, met in the\ndirectors room of the Exposition\nBuilding last Tuesday and discusse I\nthe ben and most effective way in\nwhich to bring to the attention of\ntho j.eople of Germany as welt as to\nthe German Government the early\nvisit of the Exposition Commission,\nnow cn route to the principal capitals\nand cit ies of Europe, and to consider\nthe advisability of establishing a German-American erganization on this\ncoast, to aid iu securing the participation by German exhibitors, and to\naid in welcoming and entertaining\ndistinguished Germans previous to\nanl during the exposition, This plan\nis being adopted by foreign citizens\nwho are residents of San Franfcisco.\nOrganizations are being formed with\nthis end in \\te\\v.\nCITY OF NEW WESTMINSTER.\nThlr-\nThir-\nto\nWest End Sewer.\nHouse    connections    can    now    fie\nmade to tlie main sewers on Ihe following streets:\n(1) Fourteenth Street from Fourth\nto Sixth Avenue.\n(2) Kamloops  Stieet.\n(3) Cariboo Street.\n(4) Fifth   Avenue   between\nteenth and Fourteenth Streets.\n(5) Holland Street.\n(6) Sixth Avenue    between\nteenth and Fourteenth Streets.\n(7) Third Avenue from River\nTentli Stieet.\n(8) Eleventh Street from Third to\nSixth Avenues.\n(9) Cornwall Street.\n(10) Fifth Avenue from Tenth    to\nEleventh Streets.\n(11) Maple Street.\n(12) Sixth Avenue from    Maple to\nTenth  Streets.\n(13) Twelfth Street from Third to\nFourth Streets.\nPermits may he obtained from   the\noffice of the City Fngineer.\nJ. W. B. BLACK1MAN,\nCity Engineer.\nMay 6th, 1912.\nNEW\nWESTMINSTER\nTRICT.\nLAND    DIS-\nshe is the leual and  beneficial ou,iTi,|le  southwest  corner\nIn   fee   simple   In pcssecslon   ol   ihtf hagj\nsaid  lands  and   premises,  BUBJECT,\nto  the  said  above meii'iotn'd   \\gi\t\nment of Sale, nni BUBJECT lo ihJ\nreservations mtnt'oned In Scc'lon _:l\nof the said Ad, bul free from all\nother rights, Interests, cl.itms anl d -\nmauds   whatever.\nDATEI) at the Citv of N'ew Westj\nminsti r. B, C\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd this 27th dav of Ap II\nA. I).,  1912.\nWHITESIDE & EDMONDS.\nSoilcltois, for the Pdltioner.\nCITY  OF   NEW  WtSTMINSER,  D.C.\nBoard of Health Department.\nThe Board of Health Department It\nabout to start a campaign for tin\ncleaning up of all back yards and vacant lots In thc city, and the hearty\nno-ot>eriitlon of the citizens in genera'\nis asked in this regard.\nA clean city is one of the heat ada\nwe can hnve, nnd we feel Hiiro thai\nthe citizens appreciate this to the full\nest extent.     The burning up    of all\nwaste  paper, etc.,  the cleaning away\nof nshes and other refuse, nnd a thorough cleaning up will go a long way\ntoward! ulving us a cltv beautiful.\nTHE   HOARD   OF   HEALTH   DEP.\nS.  .  PEARCE,\nHealth Inspector.\nDistrict of New Westminster.\nTake notice that I, Thomas Ralph\nNlckson, of Vancouver, occupation\ncontractor, intend to apply for permission to lease the following described lands for Lil years.\nCommencing at 0 post plantei at\n^^^^^ )f District Lot\nthence north to the northwest\nrorner of D. L. IMM, thence 40 chains\nwesl along the north boundaries of\n11. Ls, 1383 and L382, thence south\nalong the west boundary of D. L. 1382\n'n the shore line on the Gulf of\nGeorgia at the Southwest corner of\n11. L, 1382, thence along shore line to\npoint of commencement containing\n\"\"0 acres moro or less.\nThe lease ls required for quarry\npurposes and to take gravel therefrom,\niSb'iied)\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nTHOMAS RALPH NICKSON.\nPer HAROLD NICKSON, Agent.\nDate April 4, 1912.\nFOR SALE\nLOTS ON   EWEN   AVENUE   CAR\n'LINE OR INSIDE.\nSEE  OUR   LIST\nRISING SUN REALTY CO'Y\nPhone 868. Room 4, Trapp Block.\nCITY OF NEW WESTMINSTER\nTWELFTH STREET IMPROVEMENTS\nSchedule showing the Real Property Immediately benefited and the proportion in which the assessment is made on per foot frontage.\nFrontage.\nBlk. Lot.    Sub.   Re-Sub.        Assessed Owner. Feet.   Amt.\nS'10| 17\nSli\nit;\nN.%\nI    5\nS121    4 i\nS12|    4 |\nI    !\nS12[   5\n1\n18\n17\n17\n16\n15\n14\n13\nN.E.pt.\n1\n2\n7\n8\n11\n11\n12\n15\n16 & 17] 1\n1\n2\n3\n4\n21\n22\n23\n24\n1\n10\n11\n13\n14\n15\n5\nG\n17\n18\n19\n20\n46\n45\n34\n33\n32\n31\n2\n1\n1\n2\n10\n20\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 21\n22\n39\n40\n1\n2\n2\n19\n20\n21\n22\n39\n40\nMcMartin, Jane  \t\nQuaggan, R.  H\t\nQuaggan, R.  H\t\nOvens, Thomas \t\nOvens, Thomas \t\nAdams, Ellen  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\t\nAdams, Ellen \t\nAdams, Ellen \t\nBrenchley, Louisa B.  \t\nTubbs, C\t\nSimccck, James T\t\nSands, Wllhelmina '.\t\nSands, Wilhelmina \t\nSands, Wilhelmina \t\nWintemute, Ada M\t\nWintemute, Ada M\t\nWintemute. Ada M.\t\nTurnbull,  Wm\t\nTurnbull, Wm. Sr., Estate \t\nAdams, Ellen \t\nAdams, Ellen \t\nHunt, Margaret A\t\nMacaulay, Bertha Maud   \t\nWallace, John S\t\nWallace, John S\t\nRobertson, Robert \t\nRobertson, Robert \t\nMandevllle, Frank  \t\nCity of New Westminster  \\ .\nDunn, Annie\t\nPeople's Trust Corporation \t\nWiggins, John Estate \t\nWiggins, John Estate \t\nWiggins, John Estate \t\nWiggins, John Estate  J.\nTurnbull, Alex\t\nFairness, W. II\t\nAdams. George  \t\nAdams, George   I\nAdams, George j\nAdams. George   |\nBartlett, E. P \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nBartlett, E. P |\nSmithers, Airrc 1, Estate  I\nSmlthers. Alfre 1, Estate  ;\nSmlthers. Alfre 1, Estate  I\nSmlthers. Alfred, Esta'.e  I\nCalvert. James   j\nWest End Methodist Church  |\nZuechero, Enrico   I\nZuechero. Enrico   |\nMain.  John I\nMandevllle. Delmia S j\nHale,  A.  E I\nHale, A. E i\nHeiton, Robert ....' 1\nHeaton, James 1\nRell, Clifton   P :\nRell, Clifton  P I\nConnelly, Alex. S j\nArkle, Christopher  ;\nRobertson, Don., and Atkinson, Jas.[\nInsley, A. M 1\nMain. W. M.  |\nOdin, Mary M !\nOdin, Mary M |\nRoman Catholic Orrhanage\t\n49.50\n46.73\n27.50\n27.f.0\n45.00\n45.00\n45.00\n45.00\n157.27\n66.00\n60.00\n66.00\n66.00\n33.00\n33.00\n6G.00\n66.00\n66.00\n66.00\n61.88\n61.87\n61.87\n61.88\nC1.8S\n61.87\n61.87\n61.88\n66.92\n71.26\n70.95\n70.95\n70.95\n70.95\n60.00\n66.00\n66.00\n60.00\nlifi.Ol)\nC0.00\n66.00\n66.00\n66.00\n66.00\n66.00\n66.00\n66.00\n66.00\n66.00\n66.00\n65.16\n65.69\n65.16\n65.09\nC5.16\n65.09\n65.16\n65.09\n65.16\n82.841*\n32.545\n65.16\n65.09\n65.16\n65.09\n65.16\n65.09\n11042.00\n$ 50.97\n48.12\n23.17\n23 17\n46.34\n46.34\n46.34\n46.34\n161.6S\nG7.98\n67.99\n67.99\n67.99\n34.00\n340\ufffd\ufffd\n67.99\n67.99\n67.99\n67.99\n63.71\n83.71\n63.71\n63.71\n63.71\n63 71\n63.71\n63.71\n68.90\n73.37\n73.03\n73.05\n73.05\n73.05\nG7.99\n67.99\n67.99\n67.99\n67.99\n67.911\n67.93\n67.99\n67.99\n67.99\n67.99\n67.99\n67.99\n67.99\n67.99\n67.'.19\n67.01\n67.02\n67.0)\n67.02\n67.19\n67.02\n67.09\n67.02\n67.on\n33.51\n33.51\n67.09\n67.02\n67.09\n67.02\n67.09\n67.02\n1072.30\nNotice Is hereby given that the\nminster intend? to pass a Local Impr\nthe properties In the schelule above\nnually for thirty years set opposite\nthe trial of complaints and appeals\nhe made will be held cn Monday, the\nat 10 o'clock in the forenoon, at the\nNew Westminster, British Columbia,\nintem'ed assessment must be served\nCouncil at least ei.';ht days prior to\nDated this 4th Day of May. 1912\n5129.48 15281.54\nCorpora: Ion of the City of New West-\novement Assessment By-law assessing\nmentioned the sums of money an*\neach lot, and a Court of Revision f \ufffd\ufffd\ngainst the assessment so proposed t*\n27th day of May, 1912, commencing\nci-nci] Chamber. In the City Hall,\n.-nd anv notic\ufffd\ufffd of anpeal from such\n.:pon tbe Clerk of the Municipal\ns ich Court of Revision.\nW. A. DUNCAN, City Clerk.\nCROWN\nUiiStUfclLi   BRUNETTE   STREET,   SAPPERTON.\nWE SOLICIT YOUR BUSINESS\nPHONE   904. PROMPT   DELIVERY\nGRAND TRUNK SYSTEM a-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd&ttff~km\nS. S. \"PRINCE RUPERT' and \"PRINCE GEORGE\"\nFOR PRINCE  RUPERT   12 midnight, Mondayj and Thursdays.\nMonday stcame;' csnnacts for Granby Bay, Stewart anl ea3t on\nthe Grand Trunk Pacific Railway.\nThursday steamer eonnrets for .Massett. Skidegate. Oueen Charlotte City, Pacofl, Jedway, etc., and east on the Grand T.un: P^cIHj\nRailway.\nFOR VICTORIA & SEATTLE    12 midnight, Tuesdays and Saturdays.\nS.S. \"PRINCE ALBERT\" for Prlnce Ruprr and Way Ports.\nFor sailings and Information apply at ticket office.\nAsk for Illustrated literature giving particulars o' agricultural\nland on Grand Trunk Pacific Railway in British Columbia'and Western Canada.\nThrough tickets to Eastern Canada, United States, and the Old\nCountry.    Choice of routes on land aud sea.\nPROMPT ATTENTION\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCOURTEOUS TREATMENT.\nII. G. SMITH, C. P. & T. A. W. E. DUPEROW, G. A. P. li.\nPhono Seymour 7100.      VANCOUVER, B.C.     527 Granville Street,\nWhite   Star-Dominion   Canadian   Service\nROYAL MAIL STEAMER8, SAILING EVERY SATURDAY.\nWireless and Deep Sea Signalling Apparatus.\nONLY FOUR DAYS AT SEA\nNew S.S. Megantic   New S.S. laurentic\n15,000 Tons Each.\nElectric Elevators, Skilled Orchestra, Electric Heaters, Etc.\nSails May 11, June 8, July 6. May 25, June 15, July 13\nFirst Class $92.50, Second Class    $53.75, Third Class, $32.50.\nONE CLASS  (II.) CABIN SERVICE.\nTwin Screw S.S. \"TEUTONIC.\" Twin Screw 8.8. \"CANADA.\"\n582 feet long, 18,000 horsepower. B14 f       , M     4th j       1|t|\nSatis May 18th, June 15th, July ,        ....    \"       '      .'      _.,   .\n13th. $55 00 and up; Third Class June 29th\"   *50'00 and u& Thlrd\n$32.50. Class $31.25.\nAll steamers sail from Montreal, calling at Quebec.   Embark night be\nfore sailing.    No hotel expenses,    no transfer charges.\nCompany's Office: 619 Second Avenue, Near Cherry Street, Seattle.\nuW*******K*0a%***t,\nJ*1L. THURSDAY, MAY 9, 1912.\nWESTMINSTER DAILY NEWS\nPAGE THREE\n\/'\ntf\nBIG PERCENTAGE OF\nCROP UNMARKETED\nCanada's Production   Last year Was\nLarge\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdProportion    Merchantable\nSatisfactory.\nOttawa, May 8.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe census and\nstatistics office has issued a bulletin\non crops and live stoclc.\nThe reports of correspondents show\nthat out of a yield of 215,851.300 bushels of wheat harvested last year 188,-\n1:55,UOO bushels or 87 per cent were\nmerchantable, and that at the end of\nMarch, 58.129,000 bushels or 27 per\ncent of the whole were yet In farmers' hands. The quantity held by\nfarmers ln the Maritime provinces of\nMarch 81 was 329,000 bushels, ln\nQuebec 350,000 bushels, ln Ontario 3,-\n874,000 buBhels, in Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta 53,528,000 bushels,\nbushels an.l In British Columbia 454,-\nquantity ln hand In all Canada was\n.\",3,042 n00 bushels or 22 per cent of\nthe total crop of 149,989,600 bushels,\nof which 141,6liti,000 bushels or 95 per\ntent were of merchantable quality.\nOot.s, which last year gave a yield\nof 34$. 187,000 bushels, were merchantable to the extent of 310,074,000 bush-\n\ufffd\ufffd\"'\ufffd\ufffd. or 89 per cent, and the quantity\nln hand at the end of March was 153,-\n846,000 bushels, or 44.18 per cent. In\nthe Maritime provinces there were In\nbund at that date 4,007,000 bushels, in\nQuebec 12 780,000 bushels, In Ontario\n24.S7O.000 bushels, In Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta 111,735.000\nbushelsa nd in British Columbia 454,-\n000 bushels. In the preceeding year\nthe quantity in hand out or a total\nharvest of 323,449,000 bushels was\n127.587.000 bushels or 39.44 per cent,\nand there\/was a total of 301,773,000\nbushels or 93.29 per cent of merchantable quality.\nThe barley yield of 1911 was 40,641.-\n000 bushels, and of this quantity there\nwaa in hand at the end of March 13,-\n235 000 bushels or 32.56 per cent. The\nmerchantable yield was, 36,683.000\nbushels or 90.26 per cent.   The barley\n(Ciop of 1910 was 45.147,000 bushels\n' and tho quantity on hand at the end\nof March last year was 13,135,000\nbushels or 29 per cent. The merchantable Quantity of that crop was 41,-\n606,000 bushels or 91.93 per cent. Ontario's ciop last year was 13,760.000\nbushels and that of the three Northwest  provinces  24,043,000 bushels.\nTbe merchantable yield of corn\nlast year was 84 per cent of the crop,\nof buckwheat 84 per cent., of potatoes\n8ii | rr cent, of turnips and other root::\n85 per cent, an.i of hay and clover SS\n1 er rent as com; ared with last year'.-\npeicrn'taget of corn 84, buckwheat 87,\npdtatoas 77. turnips and other roots\n87 r.nd hay and clover S3. The quantities on hand at the end of March\nwere, in bushels, corn 3,669,000 com-\nj :n-e 1 with 4,734,000 in 1911. buckwheat 1,728,000 against 1,750,000. potatoes ?0,40!,0b0 against 23.564 000,\nand turnlj's e,nd other roots 14,055,-\n000 against 16,1-60,000. Of hay and\nclo-<'r tee \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'. e e on hand at the end\nof March last 3,131.000 tons compared\nwith 6,287.000 tons on hand at the\nend of March, mil.\nThe condition of live stock nt the\nend of March, expressed In the percentage o'f a standard representing \ufffd\ufffd\nhealthy and thlrfty state and denoted\nby 100 was for horses 96, milch cows\n92,68, other cattle 91.53, sheep 93.40\nand sulre 94. Only ln Prince Edward\nIslan 1  for cattle, ln Nova Scotia for\ntroops for tlie Mexican border. General Wood said that no such orders\nhad been given or were in contemplation. Some ot the regiments ie-\nturning rrom the Philippines wlll be\ndue soon and the first of them wlll\ngo to Vancouver. The second cavalry, due lu this country about June\n15, will go to El Paso, and the fourth\ncavalry which follows in a few weeks,\nis to- be stationed at Fort Huachuca.\nThese dispositions were announced a\nlong time ago.\nLOVE   KNOWS   NO   BARS.\nHigh\nSchool Girl   and   Chauffeur Tie\nNuptial   Knot.\nSeattle, May   8.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMlss   Ethel   Catherine Blaine, daughter of Councilman\non it, and ho had recommended to\ntheir organization that they make a\nspecial effort to have a large and representative delegation at the congress.\nMr. Willard and Mr. Maxfield wlll\nappear before the state land board at\nits next meeting and urge Its cooperation in the making of the exhibit\nand in selecting progressive farmers\nas delegates to represent the state.\nPEACE   RIVER   MAP\nREADY   FOR   DISTRIBUTION\nA publication which should prove of\nconsiderable Interest   tc the prospec-\ntive settler or to the student or the\nn^      u', ?' L' I '     e' ll y?al'8 \ufffd\ufffdf a\ufffd\ufffdel giowth ot Western Canada,   has   re-\nand a high school student, who be\nlleves In doing things at the psychological moment, an.l Ralph Watson,\nan Ived at the age of 20 years, a\nchauffeur, handsome and dashing, is\nanother young, person who is for doing things with dispatch.\nMiss Blaine and Watson slipped off\nto Vancouver, B. C. last F-riday afternoon, without the knowledge and\nconsent or tbe former's parents, and\nwere married. Papa Blaine was and\nstill is in Minneapolis attending the\nMetho'lst      Confeience. Mamma\nBlaine was ill.\nMr. and Mrs. Ralph Watson returned to Seattle and repaired to tbe\nBlaine home.\n\"Mamma. I have man led Ralph,\"\nsaid Mrs. Watson, not without enthusiasm.\n\"I had expected as much,\" said\nMamma coldly. And then .Mrs. Blaine\nopened her arms very wide and the\n,roud laughter in the twinkling ot an\neye was fondly enclosed therein.\nGORGEOUS CEREMONIES\nMARK ANNUAL CONCLAVE\nLos Ant-eles, Cal., May 8.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThree\ngorgeous street pageants such as have\nnever been equaled ln Los Angeles\nmarked the formal opening yeste--\nday of the 3Sth annual conclave of\nthe imperial council of the Mystic\nShrine. The first parade, escorting\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd he Imperla] officers and delegates to\nthe Scottish rite cathedral for the\nopening of ihe council this forenoon\nwas a brilliant spectacle. A half\nhundred gorgeously garbed Arab patrols took part and imperial officers\nsaid that it was the greatest turn out\nof jairols ln the history of the\nshrine.\nTwo more parades, one an electrical\npageant and the other composed of\ntemples and patrols, wended tlieir\nway in opposite directions through I\nthe main portion of the city, to tho\ncheers of miles of spectators ,vho |\nwere massed a dozen or more deep on\neither side of tha street.\nTwo business sessions of the imperial council we:e held today and the\nfirst was one of welcome and rasponse\nbv local Shriners and visiting officials. In lhe afternoon routine business was transacted after which it\nwas voied lo grant tenipls charters ti'.\nMuskogee, Okla, and Jackson, Mlss.\nand a dispensation to San Dle;;o, Cal\neently been prepared In, and is now\nheing issued from the railway lands\nbranch of the Department of the Interior. This publication which is\nknown as the Peace River or Northern Alberta Homestead )Map, graphically illustrates by a comparatively\nsimple system of coloring the land\nsituation in that country, including,\nas It does, complete Information with\nrespect to the disposal- of lands, lo-\n-atlon of timher berths and forest reserves, nature or the soil, etc. An interesting feature of the color scheme\nis the fact that lt enables an observer\nto procure at a glance a complete\ngrasp of the present land situation,\nnot only with regard to those lands\nwhicli have been taken up during the\nlast year, but also with respect to\nlands previously homesteaded but for\nwhich patents have not yet been issued, thus also enabling a person to\ntrace the pioeresp during recent\nyears, or settlement ln the Peace\nliver distiict. The aim ln the preparation of the map has\" been to show\nthe land situation up to the beginning\nof the urtsent year and in view of the\nrapid exhaustion of free homesteads\nMironehout the older prairie provinces\nthe information should prove of particular interest  to  settlers.\nIn addition to the Information with\nrespect to lands which have been\n'ome?teaded and otherwise 'isposed\nof, the publication contains complete\ninformation regarding postofflces,\nrailways, topography, etc.\nCopies may be obtained free of\ncharge upon application to the Superintendent of Railway Lands, Department of the Interior, Ottawa.\nWINNIPEG'S   MEMORIAL\nVICTIMS  OF\nTO\nTITANIC\nStolen Jewels Identified.\nSeattle, May 8.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSome of the jewels seized by federal customs officers\n'ast wee'i when tbey arrested Charles\nCunningham of Salt Lake Cily, on a\ncharge of opfum smuggling, were\nidentifiel in a letter received fron-\nthe United States marshal at Ss'*\nL?.l:e tcdiy as jewelry Cunabgham is\nI'e'fd to hive stclcn f;om t,vo \"iris\nin Salt La'.ce laEt summer. Amen?\nthe articles identified was a diamond\nlucl.et and chain, seal ring and several minor | ieces. The larger je.vels\nseized by the customs officers ine ude\na single diamond valued at $800.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdvhirh mav he In tbe list said to have\nbeen stolen but further details wil'\nhe iei';tied before positive identification ean be made.\nWinnipeg. May 8.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe Board ol:\nContol this morning adopted t,he fol-1\nlowing as the inscription to be placed\nOn the memorial tablet to he erected\nIn the corridor of the City Hall in |\nmemory of tho1-\" Who lost their lhcij\nin the Titanic disaster:\n\"Liected by tne people of Winni-1\npeg ln memory of their follow citl-!\nzens: Mark Fortune, John Hugo Ross I\nThomas Beattie, George \"A. Graham\nJ. J. Borebank and Charles A. For-1\ntune, who with 1600 others, lost their |\nmi'ch (owe, ln Ontario for cattle and\nIn British Columbia for cattle other} Hies when the steamship Titanic\nthan milch cows, and for sheep do the foundered in mid-Atlantic on April 15,\nfigurss    lepresentlng   conditions   fall, 1912.\"\nUSEJLSAGE TEA\nTo Darken the 'Hair and Restore Gray and Faded Hair\nto Its Natural Color,\nbelow a .percentage of 90.\nEXAGGERATE   SUFFERINGS.\nAmericans   cn  Mexican Coast Not in\nBay Way at All.\nWashington, May 8.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe plight of\nAmericans on the west coast of Mexico appears to have been exaggerated,\naccording to the report received yes-\nterd.iv at the war department from\nOiiartermas'pr F.ly In command of the\ntransport Buford, which was sent to\nX-i^.. :\"s> t0 l*ol! ul> \ufffd\ufffd!3trcsseJ for-\n^ignO 3. -\"'\nId a U'epar.i dated yesterday a*\nMochls, Sinalca. via Nogales, the officer rc-iorts: \"Best Information received Is that 13SS than cne do-en\nAmericans r.Hl embark there. Thereat cf feeling shown toward the Bu-\nford Tool; aboard one typbo' I \ufffd\ufffd-n\ntient. at Mazatlan.   Al*\ufffd\ufffd *-\" .\nabout 65 \/-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ' . r.wrmadlP\ufffd\ufffd;\n- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd. iMtna win c-mbarli   at\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdi\ufffd\ufffd8 Iv-tra] staff ag-.lrt :oday entered a sweeping   dermal fi tlie.  many\nThe inscription will be surmounted\nby the City Arms.\nMinnesota   Represented.\nLethbridge,  Alberta,  May  8.-\n-Gov--\n_. It is easier to preserve the color of\nthe bair than to restore it, although it\nis possible to do both. Out' grandmothers understood the secret -They\nmade a \"sage tea,\" and their dn-k,\nglossy hair long after middle life was\nstnrlr* of the rer ,.'. 6   fanlefs from i ttfen*,  because or tne\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd uuire \ufffd\ufffdBi\ufffd\ufffd.u.-\nWashington   for   $* |WU vt J ttfral success depending so much up-\nernor   Eberhardt  last  week   met   m i oue to this fact   Our mothers have gray\nconference at Minneapolis the execu- hairs before they are hfty, but they are\nthe secretarv-tioasurer of the Inter- beginning to appreciate the wisdom of\nnational  Dry Farming Congiess. Mr. \ufffd\ufffdJ grandmothers in using \"sage tea''\niohn   T.  Burns, and   Mr. Daniel   E. for tSeir hair and aro fast followmr:alt _\nWillard. Industrial   Commissioner   ot .Jh^ present generation has th^ advan-\nthe Northern Paciflc Railway, and It SffifLjS.K&2L+&?* % *&,**!l&\nwas later announced by bis excellency ^^SSWSS^^^^!^.\nthat Minnesota will be represented at \ufffd\ufffd^S\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd5. . pMJ\ufffd\ufffd rt\ufffd\ufffdr Remedy.   As a\nthe Dry  Farming Congress   in   this \ufffd\ufffd;a'Ph\ufffd\ufffdPIC ^id color restorer this prep-\ncltv next October by a large and rep- ?,      .- \ufffd\ufffd vastly superior to the ore nary\n-esentatlve delegation ot termers h- ' ,^**\ufffd\ufffd6 tea\" made by our grandmothers,\nbankers, and also by one ot \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'     ..^ . The .growth, and _ beauty of tl\ufffd\ufffd hair\n*r and  best exhibits V       ,-?\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd xrF\nH\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd i.- .m.a Btat* aver\n._ oOBUOlfUttttl lm-\nvw\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHUist\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdw Maxfield to\n\ufffd\ufffdtntl*e (Or lhe collating bf thc exhibit 6HtJ the ijifMalmlon ot lt at the\nhi- exposition ftuMhss here.\n^rfc &v\ufffd\ufffdlW slated that the bank-\nera of Minnesota were particularly\nInterested in the dry farming move-\nmen* 'because of the future agricul\nsent out.\nmigration\ndepends on a healthy condition of the\nacalp. Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hair\nRemedy quickly kills the dandruff germs\nwhich rob tfc<? hair of its life, color and\nlustre, malcos the scalp clean and\nhealthy, feivos t'..e hfttf rtwngfy color\nand beauty, o-.'.d makes it grow.\nGet a 50 cent bottle from your druffgtet\ntoday. He will give your money back\nif you are not satisfied tfter a fair trial.\nSpecial Agents, D. S. Curtis and H.\nRyall.\nAnnual May Sale of\nTURE\nAND HOUSE FURNISHINGS\nThis May Sale of Furniture is an Unusual. Profit 8howlng Sale. Coming at this time of the year,\nwhen one naturally thinks of House Cleaning or of Re-furniahing the home, makes this sals one of unusual  interest.\nPILLOWS\nAs an Extra Special for the\nMay Sale we quote a good\nquality wool filled Art Ticking\nPillow\n50c\n$1.15 Art Ticking Feather Pillows; size lSxL'7  85c\nOur Mattresj stock contains\na particularly desirable selection lrom which you can make\nyour choice. We carry Lee's\nLimited Special \"The Delight,\"\nthe Ostermoie and other standard makes. As an extra special\nwe quote a $3.60 cottci top filled, good ticking. May Sale\nPi ice\nBED SPRINGS\nALL SPRINGS AT REDUCED\nPRICES FOR THE MAY SALE.\n$2.50 Woven Wire Springs; durably made $1.95\n$3.00 Reinforced Woven Wire\nSprings for   $2.45\nExtra heavy Woven Wire, Helical Spring; reinforcement with\nheavy wire roll edge; $3.50.\nnow   $2.95\nIRON BEDS\nWe have nearly (50) flfty\nmodels of Iron Beds in the various shares, styles and sizes\nfrom which you may choose.\nOur stock is enormous. As a\nsample we quote a $5.00 enamelled bed.   May Sale Prica\n$2.95\n$3.75\n$8.50 Eungalow Bed $3.50\n$5.00 sanitary Oiled top and bottom     Mattress;     ticking   well\nstayed   $3.95\n$7.50 all-felt Mattress with   cot\nticking cover $5.50\nBEDDING\nAll Bedding Is marked at reduced prices. This presents a\ngrand oppottunlty for\nHOTELS\nBOARDING HOUSES AND\nLOGGING CAMPS\nto supply their   needs   during\nth:s May Sale.\nBRASS BEDS\nXo piece or Furniture in the\nbed room adds as much dignity\nas is secured from a Brass Bed.\nOur stock affords you many\nstyles in the various size3, all\nat reduced prices. As a May\nSale Special we quote a $23.00\nBeautiful Brass Bed\n$18.50\nmay mi um \\h\nALL FURNITURE\nLEES LIMITED\nMAIL AND PNONE 0R-\nPAY CASH, IT WILL PAY YOU\nTHURSDAY\nmm^^ma^mmm^^mmatmt^mammmmimmmmma^mmmm^aBmmu^Mmm^mmmmm-Msn^m^sEXMBHmmm\nSPECIALS\nBacon, No. 1 Smoked, per lb.      -\nNo. 1 Eating Apples, per box\nNo. 1 Salmon, tall tins, per tin\nSeeded Raising, 1 lb. package     -       -\n\"Our Best\" Flour - -\nChivers Marmalade, glass jars\nScotch Sugar, 18 lb. sacks\nOur Famous Fetherlight Baking Powder, per tin - 20c\nNational Cream Sodas, per tin - 25c\nCowan's Cooking Chocolate, regular 50c., today lb. 40c\n-   18c\n$2.50\n15e\n3 for 25c\n$1.65\n15c\n$1.20\nDELICATESSEN DEPARTMENT\nDill Pickles, per dozen\nSweet Mixed Pickles, per quart\nQueen Olives, per quart\n25c\n35e\n35c\nThe Public Supply Stores\nL. U. ADAMS.\nCASH GROCERS\n33 8th Street      'THE MTt FRONT'\nR. O. SWTH.'\nPhone 2\n7~sH^.'.- lftUMFOUR.\nWESTMlndTER DAILY NEWS\nTHURSDAY, MAY 9, 1912.\n.WESIirai.Mll NEWS\nFubltsheB   Meg?'- morning   except\niSneday fcy\"W$b| National Printing and\nPublishingCo., Lt\ufffd\ufffd, at their office,\n%3   McKenzie  Street,  New  Westminster, B. C,\nROBERT H. BEST, Manager.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   *   Mi-\nTELEPHONES:\nBusiness Office L999\n^Editorial  01H6U1 ;.\". R999\nSUBSCRIPTION  RATES.\nBy Carrier $4''ter year, $1 for throe\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMonths, or 40c p^r montli.\nBy mall |3 per year, or 25c per\n\ufffd\ufffdnonth.\nWestminster Wieekiy News $1 pet\nyear.\nTHURSDAY,  MAY 9,  1912.\n\ufffd\ufffd FOR GOVERNMENT ELEVATORS,\nlion. George Bf Foster, ministor or\nTrade nnd Commerce, has wiitten to\nthe Vancouver Board of Trade for Information bearing on the building ol\na 'government elevator on Burrard Inlet. That Is as lt should be. But to\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdroller! KiitXiglyut, data to form any\nconclusion on'the suliject, llie government might 'ftfld It worth while to\nwrite also to the authorities on the\nFYaser lor information. Victoria, too,\nwould irobiihly like to join in the\ncorrespondence, aid perhaps Prince\nitujiert. All these places certainly\nhave a right to be consulted and we\nventure lo state that when tho advantages ol' all are compared those of\nthe Fraser river will prove to be superior to all others.\nP.unard Inlet is a flne salt-water\nharbor. It is'spuclou; and deep, but\nit does not belong to Vancouver. The\nbulk of the waterfront is in the hands\nof private interests, an:! here nt the\nvery start is una most Important point\nwhere Westminster is more fortunate than her rivals. This city owns\nits own waterfront, lt can do what it\nlikes with it and it can encourage\nshipping atld ! Industries by placing\nthat waterfront at their disposal on\nreasonable terhns.\nTo drop comparisons, which should\nnever lie allowed to get odious, it can\ntoe flatly stated.tfcat Westminster has\nthe oniy real!\/' good ancl   important\nfresh-water harbor on the mainland of\nI\nBritish Columbia. The cleanlag properties of freVh' Water on the ship's bottom and the absence of the teredo\nthat very lajkily destroys wharves\nbuilt in salt water on this coast, ate\ninestimable advantages of the Fraser\nri ver.\nBesides these points there exist on\nthe Fraser facilities for industrial development that practically can not be\nfound elsewrjj-c^ie; in the province.\nThere is also1 nrilnnited scope for railway development.\nAll this nature has done for the\nIioit. It is -now time for man to do\nliis part. With the vast improvements\ncontemplated Iif, the city harbor\nscheme Westminster will without\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtloubt be the spot where government\n<elevators could be built to the most\nadvantage, It is sincerely to be ho;:ecl\ntbat. the council's requost forwarder\n*.o Ottaivu on the subject will bear\nsood f. -;it. i; should now be the part\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdot every other organization in the\ncily, such as tiio Board of Trade and\ntlie Process '(lu!>, to back up this request with all the weight tbey can\nbring to hear itHts support.\nTJANGERSirOF   PROSPERITY.\nAgnes   Uut   Tel|8    Canada    to    Be\nCareful.\n\"X&u have a-great country up bere,\na tremendous country, one developing\nwith Incredible rapidity. Nothing can\nharm you but .OMY own folly.\" These\nwords were spoken to The Winnipeg\nTribune hy Miss Agnes C. Laut, a\nNew York literary lady of Winnipeg\nextraction, who is slaying at the Hoyal Alexandra. Miss Laut Is in tlie\nwest cn a private trip, staying off lor\na day or t.vo at the principal point?;\nand fc-lrdving 11.e land for articles.\nMiss Laut s?es the greatest danger\nto llie prosperity now enjoyed by thia\ncountry in tl# oi.cning of the Pan ma\ncanal, \"Thai won! I mark one of ihe\nmost colossal booms ever experienced, and the danger western Canada bul in Ihat direction to guard\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdj-.iiinM was that the flood of wealth,\npopulation ami prosperity would be\nsubverted In that direction. The lirst\ni siai will pass tbrough in 191 '..\" she\nBays, \"and ln 11)15 the formal opening\nwill ta\"c place,\" ahe regards this as\no ::\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd of tiie commercial events of mod-\n\ufffd\ufffdith times an 1 warns wcsicrn Canadians that they must have an tinsull-\ned reputation in ihe markets of the\nworld and among- the immigrants of\nthe 1'niird States and the older lands\nif ih\"y would retain the flood of\nwealth and settlers now pouring into\ntin- prairies of the west. She had\ntalked to many realty men and bank-\nvis in ihe west and in the east, and\nthey expressed themselves as uneasy\n\ufffd\ufffdii the outcome of-the wide-open Hood\n-gates of prosperity here.\nEye of thc World on West.\nMiss Laut says: \"The eye of the\nworld Is on you. Yon are making won-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdderrul, almost incredible progress.\nYour values are high and investors\n\ufffd\ufffdof tbe east are blind lo the wonderful\npossibilities of ihe country. While\nthe. values of your lands are sound in\nthc hearts of your cities, some of\nyour besi real estate men are protesting against the selling of remotf\nHot \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd which have no vai ie except tlio\nwonii of hay tliey grow and possibly\nue\\er will be wotth anything else.\nReaction  Will   Come. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd -\n\"The reaction of auch enterprise on\nlarge and legitimate business Interests is boun.l to hurt the west. Thlt\ncountry Is In danger of the same erroi\nas that whicli afflicted Chicago forty\nyears ago. Your realty men and\nothers embarked on legitimate business reel strongly that your western\ncommunities should organize to pro\ntoct themselves against unsound offerings or undertakings.\n\"The time when the danger or mak\nlng bad erto's Is trentest is when r-\nman or a country Is prosperous. Some\n:tre very caref.il not to make errors:\nwlion really hard up, Your country\nIs making sut-h tremendous strides in\nits development, settlers are pourinj\nln trom all quartan; experienced farmers are coming in from tho United\nStates at the rate of 150,000 a year\nand with an average capital of jllHK\na piece, that you hnve to be very care\nful...,     ....\nDanger of the Canal.\n\"I liave been working on the Panama canal for years. The day that it\nopens will be an 111 day for Canada\nif her values are Inflated and if thc\ninvesting and home-seeking public\nhave lost confidence in the country.\nWhen u man hu3 bean swindled he re\nports it to his bankers and whei:\nthese complaints accur. late thd coun\ntry gets In lo bad odium. Tbis country will need every resource It ha?\nund every kind worl that can bo said\nabout It,i and complete public confl\ndence to stall it over the dark days\nthat must ensue for lt when the great\ncanal is opened.\n'Panama Is going to experience one\nof the most colossal booms known tc\nhistory. The rails of the continent\nwould be diverted north and south Instead of oast and west. Wheat, lumber and coal, all now transposed b.v\nfreight, woull be senl by water.\nPlana aro unanimous for the divert\ning of the whole traffic southwest,\nand lt .will be wise for the northwest\nlo give itself no black eye. Tbere are\nthre? big transcontinental systems\ngoing east and west which have al-\ncady bought terminals on tbe Pan\nama. New Orleans has spent $16,\n000,000 on a steamship service. From\nSeattle to Sandy Eagle $150,000,00',\nhave been spent, on harbor Improvement alone, and much has been spent\non publicity schemes, progressive\nclubs and the like. This money has\nalready been spent and there arc\nmany iiiillions moio yet to be spent.\nFcl'ies of Prosperity.\nTbo United States is noy,- paying\nfor its own folly in prosperous years\nIt is paying interest on watered\nstocks anil on the extravagances of\npast years. The whole river if immigration has been directed to western\nCanada. The whole Dominion is\ndunk witli prosperity. Bankers look\nat the huge railway schemes you are\nuarantceing and wonder if you will\never be called upon- to take them\nover. Your progress is indeed perfectly astonishing, but you must put\nthe brakes on or there will come a\nfearful crash later.\nWinnipeg has grown greatly; I lost\nmyself twice heie. yesterday. The\nspirit of the people here is beautiful\nthe scenery is magnificent. All are\nbuoyant and hopeful, but in prosperity is the time to guard against the\ncrash tliat must inevitably follow\ngrsat prosperity and heedless extrava\nganee.\"\nJOKES   ON   HOMEYMOONERS.\nOld as the HMls\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPractised the World\nOver.\nPia; ing jokes on honeymconers is\na pastime antedating civilization it\nself. With increase of perspicacity\nhowever, it develops into an art. The\ntwentieth century a,wain, haying woo-\n9.1 and won his lady fair, discovers\nthat \"getting away with it\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"it\" be\ning the bride\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdis a more perplexing\nproposition than the vernacular\nrbrase generally implies.\nAt this juncture, for some reason or\nother, every one of his kith, kin and\nacquaintance who happens to consid\ner himself gifted as a joker gets busy\nto tbe end that the first hours of\ndouble harness shall be fraught with\nanything but that blissful tranquility\nihat Is supposed to be the highest\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffddoaj of matrimonial blessedness, says\nthe Scrap Book. It Is in that brief\nperiod between the conclusion of the\nmarriage ceremony ancl the commencement ol the honeymoon that\nthe practical joker come3 into his\nown.\nSeparation'and kidnapping may he\ngarded as the pinnacle of tbe honeymoon-baiters ambition. In tbe carrying out of his plant he sticks at nothing an I respects nothing and nobody.\nGreat Is his glee if he can invoke\nthe law as an alder and abettor.\nNot very long ago two people In\nprosperous circumstances were wedded in an up-state city of New York. It\nvvas B rftther fashionable wedding,\nwith an Imposing array of groomsmen, a beauteous bevy of bridesmaids, Horal decorations, newspapei\nreporters and tbe usual trlmmln-ss.\nTowards ihe close of the reception\none of the groomsmen Bought qui tht\nplain clothes detective who wai\nguarding Ihe presents, V.e was plain\nly in a gieat state of perturbation, lie\ntook the nop by the arm con::'en\ntlaliy.\n\"lilst, officer! An unbiddt ii guest\njust come, looks like a gentleman\ncracksman; lie's slunk upstairs, third\ndoor on tlie light. Probably desper\nato character posing as a guest. Get\nhim away as Quietly as possible; nc\nscene.\"\nThe cop nodded a nod of comprehension and forthwith wenl to it\nThird door on the right. Sure\nenough, there was his man, well\ndressed and even then han Hing a\nvaluable gold watch.\nDetails of what happened during\nthe next quarter of an hour wore\nnever known, but it was a crowded\nperiod, and then two men went out by\na side door, both much disheveled.\nOne wore a look of grim, virtuous\ntriumph, the oilier a pair of handcuffs. The latter appeared to be overwhelmed by his emotions.\nII. was late tliat night before the\nsergeant in the station house permitted himself to be convinced\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdby a\ndelegation that included a tearful\nbride\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthat the prisoner was indeed\nonly a victimized bridesgroom.\nThus It ls the world over.   Whether\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBE*-\nCREAM\n-\nIs a protection and guarantee\nagainst alum which is found in\nthe low priced baking powders.\nTo be on the safe side when buying\nbaking powder, examine the label and\ntake only a brand shown to be made\nfrom Cream of Tartar.\nthe c*ouple be wedded in Wtnstecl\nConn., or Patagonia, In !<ondon lowi\nor Timbuetoo, the practical joker is\nan ever present menace to tiie newly\nweds. There has from time to time\nbeen talk of legislating against bim\nbut what's the good? Even If lawt\nwero passed to restrain bim he would\nprobably induce the bridegicom to be\narrested as his proxy.\nJokes on honeyiiiooners are no\nmushroom growth rising up as a sign\nof modei n decadence. True, the custom has been developed wonderfully\nin late years, but even in the time of\nTom Jones, and that's nearly two centuries ago, wedding couples were considered fair game, and the Wide-\ngioom's friends were eensidered to be\nwoefully lacking in the proper spirit\njf the occasion If they failed to ply\nhlm with strong waters until he\nreached the point where the London\npolice court formula labels a man\n'drunk ani incapable,\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSeattle   VA.\nwere reproved for their ignorance by\none of the sheikhs, whose version was\nthat they were representatives of the\ngreat British army.\nTasty Ways of Serving Flsh.\nFAMINE   SCENES   IN   CHINA\nARE   GRAPHICALLY   TOLD\nThe day was balmy an.l beautiful\nas we lode across the plains; it\nmight easily be one of the garden\nspots of China or of the world.\nWe made our way into the small\ntown of Yukou and were faced with\nfacts that, began to give a different\nimpression. The street was crowded,\nthat is comfortably filled at any rate:\nj'ut almost eveiy sh9p was closed-\nThere was not a thing for sale In the\ntown but a little something to eat.\nand very little of that . Here woul\nbe a shop with perhaps a dozen caker\nof bread; another with ten cents\nworth of salt; another with a half a\nbushel of rice; altogether theie was\nnot exposed to view enough in the\nwhole town to feed for one meal thc\nnowd which was actually on the\nstieet.\nWe saw scores of houses fiorr\nwhich the roofs had been taken and\nthe rafters cariied away. I do noi\nthink any one could go through that\nexperience and be thc? same person-\n1 am sure I felt ten >ears older In\nten hours. These people were not\nbeggars; I have been accustomed to\nbeggars; we had 76,000 In Nanking\nthe first winter I lived there. One\npities them, but there seems about\neven the best ot them something professional. These were not. Tboy did\nnot ask for anything. Except for the\nmoan of a child, and now and then\nthe bursting forth of the cry of one\nwoman, they were quiet. Silently\nthe great waters had during the summer risen over their fields; silently\nthe famine has entered their homes:\nsilently wlll come the typhus and the\nfamine fever: and silently as the fate\nthat overwhelms them, they wait\nIheir doom.\nAll life seems different since then.\nOne's philosophy of life and of pain\nreceives an awful wrench. And especially when one thinks of the fact\nthat to save these people from 'oath\nis not a matter of carrying paupers\nfor a number of years'; it Is Just for\n'he next few months. It only tikes\nabout sixty cents (gold) to bridge for\none of Ib.ese people the chasm of thc\nmined crop to the bursting grain.\n')r. Woods said the most pathetic\nsight that bis brother and he evor\nsaw was in 1007: In one regl a the\nwheal was bearded and headed, and\n'aeked bul two weeks of harvest, and\nHie people were dropping down lr\ntheir own fields dying of hunger be\ncause they could nol bridge the two\nweeks. A long time wlll not elaj se,\nIt Is no; an Infinitely large number o\npeople, they can be helped, you ean\nhelp. Please send a contribution to\nday to the Chinese famine fund no,\\\nBtarted in Westminster.\nFlsh Omelet.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPake tbe remains of\ncold boiled whitefish. four eggs, a little\nwhite sauce, a tablespoonful of milk or\ncream, one ounce and a half of butter\nand a dash of pepper, salt and cayenne.\nNow free tbe fish from all skin and\nbones, break It into small flakes, melt\na piece of butter in a small stewpan,\nadd  the  fish  seasonings  nnd enough\ni white sauce to molsteu tbe fish.   Keep\n! it hot, slightly beat tbe eggs in a basin\nI and add the milk and season to taste.\n1 Melt a full ounce of butter In an omelet pan, pour ln the eggs, stir over a\n< hot flre until the mixture begins tq set,\ntben shake well.   Shape it ln aa oval\nform, put tbe prepared flsh In the middle and fold In the ends.    Allow It to\ncolor and then turn out on a bot disb\nand serve immediately.\nBaked Mackerel.-After filleting the\nflsh cut each piece In two. season with\npepper, salt and lemon juice and arrange on a buttered dish in tbls fashion\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdflrst a. piece of flsb. tbeu u slice of\ntomato and so until all the Ingredients\nare used. Pour over a little stock,\ncover with a buttered paper and cook\nIn tbe oven for twenty minutes. Dish\nup, mix with the stock ln wbicb tbe\nfisb was cooked a little brown sauce,\nboll up and Anally stir In a good sized\npiece of butter. Tour tbe sauce over\ntbe flsb and serve.\nCod a 1'Espagnole.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSlice a Spanish\nonion and fry lt ln oil, then add double\nits weight of cooked tlakcd cod, previously freed from skin nnd bone, and\nsufficient tomato sauce to moisten It\nall, seasoning It with salt, coralline\npepper and minced sweet herbs. Now\nstir it all over tbe fire till thoroughly\nbot, and serrc.\nBaked Halibut..\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGet as much halibut ns yon require and cut lt In thick\nslices, thicker thau you would ror Trying. Sprinkle a small baking pan with\npepper aud salt lay In the fisb, sprinkle\nwith pepper and salt. Pour ln milk to\ncome to tbe top of tbe fish. Bake In a\ngood oven ahout half an bour. then remove tbe flsb to a hot platter, add\nmore milk lf necessary for a gravy\nand thicken with flour. Season ta\ntaste and pour over tbe fish. Another\nway to cook halibut is to make about\none ond one-halt cups of butter gravy.\nHave tt rather thick, os the Juice from\ntbe fish tblns It considerably. Put a\npound of sliced halibut ln a-pudding\ndish, cover It with grnvy, cover tht\ndish and bake half an hour.\nSurplices in Soucian.\nD::ring Lorl Kitchener's re.ent vis\nli to El obeld, when he. Inaugurated\nthe new railway, a clnematogranl\nshow was given with his approval tr\nthe natives. It was the first time\nany of them had witnessed anything\nof the kind. The films dealt with nil\nr.ho events which have taken placi\nwithin the last two months in tht\nSoudan. Much Interest wus taken ir\ntbe pictures depicting the roval visit\n<ind the figures of the king and queen\nand tho Sirdar were warmly greetef\nby the natives.\nHut the film which reproduced th<\nconsecration of Khartoum Catho lni I\ngave rise to a good deal of discussion.\nThey could not un lerstand what the\neurpliced figures were. Some said\nthey were prisoners, others women.\nOne or two natives, more Intelligent\nthat the rest, ventured the opinion\nthat they might be priests; but they\nJ\nKitchenettes.\nCamel's hair and red sable brushes\nthat have got out of shape or curled\ncun be restored to their proper form by\ndipping llrst into hot nnd then into cold\nwater.\nTo make Individual chicken pics\nHne gem pnns with pastry, leaving\ncrust enough lo fold over a tablespoonful rich chicken hash, and bake lu a\nquick oven.\nIf tbe cake Unvoting hns heen forgotten when making tbe hatter try\nsprinkling the required amount over\ntbe cake us It stands in the pan before bnkhig.\nIf brooms are to sweep clean they\nmust be washed oecns Iona lly and\nfreed from dust and dirt. To two\nquarts of warm water add four tablespoonfuls or household ammonia.\nStand (he brooms In this ror half nn\nhour. Rinse In cold wnter nnd hang\nin the sun to dry. Mouse brushes of\nany variety mny be washed in tbls\nmanner.\nAndrew Clausen\nExpert repairing of American, English\nand Swiss\nWATCHES\nAll  Work  Guaranteed.\nMANDEVILLE\nAPARTMENT HOUSE\n12th Street and 6th Avenue\nSTEAM HEATED        ELECTRIC LIGHT\n3 and 4 Room Suits Reasonable Rents\nGAS RANGE IN EACH SUITE\nGRAY & GILCHRIST, Agents\nPhone 595 675 Columbia Street\nWestminster Opera House\nFacing The Music\nUnder the Direction of B. R. Hill\nIN AID OF THE BOY SCOUTS\nThursday, May 9\nAT 8.30 P.M.\nTickets, $1.00, 75c, 50c and 25c\nMay Be Obtained From Boy Scouts or at Tidy, tne Florist's.\nBRUSH UP !\nEverybody needs at least ONE    good    Whisk.     Here    are a great\nvariety, prices from 20c to 75c.\nWHISKS\nwith solid e^ony handles,\nwith  braided straw handles,\nwith wire wound handles,\nwith nickel silver handles.\nDVAI   I      DRUGGIST  and\nIm a AiLL   OPTICIAN\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPHONE 57\nWE8TMINPTER TRU8T BLOCK\nBrunette Saw Mills Company, Ltd.\nNew Westminster, B. C.\nAre well stocked up with all kinds and grades of\nLUMBER FOR  HOUSE BUILDING\nA specially large stock of Laths, Shingles and\nNo. 2 Common Boards and Dimension.\nNow is the time to build for sale or rent while price* are low\nW. R. OILLEY, Phona 122. Q. E. QILLEY, Phona 2*1.\nPhonea, Office 15 and 11.\nGilley Bros. Ltd.\nCOLUMBIA 8TREET WE8T.\nWholesale and Retail Dealers In Coal\nCEMENT, LIME, 8EWER PIPE, DRAIN TILE, CRU8HED ROCK.\nWASHED GRAVEL AND CLEAN SAND, PRES8ED BRICK ANO\nFIRE BRICK.\nINTERURBAN TRAMS\n541 Front Street.     Near City Market.'\nWestminster Branch. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Cars\nleave B, C. B, R. Co. station Tor\nVancouver at 5:00, 5:45 and\n6:45 a.m. and every 15 minutes\nthereafter untll 10:00 p.m. After 10:00 p.m. half hourly service until midnight.\nSunday Service.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCars leavo\nfor Vancouver at 6:00, 7:00,\n8:00, 8:30, 9:00 and 9:30 a.m.\nRegular week day service prevailing thereafter.\nFreight Service.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCars leave\nNew Westminster for Vancouver at 7:20, 11:20, 12:20 and\n15 20.\nBurnahy  Branch Cars leave\nB ,C, V. Co. station for Vancouver hi f>:45. 0:45 nnd 8:00\na in., with hourly service thereafter until 10 p. m. and late car\nat 11:00 p. m.\nafter and late car at 11:30 p.m.\nleaves at 8:00 a.m. Regular\nweek day service thereafter.\nFreight Service.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLeave New\nWestminster for Vancouver at\n8:20.\nLulu Island , Branch.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd(To\nVancouver via Eburne)\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCars\nleave B. C. ES. R. Co. station at\n7:00 a.m. and hourly thereafter\nuntll 11:00 p.m.\nSunday Service.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFirst car\nleaves nt 8:00 a.m. Regular\nweek day service thereafter.\nFreight Service.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLeave New\nWestminster for Van. at 10:00.\nFraser Valley Branch\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Cars\nleave B. C. 12. R. Co. station\nfor Chilliwack and way points\nnt 9:30 a.m., 1:20 and 6:10. For\nHuntingdon and way points at\n4:05 p.m.\nPRlTISFfCOLUMPIA ELECTRIC RAILWAY COMPANY. THUR8DAY, MAY 9, 1912.\nWESTMINSTER DAILY NEWS\nSPORTS\nAMATEURS OPEN\nLACROSSE SEASON\nReginas  and  West  Ends Clash  Thla\nEvening\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMust Start 8harp on\nT'me.\nI liis evening on the Queens park\ngrounds will see the opening of the\nIntermediate LacroBse league, the Re-\n^iiuis and tlie West Ends being the\ncontefting teams. Under the new\nrules laid down by the executive, the\ngame ls scheduled to start at 6:30\no'clock sharp, If one of the teams\ni.s ten minutes late they forfeit one\ngoal, and after a half hour's tardiness\nthey forfeit the game. Several de-\nla\\ s occurred during the games last\nseason and the officials were forced\nto lay down a hard and fast rule ln\nolder that the games might be finished before darkness set ln.\nSain,erton won th,b pennant last\nyear and aro making the proud boast\nthat they wlll repeat the trick this\nSeason, However, with nev faces on\nIhe other teams, their task will Indie I he n hard one, nnd It will be\nanybody's bet until the end of tbe\nplaying  schedule is  In  sight.\n'i be line-up of the lirglnas Is as follows:\nIowa: w. Coutts (captain), gbal; Hoy\nPearson, point; K. Cotton, cover\npoint; Hugh Stoddart. first defence;\nHarvey Tarnli.ill, second defence; E.\nSait, third defence; BS, Eastman, ceu-\ntre; A. Robertson, third home; C,\nHuff, second home; E. Mackenzie,\nlirst home; Tip Sinclair, outside\nhotAc; D. McMillan, Inside home. A.\nI,. .Johnson and 3. Saver spares.\n\\W\nJKVO* \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*;\n-mtm.7za~.\ufffd\ufffdAQtt mm\nVictoria   \t\nVancouver  12\nPortland  %%\nSpokane  10\nTacoma    <)\nSeattle  a\nYesterday's Games.\nAt Vancouver\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd h, ij jj;\nVancouver       3    4    0\nSpokane  1   8   2\n..At Seattle\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd R. H. F\nTacoma   12 14    (i\nSeattle 4    7    3\n731   COLUMBIA    STREET^\nAt Portland-\nVictorlj  \t\nPortland  ....\nSWIMMING.\nR. H. E.\n4 5 0\n1   6   8\nNAMES FILED.\nWestminster Has Seventeen Players;\nCon Jones  Nineteen.\nManapei 3 of the Westmlnater and\nthe Vancouver clubs have filed with\nSecretary Lynch the names of the\nplayers whom they hope to have play-\nthp on the teams In the Minto cup\ngames. Manager Gray, of the Salmon\nHellies, is apparently satislied that\nseventeen men will he capable of lanl-\ning back the battered old mug to the\nbanks of the Eraser. Jones, always\non the lookout for using the word\nquantity as well as quality, has nineteen players who have signed the\nregistration cards.   Here is the list:\nWestminster\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd^. B. Gray, A. Clark.\nT. Gifford, J. Howard, .1. Gifford, G.\nRennie, H. Giffo-d, T. Rennie, w.\nTurnbull, J. Feeney, I. Wintemute, C.\nSpring. 0. Spring, II. Hylan I, L. Turn-\nhull, K. McCarty, C, Galbraith.\nVancouver\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdE. T. McGregor, C. A.\nHess, It. McDonald, P. Muldoon, D.\nPhelan, J. F. Cummins, L. S. Mc-\nDo-jgall, A. J. Allen. E. C. Lalonde,\nR. O. Carter, E. T. Murray, S. J.\nNichols, G. M. Matheson. H. R. God-\nfiey, F. Ion, H. 8. Pickering, W. S.\nWest, H. 8. GrliTith. D. F. Cameron.\nTwelve members of the Salmon\nI'el'.ie? squad turned out for practice,\ncavorting around the oval, getting into share for tlie opening battle. A\npractice has been called for 5 o'clock\nthis evening In order to allow the intermediate game to be played.\nTonlqht will see the finish of the\nfour day swimming contest at the\nlocal V. M. C. A. The figures given\nout. last evening Indicate a win for\nCaydzlen unless hls nearest competitor shows uny cIuhb ln Ihe spurts,\nCaydzlen has a total of 225 lengths to\nhis credit, Ferres coming next with\n211. In the High sehopl claBS T.\nTrapp leads the field with 205 hips.\nThe public generally ure Invited to\nwitness the closing scenes of the race\nwhich begin nt 8 o'clock this evening.\nTHE   SOUTHPAW   QUESTION.\nDoc White, the left-hand pitcher 0.\"\nthe Chicago White So:;, h::s a convincing answer for the everlasting\nItiestlon: \"Why can't a left-hand bat-\nter successfully bit a southpaw\nI wirier?\"\nWhite's answer to the query was:\n\"It's the simplest thing in the aorld.\nTbe majority of pitchers in the big\nleagues are right-handed, are they\nnet? When you'were a kid and played on lots, the majority of pitchers\nthen Wj\ufffd\ufffdre right-ban .led, were thoy\nnot?\n\"Admitting that, isn't it reasonable\nto assure that a ball player fiom bis\nearliest days to the time he gets Into\nthe big leagues, hits against right-\nhanded pitchers twice as often as he\ndoes against southpaws? Well, that's\nthe answer and that's all there ls to\nit.\nIf the big leagues Bhould decide to\ncairy half a dozen left-handed pitchers and only one or two right-hand-\ners, you would fin 1 that in the course\nof a very, short time all these fellows\nwho cannot hit left-handed pitchers\nwould soon be able to solve the port-\nside shoots. Take Ty Cobb, for instance,\" says White. \"I used to )lke\nto pitch against him when ho first\nbroke into the American league. He (\nwas the easiest kind of a proposition\nfor me. Hut now\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwell, I can't fool\nhim any more, and po left-hander\ncan; I don't care who he ls. It is\nclaimed that Vean Gregg, the Cleveland southpaw, wus the only man\nwho coulJ swerve u'> something. Ty\ncouldn't hit last season. This may\nbe true, but you can gamble that If\nGregg slays in tlie American league\nvery long, Cobb will be able to get\nhim.\"\nTHE KITCHEN DRESSER.\nIt Waa Originally a Bench on Whieh\nMeat Waa Dressad.\nDr. Johnson tells us thut tbe kitchen\ndresser was a bench in tbe kitchen on\nwbicb meat wns dressed or prepared\nfor table and gives the following lines\nln support of bis view:\n'Tis burnt, and so ia all the meat\nWhat doga ara tbesa?   Where la tha rascal cook?\nHow durat you, villains, brln* It from tha\ndresser\nAnd serve thua to me that lova It not 7\n-Shakespeare.\nA maple dresser In her hall she bad,\nOn which full many a slender maal she\nmade.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDryden.\nWright in bis \"Domestic Manners of\nthe Middle Age8\" says: \"One of the\ngreat objects of ostentation In a rich\nman's bouse waa bis plate, which at\ndinner time be brought forth and\nspread on the table In sight of bis\nguests. Afterward to exhibit tbe plate\nto more advantage the table was made\nwith shelves or steps, on which tbe different nrtjcles could be arranged ln\nrows, one above another. It waa called\nIn French, or Anglo-Norman, a dres-\nsolr, because on it the different articles\nwere dressed or arranged.\"\nIt Is tbla to which the modern poet\nrefers:\nThe pewter plates on the dresser\nCaught and reflected the flame aa shields\nof armlea the sunahlne.\nThe executive of tbe B. C. L. A.\nlias already secured tbe names of\nthree gentlemen who have consented\nto act in the capacity of referee If\nwanted. These are C. St.v John, a\nwoll known Easterner who is now residing in Vancouver; Bob Cheney and\nAlec Turnbull, the latter two hailing\nfrom this city. These names, to\nwhicli may be at'ded several others,\nwill be presented lo the lacrosse commission, which will govern the game\nin tbis province this coming season.\nWith the coming arrival of Messrs.\n.lontiH and Harr from their long Jaunt\nto the East In search of players, lt ia\nprobable that a meeting of the B. C.\nL. A. will be called for some evening this week, the meeting to be held\nin this city.\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\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nay BOWLING. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n* \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\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\nWith a total of 1171 pins J. C.\nChamberlin and A. B. Chamberlin\ntook the lead last night in the Exchange cup .two-men team competition\nnow in progress at the local alley.\nHoth men bowled ln great form, collecting an average of 199 and 193 respectively. Although this ls a very\ngood store, there ls no. doubt that lt\nwill be beaten, as quite a number of\ngood combination* have yot to roll.\nFollowing ls the result of yesterday's\nhowling:\n.1   C.  Chamberlin..21\"    179    200\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd596\nA. 13. Chamberlin .190    183   193\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd575\n1171\nWalsh 211    161    205\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd577\nIngram  185    164   166\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd515\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"   * 1093\nWalsh 177    148   176-501\nSteele 133    187   153-473\n974\nWillette 19\"    \ufffd\ufffd3   201\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd579\nDili      173    145   183\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd501\nMonteith   208\n1080\n15!)    102\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd529\nLACROSSE  COMMISSION.\nToronto, May 8.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA lacrosse commission is certain for 1913. President\nPercy Quinn of the Dominion Lacrosse Association, stated this morning that after an interview wdth Con\nJones ln the King Edward Hotel on\nSaturday, he would not oppose a commission, but he was not prepared at\nthe present to discuss the matter.\nThis means that the coast magnate\nIs waiting for the Big Four to reopen negotiations for a commission.\nPresident Quinn stated this would be\ndone after tbe close of the present\nseason. The N. L. U. and Middle\nWest will also be provided for when\nthe commission Is formed.\nIt Is understood that the commission will be formed along the lines\nof tbe baseball commission, that ls to\nsuy, no salary limit will be -placed on\nthe. big leaguers, though clauses will\nbe Inserted which will make it Impossible for the players to jump contracts and dicker with two clubs.\nUniversal playing rules will be\nbrought uo, together with regulations\nundei- which the Minto Cup will be\ncompeted for.\n\"I have not considered for a moment bringing McDougall and McGregor back from the coast,\" stated\nCharlie Querrie this morning, \"and I\nam satisfied with the way my new\nhome Is working out. I expect Tommy Gorman \ufffd\ufffdhere on May 15.\"\nPRESENCE OF MIND.\nThe Way Two Englishmen Captured\nFour Hundred Prisoners.\nToward tbe close of tbe peninsular\nwar 400 prisoners were captured by\nJqbu Colborue. afterwnrd Field Marshal Lord Seaton. Colborne, who Was\nwounded at Talavera, bad been disabled for some time, but In 1813 be\nwas lu active service again, and wben\nWellington's army crossed tlie frontier\ninto France be performed what was indeed tbe most amazing feat of hls career.\nWben riding, with no comrade but\ntbe famous Sir Henry Smith, separated\nfrom his column, he saw 4IK) French\nsoldiers passing along a ravine below\nblm. \"Tbe only way was to put a good\nface ou the matter,\" be. wrote. \"So I\nwent up to tbem. desiring tbem to surrender. Tbe olUcer, thinking, of course,\nthe column was behind me. surrendered bis sword, saying theatrically, 'Jo\nvous rends cette epee. qui a blen fait\nson devoir.' (1 surrender this sword,\nwbich bas done Its duty well.) The\n400 followed bis example.\"\nSir Henry Smith used to declare that\nhe bnd never seen such cool presence\nof mind as Colborne displayed on tbla\noccasion.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLondon Spectator.\nOLD      LANDMARK      DISAPPEARS.\nSteele 15S    190   158\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd501!\n1035\nWalsh 167    178    164-509\nPlke I61    1G8   178\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd507\n1.010\nAViilette 150   182   211\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd543\nDill 176    202    147\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd525\nCorbet t 192\nWalsh 149\n162\n144\n1068\n154\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd508\n155\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd448\n956\nHendry   House Will   Soon Be Thing\nof the Paat.\nIn a few weeks one of the old landmarks ot the city will be a thing of\nthe past. Tho old Hendry house is\nbeing moved.and some~ time ago the\nlarge plot of land that went wtth It\nwas subdivided Into house lots, while\nAsh street was extended through it,\nand lanes as well.      , \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nThe old house was built over thirty\nyears flgo by a man named Dean, it\nsoon came into the hands of Mr. John\nHepdry, who occupied lt until a short\ntlmo ago. Tbo houso was very strong-\nlc built aud finely finished, and Its\nsize and position overlooking the\nriver made lt consticuous. The house\nwas bought by i\\!r. H. Gilley. Part of\nIt has been moved to add to his own\nadjoining residence on Queen's avenue to be used as a billiard room,\nand the rest of lt will be moved over\nto front on Ash street. On another\npart of the old estate Mr. J. Carter\nSmith ta hiillrilna \ufffd\ufffd rpstdftnep. the\nfoundation for which, made of concrete blocks, ls about completed.\nSanger's White Elephant.\n\"I was exhibiting the only white\nelephant erer seen ln the western\nworld,' \" relates Lord George Sanger in\nhis book, \"Seventy Years a Showman,\"\n\"when I was honored by a visit from\nKing, Edward, tben Prince of Wales.\nAfter tbe performance I conducted tbe\nprince tbrough tbe stables and showed\nblm all tbere was to see. When we\ncame to the \"white elephant' stall his\nroyal highness suddenly turned to me\naud said. Sanger, is tbls really one of\ntbe sacred wblte elephants?'\n\"To thia I replied: 'Well, your royal\nhighness, a showman is entitled to\npractice a little deception on the crowd,\nbut 1 should never think of deceiving\nmy future klnnt It ls certainly a\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwhite\" elepbant-in fact, a very white\nelephant, but only because we give\nhim u coat of special whitewash twice\na day!\"'   \t\nThe Backteriologist.\nA Richmond negro chanced to meet\noa tbe street u friend wbo complained\nof much \"mls'ry.\" Indeed, tbe afflicted one waa lu despair, so \"tuckered\nout\" was be.\n\"Wot seems to be de matter?\" asked tbe flrst negro.\n\"Jim,\" snld tbe otber with a moan\nand a gesture indicating tbe portion of\nbis anatomy that was giving blm so\nmucb trouble, \"l's got sech awful pains\nIn imib back lieuh!\"\nJim assumed an air of great solemnity ond wisdom, \"ln dat case,\" said\nbe, \"dere's only one thing fo' yo' to\ndo. Jes' yo' put yo's'f in de bands o'\ndat Doctab Blank. I bears dat he's\nde finest backteriologist in de whole\nsouf.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNew Vork Press.\nBuddhism.\nBuddbhtm started with Gantama\nBuddha about 000 years before the\nChristian era, and it numbers among\nits adherents more than a third of tbe\nhuman race. Buddhism ls confined\nmainly to Asia\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdManchuria, Mongolia,\nKorea. Tibet. China, Japan and the\nlarge Islands off the Asiatic coast\nThongh born ln India, Buddhism Is not\nstrong ln that country today, being\ndriven ont by the old Hinduism of\nwhich it ia the offshoot\nAL. W. GILLIS. manager.\nThursday,  Friday and\nSaturday.\nGERMAR'S MODELS\nArtistic Poses In Bronze.\nSubjects\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1, Meniqrios; 2,\nTlie Discus Thrower; 3,\nCunid and the Blacksmith;\n4, Tho Secret: 5. The Can-\ntlve: (I, The Sculptor's\nDream; 7, Reaching the\nTraining Post.\nGRAHAM  AND  NOFtTON\nThe \"Kose  City\" Duo Sing-\nerj, Dancers and Comedians.\nJACK  IRWIN\nBetter known as \"Young\nSharkey,\" featuring his own\nrecitation entitled \"His Last\nFight.\"\n^^r^\nA PRETTY  HOME\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 1   fi 1    ,i\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nON PINE STREET\nTwo stories with four rooms and square hall on ground floor and\nthree bedrooms and separate bath room and toilet upstair*: cement\ncellar, furnace, etc.\nThis house has hardwood floors on the ground floor, and Is very\nprettily decorated. There Is a grate in the sitting room and electric\nlight fixtures downstairs. T*.   ,\nThe lot has flfty feet frontage with a sixteen foot lane ln the\nrear.    Price 15000.   Terms, $1750 cash, balance arranjed. |\nThe Westminster Trust and Sife Deposit Co.,ltd.\nJ. J. JONES, Mgr.-Dir.\n28 Lorne Street, New Westminster\nE. H. BUCKLIN, N. BEARDSLEE, W. V.H. BUCKLIN.\nPres. and Geni. Mgr. Vice-President Sec. tnd Treas.\nSMALL-BUCKLIN\n===   LUMBER CO., LTD. \"       \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nManufacturers  and  Wholeaalo Dealera In\nTir, Cedar  and   Spruce Lumber\nPhones No. 7 and 877.   Shingles,  Sash,  Doors,   Mouldings, Etc.\n4\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMFW  PHOTO  PLAYS\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd4\nHorseman Dies.\nLexington, Ky., May 8.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.Horace W.\nWilson, for 13 years secretary of the\nKentucky Trotting Horse Breeders'\nAssociation, and one of the best\nknown horsemen in America, died\nhere yesterday, aged 52. He was for\nm?.nv >ears saeresary of the Empire\nTrotting Association in New York,\nar.d at one time was associate editor\nof a Chicago paper devoted   to horse\nFOR CHOICE\nFISH\nOYSTERS\nCHICKENS\nLAMB\nBEEF\nMUTTON\nGO TO\nP.  BURNS' MARKET\nFOR THE HIGHEST QUALITY MEATS\nKEE\nFor Reference\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdYou May Want Some of These\nTENTS\nCUSHIONS\n(Xl\n7x9\n.$6.30\n.$7.55\nIR inch.       20 Inch.       22 inch.\n45c 60c. 75c.\nWALL TENTS\nMade of Eight Ounce Duck.\n8x10 $11.00\n10x12 $12.90\n12x14 $17.30\n11x16 $22.70\nCAMP CHAIRS\nStrong Kitchen    Chair,   doube\nrung i .... ..65c\nCanvas Stools   35c\nCanvas Stools with back .. 50c\nDeck Chairs, adjustable ..$125\nFolding Arm Chaire $1.75\nCHEST OF DRAWERS\nThree draws   ... .$6.90\nSix draws   ......$9.75\nPILLOWS\nWool, each   50c\nFeathers, each    75c\nREVERSIBLE MATTING\nRUGS\nORESSER\nFor the Floor.\n3x6 feet  35c\n6x9 feet   $1.25\n9x9 feet $2.00\n9x10 feet   $2.25\n9x12 feet    $2.75\nJAPANESE MATTING\n36 inches wide, per yard  . .20c\nFLOOR OILCLOTH\n6 feet wide, per square yard 30c\nwith three drawers and   large\nplate mirror   $9.75\nVERANDAH SHADES\nHalf Spl t Bamboo.\nNatural. Green.\n80c .........4x8 $1.00\n$120    6x8...   $1.50\n$1.40    7x8...   $1.80\n$1.75    8x8   $2.00\n$2.00 10x8... $2.63\nWINDOW SHADES\nCream or   green   mounted   on\nHartshorn Rollers.\n3 FOR $1.00\nIKEAT SAFES\nScreen  wire  gauge, two sides\nand front.\nTwo shelves   $2.25\nThree shelves  $3.63\nLINOLEUM\n6 feet wide, per square yard 45c\n12 feet wide, per square yd 55c\nREVERSIDLE JUTE\nCARPET FOR RUNNERS\n18 inches wdde, per yard . .20c\n22 imrl^es wide, per yard . .23c\nV.ti inches wide, per yard  ..35c\nCURTAIN RODS\nEs landed to 42 Inches 2 for 25s\nCURTAIN SCRIM\n36 inches wide; a large variety\nof patterns, per yard  25c\nDINING TADLE $3.90\nFolding Dining Table with\ndrawers, when open 4 feet by 4\nfeet, when cloaed 2 feet by 4\nfeet.\nLARGE   REVERSIBLE\nHEARTH HOGS $2.90\n36 by 72 inches wide; a dandy.\nCAMP BEDS\nCanvas Stretcher   $1.75\nBed Springs, any size  $2.50\nWire Stretchers, cable supports,\neach :. $3.00\nDouble woven wire Stretchers,\nextra heavy support ...,..$4.75\nFolding Canvas Cots $3.50\nIron Beds with spring and mattress complete for ... .$8.75\nCAMP MATTRESSES\n2.6x6 feet  ,i,*.-,-. .$4,50\n2.6x6 feet  .,-,;}. .$2 53\nHeavy cotton   lined    Matt'ess,\nany size    ....... .$2.75\nFLANNELETTE SHEETS\nBest quality. \"\n10J4                   11|4 J2I4\n$1.25                $1.50 '   $1.75\nWhite Cotton Sheets, large size,\nper pair        .... .,$1.75\n \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  '\nBLANKETS\nHeavy grey, per pair ... .$2.73\nUnion, 60x80, 7 lbs., pair . .$3.50\nSilver grey, 7 lbs :..$3.90\nTOWELS\nRough Turkish Bathing Towfcls,\nlarge size, per pair .. ..V. ..50c\nWhite Turkish   TowelSv   lhrge\nsize, per pair    ..'.'.\"\ufffd\ufffd.. \/;'.BOc\nSmall Face Towels, pait....35c\n\"     '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd!'\nCOMFORTERS\nReversible, double bed size . .$2\nDistraction Needed.\n\"Ton don't seem to be making much\nprogress in golf.\"\n\"No,\" replied Mr. Cumrox. \"It worries. Do you know 1 sometimes wish\nthat I wns back tn business bo as to\nhave something to take my mind off\nthe game.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWashington Star.\nDENNY & ROSS\nExclusive House Furnishers\nSixth Street\nWE DO IT RIGHT\nNew Westminster\n,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdj|wq\ufffd\ufffd^W''W,''.\ufffd\ufffdWgllH\ufffd\ufffdwv^\nmmmaatssawmnWsw*'\n.:\ufffd\ufffdster sasn'Str\n2E PAGE SIX.\nWESTMINSTER DAILY NEWS\nTHURSDAY, MAY 9, 1912.\nNEW    WESTMINSTER    MAIL\nArrival: Closing;\n10:50\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdVancou ver  via Q. .N.  R.\n 23:00\n7:40\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdVancouver via B. C. E. R.\n(dally \ufffd\ufffdgtaept Sunday). 11:15\n18:00\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdVancouver via. B. C. E. R.\n(dally except Sunday).16:00\n18:00\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdVancouver >vda B. C. J\ufffd\ufffd. It.\n(daily except Sunday,).20:30\n7:40\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdVictoria  via h. C. E.  R.\n(daily except Sunday) .11.15\n10:50\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdVictoria via ,G. N. R.\n(daily except Sunday). 11:IE\n7:30\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdUnited States via G. N. K.\n(dally except Bunday).. 9.46\n15:15\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdUnited Statea via G. N. R.\nidaily except Sunday)..16:0C\n11:40\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAll points eaat and Europe    (daily)    8:15\n22:43\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAll points east and Europe (daily)   13:15\n11:40--Sapperton    and   Fraser\nMills      (daily     except\nSuuday)    8:15\n18:10\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfiapperton    and   Fteaser\nmills      tdally     except\nSunday)         ;14:00\n11:40\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCoquitlam       (dally    exoept   Sunday)     8:15\n12:00\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCentral Park, McKay and\nKdmonds Idaily exoept\nSunday i        11.18\n14:u0\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEast Uurnaby (dally except   Sunday    14:3*\n10:00\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTimberland (Tuesday and\nFriday)    I3:3r\n10:30\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBarnston islands arrives\nTuesday, Thursday aud\nSaturday,    and    leaves ,\nMondav,       Wednesdav\nand  Friday    14:00\n(10:00\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLadner, Port Guichon,\nWestham Island, Burt\nVilla   13:30\nIdr.OO\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Annieville   a:id   Sunbury\nA TOWER Or ROMANCE.\nA NORWEGIAN WORD.\nCanonbury Once ths Home of Many   Origin of \"BudstikKan.\" Which Means\nLiteral.'   Celebrities.\nHistoric   London   is   rapidly   disap. J\npearing, but now and then one runs\nacross some relic of the middle apes i\nthat  still preserves much of its orig- j\nina!  character.    Such   a   survival   i-t I\nCanonbury   Tower,   standing   in   one\nof  the   northern  suburbs  < f   London. I\nIt began  life  in  1360 as  the country i\nresidence of the prior of Et. Bnrtholo-i\nmew.   In more recent days it hecanu\nthd  home   in   turn   of   many   literary\ncelebrities.     Oliver   Goldsmith   lived:\nthere   from   1762 to  1764,  though  the;\nactual rooms that lie occupied are un-]\ncertain.    It was tliere he commenced j\n\"The   Vicar  oi  Wakefield.''    Another j\ntenant   at   the   same   time   as   Gold-;\nsmith   was  Newberry,  the  bookseller, '\nand it was in his rooms that the ini- ',\npecunious   Oliver   often   took   refuge |\nfr< m his creditors.\nIn the room, generally reputed to\nhave been inhabited by Uoldsmitli\nlived Washington Irving some time\n.after, a period of his life which lie\ndescribed in his \"Tales ol a Traveler.\" Other interesting folk who lived there at different times were Samuel Humphre; \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd, the author ol \"Ulysses,'' who died there in 17u\"; Christopher Smart, the \"mad poet'; Dr.\nJohnson of dictionary fame; William\nHone,    who    wrote    \"Tlie    Everyday\n\"Spreading th* News.'\nThis peculiar word Ih frequently\nfound ln Scandinavian communities us\nthe name or a newspaper, such as SL\nCloud Budstlkken. It ls u Norwegian\nword. 1,200 years old at tbe least und\nhas a very peculiar origin.\nIn  those days,  when  lbe coasts of\nJCorwa,v were ravaged by pirates, the\ninhabitants had to resojrt to nil sorts\nof devices to warn those nt n distance\nI of lhe approach of these piratical craft.\ni When one was seen on the horizon \ufffd\ufffd\n! mnn went up to Ihe top of n mountain.\nwhere he lighted a beacon'lire.    This\n' could be seen for n long distance und\nwas known to be u  warning.    When\n; It  was seen  In the distance another\ni (Ire was lighted on another bill until\n| all over the country tires blazed from\nevery hilltop and the people prepared\nj to defend themselves.\nThey also had a system of messen-\ni gers. l'he man who tlrst sighted tbe\nsnil would lake an arrow and send lt\nto his neighbors. From town to town\ntbls arrow was sent until all were\nwarned. These were rather primitive\nways of telegraphing, but were so effectual that In Ihe course of twenty\ni four hours all Norway knew of tbe approach of pirates.\nTbls system of spreading the news\nwas called \"btidstlkken.\" and wben\nthere were no more pirates the newspapers become spreaders of tbe news\nand so were appropriately styled \"bud-\nstikken.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdExchange.\n'uKIMl-\nidaily   except  Sunday) .13:30\n-Woodwards        (Tuesday,\nriiuraduv     and    Saturday)    13:30\n10:45\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdVancouver, Piper's gld-\niug viu U. N. tt,\n(dally except Sunaay) ..14:21\n15:50\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCloverdale and Port Kells\nvia G.   N.   R.   (dally  except  Sunday) 14:00\nJl:20\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdClayton (Tuesday, Thursday, Friday and Sat-\nday       14:00\n11:20\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTynehead   (Tuesday   and\nFriday)        ...14:00\n7:40\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBurnaby Lake  (daily except Sunday   16:00\n18:10\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAbbotsford, Upper Sumas,\nMatsqui, Huntingdon,\netc. (daily except Sunday)   23:00\n16:15\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCrescent, Wh'ie Hock and\nUlulne (dali<, except\nSunday)    9:45\n16:15\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHall'B Prairie, Fern Mdge\nand Haz'etne.-e (Tuesday Thursday and Satur'   y    9:45\n11:20\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdChilliwack, Milner, Mt.\nLehman, A Idergrove, Otter, Shortreed, Surrey\nCentre.Cloverdale,Langley Prairie. Murray vllle.\nStrawberry Hill, South\nWestminster, Clover\nValley, Coghlan, Sardis, Sperling Station,\nHrudner, Bellerose, via\nB. C. E. It. (daily except Sunday)   9:00\n11:20\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdRand, Majuba Hill via\nB. C. E. It. (Monday\nWednesday and Friday          9:00\n20:30\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdChilliwack via B. C. E. R.\n(dally except. Sunday) .17:30\n11:20\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAbbotsford, Huntingdon,\nvia B. C. E. R. (daily\nexcept Sunday) 17:30\n15:50\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCloverdale    via   B.C.E.R.\ntdally except Sunday) .17:30\n2;60\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFraser   Arm    and    Alta\nVisU    23:00\nLAND REGISTRY ACT.\nNotice is hereby given that I shall\nat the expiration of thirty days.from\nthe date of the first publication hereof cancel from the books of the Land\nRegistry Office, New Westminster,\nB.C., a certain agreement for sale,\ndated the 2Mb day of February, mm\nexisting between Charles S. Brown, as\nvendor, of Vancouver, 11. C, and Moulton Shank us purchaser, formerly ol\nVancouver, II. C; said agreement for\nsale covering the east half of lot 8,\nand the west half of lot 1), block 1, being a subdivision of east half of lot\n15S, group 1, New Westminster district\nC. S. KEITH,\nDistrict Hegisuar,\n* N'ew Westminster, B. C\nDated at the Land Registry Office,\nNew Westminster, B.C., this 12th day\nof April, 1912.\nTo MOULTON SHANK. ESQ.\nBook\"; Woodfall, who printed \"The\nLelters of Junius,\" and Robert Hors-\nfield, one of Pope's booksellers.\nCanonbury Tower is now tlie property of the Marquis oi Northampton, :\nand an interesting romance is told of j\nhis ancestor  through  whom   it  came\ninto his possession. In 1501 it belonged to Sir John Spencer, a Lord Mayor |\nof London.   He had a very beautiful\ndaughter, Elizabeth, who was also a\nrifh heiress.   She loved and was lov-!\ned by Lord Compton, but her father '\nrefused to sanction the match, so the\nlover bnd to resort to strategy.    He\ndressed  himself u;5 as a baker's boy,\ncalled  at  the   li'iu-e  and  eventually\nleft\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwilh liis lady love in his basket.\nSir John   wns   furious   and   refused\nto see hi* daughter after tiie marriage,\nbut a reconciliation was effected about\na  year  after   by\nof women. Queen IClizabeth. She invited the angry baronet to become\nsponsor to an  infant, wnose  mother,\nsue  declared    had   behave .   much   as d    ,)y u     ,    amJ     ,,.,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd takw]\nIns daughter had.   tor Job l consented    ..       , .\"     ,,        , .   i  \ufffd\ufffd _     ,-\ufffd\ufffd,\nand  then  announced  that  he  should    therefrom   by   Oruvelot   before   l.W\nadopt the  son  as  his  own.    At this   showing how-\npropitious  II '>inent the Queen reveal- I In ball of Wertmlnster\ned   her   little   plot   and   I'i   incident j Sleek sempstrtss v*\"d\ufffd\ufffd amidst the courts\nclosed in the tin e honored wav bv tha her xvuro'\nold man \"bless-you-my-chiidenng'' his ! In \"To\"1 Brown's Amusements\"\nson-in-la .' and erring daughter. Jt j (1770i we read: \"We enter into a great\nwas through  this child that the Mai- , ball wbere we ure surprised to see In\nthe same place men on one side with |\nbaubles and toys nnd on tbe other tak\nen up witli fe.-ir of Judgment. In lliishop ure lo lie sold ribbons and gloves\ntowers, beaddressi s. etc. On Ibe left\nblind we hear il nimble tougued palut\ned sempstress with ber charming tre\nble invite you to buy some of bei\nkulckknacks.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd I.undou  Mail.\nWESTMINSTER HALL\nIts Bargain Counters, State Trials and\nCoronation Banquets.\nWestminster   hull,   whose  old   gray\nwtills have seen coronation  banquets\nnnd state trials, used to echo with the\nbargains   driven   at   shops   or   stalls\nwhich at one time fringed Its walls like\na modern bazaar.   These were kept by\nthat  most  cunning I booksellers, toy dealers,  sempstresses\nand milliners.    The rents aud profits\nwent by right to Ibe warden of the\nfleet.   An engraving of the busy scene\niiver.\nof   Northampton   inherited   the\nKitchener as Prisoner.\nKitohenerVt ability in disguising\nhimself has given risa to many stories, true and therwise, ol tills famom .\nsoldier. The following incident was I\ntold by one ivKo served with the K<sex j\nKer.-.ment in B campaign against the ;\nDervishes:\n\"1 was acting corporal nl (he guard .\nover a lar re number of 'gentlemen of !\nthe desert'  whom  we had taken pris- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\noners.   In the course of my round.-1 a\ncaptive within the lent drew my it-\n(\"Ution. and  I was surprised to heai\nIn eood English the request:\n\" 'Corporal,   1   wish  to get  out  of |\n\"I of course reported tiie occurrence\nt\" the sergeant of the guard, only tn\nbe met with  * e curt reply:\n\" 'Let the fool stay where be is.'\n\"As I passed the spot again the\nvoice from within said:\n\" 'Say. oorpfcral, you are of the Es-\nsex Regiment?'\n\"I answered that I was, and the\nprisoner said :\n\" 'Well, tell Mr. B  that I want\nto speak  to  him.'\n\" 'What name?\"   I queried.\n\"'Kitchener,' came thi reply, and\nI at once reported accordingly to\nthe sergeant.\n\"He immediately made for the pris-\nqner&' quarters, and I shell never forget that meeting.\n\"The dishevelled 'Dervish' was in\nreality the Lord Kitchener that wss\nto be, who had been out spying among\nthe enemy, and had apparently been\ntaken prisoner by his own troops.\"\nLAND   REGISTRY  ACT.\nRe the south half of the Northwest\nquarter of Section 5, Township 15 lex-\ncept one-half acre I hereof) In thc district of New Westminster.\nWhi reas proof of the los3 of cortili\ncate of title no. 430P, issued in the\nname of Catherine Oliver, lias been\nflled in tiiis office.\nNotice Is hereby given that I shall,\nat the expiration of one month f:orn\nthe dale of the first publication hereof, In a daily newspaper published i:i\ntlie City ol New Westminster, issue a\nduplicate of the b; id certificate, unless\nri the meantime vnlld\nmade to tne in writing.\nThe  Rifle  Flsh.\nWriting to the Travelers' Gl r.ettfi\nfrom Queensland about thn strange\nforms of animal life in that country,\nwliich include the web foot duck,\nwhich lays eggs and suckles its young,\nthe \"lung fish\" and the \"walking\nperch.\" a correspondent gives a description of tlie rifla fish, which when\nfull grown measures abou' ten inches\nand weighs about one and a half\npounds, It subsists on fond wllich\nit shoots\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdhence the name, lt Bwini!\nleisurely about the stream a few\ninches below the surface and is always On the lo ik-out for flies and othei' insects that settle on the floating\nsurface of water plants. On getting\ncjose enough to its victim its di--\ncliarges a tiny jet or ball of water\nwhicn, if shirt straight, knocks the\nlly into the stream, where it is In\n.'.a:t!y gathered in by the shooter.\nA Fair Offer.\nlt \\Vns (i political meeting In the east\nend of London, and tlie M. P., su exceptionally popular man, was addressing liis constituents. The politician in\nquestion rejoices iu a luxuriant crop\nof hnir. The audience was sympathetic for the most part, but there was\none mail In the front row of the uu-\ndlence who made numerous interruj*\ntions. He was a coal beaver, apparently, und bad but recently beeu heaving coals.\n\"(Jet your hair cut:\" he shouted during a most pathetic passage in the candidate's speech. The well known catch\nphrase seemed particularly applicable,\nso a good many of tbe audience laughed.\nBut tbe M. P. wns equal to the occasion.\n\"1 wdll make a bargain with that\ngentleman,\" be said. \"I will net m.v\nbalr cut lf he will get his face wash\ned.\"\nThere were no more Interruptions.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nLondon Express.\nHer Resignation.\n\"rnpit,\" she said. \"I um very angry\nwilh lieraldlne.\"\n\"What's tieraldine done?\" asked ber\nfather.\n\"Why. I told her a secret last summer,\" said the Utile gill Indignantly,\n\"and she has Just told iue she's going\nto tell It.\"\n'\"That's very wrong of Geraldine.\nHas she any excuse ir\"\n\"Why, I told her It wns wicked to\ntell a secret, and what do you iblnk\nshe said'.' She said. 'Oh. I know, but\nI've resigned from (hat secret.'\n\"Papa.\" she concluded earnestly,\n\"you can't reslgu from a secret, can\nyouV\"\nTh'\ufffd\ufffd menial processes of children are\npast OodlDg uui.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPhiladelphia Ledger\nhe I\nI\nFish That   Destroy  MosquLoes.\nAil the pools and swamp- in Bat\nbndos, West Ind.es, are stocked with\nswarms of millions of tiny fishes that\nfeed on the larvae of the mosquit i.\n'iii \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd health board of Antigua, being\ncn vinced that these fish do a valu-\ni.liie missionary work in the consumption of mosquit) egg-\". \ufffd\ufffdi \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd time ago\narranged for their systematic distti-\ni.' -1 i\ufffd\ufffdi: i throughout the. pools and\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd';\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd tarns of  Antigua.\nThe   Jamiii'ans   also   have   utilized\nthese flsh  in this wny: The tanks of\niiir- hotel in .Jamaica are full of them,\n,.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   and the secretary of an agricultural\nobjection  bei      ,,,,.   m   |ill)t **^.iUl]   ^.^   th(U\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  r. ,.,-,,^r. there lias been a marked diminution\n'    S' KBI?2;.i        \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd lever roundabout.\nRegistrar n' Tlt'es.  .\t\nA  Vetrnn   Pre^r.hir.\nI    Tiie\nLondon i\nDistrlcl    ^^^^^^^^\nLand Registry oflee, Kew Westmin\nler, B. C, April 22, 1!>!2.\nMade Him Cautious.\nMr. While-1 understand. Smathers,\nthat your church is about to go Into\ncourt to sue certain delinquent worshipers for pew rent. Krudder Sriuith\ners\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Vassal], only I doesn't call folks\ndllt won't pay de Linvd der holiest\ndebtednesH wuhshlpahs. Mr White-\nWhat do you cull tbem7 1-imdder\nSmathers\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-Ne'm mind, sub: ne'm mind\nwbat I calls 'em. I called one of em\nwbat I called hlm dls mnwiiln', and\nbe knocked me In de bead wid a rock.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNational Monthly.\nShopping Up to Date.\n\"Xo. noue ot these hula suggest raj\npersonality nt nil.   You see. I'm a greal\nrace goer, adore drniiin. rend classics\nIn  the original, sympathize  with  the\nwoman's movement, travel a good deal\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^    ond am Intensely temperamental    The\nldest   officiating   preacher   in ! |)nt  I   want must convey  all  tbls.\"-\nSutlre.\nWINDSOR SALT-ought to\ncost more \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd so  pure, fine, well-\nfavoured.   Goes further, loo,   ll:,l\ntot a tent dc.;:ci'.\nHi\nRev, Robert Brandon, I'.ap-\nI list, who recently celebrated lm nine-\nj ;;.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-!. flii   birthday   anniversary;       Ha\n; i v.ii  nes   about  \ufffd\ufffdnoo   a   ino.ith   at,  a\n! pia \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd<-. \\u \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdChelsea, where hs has minis;\n;--,v.l  for -ixti'-f<*ar years.   He has to\n-\\t* 'carrie'd to  lii.-i ohyrch  iu  a hath\n;.... ,i r ire has l.efii a <::.;:j.it' since\n....  -,,,..   l.'t j'..\ufffd\ufffdrs old.\nLooking Forward.\nFriend\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHave you named the baby\nyet* Proud Mother\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNo; we must tie\nvery careful to give him n nice one.\nbecause there will be no many named\nafter blm wben tie becomes president.\nIS HERE\nThis is the season of the\nyear when you must spend\nsome money on yourself.\nIn order to get the best\nvalue for your money you\nmust do this intelligently.\nDo not go elsewhere to make\nyour purchases.\nSpend Your Money In\nNew Westminster\nRoyal City merchants have\nspent thousands of dollars\nin laying new, up-to-date\nand complete stocks of\nmerchandise in all lines.\nThey can give you satisfaction, and prices here are as\nlow or lower than anywhere\nelse on the coast.\nDon't send to mail order\nhouses or other cities\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdbuy\nhere. Read the daily messages from Westminster\nmerchants in THE NEWS\nand act on them. That is\nthefway to help your city\ngrow.\nIf you don't get The News\nregularly subscribe for it\nnow. It is worth reading--\nbothjjits news and advertising columns\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdand alert and\nprogressive citizens cannot\nafford to do without it. THURSDAY, MAY 9, 1912.\nWESTMINSTER DAILY NEWS\nPWJJ. SEVEN\nINDIA'S MAHARAJAKS\nNATIVE   PRINCES   HAVE   GREAT\nPOWER   IN   PROVINCES.\nTheir Position Is Mors Important\nThan That of European Nobles for\nEach Is a Monarch In His Own\nRight\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThere Are No Less Than\nSix Hundred Ruling Houses Headed by the Great Nizam.\nPRINTING  IN  CHINA.\nOften No Presses Ara Used, a Pair of\nBrushes Doing tha Work.\nTbe Chinese assert thut (be art of\nprinting was discovered lu China about\ntlfty yeurs before tbe Christian era.\nUntil tbe discovery of the art of pu-\npermaking. A. D. 'Jo. tbey printed on\nHilk or clotb cut In tbe form of leaves. (\nTbe method employed to this day by '\nmany native Chluese prfuters ts as\nfollows:\nNu printing press Is used. The delicate nature of the Chinese paper would\nnot admit of It.    When tbe blocks are j\nPLAYING CARDS.\nAt tbi' moment,  when  all  that  Is\nsplendid in Anglo-Indian majesty has   proved, ihe paper cut and the tok .\nlecently been  gathered in one ijre.it\nEastern dependency, and weird and\n[wonderful names, the significance of\n[which is generally lost in this country, are appearing in the newspapers,\nit is appropriate that a brief spnee\njshouli' be devoted t> a succinct explanation (f the position occupied by\nth \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd great chiefs who ass\ufffd\ufffdmblid in the\njcapital of Auruntfzeh to do homage at j\nthe coronation of tlieir feudal King-\nEmperor,\n> So many misconceptions nro enter-\ntained by the public about the potentate b of India that the present is the\nril_- 111 moment for making thpir position clear. Anything like a biographical description of the Indian chiefs\nis, of course, impossible here, but\ntiii rS are certain notable paints in relation to the Indian royulties which\nmay profitably be noted.\nT<. define the individual significance\nif i ach titular style among the\nRajabl of Ind1'. would be a useless\ntask, for it is almost incapable of\nexplanation to renders unacquainted\nwith India. The tast explanation is\nthat given by Whitakcr's Peerage,\nbut it- right to be accepted as nn\nauthority may be gauged by the\nst\ufffd\ufffdti ments that \"Maharajah, Raja,\nan I   Nuwab  correspond  with  English\np   ITS.\"\nA more erroneous Conception ol the\nrelative position of the Indian princes\nit is impossible to conceive. Rut it\nexplains the difficulty of dogmatizing\nupon Indi in royalty; even when well-\nknown Anglo-Indian gentlemen are\nasked to co-operate in arriving ut\nconclusions, Rut in a simple form\nw will endeaVor to put the status of\ntin various hieh dignitaries of Indiu\nclearly before the reader.\nThe Indian \"Debrett,\" if there wero\nsuch a Compilation, would contain\nthe family details of no less than six\nHundred ruling houses. Tbe chief of\nthese is the young Nizam of Hyderabad, whose eoronufrion took place.\nwilh an immens? display of feudal\nmagnificence, last May. He is the\nactual ruler of a country bigger than\nBritain, with powers of life and death\nover millions of rubjfcts.\nTn describe the Nizam ns corresponding to n British peer is as ridiculous a statement ns could well be\nmad\". The Nu\/.im's portion is so\ncurious that he might be iriven a\nseparate article. Next tn the ruler\nof Hyderabad are the Mnhnrajahs of\nBaroda, Mysore, and Cashmire. Thes-\ngi ntlemeii nre all kings. In a word.\nthey corr\ufffd\ufffdspond in India with the\nGerman king* in Europe.\nAnother gr\"at Indian prince is the\nRao of Kutch. und ns he is the Indian\npotentate with whom the writer is\nbesl acquainted, his position can be\nprecisely defined. H:- is a sover-ign\nin inarch, and among Ihmr of hi?\n- niects who speak Ennlish\ufffd\ufffd\ufffda very\nsmall number, by the way\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHis Hieh-\nn- \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd< is Usually referred to ns \"the\nKing of Patch.\" And th.s is no mis-\nni mer.\nTlie Rao-Sahib of Kutfh ex\"rci=es\nnil th- attributes of a monarch. He\nrules with the assurance of a despot.\n1 is an island kins, whose country\ncan only h* reached by sei for the\ngrea \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd part of the year. The Rann\nof Kutch, which shuts th^ country off\nfr. in tlie mainland of India, Ij dry for\nthree months cach year, but it can\nonly b\" crossed by camels, as it is a\nsal'  desert.\nHis Highness has hi= palace high\nii*. on tbe ton of a hill, within the\nembattled walls of a fortified city.\nTo enter this city one must pass\nthrough great gates and over the\ndrawbridges of a splendid lake. .In\nfact, the City of Bhuj..of which probably nine-tenths of those who rend\nthose linns have never heard, is a\nwonderful walled stronghold, capable\nof housing all Hr-1 people of Kutch in\ntune of war, and which even to-day\nwould be n hard nut to crack for ',' e\nsoldi rs of the King-Emneror. if ever\nthe dav cam' that Britain fou-'d herself se'Hously at loggerhet^s with the\nKutchi  sovereign.''\n\\ white man is almost a rara avis\nwithin the walls of Bhuj. and when\n(he writ- drove through the city in\none of the Rao-Sahib's carriages, to\npay a ceremonial call upon his high-\ni . -s, thp natives gazed at their monarch's girst in open-eyed nmazorp\"tit.\nThe Rao of Kutch rulei his country\nwithout the assistance of the white\nman. He has never been conquered\nhy lhe Britisli. It was st the request\nof the Rao's ancestor tbat Ihe British\nI'niv rituient sent a Resident to Kulch\nin 1810. with a regiment of soldiers\nt    manifest his authority.\nTh re is still a lesidsnt in Kutch.\nlie has a charming bungalo at some,\ndistance from the town, but he loves\nI., cssape down to Bombay and feel\ntii.it he ii in th\" land of the living.\nFor a Resident is almost an anomaly\nin Kulch. He has to bo very careful\nnot tn interfere with the rul-r*hip of\ntiie Rao-Sahib. All he is there for is\nto see that the Kutch'i monarch does\nnut. make wnr on any neighboring\nstale. So long as the Rao is content\nto ruh his own country, th? services\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdof the Resident are rendered a sine-\nour\".\nThe Rao is the descendant of a long\nline of great Rajput warriors\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdbloodthirsty fellows at their best. But in\nIndia might has always been right\nmil lh\" same applies to every other\nIndian Mate. The Rao has his own\narmy. He has beneath him a great\nfeudal nobility, all of tbem rulers fit\ntheir own states, who, in tim \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd of war,\nwould send their liege lord the Rao-\nSahib, (heir quota of men for the de-\nfoiuce of their island country.\nready oue man wltb bis brush will\nprint a largo number of sheets iu a\nduy.\nTbe block to be printed roust be placed perfectly level aud secured tlriuiy.\nTbe printer baa two brushes, oue of\nihem stirrer than tbe otber, which be\neau bold ln bis baud and use ut either\nend.\nile dips It Into the Ink nnd rubs tbe\nblock wltb It. taking care not to moisten it too much or leave It too dry. lf\nIt were wetted too much Ibe characters\nwould be blurred; if too little, tbey\nwould uot print. Wben once tbe block\nia got Into tbe pro|>er condition be can\nprint three or four Impressions without dipping bis brush lato tbe luk\nagain.   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nThe second brush ls used to rub over\nthe puper wltb a small degree of pressure, tbat It may take the Impression.\nThis It does easily, for, uot belug sized\nwith alum, it receives the Ink the instant It comes in contact with It It\nis only necessary that the brush Bhould\nbe passed over every part of tbe sheet\nwith a greater or smaller degree of\npressure and repeated In proportion\nas the printer Uud.s there ls more or\nless Ink upon tbe block.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdHarper's\nWeekly.\nMIXED RELATIONS.   '\nAn Interesting Study From Historic\nand Pictorial  Viewpoints.\nQuite apart from tbeir use Id various games, playing cards are un interesting study from historic and pictorial points of view. Take Urst tbeir\nnumerical arrangement\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd oj curds, 3(15\npips or dots und 13 tricks, representing\nthe weeks and days In tbe year and tbe\nlunar months.\nTbere ure fodr suits, representing\nfour clusses of people ns tbey were divided at tbe time tbe pack ot cards\nwe now use was devised by tbe Frencb.\nThe \"spades\" stood for pikemen or soldiers, tbe clubs for clover, typifying\nfarmers: tbe diamonds for building\ntiles, representing artisans, und tbe\nhearts for ehoirnien or ecclesiastics.\nThe \"kings\" and \"queens\" at that\ntime were more or less correct likeness\nof certain royal und noble personages.\nEven In our modern packs It ls said\ntbat oue of the queens Is a conventionalized portrait of Elizabeth ot York,\nwho was engaged to tbe dauphin of\nFrance.\nThe \"knaves\" were tben the king's\nJesters, and even these cards may. be\nportraits. All the court cards. In fact,\nretain tbeir sixteenth century characteristics. Cnrds are among tbe few\nthings that have not changed with tbe\ncenturies.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBrooklyn EagleA\nA Family Problem a Lawyer Oid Not\nCare to Tackle.\nA lawyer received u call from n new\nclient, a mon bent upon recovering a\nsum of money advanced upon u uoto\nand not repaid.\n\"Who Is tbe debtor?' asked the lawyer.\n\"Oh. she's a relative of mine.\"\n\"How nearly i elatedV\"\n\"Very nearly.\"\n\"But, my dear sir.\" pprdstM the lawyer, \"you must be more explicit.\"\n\"Well, Bbe may be my mother Inlaw.\"\n\"May be? Then you are likely to\nmarry her daughter.\"\n\"I've ulreudy married the daughter.\"\n\"Tben, of course, tbe deteudaut la\nyour mother-In law.\"\n\"Perhaps you'd better hear the\nwhole aiory,\" returned Ibe client\n\"You see, a year ago we lived together, my son and I. Across tbe way\nlived the Widow Foster and ber\ndaughter Mary. I married Mary, nnd\nmy sun married tbe widow. Now\nperhaps you can tell me whether my\nson's wife Is my mother-in-law or my\ndaughter-in-law.\"\nThe lawyer did not answer. The\nproblem was unfamiliar, lie was uot\nready.\n\"1 don't think I can take yonr ense,\"\nhe said, \"lt presents too many complications.\"\n\"Very well.\" returned the man. taking bis bat despondently. \"But there's\none tblng 1 forgot. Kiuce our double\nwedding a child bus been born lo each\nof us. What relation are tbo.ie two\nchildren to each other?\"\n- ' Bagpipes.\nBagpipes, mentioned tn Jeremiah\nxlvlli, ;jii. \"Mine heart shall sound for\nMoab like pipes, like pipes for tbe meu\nof Klr-heres,\" nnd elsewhere In Scripture were used also b.v the early Egyptians. Botb Creeks und Itomans knew\ntbe Instrument, for a coin of JSero\nshows upon one side tbe tibia utrlcii-\nlaris, a bag with two reeds and nine\npipes. I'rocoplus ulso, wbo wrote\nubout SAO A. V.. asserts that Itomail\nsoldiers sometimes marched lo ibe.\nsound of the bagpipes, and It Is not impossible that tbey Introduced them tuto\ntbe British Islands. 'J be earliest, more\nmodern reference to them Is lu un\nIrish .MS. ot 11'KI, and an Irish Illuminated MS. of 13'K) depicts a pig pluy-\ning on the bagpipes, 'ibe N-oltlsti\nhighlit nriers were the llrst and only\npeople to use tbe great war pipe, us\ntbe highland regiments still Uu.\nSupply on the Way.\nRufus (irogiin Is one uf tbe managers or tbe biggest store Id his town,\n'ihe slogan ot tbe sture Is, \"We Sell\nEverything.\"\nWben Kufus ls asked for anything\nthe sture doesn't happen to have on\nhand he always says. \"W\ufffd\ufffdare out of\nthat Just now, but we have a carload\n:omlng.\" And -ltufus' carload\" la a\noca l Joke.\n\"Rufus,\" naked a customer one day,\n'do you know where 1 can get a hired\nfl nr\n\"Well.\" said Rufna, \"we haven't nny\nlow, but we hare a carload coming.\"\n-Saturday Evening J'ost\ni:\nwho do not receive The News before\n8 a.m. should\nTELEPHONE 999\nand make complaint. Only in this way\nmay an efficient delivery be maintained.\nAre you one of these to whom\nevery meal is another source of\nsuffering ?\nNa-Dru-Co Dyspepsia Tablets\nwill help your disordered stomach to\ndigest any reasonable meals, and will\nsoon restore it to such perfect condition that you'll never feel that you\nhave a stomach. Take one after\neach meal. 50c. a Box at your\nDruggist's. Made by the National\nDrug and Chemical Co. of Canada,\nLimited. fto\nNAPOLEOPTSJESTINY.\nSummed Up In Four Mottoes Bonaparte Learned at School.\nIn 1784 Bonaparte, tben flfteen years\nold. arrived at the military scbool ot\nI'aris from Brlenne. being one of four\nunder ibe conduct of a minim priest.\nHe mounted 173 steps, carrying bVi\nsmall valise, and reached, lu the attic,\nthe barrack chamber he was to occupy.\nThis chamber had two beds and a\nsmall window opening on the great\nyard of the scbool. Tbe young predecessors of Bonaparte had heserawled\nthe whitewashed walls with charcoal,\nand the newcomer could read ln this\nlittle cell these four Inscriptions, which\nwe ourselves read tbere yenrs ago:\nAn epaulet Is very long to win.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nDe Montgivray.\nTbe finest day In life Is ihat of a battle.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdVlcorate de Tlntenlac.\nLife Is but a prolonged He.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLe Chevalier Adolphe Delmas.\nTbe end of all Is six feet of earth.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdI.e Comte de la Villette.\nWith the trifling substitution of the\nword \"empire\" for \"epaulet\" these four\nsentences contain the whole destiny of\nBonaparte and formed a kind of\n\"Mene, Tekel. Upbarsln.\" written In\nadvance upon tbat wall.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdVictor Hugo.\nJustly Impatient\nta a Newark factory two workmen\nnere shouting nt each other np and\nlown an elevator shaft\n\"Hand on.\" cried une. \"Can ye na\nlnVierstand th\" English language? I'm\nellln' ye lu baud on, ye luvu!\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNew-\nirk News.\nNothing Waited.\nThe Customer-Aren't you wasting a\npood deal of that steak la trimming Itl\nI fie Ruichfr-No. ma'am. 1 weighed It\nlist.-Loudon Sketch. \ufffd\ufffd,\nDangers In Paint.\n\"Turpentine und benzine.\" says n department of agriculture bulletin, \"are\nvery lutlammable. and special precautions should be taken not to bring\npaint containing fliese substances near\nauy light or open fire. Many pigments are poisonous, nnd tbe workman should be particularly careful to\nremorp all paint stains from the skin\nand not under any elroumstnnees allow any of It to get Into tit's mouth.\nA man should not eat ln tbe same\nclothes In which be has been painting\nnnd before eating should not only\nchange his clothes, but wash nil paint\nsfalns from his skin. It ls not advisable to use turpentine or benzine In\nremoving pnlnt stains from the bands,\nbut by oiling thoroughly witb linseed\noil or ln fact wltb any fatty oil nnd\nthen thoroughly washing with soap\ntbe paint may be removed, provided\nit has not been allowed to dry tou\nthoroughly on tbe bands.\"\nNOTICE!\nThere  ls  no  connection    whatevet\nbetween the City Dye Works and the\nRoyal City Cleaners and Dyers.\n(Sgd.)     G. F.  BALDWIN,\n343  Columbia Street.\nBUSINESS DIRECTORY\nFRATERNAL.\n1. O. O. F. AMITY LODGE NO. 17\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nThe regular meeting of Amity lodge\nNo. 27, I. O. 0. F., is held every Mon\nday night at 8 o'clock ln Odd Kel\nlows hall, corner Carnarvon and\nEighth street. Visiting brethern\ncordially invited. H. W. Harrison.\nN. G.; C. B. Bryson, V. G.; James\nFerguson, P. G., recording seere\ntary, K. B. Purdy, financial seere\ntary.\nSubscriber!\nSpring Lamb, Beef,\nPork Mutton, and Veal\nAT THE\nCentral Meat Markel\nBOWELL A ODDY\nCorner Eighth St. and Fifth Avenue.\nPHONE 370.\ng| CANADIAN PACIFIC\nW RAILWAY CO\nSpecial low rates to all Eastern\npoints wlll be on sale commencing\nMay 2; good to return up to October\n31. These rates can be used for passengers going to the Old Country.\nFor particulars and reservations\n The   '\nRoyal Bank of Canada\nCapital   paid  up. $6,200,000\nReserve   7.200,000\nThe Bank haa .over 200\nbranches, extending in Canada\nfrom the Atlantic to the Pacnic,\nin Cuba throughout the island;'\nalso ln Porto Rico, Bahamas.\nBarbados, Jamaica, Trinidad,\nNew York and London,, Eng.\nDrafts issued without delay\non all tbe principal towns and\ncitlea In the world. These ex-\ncelent connections afford every\nbankine facility.\nNew Westminster Branch,\nLawford  Richardson; Mgr.\nED. GOULET, Agent\nNew  Westminste;\nOr H. W. Brodie, G.P.A..  Vancouver\nAUDITOR AND ACCOUNTANT.\na. J. A. BURNETT. AUDITOR AND\nAccountant Tel. R 128. Room\nTrapp block.\nPUBLIC STENOGRAPHER.\nSpecifications, agreements of sale,\ndeeds, business letters, etc; circular\nwork specialist. All work strictly confidential. M. Broten, Room li, Merchant Bank Bldg.   Phone 715.\nREMOVAL NOTICE\nD. V. Lewthwaite\nCABINET   MAKER   AND\nUPHOLSTERER.\nNew Westminster, B. C\nWorkshop 611   Victoria  Street.\n(Over Dally News.i\nBank of Montreal\nESTABLISHED 1817.\nCAPITAL   (Pald-Up)   ...$13^13,000.00\nRE8ERVE  .\ufffd\ufffd18t000,000.0\ufffd\ufffd>\nBranchea throughout Canada and\nNewfoundland, ano In London, England, Nsw York, Chkago and Spokane,\nU.S.A., and Mexico City. A general\nbaaktog business transacted. Letters ot Credit Issued, available with\ncorrespondents In sli parts ot tbe\nworld.\nSavings Bank Dtpartmeac\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDeposit*\necslved In snms of $1 and upward,\nmd Interest alio wei at 8 per cent per\ninnum  (present r\ufffd\ufffdte).\nTotal  Assets  over  1186.000,000.00\nNEW WE8TMIN8TER BRANCH,\nG. D. BRYMNER. Manager.\nWE WANT YOUR ORDER\nCASH IF YOU CAN.\nCREDIT IF YOU CANT,\nWe have no hot air to peddle;\njust legitimate tailoring.\n.CANADIAN\nDI,Cmc\nHandicapping the Burglar.\nBurglaries In private bouses In Vienna are rare, because tho doors are\nlocked from 10 o'clock nt night to 0 In\nthe morning by order of tbe police. Admission and exit between those Hours\nare given by tbe house porter, who receives a fee for unlocking tbe door\nund Ih bound to report to Ihe pollce\nthe doings and mode of life of all the\nInhabitants of the house. This system\nof lock money ls tiresome, but In Vienna, ns ut Naples, where it also exists. It obliges burglars and other criminals to operate during the daylight\nnnd diminishes their chances of success. The landlords tried n few years\nago the system of giving tbe key of\ntbe house door to tennnts. but ibe majority of tbe keys have been withdrawn.\nWonders of Modern Drama.\nThe heroine of tbe play bud just received tbe telegram from ber faithless\nlover. Tbeu she fainted, and the curtain went down.\nLoud npplnuse followed, particularly\nln tbe gallery.\nInstnutly tbecurtnln went up.\nThe heroine, having mlruculously recovered, was ou ber feet, bowing and\nsmiling.\nMore wonderful still, lbe faithless\nlover stood by ber side, ulso bowing\nadd smiling, having traveled u distance\nof 287 miles ln ten seconds Id order to\nbe on band to acknowledge tbe ap-\nplsuse.-Chicago Tribune.\nPROFESSIONAL.\nJOHNSTON & JACKSON, barristers\nat-law, solicitors, etc. Offices, Rooms\n6 and 7 Ellis block, Columbia street\n'Cable Address- \"Stonack.\" Code:\nWestern Union. Telephone, 1070.\nAdam Smith Johnston and Frank\nAlexander Jackson.\na.m.\ndaily    except\n11    p.m.    foi\nJ. N. AITCH1S0N\nMERCHANT TAILOR\n38 Begbie Street.\nWHITESIDE & EDMONDS\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBarristers and Solicitors, Westminster\nTrust block, Columbia atreet, New\nWestminster, B.C. Cable address\n\"Whiteside,\" Western Union. P.O.\nDrawer 200. Telephone Ct). W. J.\nWhiteside. H. L. Edmonds.\nfr CANADIAN PACIFIC\nB. C. Coast Service\nVANCOUVER-VICTORIA-SEATTLE\nSERVICE.\nLeaves    Vancouver    10    a.m.    for\nSeattle,   via   Victoria,\nTuesday.\nLeaves    Vancouver\nSeattle direct daily. j|\nLeaves Vancouver 2 p.m. and 11:46\np.m. daily for  Victoria.\nLeaves   Vancouver     2    p.m.     for\nNanaimo dally except Sunday.\nNORTHERN   BOATS   FOR   PRINCE\nRUPERT.\nLeaves   Vancouver   every Wednesday at 10 p.m. I\nCHILLIWACK SERVICE.\nLeaves Westminster 8 a.m. Monday,\nWednesday and Friday.\nLeaves Chilliwack 7 a.m. Tuesday,\nThursday and Saturday.\n> ED. GOULET,\nAgent, New Westminster.\nH. W. BRODIE,\nO. P   A.. Vancouver\nPhone 388.\nP. O. Box 557.\nJACKSON PRINTING CO.\nFine Office Stationery\nJob Printing of Every\nDescription \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Butter\nWrappers a Specialty\nMarket Square, New Weatmlnster.\nJ. STILWELL CLUTE, - barrister-at\nlaw, solicitor, etc; corner Columbia\nand McKenzie streets. New Weet\nminster, B. C. P. O. Box 112. Tele\npbone 710.\nI. P. HAMPTON BOLE, BAHRISTER,\nsolicitor and notary, 610 Columbia\nstreet.   Over C. P. R. Telegraph.\nWADE. WHEALLER, McQUARRlE t\nMARTIN\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBarristers and Solicitors\nWestminster offlces, Rooms 7 and *\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nOulchon block, corner Columbia an.\nMcKenzie streets; Vancouver of\nflees, Williams building, 41 Gran\nvllle atreet F. C. Wade, K. C.\nA. Whealler, W. O. McQuarrie, O. E\nMartin, Geo. Cassady.\nA Good Goer,\n\"That'a a flne watch yon've go there.\nCalhoun,\" aald a friend. \"Is It a good\ngoer?\"\n\"A good goer?\" said Calhoun Clay.\n\"Well, you bet your life it's a good\ngoer. Wby, It cun do an hour ln half\nthe time!\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdExrba nge.\nBOARD OF TRADE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNEW WEST-\nminster Board of Trade meets in the\nboard room, City Hall, as follows-\nThird Friday of each month; quar\nterly meeting on the third Friday of\nFebruary, May, August and November at 8 p.m. Annual meetings on\nthe third Friday of February. New\nmembers may be proposed and\nelected at any monthly or quarterlv\nmeeting. S. H. Stuart Wade, secretary.\nPhone R672.\n610 Hamilton St\nSole agent for\nHire's Root Beer\nMineral Waters,   Aerated.Waters\nManufactured by\nJ. HENLEY\nNEW WE8TMIN8TER, B. C.\nTelephone R 113. Office:  Princess St\nJUST OPENED UP\nSummer Goods for Suiting\nHee Chung\nMerchant Tailor\n701 Front Street,\nIVrfect fit und workmanship'guaranteed.\nd. Mcelroy\nChimney Sweeping,\nEa vet rough Cleaning,\nSewer Connecting,\n.; Cesspools. Septic Tanks, Etc.\nSkeleton  Dug U;*.\nTl.o ..Iteloton of n man who had been ] '-.'    .  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd . m.i*,j\ufffd\ufffd\nburied a', least 4,000 years ago re- ! The habit of doing little bosd tiling\"\neently was discovered by archaeolog- ' iromptly und bravely ts tbe best prep-\nisU in Kngland. ration for the crises of life.\nHe Can't.\n\"Before you were married you said\nthat you couldn't do enough for ine.\"\n\"Well. I guess that time haa proved\n1 that 1 was rights-Detroit Free Press.\nThe motto of chivalry la also tbs\nmotto of wisdom\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdto serve all, but lovt\nonly oue.-Baliac\nP. G. GARDINER.       A. U. MERCER\nGardiner & Mercer\nM. 8. A.\nARCHITECTS\nWESTMINSTER     TRUST      BLOCK.\nPhone 681. Bex 77S\nNEW WE8TMIN8TER. B. C.\nD. Mc Aulay\nTel. 761.\nARCHITECT\nCor. 6th and Columbia\nWestminster Junk Company\nWill 0d<e you a square   deal   on all\njunk, and highest price.\n207 and 208 Front Street.\nPhone R 619.\nTRY\nTR\\\nTRY\nWestminster\nTransfer Co.\nOffice Phone  185.      Barn Phone 137\nBegbie Street.\nBaggage Delivered Promptly to\nany part of the city.\nLight and Heavy Hauling\nOFF'CE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTPAM  DfcPOl\nCITY OF NEW WESTMINSTER. B.C,\nJ. Newsome & Sons\nPainters, Paperhangers\nand Decorators\nEstimates Given.\n214 Sixth Avenue. Phone 867\nNEW WESTMINSTER\nB.C.\n5P4==\nOn Chong Co.\nMerchant Tailors\nLadles' and Gentlemen's Suit Made-\nCo-Order at reasonable prices. Spring\nGoods Just arrived. First-ClasS Fit\nand Work Guaranteed.\nON GHONG CO.\nMerchant' Tailors\n24 Mclnnis St., City.\nThe Continuous\nGrowth of aBank\nCAN MEAN BUT ONE THINS\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTHAT THE SERVICE IT\nRENDERS    ITS    CUSTOMERS\nMAKE8     FOR     PERMANENT\nBUSINE8S  RELATIONS.\nTHE\nBankofTofonto\nWITH MORE THAN 65 YEAR8\nOF CONTINUOUS GROWTH\nAND 8ATI8FACTORY 8ER-\nVICE, INVITES\nSAVINGS AND\nBUSINESS ACCOUNTS\nCAPITAL  .\nREST......\n.$4,600,000\n$5,600,000\nNEW WESTMINSTER,   B, C\nBR\/VNCH\nJ. GRACEY, MANAGER.\nT?n PA^lfclGHT\n*Westminster daily news\nTHUR8DAY, MAY 9, 1912.\nCity News\n\ufffd\ufffd *\nWE HAVE.^;' COMPLETE   STOCK\n)F\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n.   & mi ^^^^\nCo^Hangers\nStr||iJ|rs\nToaffrs\nters\nR&Bblders\nBottle Carriers\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. (.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd'\nEVERYTHING IN WIRE GOODS\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*,','   ' -\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSOLD  BY\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ti.. I '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   ' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nAnderson & Lusby\nB. &. M. FISH\nFlesh Spring Salmon..\nFresh -Ha'ib'it    :i lbs. foi\nFreeh Oolichans  4 lbs. fo;\nFresh  Solrk>j,. :t llis. foi\nRoyal Sturgeon, per Ib\t\nfmo ej S1 1'inis Sainv n,    tr ll).\nLottie's Flnfiaii Iladdie 2 lbs. for 25c\n537 rVflSt St.   -   Phone 301\nlbs. for 2:>c\n25c\n25:\n2;>(\n.t5c\n. 'i'lC\n:J 11 i\nTHE BEST CIFT YAU CAN\nMAKE TO'XOUR FAMILY IS THE\nGIFT OF A LIFE INSURANCE\nPOLICY AGAINST ^OSS THROUGH\nYOUR DEATH. IT IS A WISE PROVISION TO MAKE AGAINST THEIR\nFINANCIAL DISTRESS SIIOULD AC\nCli'-EXT OVERTAKE YOU.\nAlfred W. McLeod\n657 C->lumb\\a St.,\nPhone   62. New   Westminster.\nThe regular monthly meeting of\nthe Westminster Benevolent society\nwill be held this afternoon at 2:30\no'clock  in the board of trade room.\nMrs. Pelletler, 507 Fourth avenue,\nphone R 2;>0, has postponed her piano\nraffle until May IS, at S o'clo.c!:.   **\nPublicity ma1 cs   a   product   noted.\ngjuality brings fame.   \"SALADA\" Tea |_\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,      , \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,\nis ho,h noted and famous.\nEdmonds\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd43-foot lo1:, cleared, about\n900 feet from station. $500; one-third\ncash, balance 6, 12 tind 18 months.\nCurtis &. Dorgan, 100 Columbia\nstreet. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\nA very pleasant social was held at\nSt, Bai nabas Episcopal church yester\nday evening. A'musical program was\ncarried (Urough and leficshmentf\nwere terveJ at the close. Archdeacon\nPentreath, of Vancouver, was a dls\ntinguished visitor on this cccasion.\nHow about your garden ? Ring up\nphone L184 and get Tidy, the florist,\nto quote you prices on the best stock\nthat is grown In the country. The; ;\nmake a siecialty of hanging baskets\nand window boxes. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nDorothy Griffiths, a little girl o\nflve, who lives at 329 Tenth street,\niiad the misfortune to break her left\narm on Tuesday afternoon while play-\n| ing with a number of children at seesaw. She was attended by Dn. Drew\nand Green, who found thai both bones\nwtre broken. She is, howe.'^r, doinsi\nvery well at piesent.\nIn event of Friday being -s-.dtaldi\nfor the holding of the May Day festival, the regular monthly meeting ol\nthe Westminster Graduate Nurses' association, which is scheduled for that\nday, will be postponed one week, to\nMay 17. While, the members of that\norganization hope and trust that the\nweather clerk will bear 'dndly wltb\nthe celebration, the meeting will be\nheld on Friday afternoon of this week\nif rain prevents the festival being carried out.\nThere will be iroduce.l this evening\nat the opera house the laughable\ncomedy,\" \"Facing the Music,\" unde;\nthe diiecticn of Bernard Hill, tlie loca\ntheatrical producer. The different\npa; t3 will be taken by members ol\nthe St. Ceorjre Dramatic club, wiih\nMr. Hill in thc lead. Tht play wi\n'ie given ln aid of tlie local corps ol\nBoy Scouts, and as this is a goo'\ncaUEfi, there is no doubt that the\noi era home will bo packed. Any persons who have not yet got their scats\nmoy get them by ringing up phone\nL184, Tidy, thc florist, and ha vim\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdhem rcEcr\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd e ', or they can buy Vten*\nfrom any l?oy Scout.\nMiss Cave-Browne-Cave\nL. fl. A. M.        A. R. C. M.\nMember of the Incorporated  Society\n. of Musicians (England).\n(Successor to Mrs. Reginald Dodd.)\nTeacher ^llfianoforte, Violin,\nSingiijgi Theory, Harmony,\nCounterpoint and Musical\nForm. V .\/.\nLESSONS BY CORRESPONDENCE\ni    For terms, etc., apply   51    Dufferin\n| Street, K#w Westminster. Phone-R4lL\nBUTTONS\nCOVERED.\nTOTH.SMI1H Co\n^^   l x^ \/ \/v-a' i nr *=: o\nNEW CORSET\nMODELS.\nNOTICE!\nS'-etial meeting' of the United\npo'tlicrhopd of Owls. All local memhers 'are earnestly requested to atten I the meeting in the' Eagles* Hall,\nat 8. p ,m. .Friday next.\nw Spring and\nrapid Progress made\non quebnsboro extension\nThe newly organized staff of tfie\nB. C. E. R. is getting down to bu;i-\nness these days. Following the inspection of the Millside an.l the\nQucensboro eitenslons, It is understood that arrangements arc being\nmade for the early opening bf the\nlatter branch. But 2000 yards of ballasting remain to be done, the rails\nand switches are all laid, overhead\nwires strung and everything points to\nthe cars being ^n operation within\ntlie next three weeks.\nWith regard to the Millside extension, the local manager found that\nquite a lot of work remains to be\ndone hcref'\/h*foi'e they can expect to\nmake any announcement of the probable date of opening. Yester'ay Interurban :Manager Purvis and Air. Sterling weait-Z'^ver the Fraser valley\nbranch wltn a view to arranging the\nsummer schedule which will be started probably next week.\nNOTICE.\nAH persons having accounts against\nthe 1912 Ball Committee of Post No\n4, of the Native Sons of B. C. are re-\noupsted to present them to me on or\nbefore May 14th, 1912.\nA. E. McCOLL, Treasurer.\nP. O. Box 92. New Westminster.\nAn Innovation In Gloves.\nThe gloveless muff, which bas proved\nsuch a success during the winter, wlll\nbe surpassed by an even greater novel-\nSummer Coats\nWhere Coats Are  Correct in Style and\nPrices Moderate for Quality\ncig Sail demanded.\nMoth Bags\nMoth Balls\nCamphor\nSeeds\nLawn Grass Seed\nBlue Stone\nKodaks\nLiquid Veneer\nHousehold Ammonia\nSilver Polish\nTHE BEST OF EACH\nEozsVs Ca\ufffd\ufffdc Still in Balance\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd?.r.:u\"r\nThree True B'.lis.\nThe caso or Boz&lt  will very prob\nibly not tome up at this assize, but\nwill  oc adjourned to the session    Ip\nOctober,    The  ) rosscution has aske.\"\nfor a inure beea se     material witness lias not been obtained.   Accord-\nnsly. unless it i- admitted tba' the\nnoney found in thc fossession of the\naccused came from the    bank    John\nSozak will h:r. e to stay in prison un-\ntll the case comes up, or ftnd the bail\ndemanded.   In dlscim-ln-; the amount\nof ball Justice Clement suggested that\nthere  he  two  sureties  of $1000  and\nthe prisoner's recognizance in $2000.\nCouncil for the defence, Messrs. Henderson  an.l   Goodstone.   thought   this\nwas  prohibitive,  but   Mr.   McQuarrie\ndeclared that the charge was a serious one and the hail ought to be substantial.    If It will be admitted that\nthe  money  was  part  of  that  stolen\nfrom the hank then the other phases\nof the case will be taken up.\nThe grand Jury yesterday returned\ntrue bills In the cases of Isher Singh.\nHogn Singh, foe perjury, and Hoe-\nkiner, charged with rape.\nCurtis Drug Store\nOur Large Stock of\nThese Smart Coats\nhas been chosen with rich care as regards dependable materials and tool tailor-lug that every woman\ncan satisfy her Individual taste, and at ths same\ntime be certai i of a serviceable garment; cnats\nshowing tlie lir.,e collar and revers inlaid with\n1 retty combinitions in silk anl satin; also a handsome   a?sortm :nt of strictly tailored models.\nCharming Coa; of wool Rajah; in shades of tan and\nfa.vn; s<iuaie Collar v.ith dec > levers; collar e^ged\nwith two inches of satin; |l;ed on collar and cuffs\nWith blus; trimmed with large brass ball button-;;\nsizes 34, 30 and 3S.   Each  $20.00\nCoat of Fa.vn SH'; ml V'ool Taffeta; luge and\nround collar and re\".ers with notch e.'iect; two patch\nrockets; tiim^c' with buttons co .ered with self\ngi-ods and ce.itre of Dicsdcn sli';; pipings on collar\nand cuffs to match buttons; Eizes 3-1 to 36,\nEach   $16.51\nN6at Coat or Tan Taffeta Cloth;  sailor collar   ef-\n-  feet;  with border of fancy silk; pat;h pockets: trimmed on collar cuffs and back with   self   buttons;\nsizes 34 and 3 ;  bust.    Each    $12.01\nCoat \ufffd\ufffdf Navy 7a\"'cta Clo'.h: collar inlaid with white\nand bb - Jotted \ufffd\ufffdi!k; cuffs trimmed to match; skirt\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtrir.iuiwl with fo ir large buttons in either si.'e of\nback; collar aul riffs trimmed with small buttons;\nsizes 84, 38 aud 33 bust.   Each $lt.E0\nBuy Kid Gloves, 75c\nFully Guaranteed\nIf the sales we are making on these Gloves speak\nan; thing for the value then they are extremely\ngood; and little wonder, ]ust think of getting a\nbeautiful soft Kid Glove at tbls price, and wdtli the\nexact guarantee as those you pay double for; showing in shades of tans, browns, greys and black;\nsizes 5*\ufffd\ufffd to \"i(,.    Extra Special, per pair 75c\nSummer Hosiery\nGood Values\nWomen's Fine Lisle Hose with embroidered and\nlace ankles; In shades of sky, rose, Id.ie, champagne, tan und black; all sl\/.es. Our speciai.\nper pair ' 50s\nWomen's Fine Cotton Hose, with little finish; double     ^\nsoles, heels and garter lops;    in   all   the   summer     B\nshades:\nI cr pt\nalso black;  Blues m to lo.   Extra spec!\n25;\nChildren's Fine Ribbed Silk Lisle Hose; In shades\nof tan, white and black; e>tra strong and nice\nsummer welgfct; sizes 6 to S>\ufffd\ufffd- Priced from, per\npair 25c to 45c\nSee Window    Showing of Special Suit Sale. . .$23.00\nWANT   BOULEVARD.\nTHK 'BRACELET QLOVE.\nty this spring, the bracelet glove. Smart\nwomep are ordering gloves wilh these\nbracelets altuihcd. and the ill ust nit ion\nshows an armlet of turquoise sel lu\ngold uud another design with coral insets. Some of the new silk gloves for\nsummer have pretty bracelets embroidered ln Dower designs at lhe wrists.\nPipes and Hymns.\nRev. Dr. Parr wi..n perpetual curate\nof Hatton, Warwickshire. Kngland,\nwhich living he held from 1783 to 1790,\nregularly smoked in the vestry while\nthe congregation was singing long\nhymns, chosen for the purpose, immediately before tiie sermon. The\ndoctor was wont to exclaim, \"My\npeople like long hymns, but I prefer\na long pipe.\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLondon Telegraph.\nNot What She Meant.\nThey were discussing private theatricals, says London Opinion, and\nthe young man remarked that he never enjoyed taking part in such entertainments.\n\"I always thinkl am making such a\nfool of myself,\" he concluded.\n\"Ob, every one thinks that,\" she\nresponded.\nFor\nPHOTO  GOOD8\nSPECTACLES\n8EEDS\n|<      \t\nPhone, 43:  L. O. 71;  Rea   72.\nNew    Westminster.    8    C.\nSchou Road Residents First to Appeal j\nUnder By-law.\nEdmonds, May 8.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe residents of\nSchou road, in the Edmonds district,\nhave thp honor to he tlie lirst to petition the council under the new boulevard by-law. The request has been\ngranted and tlie engineer will report\nwhat kind of mes are adapted to the\nstreet. The houses along the Schou\nroud are of tlie bungalow class, own\ned by progressive citizens of Fo\nmonds, who quickly realized the\nbenefits to be derived by the planting\nof tiees on each silo of the street.\nIi is ihe Intention of the council to\nemploy men to take care of citalr.\nsections ln tlie municipality, the com\nJo be assessed against the propert;\nowners benefited.\nSCOUT ORDERS.\nNew 6 Roomed Modern House\nSituated close to Moody Park* east side; full\nconcrete basement, cement floor, laundry\ntubs, fireplace, etc. This is a good buy.\nPrice $4,000, small cash payment, balance\narranged. Ref. 512\nWHITE, SHILES & CO.\nColumbia Street New Westminster\ntviflR\nRJ\nWe have just placed on the market a splendid Subdivision overlooking Burnaby Lake.\nREMEDIES\nMerit  Made  Them\nFamous.  See Our\nWindow\nDRUG STORE\nisjng Chemists, Etc.\n!\ufffd\ufffd*a\ufffd\ufffd\"ie Hlock.   441 Columbia St.\nNew Va'aatrnluater   PC.\nBy Scout Master R. P. Day, Commanding First New Westminster Troop\nBaden-Powell Boy Scouts.\nNew Westminster, May X. IM2\nTbe troop will parade at the    drill\nhall on Thirsday, tbe    9(h   inst.,   ai\n7:4fi p.m. prompt\/ to atttnd tlie jjlaji\nat tlie o] era  bouse entitled \"Facing\nthe Music,\" fiven by tho Westminster\nAmateur  Drama;Ic    society    for    the\nbenefit of the First New Westminster\nB.  I'. Hoy. SOOUts.    Dree.;, drill order,\nwithout staves.\nThe troon will parade at the drill\nHull on Fridav next, May 10, at I\"\no'clock I'i'ompt, to ttttond the c.owning o' the May Queen. Brest, \"re\nview order\" with water bott'OS, The\nsco.it masters oxject every r.cont to\nattend.\nOrderly bugler foi tho dty, CcrpoT\ufffd\ufffdl\ntl.i.'.lei- lion, 'iVanp.\nThe troop will ruiwie at the tM'.t\nh.-.ll on Wednesday nott, Ma<  in. at\nV:.1o p.m. prompt.. Dress, drill order.\nOrderly binder for the weet endin;;\nMay 1111, Bugler Leonard t.Vasura.\nTTfy o:der,\nl\ufffd\ufffdt*\ufffd\ufffdI> Fiederfcl; j. v'.v.v --**.\nAdj-taaL\nCANADIAN WESTERN LUMBER CO., Ltd.\n'THE FRASER RIVER MILLS\"\nBetter Stock for Less Money\nAsk the Sales  Department to have our representative call    and\nexplain what makes this possible. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nOUR TELEPHONE NUMBER IS 890.\nall cleared and some in bearing orchard;\ncity water, electric light, telephone, good\nroads, sidewalks, good car service and low\nfares. Every convenience for a comfortable suburban home in a select residential\ndistrict. Terms 1-4 Cash, balance 1, 2 and\n3 years.\nFor descriptive matter and prices, see\nF. J. HART & CO., LTD.\nEPTAB LI'S HED 1831.\nWc write Fire, Life,. Acqj-i'eei. EmJI****** l^aT-'til-.y,,   Autirnobl't\nHid M.tri.-nt tcaLCM.tc.il.\nDp Not Waste Money\nSave a little systematically, (or It la the stun that th* foundations of wealth and happiness are built of.\nMoney may be osed In two waya; to   spend   for   what   ta\nneeded now aud to Invest tor what shall be needed In the future.   Money cannot be Invested until lt ia flrst saved.\nPROTECT YOUR FUTURE WITH A SAVINGS ACCOUNT.\nThe Bank of Vancouver\nAuthorized Capital, $2,000,000.     Columbia, corner Eighth street.\nA. L. uEWAR, General Manager O. R. DONLEY, Local Manager.\nSIGNET RINGS\nSOLID GOLD SIGNETS-Your Choice for\n$5.50\nCHAMBERLIN  ,jrc^\nOfficial Time Inspector for C. P. R. and B. C. Electric Railway.","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. 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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 National Printing and Publishing Co., Ltd.","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. 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