"ee19065f-adbd-46d8-8f08-d54d9a9f4e9d"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "[New Westminster Daily News]"@en . "2015-11-05"@en . "1910-07-28"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/nwdn/items/1.0317240/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " White Rock\nSEASIDE PROPERTY\nWHITE, SHILES & CO.\nNEW WESTMINSTER.\nDUMBER 152.\nWESriVIINSTER WOMAN\nENDS tifEWITHBULLET\nUlrs. Arthur Brown, Former\nTelephone Girl, Commits\nSuicide in Vancouver.\nj,,nt -it the alleged neglect\ni;\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDAiice m- Day-\nTit*Fifth street, New Westminster,\n01 : ' j \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD:) ' ended her days\nM-',;ij(. manner in thf Strathcona\nI\"\". :.. uatna a bottle and\nI\nCamping\n\"WHITE ROCK,\" THE PLACE\nWHITE, SHILES & CO.\nNEW WESTMINSTER.\nCENTS.\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD, a tragic\nL0tet Vancouver,\n,if ol chloroform and a revolvei\n1 \";\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD, to the rashend\nNews of the\nfatality did not reach\nI,M,dtyuntil late last night, although\nZaffair happened shortly after two\nsecured by The\nUe affair\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDo'clock.\nFrom Information ^^^^^^^\nKm yesterday evening, it appears\nthat Mrs Brown had for the past few\ntos been living In the Strathcona\nhotel Vancouver. She appeared to be\nvery'despondent over the actions of\nber husband, who, she said, was ne-\nIglecting her.\nI\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDm ,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD-,. On several occasions\nm,.,l to I el Into communication\nIwlth him at a Granville street room-\nIne house, wberejK was staying, but\nshe failed every time. Mrs. Brown\nbelieved to have made a last at-\n.tempt yesterday morning, when she\nit with nn more success than ln the\nIt was then that she decided to end\nir unhappy days rather than con-\naoue in distressing alliance with\nBrown.\nHer determination to commit sul-\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDIde was confided to no one, and the\nit Intimation that anything was\nrong was when a chambermaid\nleard a revovler discharged in Mrs.\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,v..'D's apartment. Summoning the\niroprletor of the hotel, the chamber.\niid entered the room and found the\nhappy victim of her own act lying\njn the hed, fully dressed, with her\nlife blood oozing from her breast.\nJongside her was a .36-callber Iver-\nlobnson revolver, one cartridge of\nthlch had been exploded, and a box\nhells. The revolver was quite\nlew. having apparently been pur-\ntoed with a specific purpose only\nfew hours prevlsouly.\nOn a bureau in the room was found\nempty chloroform bottle and an-\nHer bottle half tilled with chloroform. It Is presumed Mrs. Brown\nbank tbe contents with the Intention\npoisoning herself before she turned\ne revolver against herself.\nTo the chambermaid's excited ex-\ntlamatlnn. \"Why did you shoot your-\n!\" Mrs Hrown only replied ln a\nlie voir,., \"it was all for Arthur.\"\nleaning her husband.\nMedical assistance was at once sum-\nloned, Drs. Greer and l'oole hurrying\nthe Bcene A hasty examination\nNearly showed them that death was\nnit a matter of a few minutes, the\nillet having grazed the young wn-\nan's heart.\nWithin half an hour she was dead.\nThe body was taken to Harron Bros,\nindertaking parlors, where it awaits\nilsposal. An Inquest will probably be\nield today.\n3rnwn and his wife, who were only\nlarried on April 2 of this year, fot\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDng a brief i.e. uiintance and court.\nNip. were known by their Intimates\no be leading anything but a happy\n\"[*\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD A few days after their marriage\nrs Brown left her husband, the\nWe then making their home at\n'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDRussell hotel, and returned to her\n[other's hr\"\"\" Hrown followed her\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Promised he would treat her bet-\nwin future, whereupon she returned\nthe hotel with blm. There seemed\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD hut inti,. difference ln their\nRations after this first break,\n'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDn\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD habits heing displeasing to\nio5m? \"If,!' wh0 di(i everything\n/\"\"Iti fn Induce him tn conform\nj^w ldeas ot \"vlng. but to no pur-\n*roJn.r,\"h w\"\"k* a\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Mr nnd Mrs.\nIrvt , ,hl8 Cl'-' \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD',n(1 went up coun-\nVed t \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'\"' \"\"no ,lme- Then ,hey\nLni ! ' ' r M\",h were fre-\nVw\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD :\" '\" Westminster. Mrs.\nKCMJ\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDll! coming here with\nbut\nBRITISH HOUSt AMENDS\nKINO'S ACCESSION BILL\nNonconformists Gain Point and Clause\nIs Changed at Second Reading\nof Bill.\nLondon. July 27.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDThe King's Acee-\nsioti Declaration bill ln amended form\npassed Its second reading In the house\ntoday by tl vote ot 410 to 84, The bill\nas it now stands provides that tho\npronouncement agalnsl Catholicism\nshall be eliminated and the clause.\n\"and declare thai I am a faithful\nProtestant,\" submitted. The nonconformists opposed the original, substituting the above for a clause\nwhich read, \"and declare thai I am a\nfaithful member ol the Protestant\nchurch as by law established In England,\" and the premier finally accepted tlieir amendment\nIt is believed that all difficulties\nhave now heen removed and thai the\nbill will survive the committee stage\nand be accepted hy the house of lords\nwithout further trouble.\nTWENTY ONE TURKISH WOMEN\nCRUSHED BENEATH PAVILION\nSalonica, July 21.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDA ladies' bathing\nestablishment at the Turkish seaport\nof Kavala collapsed yesterday, burying\na large number of bathers. Twenty-\none bodies have been recovered. Many\nwomen were Injured.\nLAURIER SPEAKS\nAT PRINCE ALBERT\nIndians and Conservatives\nJoin In Greeting Touring\nStatesman.\nPrince Albert, July 27.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDSir Wilfrid\nLaurior today addressed an enthusiastic gathering of 5,ono people. Many\nprominent conservatives were on the\nplatform and scores of Indians were\nin the audience, and all cheered the\npremier heartily. Sir Wilfrid recalled\nhis former visit to Prince Albert, sixteen years ago. and liis election for\nthe federal house in that constituency ln 1896, when be won the seat\nfrom James MacKay, who occupied a\nseat to the right of the chairman today.\nThe premier paid a patriotic tribute\nto Imperial Unity and declared, c 11-\ncernlug the advent of South Afilea\ninto the commonwealth, that \"no nation could have done this but old Eng-\nland.\" He appealed to newcomers\nto contribute by honest effort to tlm\nprogress and development of the Canadian homeland.\nDiscussing the naval policy the premier said he did not favor a direct\ncontribution because ln some respects\nls \"smacks of tribute\" but In case\nof necessity the motherland would\nfind Canada the leader amongst het\ndaughters in coming wholt-souledly to\nher aid.\nPROMINENT ENGLISHMEN\nCOMING TO DOMINION\nLondon, July 27.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDViscount Dill\nsails for Canada on Saturday and In\nconjunction with Lord Strathcona intends to got Canadians Interested ln\nthe proposed Imperial exhibition in\n1915.\nAlfred W. Smlthers. chairman of\nthe board of directors of the Grand\nTrunk railway sails for Canada via\nNew York on the Cunard liner Mauritania on Saturday.\nmends nf \ \" n nuen a'one.\n{nallv , ' ;\" l!r\"wn expected even-\ner'h,../.-'' \": \"vln\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD llPa\" from\n-u shp I ;,\" ' n\" onp suspected\nCenv''''lS''1' wh\" \"M only about\nta this ri\".v\\"f 'lRe' was wel1 known\nfriends ai *here slle \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*-*\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD a host of\nthe emniov ' ,Waa for 8,)me tln,e ln\n>nv 1,1th9 \"' c- Telephone\n,he madi .1? R \"n T,l^ht dl\"y when\nk\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDa .\",||\"alnta\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD(\" Brown,\n^ Conl\ reaI esta,f> Arm of\n^ of Z Co Llule l* known\nnr wown's antecedents.\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD SS^ 'r\"ly -7-T,lp Porte\n'\"Wag ,L. ?, 0|'1he'- telegram an-\nnf*8* *Wi T\"nlrt atl(1 TrIPO\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nThe Porte r,;1 an'> TO'**! troop..\nk'i \">\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDever5r?at,on la tn tha **-\nP*o,ln(!^e,al \"\"ndred were killed\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDTr~~\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD-\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n**************\nhl8 % ani \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'h\" UbWata of *\nhel,\"iilh\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDii,dU,r,ct w111 be \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nfl ^' ou ,\"ral dub room9 \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.,\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD..\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD;\nBIG SUM DISAPPEARS\nFROM VESSEL'S SAFE\nAuthorities Investigate Alleged Theft\nat Puget Sound Navy\nYard.\nMINTO COP GAME\nSHOWN ON SCREEN\nBRITISH CAPITAl\nON THE WAY HERE\nCITY BAND WILL GIVE [CITIZEN'S CXC f SION\nfirst concert of seasonI LARGELY! IRONIZED\nPictures of First Montreal-\nWestminster Match at The\nEdison Theatre.\nThe moving pictures of the flrsl of\nti\" two Minto cup games between the\nSalmon Bellies and Montreals were\npul on al the Edison theatre last\nevening, and packed the house from\nthe doors to the gallery whence th \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\npictures are projeoted. There wen'\nothot liims on the bill, good films, too;\nbu4 it was ti, 11, turea ot the Minto\ncup games that tbe people bad come\nto see; thi re waa a feeling of expectation in the air until the announcement thai the next Him would\nbe the one showing the game blOB-\nomed out on ihe sheet, and when the\npreliminaries were over and the pic-\ntun- of the bin Viceregal mug as it\nlooked in (lifford's window last week\nappeared on tho screen the audience\ndrew a deep breath and settled down\nto watch every move of the pictures\nto come,\nBefore they were shown the pictures\nof the .time Itself, the audience had\nto take a look at. the crowd. Such\nti crowd! It's safe to say that lf those\npictures are shown in tbe east, the\nold Ontario fanners will have to believe that the west ls something else\nthan an unpopulated wilderness. The\ncamera shows the platoons of automobiles, drawn up at the north end of\nthe oval; It shows the new bleachers,\nIn wliich humanity Is Jammed like\nfinnan baddle in a cask; it shows the\nold bleachers; and It Is when these\nare on the screen that the darkness\nbegins to be punctured with little\nexclamations: \"Why.there'a Bill\";\n\"Pipe Joe and his best girl\"; \"Oh,\nyou Alice,\" and so forth, as familiar\nfaces come within the range of tlie\npictures. \"\\nlt is when the grandstand is reached, however, that the audience is\ntreated to an inspiring display of all\nthe youth, beauty, wealth and wisdom\nof the Royal city. Many of New\nWestminster's most prominent citizens were observed among the crowd\nand few of them looked happy. Harvey\nBtrelght looked distinctly grieved\nGowan MacCowan looked ns though\nbe contemplated proceedings for libel\nwhile the sun shining on A. E, Rand's\nglasses gave him a transcendental appearance. The ladles stood lt better\nthan tiie men. looking somewhat uncertain but none the less charming\nThe pictures of the play Itself were\nfor the most part good, though in\nclined to be hazy in one of two sec\ntlons of the film. A splendid view is\nobtained of the capers of His Honor\nPremier McBride after be had faced\noff the ball, while the view of the\nSalmon Bellies' charge down the field\na minute later, and of Len Turnbull's\nflying shot Into goal, brought the audience to Its feet as If lt had been\nwatching the real thing. It was nn\nInspiring thing to see the bleachers\nsurge up after that historical shot.\nRome of the play was so fast that\nthe camera absolutely failed to cover\nit and there are one or two sections\nIn the film where fhe audience sees\nnothing but a blank field; for the\nmost part, however, a fair view of the\nplay ls obtained. That the pictures\nproved satisfactory to the lacrosse\nfans of the city Is shown by the way\nthey are turning out to view them.\nE. J. Fader Leaves For The\nOld Country To Deal With\nEnglish Investors.\nQueens Park Selected for First Appearance This Year of Rushton's\nMusicians.\nStill Searching.\nFatherpoint, July 27.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDChief Constable Meauveati has received instructions from Chief Sherwood, of the\nIKimlnion police, to board the steamer\nMontrose on her arrival here and\nplace Dr. Crippen and Miss Leneve\nunder arrest should they be on that\nvessel. The Montrose ls expected to\narrive here Friday.\nSeattle, July 27. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD City detectives\nhave been called upon by the officers\nat the Puget. Sound navy yard to aid\nthem In investigating the loss of\n.2,200 from the paymaster's safe on\nthe receiving ship Philadelphia.\nThe loss was discovered Saturday\nnight and since then the naval authorities have been conducting a quiet\nInvestigation. As yet no arrests have\nbeen made, although all the enlisted\nmen aboard the ship have been denied shore leaw pending the completion of the investigation.\nIt was Incorrectly reported at first\nthat Eugene H. Trlcou was under arrest in connection with the loss of\nthe money. Trlcou, who Is paymaster\non tbe cruiser Philadelphia, and who\nhaa not been aboard the Philedelphia\nln two months, has been made a member of the board of enquiry jonduofr\nIns the Investigation into the alleged\ntheXt.\nMOVE HOUSE TO MAKE\nROOM FOR NEW HOSPITAL\nBuilding on Property Purchased by\nHospital Board Is Shifted to Other\nQuarters\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDChimneys Cut Down.\nThe first active move towards the\nconstruction of the new Royal Columbian hospital in Sapperton was made\nyesterday, when workmen started to\nmove the house on the lot east of\nthe old hospital.\nThe hospital board purchased this\nproperty some time ago with a view\nto making extensions to the prpsent\nbuilding, but since it has been decided to construct a new hospital altogether it waa found that the property was more suitable for the new\nedifice than ls the present location.\nThe east end of the hospital will\nbe built first and in that manner the\nboard will obviate the necessity of\nmoving the present building or disturbing the patients until they can\nbe transferred to the completed portion of the new structure.\nThe house being moved is a large\none and has to be taken a consider;\nahle distance as the purchaser does\nnot possess any property close to the\nold site. The chimneys had to be\nremoved to allow the house to pass\nunder the telephone wires.\ninterviewed by a Xews representative yesterday evening, prior to his\ndeparture for England, ex-Alderman\nFader said he was journeying to London mainl) for business purposes and\ndid not expect to return until October,\nAsked tis to the precise objects of\nhis tiip. Mr, Fader said be had ;ic-\ni .pted tm offer of 1500,000 for several\nof his intciests in British Columbia.\nIncluding the Pitt Lake Brick and Cement company. This concern will be\ntaken over, be said, by a company\nwitli a capital of . l.rion.uoo and the\nworks will no doubt be considerably\nImproved and extended. \"My object\nin going to London Is,' said Mr. Ftuler,\n\"to complete the arrangements in connection wiUi thife transaction.\"\n\"Are you dealing with any of your\nother interests?\" lie was asked.\n\"Oh, yes. I shall take with me my\nextensive timber holdings. These\namount tii over two billion feet and\ncomprise the finest selection of timher\nln thlB province.\"\n\"That seems rather a large figure.\"\n\"Yes, perhaps It does,\" replied Mr.\nFader; \"but I have been in British Columbia since 1888 and have always\nbeen interested in timber from that\ntime until now. 1 have kept my eyes\nopen, and possession a good practical\nknowledge of timber values. I have\nbeen able to make some very valu/ole\nselections.\"\n\"But you have not, of course, limited vour activities to timber holdings?\"\n| \"Oh, no. 1 have taken an active\nT>art in many of the chief commercial\nand financial transactions in the city\nof New Westminster and its vicinity.\nThere are, for instance, two concerns here which I have promoted,\nin neither of which could the stock\nbe bought at 400 per cent above par.\"\n\"I)o you anticipate any difficulty in\nraising the capital you require for the\nuevelopmeiit of the Intciests you\nhave mentioned?\"\n\"Not at all. I believe that my\nlengthy experience in commercial and\nfinancial affairs on this coast and the\nhigh character of the concerns in\nwhich I am interested, will enable me\nto secure the necessary capital with\ncomparative ease.\"\n\"Will the new companies have their\nheadquarters here?\"\n\"Yes, certainly. My faith ln the\nRoyal city nnd Its future is of the\nfirmest and the head offices will be\nhere. I do not care to say at present\nexactly what the new companies may\ndo in tlie way of development, but I\nfeel sure that one concern at least\nwill soon be employing between 300\nand 400 men.\"\n\"Have you any new projects In view\nupon your return to New Westminster\nIn October?\"\n\"Well, yes, but I think it Is better\nnot to say too much about these just\nnow. I may say, however, that when\nI get back I intend to complete the\nlarge dock which has been commenced near the bridge, so that it\nwill be one of the finest docks on the\nFraser. The Great Northern railway\nis now putting in the switch on the\nupper way of the dock. Altogether, I\nexpect to have quite a busy time on\nmy return.'\nMr. and Mrs. Fader leave today for\nthe east en route for London. During\ntheir stay In that city they will he\nguests at the First Avenue hotel, High\nHolborn.\nThe first civic band concert of the\nseason Will be hold at Queens park\nthis evening. A splendid program litis\nbeen prepared, and it is hoped that\nthe citizens of New Westminster will\nshow their appreciation of this effort\nto provide entertainment In the evenings by turning out in force.\nTbe program for this evening's concert Is as follows:\nMarch, \"Uoston Tra Pai ty\" . . A Pt \ or\nOverture, \"Stradella Plotow\nIntermezzo, \"Amo\" II. Ingiahatii\nOverture, \"Popular Bongs\"...,Remlck\nSelection, \"Donnybrook\" C. Yolti\nSolo, \"Good Night. Beloved\"\t\nMr. Parkinson.\nSelection, \"Stubborn Cinderella\"..\n I low anl\nMarch, \"National Kmhlem\". . . Ba. ley\n\"God Save the King.\"\nThe eoncernt will commence at\neight sharp.\nIt Is probable that. If the attendance shows that the concert Is desired\nby the citizens. It will be made a\nweekly affair. Should this be done\nthe present Intention Is to hold it\none week at Moody square, one week\nat Queens park and the third at Sapperton or Tipperary.\nBig Crowd Makes Enjoyable\nTrip To Victoria On S.S.\nPrincess May.\nCANNERS CATCH\nMANY SOCKEYES\nSteps Are Being Taken To\nPrevent Fish From Being\nSold to American Vessels.\nTHOUSAND DOLLARS\nFOR FISHERY LEASES\nIllegal exportations of raw sockeyes\nwill be closely watched by the lunula-\nIon fishery officers this year. Tiie\npractice attained some proportions In\nformer years but this season Fishery\nInspector Sword has already taken\nsteps to prevent It.\nHe has given Instructions to tbe two\npatrol boats. Georgia and Restless, to\nputrid the vicinity of Point Roberts\nday and night to prevent this kind of\ntraffic.\nThe salmon reports indicate tin\nearly start of the sockeye run. The\nSt. Mungo cannery got about two\nthousand fish in the Fraser yesterday,\nthe most that has been caught this\nyear, and everything points to the\nstart of the big run very soon.\nThe salmon report:\nBellingham\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDGot 13.500 fish altogether yesterday, of which 8,600 came\nfrom the salmon banks. 1,300 from\nseiners and the balance from Lumml\nand the Oulf. *u ,\nFldalgo, Aanacortes\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDGot 10.000 flsh\nfrom traps and 1.400 from seiners.\nReports from the Naas river state\nthat tiie run there had been very satis\nfactory to July 20, and prospects were\nencouraging for a full pack.\nVancouver Cannery\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDBoats averaged\n33 yesterday.\nBrunswick\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDGot about 500 flsh yesterday.\nSt. Mungo\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDGot about 2.000 fish yesterday\nBritish Columbia\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDForty boats averaged 23. High boat, 111.\nPhoenii\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDGot 5.000 fish yesterday.\nGulf of Georgia\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDGot 1.900 fish >es-\nterday. Fifty-four boats averaged 34.\nImperial\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDGot about 4,000 fish yesterday.\nKwens\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD^slxty boats averaged 30.\nScottish-Canadian\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDGot 2,500 fish\nyesterday. High boat this morning, 75.\nEMPIRE'S POET INVENTS\nBIRD MAN LIFE PRESERVER\nRegulations Have Been Amended\nMaking Provision for Higher\nPenalty for Offenders.\nRudyard Kipling Thinks Pneumatic\nHelmets Would Save Lives of\nAir Navigators.\nVictoria, July 27.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDPeople who are |\nln the habit of breaking the fisheries\nregulations of the Dominion government must beware, for in the future\nthey will be liable to higher fines\nthan the law allows at present. The\nlimit of penalty has been raised from\n$100 to $1,000 for all lapses from the\nregulations, whether by sportsmen or\nothers. This amendment was assented to May 4, 1010, and is now in force.\nIt repeals section 94, chapter 45, and\nmakes the $100 fine read $1,000. There\nis also special provision made for violation under the lnternation agreement with the United States, allow-\ning six months' Imprisonment ln that\ncase.\nFishery Offlcer Galbralth has Just\nreceived a copy of the new regulations\nand Is prepared to enforce them.\nTunnel Opens at Windsor.\nWindsor, Ont., July 27.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDThe formal\nopening of the $12,000,000 Detroit river tunnel took place yesterday by tho\narrival of a passenger train lrom Detroit\nLondon, July 27.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDPneumatic armor\nfor aviators, \"that will prevent toe\nspinal column from being snapped,\"\nis the novel suggestion just made by\nRudyard Kipling. Kipling admits that\nthe suggestion will not be realized,\nhut stoutly defends it.\nHe says aviators should at least\nwear inflated rubber helmets and a\nprotection to the back and shoulders\nnot heavier than tho plainer ones now\nworn by fencers. \"Such n device\nwould protect the spinal column and\nhead of the aviator.\" Kipling says,\n\"and turn an irretrievable smash Into\na mere horrid Jarring.\" He Illustrates\nhis article with sketches by himself.\nLoaded with a happy crowd of seven hundred excursionists hound for\nVictoria, the steamer Princess May\nlefl the C. P. X. wharf yesterday\nmorning shortly after seven o'clock,\nthe advertised time, and after a pleasant passage reached the Capital city\nat 12:20 p. in.\nOnce disembarked, the trippers disponed themselves tis thej deemed\nbest, ti majority taking pan in tallyho\nor automobile rides around the city,\nwhile others Improved their knowledge\nof legislative mailers by \lsliin. the\nparliament buildings, where Premier\nRichard McBride received a numbei or\nfriends In an informal way. Guides\nwere provided to show the visitors\nover ,the buildings.\nA goodly number of the trippers\nspent the few hours on the island visiting friends In Victoria, while others\nagain confined thelr attention to the\nbusiness district of the city.\nTlie Princess May was advertised to\nstart on tlie return Journey at four\no'clock. Nearly ten minutes' grace\nwas allowed for laggards, after which\nthe boat steamed very slowly out of\nthe harbor, her progress being Impeded by the presence of a couple of\nother boats and a scow In the bottleneck entrance.\nThe return journey was made by\ndaylight, until the steamer was well\nup the river, the splendid scenery\nthrough The Pass being enjoyed to\nthe full by all lovers of nature.\nA number of fishermen who neglected to pull In their nets out of\nthe path of the steamer saw their\nsockeye catchers badly cut. Fortunately for the ladies on board tlie\nPi incess May. the fishermen were too\nfar away to enable their remarks to\nbe heard. Anyway, most of the men\nwere foreigners.\nCaptain Macleod. who was in charge\nof the steamer. Purser Ironsides and\nChief Steward Roland throughout the\n| day did everything In their power to\nadd to the comfort of the passengers\nand greatly facilitated the work of the\ncommittee In charge of the excursion.\nI'tiable to take part In the excursion. Chairman George Adams delegated the duties of chairman to D. io.\nMacKenzie, who was already saddled\nwith the cares of the secretaryship.\nMt. MacKenzie bore the double burden nobly, and his threat to le^icti\nfrom the position of secretary next\nyear wlll not be considered after his\nfine showing yesterday.\nS. J. Davison, who hns charge of\nthe money bags, was not in a position\nto state yesterday evening the\namount of money taken in. but the\nOptimists on tlie committee figure that\nthe deficit of $isu which was contracted last year, when the picnic was\nhpld at Blackie Spit, will not only\nbe wiped out. but that there will remain a surplus after all debts are\npaid.\nA photograph of the members of\ntlie committee was taken on the return trip by W. T. Cooksley. Those\nwho grouped and posed for the benefit of posterity were D. R. MacKenzie,\nW. Davison. George Blakely, E. W.\nCook. J. II. Benson, Captain H. Woo-\nster, W. A. Gilley, Robert Wintemute.\nJ. W. Irwin and F. P. Maxwell. Three\nmembers of the committee. George\nAdams, J. H. Vidal and J. H. Watson\nwere not present on the boat.\nMusic wns provided during the trip\nby the Smlth-lnsley orchestra, which\ndiscoursed in the main saloon. On\nthe upper deck A. Wright and W. Robertson, bagpipe artists, entertained a\ncrowd with their Scotch airs.\nThe boat berthed at the C. P. N.\nwharf about ten o'clock, considerable\ntime being taken in disembarking,\nas only one gangplank was used. In\nVictoria three gangplanks were utilized, the crowd filing out of the boat\nwith hardly any delay.\n j\nCuban Insurgent Captured.\nHavanu, July al,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDGeneral Minlet,\nwho two days ago started an uprising\nnear Elcaney, was surprised In camp\ntod/\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDy and captured by a detachment\nof the rural guards under Lieutenant\nGarrfllo. One of Mlnlet's Insurgents\nwas killed, Minlet and two others\nwere taken prisoners and the others\nfled.\nSane Man Acts Mad.\nBerlin, July 27.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDA curious scene\ntook place In a police court where a\nyoung man. who had W'en sentened\nfor theft several timeB, again came\nup for sentence. lie had showed\nsigns of madness, and a medical examination was ordered and he was\nput in an asylum. He had no desire\nto remain in thp asylum, however, and\ninform\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD t the director that ills madness was feigned, and psked to be\ntaken before his judges. The experts\nwho persisted In declaring that he\nwas mad, invited him to give an exhibition of feigned madness. The accused bounded from the seat, foaming\nat the mouth, and l oiled in front of\nthe Judge. The spectators in court\nShouted \"Enough,\" an.l the realistic\nscene came to an end by the prisoner\ndelivering a speech and returning to\nhis seat with a smile on his lips. He\nwas sentence! to six weeks' Imprisonment.\n* \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n* Date of Coronation. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD London, July 27.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDIt is re- \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ported that the coronation of \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD King George will take place \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n* on' June 21 or 22, 1911. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n1 PAGE TWO.\nIHE DAILY NEWS.\nTHURSDAY, JULY 28, 15\nii\n'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD(If.:\nm\n;^\n:i\nr\\n1^\nK\nH\nClassified Advertisements REAL ESTATE CANADA'S ASSETS\nAMAZINGLY RICH\nWANTED.\nWANTED\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDGOOD DINING ROOM\nso woman tor upstairs work.\nApi i. King's hotel.\nWANTED\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDTWO BOYS, FIFTEEN\nyears or older, to learn u ade.\nSash and Door Factory.\nWANTED- MALE TEACHERS FOR\nI . tl and Common schools, this city,\nAppli .itions received till noon oi\nAugust I. R. Lennle, Secretary.\nWANTED\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD10 ions prunes, 10 tons\ni1 irs, 50 ious apples, tor canning.\n.1. lit odor, Box 697, New Westminster.\ntMivKSSR'L s'lTUKNT in Accountancy wishes situation for practical experience. No salary two or\nlour weeks preceding steady situation. Address A, ibis offll e.\nWANTED \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD GENERAL SERVANT.\nBesl wages paid to right patty. Apply L'Ul Columbia street.\nWANTED\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDBOYS TO WORN AT\nthe Beaver cigar factory.\nWANTED\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDA GIRL FOR GENERAL\nhousework and plain cooking. Apply 125 Third avenue,\nWILSON, COOK & CO.\nOffice: Northern Crown Bank Bldg.\nPhone 646.\nOpen Evenings for Your Benefit.\n20 acres on Scott road, close in, at\n$110 per acre.\nTwo large lots close to store and tram I\n$3 lach; one-fourth cash; balance\nJ10 per month.\nFruit farm in Delta. Ten acres of good i\nland; all cleared, wltb good house |\nand barns; 250 bearing fruit trees;\non good road. Price $3,500. Good\nterms. ITl'-A\n\t\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Fort George Lands\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD20,000 acres-\nbeing some of the best land in Central British Columbia, which is being sold rapidly in large and small\ntracts, On very attractive terms.\nCall and get particulars.\nWaterpower and Timber Are\nThe Resources of Fabulous\nRiches. Scarcely Exploited\nFOR SALE.\nFOR SALK\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDAT ONCE, TWO LOTS\non Westminster road; aboul 180\nfeet to another road; for $700; quarter cash. Herbert Gay, Windsor\nhotel, after 6 o'clock.\nPOR SALE\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDA NEARLY NEW FIVE\nroom furnished cottage; half minute to car. Price $1,800; cash $600.\nAddi ess Owner, Daily News otlice.\nPOR SALE\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDREFRIGERATOR, AP-\nply 11. Oliver, 233 Eleventh stieet,\ncity.\nDOUBLE CORNER\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDOn Sixth avenue\nand Eleventh street; 132x132 feet,\nwith small cottage. Price $3,500;\n$500 cash; balance on very easy\ni terms. ITil-C\nN. W. i., section 8, Tp. 10\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD160 acres\nof good land with 2,000,000 feet of\ntimber. No limber lease. $:(5 per\nacre. $2,000 cash.\n^WILSON, COOK & CO.\nOffice: Northern Crown Bank Bldg.\nPhone 646.\nOpen Evenings for Your Benefit.\nROOMS TO RENT.\nPRIVATE BOARDING HOUSE\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nFirst class board. Newly furnished\nrooms. All home cooking. Terms\nvery reasonable, at 513 A. nes street.\nTO RENT \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDNICELY FURNISHED\nroom suitable for two. Handy to\nbusiness section. Apply 129 Tenth\nstreet.\nKELLINGTON BROS.\nCorner Columbia and Begbie Streets.\nPhone 680.\nCLOVERDALE\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDGreat bargain. Must\nlie sold by flrst of August, lu acres,\ntill in Oats, Potatoes and Garden.\nWater at the door. Nice Cottage\nand Stable. All the Stock and Machinery i*a with this place; and tbe\nFurniture of the house. Right In\ntown, where you bave both the tram\nand Great Northern service daily.\nHere is the opportunity of a lifetime to secure a home at a small\nprice, and easy terms. Call and see\nus about tbis.\nKEiXlNGTOrTBROSr\"\nCorner Columbia and Begbie Streets.\nPhone 680.\nTO RENT\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDFURNISHED ROOM.\nAgnes street.\n204\nHALE BROS. & KENNEDY, LTD.\nTO RENT\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDFURNISHED ROOM. AP-1 Over Merchants Bank, Cor. Columbia\nply 818, Milton street. and Begbie Sts.\n- New Westminster, B. C. Phone 335\n^^^!TO RENT.\nTO LET \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD LARGE FRONT BED-\nroom; furnished. Near Daily News.\nApply 609 Victoria street.\nTO LET\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDTHE BASEMENT AND\nstore in the K. P. block; suitable\nfor store rooms, skating rink, or\nmoving pictures, etc., etc. For particulars apply to John Forrester.\nSec. K. P. Trustees, 517 St. George\nstreet, City.\nLOST.\nLOST\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDLADY'S BLUE COAT. FIND-\ne~- please return to Daily News offlce.\nLOST\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDCHILD'S SILK COAT BE-\ntween K. of P. Hall and Third avenue and Ninth street. Finder\nplease return to L'35 Ninth street.\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nLOST\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDSET OF DRAWING INSTRU-\nments in green case. Finder please\ncommunicate with Hope &. Barker,\nTrapp block.\nLOST \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDIN OR NEAR MARKET, A\npocket book containing bank book\nand -sum of money. Reward if returned to Police station.\nLOST\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDLADIES' SILVER WATCH\nwith gold chain, between tram office and Third stieet. Suitable reward for returning same to Dally\nNews office.\nPHONE QUICK IF YOU WANT THIS\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD2(10 acres ln famous Whonnock\ndistrict.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD4i> acres waterfront, and\n155 acres dyked land all cleared and\nready for the plow; balance bush.\nOnly $125 por acre, at regular snap\nterms of one-quarter cash and balance over 5 years at 6 per cent.\nNICE OUT OF TOWN HOMESTEAD\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDOnly throe miles from town, close\nto B. C. Electric railway; nine acres,\ncomfortable little house, and small\norchard. Prettily located; just right\ndistance from road. Only ten minutes from city by car line. Price\n$4,000; one-quarter down and easy\nterms.\nGOOD THING IN BURNABY\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD27\nacres, corner North Arm and Boundary road (dividing lino between\nBurnaby and South Vancouver);\nsouthern slope; easy clearing;\nsplendid fruit land. Price below\nmarket at $525 per acre; $5,000 cash\nand balance over three years at 7\nper cent.\nNew Westminster, B. C. Phone 335\nCITY OF NEW WESTMINSTER.\nLocal Improvement Notice.\nFOUND.\nPOUND\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDIN C.P.R. WAITING ROOM,\nlady's coat. Owner may bave same\nby applying to ticket agent and\nproving property.\nSTRAYED\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDFROM THE PREMISES\nof E, II. Sands, on Eleventh street.\nbay mare wltb ono white foot. Had\nbaiter and rope around neck. Was\nseen yesterday afternoon on the\nNorth Arm road. Finder will please\nInform E. II. Sands, at White &\nS! lies' ofiice, Columbia street.\nTENDERS WANTED.\nCity of New Westminster Notice to\nPaving Contractors:\nTenders for Paving Columbia Street\nExtension.\nTbe Corporation invites tenders\nfrom rtreet paving companies for\ngrading, Sti eel paving laying of con-\ncre'O sidewalks, and const ruction of\nstorm water sewers for Columbia\nstrce'. from Fourth street to Leopold place. Paving companies\nwill be required to state term\nof years they will guarantee their pav-\ntrn and tbe percentage of money the\nCorporation can retain during the period of guarantee; also the steepest\ngrata tbey calculate their pavement\nis sfe for horse traffic.\nPl'ins, profiles, specifications, and\nfurther Information can be obtained\nfrom .1. W. R. Blackman, City Engine'-, city Hall\nTenders will be received up to 5\np. in. on August 8, 1910, by the undersigned.\nW, A. DUNCAN,\nCity Clerk.\nC. T'a'll, .New. .Westminster, July\n25, 1010. H\nPursuant to Section 20 of the \"Local\nImporvement General Bylaw, 1909,\"\nnotice Is hereby given that the Assessment Roll for Local Improvements on\nthe following streets, viz., Tenth\nstreet on both sides from Sixth avenue to Tenth avenue, except on the\neast side of said street hetween Sixth\nand Eighth avenues; also on both\nsides of London, Edinburg. Dublin and\nHamilton streets, Eight and Seventh\navenues between Tenth and Twelfth\nstreets, ls open for inspection at. the\nofllce of the Assessment Commissioner in the city ball, New Westminster,\nBritish Columbia, and In cas\" the owner or any person Interested In tiny of\nthe properties included therein desires to appeal from such assessment,\nbo shall, within tbe period of eleven\nill) days from the flrst.publication\nof this nol ice, give notice to the undersigned in writing of bis intention\nto appeal.\nDated the 27th day of June, A.D.,\n1910.\nW. A. DUNCAN,\nCity Clerk.\nDate of flrst publication tbe 27th day\nof June, 1910.\nDistrict of New Westminster.\nNew Westminster Land District.\nTake notice that I, Norman Caswell,\nof Abbotsford, B.C., miner, intend to\napply to tbe Chief Commissioner of\nLands at Victoria, B.C., for a license\nto prospect for coal and petroleum\non and ln the following described\nlands:\nCommencing at a post marked N. C,\nN'. K. corner, planted at the N. E.\ncorner of Section 19, in Township 19,\nMunicipality of Sumas, New Westminster District; thence south 80\nchains; thence west 80 chains; thence\nnorth 80 chains; thence east 80 chains\nto point of commencement and containing <\"<\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD theless two thousand passengers have\nal \"ll! System ami the alarm boxes ,,,,,. , .\nPlaced Inside the buildings close to ls week by the slx BteamerB\nthe watchman; thai ordero should be BalIln8 for British port..\ngiven that on the flrsl Blgn of a Are Loaded With Passengers.\nan alarm be sent In al ome; and that Delegates for the Euchanstlc con-\na standing order be given to tbe dlf- gress will commence to crowd the\nferenl officers of city fire department boats sailing In the middle ol Augusl\nami onwards to the end of the month.\nIP.\nSilver Waiches,\n1600.\nSliver Watches, gents' open case,\n1750 up.\nAgent ter Waltham and Klgin\n(Patches.\nWatch repairing a specialty.\nF. CRAKE\nTwo Doors from Geo. Adams' Grocery\ngents' open face\nVICTOR A. JOHNDRO\nARCHITECT\nRoom 6, Guichon Building.\nPhone 681\nA. CAMPBELL HOPE\nArchitect and Engineer.\nHOPE & BARKER, Architects.\nNew Westminster \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Trapp Block\nPlione 655.\nr\t\nPALMER\nGASOLINE ENGINES\nto\naud\n!5 H. P.\n4 Cycle.\nLocal Agents\nWestminster Iron Works\nPhone 53.\nTenth St., New Westminster\nJACKSON\nPRINTING\nCOMPANY\nCORRECT\nSTYLISH\nPRINTING\nEstimates Given on Any Kind\nof Job Printing\nfor admittance to the various build\nlngs tit till times in case of lire are\nthe suggestion's by Chief Graham in\nhis report to .1. B. Hunter, deputy\nminister of public works, regarding\nthe system of Are protection in the\nDominion government buildings.\nin the body of his report Chief Graham makes the following statement;\n\"in the senate .ide (of the main build-\nlng) l found a hydrant covered up\nwith boxes and hooks, and In the lib-\nrary there are two hydrants enclosed\nIn cupboards and locked. To open\none required Cue minutes before the\nkey could be found.\nin the basement of the west block,\nChief Graham reports 'that conditions\nare bad,, the Moor, he says, being littered with waste paper, boxes, straw,\netc., and also largo wooden cupboards\nfilled with surplus stock of paper.\nIle further reports a careless condition of tilings in tlie record library of\nthe secretary of state's department.\n\"This part of tho building is a fire\ntrap\nhalf\nRepresentatives from me Vatican together with other church dlgnatories,\nsail on the Empress of Ireland, leaving\nLiverpool on August 26. So greal are\nthe numbers who are traveling to attend the congress thai earlier passages bave had to be taken than were\noriginally intended. The Empress of\nBritain sailing on Augusl 12, had ber\naccommodation booked for this date\nmonths ago, and not only the boats\nBailing trom Liverpool, but the Allan\nlineis leaving Glasgow and London,\nand the Royal Edward and Royal\nGeorge, from Bristol, will be loaded\nwith passengers on all their westbound voyages in August right Into\nSeptember.\nSeptember will see the greatest\nrush of return tourists that the St.\nLawrence route has ever experienced.\nNo Doubt About It.\n\"There is no doubt about it,\" said\none of the bead officials associated\nwith the steamship service today, \"the\nand there are orily a few pails St. Lawrence is certainly going to be\nfilled with water,\" says the the popular route for tourists from\nFarmers In North Addlngton Are Losing Their Stock.\nKingston, July 2G, Al Vennacher,\nin tin; northern pan of Addlngton, tbe\nbears have been busy, and as a re-\nsuit some farmers are mourning tin-\nloss of stock. Robert Comer losl one\nof his sheep, nnd Indications around\nthe Bheepfold pointed plainly to bruin\nas the perpetrator. Aboul the same\nlime John E. Irish, a neighbor, found\nthai two of his sheep hnd been carried off in the same way. Les Wilson, another neighbor, saw three cubs\ndisporting around with their mother\nnear liis Held otic day last week.\nRailway Time Tables\nB. C. E. h. Westminster Branch.\nWeek Day Schedule.\nCars leave Vancouver for Xew West.\nminster ut ;\">;00, C:DO, 7:20 and 8:00\na.m., and every half buur thereafter\nuntil ii:30 p.m.\nCars leave NV-w Westminster for Vancouver at 5:60, C:2U, G:.ri0, 7:20 and\nS:U0 a.m., and every half hour thereafter until 11:00 ..m.\noil pip.\nSjnday Schedule.\nCars leave Vaucouver Tor New Westminster at 8:00 and 0:00 a.m., and\nevery half hour thereafter until\n11:30 p.m.\nCars leave New Westminster for Van\ncouver at 2:00 a.m.. and every mil!\nhour thereafter until 11 p.m.\nThomson Blk.\nPhone 388\nNew Arrivals in\nLadies' Blouses\nAND\nChildren's Dresses\nA. J. BIRTCH\nThe White House 617 Columbia Street\nSg\"tfffil FITTINGS\nSHOW CASES\nARTISTIC MANTELS\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDSTAIR RAIL-\ntUGS\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ALL KINDS OF WOOD-\nWORKINO\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDDESIGNS AND ESTIMATES SUPPLIED\nWestminster Woodworking Co.\nchief. | America. Represenatives of the steam-\nIn another part of the report, Chief Ship companies, the harbor commis-\nGraham states: \"In the basement of sioners, and the civic authorities\ntbe Langevine block the conditions ought to get together now and agree\ncould not be worse. I found every j upon a united plan for an advertis-\nroom and corridor filled with paper ing campaign for the St.. Lawrence\nand cardboard boxes.\" (route. If the traffic grows much great-\n\"In the printing bureau tlie equip- er next year, as I forsee that it will\nment for fire protection is not ample | do, there will have to be steamship\nenough.\" | sailings for England on Tuesday or\nHe reports that there is no fire Wednesday as well as on Thursdays,\nequipment whatever in tbe attic of\" Fridays and Saturdays. A mid-week\ntbe supreme court. Conditions in the sailing would draw a lot more Ameri-\nArchlves building and tbe Royal Mint, can traffic.\"\nhowever, are excellent. Another representative steamship\nIn conclusion, Chief Graham recom- manager, while agreeing that there\nmends that all corridors should be has been a remarkable Increase in\nkept free from all rubbish and regu- American passengers by the St. Law-\nlarly Inspected. He further suggests rence route said that the increase\nthat reels kept outside the buildings would bave to be considerably furthj/\" iam\nbe discarded, as the hose has become enhanced before It would justify an\nof no use on account of exposure to extra sailing earlier in the w*\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDf<1<.\nweather. Wi\" Put on Mop*-Vessels.\n\"All corridors over 100 feet long,\" . \"We have tv carry freight as well\nbe says, \"should be protected by gelf-' fts passengers to make tlie voyage\nclosing fire shutters, which will mini- pay,\" be'said, \"and our experience is\nmize the rapid spread of fire borl-. that shippers will not ship off their\n1 goods from Toronto and other points\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDbefore Monday, which means that they\ndo not reach Montreal until Wednesday or Thursday, so that the freight\nis not ready before Friday and Saturday. If the shippers would ship goods\nto us on Saturdays that would he all\nright for a Tuesday or Wednesday\nsailing, but they will not do this. However, passenger traffic may so develop that we shall be more Independent of freight.\"\nEburne Line.\nCars leave New Westminster at 8\na.m. and every hour until 11 p.m.\nCars leave Vancouver at 7 a.m. and\nevery hour until 10 p.m.\nOn Sundays cars leave Westminster\nat 9 a.m. to 10 p.m.\nOn Sundays cars leave Vancouver at\n8 a.m. to 10 p.m.\nD. J. Stewart, Local Manager, New\nWestminster.\nGreat Northern Railway.\nLv. N. W. 11 a.m.; ar. Seattle 3:55\n.m.\nLv. N. W. 4:30 p.m.; ar. Seattle 0:40\np.m.\nLv. N. W. 12:27 a.m.; ar. Seattle 7:15\na.m.\nLv. Seattle 8.05 a.m\np.m.\nLv. Seattle 4:35 p.m\np m.\niLv. Seattle 11:45 p.m.; ar\nar\nN. W. 2:55\nar. N. W. 9:30\nLv. Seattle 12:5\np.m.\np.m.\nN.W. 6:20\nar. N.W. 0:20\nzontally.'\nFall Did Not Hurt Her.\nLong Reach, Cal.. July 26.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDLittle\nMargaret Porchers foil out of a third-\nstory window of a hotel yesterday,\nturned several somersaults and landed on the lawn. She got up and\nbrushed ber mussed-up frock, smiled\nsweetly to persons rushing to her aid.\nShe was apparently not Injured ln the\nslightest.\nBRITISH FLEET TO STAY\nAT SEA FOR WHOLE MONTH\nEndurance of Men and Ships Will Be\nPut to Practical Test\nSoon.\nPAROLED PRISONERS\nCAN KEEP THEIR WORD\nG. N. ft.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDPort Gulchon.\nLeaves New Westminster daily, except. Sunday, from watei front freight\nshed 2:30 p.m. and from bridge passenger station 3:'.0 p.m.; arrives at\nPort Guichon 0:20 p.m.\nLeaves Port Gulchon 7:00 am\ndaily, except Sunday, arrives at New\nWestminster bridge passenger station\n9:20 a.m., water front freight shed\n9:30 a.m.\nNOTICE TO CONTRACTORS.\nSEALED TENDERS addressed to\nthe undersigned, and marked on tha\nenvelope \"Tender for Piping System.\"\nTender for Water System,\" and \"Tender for Pipe Tunnels nnd Wiring\nnDucts,\" as the ease may be, will be\nreci Ived al the offlce of the Commit\nsioners of the Transcontinental Railway, at Ottawa, Ontario, until twelve\no'clock noon ol the 26th daj of July,\n1910, for:\n111 Air, steam, water and\nlng system;\n12) Yard wider system;\n(3) I'ipe tunnels and wiring ducts;\nrequired in connection with th i Transcontinental Railway shops east, of\nWinnipeg.\nPlans ami specifications may bo\nseen In the ollice of Mr. Gordon Grant,\nChief Engineer of the Commissioners,\nat Ottawa, Ontario, and In the offloe\nof Mr, s. It. Poulin, Distrlcl Engineer,\nSt. Boniface, Manitoba,\nPersons tendering are notified tbat\ntenders will nol be considered unlets\nmade on the printed form supplied\nby the Commissioners, which may be\nhad on application to tbe Chief Engl*\nneer iit Ottawa, or to the District\nEngineer al st. Boniface, Manitoba.\nEach tender must be Blgned and\nsealed hy nil the parties to the tender, and witnessed, and be accompanied by an accepted cheque on a chartered Rank of the Dominion of Canada, payable to the order of the Commissioners of the Transcontinental\nRailway, for a sum equal to ten [ier\ncent 110 p. c.) of the amount of tho\ntender.\nAny person whose tender Is accepted shall .within ten days after the\nsigning thereof, sign the contract, specifications, and other documents required to bo signed, and In any case\nof refusal or failure on the part of\nthe party whose tender Is accepted\nto complete and execute tbe contract\nwith the Commissioners, the said\ncheque shall be forfeited to the Commissioners as liquidated damages for\nsuch refusal or failure, and all contract rights acquired by the acceptance of the tender shall be forfeited.\nThe cheques deposited by parties\nwhose tenders are accepted will be\nde|K>slted to the credit of the Receiver\nGeneral of Canada, as security for th*.\ndue and faithful performance of thp\ncontract r icordin . to Its terms.\nThe Che*,.,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD deposited by parties\nwhose enders are rejected will be\nreturned within ten days after the\nsigning of the contract.\nThe light Is reserved to reject any\nor all tenders.\nBy order,\nIV Iv RYAN.\nSecretary to the Commissioners of\ntin- Transcontinental Railway.\nDated at Ottawa. 30th June. 1910.\nSystem in Use in Canada Proves Sui\ncess, According to Parole Officer\nArchibald.\ni\nWORKS-Corn\nJ. BROOKES, Proprietor\nr Eleventh and Carline.\nPHONE 473\n****************\n,, \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nNOTICE.\ntierstt,?' I8 h\"ohy sU'en that the part-\nUu p l!\"rP,\"fore\nexisting between\n^ nrwr8tglled' rar<\"ylng on business\nmi inters tu\nWest\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Jacks\nfourth\nestminster. B. c.\nVancouver and New\nunder the name\n\"n & Morrison, was on the\nly miihVT \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDf 0rtobpi-. 1909. dissolved\nm\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDtual cnnSent,\nFREDERICK JACKSON.\n^ \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD. G. MORRISON.\nFOR CHILLIWACK\nAnd Upriver Landings\nThe New Sternwheeler\nCITY OF\nNEW WESTMINSTER.\n'\"tiers win w\nUn(,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDnii_n. , e received by the\n-. 1910 fo? 1?.'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD 5 ?' m- of August\nl^ln'ch dla\n\"lfi supply of 1,000 feet\ntameter and 1,200 feet of\nuiameter\n12-lnch\nJ1\"* and r rT,lfr '\"P^'ded\nJoints. 1\"\"lnrh diameter flexible\nsteel\nits.\nActions\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDnd full particulars\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD from the City Engl-\nfinest\nman. City Hall.\nas\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDepud .a\"r tender n9t nee\"\nClt* Hal* v T!NfUN. Oity Clerk.\nIMo. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \"* Westminster. July\nS. S. PAYSTREAK\nLeaves Brackman-Ker Milling Company's wharf, New Westminster, WltB\npassengers and freight as follows:\nLeaves New Westminster Tuesday.\nThursday and Saturday at 8 a.m.\nLeaves Chilliwack Wednesday, Friday and Sunday at 7 a. m.\nFirst Class Passenger Accommodation\nROYAL CITY NAVIGATION CO., Ltd.\nNew Westminster.\nW. RICH\nTeaming and Expressing.\nDEALER IN\nWOOD\n7J8 FOURTH ST. PHONE R\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD7\nOttawa, July 27.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDOut of the 3.100\nprisoners released under the parole\nsystem from Canadian penitentiaries,\nJails, etc., during the eleven years\nsince the system went into effect, only\nabout sixty-five have failed to live\nand\ngone back to lives of crime, with the\nresult that they had to be kept in\npenal institutions again.\nDominion Parol Offlcer W. P. Archibald left last night for Toronto to inspect Jails, etc., there. He has Just\ngot back from inspections at Kingston,\nDorchester, and St. Vincent de Paul.\n, He considers tbe results of the ef-\n.. enough totartib weekji.| ^ made amp]y ]ugtlfylng the gtep\nLondon, July 27.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDThe war endurance of the British fleet is to put to\na severe test during the forthcoming\nnaval manoeuvers.\nEfforts are to be made to keep all\nthe ships engaged with the exception\nof torpedo craft and submarines con-\ntinuously at sea during the four weeks] \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDp t0 the prom|ses tbey made\nthe manoeuvers last. No ship is to\nenter port save under very exceptional\ncircumstances.\nCommunication with the shore will\nonly be made by wireless telegraphy\nand by a regular service of scouts and\ndispatch vessels.\nThe problem will not. perhaps be as\ngreat as appears at first sight. Every\nship of any size in the navy Is supposed always to carry food and gen-\nIt was known, too\nthur Wilson went to the admiralty\nthere would be less consideration than\never given to the luxuries of life, and\nmore than ever before to stern and\nSpartan preparation for war.\nThe coalinc difficulty will not be\narmored ship can car-! tion\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDaround fifteen or twenty per\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD> Too tons of coal, and ! cent\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDof those incarcerated In peniten\ntiaries are really criminal; that\nthe government took In autnori.ing\nthe Justice department to, under certain conditions, allow convicts to be\nreleased on parole.\nIt. is known that only a small por-\nserious,\nrv from\nIs.\nEvery\n.nun to\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDit an ordinarv erasing speed of ten\nknots this Is sufficient to carry them under nearly all circumstances ive\nfrom 7 000 to 9 000 miles. For the ! lives of crime. Most, of them get into\nlir ter' \"radius\" this allows for 7001 trouble through sudden temptations\nshorter rani us . |9 that they were unable to resist. Sta-\n,X way 1\"%*,\" sl teen hour's a j tlstlcs show that It cost, the state\n__ on an average the full supply of about. $250 a year to maintain those\n1 would last more than forty days.: kept. In penitentiaries and Jails.\ncraft such as destroyers) One year 300 men released on pa-\nbave their bunkers re-1 role were watched closely and It was\ni i if thev are to remain at j found that, they earned $110,000. and\nplenished l ney \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\" fe \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD thoae who had faml;iP3 assisted in\n^\"Cr-'-sS;'*T^tons .keeping them It is Calmed this Is\nuev . .ai i j v j i a-nnrl ripnl\nCO;\nSmaller\nwill need to\nt\nOf f\"el- . ... \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD. and 40c per yard, for per yard 25c\nAll Better Qualities in Madras Curtainings Specially Reduced\nUnequalled Values in White Sheeting\nCompare our prices with any other; we challange you to find better value than we offn I\n8x4 Bleached Sheeting, regular 30c for, per yard ?5c\n8x4 Bleached Sheeting, regular 35c for, per yard 30c\n9x4 Bleached Sheeting, regular 45c for, per yard 3712c\nCorrespondence\n(Tlie Daily News is not responsible\nfor the opinions expressed by lis correspondents.)\nMEETING OF LIBERALS.\nEditor, Daily News;\nSir\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDAmong the \"locals\" in your Issue of Wednesday morning 1 noticed\nono containing an announcement as\nfollows:\n'V. meeting of the liberals of the\ncity and district will be held in the\nLiberal club rooms tomorrow (Thursday) ew.iing, commencing at eight\no t jck, when mutters of considerable\ni.i] 0! tance are to be discussed.\"\n. Ithougli not officially Informed, ii\nwill not bo a breach of confidence for\nme to bups st that the principal mat\nter of \"considerable Importance\" to\nbe discussed at this meeting of lib-\nc \"s -tather Inxd. luately called, it.\n. corns to me\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDwill be the question of\nSir Wilfrid Laurier visiting\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDor rather\nnot visiting\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDthis ci'y on the occasion\nof bis short tour of tbe province nexl\nr.'.ov1''.\nTi.e on iss:cn of New Westminster\nGOLD DUST will\na,\nsterilize your kitchen things and\nmake them wholesome and sanitary\nSoap only cleans; GOLD DUST cleans and\nsterilizes.\nSoap washes over the surface, leaving a greasy-\nfilm behind it; GOLD DUST digs deep after germs\nand impurities, and insures purity and safety.\n' Soap needs muscle help (as an exerciser, it's\nfine); GOLD DUST does all the hard part of the\nwork without your assistance, leaving you to take\nyour exercise in a more enjoyable manner.\nGOLD DUST is a good, honest, vegetable oil\nsoap, to which is added other purifying materials\nin just the right pro- \ r f *\nportions to cleanse s^\.l///y.\neasily, vigorously, ^^\nand without harm to\nfabric, utensil or\nhands.\n\"Let the GOLD\nDUST Twins do\nyour work.\"\nMade by THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY\nMakers of FAIRY SOAP, the oval cake.\nClean-Up in Door Panels\nLace door panels, sash curtains, etc., in floral and set designs, with and without frills.\nA varied assortment to choose\nfrom\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDand we Intend to clear\nthe lot. Regular %\, $1.25 and\n.1.50 for, each 75c\nHere's a Special in\nPillow Cotton\nCircular pillow cotton in 4U,\n42, II and 40 inch widths. Good\nfine round thread, thoroughly\nbleached, This is what you pay\n25c a yard for at ordinary times.\nNow, to induce you to invest,\nli yards for $1 or, per yard 20c\n50c Casement Cloth\n35c Yard.\nTo introduce this new plain\ncasement cloth, we offer s Bpeclal inducement: 46 Inches\nwide In cream and ecru only.\nSells at r>ty Property and Houses and Lots. When\nsay SNAPS we MEAN it.\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD**************************<\nwe\n[Victoria Man Will Probably\n^t Dewar Is Sore And\nWill Refuse Honor.\naie\nFamous Auto Prize\nBetween\nCauses Trouble\nRival Manufacturers.\nInjunction Issued.\nNow York, July\nbeen Berved on\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDPapers have\n.,, . \"\"' contest board of\n,.,^ inn Moresby,!;;;;nf;;;;;,l;;,,;^;'i'''-^i'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD-issocia,ion\nM>lii].M| ui!, nieree the big Kame (junction has been grained to Harold|\nlenext Saturday. President Lynch,, (\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD^n.h president of the Premier\n* -tellies, was in Van- Motor Manufacturing companv re.\nI straining the board from\nthe *\"'' \"\n$150,000 TO LOAN\nFire Insurance, Life Insurance, Accident Insurance,\nMotor Boat Insurance, Automobile Insurance and\nEmployers' Liability.\nS. r ADER\nCamp Sites\n-AT-\n451 Columbia St.\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD********aaaaaaaaaaa\nml had a conference\nthe referee quos-\non\n(\nif tlie Salmon\noiiver recentlj\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD | J\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD<\nDitchburn wlll not be available,\nhe has to make a business trip to\nha north and the other man who was\n2' d ^t the flrst of tho season,\nDewar. lias announced, though\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD officiatly. thai he will not act.\nI ,,;,..., aie scarce at this\n.., yeai and tbo managers of\nLe,,ui ciubs \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD' re sort of up against\n.;,,,, >,. !. me was mentioned\n, , ... | tbly be the man if\nred, if the efforts\nblm to take the\n, | ailing, endeavors will j\n, \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ,, . \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Halley Wilson, of Lad-\ntait, in Job.\neferee Dewar has not signified def-\nthal he \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD111 nol act, but from j\ntatenn nts II is hardly prob-\nIt ls understood ''\n,. ... ,-. |i \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD hlch be was treated |\nie Vancouver team after the last'\n- . delivering\n(Hidden trophy to George W. Durham, of the Chalmers Motor company,\nof Detroit.\n.Justice Kelley, of the state supreme\ncourt, granted the injunction.\nTho referee of the Glidden tour originally awarded the trophy to a Premier car. on protest ot the Chalmers\nentrant this award was subsequently\nreversed by the contest board on the\nground that the oil tank and pump on\nthe Premier car were not part of the\nstock equipment.\nHad Good Team Once,\ni From Daily News-Advertiser.)\nNew West minster has one grand lacrosse team, bul the writer doesn't\nthink ii is superior to the team of\n1900, when \"Dad\" Turnbull was playing center and Wells Gray, Barlow\nGalbralth, Tommy Qlfford, Charlie\nSnell and \"Biscuits\" Peele comprised\nthe defence. On the other side of\nNew Westminster.\n*********************************\nWESTMINSTER PUPILS\nPASS ENTRANCE EXAMS\nNam\nes of\nThose Who May Enter\nHigh School on Reopening\nof Schools.\nhe officiated al in Vancouver has i'',f!'',er1lho1'0 Wll!i Harry Latham, Billy\njgusted him with larrosse and he\n. . led to retire and lead tbe sim-\n;, VI tl e close of that famous\n:]l ., 'a.,- almost mobbed in the\nIng room, and but for\nrfen di e of Lionel Yorke might\nve been hurt. The spectators also\n: his feelings, one disgruntled fan\nfins to spit on him as be passed\njer thi land Trom the field.\nthat there will he two\nbe New Westminster star play-\nd and Len Turnbull,\n. Iron \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD tt urdaj 's lineup. The\ntory which Capl tin Gifford sustained\nhis knee In the first game with\nDtreal is fai from better and the\ndefence man will hardly risk\njotbei - ime for a week or two,\n,<-n Turnbull's injury Is not so se-\ni bul ii is painful and will effec-\ny bar him from participation In\ncame. The nail on bis big toe\nwen Jumped on and the injury is\npainful, He mav play but It is\nID; likely.\nIf other playi rs will all be there\ni Con Jones' latest imports will\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD bi : I nd to play in New West-\nis'.er for ti.e flrst time.\nOifford, Fred Lynch, Stanley Peele\nj and Oddy. This was a great combination, and one that had it over the best\ni tbe east could turn out, And tbey bad\nsome wonderful lacrosse players east\n| of the Rockies in those days. The\nj present New Westminster team is\nfast from goal to inside home, but it\nI is their speed they depend on. The\nI old team had speed, too. but they\nI were generals on the field also, and\nI every man was figuring out plays,\n[while old man Turnbull was engineering i hem from center In every match.\nThe team of today will be just as\ngreat, however, after the players bave\nbad a fow more seasons' experience.\nAnd outside of Tommy Gifford there\nls not one who Is ready to quit the\ngame for a few years at any rate.\nYACHT RACE\nTO UNITED STATES\nCENTRALS TO MEET\nVANCOUVER LACROSSE TEAM\nThe Central lacrosse team will play\na match with thc Lorb Roberts school\nteam of Vancouver as a curtain raiser\nto the big professional match here\nnext Saturday. The Lord Roberts\nboys have made an enviable name for\nthemselves in larrosse this year and\nare a hard team to beat but the\nCentrals aie confident tbat tbey can\nturn the trick.\nTbe following is the lineup of the\nCentral team: Goal, Mortison; ,T.\nBuckland, Margison, Day. Swanceskl,\nWatson. Salt. Sinclair, Eastman,\nCourtney, Storm and Dawe.\nseconds\nand lee-\nsschusetts Defeats St. Lawrence\nEas'ly In Second Race for\nSeawanhaka Cup.\nMhester, Mass., July 27.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDThe\nfc:k:i\" yai \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD; issachusetta won\nsecond ra i I iday in defense of\nSeawanhak i ip, defeating the\nMian challenge] St. Lawrence by\nto minutes twenty-four\n' * twelve-mile windward\nWen the signal to start was Bound-,\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD2p in :;,, Wj,)(] >fUs blowing I\n\"eight to ten knots an hour, glv-j\n:;\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDboats i fine test. At the Big-'\nllle Massachusetts hauled her i\nft* smartly and rushed across thel\nJ' \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Id p. in. about twenty vards\n'Oof the St, Lawrence. The lat-\nr''\"wover, was Bilghtly to the wind- \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD in the wake of the defender, so i\nwe honors of the start were prac\n;\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD fven. At 2:18 p. m. both\nw were holding a long-course tack '\nu\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD !tukl'rs island, with the St.\nr\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDealini, ahead an(1 ,he Mas.\nuse\"s listen, and to the wind-\n.v,,,,\"1;\" \"I' to that time the rae-\n\"- .urn,,,, , ,, even ,(>nnH\n,_,,:\"',1I:\"\" wlndwart the Massa-!\n'. . \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD St. Lawrence a\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD minutes\n\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD three\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDachu8ett8\nBASEBALL\nAmerican League.\nAt Boston list game) \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nNew York \t\nUoston \t\nSecond game\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nN'ew York \t\nBoston :\t\nNational League.\nAt St. Louis\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nSt. Louis 3\nChicago 6\nAt Cincinnati\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD R\nE.\n1\n0\nB.\n4\nE.\n1\n1\nB.\nVictoria, July 27.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDHigh school entrance examination results were an-\noounced today. The results for -New\nWestminster ars as follows:\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDNew Westminster Centre, Boys'\nCentral\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDNumber of candidates, 3*;\npassed. 21\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDLeonard Ro. till. 720; Kos-\nabiiro Shimtzu, 703; W. Locey Fehner,\n699; Miller Lougheed, 662j Wilbur G.\nSmith, 651; Frederic Oxenbury, 644;\nWilliam Hood, 643; John McKercher,\n643; John Allison, 638; Robert M.\nShaw, 612; Ernesl L. Dawe, 611; Shin-\ngi Fuszimoto, 608; Donovan J. Trapp,\n608; Arthur Kelley, 606; Edmond C.\nTraves, 595; Mlnard G. Hill, 592; T.\nHerbert McAllister, 589; George E.\nCurtis, 570; Francis Andrews, 560;\nFrancis Meyers, 650; John F. McAllister, 550.\nGirls' Central School\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDFirst division,\nnumber of candidates, 25; passed, ^J\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nRuth M. Gregg. 791; Geraldine V.\nDowd. 679; Edith V. Brenchley, 677;\nBeryl S. Smith, 676; Alice Pope. 010;\nJessie Roy, 666; Olivine R. Robertson,\n666; Dorothy M. Trapp, ilat; Rebecca\nGreen, 660; Sarah B. Eddy, 636; Jessie I. Allen, 830; Iza M. MacDonald,\n625; Margery d'Easum, 624; Ellen\nSalt, 612; Gladys M. Wilson, 602;\nIverna Crouse, 5!>8; Ida Huff, 51)7;\nEdna M. Burden, 5!KJ; Margaret C.\nGoodwin, r,XS; Ethel V. Wintemute,\n577; Florence B. Ackley, 570; Ida Mar-\ntin, 656.\nGirls' Central\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDSecond division\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nNumber of candidates. 16; passed. 7\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nBlBie F. Ayling, 680; Mildred A. Owen.\n665; Mary B. Burnett, 662; Rita D.\nMeCutche'on, 659; Dorothy Postill,\nj 630; Vivian W. Brown, 622; Susie M.\n! Loree. 610.\nLord Kelvin\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDNumber of candidates,\n125; passed. 9\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDChristine L. Brown.\n706; Dorothy K. Vidal, 699; James W.\nWilson, 660; Harry E. Bond. 059;\nDonald Wilson. 633; Frances M. Patterson. 621; Lawrence B. Mason, 607;\nCharlotte M. Prayer, 57S; Jessie O.\nBodley, 669.\nSapperton\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDnumber of candidates\nIt; passed. 8\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDFlorence Hodge, 690;\nBertram Johnston, 669.; Florence Hon-\neywood, fi23; Irma Dougbly. 607;\nCharles Rennle, 604; Evelyn Richards.\n600; Vera Fitzpatrick, 550; Albert B.\nRichards, 550.\nSt. Anns Academy\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDNumber of candidates. S; passed, 2\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDDora A. Vassuer,\n0'il; Susan B. Gregory. 621.\nSt. Louis College\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDNumber of candidates, 2; passed, 2\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDThomas P. Cor-1\nrigan, 667; George Feeney, 662.\nPittsburg 8 12\nMAN CHARGED WITH THEFT\nLOCKED UP WITH MANIAC\n9\nI\nand one second.\ndown the wind the\nIminntB -.made a i\"'i wain of\nZT*m twenty-aeven seconds.\n,,,,., \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.run b inward the wind\nbroad reach. The\nTher ,m.i '': nn chance\",\nBlotto ', ''\"\"' l0B< twelve sec\n1. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDebl Lawrence on this sin-\nPnsular y:\" ' ' ' \"'\" r:u'e over ll\n1 - 't)] cour8e tomorrow, starting\nkivtoll v ' \"\"' ^ctory \"f \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDho\nVr g78!achusetts over the chai-\ntodav f\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD fenoe in the second\nseveral nt \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Beawanhaka cup\nMy ,.','\" lh<' Canadians have\nP liter ta \"ran\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD|einent8 to go\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD tomorrow's nice.\nh Intermo,!,6 La,cro\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD8 Tonight.'\n)i;n,,,| ';\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD lacrosse match win\n:ttt\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDeen tCT8 ,'i\"'k thl\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD eve\"'\nPS faceoff hf,a| ',ons iinrt \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD>e\nIthe doc\" , \"\"u; a( 'n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDf Past six\nRhto |\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\".,U ,r.\" '\"''ho Sapperton\nlaH I'm,.., i, \",:\"' t'outls; Stott\n[!?\"'. r,:;';,!;;'11,.^\"\" PatcheU, an\n, \"\"\"\"> tii if8**, Archl-\n^tPr \"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Sclater, Coutts and\nCincinnati 3\nEastern League.\nAt Buffalo\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDBaltimore, '.i: Buffalo. 4.\nAt Montreal\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDJersey City, 2; Montreal, 3.\nAt Rochester\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDProvidence, 3; Rochester, :i.\nAt Toronto\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDNewark-Toronto; no\ngame; wet grounds.\nAt Montreal\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDJersey City\ntreal, 3.\nCoast League.\nAt San Francisco\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nPortland \t\nSan Francisco \t\nAt Lob Atmeles\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nOakland \t\nVernon \t\nAt Sacramento\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nLos Angeles \t\nSacramento\nMon-\nR. II. B.\n11.\nil\n12\n11.\nll\nNorthwestern League.\nB.\nIt.\n0\n6\nII. B.\n8 2\nBaker\nAI Seattle\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*\nVancouver 1 ' \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'\nSeattle 5 10 0\nBatteries\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDJensen and Lewis; Chin-\nault and Hemenway\nAt Tacoma\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nTacoma \t\nSpokane \t\nBatteries\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDAnnls and Byrnes;\nand Shea.\nStanding of the Clubs.\nWon. Lost\nSpokane &s\nVancouver Bl\nTacoma ^\nSeattle 39\nGames Today.\nSeattle vs. Vancouver, Recreation\npark, Vancouver. I p. ni.\nSpokane at Tacoma.\nEIGHTY TWO MISSING,\nREPORTS JAP WARSHIP\n43\n47\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDIT\n57\nVancouver, July 27.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDGeorge Parsons, who is awaiting trial at the city\npolice station on a charge of theft,\nhad an exciting time the flrst night he\nslept there. He .was brought down\nfrom Rock Bay to meet a charge of\nstealing a valise from a hotel in town.\nWith him came Martin Carroll who\nhad heen suffering from delirium tremens in the north, and had tried to\ncool himself off by jumping into ninety feet of water at Roek Bay. When\nCarroll arrived here, however, he was\nquiet and seemed past the danger line,\nand he and Parsons were put to sleep\nin the same cell.\nAbout three o'clock yesterday morning Parsons was awakened by a ferocious yell, and found his bedmate raving and howling in the narrow quarters of the room. Parsons yelled for\nhelp and in liis desperation crawled\nup the bars on the side of the cell\nwhere he hung desperately till the\ngaoler arrived, and let him through\nthe door, where he fell in a dead\nswoon for a lew momenta. By this\ntime Carroll had become quieter, but\nParsons had no further wish for his\ncompany as a bedfellow, and If be\ncomes to write his autobiography will\nno doubt bave one exciting chapter\nentitled, \"A Night With a Madman.\"\nCarroll is being held for examination\nbefore being taken to the bospita\ntreatment.\nThe Public\nSupply Stores\nAPRICOTS\nFor\nPreserving\nA Carload\nJust Received\nPlace your order Now.\nGeo.\nAdams\nPhone 92\nBARRIE MAY MARRY.\nLord\nfor\nPet.\n.561\n.520 i\n,510\n.404\nHALF CENTURY Or B. C.\nENOUGH FOR HULL\nMAN\nt\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD..J5Pi' Still Winning.\n>W :'' S><<1 188 runs.\nia* as?- nr8t ,nnin\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDs\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*Venn, . \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD- -.., ,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDnn. This Is\nvictory\ns Iind lV.i ml lnnings\nirls \"ciossiva vlctorv f\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD, lho\nTokio, Julv 27.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDWarships which\nhave been searching for survivors or\ntho wreck of the passenger steamer\nTetsurel Medina, which went ashore\nKorean coast, report today tnat\nfour soldiers and | birth.\nof the crew of\nfor\noff thfl^^^^^\nfifty passengers\ntwenty-eight members\nthat vessel are missing and are l\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDt\nibly lost.\nHull. July 27.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDEugene Couture, who\nhas been absent from Hull for forty-\neight years, has returned to his former residence.\nMr. Couture, wbo has many\nfives in Hull, left that city\nwest when he was twenty-one\nof age. He settled In\nbia, where he conducted a ranch and\nhad also some mining interests. His\nbrother bere has not seen him for\ndose to half a century and all his people are delighted at his return. Mr.\nCouture has sold his ranch and mining claims and Intends to spend the\nrest of his days in the city of his\nrelator the\n \" years\nBritish Colum-\nI have seen enough of the Rocky\noh-'mountains for the present anyway,\"\nsaid Mr. Couture.\nNovelist-Dramatist to Take\nEsher's Daughter.\nLondon, July 21.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDThe highly interesting report is afloat in London that\nJ. M. Barrle, author and playwright,\nwill marry the Hon. Dorothy Eugenie\nBrett, the elder of Lorn Esher's two\ndaughters. Miss Brett is considerably\nyounger than the famous dramatist.\nShe Is twenty-seven, while he is fifty.\nAlthough Barrio's friends say love for\nwomen die 1 in blm when he divorced\nbis first wife, wbo was Mary Ansel],\nan actress, there seems to be foundation for the report that he will wed\nagain.\nLord Esher, whom someone styled\n\"the empire's handy man,\" and his\nfamily are well known in Bohemian\nsociety.\nMiss Dorothy Brett ls very literary\nin her tastes. She has tried ber hand\nat writing plays, but none of them\nhas been produced publicly yet.\nMiss Brett has American blood In\nher veins. Miss Brett should inherit\nliterary abilities. Her mother writes\ngood poetry. Lord Esher. who had\ngreat influence with King Edward, has\nfound time to write \"Footprints of\nStatesmen,\" \"The Yoke of Empire,\"\nand \"The Letters of Queen Victoria.\"\nJ. M. Barrle married Mary Ansell\nIn Scotland. July 4, 1904. They lived\nhappily until the fall of 1908, when\nGilbert Cannan, younger than she,\ncame Into the wife's life. After a\nbrief career on the London stock exchange, Cannan had turned to literature and wrote several books and\nplaylets.\nBig Strike May Start Today.\nChicago, July 27.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDA general strike\nof the building trades was decided\nupon at today's conference of thirty-\nseven unions which met ln a final\neffort to obtain a settlement with the\nOtis Elevator company. By noon tomorrow It Is said that the strike order\nwill involve 28 000 men. The carpenters' union Is the only one not affected, the report of that organization at\nthe conference declaring against a\nsympathetic strike.\nWhite Rock\nCan be had at Lowest Prices and\nthe Easiest of Terms.\ni\nWhite, Shiles & Co.\nColumbia St.\nNew Westminster\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\na****************************************************\nContractors and\nHouse Builders\nvVe have a full line of\nBuilders Hardware in this\nBefore Building See Us, as we\nmoney. Also Complete Stock\nthe Best\nCity.\nwe can save you\nbelieve\not PAINTS and OILS\nT. J.Trapp & Co., Ltd.\n=) GIFTS 0\nSelected at Gray's please the recipient.\nThey have distinction, are appropriate and exhibit refined taste.\nCUT GLASS in Celery Dishes. Spoon Trays. Hon Flons, Fern and\nFlower Pots, Vases and Fruit Bowls at prices from $2.50 to $25.00. .\nSILVERWARE in\nTea Sets at $25.00.\ngreat variety from Pickle Jars at $3-00 to\nJohn B. Gray\nww'WlW. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD., WATCHMAKER AND JEWELLER. ^^^\nDominion Trust Block. Columbia SL X\nAccident\nInsurance\nI represent the Railway Passengers Assurance Co. of London,\nEngland, Which is the oldest and strongest Accident Assurance Com-\npany in, the world. Founded in 1849 for the benefit of passengers\nby. railroad, the principle was soon found to be of Wider application,\nand the system was extended in 1855 to\nAccidents of All Kinds\nThis Company has paid claims amounting to over $30,000,000\".\n, EMPLOYERS' LIABILITY,\nPUBLIC LIABILITY.\nCONTRACTORS' EMPLOYERS LIABILITY.\nPERSONAL ACCIDENT AND SICKNESS.\nELEVATOR LIABILITY.\nFIDELITY BONDS.\nEnquire for rates In this reliable company.\nALFRED W. McLEOD\n\"The Insurance Man\"\nSuite 1, Curtis-Armstrong Blk. Phone 62\nROOSEVELT WRITES ON FIGHT\nTU DETRIMENT OF CIRCULATION\nHutchinson, Kas., July 27.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDBecause\nof an article by Theodore Roosevelt\nIn The Outlook, the last issue of the\nmagazine has been barred from sale\nIn Hutchinson. The magazine comes\nunder the ban of the recent ordinance\nwhich prohibited the exhibition of\nprize fight pictures and the sale of\nnewspapers or magazines printing\nsuch pictures or printing stories of\nprizefighting. Of course, it was never\nIntended that the ordinance should\nplnce The Outlook In the same class\nas The Police Gazette, but under a\nstrict Interpretation of the ordinance\nany magazine which prints matter relating to prize fighting can be barred.\nThe last Issue of The Outlook contained a comment of Mr. Roosevelt on\nthe Jeffries-Johnson fight, so lt came\nunder the provisions of the ordinance,\neven If the article did condemn prize\nfighting.\nNo particular attention was paid to\nthe matter until Monday, when Mr.\nOswald, a city commissioner, went to\na book store to buy a copy of The\nOutlook. \"Can't sell it,\" the book\ndealer said; \"it has an article on price\nfighting by.Theodore Roosevelt, and\nI would be breaking the new ordi*\nnance.\" p,\nill\nI\nr PAGE SIX.\nTHE DAILY NEWS.\nTHURSDAY. ,|ULY,.\n23, i9l(r\n.;\nw\n%\ni\n:i\nI\nte1\nJ*\nfe\nfe\n\\nit i\nTAIL IN CAKE BHITISH NAVY m BE\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDHS INDIANA *__**\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n, Dre.itlnoughts, Cruisers and Torpedo\nTraveller Finds Appendage Boats Are In Course of Construction\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD , , i at Many Shipbuilding Yards.\nIn His Fare and Appeals\nTo The State.\nTake notice tl i\nboon made to ,\nHall as the ownei ,1\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Tax Bale I,,,,,;\".. J\ninspector of dvk.8 , , K %3\nbearing date'i ?S\nA-l'.. 1907 of .,,\nthat certain pare, ',\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*' *\nnnd premises Bltti ' .d\nin the Distrlcl , ' \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDMbT\nIn the Pn/. , ,: : >j\nmore partial irl, ; .\ned us Part 3.00 ' Hqfl\nHall\nJune\n'\n'Wl ||,\nThis is the Wonderful New Flour\nthat has made such a sensation throughout Western Canada.\nMade of highest grade Saskatchewan wheat, in the newest, best-equipped,\nlargest mill on the prairies.\nMade with the determination to give users better flour-value, greater\ncertainty cf baking-success, fuller satisfaction with the final result, whether\nwith biscuits, cake or bread.\nHousewives throughout all the West admit that Robin Hood Flour gives all this,\nTherefore, Madam, it is the flour for you.\nThis flour cannot be described in an advertisement. We use this paper\nmerely to give the introduction\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDto say:\n\" Let us make you acquainted with Robin Hood Flour.\"\nIt Is tho guaranteed flour. If you are not satisfied with It after two fair tr'ala,\nask youp grocer for your money back. He will give It to you.\nAdd more water than usual when using Robin Hood Flour. Made of eueh\nhard, dry wheat, It absorbs more moisture producing a larger, whiter loaf.\nThe difference between Robin Hood Flour and other flours\nyou have to find out for yourself. That there is a difference\nevery woman who now uses Robin Hood admits.\nSASKATCHEWAN FLOUR MILLS CO.\nLIMITED 1\nMoose Jaw, Sask.\nIndianapolis, July 27.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDGeorge Williams, tui Indiana traveling man, has\nasked the state board of health to in-\nate thi circumstances attending\ntl ,. plai lni ol the tail oi a mouse in\nbis breakfast cakes at a country hotel.\nit seems trom Mr. Williams' letter\nthat he had some difficulty In Interest-\nthe local health authorities in h\nLondon, July 27.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDDuring the nexl\ntew weeks a large number of ships\nwin be added to the effective Btrengtb\nof the navy, and many others will puss\nImportant stages ln their construction.\nThe Bixteen torpedo boal destroyers\nof the Beagle type are confidently expected iw be in commission by the end \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nof August. Several have already run \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*- not re jisi,ored , ,,r tjj\ntheir preliminary trials. These ves- of the \"Land Regtstn \h\"\nBfiin vary in displacement trom 890 to ed lo contest fie I\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDI' ii\nquarter of Section |\nRange 29, west ,,;\nYou and thosi i\nunder you and ||\nany Interest in th .\nof any unre '.ti\", l!,:\"'inM'\nail persons ch-i \"^ \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD!\nthe said land b. ..\nIs not rejisi-yred ,\nr\"eaBOn he 940 tons, thai is to say from 220 to (chaser within fo\n279 ions larger than the heaviest dor- dale of Llie Qi \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nman destroyer yet commissioned\nThe contact speed is twenty-seven caveat or cei tui:,\nknots, bul Bwiftness has been delib- being filed w*iii:i\nerately sacrificed in order to secure default of rei j11:i :\ngood Beakeeping qualities and long Hon, you dai each t.|\nBtaying powers. They will carry H'.u ever estopped and i\n:\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ||\n:::::':.:. \"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.:\" . \">&[*\n3 bonded!\niei 1 orlod, orT\nIf tons of fuel compared with seventy-!\"11* \"P nn.v f,alm tn\ncase and it is tor that\nwishes the state authorities to Intervene.\nWhen Mr. Williams produced the\ntail of the mouse ami demanded to\nknow how il got Into bis cake, the\nlocal authorities admitted that the\nUotelkeeper might he prosecuted un\ndor tbo sanitarv laws of the state. If tons oi tuei comparea wun seventy j \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*-\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD -v \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\"}'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\na tailless five to LOO ions of (be tbirty-threo- i the s'il'1 land, and I .had ,\nknot Tribe class. Duncan Bell Hall as owner tw\nFive now fast protected cruisers aro 'n fpe- A,id I litrety n l\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.* tbatm\nalso nearlng completion\nthe Newcastle, Llverpoo\nBrlst ol ami Gloucester. Tbe first\nnamed will be commissioned in Au.-\nindlord.luBt and the others well before the\n'end of the year. They are the flrsl\nad-1 protected cruisers to be added to tho\n,;..;., t, nt..' tui :....u'sthetk\ and an- navy since 1902.\nother for serving meat that bad been On July 20 the iinarmorod cruiser\nDlonde will be launched at Pembroke\nMr. Williams would product\nmouse tbey might have a good case\na. alnsi the landlord, for they could\nthen tell whether tbe amputation had\nbeen properly performed, and if the\ntail bad been kept too long before being cooked. They said there wore two\nchances of getting at lhe\none for cruelty to animals in ease tbe\ntall bad not been amputated after\nDuncan Hell Hall\nIn fee. And I lierel j\nthese being Ucatlon of tbis m.u \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD',. [, 1\nil, citisgow. In a dally newsp^pei i. Misl _.invj\nWestminster wh te tood mm s.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nlent service i\\\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.'. .;\nDated at tho I. n I Registry rj\nNew Westminster, '\nthis 1-otti\nuay\n\"'\"\"' i.'.-ii\nOf April,]\nIt's Not Hot Air\nIt's a Solid Fact J\nThat we are selling Summer Underwear at 35 p.c.\ndiscount. We have a larger stock than usual at this\nseason of the year, owing to the late season, and we\ntake this method of reducing it. We've summer\nweights, summer shapes and summer colors in the\nbest makes of underwear\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDthe best and coolest that\nwe can buy.\nBalbriggan, Mercerized Mesh, Etc.\nFull or Short Sleeves\nRegular or Extra Sizes\nRegular $2.00 the suit, for $1.25\nRegular $1.70 the suit, for $1.00\nRegular $1.50 the suit, for .95\nRegular $1.00 the suit, for .65\nIn addition we have Union Suits and Athletic Underwear in a great variety of styles and fabrics.\nWe'll attend to your underwear wants, sir, with the\nkind of underwear that pleases.\nREID & CO\nThe Store of Satisfaction\nClothes Hats Furnishings\nPROHIBITION QUESTION\nMAY SPLIT DEMOCRATS\nBryan Adheres to County Option and\nIs Opposed in Home State by\nOwn Party\nSunlight Soap\nSunlight Soap contains nothing that will harm the\ndaintiest fabrics nor roughen the skin.\nSold by all dealers at ,\nFive Cents a Bar\nGrand Island, Neb., July 21.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDDelegates gathered early about tbe big\ntent where tbe Democratic state platform convention is in session today.\ninterest in tbe convention centers\nIn the county option fight. William\nJennings Bryan has championed the\ncause of the optionists. Against him\nare arrayed practically all of tbe state\nDemocratic leaders. Anti-optionists\nclaim they have a good working majority in the convention, and that tbey\nwill defeat Bryan and his prohibition\nfriends. Recent primary elections\nstrengthen this contention. On the\nother hand, the prohibitionists are relying upon the Commoner to sway the\nmajority. They expect the anti-option\ndelegates to be carried off their feet\nby Bryan oratory.\nThe presence of Bryan, who arrived\non one of the early trains, and the belief that he was to make one of the\nmost notable speeches of hla career ln\nwhat Is regarded as a crucial contest\nfor his political leadership, also served\nto draw hundreds ot spectators, who\nformed a great fringe outside the open\ntent.\nWith the arrival of Mr. Bryan, all\nthe dominant figures of the convention\nare on the scene.\nMayor Dahlman, of Omaha, now arrayed against his former political\nleader ln the pending county option\ncontest, headed a large delegation\nfrom Omaha today, which loudly proclaimed the candidacy of Mayor Dahlman as a successor to Gov. Shallen-\nberger. The headquarters of Congressman Hitchcock, of Omaha, and\nRichard L. Metcalfe, of Lincoln,\ncandidates for the nomination for\nUnited States senator, were crowded\nduring tbe morning and much partisan feeling was evinced, although\nthe convention will take no action on\nthe various candidates for state and\nnational offices.\nSave for a probable endorsement of\nthe administration of Gov. Shallen-\nberger the convention will confine Its\nefforts to drafting and endorsing the\nplatform on which the party will make\nits campaign In the state this year.\nIt was Indicated early that the temporary organization of the convention\nwould be made the permanent, one and\nthat Constantlne J. Smith, of Omaha,\nas temporary chairman, would deliver\ntbe keynote speech of the convention.\nMr. Bryan was reticent after his arrival as to what form his speech\nwould assume. He said lt would be\nbased on the developments of the\nconvention.\nier\nkept too long.\nMr. Williams replied that the local;\nauthorities seemed to have missed!\nthe point entirely, so far as he was j\nconcerned. What he wanted to know i\nwas whether it was permissable at all I\nto serve the tall of a mouse in wheat\ncakes at breakfast, and if so, whether\nthe charge should be for tbe cakes ho\nwas willing to pay, but lf for the tail\nhe would protest tbe bill.\nTbe local health authorities informed Mr. Williams that they wore\nnot engaged in helping landlords collect bills or in assisting guests to escape payment. They did not see how\nMr. Williams could maintain a cause\nat law unless lt was based on a charge\nof cruelty to animals in separating\nthe tail from the liody and in tbat\nevent it would have to be shown that\nthe mouse was alive when tho amputation was performed.\nMr. Williams was further informed\nthat much would depend upon whether the tail of tbe mouse got into the\nbatter by accident or design, for, they\nsaid, if the landlord served the tails\nof mice regularly in the breakfast\ncakes then the guests would be assumed to have notice of this custom,\nbut were it an accident bo would\nhave to prove actual damages before\nhe could recover, for the Indiana law\ndoes not permit vindictive damages in\nthe absence of evidence of malice.\nThe obstacles thus thrown in his\nway were so many and so varied that\nWilliams determined to appeal to the\nstate board of health and ask that an\nInvestigation he undertaken, llo believes that prejudice against traveling\nmen and local bias in favor of tlie ho-\ntelkeeper are standing In the way of\nan honest, and thorough investigation\nby tho local authorities and he hopes\nto get outside of the pale of these influences by placing the matter In the\nhands of the state board.\nThat Mr. Williams thinks there ls\nsomething sinister in tlie circumstances attending the placing of the\ntall of the mouse in his wheat cakes\nls Intimated in his letter to the state\nboard of health. He wants to know,\nfor instance, if the Payne-Aldrlch\ntariff has anything to do with mixing\ntails of mice with batter. He said\nthat he noticed that rattall files are\ntaxed under tbe new tariff and he\nwants to know lf the schedule has\nbeen construed to cover the tails of\nmice as well. He says he has heard\na great deal about the' cost of living\nin the smaller Indiana towns, and\ncities, and he would like to know lf it\nis possible to so amend the tariff law\nas to make the duty on all kinds of\ntails prohibitive and to place mice\nunder the protection of the Internal\nrevenue department.\ndockyard; on August 6 the great\nDreadnought cruiser Lion will be\nlaunched at Oevonport dockyard, and\nIt is believed tbat the battleship Orion\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDthe first British ship to bave all ber\nturrets on the center line\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDwill be\nlaunched on the same day at Ports,\nmouth, She will certainly be launched\nln tbe first fortnight in August.\nFurther towards the end of the year\nthe battleship Neptune and tho Dreadnought cruiser Indefatigable, will bo\nput into commission. There will then\nlie a complete squadron of Dreadnoughts in home waters.\nColumbia,\nD., 1910.\nS. KEITH,\n1 ;('t He. i!tJ\nTo Canada Pern anent Loantf\nlngs Co.; Oppenheimei Bros\nLiability; G. W. Leisbman; J. w hJ\nton.\nLAND REGISTRY ACT.\nRe Lots 5, 6, 7 and 8, Block 3 otm\nof the south-east quartei of Sec.\nTownship 8, Map 628, |n the DisJ\nAll previous records at Messrs. John Jof New Westmlnstei, Cloverdale,\nSaul White and company's yards at Whereas proof of the loss ol \"*-\n('owes, have been beaten by the rapid j cate of Title Numbei L2454 F,\nbuilding of the new ocean-going de- J In the name of K. T Wilson H\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD|\nstroyer Redpole, which was launched; has been filed in this ofllce,\nyesterday. Despite the fact that thej Notice Is hereby given that I il\nfirm ls busy with two similar vessels at the expiration of one month fl\nit has been completed in a little over: the date of the first publication!\nsix months. |of, ln a dally newspaper publlsW\n--\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD -\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD 'the City of New Westminster,in\nduplicate of the said Certificate,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD_\nln the meantime valid uhjectioi|\nmade to me in writing.\nC. 8, KEITH,|\nDistrict Ileglstrar ol\nLand Registry Offlce,\nNew Westminster, B. t'., July >.\nLIBERAL WELCOME ARCH\nBREAKS CONSERVATIVE HEAD\nSaskatoon, Sask., July 27.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDDuring\na heavy wind and rain storm about\nsi\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD o'clock tonight the framework of\nthe end of one of tbe grain arches\nerected for the Laurier visit here\non Friday was caught In a whirlwind and toppled over. Just at the\nmoment Dr. H. B, Munroe came along\nthe street In an automobile and reached tbe arch just as it fell, the timbers striking tbe auto and demolishing the machine. The doctor was bit. Sealed tenders, addressed tott|\nby falling boards and received nasty derslgned, and marked on tie\ncuts about tbe face and head. Only t velope \"Tenders for Royal Cola\nProvidence saved him from Instant Hospital,\" will be received il\ndeath, as tbe fall of timbers which lo****** of the Secretary, ThomiOl\ndid most of the damage was relieved N>w Westminster,\nNOTICE TO CONTRACTORS!\nTenders for Royal Co'umbian\npital, New Westminster, B. CJ\nWestminster, B,\nby the cover supports right above the!oVlock noon' of Monday\ndoctor's head. A peculiar co-lncl- !day (,f August, 1910.\ndence about the affair Is that Dr. Monroe was the Conservative candidate\nin the Federal election hero four\nyears ago.\nuntil\nUie fiftti\nSoda Water Factory\nM. A. HODGE, Proprietor.\n304 Columbia St. Phone 089.\nSapperton.\nMisused Royal Arms.\nLondon, July 27.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDA business man\nhas discovered that it is a crime to\nhave the British royal arms printed\non your letter paper. William Whitman established himself at Portsmouth as the Imperial Stencil company, and his business letters bore the\nHon and unicorn as a decoration. A\nclient of his at Tonbrldge, Kent, having a grievance against him, informed\nthe authorities, with the result that\nthe citizen was haled before the magistrate and fined $32 or a month Imprisonment In default. The use of the\nroyal arms as a trademark is confined\nto those tradesmen who are royal\nwarrant-holders (appointed purveyors\nto the royal family) and no one ls allowed to use the sign for business\npurposes without the king's permission.\nCHINAMAN THROWS HOT SOUP\nON HOTEL CHAHBERMAID\nRevelstoke, July 27.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDA dastardly\nassault was made this week by a Chinese cook, employed at the Oriental\nhotel, upon one of the hotel chambermaids. It appears that the girl was\nIn the kitchen putting Irons on the\nstove, to which the Chink objected.\nWords soon followed, tbe Chink finally getting in a rago. and catching up\na largo pan of boiling soup, hurled\nthe contents full in the girl's face, the\nhot liquid causing dreadful scalds.\nThe Chink was arrested and\nbrought up this morning at the police court on a charge of assault, being changed from assault with Intent\nto do bodily harm.\nG. S. McCarter appeared for the\nprosecution. The charge was proved\nand the accused was fined $57.50 in\nall. The fine was paid.\nFeeling ran high when the affair became known, and lt would not have\ntaken much to cause the men ln that\nvicinity of the hotel to have lynched\nthe Chinaman for his brutal deed.\nNew Georgian Coinage.\nLondon, July 27.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDThe new Georgian coinage will differ from the present design only In the portrait of the\nking, the reverse side being left as\nnow. The design for the head of\nGeorge V. has been entrusted to Bertram McKennal, associate of the Royal Academy, an Australian sculptor,\nwho will also design the medal to commemorate the new king's coronation.\nMr. McKennal has been favored with\nmany royal commissions for sculpture.\nHe has executed statutes of Queen\nVictoria for India, Australlta, and\nBlackburn, Lancashire. He will also\nHOSPITAL\nWestminster Private Hospital.\n223 Townsend St. Maternity\nand non-contagious medical\ncases accepted. Terms from\n$15 weekly. For further particulars apply to Hospital. Telephone 755.\nDistrict of New Westminster.\nNew Westminster Land District.\nTake notice that I, J. A. McGowan,\nof Abbotsford, B.C., accountant, intend to apply to the Chief Commissioner of Lands at Victoria, B.C., for\na license to prospect, for coal and petroleum on and ln the following described lands:\nCommencing at a post marked J.\nA. McG., S. VV. corner, planted at the\nS. W. corner of Section 33, in Township 19, Municipality of Sumas, New\nWestminster District; thence north\n80 chains; thence east 80 chains'\nthence south 80 chains; thence west\n80 chains'to point of commencement\nand containing G40 acres.\nDated at Abbotsford, B.C., this Oth\nday of June, A.D., 1910.\nJ. A. McGOWAN.\nPlans and specifications marl\nI seen at the office of the architf\nj Messrs. Birds & Blackmore, 3041\nI block, Vancouver, B, C, or\nSecretary's ofllce, Thomson\nNew Westminster, B. C.\nKach tender must be sipiell\nsealed by all the parties to tbel\nder, and witnessed, and he at{\npanled by an accepted cheque <\nchartered bank, payable to the \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nof the Board of Managers of thel\nColumbian Hospital, equal to fivel\ncent of the amount of tho tender!\nAny person whoso tender is M\ned, shall, within one week afwl\nacceptance thereof, sl. n the conT\nspecifications and otber document\nquired to be signed, nnd '\" aWl\nof refusal or failure on the m\nthe party whose tender lu accept*\ncomplete and execute tho <*\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nwith the Board of Manager*, W\nchequo shall be forfeited totMl\nof Managers as liquidated daOffl\nsuch refusal or failure. L\nThe person whose tender B\ncepted. will be required to Fl\na bond satisfactory to the \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDM1\nManagers, equal to ten l\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDr cel\nthe amount of the contract\nThe cheque deposited W\nwhose tenders are reject**\nreturned within ten days sue |\nsigning of the contrail.\nThe lowest, or any lender,:\nessarlly accepted. \-vhit\nSecretary Royal Columbian \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\"\"'i\nP. O. Box 59.\nNew Westminster. B. <*\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n1910.\nBank of MonW\nESTABLISH!-'.!) I?17'\nCAPITAL\nRESERVE\n$14,4 W\n11,000.*\nDistrict of New Westminster.\nbe responsible for\nstatutes of King E\ned at Adelaide, South Australia.\nNew Westminster Land District\nTake notice that I, T. Walters' of\nAbbotsford, B.C., engineer, intend to\napply to the Chief Commissioner of\nLands at Victoria, B.C., for a license\nto prospect for coal and petroleum on\nand In the following described lands'\nCommencing at a post marked T W\nS. W. corner, planted at the S W\ncorner of Section 32, In Township io'\nMunicipality of Sumas, New West-\nminster District; thence north 80\nchains; thence east 80 chains; thence\nsouth 80 chains; thence west 80\nchains to point of commencement and\ncontaining 640 acres\n, , , f ,., ,.Jone of the flrst' Dated ^ Abbotsford, B.C this oth\nstatutes of King Edward, to be erect- day of June, A.D 1910 '\ntart n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD AHolnUo Cm,ll, \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD..\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD._-,i_ * ' \"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDI _>\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*>\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nT. WALTERS.\nCitH*-- \\n/>ndoiW\nnd m\nBranches throughout\nI Newfoundland, anu in\nland, New York, Chicago a g\nand Mexico City. ,\ntransact*11'\navaiaM\nU.S.A.,\nbanking business\nters of Credit Issued. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD>\";, ,;\ncorrespondents in\nworld. nt\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDW\nSavings Bank DJpi't,',c\"'d \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDp\nannum (present rate). o0|0\nTotal Assets over W-'v\nNEW WESTMINSTER B\nO. D. BRYMNKK.\nRAH\nMa\"1\nTry a \"WANT\" ad I\"\nIt yill bring results.\nThe\n-^&l\s*. THU.SSAY..O^^\nDIRECTORY\nTHE DAILY NEWS.\nPAGE SEVEN.\nul'-\nKJEW WKS'l\n. .. , ts tUf\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*i .. | now.:\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDf each nioniii:\n,, tbe tmra\nMay, August\n. , p.m Annual\nThursday or\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD rs may be\ni . ,i any month-\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD' \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD* c- a\n1\t\nPRINTERS,\n.. ild ol J\ni I\nKirf>.p*\nMILLING COMPANY\nLOSES MILLIONS\nMOOSE\nTO\nJAW NEXT CITY\nHAVE STREET RAILWAY\n;\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDi,\nV, fffl\n, i arbon Papers,\np 0 box 142. Old\nSixth street.\nANO TUNING.\nPI\nnmToRGANS TUNED AND\nlocal tuner, W. B.\nIsrtln, M\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'\" :\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD .615.\n81] lhibllu St.,\nLABOR AGENTS.\nAGENTS! MANA-\ni. Powell Btreet,\n3575. Prompl\nall orders for\n1 , '-islt us.\nIAST\nI, C\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n\"professional^\nEDMONDS, BARR18-\nors, Westminster\nmbia Btreet, New\nv. J, Whiteside, m.\n.: \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n| McQUARRlE &\nT,iTl\ \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD and Solicitors,\nL :; , Rooms 7 and 8\nt tii ! Columbia and\nts; Vancouver of-\nI building, -11 Gran-\nI'. C, Wad.', K. C;\n, , w, G, McQuarrie, G. E\nrt In\nFACE INSURANCE\nYoll\nItte,\n, etc.\nlouse,\nWhy\ninsure your\nbusiness holdings, etc\nnot your face.\nThe policy of thc \"Gillette\"\nis to insure you against further\nshaving troubles, dull unhoncd\nrazors, culs, time lost, money spent.\nA Gillette Safely Razor\nestablishes a long term insurance\npolicy for your face,\nMik or write fur our free booklet\nexplaining a hundred and one\nthings you ought to know abou*\nsharing and the care of your face.\nI \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Hi tl\nof triple\nlasl ., Itfetl\nliia.I\n. nfeti\nv R itoi Si i onulnts\n; I holili i thui \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD i\n.. , with . i\nI \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'! Icri n \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD [Jl, i\nleatni i . .1.. rn..\nCombination Seta\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDBrush, Bono etc\n$6.50 to $50.00\nSold By\nKIRK'S HARDWARE\nPillsbury-Washburn\nMills Found To Be In Bud\nFinancial Stale.\nJuly 2; ii rectoi\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD...:.!\nLtd\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ints tor ii;\nMoose .law, July .7.-The lirst move\ntoward actual construction of Moose\n.law s street ratlwaj was m ide lasl\nwei k \* ben the rallwaj companj\nfded to Kettle Rtver Paving and\n1 1 nstructlon com] anj, now pat Ing\nFlour \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDN!:ii\" Btreet, the contracl of laying\nties In the paved area. Ties have be< n\n01 di red ii \"in .1 coasl lumber company\nand 1 he 1 allwaj companj have e\erj\nthing In readiness to iill out their\npan of the contract.\nThe companj Intend to have lour or\nflve miles ot road In operation bj this\nfall, wiih ten minute service for six\nnionlhs and after thai period\nW_> I Tm/iriCOll/' *? Sometimes people do, and suffer,\nran^. UlftVWl^^lJ' \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD because the stomach balk*,\nrelieve the discomfort at once, and help dlgesl the overload. The lover of fjood\nthings: nay feel quite sale with a box of NA-DRU-CO Dyspepsia Tablets at hand.\nlf your druggist has not stocked them yet send 50c. and we\n50c. a box\nwill mail them.\nN.t,*n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDl D,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD, .nd Ch>mjr\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDl Co. of C\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDn\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD* I' II, I II I , , I lll,|, (Ml IHI) ,| I |J J I-\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD 'i'<'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD a irw days ago and ni,li: schedule wlll be decided between\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD the citj ami ihe company.\nof\neai were presented\n_*\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Passed after a stormy session R.\n\"\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Glw. chairman ol the board, who\nPresided al the meeting, referred to\nll'e apalling loss nf $4,000,000,\" as\nshown bj the report, Baying; \"U was\n,l'\"' i';,,,l> to 1 ods which can hard-\nJ l<- called bj anj other name than\n1 ll:\"' The question of restitution\nProceedings will have to be carefullj\nidered \"\nJohn MacDonald Henderson, mem- the ,.\nol the house ol commons, declared\nbe was pre] 1 d to And the monej In\nllls \"\"\" i'\"< kel in probe to ti nd a\nsituation ni affairs which Director\n( loutle characterized\neati \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD 1\nHi 1\nMl thai o i:\nnl been\nTo Build Warships.\nVictoria, Julj 27, Ten lers were In\nvlted here today for the construction g' vv' corn\n\"i a 11 ulser of the Bristol type. The\nBritish Columbia Marine\ncompany has announced Its determlna\ntlon in tender for the construction of\nas \"one of the\ncompanj bi andals ol modern\nNOTICE TO CONTRACTORS\nSi\nled Tenders addressed to the un-\nlerBlgned, and marked on the enve-\n.\"i e i'i ndi is foi Sewer,\" wlll be re\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDcon cil al the offlce ol the Commis\nost, most- sioners of the Transcontinental Rail-\n''\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD'' gambling and on Improp- wav. al Ottawa, Ontario, until twelve\n*'\"> ' \"' ;\"\"\"s' Another $1,450.- o'clock noon of the 26th day of July,\n\"\"\". he added, was nol Irai eable, and 1910 '\nV, .i\"1\" had 1 n lust iu agents' ba\nTake notice thai 1, J. F. Boyd\nAbbotsford, B.C., lumberman, intend\nto apply to the chief Commissioner of\nLands at Victoria, B.C., for a license\nto prospect for conl and petroleum on\nand in the following described lands:\nCommencing at a post marked J,\n' . B., s. VV. corner, planted at the\nor of Section 24, in Township 16, Municipality of Sumas, New\nwaj Westminster District: thence north fin\nchains; thence easl so chains; thence\nsouth Si) chains; thence west 80\nchains to poini of commencement and\ncontaining 640 acres.\nDated al Abbotsford, B.C., this oth\nday or .lune. A 1)., 1*110.\nJ. F. HOYD.\nGlyn dei I.ned thai a\nI Ihe monej h\n1} In wl\nAnothei\nDistrict ot New Westminster.\nam\n\" ' ' \"' 'I\" _'M1| ,|,l \ I'l ,ll|l\,\nfor the excavation, construction.\nNew Westminster Lard District.\nTal-rcr and Undertaker,\npr Art** ftn,| McKenzie streets.\n! 176, night call 81.\nCABINET MAKING.\nLEWTHWAITB,\n* ti rer\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDfuture :\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\" Im nit\nCABINET-\n425 Clark-\nBurr Slock).\n' I repaired. Mia-\n'ore In n. and oak.\nm\nWoodworking.\nUi''Vst!:r woodworking\nlintt \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDiffle* ttna stlJre Bttlns8;\niV; 1 alr- 'cases, man ten\n\m;*n work. Deal, ns and esti-\ntarnished\n, r' Works\n? Car line, p\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDI Brookes, pro-\n: Corner Eleventh\n0. box 254, i*none\nP^HANGINO & DECORATING.\nRae & McLellan\nTrapp Block\nPhone 714\nGOOD\nTIME\nto take up a good subdivision proposition is\nright now. By the time\nyou are in shape to put\nit on the market, realty\nwill be active again.\nWe have 160 acres in\nCoquitlam that we can\nsell at $90 on good\nterms. Subdivided into\n5 acre blocks this will\nreadily sell for $200 to\n$250. Small blocks in\nthis vicinity have already been sold at as\nhigh a figure as $300\nper acre.\nThink it over and talk to\nRae & McLellan\nTrapp Block\nPhone 714\n - w - Any person whose tender Is ac-\ned to about .5,200,00(1, have heen set- copied shall, within ten days after the\nUed with. Under this scheme the Kt.nin. thereof, sign the contract,\nmills, trademarks and goods will bave speciflcaUons, and other documents\nbei n leased to an operating company required to be signed\nformed in the l'nited States with a of refusa\ncapital of $2.000.111111.\nU.S. STEEL corporation;\nEARNS MANV MILLIONS\nOver Forty Million Dollars Is Taken\nin by Great American Trust\nin Three Months.\nand In any case\nor failure on tbe part of the\nparty whose tender Is accepted to exe-\n! cute and complete the contract with\nthe Commissioners, the said chorine\nshall be forfeited to the Commissioners as liquidated da.na. es for such\nrefusal or failure, and all contract\nrights acquired by the acceptance of\nthe tender shall be forfeited.\nThe cheque deposited by parties\nWhose tenders is accepted will be deposited to the credit of the Receiver\nGeneral of Canada, as security for the\n;due and faithful performance of the\ncontract according to its terms.\nThe cheques deposited by parties\nWhole tenders are rejected will be returned within ten days after the sign-\nNow York. .July 27.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDThe quarterly tog of tbe contract\nstatement of the l'nited States Steel\nCorporation for three months ending June 30, last Issued today, shows\ntotal earnings of J40.170.960, an\namount far In excess of unofficial esti-\nThe right Is reserved to reject any\nor all tenders.\nBy order.\nP. E. RYAN,\nSecretary.\n. moiiui lai in i'.mi'ss oi iiihiiih i.n et.u-! , - -\nmates, and greater than the earnings! The Commissioners of the Transcontl-\n !,,,., t,. i i \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.,; I ,t \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD , i\not the first quarter, by $3,564,084. The\nnet earnings for the quarter were $?..\".,-\n880,766, or $2,877,661 greater than the\nnental Rallw\nDated nt Ottawa. July 8. 101 n.\nNewspapers inserting this advertise-\ninnil.ii,,), ill . ,.ni.'i\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDi Kj^mtri ii,,iii int. - - - _\ni first quarters returns. Both gross and ment without authority from the Com\nmissioners will not be paid for It. **\n&S0 .,\nPI41D\nw.\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDALL PAPER,\nPis '\nEL* .nd* '-''Wining'.\"\".*.\"^\n|e.,x \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,\"!,. decorating. sixtn\nKOO.YI\nand Sanltas;\nNe* Wegtm.nster\nmachine works.\ndie?*f5.Hachinb works,\n!\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDster m et' New West-\n, and ,hi? ,acturer\" of modern\n111 Plantt ml\" macninery,\nand sycrlflcationa pre-\nFIRE APPLIANCES.\nFIRE\nest\nR.\nEXTINGUISHERS. THE LAT-\nin fire fighting apparatus.\nHarris & Co., Lavery block,\nnet earnings are vastly larger than\nthose of the corresponding quarter\nlast year which were $29,340,421 and\n$23,323,396 respectively.\nIn contrast to the earnings Wall\nstreet expressed disappointment at\ni the exhibition of unfilled orders as set ^\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDw*ni\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDiu ummp\ni forth in todays report. They are only SYNOPSIS QPf\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD**}\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD.LH0M\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD-\n' 1.253,794 tons, a falling off of 1.344.- STEAD REGULATIONS.\n1575 tons from the previous quarter |\nIin this connection it was unofficially Any available Dominion Lands wltn-\nstated that the reports show only tbe In the railway belt In British Colum-\nnon-cancellable business. bia, may be homesteaded ^y any per\nPursuant to the corporation's policy \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDon wno Is the sole head of a family\nOf publication the directors today or- or any male over 18 years of age, to\ndered that the officers hereafter make the extent of oiw-quarter section of\ni pnbllc on the tenth day of each month, 160 acres, more or less.\n! the aggregate tonnage of unfilled or- Entry must be made personally at\nders on hand at the close of the pre- tha local land offlce for the district\n, vill,',s mont'i In wllich thp land ls s'tuaie' b'aUy\nThe charge off for depreciation and by proxy may, however, he made on\niextraordinary expense for the last certain conditions by the father,\nnuarter ww $6,569,949, as against $6, mother, son. daughter, brother or 81*\n829232 in the previous quarter, ancl ter of an Intending homesteader.\ntr m ,,,, in the same Quarter of 1909 The homesteader is required to per-\nmnrter of the vear. ancl $6,894,244 in plans:\no' \"rresponcling quarter last year, (1) At least six months' residence\n, T1.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD of $6 10 was set aside fur \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDpon and cultivation of the land on\naccount of expenditure made, and t-o ach year for three years.\nbe made for additional property, new (2) If the father ( or mottier, lf tne\nnlants and construction. The regular father is decased), of the homesteader\nQuarterly dividend of one and three- asides upon a farm ln the vicinity of\n.\"tors per cent on the preferred, the land entered for, the requirement.\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD nd one and one-quarter per cent on as to residence may be satisfied by\n'Z* commonI shares were declared. such person residing with the father\nN'o statement dealing with the trade or mother,\noutlook was issued, hut several of the (3) if the settler has his permanent\ndirectors expressed themselves as ^dence upon farming land owned\nconvinced that the present quarter's by __ |n the vicinity Of his ftome-\n,.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD,\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD..\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD, wfl| be more satisfactory than gtead, the requirements as to residence\nhose just published. may fa satisfied by residence upon\nthe said land.\n \" ' Six months' notice ii writing should\nLIVING NOTOTHERIUM be given to the commisalon*r of Do-\nEasterbrook Milling Company,\nEburne. B. C.\nFLOUR! FLOUR !\nHUNGARIAN JEWEI $6.50 per bbl.\nIMPERIAL $6.75 per bbl.\nTERMINAL $5.25 per Bbl.\nHINDOO FLOUR $4.50 per Bbl-\nTiUmCl - * Q C FLOUR AND FEED MERCHANTS\nMcQuarrie & to.\t\nFRONT 8TREET. New Westminster. Telephone $38.\nB.C. Mills\nTimber and Trading\nCo.\n\" *9---~-*% Manufacturers and Dealers In All Kinds of\nLUMEBR, LATH, SHINGLES, SASH. DOORS. INTERIOR\nFINISH,\nPLmIN AND\nTURNED WORK, FISH BOXES. LARGE STOCK\nFANCY GLASS.\nRoyal City Planing\"Mills Branch\nTelephone 12 New Westminster Box 137\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDfi*\nmi\nand\nNew Westminster to New Westminster\nVia\nSteveston and Vancouver\nStr. TRANSFER\nLeaves Brackman-Ker wharf at 3 P. M. daily except Saturday,\non Saturday for Steveston and way points.\nA Delightful Trip for $1.50\nTickets at B. C. E. R. ticket offlce and on board steamer. Electric cars leave Steveston every hour (on the half-hour) for Vancou-\n-er.\nSee the Famous Fraser River Canneries, Vancouver, Etc\t\nRound trip tickets to Steveston, Saturday afternoons, fl.\nColumbia street. Phone 666.\nltd\nMonu\nMENTAl\n^^L WORKS.\n^NmaSl.L works, jas\n_ \">unmpnn a ,Urflr aml importer\n** etc. a.,. 0.mbatone8. buitmng\n3al auction guaranteed\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Ne\" Westminster.\nHOTELS.\nKINO'S HOTEL \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD COLUMBIA. ST.\nPhone. Newest and most up-to-date\nIn the City. Terms moderate. First-\nclass cuisine. J. Trachy, proprietor.\nDISCOVERED AT LAST minion lands at Ottawa of Intention\nto apply for patent.\nv tnri-i lulv 27.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDLiving beasts. Coal.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDGoal mining rlgbts may be\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD!.'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD ,o those ot prehistoric ages lea8e(t for a period of t.wenty-on*\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDeno-tcd to have been located by years at an annual rental of $1 per\na'n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDM\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDwdtoNewOulnea,ao.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDcre. Not more than 2560 aero\nexplorers engageai i ^ ^ ^^ t***\n0\niii\n-Ml\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nr\nThe Oven\nOf a Range\nTHAT a perfectly constructed,\nair-tight oven will bake better with half the fuel than a\nloosely constructed oven, is a fact\nbeyond question. The Majestic\noven is made of heavier material\nthan any other, and is riveted (not\nbolted) to a malleable I. or angle\nIron frame, making it absolutely\nair-tight. The oven, in an ordinary stove or range is bolted or\nriveted to the range body, without\nbracing and without frames, allowing a knife blade to pass\nthrough corners and sides. It is\nnatural that with an oven constructed in this manner, It requires twice the fuel, and not near\nas good results as can be obtained\nin any oven of a Majestic Range.\nTbe Majestic oven stays that way,\ntoo,\nNote tbe illultrttioM.\nANDERSON & LUSBY\nCOLUMBIA STREET.\n*.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD..\nWhere Do You\nBreakfast ?\nThe \"Royal Cafe,\" is\nthe only reasonable answer. ^Vhy ? First,\nEverything there is neat\nand clean. Second, the\nfood is cooked to make\nyou hungry. Third, the\nservice is swift and our\nwaiters are obliging-\nFourth, prices are moderate. But why enumerate all the Advantages.\nW< Could count to a\nhundred and not he' finished. Come tomorrow\nmorning.\nThe Royal Cafe\n604 Columbia St., Phone 375\n*>*******)&**'\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD&\ni City News \\n\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\n*\"**z**%**%**z**?'**-:f**-:;**%**x** \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD#\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD#\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD#\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\nSTORAGE\nH. P. VIDAL & CO.\nMarket Square\nPHONE 475.\nThe Central Hotel Cafe\nOpposite B. C. E. R. Depot\n25c - Merchants Lunch - 25c\nCHOICE COOKING\nPROMPT SERVICE\nGIVE US A TRIAL\nALWAYS:\nA nice line of\nTOILET WATERS, VIOLET\nAMMONIA, PERFUMES.\nManicuring necetsltie\nCOMPLEXION POWDER8,\nTALCUM POWDERS, TOILET SOAPS, ETC.\nT. A. MUIR & CO.\nDISPENSING CHEMIST8\nDean* Block\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDFour Doors East\nof Bank of Montreal.\nMayor ],co spent tlie holiday al\nCrescent, his summer home..\nPot plants tind fresh cut flowers\nat Tidy's store. Plume 184 **\nTomorrow's market will prohably\nsee tlie last of the r.ispherYlps and\n, cherries. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD -\nWhite Rock for cool .p;rKrec7es. **\nA large number of people went to\nWhite Rock yesterday to spend the\nholiday,\n< *\nSwimming, boating, bathing and\nj cool breezes at White Hock. Have\nyou a Bummer cottage there?\nThe foundation of Wilberg & Woltz's\nnew cigar factory on Seventh street\nis almost completed.\nEdison records for August now on\nsalo at .1. li. Todd's Music House. **\nGood progress is being made on tlie\nplant of the National Paper mills at\nSapperton.\nSee Fales for Lawn and Camp Ftir-\n' nit ure. **\nDespite the fact that yesterday was\nj a public holiday, not a single mfin\n| was locked up at the police. station\non the usual charge.\nThe management of the Bohemian\nCafe sees to it that the best only ls\nserved there. **\nA meeting of the Citizens Picnic\ncommittee wlll be held on Tuesday\nevening to wind up the affairs of yesterday's excursion.\nP. Burns & Co.'s meat market will\nbe closed all day on Wednesday; public holiday. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\" **\nTho B. C. E. R. company has made\nan official announcement of the start\non August 1 of a better car service\non the cit\" lines.\nW. T. Cooksley, at the Citizens picnic in Victoria yesterday, enjoyed a\nride around the capital in. an Irish\nJaunting car, the only one of its kind\non the coast.\nDavles greenhouse is the place to\nget bouquets, floral designs and all\nkinds of cut flowers. Phone R 208. **\nLacrosse supporters ' In Victoria\nclaim that the game between the intermediates at the Capital on Saturday is a sure win for their team, as\nit has been practicing hard.\nFor a pleasant cool drink, try the\nIce Cream Sodas at The Royal Cafe. **\nMany people walked over to see the\nC. N. R. construction camp on the\nsouth side of the river yesterday. The\nC. N. R. men were not concerned in\nany civic holiday and did as much\nwork yesterday as they have done on\nany previous day since the commence-\n,,,-nt of the work.\nin...\nIn a baseball game at Queens pajk\non Tuesday evening Auditor Corn-\nworth had a narrow escape from being\nhit by a foul tipped ball. The \>i**i\nwas coming with tremendous Bpe$cl\nand il\" it bad struck Mr. t'otswortti.\nthe auditor's report would have b. ($n\ndelayed for another week.\nFor carnations, sweet peas nnd\ndahlias, plione Davies greenhouse.\nIt 208. **\nKev. John Evans Preston, a clergyman of Drogheda. Ireland, is inquiring through the government offices for\nthe whereabouts of Edward Osborne,\ndescribed as twenty-four years of age\nand strong tind active. He worked ln\nthe Port Kells shingle mill and was\nsupposed to have gone Into the mountains some time last, September.\nThreo hundred and fifty dollars will\nbuy h lot and build a cottage at White\nRock. White, Shiles & Co. will tell\nyou bow. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*\nCommencing on August 1, the B. C.\nK. H. company will run a city service\nto Edmonds station from 6:40 a.m.\nand every twenty minutes until 11:20\np.m. Leaving Edmonds station at\n6:10 a.m. and every twenty minutes\nuntil 11:50 p.m. Sapperton car will\nleave tram station at ti: 10 a.m. and\nevery twenty minutes until 11:30 p.m.\nLeaving Sapperton at 0:;]0 a.m. at\n0:30 a.m. and every twenty minutes\nTake Advantage Of Our\nAlteration Sale Prices\nOur big sale continues this week. As the piles of sale goods disappear\nnew lines arrive or further reductions are made on lines that are not moving\nNothing in the store but what feels the effect of the reductions. Low prices\nhave moved more goods in this month than ever before in the same time.\nThe last week of our big sale will afford you greater saving opportunities\nthan ever.\nWALES WISHES TO BE\nREPRESENTED ON STANDARD\nLondon, July 27.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\"Gallant Little\nWales\" is trying hard to get represented upon the royal standard, and\nclaims that the red dragon of Wales\nshould be emblazoned thereon, taking\none of the two quarters which English selfishly uses for her three lions\npassant. With this object the Welsh\nmembers of parliament bave laid their\nclaims before Premier Asquith, who\nhas promised that it should be made\nknown to the king.\nOn the royal standard, which also\nforms tbe central part of the royal\narms, England is represented by two\nquarters, Scotland by one, red lion\nrampant, and Ireland by one, the Irish\nharp. Wales thinks that her emblem\nmight be easily introduced, if England\nsacrifices one of her quarters.\nThe most effective answer against\nthe Welsh proposal is that the alterations in the royal standard and arms\nwherever they are emblazoned\nthroughout the British empire would\ncost fifteen millions of dollars.\nLEVEL CROSSING CAUSES\nDEATH OF 12 IN CLEVELAND\nCall on W. \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD Fales for \u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD?\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD*\ndelivery on parlor. T>eui?om' kitc'ie,n\nor any house furnishings.\nCleveland, July 27.\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BD\u00EF\u00BF\u00BDTwelve persons were injured, one probably fatally, when a St. Clair avenue car\nwas struck by an outward bound Pennsylvania train at the Thirty-eighth\nstreet grade crossing this evening.\nThe car was hurled from tbe track\n'and Bm.8be "Titled The Daily News from 1906-03-06 to 1912-04-24; Westminster Daily News from 1912-04-25 to 1912-12-04; and The New Westminster News from 1912-12-05 to 1914-09-04.

Published by The Daily News Publishing Company, Limited from 1903-03-06 to 1912-04-24; and The National Printing and Publishing Co., Ltd. from 1912-04-25 to 1914-09-04."@en . "Newspapers"@en . "New Westminster (B.C.)"@en . "The_Daily_News_1910-07-28"@en . "10.14288/1.0317240"@en . "English"@en . "49.206667"@en . "-122.910556"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "New Westminster, B.C. : The Daily News Publishing Company, Limited"@en . "Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy, or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Digitization Centre: http://digitize.library.ubc.ca/"@en . "BC Historical Newspapers"@en . "Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives."@en . "The Daily News"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .