Friday, July 10, 19144 | aaa ennaaaeaaneennne t OR A TAXI? 75-PHONE-75 INCE RUPERT AUTO CO ORCny eee Summer CLOTHES hy Not Have the BEST? See Us at Once SWEDER BROS,, jlors to Ladies and Gen- tlemen EDS! SEEDS! © received our 1014 &pring Beede LD, GARDEN, AND FLOWER 6EEDS Agente for DOMINION NURSERY & ORCHARDS CO. Dealers in Feed of all kinds COKEN FEED A 6PECIALTY ‘| orders promptly attended to ince Rupert Feed Co. Third Ave. Phone Biack 268 ce Rupert Dairy Phone Green 252 Istein Milk for Babies specially Bottled TESTED cows invitation is cordially ex- d to the citizens interested spect the dairy premises g the hours of 3:30 and 4:30 esdays and Saturdays when hg operations are being con- hurch Services - T PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Bervices every Sunday tn the ureh Hall at 11 a.m. and ress Theatre at 730 p.m. unday Sehool at 2.30 p. m. ~ FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH BUR. YOUNG and FIFTH AVE Services every Sunday et 1! am. and 730 p.m Sunday Sehool 2.80 p. m. Haraca Bible Class 2.30 p.m. W. W. WRIGHT, B.A., Pastor HE FIRST METHODIST CHURCH SILTH AVE. AND MUBGRAVE PLACE Services every Sunday at ti am. and 7.30 p.m Sunday Sebeol at 2.30 p.m. \. MR. DIMMICK PASTOR ANDREW'S ANGLICAN CHURCH rift) Ave. and Dunsmuir Place Morning prayer, 11. Even ng prayer, 7:40. Sunday school, 8: a i, . Holy Communion rst Sunday of month, at if & m., and third Sunday at & a. m. Vv. G. A. RIX - RECTOR & SALVATION ARMY CITADEL, Granville Court Sunday services at am, Sands’ p.m. Sun day fvhool, 1:30 p. m Week bight services Mon day, Wednesday, Thurs day and Saturday PERN R EERE EEE EH FIRE ALARM SYSTEM CIRCUIT NO. 1. Sth St. and 3rd Ave. 6th &. and trd Ave. 14..8th St. and Sra Ave. ox 15-—Junection of ist, 2nd aud Sra Aves. ox 16-——ist Ave., between 8th and Oth Sts. (Knox Hotel.) ox 17-—1et Ave. and 7th St, tral Hotel.) . ox 18 x (Cea CIROUIT NO. 2. 2 22--3rd Ave, and 3rd St (Post Omee.) ox 23--Srd Ave, and McBride St x 24——i8t Ave. and MeBride St ox 26-—-2nd Ave, and @nd St. ox 26--2nd Ave. and 6th 8t. ox 27.0, T. P. CIRCUIT NO. 3. ox 815th Ave. and Fulton St, ox 82-—Borden and Taylor Sts. ox 647th Ave. and Fulton 8t, x 80th Ave. and Comox Ave on 878th Ave. and Dodge Vl. Box 38— 4th Ave. and Thompson St. CIRCUIT NO. 4. ox 414th Ave, and Emmerson vl Box 425th Ave. and MeBride St Box 485th Ave. and Green St Box 44--6th Ave end Basti 61. Box 45-—Tth Ave. and ENerts. Box 141--7th Ave, and Yung St RRRDAES Oe RRO RRA ADVERTISE IN HE DAILY NEWS THE DAILY NEWS To-Morrow’s Decision Awaited With Interest Prominent lawyers from New Yor e et BULLER / LNCS) Cl 5 ; , , o Of Ce . eE.L.NEWCOMBE API MM. .. FW.GRIEFIM O° JUSTICE PREM IING ile icramaspnhed> CANADIAH GONE, BIG LEGAL LIGHTS AT THE EMPRESS ENQUIRY k and London as well as from Canadian cities who argued the merits of the case before Lord Mersey and his co-investigators, In the history of colonization Any review devoted to this g now reaping. (Written for The Daily The Pioneers Whenever colonisation is men tioned the mind immediately re verts to the reign of Elizabeth, which was the greatest period of vision England has known. It has aptly been termed the Age of Discovery It was an age which bred the pioneers who cast abroad the seeds of Empire. At that time, although England was devoid of possessions, she was aflame with an intense national spirit—the furnace in which the roots of empire were forged There were more dreams to the square mile in Flizabethan Eng land than there had ever been be fore, or have ever been since Each little tavern in every sea- board town was thronged with dreams; they were exchanged over each tankard of ale by the bronzed, bearded men who told strange tales of wealth beyond hopes of avarice And these ad- venturers, men with large hopes and long swords, set the prows of their galleons westward in search of terra incognita. They were the earliest builders of Empire. the British had been planted in Newfoundland in 1583 Sir Humphrey Gilbert, atten- tion was rapidly given to the pos- sibilities contained in this new Once by world, this marvel of the age. Actual colonisation grew slowly. \t the end of the seventeenth century only Gambia and the Gold Coast in West Africa, St. Helena, the Bermudas, Barbados, and Ja- maica, a few West Indian Islands and the New England States flew the’ British At this and during the first vears of the eighteenth century, suddenly sprang into fame the battle ground of eolenial strife rhe Treaty of Utrecht in 17413 fina decided fate of the Dominion Settiers Life Then the wel from natural contents the tlers in Cane - bewan to peg out their claims and to make that his like an eple In In imagina flag time few tanada as lly the relief set. in ome n, tory whieh reads human endurance ROMANCE OF COLONIZATION HAS BEGINNING IN DREAMS :: vivid appeal to the Imagination as the Dominion of Canada. without some brief reference to those men who in other days turned the earth in preparation for the harvest which we are One of the most valuable poli- ticai common-piaces is contained in the priceless truth that “when there is rf vision the people perish Leaders of men, wheth-| er they have sat with tilted hats| the front benches of parlia t:; whether they have, sword hand, carried on the oldest dition of leadership; or, pen hand, observed the latest, have had somewhere in their make-up the essential characteristics of the visionary. it was this faculty that caused Nap to re-arrange Europe; | that made him capable of stretch- ing a hand towards the pyramids and exhorting his weary soldiers to remember that “forty cen turies’ looked down upon them jlenee was only broken by the war signals of raddle-faced braves le choed with the shriek of the} huge G. T. R. and C, P.R. engines, | }whose metal paths had been tun-/} | PAPER TRUST SIGNS UP WITH THE UNIONS New York, July 9. months’ dispute, After a five representatives oe through mountains and set/of the International Paper Com- —— lo gorges, A splendid system of|pany, which employs between no land offers such a wide and lo at ais joined waterway to water-|8,000 and 9,000 men in thirty or lway and consequent advance-|movre plants located in a score reat country would be ill-balanced [ment in agriculture was recorded. |of cities of the United States and | Truly titanie achievements were |Canada, and the committee rep- leffected by these pioneers. jresenting the employees’ unions, | And pioneers they remain. They have arrived at an amicable ad- lare still exploring, still finding|justment of their differences. News by T. W. Sheffield) other resources, widening the rhe conferees signed a new lold, opening up the new. Today agreement for one year only, tion we see this strange, stub Yast fields of endeavour await| Which will supersede the tw born breed, the pioneers, steadily the energy of the workman, and,year agreement that expired May subduing the great f — the most valuable asset he can| first last, which they were opposed. We se@ liar, to his labour is the faculty | ————— them marking it the site Of] of vision. Thos who review the ‘UNEMPLOYED WAIT ON the homesteads; we see them) narvellous growth of industry | OTTAWA GOVERNMENT |hewing down the forests, sowing ompany with the harmonic ——e pea and. building 9 Der and integral national spirit, and] Ottawa, July 9.—W. D. Seott, jas a refuge from the terrible on-|tpoce who realize the promise of | Superinter dent of immigration, slaught of the aborigines. This) ¢,. future. may feel that there| Was waited upon yesterday after- epoch in the development Of) wa. something singularly appro-| een by a delegation representing |Canada has been preserved in} )piate in th conscious vision| 400 Ukranians, now out of em- uvenile fietion and has helped to}... those d mariners who|Pleyment in Ottawa. jmake the fortune of cinematro-|thought of this continent as the | fhey were told that the de- jgraph syndicates and of gold possibilities. In|Partment could do nothing in the Then we see the fur-capped|q smaller but none the less im-|™atter of ordering employment. fhunter with snow-sh ind his| portant deg the oldtimers of I‘ xer pt in cases where farm hands ipelts, his adventuresome life althe Pacific Coast have added their} Were needed. As the demand for jdual struggle with nature and his | share W in making Prince Ithis class of worker in Eastern | fe low men, give place to a more} Rupert a nportant part of the | Ontario is at a minimum, there is |i npor aaa person—the farmer Empire little chanee that any will be | Strength and pertinacity have |