THE WEATHER Twenty-four hours ending 5 a. m., THE DAILY NE May 19. BAZ. JaHP. a fs ee Formerly The Prince Rupert Optimist Oe Te Prince RUPERT, B.C.. Fripay, May i9, 1911. ee cea PRESIDENT DIAZ AGREES 10 RETIR ANCOUVER COP PUT A JUDGE UNDER ARREST dge McInnes Disobeyed the Order to ‘‘Move On’’— Policeman Arrested Judge in Presence of a Big Crowd and Sent for the Patrol Wagon Canadian Press Despatch) street without the policeman’s per- ncouver, May 19.—The spec-| mission refused to ‘‘move on.” le of a British Columbia judge} Accordingly the officer of the yped by the arm by a Vancou- placed the Judge under ar- policeman on Hastings street, | rest. The unusual spectacle caused ile the officer telephoned to the|a large crowd to congregate. The ice station for a patrol wagon | excitement deepened when the me and take the Judge to the| officer sent for the patrol wagon, tion, a crowd of two! with the evident intention of haling usand to gather this morning. the Judge off to the local cooler. great that it] i | caused » crowd was 80 Explanations Followed traffic. ae Before the ked the +s * civic coach arrived, Didn't Know His Man }explanations were made, and the he joke was rather on the} Judge was allowed to depart from iceman who didn't know that/arrest. He has been made the mn he ordered two inoffensive| subject of many humorous in- ing gentlemen to ‘‘Move on?" | quiries. Judge McInnis is taking one of them was Judge | the whole affair in good part, and nne His Honor, who con-|appreciates the humor of the situ- ed he was committing nolation, along with the rest of the citizens C.N.R. IS AFTER MAIL CONTRACT Will Co-Operate With the In- ter-Colonial Road he by standing talking on the| RAWLER SCOUTS FOR RUPERT t of Sir George Doughty's ishing feet Coming Out Montreal, May mail When between | 18. the contract and Doughty's the (,eorge ree trawlers, newest f Sir Sea fishing fleet are being | out to make the long journey overseas Liverpool and Hongkong expired April 26th, nouncement, but Sir Thomas Shau- on there was no an- rince Rupert this summer from isby, England ghnessy went to England to order 1c trawlers are to act in the|two boats in view of getting the city of scouts as it were, for coftract. The boats have never freater trawling fleet which been ordered, for the reason that Irge proposes to place on| the contract goes not to theC. P.R coast with Prince Rupert as|but to the Intercolonial and the port Canadian Northern Railway com- George Doughty made in- bined. The announcement will be gations while out here re-| made this week from Ottawa. ing the possibilities of the The C. N. R. is interested with of British Columbia, which |Sir Thomas Trowbridge in_ the ted were so great that they| Blacksod Bay project and_ their i give employment to a very ships will take the mails to Halifax, number of fishermen, and|thence by the Intercolonial to pected to establish a great) Montreal, thence by the C. N. R. g depot like. those on the| to the coast, 1 Sea on this coast. is also his intention to enter G.T.P. WORKMEN coast whaling~ business, and il} da : a th ar oS GO ON STRIKE ‘ wis service, and will tigate the herring business. Two Hundred Bridgebuilders on | >corge Doughty is largely in Calgary Branch Quit Work ted in the fisheries of the! Sea, and has many vessels | Calgary, May 18.—Two hundred | headquarters at Grimsby. structural steel workers employed | lon the G. T. P. bridge on the | Calgary branch near Aix, have OTA TOWN IS WRECKED gone out on strike. The trouble is lover the wage scale. Trouble Rapids in South Dakota) |been brewing with them for some| Pestroyed by a Tornado | time owing to the demand * Hor an increase of pay having been | refused. has pé ast, inadian Press Despatch) ux Falls, S. D., May 19.—It , orted here that the town of ;/PORTLAND CANAL MASCOT Rapids was destroyed by a| do which this! Ct last are Manager Nick Sheridan's Baby Visits the Mine With Dad over Details swept night. btainable as yet. : Nick Sheridan, manager of the Portland Canal Mine, now on his way to Stewart to visit the mine, He in Prince Rupert, having come by the Prince Rupert on Wednesday, and is going on EW CITY SOLICITOR 1s ——e is s Care of His First Case for City his Morning Ce by the Camosun, Mr. Sheridan y Solicitor Peters conducted |is accompanied by his wife and rst case in Prince Rupert|child who have already paid a iorning. The dase was that|visit to the mine. The little one Pan Mclnnis charged with |has to be literally ‘packed up ciently Llanketting a blast}the mountain for two thousand rst avenue, He was fined $5|five hundred feet in a_ specially poate, arranged and cosy pack-sack and board, The trip is a huge enter- tainment for the youngster who is looking forward to it with as the popular his Bughouse, Went Below of P. C. Mansell of the police force, Eugene Geltas care much enthusiasm as mine manager for pe ISSCSSCH | It was late on the 13th when they | labor down below this morning. prosperous property. PRESIDENT DIAZ IS TO RETIRE Will Vacate Office as President of Mexico on May 24th (Canadian Press Despatch) Mexico May 19.—It semi-officially announced here that City, is President Diaz will retire f-om the Presidercy on May 24th. On Mey 25th, Madero will accept office as President, pending a general election. Pacific Coast Baseball i | Vernon 6, Los Angeles 5. San Francisco 3, Oakland 1. Portland 2, Sacramento 3. mt rs ts tt te rs BASEBALL SCORES ere Northwestern League Vancouver 4, Seattle 0. Tacoma and Victoria; No score. Portland and Spokane; no game on account of rain. National League Boston 1, St. Louis 3. Chicago 11, Philadelphia 3. Cincinnati 1, Brooklyn 2. Pittsburg 6, New York 1. American League | New York 3, St. Louis 1. Cleveland 9, Washington 6. | Philadelphia 4, Detroit 9. | Chicago 12, Boston 8. stopped | in fifth inning on account of rain. | TEN VESSELS Hurricane Does Terrible Dam- age Off New Hebrides (Canadian Press ewe Sydney, Australia, May 19.—Re- ports have reached here of terrible damage done along the coasts of the New Hebrides during the hur- ricanes this week. Ten vessels are reported ashore at different places, and eight persons are reported drowned. It is a good plan to put a little {money away as a reserve fund. Why not put ten dollars a month into a lot? H. F. McRae & Co. |have good ones on these terms. AFTER SEVEN DAYS RE RESCUED Worn Out With Toil and Suffering from Lack of Food, Two Boat Crews from the Sealer Pescawha Reach Prince Rupert Har-| bor---Missed Their Vessel in Haze off Banks Island---Had to Row Two Hundred Miles Along Coast, Living on Clams. Worn out with fatigue and want loee ee 4046446644644 44) order for food, and said he would of food, after working their small | The Saved Men @| find work for them if they wished SSELS xe WANT TO BAR ALL JAPS FROM BRITISH COLUMBIA (Canadian Press Despatch) Ottawa, May 19.—Oriental im- migration, especialiy as it affects the future well-being of British Columbia, came up for discussion in the House of Commons last night when Hon. W. S. Fielding moved for the House to appoint a committee to curisider a resolution for extending the existing trade agreement with Japan. Mr. Martin Burrell, member for Yale-Cariboo, at once urged that Canada should abandon its efforts to develop a large trade with Japan and China, and adhere to the new treaty between Great Britain and Japan. So far as Canada was concerned he urged that measures be taken to re- Martin Burrell and His Colleagues Advocate Drastic Measures—Urged the Government Not to Renew Trade Agreement with Japan and China strict or to prohibit the imim- gration in Canada of Japanese. All of the other Conservative members from British Columbia supported Mr. Burrell’s stand, demanding a total prohibition of Jananese immigration into British Columbia. The House voted to appoint the committee. Having to leave their present premises on the corner of Second avenue and Sixth street. Director- Cohen, the well known clothiers, have decided to sell a large part of their good stock at a sacrifice. This will give those wanting to purchase clothing an opportunity todoso cheaply. See the advertise- ment on another page for par- ticulars. BREAKS: RECORD IN TELEPHONING Two Thousand Mile Talk New York Speaks with Denver— New York, May 18.—For the first time in history the human DELIMITING THE BOUNDARY LINE Will Give Canadians Exclusive Right to Halibut Banks The Dominion Government has entrusted an important work to openboats for over two hundred | In the first boat, Joe # until they could pick up their| voice carried 2,000 miles Monday | Mr. F. H. Mackie of the astron- miles along the coast on a diet|# Morrell with Sid Wom- # | schooner again. The men have/night, when New York found |omical.staff of the Department of of clams with an occasional bird|# bolt, and Jack Stewart. |} homes down south, however, and| Denver over a long distance tele-|the Interior. It is to make a brought down with an otter rifle,!+ In the second boat, #¢/ feeling that they have had enough! phone wire. “A phantom” tele-|survey of the boundary line from the above-named six men of the|# Bob Stewart with Fred +|of the sea to last them for a while, | phone, connected with four copper|the head of the Portland Canal crew of the schooner Pescawha| + Smith and Tom Lenton. + | they were anxious to go below. | wires, the thickness of a lead/to the open sea. The work will reached Prince Rupert yesterday|++44444¢4¢44¢4444¢4444)Captain Barney Johnston of the} | pencil, Prince Rupert came to the rescue/and in all 22 people were exchang- | too | and swinging the two seal- boats! ing messages by and set out for the south with] - their boats by the Prince Rupert this morning. Lost Schooner The men left the the 12th, in Hecate Strait between Banks Island and Queen Charlotte Sound boats hunting | for sea otters. uring the after- noon a baffling heat haze obscured | schooner on in two |the horizon and they completely | lost track of the schooner, By | chance the two boats which had} | been separ ated, met, and keeping ltogether searched for the ship till night. Then they tried to lreach land twenty-five miles off, There were provisions and water the boats for only one meal. in sighted the coast, and all were in distress with hunger and thirst. Inhospitable Coast Surf was breaking on the rocky shore, and for a time it was difficult to land at all, but at last a landing was effected, and shelter- ing themselves under the boats’ sails stretched on the oars, the men spent the night, They found some water, and managed to light a fire, but not until low tide did they find some clams. They had no idea where they were, but next day continued their journey north» wards along the trying to find an inhabited place, and eating mostly shellfish. Sometimes they managed to shoot a duck, but the coast RALPH CONNOR SAYS THE END IS FAR OFF Chairman of Conciliation Board on Miners Strike Rather Pessimistic About an Early Settlement—No Patched Up Agreement Will be (Canadian Press Despatch) Winnipeg, May 19——Dr. C, W. Gordon, (Ralph Connor), who was appointed chairman of the Con-| temporary agreement, and make|resumed in two weeks’ time, the iciliation Board to inquire into te of the Western | Miners, returned home today andl spoke in very troubles | katla food they could was far scanty. get Made Kitkatla Struggling along like this from point to point on the lonely coast the famished men reached Kit- on the 16th. Here they \found only Irdians, and for some unexplained reason they did not succeed in getiing any food. But told them in broken to reach Claxton where he they would find white men. Wearily they set out again, but mistaking their direc- tion they took the wrong side of Porcher Island, and to spend a night on without food. “McCullough” Saved Them On Thursday the 17th, they were off the mouth of the Skeena, and here the tug McCullough met them and Captain Herbert Clifton took them on board and fed them royally. They were utterly tired out with rowing, and rested the night before setting out directed by Captain Clifton, for Prince Rupert. Yesterday morning, how- ever, they came on here, arriving about mid-day. Good for Capt. Johnston Going to Mayor Manson advice and assistance to take them home, they told their story, and the Mayor at once gave them an an Indian English how said had the again rocks for Entertained, He Says of the for an early settlement. } “The Beard could patch up a| prospects a hasty settlement of the matter, but that was done before. What} is wanted now is a thorough inquiry aboard, arranged for the modation of the seamen Vancouver. They left this morn-| ing at eight ‘clock. Two Hardy Sea-dogs Bob Stewart, who was looking pretty haggard after his exper- ience, and Joe Morrell, who wears still a look of anxiety, are both well known seal hunters, and have had many perilous experiences. Bob Stewart was lost in an open boat 47 miles off the coast of Trinidad six years ago when he was sealing with the schooner “Hatsy.”’ The present experience is his fourth of this kind, Joe Morrell has been in similar plight three times at least, once off the coast of Japan. But both men declare that this latest adventure of theirs was very nearly the last. They are making for home for a long spell ashore before they face the sea again. Schooner Still Searching The sealing schooner Peschawha as reported by wireless, in charge of Captain Bert Balcom, and is still in the neighborhood of the Queen Charlotte Islands though probably all bope of finding the missing boats has now been given up by the captain. Wireless mes- sages have been sent to the Islands to inform Captain Balcom of the | will last for many years to come,” rescue of the men. he said. He said that the enquiry will be continue Board would its work luntil a proper settlement was as far as | brought the cities together wires. telegraph operators worked New York-Chicago ends of four duplex telegraph wires. The same four wires and the same current sufficed for the simultaneous needs of the 22 senders and receivers of messages. ROYAL ROMANCE IS TALKED OF German Emperor's Daughter May Becomea British Bride London, May 18.—It is now reported that one of the objects of the German Emperor's visit to England is to discuss the pos- sibility of the engagement of his daughter to the Prince of Wales. The princess is looked on as one of the charming of the royal princesses. The Prince of most next month. No mention of a bride for him has previously been made. Great Chance for Men Some astounding bargains can be had tomerrow at the Acme Clothing Store, Second avenue, when the firm commence selling out a tremenduos stock of gent’s clothing and furnishings valued at over $30,000, The prices of the goods for sale are literally cut in half. It will be worth any man's time to call in the store and look telephone and accom-| telegraph at once over these four While the talkers talked, 16 the Wales will be eighteen years old | take the party of ten three seasons to complete, and involves most careful calculations. It is probable that monuments will be established at different points on either side of the canal, indicating their distance from the actual boundary in the channel. At the entrance of the canal the boundary line swings due west terminating directly south of Cape Muyon at the south end of Prince of Wales Isiand, Alaska. According to the Canadian con- tention this will make Dixon En- trance between Prince of Wales Island and the Queen Charlotte Islands territorial waters of Can- ada, ensuring exclusively to Can- adians the right to fish on the greatest halibut banks in existence. NORTHBEND BACK Brought Coal, Will be Used to Carry Lumber | With a cargo of coal for the railway service, the old Northbend towed back to the harbor yesterday after hafing been re- paired down below. The hulk will now be used for bringing lumber across from Queen Charlotte City. was Grand Trunk Steamers Instead of tomorrow, the George will arrive on Sunday, as she had a Seattle excursion contract to fulfil. The Prince Albert will take her Stewart trip this week, and will go on Monday to Skidegate, and the Queen Charlotte ports. This temporary alteration of the over the goods. See the full page advertisement for full details. The ‘old original Royal 15-cent Lunch, which was formerly on the Rupert Road has re-opened in the Royal Hotel. Entrance off 6th street. 111-118 ©. M. Helgerson, Limited, have arrived at, and the men all back at pessimistic terms|and a proper settlement which | work, -ent. Phone 96, 106-tf several houses with bath for|telephone 320 green. regular schedule will in All prob- ability be the last for this season. If you want a neat little house om the best residential avenue— ring up W. F. McRae & Co. in their new office, ‘phone 205. For row boats and launches Davis’ Boat House. a Sag Sa